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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Ruttle Plant Ltd v Secretary of State for Environment Food & Rural Affairs No. 2 [2008] EWHC 238 (TCC) (30 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2008/238.html Cite as: [2009] 1 All ER 448, [2008] EWHC 238 (TCC), [2008] BPIR 1395 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Ruttle Plant Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Environment Food and Rural Affairs No. 2 |
Defendant |
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Jonathan Acton Davis QC and Rebecca Stubbs (instructed by Nabarro) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Ramsey :
(1) Ruttle served a draft Amended Particulars of Claim;(2) DEFRA served notice of objections to the amendments;
(3) Ruttle served submissions;
(4) DEFRA served submissions;
(5) Ruttle served submissions.
(1) That Ruttle would serve further submissions on the exercise of the Court's discretion to allow FAL to be joined as a Claimant;(2) That DEFRA would respond to the submissions;
(3) That Ruttle would reply;
(4) The matter would be dealt with in writing and a further draft judgment would be handed down.
The original application
(1) The joinder of Farm Assist Limited ("FAL")
By paragraph 5 of the draft amended Particulars of Claim Ruttle sought to plead: "This action is brought in the name of, on behalf of and/or in the right of FAL by [Ruttle]".(2) The status of Ruttle
By paragraph 61 of the draft amended Particulars of Claim Ruttle sought to plead the reasons why it remained as a Claimant.(3) The pleading of damages
By paragraph 31 and 62 of the draft amended Particulars of Claim Ruttle sought to postpone the pleading of its claim for damages.
(1) The joinder of FAL
Whilst DEFRA accepted that FAL, itself, could bring proceedings, it submitted that these proceedings were not brought by FAL in its own right. For the reasons dealt with below DEFRA contended that Ruttle did not have the pleaded status and should not be permitted to amend. In any event DEFRA submitted that the Liquidator of FAL must consent and the consent should be filed with the Court. It was submitted that the letter of 13 December 2007 originally filed by the Liquidator was defective.
(2) The status of Ruttle.
DEFRA submitted that the Deed of Assignment did not validly assign FAL's rights to Ruttle because:
(a) The rights to commence and conduct these proceedings and the entitlement to the fruits were an element of FAL's property and could not be assigned by the Liquidator acting in his own name. FAL was not a party to the Deed of Assignment and the Liquidator had no entitlement to assign what he purported to do.
(b) Even if the Liquidator did what he purported to do, then he would have abrogated his responsibilities in relation to an asset which was vested in and remained the property of FAL, by the assignment to Ruttle, a company outside the regime of the Insolvency Act 1986. DEFRA submitted that by divesting himself of the right to control proceedings the Liquidator surrendered his fiduciary power to control proceedings commenced in the name of the FAL.
(c) Further, whilst an equitable assignment of the fruits of the action was unobjectionable, DEFRA submitted that, in purporting to assign the fruits of the action and also the right to prosecute the claim, the Liquidator had made an assignment which was champertous.
(d) Further, DEFRA submitted that the assignment to Ruttle of the ability to enforce FAL's right to payment contravened the non-assignment provision in clause 21.1 of the Contract between FAL and DEFRA.
(3) The pleading of damages
DEFRA objected to the lack of particularisation of the claim for damages and the approach taken by Ruttle.
FAL not a party to the Deed
"First, it is said that the consideration of an assignment was a cause of action, and that the cause of action was a tort, namely, a slander. I think that all that was assigned was the fruits of an action. I know no rule of law which prevents the assignment of the fruits of an action. Such an assignment does not give the assignee any right to interfere in the proceedings in the action."
"Finally it was urged that that which purported to be assigned to the husband was in substance a cause of action for personal wrong. What was assigned to him was whatever should come from an action of slander which had been brought by Mrs. Glegg against Lady Bromley, and it was urged that such an interest was incapable of being validly assigned.
…
It is clearly intended to assign the fruits of the action, so that whatever benefit comes from the action shall go to Mr Glegg by way of further security, but there is nothing which gives him the right to intervene in the action or which is in any way against public policy."
"In the first place, I think that according to the true construction of the mortgage in question the subject-matter assigned is money or other property which might thereafter be acquired by means of the pending action for slander. It is not an existing chose in action, but future property identified by reference to an existing chose in action."
"If a transfer of a cause of action in return for financing an action and a share of the recoveries is a "sale" for the purpose of paragraph 6, so must, I think a transfer of a half beneficial interest in recoveries in return for financing the action."
Surrender of Fiduciary Powers
"… the fundamental distinction between assets of a company and rights conferred upon a liquidator in relation to the conduct of the liquidation. The former are assignable by sale under para 6 of Sch 4, the latter are not because in my view they are an incident of the office of the liquidator. The conclusion is, in my view, supported by the special status of the liquidator in company law."
"Now, if Mr Menzies is right in submitting that a liquidator can assign any of his powers the assignee, who is not a liquidator, would be free from any such control and I find it very difficult to envisage that Parliament could have contemplated that that was a permissible state of affairs."
"In the present case there is, it seems to me, a short answer to this point, that is that a claim under s.214 is simply incapable of outright legal assignment - it can only be made and pursued by a liquidator-and that even a partial loss of control is objectionable where the claim has a public or penal element. So my view on the office of the liquidator point - in the context of a s.214 - strongly reinforces my conclusion on the property point."
"Outside the context of a s.214 (or s.213) Mr Wright's point is not without force, but is still open to debate. The basic principle underlying Seear v. Lawson and all the authorities that come after it may be seen as a recognition that there is a public interest in trustees in bankruptcy and liquidators being able to realise assets (including causes of action) expeditiously and economically, and that this warrants their statutory powers being construed widely rather than restrictively. I remind myself that Chitty J said in Guy v. Churchill (the first case where a liquidator covenanted to assist the assignee, and agreed to take a share of any recoveries as the only consideration) in a passage which I have already quoted (40 ChD at p 488),
"It would be a strange and inconsistent result to say that although the right of action may be sold out and out it cannot be disposed of on the terms that some part of the fruit of the action if successful shall come back to the bankrupt's estate for division among his creditors."
It might perhaps have been argued that this would not be a strange or inconsistent result, since under an outright assignment for a non-contingent consideration the liquidator is relieved of any further involvement in the litigation, even as an assistant, and does receive some money as a 'bird in the hand' for early distribution to the company's creditors; and so a situation in which a liquidator continues to be involved may in practice be less desirable than when he sells a cause of action outright for cash, and has no further involvement. However Guy v. Churchill has stood for over 100 years and was approved by the Court of Appeal in Ramsey v. Hartley. It will be a decision for future cases how Knox J's observations in Ayala on s.167(3) are to be reconciled with the statutory power, which a liquidator undoubtedly has, to make an outright assignment, for cash of a bare cause of action in ordinary civil litigation"
The first is the transfer of property carrying with it the right to prosecute any cause of action closely related to that property, such as the assignment of a debt. Such a transfer and any action brought by the transferee to enforce that right are not champertous: see for example, Camdex International Ltd v Bank of Zambia [1996] 3 WLR 759. The second is the assignment of a bare cause of action or a bare right to litigate. Such assignments offend public policy: see, for example Trendex Trading Corporation Credit Suisse [1982] AC 679. The third is the assignment of the damages or other monetary compensation that may be awarded in an action in which judgment has not yet been given. Such an assignment being an agreement to assign future property (damages, if and when awarded), operates in equity and if supported by consideration will be valid and no question of unlawful maintenance or champerty will arise, at any rate when the assignee has no right to influence the course of the proceedings: See Glegg v. Bromley [1912] 3 KB 474."
"Whether he sells a bare right of action or the fruits of the action, the only authority a liquidator has to make any such sale is this statutory power. It has long been accepted that a trustee in bankruptcy can lawfully sell a bare right of action owned by an insolvent to a stranger with no interest in it, although that would involve maintenance or champerty but for the fact that he sells under the statutory authority. A liquidator has the same power. In my opinion, there is no reason why this statutory authority should not make lawful any sale of the insolvent company's property by a liquidator, including the sale of a share in the proceeds of an action belonging to the company to a person with no interest in the litigation on terms that that person is to have control of the litigation, although that would involve champerty but for the transaction being made under that authority. This will be the position, provided only that the subject matter of the sale is 'property of the company' within the statutory power."
"Like Robert Walker J we therefore conclude on its true construction "the company's property" in paragraph 6 of Schedule 4 does not include the fruits of litigation brought by the liquidator under section 214. The judge also found that his conclusion was strongly supported by the consideration that the liquidator pursuing an application under s 213 or 214 was not conducting ordinary civil litigation but litigation with a public or penal element and any loss of control by the liquidator of that litigation was objectionable. For our part we regard that as relevant not to the question whether the fruits of such litigation are "the company's property" within paragraph 6 of Schedule 4 but to the propriety of the liquidator's act in entering into the agreement and the correctness of the Companies Court in authorising this act. As a matter of policy we think that there is much to be said for allowing a liquidator to sell the fruits of an action for the reasons given by Drummond J, provided that it does not give the purchaser the right to influence the course of or to interfere with the Liquidator's conduct of the proceedings. The liquidator as an officer of the Court exercising a statutory power in pursuing proceedings must be free to behave accordingly. We are far from happy with the right of interference given to LWL by the agreement, which, as it now stands, does enable LWL to dictate how the liquidator is to conduct the action (see in particular clause 5). Indeed despite Mr Wright's argument to the contrary, it seems to us to enable LWL to prevent the liquidator from exercising his statutory power under section 168(3) of the Act of 1986 to apply to the Court for directions in relation to litigation, though we should record Mr Wright's offer on behalf of LWL that the agreement should take effect as if the liquidator retained that power. The proviso to clause 6 on which Mr Wright placed reliance is by its terms limited in its application. It is to be noted that the right of an Insurer under the funding agreement in In re Movitor Pty Ltd v. Sims, 19 ACSR 440 were considerably less than those of LWL under the agreement."
Champerty
Clause 21.1 of the Contract
"But Professor Goode's classifications provides no warrant for the view taken by the majority of the Court of Appeal in the present case: he does not discuss or envisage a case where a contractual prohibition against assignment is to be construed as prohibiting an assignment by A to C of rights to future performance but does not prohibit the assignment by A to C of "the fruits of performance" eg., accrued rights of action or debts."
"The question is to what extent does clause 17 on its true construction restrict the rights of assignment which would otherwise exist? In the context of a complicated building contract, I find it impossible to construe clause 17 as prohibiting only the assignment of rights to future performance, leaving each party free to assign the fruits of the contract."
Pleading of damages
Conclusion
(1) The amendment to the first sentence of paragraph 5 of the original draft Amended Particulars of Claim, in the light of this judgment, is objectionable and the amendment should not be allowed.(2) The amendment at paragraph 61(a) of the original draft Amended Particulars of Claim repeats those in the first sentence of paragraph 5 and is objectionable for that reason and the amendment should not be allowed.
(3) The amendment at paragraph 61(b) of the original draft Amended Particulars of Claim recites the right of Ruttle to receive the fruits of these proceedings. I do not consider that this would justify retaining Ruttle as a party and the amendment should not be allowed.
(4) The amendments at paragraphs 61(c) and 61(d) of the original draft Amended Particulars of Claim relates to possible costs orders being made in these proceedings in the event that FAL proceeds. Again, I do not consider that this would justify retaining Ruttle as a party to the proceedings at this stage and the amendments should not be allowed.
(5) The amendments at paragraphs 62(b) and 62(c) of the draft Amended Particulars of Claim seek to delay the pleading of FAL's damages until after the determination of the issue of rescission of the settlement agreement. I consider that adequate particulars of that claim should be given and the amendments in their present form should not be allowed, without further particularisation being provided.
The Application to join FAL
"The court may order a person to be added as a new party if –
(a) it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve all the matters in dispute in the proceedings; or
(b) there is an issue involving the new party and an existing party which is connected to the matters in dispute in the proceedings, and it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve that issue."
"The overriding objective is that the court should deal with cases justly. That includes, so far as practicable, ensuring that each case is dealt with not only expeditiously but also fairly. Amendments in general ought to be allowed so that the real dispute between the parties can be adjudicated upon provided that any prejudice to the other party or parties caused by the amendment can be compensated for in costs, and the public interest in the efficient administration of justice is not significantly harmed."
The Application by DEFRA
(1) That permission is granted to the Liquidator to add FAL as the Claimant to the proceedings;(2) That FAL has permission to amend the Particulars of Claim in the form of "Variation B", subject to further particularisation of damages at paragraphs 62(b) and 62(c).
(3) That so far as Ruttle is concerned, DEFRA has summary judgment against Ruttle and the proceedings by Ruttle are struck out;
(4) That DEFRA is to have the costs of its application dated 17 July 2007 such costs to be assessed on a standard basis if not agreed. Ruttle shall pay DEFRA £114,600 on account of costs within 14 days of the handing down of this judgment.
(5) That the application by DEFRA against Ruttle for the costs of the proceedings to date be adjourned with liberty to apply.