BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
High Court of Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Greendale Developments Ltd., Re [1997] IEHC 162 (28th October, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1997/162.html Cite as: [1997] IEHC 162 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
1. The
Applicant in this application is Liam McQuaid ("the Liquidator"), the Official
Liquidator of Greendale Developments Limited ("the Company"), which is being
wound up by the Court. The Liquidator seeks to have an application which is
pending before the Court heard in camera. In the substantive application, the
Liquidator seeks directions in connection with the liquidation of the Company
and, in particular, an Order pursuant to Section 231 of the Companies Act, 1963
granting him liberty to continue two plenary actions which were commenced by
the Company before the winding up Order was made, one being an action against a
bank and firm of chartered accountants and the other being an action against a
firm of solicitors. The Act of 1963 does not confer any power on the Court to
hear an application under Section 231 otherwise than in public. Not being
satisfied that authority exists which permits the hearing of the substantive
application in camera, I adapted the approach adopted by Murphy J. in
In
Re: Countyglen Plc
[1995] 1 I.R. 220 and I directed that the Attorney General should come into the
proceedings as legitimus contradictor to argue that the substantive application
must be heard in public.
2. Subsection
(1) of Section 231 empowers the liquidator in a winding up by the Court to do
various acts with the sanction of the Court or of the committee of inspection,
including the bringing or defending of any action or other legal proceedings in
the name and on behalf of the company. Subsection (3) of Section 231 provides
as follows:-
3. Counsel
for the Liquidator has intimated that one creditor which is on notice of the
substantive application does not object to leave to continue the proceedings
being granted. Another creditor of the Company has filed an Affidavit in the
substantive application strenuously objecting to the proceedings being
continued. It is against this background that the preliminary issue as to
whether the Liquidator's application to have the substantive application heard
in camera must be considered.
4. Article
34.1 of the Constitution provides that justice shall be administered in court
established by law by Judges appointed in the manner provided by the
Constitution, and, save in such special and limited cases as may be prescribed
by law, shall be administered in public. It is well settled that the effect of
Article 34.1 of the Constitution is that justice must be administered in public
in the absence of a statutory provision enacted or re-enacted or applied by a
law enacted by the Oireachtas subsequent to the coming into force of the
Constitution (
In
Re: R.
[1989] I.R. 126;
Irish
Press Plc -v- Ingersoll
[1993] I.L.R.M. 747). The essential question which falls for consideration on
this application is whether the making of a decision to grant or refuse leave
to continue proceedings in the circumstances of the substantive application is
an administration of justice.
5. On
behalf of the Liquidator, Mr. Trainor submitted that such a decision is not an
administration of justice, rather it is an administrative function which the
Court performs in a compulsory winding up which is analogous to administrative
functions which the Court performs in the administration of the estates of
deceased persons and the exercise of jurisdiction over minors and wards of
court. Moreover, it was submitted on behalf of the Liquidator that such a
decision does not manifest any of the five features which were identified in
McDonald
-v- Bord na gCon
[1965] I.R. 217 as being characteristic of the administration of justice. On
the other hand, Mr. Clarke submitted on behalf of the Attorney General that all
of the five characteristic features identified in
McDonald
-v- Bord na gCon
are present in an adjudication under Section 231 in the circumstances which
arise on the substantive application and that in dealing with the substantive
application this Court will be administering justice.
6. I
propose considering the arguments advanced in relation to each of the five
features individually. These features are:-
7. In
determining an application under Section 231, such as the application in the
substantive application, it was submitted on behalf of the Liquidator, the
Court arrives at an assessment of the appropriate course of action for the
Liquidator to adopt having regard to certain variables, for example, the
strength of the action which the Liquidator wishes to bring or continue as
against the likely expense of the case and the level of costs to which the
Company would be exposed if it were to lose the action. Such an assessment is
not a dispute or controversy as to legal rights in the sense which that term is
normally understood. The decision which the Court makes is no different in
quality than that which the Board of Directors of a solvent company would make
when determining whether to proceed with, or desist from, litigation.
8. Mr.
Clarke argued that Section 231 itself recognises that the manner in which his
powers may be exercised by a liquidator can have a serious effect on the rights
of creditors and contributories. If the Court accedes to an application to
continue proceedings and the liquidator loses the action and costs are awarded
against him, the creditors will be worse off and their entitlement on
distribution of the assets of the company may be significantly reduced. On the
other hand, if the Court refuses to sanction the continuance of an action which
would have been successful, the creditor who has urged that the action should
proceed may end up with less on distribution than he would have received had on
the action gone ahead. Mr. Clarke submitted that the combined effect of
subsections (1) and (3) of Section 231 is to confer on a creditor or
contributory a right to the best chance to optimum distribution. The test, in
broad terms, it was suggested is whether the resolution of the matter results
in the rights of one party being defined to his advantage while the rights of
another party are defined to his disadvantage. That test is satisfied here, it
was submitted, and there is a dispute or controversy which affects the legal
rights of creditors and the resolution of that dispute will affect those legal
rights.
9. It
was argued on behalf of the Liquidator that the decision which will be made on
the substantive application, whether to proceed with the litigation or not, is
not one as to the rights of any parties. It is only indirectly that it has an
affect on the rights of the creditors to the remaining assets of the Company
but no actual determination of their rights is made.
10. Mr.
Clarke submitted that there is a determination or ascertainment of rights - the
rights of creditors who make opposing contentions.
11. It
was submitted on behalf of the Liquidator that there is no final decision on an
application such as the substantive application, in that there is no impediment
to the Court reopening the matter at a future stage.
12. Mr.
Clarke submitted that in the constitutional context "a final determination"
does not imply such finality of process that the matter can never be revisited.
On the contrary, he suggested that in this context "final determination" means
a definitive settlement of the issue in the absence of some countervailing
order of the Court.
13. In
my view, the order which the Court will make on the substantive application
must be a "final determination" of the substantive application in the sense in
which that expression was used in the relevant passage from
McDonald
-v- Bord na gCon
.
14. The
Liquidator's position is that the nature of the decision which will be made on
the substantive application is such that it does not have this feature.
15. The
Attorney General's position is that the order will be capable of enforcement
and, if necessary, will be enforced, which, in my view, is undoubtedly the case.
16. It
was submitted on behalf of the Liquidator that the order which will be made on
the substantive application is not an order that could be said to be
characteristic of a Court, in that it involves no resolution of issues of fact
and no determination of questions of law, but is merely an administrative
decision made in the course of the Court's supervision of companies being wound
up by the Court.
17. On
behalf of the Attorney General, it was submitted that the order which will be
made on the substantive application is an order of a type which has been made
by the Courts since there has been companies legislation. It was not accepted
that the substantive application would involve no resolution of issues of fact
and no determination of questions of law. On the contrary, there might well be
an issue as to the principles by which the Court should be guided in
determining whether to grant or refuse the relief, which would be a mixed
question of law and fact.
19. In
his judgment in
Keady
-v- Commissioner of An Garda Siochana & Others
[1992] 2 I.R. 197, having quoted the passage from the judgment of Kenny J. in
McDonald
-v- Bord na gCon
in which the five characteristic features of the administration of justice are
identified, O'Flaherty J. went on to say at page 212:-
20. These
essential ingredients correspond with features (1) and (2). In my view, when
an application by a liquidator under Section 231 involves either of the
following situations -
21. The
decision of the Court on a contested application to continue proceedings under
Section 231 is qualitatively different from the decision of a Board of
Directors of a solvent company in relation to prosecuting litigation. The
decision of the Board of Directors should be informed by the interests of the
company, not by the sectional interests of individual shareholders or
creditors. Once a winding up Order is made, the company is doomed to
extinction. The winding up process is the process of the administration of the
assets of the company: their collection, realisation and distribution in
discharge of the liabilities of the company to the creditors and of the
entitlement of its contributories in accordance with the scheme of priorities
prescribed in the Companies Acts. Insofar as the Companies Acts give an
entitlement to a creditor or a contributory to be heard by the Court in
relation to a matter arising in the winding up, in my view, the Court is
required to have regard to the sectional interest of that creditor or
contributory and, in particular, to the protection of his legal entitlement to
a distribution from the assets of the company as defined by the Companies Acts.
22. Finally,
it is not difficult to envisage a situation in which the hearing in public of a
disputed application for leave to initiate or continue proceedings under
Section 231 in public would be seriously prejudicial to the legitimate
interests of the Company in liquidation representing its creditors and
contributories. However, in the absence of a statutory provision on the lines
of Section 205(7) of the 1963 Act, the Court has no discretion to hear such an
application otherwise than in public.