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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 >> Secretary of State for Business and Trade v Abdulali & Anor [2024] EWHC 1722 (Ch) (05 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/1722.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 330, [2024] EWHC 1722 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF SUZANNE PALMER
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
7 Rolls Buildings London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
____________________
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS AND TRADE |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) MUSTAFA HASSANALI ABDULALI (2) JAMES DINGLEY |
Respondents |
____________________
Thomas Grant KC (instructed by Moore Recovery Limited) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 18 June 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ CAWSON KC:
Introduction
i) Neither as a matter of construction of the Insolvency Act 1986 ("IA Act 1986"), established precedent, or general principle, is there any basis to say that the proposed post-discharge GLO Scheme compensation payments would form part of the bankruptcy estate; and
ii) On the proper construction of the relevant assignments, the Respondents have no entitlement to share in the compensation proposed to be paid by the Applicant under the GLO Scheme.
i) The First Witness Statement of Robert Brightwell;
ii) The Second Witness Statement of Robert Brightwell; and
iii) The Second Witness Statement of Antony Nwanodi.
i) As trustees in bankruptcy, they owe duties and responsibilities to the creditors within the relevant bankruptcies who have, themselves, suffered financially in consequence of the events in question. A number of these creditors are, it is said, themselves, small businesses.
ii) Whilst POL is a creditor in a number of the bankruptcies, it has agreed to waive any claim therein and therefore does not stand to benefit from the position adopted by the Respondents.
iii) The parties are agreed that the effect of this decision will not affect the amount actually received by way of compensation by the relevant postmasters. In financial terms, the question is as to whether, in addition to paying the sums that might otherwise be payable under the GLO Scheme, the Applicant will have to pay any additional sums required to pay off the bankrupts' creditors in full, and bankruptcy costs and expenses.
iv) It is the Respondents' position that it was only because they were prepared to assign the relevant causes of action that Ms Palmer and the other relevant postmasters were able to participate in the GLO Litigation. The Respondents express a concern that the stigma of bankruptcy will continue to attach to the relevant postmasters unless their bankruptcies can be annulled, and they maintain that annulment is more likely to be obtained (through the payment in full of bankruptcy debts and costs and expenses) if the relevant compensation payments are made into the bankruptcy estate.
v) The Respondents have fully cooperated in ensuring that the Application has been dealt with on an expedited basis as "friendly" litigation designed to resolve the issues that have arisen.
Factual background
"… the proceedings in respect of the Post Office Limited Initial Complaint Review, presently in the Case Mediation Scheme under reference […] and in all or any connected proceedings going forward, whether in the Assignee's sole name or in conjunction with other parties between POST OFFICE LIMITED and [name of bankrupt]."
i) Paragraph 1.1.1 refers to the Government having announced the "ex gratia" GLO Scheme on 22 March 2022 "with the objective of ensuring postmasters who were part of the GLO and not eligible to receive compensation from POL have access to fair compensation for their Horizon-related losses."
ii) Paragraph 1.1.2 refers to the fact that in awarding compensation to postmasters, the GLO Scheme will be guided by considerations of fairness, in addition to applying established legal principles and findings from the Common Issues Judgment and the Horizon Issues Judgment. Further, it is therein stated that the GLO Scheme "aims to restore postmasters back into the position they would have been in had it not been for the breach of Post-Office's contractual obligations … Claims can be made for Horizon Shortfalls and for consequential losses resulting from them".
iii) Paragraph 2 provides that, in order to make a claim, it is necessary to have been a claimant in the GLO Litigation and a party to the Settlement Deed. However, paragraph 2.1.4 provides that applications can be made on behalf of a deceased GLO postmaster or a GLO postmaster who is suffering from capacity issues. Further, paragraph 2.1.5 provides that shareholders or directors of companies that no longer exist, or partners of partnerships that no longer exist, are able to make a claim "as the linked individual".
iv) The process involved in making a claim is set out in paragraph 3.
v) Paragraph 4 sets out the "Key Principles" involved in making a claim including as to burden of proof, and the application of established legal principles in relation to matters such as causation, remoteness, mitigation and quantum.
vi) Paragraph 5 sets out what can be claimed. It is of note that paragraph 5.7 deals specifically with bankruptcy or other insolvency, and losses suffered if the postmaster underwent bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings as a result of a Horizon Shortfall, providing, at paragraph 5.7.1, that the same might be claimed as a "Consequential Loss". Paragraph 5.7.2 then set out what evidence would be required for such a claim to be successful, including that the bankruptcy/insolvency was due to the Horizon Shortfall rather than intervening events/general financial hardship/other factors. Paragraph 5.7.3 sets out the types of documents that should be provided in respect of such a claim including details of all creditors at the time of bankruptcy/insolvency, and if the bankruptcy/insolvency process had concluded, details of payments made to creditors. Paragraph 5.7.4 specifies that if the postmaster was made bankrupt as a result of the Horizon Shortfall, then he/she may be able to claim for, amongst other things, diminution in value to their estate or assets because of the bankruptcy, financial losses as a result of harm to credit and reputation by reason of the bankruptcy, and the expenses of the bankruptcy (including annulment costs already incurred). Paragraph 5.7.7 provides that if the postmaster wishes to seek an annulment, the GLO Scheme would cover the reasonable legal fees associated with doing so.
The Assignment
i) The "Assignor" is expressed to be Ms Palmer acting by the Respondents, as her Joint Trustees in Bankruptcy, and recital 2 to the Assignment states that the Respondents are joined as a party to the deed "merely for the purposes of receiving the benefit of the waivers and exclusions in this Deed." This is, as I see it, an odd way of expressing matters if, as appears to be common ground, the relevant causes of action had vested in the Respondents as Ms Palmer's trustees in bankruptcy and were to be assigned by them on terms under which they were to receive a proportion of the fruits. However, it is not sought to be contended that the Assignment did not have the effect of assigning the relevant causes of action back to Ms Palmer on the terms provided for.
ii) The "Assignee" is expressed to be Ms Palmer.
iii) At recital 3 it is stated that:
"Details of the action the Assignor was a party to prior to the bankruptcy is attached to the Schedule to this Deed (hereafter 'the Action'). The Action contained within the Schedule represents the proceedings conducted in respect of the Post Office Limited Initial Complaint Review and in all or any connected proceedings going forward whether in her sole name or in conjunction with other parties."
iv) The Schedule referred to reads as follows:
"The proceedings in respect of the Post Office Limited Initial Complaint Review and in all or any connected proceedings going forward whether in the Assignee's sole name or in conjunction with other parties between POST OFFICE LIMITED and SUZANNE LESLEY PALMER."
v) At recital 4 the Assignor, "acting by her Joint Trustees in Bankruptcy", is expressed as assigning "whatever right interest or title it has in the Action to the Assignee ('the Assignment')."
vi) Recital 5 provides that in the event that the Assignee was successful in recovering any sums from "the Action":
"… the Assignee shall immediately account to the Assignor for the sum of £11,000 from their Proportionate Share in respect of the Assignor's costs. Of the remaining Proportionate Share the Assignee shall immediately account to the Assignor for a further sum (i.e. in addition to the £11,000) up to an aggregate total of [49] per cent of the Proportionate Share, subject to a cap of the amount required in order to satisfy, in full the total creditors (and, if applicable, statutory interest) in the bankrupt estate and bankruptcy costs and disbursements. The Assignee shall retain [51] per cent of the Proportionate Share."
vii) Clause 2.1 provided that: "The Assignor assigns to the Assignee such rights and interest it has in the Action with power to sue for and give a valid receipt."
viii) Clause 3 provides that: "The Assignor will give credit to the Assignee for any sums received by the Assignor in respect of the Action prior to completion of the Action or following completion of the Action subject to the 49:51 division of proceeds."
Relevant provisions of the IA 1986
i) Section 283 IA 1986, so far as relevant, provides:
"(1) Subject as follows, a bankrupt's estate for the purposes of any of this Group of Parts comprises—
(a) all property belonging to or vested in the bankrupt at the commencement of the bankruptcy, and
(b) any property which by virtue of any of the following provisions of this Part is comprised in that estate or is treated as falling with the preceding paragraph.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to—
(a) such tools, books, vehicles and other items of equipment as are necessary to the bankrupt for use personally by him in his employment, business or vocation;
(b) such clothing, bedding, furniture, household equipment and provisions as are necessary for satisfying the basic domestic needs of the bankrupt and his family…"
ii) "Property" is defined in s.436(1) IA 1986 in the following terms:
""property" includes money, goods, things in action, land and every description of property wherever situated and also obligations and every description of interest, whether present or future or vested or contingent, arising out of, or incidental to, property".[2]
iii) Section 306 IA 1986 provides that:
"(1) The bankrupt's estate shall vest in the trustee immediately on his appointment taking effect or, in the case of the official receiver, on his becoming trustee.
(2) Where any property which is, or is to be, comprised in the bankrupt's estate vests in the trustee (whether under this section or under any other provision of this Part), it shall so vest without any conveyance, assignment or transfer."
iv) Under s.307(1) IA 1986, the trustee in bankruptcy can by notice "claim for the bankrupt's estate any property which has been acquired by, or has devolved upon, the bankrupt since the commencement of the bankruptcy", but not "any property which is acquired by, or devolves upon, the bankrupt after his discharge".
v) As to "discharge", s.279(1) IA 1986, provides that: "A bankrupt is discharged from bankruptcy at the end of the period of one year beginning with the date on which the bankruptcy commences."
Relevant case law
"10. The following can, I think, be derived from the case law in respect of the 1986 Act and its predecessors:
(i) It is "legitimate and necessary to bear in mind the statutory objective" when interpreting the 1986 Act, albeit that "however desirable it may be to construe the Act in a way calculated to carry out the parliamentary purpose, it is not legitimate to distort the meaning of the words Parliament has chosen to use in order to achieve that result": see Bristol Airport plc v Powdrill [1990] Ch 744, 758–759, per Browne-Wilkinson V-C.
(ii) "[T]he statutory objective of the provisions of the 1986 Act" is that, "subject to certain specific exceptions, all a debtor's property capable of realisation should be vested in the trustee for him to realise and distribute the proceeds among the creditors": Patel v Jones [2001] BPIR 919, para 39, per Mummery LJ. In a similar vein, Mummery LJ had noted in Dear v Reeves [2002] Ch 1, para 39, a couple of months earlier:
"The purpose of divesting the bankrupt of his property, with certain express statutory exclusions, and vesting the bankrupt's title to it in the trustee is to enable the trustee to realise the bankrupt's estate for the benefit of the creditors and to distribute it among the bankrupt's creditors in accordance with the statutory scheme contained in Chapter IV of Part IX of the 1986 Act."
(iii) That approach accords with the "principle of public policy" that:
"in bankruptcy the entire property of the bankrupt, of whatever kind or nature it be, whether alienable or inalienable, subject to be taken in execution, legal or equitable, or not so subject, shall, with the exception of some compassionate allowances for his maintenance, be appropriated and made available for the payment of his creditors": Hollinshead v Hazleton [1916] 1 AC 428, 436, per Lord Atkinson.
(iv) In keeping with that policy, "in successive statutes dealing with bankruptcy and insolvency the definition of 'property' has been progressively extended": In re Celtic Extraction Ltd [2001] Ch 475, 486, para 26, per Morritt LJ[3].
(v) The word "property" "is not a term of art but takes its meaning from its context": In re Celtic Extraction Ltd, at p 486, para 26, per Morritt LJ.
(vi) The explanation of "property" given in section 436 "is not in truth a definition of the word 'property'" since the section "only sets out what is included": Ord v Upton [2000] Ch 352, 360, per Aldous LJ.
(vii) Section 436 is very wide in its scope. In the Bristol Airport case [1990] Ch 744, Browne-Wilkinson V-C observed, at p 759, "It is hard to think of a wider definition of property".
(viii) There are, however, limits. Thus, the fact that a possibility has a realisable value will not necessarily render it "property": "The chance of receiving a legacy from a relative a man might sell before his bankruptcy, but still, if not sold by him, that chance would not pass to his assignees": Johnson v Smiley (1853) 17 Beav 223, 230, per Romilly MR. In Ex p Dever; In re Suse and Sibeth (1887) 18 QBD 660, a "mere spes" was held not to have vested in a trustee in bankruptcy. A wife had taken out an insurance policy on the life of her husband on terms that entitled her to opt to withdraw money after ten years if the policy had not previously been terminated by lapse or death. The husband became bankrupt during the currency of the policy, but it was not until after he had obtained his discharge that the wife became able to exercise the right of withdrawal and did so. The Court of Appeal held that any interest that the husband might have in the money paid by the insurance company did not pass to his trustee in bankruptcy. Fry LJ, for example, said, at p 670:
"How could the interest of the husband be 'property', when it was something which could only accrue in the event of the exercise of the wife's option on a double contingency, which had not happened at the time when he obtained his discharge? How could it be said that any 'property' was vested in him at the time of his discharge? It was the mere hope of a hope that something might come to him by reason of his surviving the ten years and of his wife's exercising her option in that particular manner. It was a mere spes, and there was nothing which could vest in the trustee in the bankruptcy."
In In re Rae [1995] BCC 102, 113 Warner J said that he was:
"not persuaded that one can, merely from a consideration of the purposes of the Insolvency Act and the non-exhaustive nature of the definition of 'property' in section 436, reach the conclusion that any asset of the bankrupt which can be realised or turned to account is 'property' within the meaning of the Act."
More recently, Chief Registrar Baister considered it "trite law that a beneficiary under a discretionary trust has no beneficial interest and nothing to which a trustee in bankruptcy can succeed under sections 283(1) and 306 Insolvency Act" (Agarwal v Canara Bank [2017] BPIR 842, 864, para 98) even though such a beneficiary may be said to have "an interest of sorts" (JSC Mezhdunarodniy Promyshlenniy Bank v Pugachev [2016] 1 WLR 160 , para 13, per Lewison LJ) and "more than a mere spes": Gartside v Inland Revenue Comrs [1968] AC 553, 618, per Lord Wilberforce."
The Applicant's case
Property vesting in the bankruptcy estate?
i) "money, goods, things in action, land and every description of property wherever situated"; and
ii) "obligations and every description of interest whether present or future or vested or contingent, arising out of, or incidental to, property."
i) Mr Tilley referred to Re Rae [1995] BCC 102, where Warner J, at p.110C-D said in relation to the first limb that the word "property" must connote anything which is capable of being owned and which ownership can be asserted or defended in legal proceedings, and on that basis that the second limb must go "wider". The point is made that an entitlement to ex gratia GLO Scheme compensation could hardly be said to be capable of being owned, such that such ownership could be asserted or defended in legal proceedings so as to fall within the first limb of the definition at least.
ii) Further, Mr Tilley referred to how the Court in Ward v Official Receiver [2012] BPIR 1073 dealt with a right to complain in respect of mis-sold payment protection insurance ("PPI") leading to the potential receipt of compensation after discharge of bankruptcy. In finding that the right to complain fell within the definition of "property" in s.436(1), District Judge Khan analysed the same in terms of an interest incidental to property, i.e. as falling within the second limb of the definition. Whilst District Judge Khan did also identify a "thing in action" falling within the first limb, this related not to the right to complain but a potential cause of action in damages for misrepresentation which would clearly have fallen within the first limb of the definition of property in s.436(1). Although Mr Tilley seeks to draw a distinction between the present case and the right to complain in Ward v Official Receiver because that case involved a complaint against the obligor rather than an ex gratia compensation scheme provided by the Government, Mr Tilley makes the point to the extent that there is any analogy with the present case, it provides no support for the first limb of s.436(1) definition being applicable on the present facts.
iii) To similar effect, Mr Tilley relies upon what was said by Singh LJ in Shop Direct Finance Co v Official Receiver [2023] EWCA Civ 367 at [56], another case involving a claim for compensation in respect of mis-sold PPI, again against the obligor/provider of the PPI. At [56], Singh LJ said that he was prepared to accept that the right to make a complaint under the relevant scheme (providing for compensation to be paid by the provider of the payment protection insurance) did fall within the definition of "property" in s.436(1), as he put it: "certainly because it is an interest "incidental to" property, i.e. the PPI policy." He then went on to say that it was unnecessary to go further and decide whether it also fell within the definition of "thing in action", but he did say that he could see force in the argument that such a right has to be transferable for it to qualify as such, referring to what Mummery LJ had said in Dear v Reeves [2002] Ch 1 at [40]. This latter case was concerned with rights of pre-emption, and Mummery LJ said therein that a distinguishing feature of a right of property, in contrast to a purely personal right, was that it was transferable, and that it might be enforced by someone other than the particular person in whom the right was initially vested. Entitlement to compensation under the GLO Scheme is, it is submitted, clearly not such a right.
iv) Relying upon these authorities, it is submitted that the entitlement of a GLO Claimant to seek compensation payable pursuant to the GLO Scheme could not, on any view, be said to be property falling within the first limb of the definition in s.436(1), as it lacks the distinguishing features of a right of property as identified in Dear v Reeves (supra) at [40] per Mummery LJ.
i) A necessity to show that there is an obligation or interest that "arises out of", or is incidental to "property" falling within the first limb; and
ii) A necessity to show that the interest or obligation in question existed, and so belonged to or was vested in the bankrupt, at commencement of their bankruptcy.
i) Firstly, the GLO Scheme relates to the making of ex gratia payments that the Government was under no legal obligation to make. It is submitted that this is sufficient in itself to break or cut any connection with the underlying causes of action behind the GLO Litigation.
ii) Secondly, it is submitted that if the entitlement to claim compensation under the GLO Scheme had truly "arisen from" the causes of action behind the GLO Litigation, or were truly "incidental" thereto, then the GLO Scheme would not have been structured in such a way as to disconnect the ability to claim from the pursuit of the underlying causes of action as it is submitted has been done by the provisions of paragraph 2 of the GLO Scheme Guidance. Particular reference is made to paragraph 2.1.5, which makes provision for individuals linked to companies or partnerships that have ceased to exist to be able make a claim.
iii) Thirdly, reliance is placed on what was said by Warner J in Re Rae (supra) at p.114B-C. In that case, the bankrupt, at the commencement of his bankruptcy, owned four fishing vessels with the benefit of fishing licences under the Sea Fish (Conservation) Act 1967. The vessels clearly constituted property (falling within the first limb of the definition in s.436(1)) that vested in his trustee in bankruptcy. The licences were invalidated by the bankruptcy and therefore did not vest in the trustee. However, the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Foods, by whom the licences were granted, recognised the entitlement of the bankrupt, and that of any person in whose favour the bankrupt waived the entitlement, to apply for a new licence. The trustee contended that the entitlement fell within the second limb of the definition of "property", being an interest incidental to the bankrupt's ownership of the vessels. It was argued on behalf of the bankrupt that the entitlement was not incidental to the ownership of the vessels because it was the creature of the minister and only existed because of an intimation by her as to the way in which she would generally exercise her discretion to grant licences. At p114B-C, Warner J said that he would have found this argument "compelling and conclusive" were it not for the terms of the ministry's letter dated 29 April 1994 in which it had been stated that it was for the court and not the ministry to assess the competing insolvency interests and to adjudicate accordingly. Mr Tilley draws an analogy with the GLO Scheme being the creature of Government intervention, but in the present case, he submits, entirely so and without a qualification of the kind found in the letter dated 29 April 1994 that was held to be significant in Re Rae.
iv) Fourthly, Mr Tilley relies upon the gap in time between the conclusion of the GLO Litigation as compromised by the Settlement Deed, and the setting up of the GLO Scheme sometime thereafter once the disparity in effect between the entitlement of the GLO Claimants under the Settlement Deed, and that of other postmasters entitled to compensation from POL under the HSS, had come to light. Mr Tilley submits that it is an important consideration that the relevant causes of action the subject matter of the assignments by the trustees in bankruptcy, and that were pursued by the GLO Litigation, were compromised by, and thus brought to an end by the Settlement Deed. Consequently, a claim to compensation under the GLO Scheme can hardly be said to have arisen out, or to be incidental to something that had been brought to an end before the GLO Scheme was established. On this point, Mr Tilley submits that Barclays Bank Plc v Marsden [2013] EWHC 3741 (Comm), a case referred to by Mr Grant KC on behalf of the Respondents in paragraph 29 of his Skeleton Argument, is to be distinguished. This latter case involved an entitlement to complain under an FCA redress scheme in respect of an interest rate swap. It followed on from an earlier compromise of "complaints, claims and causes of action" between the bank and customer that had been re-opened by a subsequent FCA review. It was argued that there could have been no contingent claim in respect of the claim for compensation to vest in the bankruptcy estate because the claim had been compromised. The argument was rejected on the facts of the case. However, Mr Tilley submits that this case is to be distinguished from the present because the FCA's powers that led to the review that re-opened the claim to compensation in that case existed at the time of the relevant bankruptcy, unlike the GLO Scheme. Further, the entitlement to complain under the FCA's redress scheme in that case would have involved the payment of compensation by the original obligor against whom the original claims that led to the compromise had been pursued. In short, the mechanism that enabled the claim for compensation was already in place at the commencement of the bankruptcy.
i) Mr Tilley suggests that there is no case where a future right that did not exist at the time of bankruptcy was held to be property simply because facts existed at the time of bankruptcy that entitled the bankrupt to claim the right when, in the future it came into existence.
ii) On this basis, Mr Tilley seeks to distinguish the present case from cases such as Patel v Jones [2001] BPIR 919:
a) Patel v Jones involved pension entitlements relating to work done prior to bankruptcy, but which were only triggered after discharge. The fact that they were only triggered after discharge did not prevent them from being "property" falling within the bankruptcy estate. The crucial point is said to be that the pension entitlement had been established prior to bankruptcy, unlike the GLO Scheme.
b) Likewise, so Mr Tilley submits, in Ex p Huggins; In re Huggins (1882) 21 ChD 85. In this case a retired judge had accepted his position as a judge on the basis he would be entitled to a pension. The benefit was held to have been conferred years before he became bankrupt, and hence was available to the trustees albeit that it would only be paid after discharge and could not have been sued for – see per Jessel MR at 89-90.
iii) Further, Mr Tilley relies on Re Rae (supra) on the basis that the entitlement to apply for the licence in that case arose from ownership of the vessels and the fact that the bankrupt had held licences associated therewith. Consequently, at the commencement of his bankruptcy, the bankrupt owned the vessels and the basis for the entitlement to apply for new licences in place of the licences that were invalidated on bankruptcy existed at that time. At p.113E, in the context of an undischarged bankruptcy, Warner J said: "I think that the recognised entitlement is a present interest incidental to the vessels". In the present case, there was no interest until the GLO Scheme was established some six years after Ms Palmer's discharge.
iv) Mr Tilley challenges Mr Grant KC's contention that his approach involves "reading down" the definition of "property" in s.436(1) in any way. Mr Tilley submits that s.283(1)(a) simply requires reading in such a way that the reference to "property" at the beginning thereof, before the words "belonging to or vested in the bankrupt", encompasses the full definition, i.e. each of the first and second limbs of the definition in s.436(1), and not just the first limb.
v) Mr Tilley submits that this approach is supported by the older, well-established authorities, a number of which were referred to without qualification in the recent decision of the Court of Appeal in Gwinnutt George [2019] Ch 471. In particular, Mr Tilley refers to Johnson v Smiley (1853) 17 Beav 223 at 230, and In Re Inkson's Trusts (1855) 21 Beav 310 at 311 as identifying the need for the relevant interest to exist at the time of bankruptcy and not simply to come into existence in consequence of subsequent events.
vi) Mr Tilley also relies upon Re Campbell [1997] Ch 14, a case concerned with the question as to whether an application for an award from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board ("CICB") constituted "property" for the purposes of the definition thereof in s.436(1), it being argued by the trustee that it fell within the second limb of the s.436(1) definition. The argument that it did so was rejected on the basis that the latter was not susceptible of referring to something which had no present existence. At p.18B-D, Knox J said this:
"Treating the matter purely as a matter of construction I am quite unable to accept that the word "property", when it is used in that definition of property, is intended to describe anything other than an existing item. In other words I do not accept that it is susceptible of referring to something which has no present existence but may possibly come into existence on some uncertain event in the future."
vii) In short, Mr Tilley submits that in order to satisfy the requirements of this second gateway, it would be necessary so show that the GLO Scheme existed at the commencement of bankruptcy, which it plainly did not. On this basis, it is submitted that, at that time, there cannot have been more than a mere hope or expectation that the Government might provide ex gratia compensation if a satisfactory and fair remedy against POL could not otherwise obtained.
Effect of the Assignment
i) "Interpretation is the ascertainment of the objective meaning of the language in which the parties have chosen to express their agreement, in its documentary, factual and commercial context. That meaning is what a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would have been available to the parties would have understood them to be using the language in the contract to mean. Both the text and context are tools in the process of interpretation."
"The text must be assessed in the light of (i) the natural and ordinary meaning of the words, (ii) any other relevant provisions of the contract, and (iii) the overall purpose of the clause and the contract" …
See - Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, 8th Edn, at p.1.
ii) A contract must be interpreted according to its meaning at the date when it was made, and therefore having regard to "the relevant background … ascertained by reference to the date at which the contract became binding on the parties": Lewison, at 3.170.
iii) Legal terms of art should be given their technical meaning in law unless there is something in the context to displace the presumption that it was intended to carry its technical meaning: Lewison, at 5.62. This involves a prior inquiry as to whether the term in question is a legal term of art: Lewison at 5.65.
i) Firstly, reliance is placed upon the fact that the Schedule to the Assignment, in providing "Details of the Action" refers to proceedings, albeit in Ms Palmer's sole name or in conjunction with other parties, but importantly between "POST OFFICE LIMITED and SUZANNE LESLEY PALMER". It is submitted that, in no sense, can a claim upon a compensation scheme established on an ex gratia basis by, and funded by, the Government fall within a definition that identifies proceedings between POL and Ms Palmer. This is on the basis that the trigger for the obligation to account to the Respondents under recital 5/clause 3 is the receipt of sums from or in respect of "the Action".
ii) Secondly, it is submitted that the GLO Scheme can, in no sense, be described as involving or concerning "proceedings", the expression used in the Schedule to the Assignment, which begins with the words "The proceedings in respect of …". It is submitted that the expression "proceedings" is a legal term of art, as illustrated by Bristol Airport v Powdrill [1990] Ch 744 at p.765F-G. In this passage, Sir Nicholas Browne-Wilkinson V-C referred to the natural meaning of the words "no other proceedings" as meaning legal proceedings or quasi-legal proceedings, at least unless there was something in the particular context to indicate otherwise. It is submitted that the Assignment was entered into in the context of ongoing legal proceedings, and that there is nothing in the context to indicate that the Schedule was referring to anything other than an adversarial legal process. So far as the earlier assignments are concerned, it is said that they were entered into in the context of the CRMS, an adversarial process involving the party against whom the relevant causes of action lay, rather than a claim made under of a government funded scheme such as the GLO Scheme.
iii) Thirdly, Mr Tilley highlights that one only gets to a consideration of this construction issue if the Respondents are unsuccessful with regard to the issue as to whether an entitlement to claim under the GLO Scheme constituted "property" falling within the bankruptcy. He submits that if it is the case that such entitlement did not fall within the relevant bankruptcy and therefore could not have been encompassed within the Assignment or other assignments of what had been vested in the Respondents, then it would be somewhat odd if the latter should give rise to an entitlement on the part of the Respondents, as trustees in bankruptcy, to the fruits of something that fell outside the terms of the Assignment or other assignments.
iv) Fourthly, Mr Tilley places reliance upon the fact that recital 5 to the Assignment, if not clause 3 thereof, referred to Ms Palmer accounting to the Respondents for £11,000 from her "Proportionate Share", and for an aggregate of 49% of "the Proportionate Share". Whilst the deeds of variation in respect of the earlier assignments could not be an admissible aid to construction in relation to the Assignment, not being shown to have been available to Ms Palmer at the time that she entered into the Assignment, Ms Palmer would have been aware that the Assignment was entered into in the context of the funding arrangements between Therium and the GLO Claimants, which provided for payment of a proportion of the recoveries to the respective GLO Claimants. It is submitted that, on the wording of recital 5, it is to the "Proportionate Share" to which Ms Palmer is entitled and to which the 49% is applied, i.e. the entitlement of Ms Palmer to share in the fruits of the GLO Litigation itself, and nothing else.
The Respondents' case
Introduction
i) The GLO Claimants had borne the risk of the GLO Litigation against POL, but their success had been marred by the fact that they had had to account for some 75% of the award achieved as against POL under clause 2 of the Settlement Deed to Therium as litigation funders. Thus, notwithstanding being the "trailblazers", they had been undercompensated. A further unfairness is said to be that whilst the GLO Claimants had, as part of the Settlement Deed, negotiated provision for compensation from POL for other postmasters not involved in the GLO Litigation through the HSS, these other postmasters would not be required to share the fruits thereof with a litigation funder as had the GLO Claimants. The GLO Scheme is therefore to be considered to be a way of putting the GLO Claimants in the same position as these other postmasters and making up for the deficiencies of the Settlement Deed.
ii) The Minister, Paul Scully MP, in making the statement announcing the GLO Scheme on 22 March 2022, had identified this unequal treatment and referred to the additional funding being made available "to give those in the GLO group compensation similar to that which is available to their non-GLO peers."
Property vesting in the bankrupt estate?
i) The PPI compensation case of Ward v Official Receiver (supra), where the award was held to vest in the trustee in circumstances in which the payment was made two years after the bankrupt's discharge from bankruptcy, after the bankrupt had brought the complaint himself during his bankruptcy. Mr Grant KC made the point that the property in respect of which the claim was said to have arisen out of, or to be incidental to, so as to satisfy the definition in the second limb of to s.436(1), namely the PPI policy, had long since ceased to exist prior to bankruptcy, yet the requirements of the second limb were held to have been satisfied.
ii) In respect of Shop Direct v Official Receiver (supra), Mr Grant KC took the point that notwithstanding the Court of Appeal's finding that, under the relevant rules of the Financial Ombudsman scheme, the "complainant" (whose knowledge was relevant the limitation purposes) was the individual bankrupt, the entitlement to complain, and thus to compensation, was held to vest in the trustee in bankruptcy – see per Singh LJ at [52]-[53], and [58].
iii) As to Barclays Bank v Marsden (supra) where the entitlement to complain under an FCA redress scheme was held to vest in the trustee in bankruptcy, Mr Grant KC referred to the fact that the bankrupt in question had been made bankrupt in 2012 and discharged in 2013, and that the offer of redress was only made in 2014 under a process that was gratuitous and non-actionable by the customer. Mr Grant KC referred to HHJ Kramer, sitting as a judge of the High Court, having said at [43]:
"Mr Marsden, too, has more than a moral claim to the redress offer. Whilst he has no contractual entitlement to receive an offer, he can complain to the bank's regulator if the offer is not provided in accordance with the review. Following Gwinnutt and the very wide description of property in s.436 of the Act, it is irrelevant that under the redress scheme Mr Marsden had no contractual right to an offer. The availability of an offer under the scheme was property in his estate at the time of the bankruptcy provided that it existed as a contingent claim at the time."
i) As he put it in submissions, "the whole concept of a future right means that it does not exist"; and
ii) The fact that there may have been no such case is not to the point.
i) At the time that she was made bankrupt, Ms Palmer had vested in her a cause or causes of action against POL that allowed her to make a claim against the latter, subject to obtaining the Assignment.
ii) With the benefit of the Assignment, she participated in the GLO Litigation and was a party to the Settlement Deed. However, in consequence of the funding arrangements required in order to pursue the GLO Litigation she, along with the other GLO Claimants ended up with an inadequate settlement in contrast to the provision made by the Settlement Deed for postmasters who had not participated in the GLO Litigation, but who had causes of action against POL, through the HSS.
iii) The GLO Scheme was set up by the Government to alleviate the consequences of the inadequate settlement and in order, effectively, to make good the claims and causes of action that Ms Palmer and the other GLO Claimants had against POL given such deficiencies.
iv) It can therefore be seen that the future interest that has now come into existence through the entitlement to claim compensation through the GLO Scheme did arise out of, and is incidental to "property", i.e. the causes of action behind the GLO Litigation.
v) The fact that the GLO Scheme was the voluntary act of the Minister/Government is not, it is submitted, to the point.
vi) There is, it is said, nothing in the statutory definition of "property" that requires the future interest in question to have existed as at the commencement bankruptcy.
vii) There is, it is said, nothing within the GLO Scheme Guidance to suggest that a trustee in bankruptcy could not apply thereunder, with a view to obtaining compensation to pay off creditors and thereby enable annulment.
The effect of the Assignment
i) It is submitted that the concept of "Action" as referred to in the Assignment is anchored in original CRMS established by POL as described in paragraphs 17 and 18 of Mr Abdulali's witness statement. This, it is said, is made clear by the fact that recital 3 to the Assignment defers to the Schedule so far as the definition of "the Action" is concerned, and by the fact that even in the Assignment to Ms Palmer reference is made in the Schedule not solely to legal proceedings in the strict sense, but to the CRMS and "all or any connected proceedings going forward".
ii) On this basis, it is submitted that where "proceedings" are referred to in both the third and fourth lines of recital 3 to the Assignment, this is a reference to proceedings in a wider sense than simply legal proceedings in the strict sense, and thus that the reference to "connected proceedings" on the fourth line of recital 3 is capable of extending to, and does extend to something other than legal proceedings.
iii) Once this is understood, then the concept of "Action" as used in the Assignment is sufficiently wide to include the GLO Scheme. Thus, for the purposes of recital 5 to and clause 3 of the Assignment, the references to "any sums from the Action" and "for any sums received … In respect of the Action", extend to sums received by way of compensation under the GLO Scheme.
iv) It is submitted that no particular significance attaches to the fact that the Schedule refers to proceedings between POL and Ms Palmer, particularly bearing in mind that recital 3 does not identify POL as the required counterparty, and the Applicant is the sole shareholder in POL.
v) Further, it is submitted that no significance should be attached to the use of the expression "Proportionate Share" in recital 5 having regard to the fact that the parties had not confined the relevant obligation to account for sums received to the GLO Litigation as funded by Therium in respect of which a "Proportionate Share" could be relevant. Mr Grant KC submits that the point can be tested by considering what the position would have been if an individual offer had been made by POL to Ms Palmer. If monies been received pursuant thereto in the context of the GLO Litigation, it is said that it could not seriously be suggested that the monies received did not fall within the terms of recital 5 to, and clause 3 of the Assignment.
Determination
Discussion
i) The HSS, being available to those who are not involved in the GLO Litigation and party to the Settlement Deed, is available to those who continue to have undetermined causes of action against POL, which such causes of action, it is common ground, will have vested in the postmasters' trustees in bankruptcy in the case of those who were made bankrupt. It is a scheme established by POL to respond to these postmasters and, in the event that they became bankrupt, their trustees in bankruptcy. On the other hand, the GLO Scheme is an ex gratia scheme established by the Government as a matter of political will rather than any obligation to respond to the position of postmasters who have exhausted and compromised their claims against POL in circumstances that have produced an unfair result. Significantly, the GLO Scheme does not involve the making of further claims against POL.
ii) The ability to claim against the GLO Scheme is not inevitably linked to the cause of action that may have existed against POL, and those who directly had the benefit thereof as demonstrated by the ability of shareholders or directors of companies that have ceased to exist, and partners of partnerships that have ceased to exist, to claim against the GLO Scheme as a "linked individual".
iii) As I read them, the provisions of paragraph 5.7 of the GLO Scheme Guidance are specifically directed at providing compensation to postmasters who can show that they were made bankrupt in consequence of a Horizon Shortfall. While similar considerations might apply to a claim being pursued by a trustee in bankruptcy on behalf of the bankruptcy estate as against the HSS, paragraph 5.7 is, as I see it, very much more directed at providing compensation to the bankrupt Postmaster himself or herself as illustrated by paragraph 5.7.7 providing that if the postmaster wishes to obtain an annulment, then the GLO Scheme would cover the reasonable legal costs in doing so.
i) The statutory objective behind the relevant provisions of IA 1986, reflecting principles of public policy, is to ensure that all of a debtor's property capable of realisation should be vested in the trustee for him to realise and distribute the proceeds amongst creditors, and the relevant provisions of the IA 1986 that fall to be considered in the present case require to be construed and applied in a manner consistent with this statutory objective, and the public policy considerations behind the same.
ii) The word "property" in s.436(1) IA 1986 is not a term of art and takes its meaning from its context, and indeed is not, in truth, a definition at all given that it is expressed in non-exclusive terms, only setting out what is included.
Does the entitlement to GLO Compensation vest in the Respondents?
i) The GLO Scheme is an ex gratia scheme established as a matter of government decision and discretion;
ii) The claims and causes of action against POL were extinguished by the Settlement Deed so as to leave the GLO Claimants without any further remedy against POL, and that was the position that pertained at the time that the GLO Scheme was announced and set up; and
iii) As demonstrated by paragraph 2.1.5 of the GLO Scheme Guidance, the ability to make a claim under the GLO Scheme is not inexorably linked to the person or entity that might have been entitled to the benefit of the relevant claim or cause against POL.
i) Fry LJ's analysis in Ex p. Dever at p.670 referred to in paragraph 89 above;
ii) The approach taken in Johnson v Smiley (supra), (also referred to by Newey LJ in Gwinnutt v George (supra), at [10(viii)]), where, in the context a consideration as to whether the possibility of being able to sell the chance of receiving a legacy pointed to it being property that would vest in a trustee because it was capable of being transferred, Romilly MR, at p.130, observed that, if not sold, the legacy would not pass to the bankrupt's assignees, i.e. his trustees in bankruptcy. He then commented:
"When I speak of an interest which the bankrupt could dispose of, I mean an existing interest, whether vested or contingent, and which if conveyed or released and assigned by him requires no further act on the part of the bankrupt, to vest it in the purchaser."
iii) In similar vein, in Re Inkson's Trusts (supra), at p.311, Romilly MR observed:
"All that passes to the assignees is an existing interest; but where it is only mere possibility or expectancy to which the bankrupt will be entitled under the contract, and it continued such until he obtains his certificate, the assignees have no right."
iv) In a more recent context, it is clear from the passage of the judgment of Knox J in Re Campbell (supra) at p.18B-D cited in paragraph 59(vi) above, that he considered that only an existing interest would suffice in the context of a case that relied upon the second limb of the definition of "property" in s.436(1) IA 2016.
v) In Re Rae (supra) at 113E, Warner J described the entitlement of the bankrupt to apply for a fishing licence as: "a present interest incidental to the vessels" [my emphasis]. In commenting on this case in Re Celtic Extraction Ltd (supra), Morritt LJ, at [29], referred to Warner J as having: "… decided that the "entitlement" was within the definition of "property" as a present interest in property, namely the vessels" [my emphasis].
vi) In Barclays Bank v Marsden (supra) at [43], HHJ Kramer, in the passage referred to in paragraph 73(iii) above referred to the availability of an offer under the FCA scheme as being property in the bankrupts estate at the time of the bankruptcy provided that it existed as a contingent claim at the time. [My emphasis].
Effect of the Assignment
i) The Assignment provided a mechanism for the Respondents to transfer or assign to Ms Palmer sufficient by way of rights and entitlement to pursue causes of action against POL with a view to recovering damages to compensate her in respect of the claims that she had against POL;
ii) The quid pro quo of this was that Ms Palmer would be required to account to the Respondents for a proportion (£11,000 plus 49%) of any sums received by Ms Palmer in pursuing the claims.
Conclusion in summary
i) The entitlement to claim and receive compensation under the GLO Scheme, and any compensation received under the GLO, does not constitute "property" vested in the Respondents as trustees in bankruptcy of Ms Palmer on a proper application of s.283(1), s.306(1) and s. 436(1) IA 1986;
ii) Ms Palmer is under no liability pursuant to recital 5 to, or clause 3 of the Assignment, or otherwise, to account to the Respondents for any part of any compensation that she might receive pursuant to the GLO Scheme.
Note 1 The correct description may in many instances be “sub-postmasters” rather than “postmasters”, but I refer to them collectively as postmasters. [Back] Note 2 For what it is worth, it is to be noted that the s.167 of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 had defined “property” as including:
“… money, goods, things in action, land and every description of property, whether real or personal, and whether situate in England or elsewhere; also obligations, easements, and every description of estate, interest and profit, present and future, vested or contingent, arising out of or incident to property as above defined.”
The Bankruptcy Act 1869 was in the same terms, but without the words “whether situate in England or elsewhere.” [Back]