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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Stainless Pipeline Supplies (Irl) Ltd (in voluntary liquidation) & Ors -v- Companies Acts [2010] IEHC 318 (29 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2010/H318.html Cite as: [2010] 3 IR 821, [2010] IEHC 318 |
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Judgment Title: Stainless Pipeline Supplies [Irl] Ltd [in voluntary liquidation] & Ors -v- Companies Acts Composition of Court: Judgment by: Laffoy J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2010] IEHC 318 THE HIGH COURT 2010 395 COS IN THE MATTER OF STAINLESS PIPELINE SUPPLIES (IRL.) LIMITED (IN VOLUNTARY LIQUIDATION) AND IN THE MATTER OF SECTIONS 267(1), 267(2) AND 267(3) OF THE COMPANIES ACT 1963 AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACTS 1963 TO 2010 ON THE APPLICATION OF CLIVE TYNER BETWEEN CLIVE TYNER APPLICANT AND
FRANK LAFFERTY AND STAINLESS PIPELINE SUPPLIES (IRL.) LIMITED (IN VOLUNTARY LIQUIDATION) RESPONDENTS Judgment of Miss Justice Laffoy delivered on the 29th day of July, 2010. 1. The application
(b) an order under Order 74, rule 71 of the Rules of the Superior Courts 1986 (the Rules) setting aside by way of appeal the decision of the chairman of the meeting to accept the proxies of Outokumpu Limited and Watercut Limited as valid proofs for the purposes of voting at the meeting; (c) a declaration that the majority in value of the creditors attending the meeting voted in favour of the resolution to appoint Paul McCann (Mr. McCann) as liquidator; and (d) an order appointing Mr. McCann as liquidator of the company in place of Mr. Lafferty.
2. The relevant statutory provisions and rules
2.3 Part X of Order 74 of the Rules deals with, inter alia, general meetings of creditors in a creditors’ voluntary winding up. Rule 71 deals with admission and rejection of proofs for the purpose of voting and provides:
2.4 Rule 74 deals with proxies and provides that a creditor may vote either in person or by proxy. It further provides:
2.5 Rule 75 provides that every instrument of proxy shall be in either Form No. 21 or Form No. 22 of Appendix M. Form No. 21 is a general proxy and Form No. 22 is a special proxy. 2.6 As counsel for the applicant acknowledged, the objections raised to the decisions of the chairman of the meeting which are the subject of the appeal under Order 74, rule 71 are technical. I propose to consider first whether the Court should set aside the decisions of the chairman and the result of the voting on the basis of those technicalities and, if it should, the consequence of doing so.
3. The voting The applicant €54,519 Mr. Duffy is an accountant. He is a director of Watercut Limited and he was a former director of the company having resigned with effect from 20th August, 2009. 3.2 The status of the applicant as creditor arises from the fact that he is the lessor of premises known as Unit R, Kells Business Park, Kells, County Meath, which at the date of the meeting constituted the registered office of the company, which were held by the company under a lease dated 19th August, 2002 made between Royaldrive Developments Limited of the one part and the company of the other part for a term of 21 years from 1st August, 2002. Prior to the meeting, the applicant had obtained judgment for €54,519 in proceedings in the High Court (Record No. 2009/3733S) in respect of arrears of rent. He claimed that there were further sums due to him in respect of arrears of rent or mesne rates which brought the amount due to him as creditor up to €131,000. The affidavits filed on this application are riddled with controversy as to the company’s liability for rent under the lease over and above €54,519. What happened at the meeting, according to the applicant, was that Mr. St. Ledger agreed to minute the applicant’s debt as what the applicant contends is the correct liability of the company to the applicant, that is to say, as €131,000. Mr. St. Ledger, in his replying affidavit, has confirmed that this account of what happened is correct. In any event, Mr. St. Ledger, as chairman, did not mark the applicant’s proof of debt as “objected to” in accordance with Order 74, rule 71. 3.3 The outcome of the voting on the resolutions to appoint the liquidator was announced by Mr. St. Ledger as follows:
Liam Duffy €76,470
Outokumpu Limited €105,684 Outokumpu Stainless AB €56,853 Outokumpu Stainless Oy €43,130 Watercut Limited €71,943 _________
TOTAL: €354,080 _________
4. Outokumpu 4.2 It is not disputed that the articles of association of Outokumpu Limited require that every instrument to which the seal shall be affixed shall be signed by a director and shall be countersigned by the secretary or a second director or some other person appointed by the directors for that purpose. The notes to Form No. 21 and Form No. 22 in Appendix M (Note 2) state:
4.3 In relation to the debts of Outokumpu Stainless AB, a company incorporated in Sweden, and Outokumpu Stainless OY, a company incorporated in Finland, Ms. Webb has averred that Outokumpu Limited acts as agents for those two companies in Ireland and collects monies due and owing to those companies for and on their behalf. She specifically averred that she believes that the sums shown in the list of unsecured creditors to be due to the Swedish company and the Finnish company are, in fact, due and owing to Outokumpu Limited as agent for the Swedish company and the Finnish company. She has further averred that she believes that the special proxy she signed authorised Mr. St. Ledger not only in respect of the debt due by the company to Outokumpu Limited in its own right, but also in respect of the debts due by it to Outokumpu Limited “as agent for” the Swedish company and the Finnish company. 4.4 In support of his argument that the special proxy was not properly executed, because the seal of Outokumpu Limited was not affixed in the manner prescribed in its articles of association, counsel for the applicant referred the Court to the decision of Morris J. in Zafeera Limited v. Wallis & Anor. (Unreported, High Court, 12th July, 1994). That case concerned the title to premises in the City of Dublin which were the subject of a contract for sale by the plaintiff to the defendants. The conveying party in a deed of 1987 under which the plaintiff had acquired title to the premises had been a company incorporated under the Companies Act 1908, and the provisions of Table A of that Act, which required that the seal should be countersigned by two directors and the secretary of the company, were applicable to it. However, the deed of 1987 originally was only countersigned by one director and the secretary. Morris J. held that the deed was not executed in accordance with the articles of association and was not effective to convey the company’s interest in the property to the plaintiff. 4.5 On the other hand, counsel for the company has referred the Court to a decision dating from 1905: Re David Wright & Co. Ltd. (1905) 39 ILTR 204. The issue in that case was the validity of debentures issued by the company. The articles of association of the company provided that the seal of the company should not be used, except by the general or special authority of the Board, and in the presence of two directors and the secretary, or a person acting as secretary. The debentures and the trust deed securing them were executed by the affixing of the seal of the company and by countersigning by the two directors and one of the directors as secretary. It was held by the Master of the Rolls that the debentures were “legal and right; that is, they are legal and valid so far as the circumstances permitted”. The Master of the Rolls pointed out that there was no clause in the articles that the person acting as secretary should be different from the directors. Of course that decision pre-dated the Act of 1908 and s. 177 of the Act of 1963. 4.6 I must conclude that the special proxy given by Outokumpu Limited was not executed as required by Order 74, rule 75. That rule gives a company two options: either to affix the seal in the manner prescribed by law, or, alternatively, to have the proxy form signed by an officer authorised in that behalf. If the latter option is availed of, then the fact that the officer is so authorised must be stated. Neither option was properly complied with in this case. 4.7 The form of proxy given by Outokumpu Limited was also defective in that, being a special proxy, it did not internally direct the person to whom it was given as to what he was to do, as it should have. That being the case, it could have been open to being construed as giving the person to whom it was given a carte blanche to vote either for or against the resolution and, indeed, that is the way it was treated by Mr. St. Ledger. It is not necessary to decide, and I am not deciding, however, that the internal defect in the proxy form on its own rendered the proxy invalid. 4.8 Outokumpu Stainless AB and Outokumpu Stainless OY were listed as creditors in the list of creditors attached to the statement of affairs separately and distinct from Outokumpu Limited. Presumably, each of those companies was given notice of the summoning the meeting and each was furnished with a general and a special form of proxy with that notice as required by Order 74, rule 76. In my view, if either company wished to vote by proxy at the meeting, it should have submitted a proxy form completed in accordance with the Rules. In my view, the Rules were not complied with in the case of either company and it is no answer that Outokumpu Limited acts as collecting agent for both companies. That does not excuse a failure to comply with the Rules. 4.9 I will consider the implications of the findings in paragraphs 4.6 and 4.8 later.
5. Watercut Limited 5.2 In my view, Watercut Limited did not properly avail of either of the two options provided for in the Rules for execution of a proxy form. There is nothing on the face of the proxy form to state that Mr. Duffy, as an officer, was authorised to sign on behalf of Watercut Limited. Accordingly, the general proxy was not properly executed.
6. The implications of the findings in paragraphs 4.6, 4.8 and 5.2 6.2 The applicant has averred that, at the meeting, Mr. Hand concluded that, of the eighteen proxies submitted, eight proxies were invalid, six were valid and two, the Outokumpu and Watercut proxies, were disputed on the basis that their execution was questioned. Mr. Hand requested that Mr. St. Ledger adjourn the meeting to take advice and satisfy himself that the proxies of Outokumpu and Watercut were valid, but Mr. St. Ledger refused to accede to that request. 6.3 In response, Mr. St. Ledger has averred that six of the proxies which the applicant contends were invalid were not invalid. Those six aggregate in value €46,305. Among the six, the creditor with the largest debt is Macro Stainless Limited (Macro) with a debt of €20,658. An affidavit sworn on 14th July, 2010 by Anthony McNamara, a director of Macro, has been filed on behalf of the company, in which Mr. McNamara exhibited the general proxy dated 23rd June, 2010 which he had given to the chairman of the meeting. On the basis of the evidence contained in the affidavit and the exhibits, in the absence of the articles of association of Macro, it is not clear that the proxy, given by Macro and apparently sealed by Macro in the presence of Mr. McNamara only, is a valid proxy. 6.4 However, what is significant, in my view, is that the creditors on whose behalf affidavits have been sworn to apprise the Court that they favoured the appointment of Mr. Lafferty as liquidator (Outokumpu, Watercut and Macro) between them have debts aggregating €298,268. Mr. Duffy’s personal proxy in favour of the chairman related to a debt of €76, 470. Therefore, technicalities aside, it is unquestionably the case that the majority in value of the creditors who gave valid proxies and technically defective proxies to the chairman favoured the appointment of Mr. Lafferty as liquidator. If the Court makes an order under Order 74, rule 71 setting aside the proxies of Outokumpu and Watercut as valid proofs for the purposes of voting at the meeting, as it must do on the basis of the findings made in paragraphs 4.6, 4.8 and 5.2 above, on the basis of the result of the voting as announced by Mr. St. Ledger, as chairman of the meeting, the outcome will be that one creditor was in favour of the appointment of Mr. Lafferty (Mr. Duffy whose debt is €71,943), as against creditors to the value of €280,636 in favour of Mr. McCann. If the Court were to give effect to that outcome, it would certainly not reflect the wishes of the majority in value of creditors who took the trouble to give proxies at the meeting, albeit that most of them did so in a defective manner. 6.5 It seems to me that the options open to the Court are as follows:
(b) to make an order appointing Mr. McCann as liquidator jointly with Mr. Lafferty, thus reflecting the type of order the Court can make under s. 267(2) where it is applicable, which would not be justified in this case; (c) to leave Mr. Lafferty in place as liquidator; or (d) to direct that a further creditors’ meeting be held. 6.7 The order which I intend to make, which is specified in the next paragraph, is not intended to impinge on the appointment of the committee of inspection at the meeting, of which the applicant is a member.
7. Order
(b) an order directing the company to summon a further creditors’ meeting for the purpose of voting on nominations for the office of liquidator of the company in the creditors’ voluntary winding up on 17th August, 2010 and to comply with the requirements of s. 266 of the Act of 1963 in relation to summoning, giving notice to the creditors of, advertising and conducting the said meeting; (c) an order suspending the exercise by Mr. Lafferty of the powers of liquidator pending the outcome of the meeting on 17th August, 2010; and (d) an order that the appointment of the liquidator of the company for the purposes of the creditors’ voluntary winding up shall be made at the said meeting in accordance with the provisions of s. 267 of the Act of 1963. |