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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 >> Kendall & Anor v Ball & Anor (Re Sherwood Oak Homes Ltd - Sherwood Oak Holdings Ltd - Insolvency Act 1986) [2024] EWHC 746 (Ch) (28 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/746.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 746 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF SHERWOOD OAK HOMES LIMITED (In Administration)
IN THE MATTER OF SHERWOOD OAK HOLDINGS LTD (In Administration)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Royal Courts of Justice 7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) ARRON KENDALL (2) MILAN VUCELJIC |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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(1) TIMOTHY DORIAN BALL (2) CAROL BALL |
Respondents |
____________________
Chloe Shuffrey (instructed by HCR Legal LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 19-20 March 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely at 2.30pm on 28 March 2024 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by e-mail.
ICC JUDGE GREENWOOD:
"During the extensive 7 year planning process, the removal of the existing bus stop on the MDC Bus Stop Land as part of the main site access has been in the contemplation of all parties for the duration of the planning processes."
And further, that:
"Delays in dedicating the MDC Bus Stop Land will jeopardise our client's ability to deliver the development in a timely fashion which in turn impacts the delivery of much needed housing in Mansfield along with payment of significant s.106 contributions including those for health and education in the area."
"Bus stop transfer - you are considering whether to seek to transfer the land into yours and Carole's names as you (rather than Sherwood Oak Holdings) are providing the purchase monies. We discussed whether it would be worthwhile doing this or buying in Sherwood Oak Holdings name and protecting yours and Carole's interest by putting a charge over the bus stop land. OakNorth and Rubicon's consent to that charge will be required. If the land is being purchased in your individual names, the planning documentation (eg s.278 agreement) would need to be amended as it is the landowner who needs to agree to the works. This is likely to delay the development works and will also mean that from a plot sales perspective, you and Carole will need to be party to the sales documentation."
"Raffingers [who were Holdings' accountants] to be advised to note within the next audit the payments to be made from the funds loaned to the company by [Mr Ball]. These payments being settled are for the acquisition of the bus stop land from [MDC] by [Mr and Mrs Ball] - costs amounting to £156,814.20 inclusive of SDLT Indemnity Insurance."
"We discussed whether the s.278 agreement should be amended to include you and Carol in your individual capacity given that [the Land] is to be transferred to both in the first instance.
It was decided that we'll work towards getting the s.278 agreement in a position to complete on/or before the day of the refinance with Pluto and the transfer of [the Land] from you and Carol to [Holdings].
16.1. that he opposed the application, because the Land was purchased "using my personal money and not money from a lender or the Companies";
16.2. that he "was funding the purchase of the Land without any assistance from banks or funders" and that he and Mrs Ball "were advised by SHMA to hold the Land in [their] own names";
16.3. that he had "explained to Victoria Bovington and Stephen Woolfe that the funding for the Development Site had been exhausted so I would have to personally use the monies I had loaned to Holdings to purchase the Land. SHMA suggested that the land could be purchased by Carol and I, in our personal names, as it was my money that was being used";
16.4. that his intention was that Holdings would purchase the Land from Mr and Mrs Ball, "once funding had been arranged and a purchase price agreed";
16.5. the reference to "funding" was to the possibility of financing which he was at that time "exploring", with "Octopus and Pluto Finance", and in respect of which he exhibited Heads of Terms with Pluto dated 4 July 2023 and 15 September 2023, and an Indicative Loan Summary with Octopus dated 18 April 2023; Mr Ball's evidence was that the desired funding (and thus the intended purchase of the Land by Holdings) "did not happen because the Administrators were appointed";
16.6. that the "money used to purchase the Land was loaned to Holdings by me and appears in my Director's Loan Account" in its financial statements for the years to 29 February 2020, 28 February 2021 and 28 February 2022; those statements were exhibited and showed Mr Ball to have been owed £2,653,238 (2020), £2,602,727 (2021) and £2,488,219 (2022); in other words, as mentioned above, the purchase price was not paid using a sum specifically provided by Mr Ball for that purpose.
The Scope of Section 234 IA 86 and Paragraph 63 of Schedule B1
"(2) Where any person has in his possession or control any property, books, papers or records to which the company appears to be entitled, the court may require that person forthwith (or within such period as the court may direct) to pay, deliver, convey, surrender or transfer the property, books, papers or records to the office-holder."
"25. This brings me to section 234 of the 1986 Act …. This section can be traced back to section 100 of the Companies Act 1862 (25 & 26 Vict c 89). Originally it was confined to applications against contributories and any "trustee, receiver, banker, or agent, or officer of the company". It provided a summary procedure by which they could be required to "pay, deliver, convey, surrender, or transfer" to the liquidator "any sum or balance, or books, papers, estate, or effects, which happen to be in his hands for the time being, and to which the company is prima facie entitled".
26. In its original form, such an application was not an originating process. It was an application in the liquidation, invoking the summary jurisdiction of the Companies Court against certain persons connected with the company and in possession of its money or property. Its purpose was to enable the liquidator to carry out his statutory functions. It did not necessarily involve a determination of title. If, for example, the liquidator appeared on affidavit evidence to be prima facie entitled to property, books or records which he needed to proceed with the liquidation, the court could in its discretion order the person in possession to hand over the property and argue about ownership later.
27. ….
28. The scope of the summary procedure was enlarged by provisions of the Insolvency Act 1985 which are now contained in section 234 of the 1986 Act. It is now available against any person who has in his control "any property, books, papers or records to which the company appears to be entitled". It remains, however, a summary discretionary remedy, obtainable by a liquidator or other office-holder for the purpose of enabling him to carry out his functions and which does not necessarily involve any determination of title.
29. When administration was introduced by the Insolvency Act 1985, section 395 of the Companies Act 1985 was amended simply by adding the words "or administrator" after the word "liquidator". This seems to me to indicate that the section was to operate in relation to a company in administration exactly as it had in relation to a company in liquidation. An administration order did not vest any of the company's property in the administrator any more than a winding up order vested it in the liquidator. Instead, section 14 of the 1986 Act gave the administrator powers in many respects similar to those of a liquidator over the company's property:
"(1) The administrator of a company—(a) may do all such things as may be necessary for the management of the affairs, business and property of the company, and (b) without prejudice to the generality of paragraph (a), has the powers specified in Schedule 1 to this Act ..."
30. Paragraph 1 of Schedule 1 gives the administrator power to "take possession of, collect and get in the property of the company and, for that purpose, to take such proceedings as may seem to him expedient" and paragraph 5 confers power to bring any action in the name and on behalf of the company.
31. Ordinarily, therefore, an action brought by an administrator to assert a claim on behalf of the company should be in the name of the company. The title to the claim will be vested in the company. …"
"26. As provided in s.234(2), the court is given power to direct the transfer to the office holder of any property, books or records to which the company "appears to be entitled". "Property" can include real property as the reference to "convey" and "transfer" makes clear. But the provisions of subss. (3) and (4) also confirm that an application under s.234 may not (and probably is not intended to) provide a definitive ruling about title nor is the possibility of such a ruling a pre-condition to the exercise of the power. Sections 234 and 236 are designed to assist an office holder in the carrying out of the relevant insolvency process by placing under his control the property and records to which the company appears to be entitled. Although, as Warner J recognised in Re London Iron & Steel Co Ltd [1990] B.C.C. 159, a determination of whether the company appears to be entitled to the property does not preclude the resolution at the hearing of the grounds upon which the application is resisted, it may not provide an appropriate procedure for determining complex issues about title involving, in particular, claims by third parties. Section 234 creates a summary procedure whereby the office holder in his own name may seek the transfer of company property to him. Although the entitlement to such an order will depend upon the company's apparent rights to the property in question and the judge will have to resolve any dispute about entitlement raised by the respondent in the proceedings, the purpose of the power conferred on the court is and remains as Lord Hoffmann explained in Smith (Administrator of Cosslett (Contractors) Ltd) v Bridgend CBC [2001] UKHL 58; [2002] 1 AC 336; [2001] BCC 740 at [26]–[28] that of enabling the office holder to carry out his statutory functions by placing the apparent property of the company under his control. This process does not therefore necessarily involve any determination of title and the final resolution of such a dispute may fall to be made in subsequent proceedings."
" … it is important to note that the judge did not rule on the exercise of the court's discretion whether to make an order under s.234 nor was he asked to consider the applicability or suitability of the s.234 procedure to a claim for specific performance of either the 1999 or the 2003 agreements. The administrators did not choose to pursue a contractual remedy by serving the requisite notices and seeking an order for specific performance in proceedings brought in the name of CSP. Their position, as I have explained, was and remains on this appeal that the effect of the two contracts was to vest in CSP beneficial ownership of the properties which entitles the company to an immediate transfer of the legal estates free of any requirement for the service of any contractual notice. This is a pure point of law based upon an analysis of the legal effect of the transactions between Mr Ezair, NEL and CSP and is, I accept, suitable for determination under the s.234 procedure. But although the point did not arise as part of the argument on the preliminary issue (and arises only obliquely on this appeal), my own view is that s.234 was not intended to cover the prosecution of a claim for specific performance or for damages in lieu. The summary nature of the power to order an immediate transfer of the property in question to the office holder suggests that it is concerned with property to which the company appears to have title that could be asserted without the need for some kind of contractual enforcement and the possible resolution of a contractual dispute. The remedy in such cases is for the office holders to commence proceedings for specific performance in the name of the company which is what they could have done but which they contend was unnecessary in the present case."
Resulting Trusts
"… when real or personal property is purchased in the name of a stranger, a resulting trust is presumed in favour of the person who paid the purchase money (Rochefoucauld v Boustead [1897] 1 Ch 196) if he did so in the character of purchaser."
"74. A vital ingredient in creating a resulting trust is establishing that payment of the purchase money for the property was made in the character of a purchaser. In most cases, the person who claims to be the real purchaser pays the purchase money direct to the vendor, and, so long as it is clear that he was not a lender or giving a gift, there should be no difficulty in showing that it was he who was the provider of the purchase money in the character of purchaser (see Lewin on Trusts (19th Edtn.) at [09-049]). In Hashem v Shayif & Anor [2008] EWHC 2380 (Fam); [2009] 1 FLR 115 Munby J (as he then was), made clear at [114] that:
"…whether A provided the money by way of gift, or by way of loan, or qua purchaser is, in the final analysis, a simple question of fact, to be determined in the light of all the evidence as to the relevant circumstances, including, subject to the rule in Shephard v Cartwright [1955] AC 431 (see per Viscount Simmonds at page 445), the parties' evidence as to their intentions at the time.""
"I suspect the position we have now reached is that the courts will always strive to work out the real intention of the purchaser and will only give effect to the presumptions of resulting trust and advancement where the intention cannot be fathomed and a "long-stop" or "default" solution is needed."
"In a case where the legal estate in property is conveyed to two or more persons as joint tenants, but neither the conveyance nor any other written document contains any express declaration of trust concerning the beneficial interests in the property (as would be required for an express declaration of this nature by virtue of section 53(l)(b) of the Law of Property Act 1925), the way is open for persons claiming a beneficial interest in it or its proceeds of sale to rely on the doctrine of "resulting, implied or constructive trusts": see section 53(2) of the Law of Property Act 1925. In particular, in a case such as that, a person who claims to have contributed to the purchase price of property which stands in the name of himself and another can rely on the well known presumption of equity that a person who has contributed a share of the purchase price of property is entitled to a corresponding proportionate beneficial interest in the property by way of implied or resulting trust: see, for example, Pettitt v. Pettitt [1970] AC 777, 813-814, per Lord Upjohn. If, however, the relevant conveyance contains an express declaration of trust which comprehensively declares the beneficial interests in the property or its proceeds of sale, there is no room for the application of the doctrine of resulting implied or constructive trusts unless and until the conveyance is set aside or rectified; until that event the declaration contained in the document speaks for itself."
"The judge's imposition of a constructive trust in favour of the defendant was therefore impermissible unless the defendant could establish some ground upon which she was entitled to set aside the declaration of trust contained in the transfer. He seems … to have misunderstood the significance of the transfer which not only made both claimant and defendant legal owners of the property but also spelt out their beneficial interests. The whole of his judgment proceeds upon the footing that he had a free hand to decide what was the common intention of the parties at the relevant time but that inquiry was simply not open to him unless the defendant had established a case for setting the declaration of trust aside."
"In the absence of a vitiating factor, such as fraud or mistake, as a ground for setting aside the express trust or as a ground for rectification of it, the court must give legal effect to the express trust declared in the transfer. In the absence of such claims the court cannot go behind that trust."
"111 The declaration of an express trust purportedly evidenced by the TR1 can only be effective if, at the time they purported to declare it, the husband and the Grand Duke were "able" to declare a trust of the beneficial interest for themselves for the purposes of s 53(1)(b) of the 1925 Act. However, at the time they purported so to declare, I am satisfied that the beneficial interest in the former matrimonial home was vested in the ADB under a resulting trust …"
112 It is important to note that this is not a 'consumer context case' in which a couple in an intimate relationship jointly purchase a property in which they intend to reside, perhaps with the assistance of a mortgage, and in the transfer document execute an express declaration of trust over the property in favour of themselves, thereby setting out their beneficial entitlement as part of the purchase they have made. In this case, the purchase monies for the former matrimonial home were provided from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal and paid to the vendor by the ADB. The documentary evidence before the court confirms that the money in question was paid from the bank account of the ADB. It is common ground between the parties that the intention was that, on any sale of the former matrimonial home, the monies provided from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal would be returned to the ADB as the proceeds of sale. I am satisfied that there is nothing in the evidence before the court to suggest that the monies originally provided from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal constituted a loan or a gift to husband and the Grand Duke.
113. In the circumstances, satisfied as I am on the unchallenged expert evidence before the court that it is more likely than not that the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal and the ADB have separate legal personalities, I am satisfied that the purchase monies from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal were paid to the vendor of the former matrimonial home by the ADB in the character of a purchaser. Further, on the evidence before the court, I am satisfied that at the time the purchase monies from GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal were paid by the ADB it was the settled intention of the ADB, the Grand Duke and the husband that the ADB would hold the beneficial interest in the property. I derive that conclusion from the following matters: i) As I have noted, the property was purchased by the ADB with funds from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal. ii) As I have also noted, the wife herself concedes that upon any sale of the former matrimonial home the proceeds of sale would return to the ADB. iii) Whilst the compromis de vente completed in relation to the former matrimonial home contains omissions in terms of the husband's signature and a date, its existence in my judgment evidences an intention that the ADB would hold the beneficial interest in the property purchased with funds from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal. Firstly, by reason of the distinction the existence of the compromis de vente creates between the manner in which the property in US property was purchased. When using private funds of Grand Duke to purchase the US property, no compromis de vente was drafted by the ADB. When using funds from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal to purchase the former matrimonial home a compromis de vente was completed by the ADB. Whilst Mr Ewins emphasised the similarities between these two property transactions, in my judgment it is the differences between the manner in which the respective properties were purchased that are more significant. In particular, the fact that when the funds came from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal as distinct from the private funds of the Grand Duke, a compromis de vente designed, as I am satisfied it was, to evidence the ADB's interest was employed. Secondly, by reason of the fact that, whilst incomplete, the terms of compromis de vente themselves constitute evidence of the intention of the husband, the Grand Duke and the ADB that the ADB would retain the beneficial interest in the former matrimonial home. iv) The statement of the husband accepts he holds no share of the beneficial interest in the property. Whilst this might be regarded as a self-serving statement in the context of these proceedings, and therefore of lesser weight, it is consistent with the other matters I have set out in this paragraph.
114 Within the context of this evidence of intention, having regard to the modern approach to resulting trusts set out in Kyriakides v Pippas, I am satisfied that it is not necessary to go on to consider the operation of the presumption. In these circumstances and having regard to the legal principles set out above, I am satisfied that the effect of the matters set out in the foregoing paragraphs was to create, upon the payment of the purchase monies from the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal by the ADB, a resulting trust of the beneficial interest in the former matrimonial home in favour of the legal entity that provided the entirety of the purchase monies for that property. Whether the beneficial interest in the former matrimonial home is owned under the resulting trust by the ABD, which paid the purchase monies, or the GroBherzogliches Fideicommiss / fidéicommis grand-ducal, which provided the purchase monies, is perhaps a point of some nicety. However, it is not necessary to decide that point for the purposes of the decision this court has to make. The key point is that the purchase monies did not, I am satisfied, come from the husband or the Grand Duke and they did not intend to own the beneficial interest in the property.
115 I remain cognisant of the principle in Goodman v Galant. However, whilst in Goodman v Galant the Court of Appeal stated that there is no room for the application of the doctrine of resulting or constructive trusts "unless and until the conveyance is set aside or rectified", in Pankhania v Chandegra I perceive the point as having been expressed in somewhat less absolute terms, with the Court of Appeal stating that there is no room for the application of the doctrine of resulting or constructive trusts unless the defendant has "established a case for setting the declaration of trust aside". Within this context, it seems to me that, given the foregoing evidence before this court, it would be artificial in this case to proceed on the basis of the TR1 when it is plain on that evidence that the husband and the Grand Duke were not "able" to declare a trust of the beneficial interest by reference to the terms of s 53(1)(b) of the Law of Property Act 1925 and, as Mr Leech submits, any application to set aside the declaration on the grounds of mistake would be bound to succeed (accepting that no such application is before the court). A trust of the beneficial interest in the former matrimonial home was not the husband's and the Grand Duke's to declare. In short, you cannot declare an express trust in a beneficial interest that is not yours (or, to indulge in the Latin, nemo dat quod non habet)."
Breach of Duty and the Constructive Trust
172 Duty to promote the success of the company
(1) A director of a company must act in the way he considers, in good faith, would be most likely to promote the success of the company for the benefit of its members as a whole, and in doing so have regard (amongst other matters) to—
(a) the likely consequences of any decision in the long term,
(b) the interests of the company's employees,
(c) the need to foster the company's business relationships with suppliers, customers and others,
(d) the impact of the company's operations on the community and the environment,
(e) the desirability of the company maintaining a reputation for high standards of business conduct, and
(f) the need to act fairly as between members of the company.
(2) Where or to the extent that the purposes of the company consist of or include purposes other than the benefit of its members, subsection (1) has effect as if the reference to promoting the success of the company for the benefit of its members were to achieving those purposes.
(3) The duty imposed by this section has effect subject to any enactment or rule of law requiring directors, in certain circumstances, to consider or act in the interests of creditors of the company.
175 Duty to avoid conflicts of interest
(1) A director of a company must avoid a situation in which he has, or can have, a direct or indirect interest that conflicts, or possibly may conflict, with the interests of the company.
(2) This applies in particular to the exploitation of any property, information or opportunity (and it is immaterial whether the company could take advantage of the property, information or opportunity).
(3) This duty does not apply to a conflict of interest arising in relation to a transaction or arrangement with the company.
(4) This duty is not infringed—
(a)if the situation cannot reasonably be regarded as likely to give rise to a conflict of interest; or
(b)if the matter has been authorised by the directors.
(5) Authorisation may be given by the directors—
(a)where the company is a private company and nothing in the company's constitution invalidates such authorisation, by the matter being proposed to and authorised by the directors; or
(b)where the company is a public company and its constitution includes provision enabling the directors to authorise the matter, by the matter being proposed to and authorised by them in accordance with the constitution.
(6) The authorisation is effective only if—
(a) any requirement as to the quorum at the meeting at which the matter is considered is met without counting the director in question or any other interested director, and
(b) the matter was agreed to without their voting or would have been agreed to if their votes had not been counted.
(7) Any reference in this section to a conflict of interest includes a conflict of interest and duty and a conflict of duties.
"………as to section 175, this reflects an equitable rule of great antiquity and
authority. In Bhullar v. Bhullar [2003] BCC 711, Jonathan Parker J. summarised it as
follows, at [27]:
" … The relevant rule, which Lord Cranworth LC in Aberdeen Railway Co. v. Blaikie described as being 'of universal application', and which Lord Herschell in Bray v. Ford [1896] AC 44 at 52 described as 'inflexible', is that (to use Lord Cranworth's formulation) no fiduciary 'shall be allowed to enter into engagements in which he has, or can have, a personal interest conflicting, or which may possibly conflict, with the interests of those whom he is bound to protect'".
It also bears emphasis that a fiduciary must not profit from his position of trust, even if that profit could not have been made by his principal: Keech v. Sandford (1726) Sel Cas 61 (cited recently by the Supreme Court in FHR European Ventures LLP v. Cedar Capital Partners LLC [2015] AC 150 at [8]). The stringency of the rule in the context of the duties owed by company directors is reflected expressly in sub-section 175(3): "This applies in particular to the exploitation of any property, information or opportunity (and it is immaterial whether the company could take advantage of the property, information or opportunity)"
Finally, on the no conflict duty, it has been held that "the key question in every case is
whether, in the particular circumstances, there is a real sensible possibility of conflict" (see Commonwealth Oil Gas Co Ltd v. Baxter [2009] SLT 11233 at para. 78, per Lord Nimmo Smith, and Re Bhullar Bros. Ltd [2003] BCC 711 at para. 30, per Jonathan Parker LJ.) The corresponding language in CA 2006 s. 175 is that in subsection 175(4)(a): "This duty is not infringed … if the situation cannot reasonably be regarded as likely to give rise to a conflict of interest."
"Although a company director may certainly breach his duties to the company by misappropriating its existing assets, that is not a pre-requisite. He may also breach his duties on other ways, not at all dependent on the misapplication of preexisting corporate assets, for example by putting himself in a position of conflict and thereby making an unauthorised profit."
And at [269]:
"A good example is Re Bhullar Bros. Ltd [2003] EWCA Civ 424, [2003] BCC 711. In that case, a company owned an investment property which was used as a bowling hall. Two directors of the company came to know that a plot of land next to the investment property was for sale, and they acquired it using another company which they owned and controlled called Silvercrest. They said that there was no breach of fiduciary duty in doing so because the company itself has shown no interest in acquiring the plot of land at the relevant time, and accordingly had not been deprived of any "maturing business opportunity". This argument was rejected and the Court of Appeal affirmed the declaration made by the judge at first instance that Silvercrest held the plot of land on trust for the company. It was not necessary, in determining that there had been a breach of duty, to show that the company had some pre-existing interest in the opportunity in question. Jonathan Parker LJ said as follows:
"[27]. I agree with Mr Berragan that the concept of a conflict between fiduciary duty and personal interest presupposes an existing fiduciary duty. But it does not follow that it is a pre-requisite of the accountability of a fiduciary that there should have been some improper dealing with the property 'belonging' to the party to whom the fiduciary duty is owed, that is to say with trust property …
[28]. In a case such as the present, where a fiduciary has exploited a commercial opportunity for his own benefit, the relevant question, in my judgement, is not whether the party to whom the duty is owed (the company, in the instant case) had some kind of beneficial interest in the opportunity; in my judgement that would be too formalistic and restricted an approach. Rather, the question is simply whether the fiduciary's exploitation of the opportunity is such as to attract the application of the rule."
"Bhullar Bros. Ltd also neatly illustrates the point that even in cases not involving the misapplication of pre-existing corporate property, the appropriate remedy may nonetheless be a proprietary one. Thus, in Bhullar Bros. Ltd itself, a constructive trust was identified as the appropriate remedy, reflecting the equitable rule that where a fiduciary acquires a benefit in breach of duty, he is to be treated as having acquired the benefit on behalf of his principal, so that it is beneficially owned by the principal (see FHR Ventures LLP v. Mankarious [2014] UKSC 45, [2015] AC 250, per Lord Neuberger at [7].)"
57.1. whether the s. 175 duty was disapplied by virtue of s. 175(3), because Holdings, as the intended future purchaser, was party to the arrangements under which the Land had been "temporarily" purchased by the Respondents, and whether in that context, Mr and Mrs Ball had declared their interests in the arrangements to Mr Woolfe, or he already knew of them, under s. 177;
57.2. whether s. 175 was engaged in circumstances where Mr and Mrs Ball "were not in fact seeking to exploit an opportunity for profit but rather to protect their position (in light of the extent of the Companies' indebtedness to Mr Ball) pending an intended resale to Holdings";
57.3. whether, if s. 175 was engaged, the transaction or arrangement was validly authorised by the companies' directors in accordance with s. 175(4);
57.4. whether the Respondents could rely on shareholder ratification or acquiescence, which would raise the question of solvency;
57.5. whether the Respondents might seek relief under s. 1157 of the CA 2006; and,
57.6. whether a constructive trust is the appropriate remedy or merely an account of profits.
61.1. that "there was an intention" to transfer the Land to Homes and/or Holdings;
61.2. that accordingly, the purchase price was paid by Homes to MDC;
61.3. that the Land was of evident and paramount value to the companies, and to the development project;
61.4. that they had not found or been given any reason for the transfer having instead been made to the Respondents rather than to Homes and/or Holdings, including in response to the "extensive requests" made in pre-action correspondence;
61.5. that relief was sought "on the basis the Respondents owe fiduciary duties to the Companies, including duties to act in the best interest [sic] of the Companies and not put themselves in a position of conflict with the interests of each of the Companies";
61.6. that the Land is held by the Respondents on resulting and/or constructive trust for Homes or Holdings.
71.1. Mr and Mrs Ball's untested written evidence, which I therefore accept in this respect, was that they intended to acquire the Land, and to become and be its owners, to be sold to Holdings at some future time, in uncertain circumstances, depending upon further development funding and the agreement of a purchase price. That arrangement is wholly inconsistent with an intention that Homes (or indeed, Holdings) was to be the purchaser from MDC.
71.2. Similarly, in substance, the Minutes of Holdings' Board Meeting on 16 May 2023 expressly stated that the Respondents were to be the purchasers and owners of the Land. Mr Weaver said, and I accept, that the Meeting was not quorate, because it was attended by only one of Holdings' directors, but it was nonetheless a contemporaneous record of the Respondents' intentions, and therefore of Homes' intention, since they were its only directors as at the date of transfer. In respect of Holdings, and as to Mr Woolfe, who was not present, the evidence was that his role in the business was nominal. Similarly therefore, the Respondents' intentions would likely be attributed to Holdings.
71.3. In my view, the Minutes evidenced an intention that by some means – although not yet settled upon – the use of "Mr Ball's own funds" to make the purchase would be reflected in the companies' accounts. If true, it is irrelevant that Mr Ball mistakenly thought that the money he had lent to Holdings continued to be "his" money to spend as he pleased. For present purposes, the important point is that however it was to be accounted for, the payment was not to be made by Homes as or intending to be or in the character of the true purchaser; whatever else might have been intended, it was certainly not that; it is plain that the Respondents intended to become the Land's owners.
71.4. To the same end, the email correspondence between the Respondents and Shakespeare Martineau, and the evidence it provides of their oral discussions, is only consistent with an intention that the Respondents would be the owners of the Land, for example, the emails of 18 and 25 April 2023, and of 24 May 2023, referred to above at paragraphs 9, 10 and 13. Again, I acknowledge that Ms Bovington might have thought that Mr Ball was "providing the purchase monies" and might therefore have thought, for example, that additional funds were being provided by him, but again, that is not relevant to this point, which is that the price was not paid by Homes as, and intending to be, the purchaser; quite the opposite.
71.5. Finally - leaving aside the question whether a resulting trust might in some cases render irrelevant the trust declared in the TR1 - that form, in the present case, signed by the Respondents, does evidence their subjective intention at that time to become the beneficial owners of the Land despite the price having been paid by Homes, of which they were the only directors.
71.6. Ultimately, other than the mere, and in my view adventitious fact of the payment having come from its bank account, there was no evidence at all to suggest an intention that Homes would purchase and own the Land beneficially. All the available evidence showed that the entire arrangement was otherwise; that the Respondents would acquire the entire interest, possibly to be sold by them to Holdings at a future time.
78.1. there was nothing to prevent the Respondents, as I have said, from setting out their case in their own statements – even if at the same time they might have said that they required further evidence; they should have understood the case being advanced against them;
78.2. they cannot rely on the Holdings' Board Meeting of 16 May 2023 as having authorised the acquisition because it was not quorate, and was therefore ineffective for the purposes of s. 175(6) of the CA 2006;
78.3. but in any event, at the time of the acquisition, even if they might have survived by means of further negotiated funding, the companies were plainly unable to pay substantial debts that had by then fallen due (and were not subsequently paid): see paragraph 23 above; if anything, Mr Ball's own evidence (that funding had been "exhausted" and that further funding options were being "explored") supported that conclusion; in those circumstances, an arrangement made by the directors which resulted in one of them being preferred within the meaning of s.239(4) of the IA (as was apparently its very purpose – "to protect their position") is not one which benefitted the creditors as a class or was even intended to do so; there was nothing at all in the evidence to suggest that the creditors' interests had been considered, let alone that they had in any sense been advanced or protected by the arrangements - quite the opposite;
78.4. it follows that the arrangement and the breach was not one which was properly authorised or forgiven by the companies.
80.1. First, as in the Princess Tessy of Luxembourg case, the Respondents' declaration in the TR1 was ineffective, because the beneficial interest in the Land vested in the companies on transfer.
80.2. Second, in any event, the constructive trust imposed is not dependent upon or designed to reflect the parties' intentions (and therefore contradicted by the Respondents' intentions as expressed in the declaration). On the contrary, the intention, as I have described, was that the Respondents would become the beneficial owners, not the companies; had they not intended that result, there would have been no need or basis upon which to establish a breach of duty, and that they did so, cannot be a reason not to grant a proprietary remedy which results in a trust in favour of the companies of the whole property and interest which they hold, whatever its nature and extent; in effect, in consequence of their breach, all that they hold is subject to the trust. I do not accept that two directors acting in breach of duty might avoid the proprietary consequences of that breach by declaring a trust for themselves of property that they wrongfully acquire, any more than that a single director could do so as transferee of the whole legal and beneficial title.
81.1. first, the point could have been raised by means of the Respondents' statements;
81.2. second, Mr Ball's evidence was that a purchase price for the future sale to Holdings would have had to be agreed; it was not his evidence that he had no intention of making a profit; moreover, it was not his evidence that the Respondents were obliged to sell the Land to Holdings at all, or even to negotiate for its sale;
81.3. third, whether or not they acted honestly and/or on advice and/or with any intention to make a profit on re-sale (rather than merely to reduce Mr Ball's exposure as a creditor) the Respondents acted in breach of their duties as directors; the disputed arrangement entailed an acute conflict of interest, and was not beneficial to the companies' creditors as a class; I was given no basis upon which to conclude that it was reasonable of the Respondents to protect their own interests - even if intended as some sort of temporary measure - at the expense of other creditors, or to conclude that the court ought now, in the exercise of its discretion, relieve them of liability to the detriment of the creditor class of companies in administration.
Dated: 28 March 2024