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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 >> Westshield Ltd v Whitehouse & Anor [2013] EWHC 3576 (TCC) (18 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2013/3576.html Cite as: [2014] BPIR 317, [2014] Bus LR 268, [2013] EWHC 3576 (TCC), [2014] CILL 3457 |
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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 :
____________________
WESTSHIELD LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR DAVID WHITEHOUSE AND MRS LISA WHITEHOUSE |
Defendant |
____________________
Christopher Cook (instructed by DWF LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 8 November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
Background
"5. The approval by Creditors and Members of the Arrangement pursuant to the [Insolvency] Act and the [Insolvency] Rules shall be deemed to include agreement, approval and acceptance of these Conditions in all respects.
6. Upon the approval of the Arrangement pursuant to the provisions of the Act and the Rules:-
(i) the Arrangement shall come into effect; and
(ii) the Supervisor shall exercise the functions given to him by the Arrangement and under the Act and Rules.
12. (a) The Supervisor shall exercise the functions given to him by the Arrangement and under the Act and Rules provided that such exercise shall be within the unfettered discretion of the Supervisor who shall be under no obligation to exercise all or any of the functions and powers conferred upon him whether the same be expressly provided for in this Proposal or implied by law…
20…(b) The Company shall continue its business on his own account and:-
(i) in its own name…
(e) For the avoidance of doubt, it is hereby stated that:-
(i) the Company shall carry on with business as principal and shall be solely responsible for any subsequent creditors arising and any liabilities incurred therein after the approval of the Arrangement…
23. (c) No creditor shall be entitled to receive any payment or dividend from the Supervisor or any other person under the terms of the Arrangements unless:-
(i) he is bound by the Arrangement…
(ii) the Supervisor has admitted his claim for the purpose of participation in any payment or dividend under the Arrangement…
(iii) Unless otherwise agreed by the creditors in general meeting or otherwise provided for in the proposal, no creditor shall be entitled to participate in the Arrangement unless that creditor's debt is one provable in a Liquidation within the meaning of the Act and Rules.
(d) The amount on which payments or dividends to a creditor are to be calculated under the Arrangement shall subject as set out in paragraphs 23(e) and 23(f) of these Conditions, be the sum for which a proof would have been admitted had a Winding-up Order being made against the Company on the day the Proposal was approved.
(e) Where before the Proposal is approved there have been mutual credits, mutual debts or other mutual dealings between the Company and any person claiming to be a creditor of the Company, an account shall be taken of what is due from each party to the other in respect of the mutual dealings and the sums due from one party shall be set off against the sums due from the other. Only the balance (if any) of the account owed by the Company to the creditor shall be claimable by the creditor.
(f) A proof may be admitted for inclusion in the Arrangement by Supervisor either for the whole amount claimed by creditor or for part only of that amount, and if the Supervisor rejects a proof in whole or in part he shall prepare a written Statement of his reasons for doing so and shall send it forthwith to the creditor. In the event of the Proof of Debt or claim of any creditor or purported creditor being rejected (whether in whole or in part) by the Supervisor, the creditor or purported creditor shall have the right application to the Court on the admissibility or otherwise of such Proof of Debt or claim provided that any such application must be made within 21 days of the creditor receiving the written Statements mentioned previously in this paragraph."
The Adjudication
"Whilst we need to review any contract between our respective clients (which is not admitted) deals with such an insolvency, it would appear that in any event your client will be unable to enforce any Adjudicator's Award because our client would succeed in applying for a stay of execution."
In neither of these two letters was there any reference to there being any counterclaim or set off.
(a) The first letter from DWF is dated 23 April 2013 and sought to put the Supervisor on notice that their clients intend to launch a claim as creditor in relation to "significant cost and expense which our clients incurred in remedying defective work carried out by Westshield" enclosing a list of some but not all of the alleged defects, quantified at about £98,000.
(b) The Supervisor replied by e-mail on the same day saying that the claim "will be rejected" on the basis that there was an adjudicator's decision in favour of Westshield.
(c) DWF replied by letter on 24 April 2013 to the effect that it was the Supervisor's responsibility under Condition 23 of the CVA Conditions to agree and admit claims, adding that the adjudicator did not consider any claim or counterclaim for defects.
(d) On 10 October 2013, after these enforcement proceedings had been started, DWF wrote again saying that their clients considered themselves to be creditors in the CVA in respect of a claim for damages in relation (at least primarily) to defects either put right by Westshield (but for which Westshield claimed the rectification cost) or put right by others. They enclosed a "proof of debt form and a statement setting out the details of the claims". The form was in a creditor claim form for CVAs and the statement identified £43,150 as involving errors in the adjudicator's decision, an over-claim of more than £10,000 for putting right some damp proof membrane defects, a suggestion supported by a witness statement that delays attributable to a piling variation could not be nearly as much as has been suggested, various suggested increased costs from the superstructure contractor attributable in some way to poor workmanship and site supervision on the part of Westshield and various other matters. This led to the conclusion that there was a net £199,805 due to the Whitehouses.
(e) The Supervisor replied on 16 October 2013 that he did not think it was his job to second guess the adjudicator particularly when the same issue was being put to the court. It does go on to say that if the "Court does not get involved for some reason, then of course I will adjudicate on the quantum of any claims" albeit that he would require a greater level of evidence than had been provided so far.
(f) DWF wrote again on 30 October 2013 which continued the argument and asked for further information from the Supervisor.
The Proceedings
Discussion
"29. The second question raised by the appeal is whether the judge was right to give summary judgment to Dahl-Jensen for the amount which the adjudicator had decided Bouygues should pay. In the ordinary case I have little doubt that an adjudicator's determination under section 108 of the 1996 Act, or under contractual provisions incorporated by that section, ought to be enforced by summary judgment. The purpose of the Act is to provide a basis upon which payment of an amount found by the adjudicator to be due from one party to the other (albeit that the determination is capable of being re-opened) can be enforced summarily. But this is not an ordinary case. At the date of the application for summary judgment - indeed at the date of the reference to adjudication - Dahl-Jensen was in liquidation.
30. In those circumstances rule 4.90 of the Insolvency Rules 1986 has effect. The rule is in these terms, so far as material:
"(1) This rule applies where, before the company goes into liquidation there have been mutual credits, mutual debts or other mutual dealings between the company and any creditor of the company proving or claiming to prove for a debt in the liquidation.
(2) An account shall be taken of what is due from each party to the other in respect of the mutual dealings and the sums due from one party shall be set off against the sums due from the other.
(3) ...
(4) Only the balance (if any) of the account is provable in the liquidation. Alternatively (as the case may be) the amount shall be paid to the liquidator as part of the assets."
31…There is no doubt that the rule has statutory force. It applies wherever there have been mutual dealings, giving rise to mutual obligations and mutual credits, between a company which subsequently goes into liquidation and another party.
32. The effect of the rule was explained by Lord Hoffman in his speech in the House of Lords in Stein v Blake [1996] 1 AC 243. In that appeal Lord Hoffman was addressing the provisions of section 323 of the Insolvency Act 1986, which is applicable in an individual insolvency or bankruptcy. But the provisions of section 323 of the Act and Rule 4.90 of the Rules are indistinguishable. The rule-making body, in 1986, incorporated into corporate insolvency provisions which had, for many centuries, been part of the law in relation to individual bankruptcy. What Lord Hoffman had to say about section 323 of the Act is equally applicable to corporate insolvency; to which rule 4.90 applies. At page 251 D-F Lord Hoffman explained the difference between bankruptcy set-off and legal set-off outside bankruptcy:
"Bankruptcy set-off, on the other hand, affects the substantive rights of the parties by enabling the bankrupt's creditor to use his indebtedness to the bankrupt as a form of security. Instead of having to prove with other creditors for the whole of his debt in the bankruptcy, he can set off pound for pound what he owes the bankrupt and prove for or pay only the balance. So in Forster v Wilson (1843) 12 M & W. 191, 204, Parke B said that the purpose of insolvency set-off was 'to do substantial justice between the parties'. Although it is often said the justice of the rule is obvious, it is worth noticing that it is by no means universal. It has however been part of the English law of bankruptcy since at least the time of the first Queen Elizabeth."
33. The importance of the rule is illustrated by the circumstances in the present case. If Bouygues is obliged to pay to Dahl-Jensen the amount awarded by the adjudicator, those monies, when received by the liquidator of Dahl-Jensen, will form part of the fund applicable for distribution amongst Dahl-Jensen's creditors. If Bouygues itself has a claim under the construction contract, as it currently asserts, and is required to prove for that claim in the liquidation of Dahl-Jensen, it will receive only a dividend pro rata to the amount of its claim. It will be deprived of the benefit of treating Dahl-Jensen's claim under the adjudicator's determination as security for its own cross-claim.
34. Lord Hoffman pointed out, at page 252 in Stein v Blake that the bankruptcy set-off requires an account to be taken of liabilities which at the time of the bankruptcy may be due but not yet payable, or which may be unascertained in amount or subject to contingency. Nevertheless, the insolvency code requires that the account shall be deemed to have been taken, and the sums due from one party shall be set off against the other, as at the date of insolvency order. Lord Hoffman pointed out also that it was an incident of the rule that claims and cross-claims merge and are extinguished; so that, as between the insolvent and the other party, there is only a single claim - represented by the balance of the account between them. In those circumstances it is difficult to see how a summary judgment can be of any advantage to either party where, as the 1996 Act and paragraph 31 of the Model Adjudication Procedure make clear, the account can be reopened at some stage; and has to be reopened in the insolvency of Dahl-Jensen.
35. Part 24, rule 2 of the Civil Procedure Rules enables the court to give summary judgment on the whole of a claim, or on a particular issue, if it considers that the defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim and there is no other reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial. In circumstances such as the present, where there are latent claims and cross-claims between parties, one of which is in liquidation, it seems to me that there is a compelling reason to refuse summary judgment on a claim arising out of an adjudication which is, necessarily, provisional. All claims and cross-claims should be resolved in the liquidation, in which full account can be taken and a balance struck. That is what rule 4.90 of the Insolvency Rules 1986 requires…"
It will be noted that Rule 4.90 of the Insolvency Rules bears a striking similarity to Condition 23(e) of the CVA Conditions adopted here.
"23. There is, so far as I can tell, no authority dealing with the position of a claimant who is the subject of a CVA and who seeks to avoid a stay of execution. Ms. McCafferty was also unable to identify any such authority. However, it seems to me that, applying the principles that I have already noted:
(a) The fact that a claimant is the subject of a CVA will be a relevant factor for the court to take into account when deciding whether or not to grant a stay under RSC Order 47.
(b) However, the mere fact of the CVA will not of itself mean that the court should automatically infer that the claimant would be unable to repay any sums paid out in accordance with the judgment, such that a stay of execution should be ordered.
(c) The circumstances of both the CVA and the claimant's current trading position will be relevant to any consideration of a stay of execution.
(d) Also of relevance will be the point noted in paragraph 26(f)(ii) of the judgment in Wimbledon (which was also one of the live issues in Michael John Construction Ltd. v. Golledge & Others) [2006] EWHC 71 (TCC)), namely whether or not the claimant's financial position and/or the CVA is due, either wholly or in significant part, to the defendant's failure to pay the sums awarded by the adjudicator."
"2" The voluntary arrangement—
(a) takes effect as if made by the company at the creditors' meeting, and
(b) binds every person who in accordance with the rules—
(i) was entitled to vote at that meeting (whether or not he was present or represented at it), or
(ii) would have been so entitled if he had had notice of it,
as if he were a party to the voluntary arrangement."
This is reflected in the CVA conditions in this case. It follows that the Whitehouses are bound by the CVA although they did not participate or register their claim. It is unclear if they had notice of the creditor's meeting but it matters not as the statute makes clear.
(a) Were there before the Proposal was approved "mutual credits, mutual debts or other mutual dealings between the Company and any person claiming to be a creditor of the Company"? The answer is that any cause of action in contract (which the Whitehouses have) had arisen before the CVA because the works were completed and taken over in April 2009. There were mutual dealings in that there was a contract between the parties and the claim for the account and the cross-claim arise out of or in connection with that contract. The Court can not say that there were definitely debts or credits because they have not been proved in the CVA or established in these proceedings.
(b) Can "an account…be taken of what is due from each party to the other in respect of the mutual dealings and the sums due from one party shall be set off against the sums due from the other"? There is no obvious reason (and certainly not one advanced in these proceedings) why such an account can not be done by the Supervisors; indeed they say that they can "adjudicate" upon it. If and when that is done, "the balance (if any) of the account owed by the Company to the creditor" can be ascertained.
(c) Once that exercise is done, if it shows money due to Westshield, that can be paid subject to the right which the Whitehouses have to refer the matter to Court within a short time. The Court can then consider what effect (if any) the adjudication decision may have on its decision as to what should be done. If the accounting shows money due to the Whitehouses, they will get however many pennies in the pound as are available to creditors from the CVA. I was told by Counsel for the Whitehouses that this could be 1 penny or less.
(a) The effect or "incident" of Condition 23 (e) is that "claims and cross-claims merge and are extinguished; so that, as between the insolvent and the other party, there is only a single claim - represented by the balance of the account between them".
(b) "In those circumstances it is difficult to see how a summary judgment can be of any advantage to either party where, as [Condition 23(e)] make[s] clear, the account can be reopened at some stage".
Decision