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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 >> Shankland & Ors v McKeand (Re Lion House Portfolio Ltd - Insolvency Act 1986) [2024] EWHC 610 (Ch) (20 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/610.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 610 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF LION HOUSE PORTFOLIO LTD (in liquidation) (crn.05074818)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) GARY PAUL SHANKLAND (2) JAMIE TAYLOR (as the Joint Liquidators of Lion House Portfolio Ltd) (3) LION HOUSE PORTFOLIO LTD |
Applicants |
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- and- |
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IAIN URQUHART McKEAND |
Respondent |
____________________
Iain McKeand in person
Hearing dates: 4-8, 11, 13 December 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
ICC JUDGE PRENTIS:
Lion House "was set up as a vehicle for me to use for 2 main purposes:
1. Provide loan note holders with a better return than they could get in the regulated market particularly in the early years due to the recession that the economy and the markets were suffering from.
2. To allow me to buy companies and benefit from their growth and ultimate sale".
3.1. Causing or permitting £1,757,168 to which Lion House was entitled to be paid to himself on about 28 November 2013.
3.2 Causing or permitting Lion House to advance monies to entities owned and controlled by him, being:
a. to Mac Capital LLP ("Mac Capital"), £162,277;
b. to Mac1 Sports Limited ("Mac1 Sports"), £220,991;
c. to Accrued Equities (UK) Limited ("Accrued Equities"), £939,573;
d. to Country Park Landscapes LLP ("Country Park"), £33,000.
3.3. Causing or permitting Lion House to pay to Now Technologies Limited ("Now Technologies") £149,861 for shares which it issued to him.
3.4. Causing or permitting shares in Fruehauf Ltd ("Fruehauf") (the "Fruehauf Shares") to be recorded in its register as his, and on about 28 September 2015 causing or permitting them to be transferred to Red Circle Investments Limited ("Red Circle"). This allegation contains the rider: "The [Liquidators] do not believe that the Fruehauf Shares were in fact transferred by [Lion House] to [Mr McKeand] but if they were then [Mr McKeand] caused [Lion House] to do so wrongfully and in breach of duty".
3.5. Receiving "benefits from Fruehauf as a result of his position as director of [Lion House] and/ or owner or controller of the shares".
Lion House's business model and operations
"Most of the initial money came from SIPPs. Around that time the regulator had clamped down on commissions available from pensions and so most financial advisers were not interested in working on people's pensions particularly if their fund amount was low as there was no financial reward in it for them.
I decided that this provided an opportunity for me and an opportunity for the pension holders to move away from the regulated world and try and grow their pension funds".
"In forming our opinion on these financial statements, which is not qualified, we have considered the adequacy of the disclosures made in the accounting policies… which set out the reasons for the preparation of these accounts on the going concern basis. These reasons contain assumptions and judgements which are materially uncertain, that [Lion House] will receive sufficient income to enable it to settle its liabilities for the foreseeable future. Should these assumptions and judgements prove to be incorrect, this may cast significant doubt about [its] ability to continue as a going concern. The financial statements do not include the adjustments that would result if the company was unable to continue as a going concern".
"So, [Accrued Equities], as a going concern, would borrow more money, invest in new businesses. Those businesses have already taken—have already understood would be owned in full or in part by myself. As I treat the whole thing as one, then the interest payments would obviously satisfy the new loan note holders and contribute to the debt to the old loan note holders, but the ability for me to fund the business as a going concern would be there if these companies were profitable, which is, in fact, what happened because I put money into [Accrued Equities] and [Lion House] to cover these shortfalls".
"The point is, the shortfall would be covered by myself, which it was. I put money into the company as the owner of the businesses because I wanted them to be a going concern and I wanted to make sure all the loan notes got paid".
"There will be periods of time when cash investors are more plentiful and there will be periods of time when pension funders are more—you know, we didn't have control over that. We would then use that money, as we have explained before, to manage the businesses"; and
"…had the people who owed the money… continued to pay their loan notes, the company would have kept going".
"Hi.
I am hoping careys will sort their issues out with FCA this week and we can release some cash but if not we are going to be squeezed.
Donovan is not responding to my calls.
Bamford?
How are we doing on the loans?
I have about 250k that needs repaying as well as the new money we need in…
Any thoughts?".
Careys was a SIPP manager; Donovan and Bamford potential investors.
"…the creditors of Lion House included Accrued Equities at £285,000, Berkeley Strategies at £187,000 and Mr McKeand himself at £694,000. I had several meetings and conversations with Mr McKeand… and he confirmed that Lion House had the support of those creditors with which he was associated. I was therefore satisfied that Lion House was solvent with the support of Mr McKeand. Mr McKeand repeatedly confirmed his support of Lion House to me throughout the period of time that Anstey Bond LLP were the retained accountants for the company. I did not, however, obtain formal letters of support from Mr McKeand in this respect, because we were never in a position to actually prepare any accounts for 2016 or thereafter… Clearly, however, Mr McKeand did support both Lion House and Accrued Equities in terms of their solvency".
Books and records
The Fruehauf Shares
"The [Liquidators] do not believe that the Fruehauf Shares were in fact transferred by [Lion House] to [Mr McKeand] but if they were then [Mr McKeand] caused [Lion House] to do so wrongfully and in breach of duty".
"The fact that the transfer of shares was defective does not eradicate that [Mr McKeand] thought and acted as though the Fruehauf shares had (for all intents and purposes) been transferred to his benefit. The shares were treated by [him] as if they were no longer assets of [Lion House]".
"1. As of the date of this declaration being executed, we are the registered holder of the 80% of the share capital of Fruehauf…
2. We hold the shares… as the nominee and bare trustee of the… Beneficial Owner [Mr McKeand]…
3. We shall at all times hold the interest in the shares, all dividends and distributions of profits… and all other rights, powers, privileges and property attributable to the shares upon trust for the Beneficial Owner absolutely.
4. The rights, powers and privileges which may vest in or attach to LHP by virtue of the entry of LHP in the register of members… shall be exercisable only with the authority of and in accordance with the express directions of the Beneficial Owner…
6. LHP will dispose of, transfer, pay and deal with the shares… only in accordance with the authority and at the direction of the Beneficial Owner".
"Initially it was thought best to have the shares in the acquired companies in the name of [Lion House] until such time as all the debt owed by those companies was repaid. That is why initially the shares were held in trust by [Lion House] for me".
"The structure, which was put together by Newman, involved either Lion House or Accrued Equities (or both) loaning the required amount to the target company to facilitate the turnaround or rescue of the business… As part of the arrangement, Lion House or Accrued Equities would also acquire the shares, or a proportion of the shares, in the target company".
This was elaborated later.
"…on the advice of either Mr Murrell or Mr Newman (I cannot now recall which), the strategy in relation to Lion House and Accrued Equities was that, on the repayment of the monies due from the target company, the shares that were held by Lion House and by Accrued Equities would be transferred over to me. The intended end game was always for me to acquire the shares in these target companies in my own name. It was, as I say, Mr Murrell or Mr Newman who came up with this strategy, and from an accounting point of view I took that advice and understood that this was an entirely acceptable method for me to ac quire the shares in my own name after the loans had been repaid. As part of this arrangement, deeds of trust were prepared between either Accrued Equities or Lion House and myself, which were executed contemporaneously with the loan… and the issue of shares to Lion House as the lender… There was a template deed of trust that we used for this… The deed of trust for the Lion House shares in Fruehauf was, therefore, prepared and updated on the same basis… I adopted the process, as advised by the accountants, in relation to all of the companies…".
"However, I did not attempt to transfer the shares from Lion House to me. Nor did I look to invoke the deed of trust. Then, some weeks or months later, Newman told me in a conversation that he had transferred the shares from Lion House to me. I did not want the shares to be transferred to me. My intention, instead, was that the shares could be transferred to… Red Circle. I told Mr Newman that he had jumped the gun, and that he needed to fix what he had done. Subsequently, Mr Newman transferred the shares on to Red Circle. The purported transfer of the shares to me, therefore, was an error on the part of Mr Newman and was never authorised".
"I did not, at the time, give any thought to how Newman had purported to transfer the shares to me or to Red Circle or what he might have produced in terms of the relevant documentation for the transfers. Certainly, from 2015, I believe that there was a general acceptance within Fruehauf (including Mr Thomson and Mr Mulraney) that Red Circle (not me) was the shareholder. That said, I do not believe that a stock transfer form was ever prepared or signed for either purported transfer, nor any share certificate issued. No money was ever paid across. There was no board meeting as such and no resolution of the board to formally recognise the transfer. Mr Newman, it appears, just had the names added to the share register. There was no transaction to go with the entry on the register.
I now realise that Mr Newman's actions in purporting to register the shares in my name, and then in the name of Red Circle, were of no legal effect…
I therefore accept the liquidators' contention that the relevant shares in Fruehauf remain with and have always been the property of Lion House. The consequences of this, therefore, are that there has been no transfer to me of the shares (or to Red Circle). There is, as a result, no basis, in fact or law, for the liquidators to pursue a claim that I have misappropriated the shares…".
"So, in terms of the awkward question of the share transfer and the trust deed, the trust deed was an option as far as I was concerned. It wasn't a definite. Mr Newman did transfer the shares without my permission. That was when I started to worry about what he was doing. It was then transferred into Red Circle for safekeeping and I felt that was probably just- let's see what happens, let's see what's going on with Newman, let's see what's going on with the legal stuff and that's why it never changed. So, the benefit of Fruehauf was always going to be to repay all the loan note holders, including myself, as a first thing, as a first option, and they knew that. All of them."
"I was informed that the best way to secure, from a tax point of view, was to have a trust deed available. My understanding was that that didn't take effect until I invoked it. So, again, it sat in a drawer… I mean, I didn't do this for the love of it. I did this to make money and I did this to own the businesses. It made sense to me to have some sort of criteria that suggested when you would move them. It didn't mean I will move them. It doesn't mean I'm going to. It means I could. That was all it was. In business, you try and create as many options for yourself as possible. Now, I owned the companies anyway, so you could argue it was slightly irrelevant. But it was only done on that basis".
"Q. I think you did produce a declaration of trust somewhere in the documents, but I think it's been made clear that you're not saying that that was ever effected, it was never considered to have been carried into effect?
A. As you can imagine, when you're setting up a new entity, such as this, and a new idea that was relating to market situations, it was a fluid situation, in the sense that we had to review, we had to be aware of our potential issues with regulation, that's why we talked to the FSA, as it was then, on a regular basis, to make sure we were doing everything correctly.
Q. Right.
A. Therefore, I was advised that, if I wanted to move these companies out in the future, from a tax position- bear in mind I was still in the UK at the time- a trust document would be useful, but my understanding was that, even though it may be signed, it was not in force. So, it was an option available to me, as far as I was concerned, but I never actually enforced it.
Q. I'm just trying to understand about that. Why would it be useful to you to have a document, as it were backdated… but not actually put into force. Why would that be useful for you for tax reasons?
A. Well, I'm not an accountant as is patently obvious. I was informed by my advisers that this was a document that would allow me to transfer shares without any tax implication".
"Q. The word 'until'… means that when the debt is repaid something happens, yes?
A. Not necessarily, no.
Q. That literally doesn't make any sense, Mr McKeand… You have said it holds the shares 'until' the debt owed by the companies was repaid. That implies that something will happen. And you have connected it with the trust for you. I put it to you, what you are saying there is that the shares will be held by Lion House until the debts are repaid and then they will be transferred to you?
A. I disagree with your analysis".
"Q. Now, the sentence "The intended game was always" can only mean that this was the plan from the beginning?
A. Well, I've just told you that that's what we talked about at the beginning, yes, at the beginning. At the beginning.
Q. At the beginning, the intended endgame was for you to acquire the shares when the debt was paid?
A. Okay, we can be very pedantic about the use of the English language, but when I say "in my name", my name as far as I'm concerned, I own a company, it's in my name, I own it individually, it's in my name. So, I own the business. So the strategy of taking it out of a company would have been for beneficial reasons in terms of borrowing and all that kind of stuff and being able to grow the business as an independent entity, rather than being part of- almost like an incubator, which is a very normal strategy for a lot of businesses out there, as you may be aware of.
Q. Mr McKeand, that's not what you say in your witness statement.
A. That's your interpretation of what I say in my witness statement and I'm giving you a different interpretation".
"Q. You are essentially accusing Mr Newman of having anticipated your instruction; is that a fair summary?
A. I don't know what his mind-set was. He did a lot of things off his own bat that I had no clue about…
"Q. You're not seriously saying, are you, that you didn't want the shares transferred to you…
A. At that time, no I didn't.
Q. 'I don't want the shares. I want them to stay in Lion House', is that what you're saying?
A. If I'd wanted them, I would have clearly expressed the requirement, and I would have discussed that it went into a company. Because I would never have held them in my own name, as such. I wanted them in a separate company…
Q. …just to clarify, so I understand what your evidence is, you're saying you didn't want them in your name, you wanted them in the name of the company?
A. What I'm saying to you is that the initial strategy of removing them from the group would have been to put them into my name, but what would be in my name personally would probably be the company because that gives you more protection rather than having them in [my own] name. I very rarely, if ever, would put anything in my name. That was the problem".
"I remember this very distinctly. I was in the office that I tended to use in Fruehauf and I'd heard about the transfer of the shares' ownership, and I said to you 'That will never stick', or words to that effect, and you said, 'We'll see'. Now, it's one of those things… that stays with you because, in my mind, it gave me an insight into what your thinking was".
The CorpAcq Payment
"The sum of £1,757,158… was indeed paid into my personal bank account by CorpAcq. My recollection is that this was due to a mistake on the part of CorpAcq by sending it to the wrong account and that the money was meant to be paid directly into the account of Lion House. CorpAcq simply sent the money to the wrong account. I am particularly angered that the liquidators have included this amount in their claim against me, as I have already explained… that the money was paid to me by mistake".
He then says a little more about the mistake and his use of the proceeds.
"It may be that the error was mine for providing CorpAcq with the wrong account number. Either way, it does not particularly matter. The money was sent to my personal bank account in error, which I recognised and rectified… [My identified bank statements show] the money coming in to my account in November and being paid across, our of the account, in December".
Post-28 November 2013 advances
Mac Capital
"Mac Capital was set up by Don Murrell, who was an external accountant and tax adviser who we used. The idea was that it would be the vehicle through which I, and others like David Snodin, would invoice other companies in the group for services performed from time to time. So, Mac Capital could only have issued invoices and received cash. It did not borrow money and did not require funding. I therefore do not see how or why Accrued Equities or Lion House would have put money into Mac Capital, and I therefore do not believe that Mr Shankland can be correct here".
Mac1 Sports
"The company was therefore founded with an investment from Lion House and Accrued Equities. The decision to invest was not mine alone- Mr Newman agreed that it was a good concept… However, over a long period, rumours persisted amongst the players about [the LLP] and they were not keen to work with an agency that was involved in a legal battle. Eventually, it became clear that the business would not succeed. However, it was not dissolved until 2016".
"…the JG acquisition creates no value over the life of the 3 year projections. Any profit generated from JG is eaten up by financing costs and retaining the existing partners. Existing CA heavily subsidises the acquisition and would end up in almost exactly the same position by doing nothing as the cash generated from existing CA is used in JG".
"We were… acutely aware of the risky nature of the business of investing in distressed and turnaround opportunities… It was exactly because of this risk that we were extremely careful in evaluating opportunities that were presented to us. I was confident in the experience and the skill set of the team that we had assembled. That team was tasked with rigorously reviewing the details and the finances of every opportunity presented to us… Of course, the business depended on coming across opportunities to invest- and those opportunities only came up occasionally and on an ad hoc basis. That is the nature of the business. As and when an opportunity arose, it was considered professionally and with the level of due diligence required".
Country Park
Accrued Equities
"We supported [Accrued Equities] because [it] had a lot of money outstanding owed to it. Why would you not? It doesn't make any sense not to. You know, you're looking at the same ownership, you're looking at the same loan note holders. So a loan note holder in [Accrued Equities] is probably a loan note holder in Lion House. I would say 90% match, 80-90% match. So of course you're going to support the companies. And we did it from day one, so it is not unusual".
"Questions have been asked about, why would Lion House support [Accrued Equities]. Well, a number of reasons. One is, as I have said, almost 90% of the loan note holders were the same people. So they had beneficial interests in each company. It was in their best interests to keep both alive. [Accrued Equities] in particular had many loan notes outstanding that it would have expected to fully recover. Now, again, recover at what point and recover how? Would that be recovered because the companies would do well and make lots of money? Or would that be recovered because we had to take them to court?".
"I believed that the money that was owed to [Accrued Equities]… was recoverable and would be in excess of the money required".
"I have explained that, unknown to me at the time, when loan notes were created to lend to target companies, Mr Newman often just issued a single loan note from either Lion House or Accrued Equities, even if the money was coming from both Lion House and Accrued Equities. As a result, on paper, Lion House ended up advancing money to Accrued Equities, when this was never my intention. I believe that this must be the reason why Accrued Equities is shown as receiving advances from Lion House. I cannot think of any other reason why Accrued Equities would be taking advances from Lion House. Again, none of this was done at my instigation".
The measure of compensation
181.1 according to its accounts, and despite (perhaps) the £1.757m being loaned as well as movements on the bank account, the net debt from Accrued Equities to Lion House increased from its 31 August 2013 £1,027,414 only to the next year's £2,120,763;
181.2 the debt then decreased to 31 August 2015's £1,943,255;
181.3 according the 2016 trial balance, there was then a small increase to £1,943,858;
181.4 the Mac Capital and Country Park debts disappeared entirely from Lion House's 2015 accounts, although that may well have been because they were written off rather than paid;
181.5 Mac1 Sports was not in the 2016 trial balance, perhaps for the same reason.
The Now Technologies shares
Other potential defences
Conclusions