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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Bridgehouse (Bradford No.2) v BAE Systems Plc [2019] EWHC 1768 (Comm) (11 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/1768.html Cite as: [2020] Bus LR 306, [2019] WLR(D) 407, [2019] EWHC 1768 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BRIDGEHOUSE (BRADFORD NO.2) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BAE SYSTEMS PLC |
Defendant |
____________________
Fiona Parkin QC and Patrick Harty (instructed by Ashurst LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13 and 14 May 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE COCKERILL DBE:
Introduction and factual background
"20. TERMINATION
20.1 If the Buyer:
(a) suffers an Event of Default (defined in Clause 20.2);… then BAE may, by notice in writing to the Buyer, determine this agreement.
20.2 Events of Default – meaning
For the purpose of clause 19 an Event of Default occurs if the Buyer suffers any of the following:…
(g) being struck off the Register of Companies or being dissolved or ceasing for any reason to retain its corporate existence.
20.3 Effect of termination notice
If notice is served pursuant to clause 20.1 then this agreement shall immediately determine and BAE shall be entitled to release the monies outstanding to the credit of the Accounts for its own benefit but any determination shall be without prejudice to any right of action or other remedy of the Parties in respect of any antecedent breach by the other of any of the provisions of this agreement."
"The general effect of administrative restoration to the register is that the company is deemed to have continued in existence as if it had not been dissolved or struck off the register."
"Issue A1: Whether BAE had a right to exercise its right under Clause 20.1 prior to the release of the Properties from the BAES Leases Trust
Issue A2: Whether an Event of Default under clause 20.2(g) arose immediately upon BB2 being struck off the register on 31 May 2016 (as BAE contended) or (as BB2 contended) only after a reasonable period of time had expired without an application for restoration to the register having been made;
Issue A3: Whether the service of BAE's notice was ineffective because BB2 did not exist, or was served in breach of a "good faith" obligation;
Issue A4: Whether any effective termination had to be re-assessed retrospectively as a result of BB2's restoration to the Register by virtue of section 1028(1) of the 2006 Act such that the Notice is to be regarded as ineffective."
It is issues A2 and A4, highlighted in bold above, which are in issue in this appeal.
The questions of law
"Issue A4
(1) Was the Arbitrator correct to conclude that the answer to Issue A4, namely "Is any effective termination to be re-assessed retrospectively as a result of BB2's restoration to the Register by virtue of section 1028(1) Companies Act 2006 such that the Notice is to be regarded as ineffective?", is "No". In particular:
a. Was the Arbitrator correct to conclude that section 1028(1) cannot undo the termination of a contract – where that termination was effected pursuant to an express contractual right to terminate in circumstances in which the company (that was a party to that contract) had been struck off the Register – after that company has been restored to the Register?
b. If the Arbitrator was wrong and the correct answer to Issue A4 is "Yes", can the parties to a contract lawfully and effectively agree that – regardless of the deeming provisions of section 1028(1) – one party shall have the contractual right to terminate upon the other party being struck off the Register of Companies and, if it does terminate, that termination will not be affected by the deeming provisions of section 1028(1) if the other party is subsequently restored to the Register?
c. If the answer to the question at paragraph 1(b) above is "Yes", did the parties to the Agreement in fact either expressly or impliedly agree that – regardless of the deeming provisions of section 1028(1) – BAE's termination of the Agreement would be lawful and effective notwithstanding the restoration of BB2 to the Register?
Issue A2
(2) Was the Arbitrator correct to conclude that the answer to Issue A2, namely "Did a clause 20.2(g) Event of Default arise immediately upon 31 May 2016 (being the date on which BB2 was struck off the Register) as BAE asserts, or as BB2 contends, only after a reasonable period of time had expired without an application for restoration having been made", is that an Event of Default arose immediately upon 31 May 2016? "
The approach to be adopted on the appeal
Question (1)(a): the effect of section 1028(1)
The statutory background
i) Pursuant to s. 651, which provided for the Court to declare a company's "dissolution to have been void" and that thereafter "such proceedings may be taken as might have been taken of the company had not been dissolved"; and
ii) Pursuant to s. 653 which permitted a person who "feels aggrieved" by the striking off to apply to the court. It contained in s. 653(3) the same formulation as s. 1028(1) of the Companies Act 2006 (namely that upon the delivery of the restoration order to the registrar, the company "is deemed to have continued in existence as if its name had not been struck off….").
i) Section 1024 entitles a former director or member of a company struck off pursuant to sections 1000 or 1001 to apply to the Registrar to restore the company to the register. This procedure is called administrative restoration. It was first introduced by the 2006 Act.
ii) Section 1029 and following provide for restoration by the court on the application of a variety of other interested people.
"(2) The first condition is that the company was carrying on business or in operation at the time of its striking off.
(3) The second condition is that, if any property or right previously vested in or held on trust for the company has vested as bona vacantia, the Crown representative has signified to the registrar in writing consent to the company's restoration to the register. ...
(5) The third condition is that the applicant has—
(a) delivered to the registrar such documents relating to the company as are necessary to bring up to date the records kept by the registrar, and
(b) paid any penalties under section 453 or corresponding earlier provisions (civil penalty for failure to deliver accounts) that were outstanding at the date of dissolution or striking off."
"the general effect of administrative restoration to the register is that the company is deemed to have continued in existence as if it had not been dissolved or struck off the register."
The arguments
i) The authorities make abundantly clear that the deeming provision in clause 1028(1) operates retrospectively as well as prospectively.
ii) The language of section 1028(1) is unrestricted. The provision is intended to be general in its application - it expressly says so. Had it been the intention of Parliament to create exceptions to the general effect of administrative restoration, it would have said so in clear terms.
iii) The absence of any such exceptions in the wording of the section is entirely consistent with the policy behind it, which is to place the company and every other person in the same position (as nearly as may be) as if the company had never been struck off or dissolved.
iv) The Arbitrator fell into error in paragraph 181 of the Award where he concluded, in effect, that the actions taken by a party to a contract, in accordance with the contract, prior to the restoration, are immune from the retrospective effect of the deeming provision contained in section 1028(1).
v) Any actions taken by a contractual counter-party during the period between the striking off/dissolution and the restoration of the company, the validity or effectiveness of which depends on the striking off/dissolution having occurred, must be reassessed on the footing that those events are deemed not to have occurred. The logical consequence of this reassessment must be that such actions are 'undone'.
vi) Contrary to what the Arbitrator appears to have thought, this is not a question of rendering legitimate actions illegitimate.
vii) To the extent the Arbitrator's reasoning was driven by concern about the complications which might arise in certain situations if BB2 were right about the effect of section 1028(1), he was wrong to bring this into account because the reality of the situation is that this is a unique situation.
i) On its true construction, section 1028 does not require the retrospective reassessment of what is otherwise an effective termination of the Contract while the company was dissolved such that the termination is somehow rendered invalid.
ii) There is no credible reason why Parliament would have chosen to legislate to such an effect. There is no public policy which supports BB2's construction and every reason why Parliament should not have legislated to prohibit such clauses.
iii) Such a result would be absurd and cause grave injustice.
iv) BB2 fails to show how it says that its construction of s. 1028(1) actually works or why it should work in such a manner.
v) BB2 elides "legislative purpose" with (what it asserts is the) "legislative effect" and has thereby failed to identify any "purpose" behind s.1028(1) which would justify the construction of the statutory provision it contends for;
vi) BB2 cannot explain why the termination is "ineffective" or how, as a matter of the law, a contract which it was accepted by BB2 had been terminated ceases to be so.
vii) BB2's approach would mean that such a termination provision does not provide a party with a right but creates a trap: a party who was entitled to serve a notice in reliance on such a clause would be retrospectively deemed not to have been entitled so to act and therefore would have done so in (very possibly repudiatory) breach of contract.
Discussion
Statutory Intention
"The modern approach to statutory construction is to have regard to the purpose of a particular provision and interpret its language, so far as possible, in a way which best gives effect to that purpose. … In seeking the purpose of a statutory provision, the interpreter is not confined to a literal interpretation of the words, but must have regard to the context and scheme of the relevant Act as a whole: …. The essence of this approach is to give the statutory provision a purposive construction in order to determine the nature of the transaction to which it was intended to apply and then to decide whether the actual transaction (which might involve considering the overall effect of a number of elements intended to operate together) answered to the statutory description. Of course this does not mean that the courts have to put their reasoning into the straitjacket of first construing the statute in the abstract and then looking at the facts. It might be more convenient to analyse the facts and then ask whether they satisfy the requirements of the statute. But however one approaches the matter, the question is always whether the relevant provision of statute, on its true construction, applies to the facts as found"
"To apply the words literally is to defeat the obvious intention of the legislation and to produce a wholly unreasonable result. To achieve the obvious intention and produce a reasonable result we must do some violence to the words. This is not a new problem, though our standard of drafting is such that it rarely emerges. The general principle is well settled. It is only where the words are absolutely incapable of a construction which will accord with the apparent intention of the provision and will avoid a wholly unreasonable result, that the words of the enactment must prevail."
"10.116 … in the case of restoration to the register, we believe that court intervention will continue to be necessary in many cases. Restoration can have far-reaching consequences and impact on the rights and interests of a range of third parties. Such parties may include members of the company, its creditors…. the registrar and, as regards the revesting of any bona vacantia, the Crown. There may be other parties affected by the resuscitation of the company, such as a landlord or third party guarantor for a company's obligations. We consider that any case which involves striking a judgment as to the appropriate balance between these two interests is properly a matter for the courts.
10.117 However it has been put to us that there is a particular category of applications for restoration where no such complications arise. These cases arise where: there is no significant third party interest in the application other than the company's own; the consent of the Treasury Solicitor … is available for the revesting of bona vacantia and where the sole object of the application is to rectify the registrar's own initiative in striking off when in the light of events it has become clear that a company thought to be inoperative was operating after all. In these cases restoration can be viewed as a purely administrative procedure for which a court process is redundant and imposes unnecessary burdens of time and expense.
10.118 …. If the company is ignorant of the position then after it has been struck off it will continue to operate as though it were still on the register until it does become aware that it has been struck off. In these circumstances, restoration is often a fairly straightforward matter; it is unlikely to be contested and it does not give rise to any consequential effects on third parties."
"…section 653(3) provides that after restoration the company is "deemed to have continued in existence as if its name had not been struck off". This latter approach may provide better protection for third parties who have dealt with the company unaware that it had been struck off."
"11.17 …. We have since given further consideration to the effect restoration would have on those who continue to deal with the dissolved company in ignorance of its position. As a consequence we recommend that the resultant single statutory procedure for restoration should produce a similar result to that currently provided in section 653(3)
11.19 There was also wide support for a new procedure of "administrative restoration" … Application for this procedure would be restricted to the company itself (or rather to a person authorised to apply on behalf of a company) and where there is no third-party opposition. It is proposed that administrative restoration should have the same legal consequences as obtained under s.653(3)."
The authorities
"More generally the final words of the sub-section seem to me designed, not by way of exposition, to qualify the generality of that which precedes them, but rather as a complement to the general words so as to enable the court (consistently with justice) to achieve to the fullest extent the "as-you-were position" which, according to the ordinary sense of those general words, is prima facie their consequence.…
Whatever, then, might have been the situation if the present application had come before the county court judge before the order of restoration… it seems to me that on October 31, 1951, it was no longer open to the respondent to allege the non-existence of the company on the preceding July 23; for, by the terms of the subsection, the company had then to be deemed to have continued in existence as if its name had never in fact been struck off the register."
"For my part, I think the words of section 353 (6) are clearly designed to produce an "as you were" position, and think that the latter part of the subsection is complementary and intended to provide for cases where provision is necessary in order to clarify an obscure position or give back to the company an opportunity which it might otherwise have lost. An example of this would be a case where a company had lost an opportunity of obtaining a concession or renewing a lease during the interval between its dissolution and an order under the subsection. A provision in the order could deal with such a case. That the last four lines of the subsection do not cut down the retroactive effect of that which precedes them is, to my mind, indicated by the introductory words "and the court may by the order." The directions and provisions to be made by the order would naturally be supposed to make good what had previously been stated, namely, that the company should be deemed to have continued in existence as if the name had not been struck off."
"This, as I read it, is a necessary and automatic result of the order; and such a deeming carries with it all the consequences that flow from it. If I may borrow the classic sentence that Lord Asquith of Bishopstone uttered, in an entirely different context, in East End Dwellings Co. Ltd. v. Finsbury Borough Council [1952] A.C. 109, 132:
If you are bidden to treat an imaginary state of affairs as real, you must surely, unless prohibited from doing so, also imagine as real the consequences and incidents which, if the putative state of affairs had in fact existed, must inevitably have flowed from or accompanied it."
"The statutory fiction that results from an order under the subsection is that the company continued in existence throughout; and this, with all that flows from it, is the necessary consequence of the order. One of the consequences is that any liabilities properly incurred by a director in the name of the company would be liabilities of the company and not of the director. What the concluding limb of the subsection empowers me to do is to give directions or make provisions for placing the company and others in the same position as nearly as may be as if the name of the company had not been struck off. …all that the subsection empowers me to do is to give a direction or make a provision which supports and carries out the statutory fiction as nearly as may be."
"It was submitted that the effect of a dissolution of the company is that all ongoing contracts of the company at least come to an end upon the dissolution, and the effect of section 653(3) cannot revive any such contract. …
I do not see that. If the argument was that a company continues as if its name had not been struck off but the contracts went with the dissolution, that would be to ignore the provision almost in its entirety. The whole point of restoring the company to the register in many cases is so that ongoing commercial relationships are kept going."
"I turn to the alternative argument based on frustration. The Master upheld a submission that there was a frustration upon dissolution. His reasoning was that in effect the frustration was unfrustrated by virtue of section 653(3). The argument for Fairlight here is simple: once a contract is frustrated, it is gone forever. That is what happened when the company was dissolved. It might have a new contract if one is entered into after it is restored, but there is not one.
I find this argument more difficult. In the end, however, I think the Master was right on the point. This subsection does operate to undo things which otherwise would have happened. If the company is deemed to have continued to be in existence, the frustration caused by its dissolution is deemed not to have happened. I think therefore that the Master was right."
"If the company had done nothing [about a notice calling upon it to perform its obligation], that would have been a repudiatory breach…
I do accept that if something which could be regarded as a repudiation happened in what might be called the intervening period, then the contract may go, but in this case there was no such event."
"As a non-existent company, it could not have complied with any of its obligations in clause 4(d), in particular the obligation to pay... "By admitting its non-existence, Contract proclaimed its inability to perform."
"I do not, however, think that the statute requires me to go further and disregard either supervening events or collateral matters which may accompany non-existence. …
In the present case the contract was, in my judgment, lawfully terminated before Contract was restored to the register. The restoration to the register resurrects the company, but I do not think that it can also resurrect a contract that has come to an end. Nor do I think that the statute requires me to assume more than that Contract was in existence. Specifically it does not require me to assume against all the evidence that Contract could perform a contract under which it was required to pay over £1 million. If the dissolved company had a lease which was forfeited under a proviso for re-entry if the lessee, being a company, was dissolved, then it may be that the forfeiture would be invalidated. But if the lessee was unable to pay its rent because it was dissolved, and the lease was forfeited for non-payment of rent, then subject to any question of relief, I do not think that section 653 requires the forfeiture to be treated as invalid."
"26. Thus the effect of a statutory provision in the language now contained in section 1028 of the Companies Act 2006, namely that "the company shall be deemed to have continued in existence as if its name had not been struck off" was not only fully retrospective in that it deemed the striking off never to have occurred and the validity of all acts occurring since to be reassessed on that basis, but this effect was fully automatic, neither (by implication) requiring any direction of the court to bring it into effect nor permitting any direction to be made producing a contrary effect. …..
28. The effect of these authorities, in my judgment, is that upon restoration to the register of a company which has been struck off, the factual position throughout must be taken to be that which the Companies Act deems to have been the case, namely that the company is "deemed to have continued in existence as if it had not been dissolved or struck off the register". Consequences which followed from the company having been struck off or dissolved must be retrospectively assessed on the footing that these events are deemed not to have happened. The logical consequence of that reassessment so far as the position under the Licensing Act is concerned is that the claimant company is deemed not to have been dissolved and its premises licence is therefore deemed not to have lapsed by virtue of that dissolution."
" Does that produce a conflict between the two statutes ...? In my view it does not. The reason for this can I think be stated quite shortly. The dissolved status of the company, which is an effect of the relevant provisions of the Companies Acts, is, by virtue of the same Acts, a reversible condition. Parliament must be taken to have notice of this when it enacted the Licensing Act. The fact that a mechanism for transfer of the licence of a dissolved company was included in section 50 is not in conflict with and does not preclude the possibility that the licence may be revived retrospectively by the restoration of the company to the register."
"44…the words "general effect" in section 1032(1) cannot be read, … as cutting down the otherwise unrestricted language of the subsection. The significance of these words is to signal that the "general" provision in section 1032(1) is subject to what follows in sections 1032(2) and 1032(3).
46…the sweeping effect of section 1032(1) is illustrated by section 1032(3), which enables the Companies Court to make directions "for placing the company and all other persons in the same position (as nearly as may be) as if the company had not been dissolved or struck off the register". That, as it seems, to me, is a powerful and illuminating indication of the policy which Parliament had in mind."
"When a decision is taken either by the Registrar or by the court, in my judgment it matters not which, to restore the company to the Registrar [sic], the authorities make clear that the effect of sections 1028(1) and 1032(1) is very extensive indeed. Everything that would have happened, had the company continued in existence, is effectively deemed to have happened."
"The intention of a deeming provision, in laying down a hypothesis, is that the hypothesis shall be carried as far as necessary to achieve the legislative purpose, but no further.
Whenever an Act sets up some fiction the courts are astute to limit the scope of its artificial effect. They are particularly concerned to ensure that it does not create harm in ways outside the intended purview of the Act."
"When considering the extent to which a deeming provision should be applied, the court is entitled and bound to ascertain for what purposes and between what persons the statutory fiction is to be resorted to. It will not always be clear what those purposes are. If the application of the provision would lead to an unjust, anomalous or absurd result then, unless its application would clearly be within the purposes of the fiction, it should not be applied. If, on the other hand, its application would not lead to any such result then, unless that would clearly be outside the purposes of the fiction, it should be applied."
Factual consequences/Proof of the pudding
"178. … The cases do not, however, deal with the situation in which parties to a contract have agreed that striking off will give rise to a right to take specific action, which action had been taken prior to reinstatement. …
180. Upon administrative reinstatement to the register, the effect is that it can no longer be argued that the company has been dissolved or struck off the register. If a contract contains a clause similar to clause 20 of the Agreement, notice cannot be given determining the contract, because there is no Event of Default.
181. Actions already taken by a party to the contract, in accordance with the contract, cannot however be undone. If the statute had meant that the legitimate action of a party to a contract should be rendered illegitimate by an administrative act (which might happen up to 6 years later), I would have expected it to have said so in clear terms.
182. I conclude that the termination of the Agreement, which was effective, is not to be re-assessed retrospectively as a result of BB2's restoration to the Register."
"The law can deem anything to be the case, however unreal. The law brings itself into disrepute, however, if it dignifies with legal significance a wholly artificial hypothesis. In construing an ambiguous enactment 'one can, and surely should, assume that Parliament intended the less artificial result. …The presumption against absurdity means that the courts will generally avoid adopting a construction that leads to an artificial result."
Question 1(b): is it possible to contract out of section 1028(1)?
i) The default position is that contracting out is permitted unless contrary to the policy of the statute.
ii) There is nothing in the statutory purpose to stand in the way of this: the purpose of s. 1028(1) is to protect persons who deal with the dissolved company, during the period of its dissolution. In the present case, the only party that has ever dealt with BB2 (whether during its dissolution or otherwise) is BAE.
iii) As such BAE is an intended beneficiary of the section and there is no reason why it cannot waive the potential benefit under that section.
iv) Thirdly, it is no part of the policy to prevent parties who do not need the protection (because they have considered the possibility of dissolution) for example by agreeing the consequences of dissolution
v) There is no reason why this specific contracting out should be prohibited as this is purely between the parties and relates to their private interests only;
vi) The liberty to renounce a right should be denied only where Parliament has expressly so indicated, which is not the case here.
Discussion
"The third proposition is that a person may renounce a right which exists solely for his own use or benefit. This again is not improved by legal Latin cant and saying "cuilibet licet" (or "quilibet potest") "renuntiare" (or "renunciare") "juri" (or "jure") "pro se introducto" as have numerous authorities…. The key however to the interpretation of the maxim lies, … in discovering whether the particular liberty or right conferred by the statute or rule of law is entirely for the benefit of the person purporting to renounce it. If there is a public as well as a private interest a contrary Latin maxim applies."
Question 1(c): did BAE and BB2 contract out of section 1028(1)?
Question (2): was the Arbitrator right to hold that an Event of Default arose immediately upon BB2 being struck off on 31 May 2016?
"When interpreting a written contract, the court is concerned to identify the intention of the parties by reference to "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" …. And it does so by focussing on the meaning of the relevant words, …, in their documentary, factual and commercial context. That meaning has to be assessed in the light of (i) the natural and ordinary meaning of the clause, (ii) any other relevant provisions of the [contract], (iii) the overall purpose of the clause and the [contract], (iv) the facts and circumstances known or assumed by the parties at the time that the document was executed, and (v) commercial common sense, but (vi) disregarding subjective evidence of any party's intentions."
"The question of whether a term should be implied, and if so what, almost inevitably arises after a crisis has been reached in the performance of the contract. So the court comes to the task of implication with the benefit of hindsight, and it is tempting for the court then to fashion a term which will reflect the merits of the situation as they then appear. Tempting, but wrong … it is not enough to show that had the parties foreseen the eventuality which in fact occurred they would have wished to make provision for it, unless it can also be shown either that there was only one contractual solution or that one of several possible solutions would without doubt have been preferred."
Conclusion