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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Snoozebox Ltd v (The Health And Safety Executive & Anor [2023] EWHC 851 (Ch) (17 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/851.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 851 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division)
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SNOOZEBOX LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and |
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(1) THE HEALTH AND SAFETY EXECUTIVE (2) HIS MAJESTY'S TREASURY |
Defendants |
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Mr Jeremy Bamford (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the First Defendant
Mr Christopher Brockman (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 27 and 28 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Richard Farnhill:
The dispute
i) As at 16 February 2018, the date of the CVA, did the HSE and/or HM Treasury have contingent claims or debts for any fine or prosecution costs that may be ordered in the Prosecution? The necessary legal relationship had been established and the prospect of liability was sufficiently real to render any fine a contingent liability. Costs arise under a different regime and the relevant legal relationship had not been established at the time of the CVA, such that there was no contingent liability for costs.
ii) Are the HSE and HM Treasury bound by the CVA? The HSE and HM Treasury are both emanations of the Crown, meaning that notice of the CVA was properly given to both of them through notice provided to the HSE. Under the Insolvency Act 1986 (the 1986 Act) the Crown is bound by a CVA like any other creditor.
iii) Do the terms of the CVA limit enforcement of any fine or order for prosecution costs that may be made by the Crown Court? The CVA prevents collection of any fine; for the avoidance of any doubt it does not limit the imposition of such a fine, nor does it affect anything other than collection (for example, the fact that a fine was imposed could still be an aggravating factor in any future prosecution). The CVA does not prevent the collection of any prosecution costs if ordered by the Crown Court against the Company.
iv) Was the Company subject to a debt or liability at the administration date of 8 November 2017? Yes as regards the fine. The investigation giving rise to the Prosecution had commenced a year before pursuant to the HSE's requirements for mandatory investigations. Nothing of substance changed in respect of it between November 2017 and February 2018, meaning that the relevant legal relationship and the prospect of liability were unchanged between those two periods. No as regards prosecution costs.
v) Was the Company released and discharged from any claim or order for a fine or prosecution costs on 18 October 2018 under clause 7.6 of the CVA or otherwise? The Company was released from the obligation to make payment of any fine on 18 October 2018 under clause 7.6 of the CVA. Any order for costs is unaffected. It remains open to the Crown Court to make either or both such orders.
vi) If the CVA covers any fine or award of costs, can the HSE or HM Treasury recover under section 5(2A) of the 1986 Act? Recovery under section 5(2A) is in accordance with the terms of the arrangement. Under the terms of the CVA it is now too late to file a proof of loss, and so no recovery can be made under that provision.
Events giving rise to the CVA and the Prosecution
Who is the creditor in respect of any fine?
It follows that prima facie in public law a minister or a Secretary of State is an aspect or member of the Crown. Except in application of the doctrine of precedent analogies are to be regarded warily in legal reasoning. But in view of all the foregoing the analogy to the human body and its members is, I think, an apt one in relation to the problem facing your Lordships. It is true to say: "My hand is holding this pen." But it is equally true to say it is another way of saying: "I am holding this pen." What is nonsensical is to say: "My hand is holding this pen as agent or as trustee for me."
The Minister of Works and the Secretary of State for the Environment are aspects or members of the Crown, incorporated and charged for administrative convenience with holding and administering property required by other Crown servants, who are also aspects or members of the Crown.
The constitutional accountability of the Crown to Parliament for the expenditure of public money means that, as a matter of public law, the Crown may have to deal differently with money from different sources. In private law the Crown through its various emanations is the beneficial owner of all central funds. If it fails to comply with the provisions which require such funds to be segregated, the remedy lies in public law.
A difference may however exist as regards challenge under section 6(1)(b) [of the 1986 Act] based on "some material irregularity at or in relation to" the meeting. An obvious irregularity is a failure to give notice to a person who should have received it. If therefore, through oversight, notice is not sent to a creditor whose claim, name and address is known to the administrators, there has been an irregularity in relation to the meeting.
Would any fine or award of costs be contingent claims for the purposes of the CVA?
a) any debt or liability to which the company is subject at the relevant date;
b) any debt or liability to which the company may become subject after the relevant date by reason of any obligation incurred before that date.
Where does this leave a first instance judge? Pulling together these threads the position seems to me to be this. A CVA requires a proposal to be put to creditors. The term "creditor" must be given a wide meaning, but a "creditor" must have a "debt". The term "debt" has a meaning that extends well beyond a debt strictly so called. It includes pecuniary liabilities (obligations that may turn into debts strictly so called) that might spring out of an existing legal relationship.
The creditors in respect of those contingent liabilities are the persons who have been carelessly exposed to asbestos and who will have claims in negligence if they suffer a loss as a result. the contingent liability to pay damages is a liability which, by reason of something done by the person (i.e. the use or distribution by T&N of asbestos or asbestos products) will necessarily arise or come into being if one or more certain events occur (i.e. the onset of asbestos-related conditions in persons previously exposed to asbestos by T&N). The careless exposure of persons to asbestos by T&N will automatically by the operation of the law of negligence lead to the liability to pay damages, assuming the existence of the other necessary elements of a claim in negligence.
However, I would suggest that, at least normally, in order for a company to have incurred a relevant 'obligation' under rule 13.12(I)(b), it must have taken, or been subject to, some step or combination of steps which (a) had some legal effect (such as putting it under some legal duty or into some legal relationship), and which (b) resulted in it being vulnerable to the specific liability in question, such that there would be a real prospect of that liability being incurred. If these two requirements are satisfied, it is also, I think, relevant to consider (c) whether it would be consistent with the regime under which the liability is imposed to conclude that the step or combination of steps gave rise to an obligation under rule 13.12(I)(b).
In other words, the Target companies were not in the sunlight, free of the FSD regime, but were well inside the penumbra of the regime, even though they were not in the full shadow of the receipt of a FSD, let alone in the darkness of the receipt of a CN.
The fine
Costs
In my view, by becoming a party to legal proceedings in this jurisdiction, a person is brought within a system governed by rules of court, which carry with them the potential for being rendered legally liable for costs, subject of course to the discretion of the court. An order for costs made against a company in liquidation, made in proceedings begun before it went into liquidation, is therefore provable as a contingent liability under rule 13.12(I)(b), as the liability for those costs will have arisen by reason of the obligation which the company incurred when it became party to the proceedings.
In the costs cases, I consider that those who engage in litigation whether as claimant or defendant, submit themselves to a statutory scheme which gives rise to a relationship between them governed by rules of court. They are liable under those rules to be made to pay costs contingently on the outcome and on the exercise of the court's discretion.
The regime under which liability is imposed
HM Treasury's right to a distribution
If
a) when the arrangement ceases to have effect any amount payable under the arrangement to a person bound by virtue of subsection (2)(b)(ii) has not been paid, and
b) the arrangement did not come to an end prematurely,
the company shall at that time become liable to pay to that person the amount payable under the arrangement.
Conclusion