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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Scottish Environmental Protection Agency & Ors, Re [2013] ScotCS CSIH_108 (12 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2013/2013CSIH108.html Cite as: 2014 SC 372, 2014 SLT 259, [2013] CSIH 108, 2014 GWD 2-48, [2013] ScotCS CSIH_108 |
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SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord Justice ClerkLord Menzies Lord Brodie
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Reclaimers - (1) SEPA: Lake QC; Brodies LLP
(2) Lord Advocate: Mure QC, Sheldon; Scottish Government Legal Directorate
(3) East Ayrshire and South Lanarkshire Councils: Howie QC, D J Edwards;
Ledingham Chalmers LLP
Respondents - (1) Scottish Coal Company: Sellar QC, Govier, R Anderson; HBJ Gately
(2) Advocate General: MacGregor; Office of the Advocate General
12 December 2013
The Directions
[1] By
interlocutor dated 11 July 2013, the Lord Ordinary gave directions to the joint
liquidators ("the liquidators") of The Scottish Coal Company Limited ("SCC") in
the winding up of SCC, which had been ordered by the court on 29 April 2013.
The Lord Ordinary directed, inter alia, that the liquidators have the
power: first, to "abandon" certain heritable property located in Scotland and
owned by SCC ("the first direction"); and, secondly, to "abandon (otherwise
disclaim)" certain statutory licences, including licences granted under the
Water Environment (Controlled Activities) Regulations 2005 and 2011 ("the CARs")
and permits issued under the Pollution Prevention and Control (Scotland)
Regulations 2000 and 2012 ("the PPCR"), presently held by SCC ("the second
direction"). The directions have considerable practical significance. SCC own
land in Ayrshire, Lanarkshire and Fife upon which open cast coal operations
were conducted under CARs licenses and PPCR permits. The ongoing costs of complying
with the regulatory regimes are about £500,000 per month. If the liquidators
were required to comply with the statutory provisions (infra) to
surrender the CARs licences, this would cost several million pounds. If the costs
of compliance were to be treated as an expense of the liquidation, it is
unlikely that SCC's creditors would receive any dividend upon dissolution.
[2] In respect
of the first direction, the Lord Ordinary had first asked himself (para [21])
two questions: (1) can someone abandon the ownership of land; and (2) can there
be ownerless land? During his consideration of the first question, he surmised
that it was "not impossible in an essentially civilian system for an owner to
abandon land" (para [22]) even if there were no authority to that effect. He
did not consider that either the introduction of land registration or the
abolition of feudal tenure affected the issue standing the specific statutory
provisions (Land Registration (Scotland) Act 1979 s 2(4); Abolition of
Feudal Tenure (Scotland) Act 2000 s 4). Although counsel for both the
liquidators and SEPA submitted that it was impossible to have ownerless land,
the Lord Ordinary did not consider (para [24]) that the authorities relied
upon by them supported that proposition. One particular example identified by
the Lord Ordinary was the Crown's waiver of bona vacantia (Macmillan: The
Law of Bona Vacantia in Scotland pp 10-12). Another was the statutory
right of the Crown to disclaim the land of a dissolved company (Companies Act
2006, s 1013(1)). Accordingly, the Lord Ordinary concluded (para [26])
that:
"... it may be possible for an owner to abandon land and circumstances may arise when, on a disclaimer by the Crown, land becomes ownerless ... If it is possible to abandon corporeal moveable property, it should be possible to abandon land".
Nevertheless, the Lord Ordinary considered that such abandonment would require to be regulated to prevent abandonment being used to avoid obligations.
[3] The
Lord Ordinary explained that a liquidator had the same powers as a trustee in
bankruptcy (Insolvency Act 1986, s 169(2)). Unlike in a liquidation (Smith
v Lord Advocate 1978 SC 259), the property of a bankrupt vested in his
trustee (Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985, s 31). However, a trustee could
choose not to adopt a contract, including a lease, thus leaving the other party
to rank for damages (Goudy, Bankruptcy (4th ed.) pp 282-3;
Myles v City of Glasgow Bank (1879) 6 R 718). He could also "decline
to take title or carry out obligations in relation to" heritage (Mitchell's
Trs v Pearson (1834) 12 S 322; Marquis of Abercorn v
Grieve (1835) 14 S 168; Mitchell's Tr v Galloway's Trs (1903) 5 F 612). The Lord Ordinary described (para [18]) the act of a trustee
declining to adopt a contract or to "take up" heritable property as an
"abandonment". Under reference to Air v Royal Bank of Scotland
(1886) 13 R 734 and Whyte v Northern Heritable Securities Investment
Co (1891) 18 R (HL) 37, the Lord Ordinary reasoned that the effect of this
was to "reverse the vesting ... so that the right [of] property remains in the
ownership of the bankrupt". This act freed the trustee of any liabilities in
relation to the abandoned asset and allowed the trustee to realise and
distribute the remainder of the estate.
[4] The Lord
Ordinary considered that there was no reason in principle why a liquidator
should not therefore also be entitled to decline to "take up" an asset (eg Asphaltic
Limestone Concrete Co v Glasgow Corporation 1907 SC 463; Joint
Administrators of Rangers Football Club, Noters 2012 SLT 599; Crown
Estate Commissioners v Liquidators of Highland Engineering 1975 SLT
58; P & O Property Holdings v City of Glasgow Council 2000
SLT 444). If a liquidator declined to "take up" land, it would remain the
property of the company, until that company was dissolved. It would not form
part of the liquidator's "patrimony". It would remain as a "mummified
patrimony" with nobody entitled to exercise control over it during the winding
up.
[5] Notwithstanding
this generality, the Lord Ordinary held (para [34]) that, where a
company's use of land was governed by statutory permits, a liquidator's ability
to "disclaim" the land (in the Lord Ordinary's sense of declining to include it
in the creditors' patrimony or taking steps to terminate ownership) would
depend upon the terms of the relevant statutory provisions and permits. Thus,
whether the liquidators had power to "disclaim" the land in question depended largely
upon the answer to the questions posed by the request for the second direction.
[6] The CARs provide
(reg 2) that a liquidator is a "responsible person" for the purposes of
the observance of licences, including the conditions for surrender of the
licence (reg 24). The Lord Ordinary held that a statutory licence was an
interest "arising out of, or incidental to, property" and therefore within a
liquidator's control (Insolvency Act 1986, ss 144 and 436). There were
two possible interpretations of the CARs in relation to whether a liquidator
was bound by the statutory provisions for the surrender of a licence. On a
broad interpretation, a liquidator was precluded from surrendering the licence
other than by the methods specified in the CARs (Re Mineral Resources [1999] BCC 422). On a narrow interpretation, termination could be achieved by other
methods, as a consequence of "external statutory force" (In re Celtic
Extraction [2001] 1 Ch 475, Morritt LJ at para 37). Whilst the Lord
Ordinary considered that there were strong policy factors in favour of the broad
interpretation, and that it reflected the natural meaning of the provisions,
such an interpretation would remove a liquidator's right to disclaim property
to the extent of licences covered by the CARs.
[7] If a
liquidator could not disclaim a licence, it would have the effect of creating a
new liquidation expense, which would be a modification of a reserved matter
(Scotland Act 1998, sch 5, para C2). It would not create a new
category of preferential debt (Insolvency Act 1986, s 386 and Sch 6),
but it would create an obligation with priority over such debts and it could
alter the order of priority in liquidation expenses (Insolvency (Scotland)
Rules 1986, rule 4.67). Thus, the Lord Ordinary reasoned, the CARs fell outside
the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament. Accordingly, he held
that the narrow interpretation of the CARs must apply in order to bring the
relevant provisions within devolved competence (Scotland Act 1998, s 101;
cf Martin v Most 2010 SC (UKSC) 40). The Lord Ordinary concluded
that, applying such an interpretation, the liquidators could disclaim the
heritable property covered by the first direction and release themselves from
the obligations under the CARs licences covered by the second direction.
Submissions
Scottish Environmental Protection Agency ("SEPA")
First direction
[8] SEPA contended that it was necessary to consider exactly what was
meant by the terms "abandon" and "disclaim" where they were used in the
directions. The liquidators claimed that the effect of the exercise of a power
to abandon or disclaim would be that the land would vest automatically in the
Crown as bona vacantia. However, a liquidator had the same powers as a
trustee in sequestration (Insolvency Act 1986, s 169(2)). A trustee in
sequestration had no power to render property bona vacantia. Therefore,
a liquidator had no such power.
[9] In order
to establish the scope of a liquidator's powers, it was necessary to establish
the scope of the powers of a trustee. Section 169 of the 1986 Act was not a
"deeming provision"; that is it did not deem a liquidator to be a trustee in
sequestration. Its purpose was to confer powers; not to disapply the
differences in vesting as between trustees and liquidators. It applied to a winding
up by the court, but a company would not necessarily be insolvent in such a
winding up if a liquidator could rid a company of property that carried the
liabilities of a statutory licence, any company could do so voluntarily and
distribute the value of any remaining assets to its creditors (including the
shareholders).
[10] Although some
authorities referred to the "abandonment" of property or contractual rights, the
word had never been used in the sense that property was rendered bona
vacantia. Rather, it had been used to describe situations where a trustee:
(1) refused to adopt a contract or to take title to property by which he would incur
personal liability (non-adoption); (2) permitted repudiation by non-performance
of a contract, leaving the creditor to rank for any damages; or (3) refused to
deal with or to realise the property of the bankrupt on the basis that it would
be uneconomical to do so.
[11] A
bankrupt's property and his contractual rights vested in the trustee (Bankruptcy
(Scotland) Act 1985, s 31); Myles v City of Glasgow Bank (1879) 6 R 718, LP (Inglis) at 725). A trustee had power to "disclaim" a contract,
but that disclaimer did not terminate the contract. The trustee could choose
to perform the bankrupt's obligations and benefit from the other party's obligations
(Mitchell's Tr v Galloway's Trs (1903) 5 F 612), Lord Adam at
617). Where the trustee "disclaimed" (that is chose not to implement) a contract,
the other party's remedy was limited to one of damages, as the court would not
grant a decree for specific implement against a trustee. There was no change
in rights; only in remedies.
[12] Contracts
imposing ongoing liabilities, including leases, were not terminated automatically
by bankruptcy (Bidoulac v Sinclair's Trs (1889) 17 R 144, LP
(Inglis) at 147). A lease could not be terminated unilaterally by a
trustee. As a consequence, the liability to pay rent would continue until the
lease was terminated by the landlord. The landlord would then lose the right
to enforce any future obligations upon the tenant (Bidoulac v
Sinclair's Trs (supra), Lord Shand at 149). "Abandonment" of a lease by
the trustee in those circumstances merely indicated that he refused to perform
the obligations under it, giving rise to a claim for damages at the instance of
the landlord. If the lease were not terminated, the bankrupt's liability for rent
would continue to accrue until the landlord, not the trustee, terminated it.
[13] Where a
trustee refused to deal with certain property or to enforce apparent rights, these
reverted to the bankrupt by virtue of his "radical right" (Air v
Royal Bank of Scotland (1886) 13 R 734, LP (Inglis) at 736). This might
occur when a bankrupt had a contractual claim, which a trustee decided not to
vindicate, but which the bankrupt wished to pursue. Meantime, the rights were
not terminated. Notwithstanding liquidation, the land held by SCC continued
to be owned by the company and the liabilities arising from that ownership could
be enforced.
[14] The
position of a liquidator in relation to contracts and heritable property was the
same as that of a trustee. He could elect to perform a contract, in which case
he (as distinct from the company) would become personally liable (Asphaltic
Limestone Concrete Co v Glasgow Corporation 1907 SC 463, Lord
McLaren at 471-2). The obligation was on the liquidator to intimate adoption,
otherwise the contract would be held to have been "abandoned" in the sense of
not being performed (Crown Estate Commissioners v Liquidators of
Highland Engineering 1975 SLT 58, Lord Keith at 61). It was not open to
the liquidator to terminate, "disclaim" or "disaffirm" a contract (Joint
Administrators of Rangers Football Club, Noters 2012 SLT 599, Lord Hodge at
para [46]).
[15] The Lord
Ordinary had dealt with (paras [27]-[28]) the "abandonment" of property in the
third sense (supra) of a liquidator declining to deal with or to realise
an asset, whereby it remained with the company. The Lord Ordinary had been
correct to say that a liquidator could "disclaim land", in the limited sense of
declining to deal with it, but he had fallen into error when he had stated that
a liquidator could disclaim "by taking steps to terminate the company's
ownership of the land" (para [34]). There was no authority for such a
proposition, as the Lord Ordinary himself acknowledged (para [22]). The
Lord Ordinary recognised the potential for abuse of a power to abandon, such as
to "escape dues on the property" (ibid).
[16] An analysis
based on dual patrimonies was of no assistance and ought to be avoided. The
theory that a trustee had two distinct patrimonies, thus protecting any trust
patrimony from the consequences of a bankrupt's personal insolvency, had no
application in the context of liquidation, where no property vested in the
liquidator. All the property remained owned by the company. There was no
"liquidator's patrimony", as such. A liquidator could not remove a class of
liabilities from a company so that they no longer ranked in the liquidation.
All the creditors were entitled to rank on the single patrimony of the company.
The pari passu principle was fundamental but not inviolate; hence
the existence of secured, preferential and postponed creditors. Similarly, ongoing
liabilities under, for example, a lease did not give rise to any problem under
the pari passu principle.
Second direction
[17] There were three propositions in connection with whether or not a
liquidator had power to "abandon" or otherwise "disclaim" a statutory licence.
First, there was no power to "disclaim" in the sense that a liquidator could
terminate a licence unilaterally and without reference to the statutory
surrender procedures. Secondly, esto a liquidator had a general power
to disclaim property, the scheme laid out in the CARs created a form of licence
that could not be renounced in that way, even if other licences could be so
renounced. Thirdly, it had been within the legislative competence of the
Scottish Parliament to promulgate the CARs with that effect.
[18] As to the
first proposition, a liquidator was the agent of the company with power to
conduct the business of the company. A liquidator had the power to instigate
the statutory procedures for the surrender of a CARs licence. A liquidator had
no power to terminate rights of third parties against the company. A
liquidator had the power to refuse to deal with, or to adopt, property only in
order to avoid personal liability.
[19] The power
of a trustee, and therefore also of a liquidator, to refuse to adopt the
property of the bankrupt or company was tied up with mutuality of contractual
obligations. A trustee or liquidator did not have to render himself personally
liable under a contract. The corollary was that he could not enforce the obligations
under that contract against the other party. That scheme did not apply to
statutory licences, which were a matter of public, rather than private, law.
The statutory licence scheme was intended to protect the public from adverse
environmental consequences. It did not allow for any trade-off of rights and obligations
as between private parties. The scheme was based on a prohibition of certain
activities, except where a permit or licence was obtained. It had none of the
features of mutuality that would give rise to a trustee's or liquidator's power
to decline to perform the licensee's obligations and to accept the consequences
of not being able to enforce rights against another.
[20] On the
second proposition, the CARs provided that the "responsible person" had to
apply to SEPA to surrender a licence. SEPA had to grant or refuse such an
application (reg 27). The CARs provided that certain matters required to be
considered by SEPA (sch 4), in accordance with a number of EU Directives,
including the Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC) to which the CARs gave
effect. Those provisions were designed to ensure that, when a licence was to
come to an end and the licensed works were to cease, the land would be left in
a state that complied with the treaty obligations of the United Kingdom. They
were critical as a means of ensuring that the objectives of the EU Directives
were complied with in Scotland. The Water Framework Directive set out 'end
result' obligations (art 4) to be achieved by member states. It was for member
states to decide how to implement the Directive, but those objectives had to be
achieved.
[21] The
"responsible person" had to comply with the licence obligations (reg 8). The definition
of "responsible person" included trustees and liquidators (reg 2(1)). Where
the licenced activities ceased on liquidation, it was the liquidator who had to
apply for surrender of the licence (reg 27). If conditions of surrender were
imposed by SEPA, it was the liquidator who had to fulfil them. It could not
have been the intention or effect of the CARs that, once a liquidator was
appointed, a licence could be abandoned at will rather than in accordance with
the statutory surrender procedures.
[22] There were a
number of factors indicating that it ought not to be possible for a statutory
licence to be terminated at the hand of a liquidator. First, there was the clear
legislative intent to establish a scheme for the surrender of licences, thus
enabling the requirements of the EU Directives to be met. Secondly, the compulsory
regulatory regime would become a voluntary one if a liquidator were subject to
the regulations only until he no longer wished to be responsible for the
licences and disclaimed them. Thirdly, it was more consistent with securing
the objectives set out in the EU Directives, even if they could not be
guaranteed in cases of absolute insolvency. Fourthly, the CARs were intended
specifically to implement the Framework Directive (see Explanatory Note to the CARs)
including the principle that "the polluter should pay" (recitals 1, 11, 19).
There was a legal obligation on member states and the courts to seek to give
effect, so far as possible, to EU Directives in the application of domestic
provisions (Pfeiffer v Deutsches Rotes Kreuz [2005] ICR 1307, at
paras 106-115). Finally, if there were any dubiety about the powers of a
liquidator to disclaim property, the construction of the CARs that was more
consistent with compliance with the EU obligations was to be preferred.
[23] The
approach of Neuberger J in Re Mineral Resources [1999] BCC 422 ought to
be followed, rather than that of the Court of Appeal in In re Celtic
Extraction [2001] Ch 475. The public interest in the expeditious
winding up of companies and the recovery of sums by unsecured creditors had to
yield to the countervailing interest of environmental protection. A
liquidation would not be prolonged indefinitely by this approach. A liquidator
could seek dissolution of the company once funds were exhausted. The costs of
completing the works in order to achieve surrender of the licences would be
expenses in the liquidation and would therefore take priority. If there were
potentially insufficient funds available to meet a liquidator's fees, an
application could be made to the court for a determination of priorities (Insolvency
Act 1986, s 156). It did not matter whether the licences fell within the
statutory definition of property in the liquidation (ibid s 436) as
the liquidators had power to deal with the licences anyway as agents of the
company.
[24] Despite the
sweeping reference to Scots common law being the same as that in England by
Morritt LJ in In re Celtic Extraction (supra, at para 38),
there was no indication of the basis upon which such a statement might have
been made. The Court of Appeal had misunderstood (at para 39) the
meaning of the "polluter pays" principle (cf EU Dir., recital 11). The
expression meant that the cost of environmental measures should fall upon the
provider of any goods and services, by factoring them into the price charged.
The money available for distribution to the creditors of SCC included funds that
should be expended on the requirements of the environmental legislation. It
was entirely consistent with the "polluter pays" principle that these funds
should be used to address environmental concerns. Creditors of companies
involved in potentially polluting work had to accept that environmental
obligations took priority (Re Mineral Resources (supra),
Neuberger J at 438). It was the antithesis of the "polluter pays" principle
that the government or the public had to pay instead. On the question of
whether there could be abandonment of land in Scotland by an English liquidator,
the application in Firmin v Aardvark TMC [2013] EWHC 1774 (Ch) had
been unopposed and SEPA had had no notice of it. The court had proceeded on "advice"
that it was competent but the nature and provenance of that advice was unclear.
[25] In relation
to the third proposition, the CARs contained a scheme that defined the birth,
life and death of those licences. It was a new regime in terms of which a
liquidator could not unilaterally cancel licences. It did not create a new
preferential debt nor any form of preferential charge. It used the existing
machinery of insolvency. It created no more than a liability on the part of a liquidator.
It was the insolvency regime that determined how that liability was to be dealt
with and its priority as a liquidation expense (Insolvency (Scotland) Rules
1986, rule 4.66).
[26] The test
for competency of devolved legislation was the same, whether it was primary or
secondary legislation at issue (Scotland Act 1998, s 29). Such
legislation could not modify or confer a power to modify the law on a reserved
matters (ibid sch 4, para 2(1)). The CARs related only to
activities carried on in Scotland and applied only to functions in or as
regards Scotland. They did not form part of the law of any country other than
Scotland. To the extent that they had any effect on the exercise of powers
thought to be contained in English law, or reserved powers, any such effect did
not make them part of the law of England (ibid s 29(2)(a)).
[27] In order to
determine whether the CARs related to reserved matters (s 29(2)(b)), it
was necessary to consider the purpose of the provision in question (s 29(3))
having regard (amongst other things) to its effect in the circumstances. The
Lord Ordinary had placed too great a weight on "effect", to the prejudice of
determining the "purpose".
[28] It was not
sufficient to demonstrate that the provision had an effect on a reserved
matter; there had to be more than a loose or consequential connection (Martin
v Most 2010 SC (UKSC) 40, Lord Walker at para [49], approved in Imperial
Tobacco v Scottish Ministers 2013 SC (UKSC) 153, Lord Hope at para [16]).
What was relevant was the core of the matter dealt with. Legislation was not
invalidated where it incidentally impacted upon a reserved matter (Imperial
Tobacco v Scottish Ministers (supra), Lord Hope at para [13],
citing Gallagher v Lynn [1937] AC 863, Lord Atkin at 870). Whatever
the test adopted, the CARs were intended to address environmental liability in
implementation of the EU Directives (Martin v Most (supra),
Lord Hope at para [25]; Water Environment and Water Services (Scotland)
Act 2003; Explanatory Note to the CARs).
[29] It was
relevant to determine whether or not the CARs impacted upon the reserved matter,
that is the "general legal effect of" winding up, or upon the exception in
respect of the "process" of winding up (Scotland Act 1998, sch 5, para C2).
The exercise of powers of "disaffirmation" or "disclaimer" fell more naturally
under the latter heading. Personal bankruptcy was not a reserved matter.
Given that the liquidators' powers were determined by reference to the powers
of a trustee, it would be anomalous if the Scottish Parliament were prevented
from altering the powers of a trustee, if such a measure also altered the
powers of a liquidator. It was not enough for the liquidators to point to a
change in outcome. There had to be a change in the law, such as an amendment
or repeal (sch 4, para 2(2), Imperial Tobacco v Scottish Ministers (supra),
Lord Hope at para [44]). In this case, the Insolvency Act and the
Insolvency Rules were not affected. Where no rule was modified, it was
difficult to identify the reserved matter that was the subject of any
modification.
[30] Section 29
should be applied to the CARs so as to favour the competence of the Scottish
Parliament (Martin v Most (supra), Lord Hope at paras [34]
and [38]). It was legitimate to look at the provisions of regulations 2 and 27
insofar as they regulated, collectively, the surrender of licences. The
purpose of the CARs was to secure that the objectives of the EU Directives were
met by providing a means of bringing about the orderly end of works and
ensuring that environmental concerns were addressed by a responsible person in
control of the activities. The effect upon a liquidator was that he could not
abandon a licence unilaterally, but that was not the purpose of the provision. It
was necessary to disable any power in a liquidator to circumvent environmental controls
by unilateral abandonment (Attorney General v National Assembly for
Wales Commission [2013] 1 AC 792, Lord Neuberger at paras 49 and 54, Lord
Hope at para 82). Insofar as the ordinary powers of a liquidator were
disapplied, that was not significant in the context of the CARs and their
purpose as a whole. The CARs were not concerned with reform of the insolvency
regime but with environmental matters. The Lord Ordinary had thus been wrong
to conclude that the broad interpretation of the CARs, for which the SEPA
contended, would be outwith the legislative competence of the Scottish
Parliament.
Lord
Advocate
First Direction
[31] The Lord Advocate agreed with SEPA's submissions. The Lord Ordinary
had erred in making the first direction. The liquidators had no power to abandon
the land so as to make it vest in the Crown as bona vacantia. A trustee
in sequestration lacked such a power and so, too, did a liquidator who had the
same powers (1986 Act, s 169). The Lord Ordinary had identified no basis
for a liquidator having the power to terminate a company's ownership of land.
The issues of bona vacantia and ownerless land in Scots law did not
assist in answering the question of whether a liquidator had power to "disclaim"
land.
[32] The Lord
Ordinary had been correct (para [30]) not to give any weight to the argument
that a Scottish liquidator necessarily had the same powers as a liquidator in
England. Section 169 of the 1986 Act did not say that a liquidator in Scotland
had the same powers as a liquidator in England. The powers of a liquidator in
Scotland depended upon those of a trustee in sequestration. The matter of
personal insolvency was not reserved to the United Kingdom Parliament. There
was no imperative for the two jurisdictions to be identical and it would be
surprising if they were.
[33] The pari
passu principle was considerably attenuated in both English and Scots law.
In essence, the principle required that those in the same position in law ranked
equally inter se, but that was subject to a range of exceptions and
persisted only insofar as assets were available. The existence of secured and
preferential creditors, rights of set-off in insolvency, deferred debts (1986 Act,
ss 213 and 214), post-liquidation debts as expenses, preferences by virtue of
liens at common law and of unpaid sellers under statute (Sale of Goods Act 1979,
ss 41 - 46) were notable examples. In practical terms, some creditors, such as
those with ongoing contracts providing essential services or goods to a
company, had sufficient leverage to ensure that they were paid. The pari
passu principle did not justify a power of disclaimer being vested in a
Scottish liquidator.
Second
Direction
[34] The
Lord Ordinary had fallen into error in giving the second direction. The
liquidators lacked the requisite power to "abandon" the statutory licences; in
the sense of "disclaiming" them unilaterally without reference to the statutory
surrender procedures. The CARs created what was a new and self-contained
statutory scheme of prohibitions and enforcement; including the creation of
criminal offences. It authorised acts that were otherwise prohibited (reg 4).
The scheme of the CARs and its aims did not fit the same model as a private
contract for profit. The CARs existed to secure environmental advantages for
society through the achievement of EU environmental objectives.
[35] The
"polluter pays" principle (Treaty on the functioning of the EU ("TFEU"), art
191; EU Directive 2000/60, recital 11) provided a sound reason for prohibiting
unilateral termination. The principle required that the costs of pollution
should be internalised, through pricing mechanisms, so that they became costs
of any operations causing environmental degradation (Raffinerie
Meditterranee v Ministero dello Svillupo Economico [2010] 3 CMLR 9). Generally, the principle encouraged producers to minimise their pollution,
as the cheaper alternative to subsequent remediation. In that sense, it operated
as a deterrent. It was important to avoid a lacuna in the domestic regime for
implementation of the EU Directives (cf Tubbs v Futurity Investments [1998] NZLR 471 at 479), which would be the result of allowing liquidators to
terminate licences unilaterally.
[36] The Lord
Ordinary had failed to have regard to the context of the CARs as a whole. A
key feature was the requirement to identify a responsible person to ensure the
effective operation and enforcement of the regulations. The rationale for the
express inclusion of liquidators, executors and trustees in sequestration as responsible
persons was intended to avoid the potential for debate over the consequences of
liquidation, death or sequestration respectively. Those issues were all addressed
on the face of the CARs.
[37] The court
had to turn its attention to the rules in the Scotland Act 1998 (Imperial
Tobacco v Scottish Ministers (supra), Lord Hope at para [13]).
The constitutional settlement had to be coherent, stable and workable (ibid,
para 15). Good legislation should not be lost by considering its effect
rather than its purpose (Martin v Most (supra), Lord Hope
at para [12]; Hansard (HL), 21 July 1998, Lord Sewell at col 819).
[38] The CARs
did not form part of the law of England (1998 Act, s 29(2)(a)). Many elements
of Scots private law affected persons beyond Scotland in respect of their
rights or obligations in Scotland, without being part of the law of any foreign
jurisdiction. There was nothing to suggest that the CARs purported to regulate
any jurisdiction other than Scotland.
[39] The Lord
Ordinary had erred in failing to consider the purpose of the CARs in the
context of the existing law and in considering only their immediate effect on
liquidators (1998 Act, s 29(2)(b); Martin v Most (supra);
Imperial Tobacco v Scottish Ministers (supra)). In relation
to purpose, it was too restrictive to consider only the direct and immediate
purpose of the CARs. That purpose was, however, to implement EU law in a way
that ensured that the EU objectives were met. The CARs did this by contemplating
the death, sequestration, or liquidation of responsible persons.
[40] In relation
to effect, the CARs did have some effect upon liquidators, insofar as they might
affect the funds available for distribution, but any such effect was minor and
ancillary to the purpose. The Scottish Government and Scottish Parliament had
made provision for the protection of the environment, as a devolved matter, for
over a decade. Such provisions may, no doubt, have had diverse financial
implications for certain sections of society. If it were correct to disregard
the purpose of those provisions and to consider only their effect, the court
would have to revisit a great number of environmental enactments.
[41] Section 29
and schedule 4 of the Scotland Act 1998 were intended to protect certain laws
on reserved matters against modification. It was not "insolvency" that was a
reserved matter, but the specific items listed under that heading (Scotland Act
1998, sch 5, para C2). Whilst the nature and ranking of preferred or
preferential debts was reserved, there was no attempt by the CARs to alter the
law on these matters. They did not alter the order of ranking of debts (Insolvency
(Scotland) Rules 1986, rule 4.67). They did not alter the nature or
categories of liquidation expenses. They impacted, as did many things, only
the funds that were available for distribution. It was not enough that the CARs
altered the quantum of liquidation expenses. That was simply a result of the
operation of rule 4.67. It was unnecessary to call upon the exceptions to
reserved matters (para 2(3) and 3(1), sch 4, 1998 Act) as that point had not
been reached.
Local Authorities
[42] At
the outset, the local authorities expressly departed from the argument on
competency advanced before the Lord Ordinary.
First Direction
[43] There may be distinctions to be drawn between situations in which a
liquidator was able to "disclaim" a contract, by being in material breach and
allowing the other party to rank in damages, and those where disclaimer of the
land itself was desired (eg where remediation costs were payable by the owner
of land for the time being under the contaminated land regime; Environmental
Protection Act 1990, s 78F). If it were possible to disclaim land, in the
sense of abandoning ownership, liquidators would no doubt seek to free
themselves from any such liabilities, where it appeared to be worthwhile to do
so. Similarly, liabilities concentrated upon a particular geographical area,
such as lagoons and voids in open cast coal mining sites, might be avoided by
disclaimer of a particular area or portion of the land affected. Such action
could be taken by the liquidators of solvent, as well as insolvent, companies.
[44] The local
authorities associated themselves with the submissions of SEPA and the Lord
Advocate. It was enough for the success of the reclaiming motion on the first
direction that the court adopted a straightforward approach on the central
issue that a liquidator had only such power as may be exercised by a trustee in
sequestration (section 169(2), Insolvency Act 1986). If the power to abandon
land existed, that could be the only source of that power.
[45] There was
no case discernible from the textbooks in which a liquidator was seen to abandon
title to land. That factor was not insignificant given the length of time that
the courts have dealt with the liquidation of companies. Neither the textbooks
nor the cases gave any clear support for the existence of any principle of
abandonment of title, as opposed to repudiation of contractual obligations by a
trustee (Wilton, Company Liquidation Law and Practice, (1922), pp 56 and
67; Goudy, Bankruptcy (4th ed.), pp 282 - 283), as could be
read across into liquidation by virtue of section 169 of the 1986 Act. The "abandonment"
of a contract amounted to a material breach by a trustee or liquidator, which
afforded a ranking in damages to the other party. It did not involve
abandonment of the title to any asset. The only speciality in the case of a material
breach by a trustee or liquidator was that the other party could not seek
specific implement.
[46] The Lord
Ordinary had noted (para [22]) that there was no precedent for the abandonment of
land and that, if it existed, such a power could easily be abused. There was
no known procedure for regulating such abandonment in Scots law, as the Lord
Ordinary suggested would be necessary in circumstances other than insolvency. The
absence of a procedure indicated that the ability to abandon land identified by
the Lord Ordinary was one that nobody possessed.
[47] The Lord
Ordinary's finding that there may be ownerless land in Scotland made him more
inclined to find that the liquidators were entitled to disclaim land. Such an
argument was not well founded. It was not possible to have ownerless land in
Scotland. All land had to be owned by somebody, even if it was owned by the
Crown. The abandonment of land had been conceptually impossible under
feudalism (Shetland Salmon Farmers Association v Crown Estate
Commissioners 1991 SLT 166, Lord Ross at 172, citing Rankine,
Landownership (4th ed), p 251). If land were not
disponed, it remained in the ownership of the Crown under the jus coronae (Shetland
Salmon Farmers Association v Crown Estate Commissioners (supra),
Lord Ross at 174). It followed that to say that abandoned land was ownerless
would be to say that it did not form part of Scotland. Since it would
be absurd to suggest that disclaimed land thereby ceased to be in Scotland, it
followed that it could not be ownerless.
[48] The same
result followed from an application of the principle quod nullius est fit
domini regis. The maxim applied to moveables and land alike (Lord
Advocate v University of Aberdeen 1963 SC 533, Lord Patrick at 554,
Lord Mackintosh at 558; Shetland Salmon Farmers Association v Crown
Estate Commissioners (supra), Lord Ross at 174). Thus, abandoned
heritage would become res nullius and fall instantly to the Crown (Shetland
Salmon Farmers Association v Crown Estate Commissioners (supra),
Lord McCluskey at 187). The Crown right to res nullius was not feudal
but part of the prerogative right (jus coronae) to the territory
of Scotland (Shetland Salmon Farmers Association v Crown Estate
Commissioners (supra), Lord Ross at 173, citing Lord Advocate v
Clyde Navigation Trs (1891) 19 R 174, Lord Young at 183). Application of that
principle did not depend on a Crown choice. The fact that everything not
otherwise owned fell to the Crown jure coronae meant that the Crown
could not waive or disclaim it (cf Macmillan, The Law of Bona Vacantia, pp
10 - 12). Any such disclaimer would be circular.
[49] The Lord
Ordinary had taken the view that the statutory provisions, regarding the
property of dissolved companies falling to the Crown as bona vacantia (Companies
Act 2006, s 1012 et seq), had to involve ownerless property in
order to be given effect. The purpose of those provisions was difficult to
determine. They did not equate readily with Scots common law. The nature of the
relationship between the vesting of property in the Crown upon dissolution, and
the effect of a subsequent disclaimer of the rights of the dissolved company,
was not clear. It was to be presumed that section 1020 of the Companies Act 2006,
which operated only if the company held property immediately before
dissolution, was intended to confer some benefit on the Crown that it did not
otherwise have at common law. The effect of the statutory provisions could
be avoided if, under the ordinary rules of property law, property could be
thrust upon the Crown prior to dissolution and the Crown was unable to disclaim
in accordance with the 2006 Act. The Crown would be able to disclaim even if
this might result in a "boomerang effect" (Scmlla Properties v Gesso
Properties (BVI) [1995] BCC 793).
[50] The Lord
Ordinary had not put forward any basis upon which a liquidator had the power to
disclaim or terminate a company's ownership of land. He had founded (para [33])
upon certain additional policy factors, but the court was not in a position to
pass judgment on the potential effects of a direction that a power to disclaim
existed. Even if it did, it was not apparent that the liquidators had power to
disclaim property at a stage in the liquidation when there were assets
available from which to meet the company's liabilities (cf dissolution, when,
normally, there were none). The effect of a power of disclaimer on
environmental agencies was, however, of relevance. If it was accepted that the
exercise of a power of disclaimer obstructed the objectives of EU environmental
law, such a power could not be allowed. Any power of disclaimer would be
barred in favour of compliance with EU obligations.
[51] The
straightforward solution was provided by section 169(2) of the 1986 Act, as
supported by policy issues. There was no ground for disclaimer in this case
and it was not open to the liquidators to disclaim in the sense of ridding the
company of ownership of property. It was not possible to lose or abandon
ownership of land by doing nothing, that is through lapse of time, as real
rights in land were imprescriptible (Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act
1973, sch 3) without action by another party. The third party would require
to occupy the property for the prescriptive period, on the basis of an a non
domino disposition habile to include the property. Those
circumstances were unlikely to arise in the present case. In any event, the
position regarding the recording of such deeds was uncertain.
Second direction
[52] The local
authorities adopted the submissions of SEPA and the Lord Advocate upon the
proper construction of the 1998 Act and the legislative competence of the CARs.
The Lord Ordinary had been correct to apply the wider interpretation of the CARs
and to reject the approach in In re Celtic Extraction (supra).
The CARs did not fall foul of the limitations on legislative competence. The
Lord Ordinary had erred in adopting the narrow interpretation of the CARs in
order to bring them within competence, as he had conceived to be necessary (1998
Act, s 101). That was sufficient to deal with the second direction.
[53] It was to
be presumed that the United Kingdom Parliament, in passing the Scotland Act
1998, intended the Scottish Parliament to have powers to enact subsidiary
legislation for the purposes of complying with EU law in areas of devolved
competence. If regulation 27 of the CARs was necessary to implement EU
obligations, but would otherwise fall outwith devolved competence, the question
of whether the EU obligations could be rendered fully effective in a manner
that fell within devolved competence had to be addressed. It was not
sufficient to say that, if EU obligations were not met, then the issue would be
remedied by the UK Parliament in due course. The court had to deal with the
problem in a way that complied with EU law (Melki [2011] 3 CMLR 45, para
40; Vodafone 2 v Revenue & Customs Commissioners [2010] 2 WLR 288).
[54] It was
necessary to provide remedies in domestic law that were sufficient to secure
protection in the areas covered by EU law (TFEU, arts 4(3) and 19(1)). Thus,
questions of statutory construction had to be answered in a manner that would
fulfil EU obligations (Amministrazione delle Finanze dello Stato v
Simmenthal [1978] 3 CMLR 263, para 14). The appropriate way in which to
resolve any conflict was to read into section 29 of the 1998 Act a saving
provision, such as "save to the extent that it is necessary so to legislate in
order to achieve the full effectiveness of EU law" (Pfeiffer v
Deutsches Rotes Kreuz (supra). In other words, the proper
construction of the 1998 Act allowed for the implication of those words, of
necessity, to meet the demands of the supremacy of EU law (Imperial Tobacco v
Lord Advocate (supra); Martin v Most (supra)).
The court was not entitled to wait for matters to be addressed by the
legislature. It had to ensure that the operation of section 29 of the 1998 Act
did not obstruct the workings of EU law.
The liquidators
[55] The liquidators accepted that their Note raised points of difficulty
and novelty but these were practical matters upon which the court's guidance
was required. The liquidators had to be clear about their personal
responsibilities, duties and liabilities, but they also represented SCC's
creditors. It was their function to attempt to assist the court. It was
unfortunate that, on the liquidators' analysis, the financial burden fell on
the taxpayer, but it was in the nature of insolvency that there would be
insufficient funds to meet all liabilities. Ultimately, the liquidation
proceeded under the authority of the court and the liquidators were not
attempting to evade SCC's obligations. If the court did not support the
liquidators' interpretation of section 169(2) of the 1986 Act, then that was an
end of the matter. The remaining issues could not affect the outcome of the
application. In that case, however, the United Kingdom insolvency regime would
contain significant and fundamental anomalies. The Scottish system for the
winding up of any company subject to a CARs licence would be unworkable.
The
first direction
[56] The
Lord Ordinary had been correct in his reasoning and, where his reasoning was
not spelled out, there were matters that were implicit. There had been
significant pressure of time placed upon the Lord Ordinary and it was
understandable that his reasoning was not always fully articulated. Furthermore,
he had not had the benefit of Re the Nortel Companies [2013] 3 WLR 504.
The application was not periled on the liquidators having the power to cause
land to become bona vacantia and so vested in the Crown. There was at
least one other plausible solution, commonly termed "the mothballed
patrimony". If the court did not see merit in what the Lord Ordinary called the
"mummified patrimony", the court should so direct.
[57] Whether or
not Scots law permitted ownerless land was not a matter of concern to the
liquidators. It was common ground that: (a) there was no direct authority on
the power of a Scottish liquidator to disclaim land; and (b) there was no statutory
provision to that effect equivalent to section 178 of the 1986. There were a
number of clear reasons for this. First, until 2004, land was held feudally
and, as a matter of legal theory, was not owned absolutely. Secondly, feudal
burdens had become less important in the twentieth century. Thirdly, only
recently had environmental obligations become significant. Previously, land
might have had no value, but it would not have had a negative value caused by ongoing
obligations.
[58] Section
169(2) dated from 1862 (Companies Act 1862, s 171) and section 178
from 1929 (Companies Act 1929, s 267). It was again common ground that,
where it had been said, in English cases, that a Scottish liquidator had a
common law power equivalent to section 178 (In re Celtic Extraction (supra)),
there had been no explanation for that statement and no opinion on Scots law
had been cited. However, that proposition was derived from the Scottish Law
Commission (Memorandum No. 16: Insolvency, Bankruptcy and Liquidation in
Scotland (1971)).
[59] The only
source of any power to disclaim Scottish land was section 169(2); indirectly,
through the application of the powers of a Scottish trustee. A liquidator's
basic powers, however, were conferred by section 167 and schedule 4 of the 1986
Act. They included the power to sell property. Overall, a liquidator's
function was to ingather property and to distribute it to creditors, with any
surplus going to the shareholders (1986 Act, s 143). In that regard, there was
no distinction between Scottish and English liquidations. Section 169(2) was a
residual, sweeping power which included, by way of example, the ability: to
make the application itself (Liquidator of Upper Clyde Shipbuilders 1975
SLT 39); to disclaim a contract; and to sell property free of inhibition (see
Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985, s 31(4)). A literal reading of section
169(2) was unworkable, particularly in the context of disclaimer, due to the
difference between liquidators and trustees as regards vesting (see infra).
It had to operate as a legal fiction or "deeming provision" (see eg Marshall
v Kerr [1995] 1 AC 148, Lord Browne-Wilkinson at 164).
[60] A trustee
had the power to disclaim a contract, including a lease. The vesting of
contracts with onerous liabilities was not something that a trustee could
avoid. Whilst he could, in effect, decline the vesting (Air v Royal
Bank of Scotland (supra), Lord Shand at 737) or "disclaim" the
contract (Goudy, Bankruptcy (4th ed.), p 282), the right
to future performance of the contract, subject to the correlative obligations,
must have vested before it could be disclaimed. So much was consistent with
the general scheme of bankruptcy, whereby the whole estate vested in the
trustee subject to his power to disclaim, decline or reverse the vesting in the
case of an onerous contract.
[61] The crucial
distinction was that, as a consequence of the bankruptcy and the statutory
vesting, the court would not enforce the primary right of the other contracting
party to demand performance, leaving only the secondary right to damages. If a
trustee disclaimed a tenant's interest in a lease, for example, the landlord's
right or remedy was a claim for damages in the sequestration. The lease
otherwise came to an end. Similarly, a feu could not go on indefinitely at the
feudal superior's choice. The power of disclaimer was a necessary element of a
rational insolvency process. The principle applied, equally, to feus, leases
or contracts (see eg Anderson v William Hamilton & Co (1875) 2 R 355) and amounted to termination, in the sense that ongoing obligations
could not be enforced against either the bankrupt or the trustee, and therefore
the trust or sequestrated estate.
[62] The effect
of exercise of the power to disclaim a right of the bankrupt was to terminate
the trustee's ownership of the asset (Bidoulac v Sinclair's Trs (supra),
LP (Inglis) at 148, Lord Shand at 149). The complication of feudal tenure
having disappeared, there was no reason in principle why a trustee should not
abandon land as well as moveables or "intangibles" back to the bankrupt. The
power to disclaim gave effect to two fundamental principles of the Scottish
insolvency processes. First, all unsecured creditors rank pari passu as
at the date of sequestration. Secondly, protracted proceedings are to be
avoided. Taken together, these principles allow for a "clean break". The
circumstances were different in liquidation, but the "clean break" principle
was common to both.
[63] Section 31
of the 1985 Act vested the whole estate of the bankrupt in the trustee subject
to certain exceptions. That was not the effect of liquidation, but the
difference in vesting did not matter insofar as the trustee's powers could be
applied to liquidators by analogy (Crown Estate Commissioners v
Liquidators of Highland Engineering (supra), Lord Keith at 59; Asphaltic
Limestone Concrete Co v Glasgow Corporation (supra), Lord
Ardwall at 470). There was statutory provision for assets to vest in a
liquidator (1986 Act, s 145) but it was not known whether this had ever
been used. The effect of liquidation was to create a statutory trust over the
property, assets, estate of the company as at the liquidation date (Smith v
Lord Advocate 1978 SC 259; Ayerst v C & K Construction
[1976] AC 167, Lord Diplock at 177 and 180). A statutory trust was created in
favour of creditors, who ranked in accordance with the pari passu principle.
The creditors ranked for pre-liquidation debts, including contingent and future
debts, as well as claims for damages assessed as at the date of liquidation.
[64] The
disclaimer process was the same for a trustee and a Scottish liquidator
(Scottish Law Commission, Memorandum No. 16 - Insolvency, Bankruptcy and
Liquidation in Scotland (1971), Professor Halliday at Appendix D). The
rights of a liquidator to disclaim onerous contracts, including feus, were
similar to the rights of a Scottish trustee, notwithstanding the difference in
vesting. If a Scottish trustee now has power to disclaim land, in the sense of
abandoning it to the bankrupt, the Scottish liquidator either has no such
power, because it is not possible to abandon land to the company that already owns
it, or he has the same power by virtue of section 169(2), with the effect that
the abandoned land falls to the Crown. However, the liquidators' position was
not periled on it being possible to abandon land to the Crown, albeit that that
was the neatest solution. The alternative was that the company retained a
"shell ownership" of the land whereby the continuing obligations of ownership
could not be enforced against the liquidation estate.
[65] Parliament would
have been aware of the existing power of a Scottish trustee to disclaim
property. It therefore made section 267 of the 1929 Act (1986 Act, s 178)
applicable only to liquidators in England. It intended Scottish liquidators to
have the equivalent power (see eg Asphaltic Limestone Concrete Co v
Glasgow Corporation (supra), Lord McLaren at 470). It was
unnecessary, therefore, to extend section 178 to Scotland (see, for example,
Report of the Company Law Amendment Committee (1926), Cmnd 2657). In section
178, the word "determine" had the same effect as "disclaimer" by a Scottish
trustee or liquidator. It was accepted, however, that there was no general
right to abandon land in England and, therefore, section 178 innovated on
English common law and its bankruptcy equivalent.
[66] Continuing
obligations of landownership, such as occupiers' liability, common law
negligence and nuisance, or the contaminated land regime, subsisted after a
liquidation. If those obligations did not give rise to debts (actual
liabilities) before the liquidation date, then, unless the company in
liquidation could disclaim the land in some sense, those continuing obligations
would become liquidation expenses to the extent that they became enforceable
debts after the liquidation date, thus subverting the pari passu principle.
Whilst pre-liquidation debts would rank in the liquidation process, continuing
obligations of ownership could subsist until dissolution. The crucial matter
for the liquidators, and creditors, was not whether the company remained on the
title sheet as proprietor of the land but whether there were other solutions to
the problem of the enforceability of post-liquidation obligations.
[67] It had
become "fashionable" to explain the unitary nature of property law and the
rights of beneficiaries by reference to the concept of "patrimony". The use of
patrimony was quite straightforward, however, and a trustee who held both an
individual and a trust patrimony could not use the latter to satisfy his
personal liabilities (Heritable Reversionary Co v Millar (1892) 19 R (HL) 43). In practical terms, it was no different from using terms such as
"legal" or "restricted" or "beneficial" ownership, which produced the same
effect that a trustee's personal debts could not be enforced against the trust
estate.
[68] It was
necessary, in order to give effect to the pari passu principle, that
obligations were valued at a single date and the liquidation was not protracted
(Re the Nortel Companies (supra). The pari passu
principle, the exception of liquidation expenses, and the power to disclaim,
were all to be treated as part of a coherent whole. The whole point of the
power of disclaimer was to prevent post-liquidation liabilities, insofar as
they were not contingent debts as at the date of liquidation, from being
enforceable against the liquidation estate. The inevitable consequence of
disclaimer was that post-liquidation debts would be enforceable against the
Crown or would be worthless rights against the mummified patrimony of the
company in liquidation. Following the Lord Ordinary's observations in respect
of publicity, which were modelled closely on existing practice under section
178 of the 1986 Act, the consequence would be the same as in England. The
claim would lie against the Crown (see eg In re Celtic Extraction (supra)).
[69] The liquidation
expenses regime was set out in rule 4.67 of the Insolvency (Scotland) Rules
1986 albeit the court had the power to re-order the priorities (1986 Act,
s 154). If there were insufficient funds to meet the liquidation
expenses, the court could order that the liquidators' remuneration was to be
paid before other outlays. In general terms, liquidation expenses were the
result, directly or indirectly, of the liquidators' exercise of discretion in
the interests of creditors; such as expenses incurred in carrying on the
business as a going concern. The liquidation expenses were, subject to clear
and limited exceptions, incurred for the benefit of the liquidation estate and
creditors. Only if statute imposed a liquidation expense was there requirement
for the company to pay it (eg In re Toshoku Finance UK [2002] 1 WLR 671). If SEPA's interpretation of the CARs were to be preferred, the
liabilities arising under the statutory licences would be liquidation expenses
(Re the Nortel Companies (supra), Lord Neuberger at para 110).
[70] By giving
Scottish liquidators the power to disclaim both land and statutory licences,
section 169(2) of the 1986 Act gave effect to the "universalist" nature of
liquidation, which was a fundamental aspect of the UK liquidation scheme.
Subject to clear statutory exceptions, a liquidator appointed to a company in
one jurisdiction could exercise his powers over property in another
jurisdiction. In theory, the effect of the winding up was worldwide and
concerned with property "wherever situated" (1986 Act, s 436), albeit the
effect depended on other systems being prepared to recognise the winding up
order. The principles of private international law did not apply (Salaman v
Todd 1911 SC 1214). An English liquidator could disclaim Scottish land (ibid).
As a matter of international private law, any transfer of land would have to
conform to the formal rules of the jurisdiction where it was situated, but that
was overridden in respect of any distinction between Scotland and England (1986
Act, s 178). The Land Register would have to be updated in respect of any
disclaimer of land.
[71] If section
178 applied to Scottish land, it would be entirely anomalous if section 169(2)
were not to be interpreted as affording an equivalent power to liquidators of
Scottish companies. There was no rationale behind any geographical restriction
where jurisdiction in winding up was based purely on where the company was
registered. Subject to express Parliamentary limitations, an English
liquidator's powers extended to Scotland, and vice versa. By contrast,
a solvent proprietor could not disclaim real property as the existence of such
a power at common law would negate the need for the statutory power to be
introduced. The Lord Ordinary had been incorrect in affording little weight to
the liquidators' suggestion that Scottish and English liquidators should have
the same powers.
[72] It had been
argued before the Lord Ordinary that land could only be transferred by some
method registrable under the Land Registration (Scotland) Act 1979, but the
statute itself was expressly without prejudice to any other transaction capable
of affecting title to Scottish land (1979 Act, s 2(4)). The classic example
was the dissolution of a company whereby land passed to the Crown. There was
nothing sacred, in this context, in the Land Register; it was a matter of good
housekeeping to note something in the Land Register but it was not a matter of
primary law. In any event, it was well-established that property held by a
bankrupt in trust did not vest in his trustee in sequestration (Heritable
Reversionary Co v Millar (supra); see, now, 1985 Act,
s 31(3)) and that the trust estate was not liable for the private debts of
a trustee. In such circumstances, the Land Register might not always reflect
reality.
The second direction
[73] The
liquidators sought to address three main issues: first, whether a Scottish
liquidator had the power to disclaim a statutory licence under section 169(2)
of the 1986 Act; secondly, if so, whether such a general power had to yield to
a contrary interpretation of the CARs; and thirdly, if the "wider
interpretation" applied, thus overriding the general position, whether the CARs
would be outwith devolved competence.
[74] As to the
first aspect, there was a degree of artificiality and unsatisfactoriness in the
liquidators' approach, but it was presented as the less unsatisfactory of the
competing analyses. A statutory licence, such as a liquor licence, did not
vest in a trustee in sequestration. The trustee would be entitled to have the
licence transferred to him or to a third party purchaser but it was not
transferred by vesting. This was consistent with the principle of delectus
personae attaching to a liquor licence as a statutory public law
authorisation rather than a private law contract (Anderson v William Hamilton
& Co (supra); Asphaltic Limestone Concrete Co v
Glasgow Corporation (supra)). Environmental licences, which imposed
continuing obligations, were different.
[75] The PPCR
imposed obligations similar to those imposed by the CARs but without specific
provision for insolvency. The PPCR had no concept of "responsible person" (cf
CARs, regulation 8(6)), but the obligations imposed could have very significant
financial consequences. The licence did not vest in the trustee. It would be
anomalous, as between insolvency processes, if the obligations under a PPCR
licence were enforceable as liquidation expenses simply by virtue of the PPCR
licence remaining in the ownership of a company. It was entirely reasonable to
interpret section 169(2) as conferring a power on the liquidators to disclaim a
statutory licence, such that compliance costs would not constitute expenses
enforceable against the liquidation estate. Equally, section 178 would apply
to enable an English liquidator to disclaim a Scottish licence simply because
such a licence fell within the definition of property for the purposes of the
1986 Act (In re Celtic Extraction (supra); Re Mineral
Resources [1999] BCC 422). If it were correct that a statutory licence
came within the statutory definition of property for insolvency purposes, it
could not make any difference whether the licence was issued by a Scottish or
English authority. For the same reasons advanced in respect of Scottish and
English land, it would be curious if section 178 applied to licences issued by
one authority and not another. If a licence was not "property", the
liquidators' power to deal with it, including transfer or surrender, came instead
from sections 143 and 144 of the 1986 Act.
[76] As to the
second aspect, it was relevant to have regard to both conventional domestic
provisions and policy considerations, including the European dimension. For
the purposes of statutory interpretation, it was presumed that any intended
change to existing law would be clearly expressed, that it would not produce an
unworkable result in practice, and that the construction that produced the more
workable result was to be preferred (Imperial Tobacco v Lord Advocate
(supra)) 153, Lord Hope at para [14]). Regulation 2 of the CARs was a
"deeming provision" that involved a statutory fiction rather than a literal
interpretation. A literal interpretation of "responsible person" would render
liquidators or executors personally liable under the CARs, which would be absurd.
In addition, the "responsible person" was selected in advance of an
authorisation licence being issued (CARs, regulation 8(6)(b)), but that was not
the position for liquidators. A liquidator may be wholly unable, whether
technically or financially, to secure compliance. Thus, undue weight should
not be placed on the literal meaning of the language used in the CARs.
[77] If the CARs
created a new and unavoidable obligations ranking before preferential debts, these
obligations would dilute significantly the effect of rule 4.67(1)(a) in respect
of other outlays. The CARs applied equally to Scottish and English
liquidators. The specific reference in the CARs to liquidators had the effect
of altering the liquidation regime. The CARs affected the insolvency scheme
because they modified sections 386 and 467 of the 1986 Act albeit by
implication (Re Mineral Resources [1999] BCC 422, Lord Neuberger at
526). The effect would apply not only to creditors who contracted with the
company voluntarily but also involuntary creditors such as HMRC or creditors in
delict. The new and unavoidable nature of obligations under the CARs was
wholly contrary to the generally voluntary nature of liquidation expenses (see supra).
The CARs ought only to affect sections 169(2) and 178 by the use of clear wording
(Re the Nortel Companies (supra), Lord Neuberger at para 104). The
obligations under the CARs offended the pari passu principle and imposed
a "super-priority" (In re Celtic Extraction (supra)). The wider purpose
of the CARs was environmental protection but their direct purpose was to modify
the insolvency regime.
[78] The proper
interpretation of the CARs was that a liquidator was a "responsible person" as
agent of the company for so long as he did not exercise a power to disclaim.
Such an approach had practical content, as the liquidator might carry on the
company's business in the commercial interests of the liquidation. The CARs
made specific reference to the liquidator, whereas the PPCR did not, to make it
clear that for the relevant period the compliance costs were liquidation
expenses, but the liquidator was not personally liable (see eg In re Toshoku
Finance UK [2002] 1 WLR 671). In practice, the liquidators would likely
have to enter into contracts to have the compliance works carried out in terms
of which they would incur personal liability (cf 1986 Act, s 156). If it
had been intended that the CARs would remove any right of disclaimer, it was
significant that there was no express provision to that effect (cf Coal
Industries Act 1994, s 36). The liquidation regime took priority and the
CARs had to fit into that regime.
[79] In the
present liquidation, there had been realisations of approximately £13.6M. The
costs incurred in the liquidation to the end of October 2013 were estimated at
£7.5M, leaving funds of £6.1M. The estimated costs of surrender works were not
known, but they could not simply be paid from the £13.6M. Instead, they would rank
pari passu with the costs already incurred. On SEPA's interpretation,
the CARs obligations would rank ahead of the rights of floating charge holders
as well as unsecured creditors. If that were the case, no creditor would seek
to wind up a company. Similarly, no rational insolvency practitioner would
accept office where, first, there was no guarantee of remuneration and,
secondly, there was likely to be exposure to personal liability to contractors.
[80] As to
implementation of EU Directives and policy, the EU had no competency in
insolvency matters. The "polluter pays" principle did not apply when the
polluter could not pay (In re Celtic Extraction (supra); R v
AbitibiBowater [2012] 3 SCR 443). The costs of compliance were provable
debts in the liquidation and future compliance costs had to be set aside before
the company was dissolved (ibid). There was no single approach (cf Tubbs
v Futurity Investments (supra)) but the liquidators' position
was in no way unorthodox. Where EU Directives made provision for financial
arrangements to be put in place to meet environmental obligations (see, for
example, Council Directive 1999/31/EC on the landfill of waste; Directive
2004/35/EC on environmental liability; Directive 2006/21/EC on the management
of waste from extractive industries; and regulation 18(4)(b), PPCR 2012), it
was because they could not deal directly with insolvency. Such provisions demonstrated
that it was not necessary to alter significantly the law of insolvency in order
to implement UK obligations under the EU environmental Directives.
[81] There was a
limit to which conventional domestic principles of interpretation could be
altered in order to comply with the obvious purpose of an EU Directive. Such
principles did not allow for rewriting or amendment (Marleasing v La
Comercial Internacional de Alimentacion [1993] BCC 421). The present case
was not one of direct enforcement of Treaty rights (cf Vodafone 2 v
Revenue and Customs Commissioners (supra); Raffinerie
Meditterranee (ERG) v Ministero dello Svillupo Economico (supra)).
The court should endorse In re Celtic Extraction (supra), which had
been followed without question in the English courts (In re Toshoku Finance
UK (supra)).
[82] As a
generality, liquidation expenses and ranking debts were mutually exclusive
categories. Thus, if the reclaimers had the right to prove for contingent
debts (CARs, regulations 32 and 33), it would lend further support to the
narrow interpretation of the CARs. If SEPA had the right to do works under
the CARs, the cost of those works would be contingent liabilities arising in
the course of the liquidation (Re the Nortel Companies (supra),
Lord Neuberger at para 77). As for current liabilities in respect of
compliance costs to date, those would be treated by the liquidators as
liquidation expenses. In the case of disclaimer, any future liability would
cease. Unless or until SEPA carried out any work, they would have no ability
to rank for the cost of works carried out under the licences. The liquidators
were carrying out controlled activities, albeit in a somewhat artificial or
technical sense, that is restricted to pumping works on site to maintain the
status quo. The obligation to surrender the licences had not yet been
triggered.
[83] In relation
to devolved competence, the liquidators adopted ab ante the submissions
of the Advocate General (infra) subject to two qualifications. First,
the CARs were outwith the devolved competence of the Scottish Parliament as they
affected the law of England (Scotland Act 1998, s 29(2)(a)); Imperial
Tobacco v Lord Advocate (supra), Lord Hope at para [29]). If
the CARs applied only to liquidators of companies in Scotland, no Scottish
company would ever hold a CARs licence. Secondly, there was a distinction to
be drawn between the substantive rules of a liquidation process and the
detailed procedure (sch5, para C2, 1998 Act). Whatever the meaning of the term
"insolvency process", it did not cover fundamental matters, such as the pari
passu principle, the nature of preferential debts, and the power of
disclaimer.
Advocate General
[84] The
Advocate General intervened on the issues of general importance in relation to,
first, the power to disclaim and, secondly, legislative competence. Although
seeking to uphold the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, the Advocate General submitted
that aspects of the Lord Ordinary's analysis, especially in respect of
legislative competence, were in error.
[85] The
liquidators had the power to abandon the sites and to disclaim the statutory
licences. In reaching that conclusion, the pertinent issue was whether a
liquidator in Scotland had powers analogous to those of a liquidator in England
(1986 Act, s 178). It was necessary for the efficient winding up of
companies for a liquidator to be able to disclaim onerous property including
land. The third category of abandonment identified by SEPA (failure to deal
with or realise assets) was the crux of the issue (Air v Royal Bank
of Scotland (supra)). A trustee in sequestration had the
power to refuse to deal with assets and thus a liquidator had a corresponding
right. The issue then became whether, if such a right of disclaimer existed,
the property so disclaimed reverted to the Crown or remained in a separate
patrimony.
[86] It had been
said that Scots and English law operated in much the same way as regards the
disclaimer of onerous property by a trustee or liquidator and that the position
in respect of liquidation was broadly similar to that in a sequestration
(Scottish Law Commission, Memorandum No 16: Insolvency, Bankruptcy and
Liquidation in Scotland (1971), para 105 and Appendix D). In other words,
there was a presumption that Scots law operated in the same manner as English
law and that, in respect of both a trustee or liquidator in Scotland,
disclaimer of land operated in the same way in England (In re Celtic
Extraction (supra), Morritt LJ at para 38). That explained why
section 178 of the 1986 Act made provision for England only.
[87] The Lord
Ordinary had considered the difficulty of whether the Crown had the option to
disclaim land which had become bona vacantia (Companies Act 2006,
s 1013). The Lord Ordinary's conclusion with regard to the dissolution of
companies was correct, but property abandoned prior to dissolution did not fall
within the patrimony in the winding up.
[88] The Lord
Ordinary's principal construction of the CARs was not correct. The
legislation had to be construed according to the intention expressed in the
language used. The court should adopt whichever of the broad and narrow
interpretations was just, reasonable and sensible (Craies on Legislation
(10th ed), paras 17.1.1 and 17.1.8). If it had been intended to
remove a liquidator's right to disclaim, clear language would have been
required. In those circumstances, the CARs ought to be interpreted so as to
make a liquidator a "responsible person" unless or until he disclaimed a
licence or the heritable property to which it related. In In re Celtic
Extraction (supra), the Court of Appeal considered the issue of principle
raised in Re Mineral Resources [1999] BCC 422. The court's reasoning
was highly persuasive and ought to be applied. Specifically, the "polluter
pays" principle did not apply when the polluter could not pay (In re Celtic
Extraction (supra), Morritt LJ at para 39). There was
nothing in the EU Directive that suggested otherwise. In the present case, it
may not be that the company could not pay but, rather than the "polluter pays",
the creditors would have to pay. The pari passu principle was
significant, but there had been no harmonisation of insolvency law at EU
level. Tubbs v Futurity Investments (supra) dealt with a
wholly different situation, namely an application to disclaim property out of
time.
[89] Regulations
2 and 27 of the CARs did not require to be in their present form in order to
provide an effective remedy in terms of the underlying EU Directive. The
analogous English regulations had no concept of a "responsible person" or a
surrender regime. Rather, they provided for an "operator" with no equivalent
to regulation 27 (regulations 7 and 18, Environmental Permitting (England and
Wales) Regulations 2010). In the English context, licences could be disclaimed
(In re Celtic Extraction (supra)) and, insofar as the
Insolvency Service were aware, there were no problems in respect of compliance with
EU law. In any event, a surrender regime could not guarantee effective
implementation of the underlying EU Directive where, as in many cases, there
were no funds available for the resultant obligations.
[90] There would
be no guarantee that an insolvency practitioner would be remunerated if the
outlays payable under the CARs ranked above a liquidator's remuneration amongst
the liquidation expenses (rule 4.67(1)(a) and (h), Insolvency (Scotland) Rules
1986, respectively). This point was telling in the Scottish context where
there was no equivalent of an official receiver to take on an appointment in
such circumstances.
[91] Whether the
CARs fell within devolved competence depended on whether those provisions would
have been competent had they been included within primary legislation of the
Scottish Parliament (1998 Act, s 54(3)). In the application of section
29(2)(a) of the 1998 Act, no issue arose in respect of the law of any territory
outside Scotland. In respect of section 29(2)(b) and (c), the statutory scheme
was carefully structured such that the provisions had to overcome all of the
hurdles specified in section 29(2)(b) and (c) as separate and independent tests
(Martin v Most (supra), Lord Hope at para [5], Lord Rodger
at para [77]). It was not correct to focus on the objective of the relevant
provision, but on whether it was achieved by an invalid method for the purposes
of the 1998 Act.
[92] For the
purposes of section 29(2)(b), it was clear that "effect" and "purpose" were not
synonymous terms (1998 Act, s 29(3)). The effect of the provision was a
guide to its purpose but the two concepts could not be collapsed, such that
they were necessarily the same in all cases. In the ultimate analysis, it was
the purpose of the enactment that had to be determined by reference to its
effect and its context, including an understanding of the scope of the reserved
matter (Imperial Tobacco v Lord Advocate (supra), Lord
Hope at paras [18] and [26]). The Lord Ordinary had conflated the
concepts of purpose and effect or, at least, it was not clear that he had not
treated the effect of the CARs as being equivalent to their purpose. The
purpose of regulations 2 and 27 was to remove the power to disclaim and to
compel a liquidator to expend funds on compliance with the obligations imposed thereunder,
which obligations took priority over preferential debts. The effect was to
make a liquidator a responsible person and to remove the right to disclaim that
would otherwise exist.
[93] The Lord
Ordinary had been correct to acknowledge that the focus should be on the
purpose, but he had provided an analysis (para [61]) of the effect of the
provisions only, without acknowledgement of the wider context of environmental
protection. There was, however, no materiality in the Lord Ordinary's error as
the effect of the CARs justified the Lord Ordinary's conclusion as to purpose.
Although the effect on unsecured creditors might only arise on insolvency, it
was so fundamental that it impacted on the general effect of winding up and on
preferential debts. The impact went beyond the procedural. It was not "loose
or consequential" (Martin v Most (supra), Lord Walker at
para [49]).
[94] As to
section 29(2)(c), the definition of modification of the law on reserved matters
was extremely wide and included, but was not restricted to, amendment or repeal
(1998 Act, sch 4, para 2, and s 126). These were not matters of
Scots private law (1998 Act, s 126(4)). To the extent that they were, they
would be special to reserved matters (ibid sch 4, para 2(3)). The effect
on the reserved insolvency regime was at the heart of the CARs and not merely
incidental or consequential.
[95] The 1998
Act provided a coherent scheme by which legislation could be "topped up" if
required in order to comply with EU law (1998 Act, s 104; Martin v
Most (supra), Lord Rodger at para [79]). As between the
devolved area of the environment and the reserved matter of insolvency, the one
did not trump the other. Section 104 would have to be applied. The statutory
provisions could be interpreted only "so far as possible" to comply with the
principles of EU law (Pfeiffer v Deutsches Rotes Kreuz (supra),
para 113). Article 191 of the TFEU did not confer rights directly on
individuals and no fundamental principle, such as equal treatment, arose in the
present case. It was not for the EU to say that article 191 was to be given
effect, especially in the context of a framework directive, with no specific
reference to the rules of insolvency.
Decision
[96] Each
member of the court has contributed to the content of this Opinion.
The Abandonment of
Land
[97] What
requires to be considered at the outset is whether the Lord Ordinary's answers
to the two questions (supra) concerning the abandonment of land and
ownerless land are correct. None of the parties at the Summar Roll hearing
supported the idea that land could be abandoned in ordinary course, thereby
becoming ownerless. However, out of deference to the Lord Ordinary's
reasoning, the court has taken some time to consider the principles involved. One
feature, which is not to be ignored, however, is the simple fact that no-one in
the court was aware of any instance in which a person (corporate or otherwise)
had "abandoned" or "disclaimed" heritable property, so as to render it
ownerless.
[98] Terminology
is important. Of course a person can abandon land, in the sense of leaving it
physically, intending to give up its use permanently (see Gordon and Wortley: Scottish
Land Law (3rd ed) I, para 13-19). This is not what is under
consideration here. What requires to be decided is whether a person can
"abandon" or "disclaim" ownership of land. What then is ownership? Without
indulging in a philosophical essay, it is "a legal relation subsisting between
a person and a thing, whence flows to the former the right to use and dispose
of the latter indefinitely, so far as he is not restrained by law or paction"
(Rankine: Landownership (4th ed), p 98, citing Vangerow: On
the Pandects (9th ed), para 295). It is a legal
relationship and the law must, and does, regulate the methods whereby it may be
brought to an end. It may be worth observing en passant that, strictly,
it is not "ownership" that is transferred. It is the land which may be
transferred and thereby result in the termination of one person's ownership and
its creation in another (Reid: The Law of Property in Scotland, para
652; Hohfeld: Fundamental Legal Conceptions, p 12).
[99] What is being
examined is not a personal right to acquire an interest in land but a real
right, which is created when the appropriate title is recorded in the General
Register of Sasines or the Land Register (see Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc.
(Scotland) Act 2000, s 2). The operation of such mechanisms as
prescription following upon a habile title have not been forgotten, but they
are of no direct relevance.
[100] Ownership of
moveables can be terminated by physical disposal coupled with the appropriate
intention (Mackenzie v MacLean 1981 SLT (Sh Ct) 40) or by similar
circumstances implying abandonment (Lord Advocate v University of Aberdeen
1963 SC 533). With ownership of land, however, the existence of the
written record is important since it renders the fact of ownership public and,
subject to the operation of law, permanent. This has a number of significant consequences;
notably, but by no means exclusively, in relation to diligence, inheritance and
the performance of obligations which run with the land. As a generality, the
world is entitled to look to, and rely upon, the Registers to establish who
owns a piece of land, in the sense of having a real right in it, at any given
moment.
[101] The law
provides a number of methods by which a person's ownership of land can be
terminated. It is conceivable that the land itself may be destroyed by coastal
erosion or some other physical effect upon the solum, but there is no
issue about the disappearance of the land itself here. Equally, there are
situations where the owner disappears; not in the sense of simply vanishing
from view but actually ceasing to exist. Thus a company may be dissolved or an
individual may die leaving no heirs. In these situations it is established (infra)
that the land falls to be regarded as bona vacantia (property which has
become empty) and may be disposed of by the Crown (infra). That type of
situation does not, as yet, apply here either.
[102] There are
only two other methods by which a person's ownership of land can be terminated.
The first is where the law operates to divest him of it by means of a formal
legal process. There are a number of these, such as land attachment (formerly
adjudication), the enforcement of a power of sale in a standard security and,
of course, compulsory purchase. All require the recording of the relative
court decree or other writing in the Registers to obtain a real right. Perhaps
of more significance in the current context, all of these processes involve the
acquisition of ownership by another person. The land is not "abandoned".
[103] The second
method of termination is by voluntary transfer to another person, by either inter
vivos or mortis causa disposition, again followed by the recording
of the appropriate document (2000 Act, s 4(1)). There is no legal process
whereby a person can transfer land into oblivion. In short, then, the answer
to the first question is that a person cannot abandon the ownership of land in
the sense of casting away the real right (cf notice of abandonment in terms of
s 32(9A) of the 1985 Act (infra)).
[104] The second
question is whether there can be ownerless land. The answer to that is that
land can indeed be ownerless, if by that is encompassed the situation in which
the owner of the land ceases to exist (supra). That can occur, as
already noted, with the death of a person without heirs or upon the dissolution
of a corporate body. In that situation, as is well known, the maxim quod
nullius est fit domini regis (that which is the property of no-one belongs
to the Crown) applies to land as it does to moveables.
[105] According to
the former feudal law theory, all heritable property within Scotland had a
proprietor (see eg Juridical Society: Complete System of Conveyancing:
Heritable Rights (4th ed) I.i, ii). The Crown, as the ultimate
superior, owned "every part of the soil" and made general grants of land, of
varying tenures, to others. These mid-superiors could in turn grant the
permanent use (dominium utile) of the land to vassals. Whether the whole
of Scotland, especially urban property in existence prior to the incursion of
feudalism, was disponed for private use in this way is highly doubtful. That
issue may be shrouded in the mists of time. It is certainly the case that,
from time to time, questions are raised about parcels of land for which no
feudal or land registration title can be found (see 2000 Act, s 6).
[106] The principal
form of feudal holding came to be that of the simple feu, with the only
obligation to the superior being payment of the feu duty. In the event of the
feuar failing to pay that duty for a period of two years, the superior could
seek resumption of the feu by obtaining a decree of irritancy in an action ob
non solutem canonem (on account of non-payment of feu (or canon) duty; ie
tinsel of the feu; see Bell: Principles (10th ed), para 701).
The important point, however, is that the land was not treated as "abandoned"
in the sense that it fell to the Crown as bona vacantia (supra),
if the feuar or his heirs were still alive.
[107] Applying
strict feudal theory, if there ceased to be a vassal, it might have been
thought that his interest in the land would revert to the superior (propter
defectum tenentis; because of the disappearance of the holder), since there
was no-one left to perform the feudal obligations, which would originally have
been militaristic in nature. However, this is not how the law developed (Macmillan:
The Law of Bona Vacantia in Scotland, p 5). Rather, the land (that is to
say that which had been the vassal's dominium utile) fell, under Roman
law principles, to the Crown as bona vacantia, leaving it to the Crown
to dispone the land to another (see now 2000 Act, ss 58(1) and 59). That
person would replace the former vassal in his relationship with the superior
(see Bell: Principles (10th ed), para 730 sub nom.
"escheat").
[108] Accordingly,
there must be land which can be described as ownerless, since it is only then
that it will be classified as bona vacantia. There is no basis for
concluding that the abolition of feudal tenure resulted in any alteration to
this principle derived from Roman law. However, it may be wrong to describe the
exercise of what is a prerogative right of the Crown, to administer land which has
become bona vacantia, as creating a real right of ownership in the Crown
in the private law sense. The right of the Crown is more properly described as
one derived from public law. It enables the Crown to take possession of "lost"
property, including land with no owner. The Crown can then administer the land
for the benefit of the community and dispose of it to another person. The
right has thus been described as "possessory" (Macmillan (supra),
pp 9, 12) or one of "occupancy" (ibid, pp 5, 7). That may result
in the emergence of a real right of ownership in the case of moveables, should
possession be taken (Lord Advocate v University of Aberdeen (supra),
Lord Patrick at 554, Lord Mackintosh at 559). However, it does not (at least
normally) involve the Crown acquiring a title to the land (Macmillan (supra),
p 12). Rather, it concerns a right, or perhaps better a power, to administer
the property (Rutherford v Lord Advocate 1932 SC 674, LP (Clyde)
at 678) even if some authorities use the rather loose terminology of
"belonging". The Crown requires to exercise the right for it to be effective, but
need not do so. Indeed, the right may be waived (Macmillan (supra), p 12).
In this context, section 1013 of the Companies Act 2006, which expressly
permits the Crown to "disclaim" property vested in it by reason of a company's
dissolution, can be seen as essentially consistent with the common law, albeit
that the statutory route may be procedurally more complex.
[109] The problem then
is what happens to land if the right is expressly waived or simply not
exercised by the Crown. In that event, ownership of the land may be acquired
by means of an a non domino habile disposition followed by occupation
for the prescriptive period (Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973,
s 1). Otherwise, it may simply lie dormant in an ownerless state.
However, the fact that a parcel of land is ownerless, in the private law sense,
does not mean that it ceases to be part of Scotland. It does not. That matter
is determined by international public law principles and not those of private
law (see Shetland Salmon Farmers Association v Crown Estate
Commissioners 1991 SLT 166, LJC (Ross) at 171, Lord McCluskey at 184).
Powers of a Trustee
[110] The Insolvency Act 1986 provides (s 169(2)) that a liquidator in a
winding up by the court in Scotland has the same powers as a trustee on a
bankrupt estate. This is a significant provision since it defines what the
liquidator can do and, to a degree, what he cannot do. In terms of the
Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 (s 31(1)):
"the whole estate of the debtor shall, by virtue of the trustee's appointment, vest in the trustee at the date of the sequestration for the benefit of the creditors".
"Estate" is now defined further (s 31(8)(aa)) as:
"any property of the debtor, title to which has not been completed by another person deriving right from the debtor".
[111] It is
central to a proper analysis of the powers of a trustee to grasp exactly what is
the effect of property "vesting" in a trustee. The short point is that, of
itself, sub-section 31(1) does not have the effect of the trustee obtaining
ownership of either moveable or heritable property, in the sense of conferring a
real right in the property. In the normal situation, for example, the
acquisition of a contractual or other right to an item of moveable property
would require to be followed by delivery (sale being a statutory exception) or,
in the case of incorporeal moveables, a duly intimated assignation in order to
become real; that is enforceable not just against the transmitting party but
the world. It is only by virtue of sub-section 31(4) that such property vests
in the trustee as if he had taken delivery of it or intimation of an
assignation had been made. All of this makes it tolerably clear that the
vesting provision in section 31(1) does not, of itself, result in the creation
of a real right amounting to ownership. Instead, it creates a personal right
in the trustee to acquire ownership of the property using the accepted methods
of doing so (Goudy: Bankruptcy (4th ed) p 268). If
registration is required to complete title, then it must be carried out (Morrison
v Harrison (1876) 3 R 406).
[112] In relation
to heritage, the 1985 Act, and its predecessors, used to provide that the act
and warrant was the equivalent of a decree of adjudication in implement of sale
(1985 Act, s 31(1)(b)). The effect of this has been said to amount to an "absolute
title" (T Burns: Bankruptcy in Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia (Reissue 2),
para 80), yet where infeftment was previously required, it had to be carried
out (ibid) to acquire a real right (Burnett's Tr v Grainger
2004 SC (HL) 19). The vesting was then effectively equivalent only to the
delivery of a disposition (see McBryde: Bankruptcy (2nd ed)
para 9-30). It created a jus ad rem (a right to the object, ibid
para 9-33) rather than a jus in rem (a right in the object). The
same considerations apply to the modern system of registration of title. Registration,
in one form or another, is required to complete title. The current provisions
of the 1985 Act, as amended by the Bankruptcy and Diligence etc. (Scotland) Act
2007, state that upon the award of sequestration, the sheriff clerk "forthwith"
intimates a copy of the award to the Keeper of the Register of Inhibitions and
Adjudications for recording (1985 Act, s 14(1)). This has the effect of an
inhibition and a citation in an adjudication (ibid s 14(2)).
[113] The trustee
can complete title by recording the appropriate Notice of Title or, for the
Land Register, applying to update the title sheet in order to show the trustee
as proprietor, once the 28 day statutory period has expired (Land Registration (Scotland)
Act 1979, s 3(6); 1985 Act, s 31(1A)). He would thereby acquire, if he desired
it, a real right. Meantime, however, he does not have ownership of the land.
He has an unqualified right to complete title, but he does not require to do
so. If he does not do so, what he retains is a personal right to acquire
ownership, which he may elect to enforce or decline to do so. This option is
akin to that in relation to the adoption of a contract. If the decision is not
to complete title, that does not involve any abandonment of property; rather,
it is a decision not to proceed to enforce a personal right.
[114] A number of
cases were cited in which there has undoubtedly been judicial reference to a
trustee "abandoning" property (eg LJC (Boyle) in Mitchell's Tr v
Pearson (1834) 12 S 322, at 325-326; and in Marquis of Abercorn v
Grieve (1835) 14 S 168 at 171). However, close analysis of these cases
makes it clear that it is a personal right (and its counterpart obligation)
that is being given up (ibid Lord Glenlee at 172). Thus in Mitchell's
Tr v Galloway's Trs (1903) 5F 612, Lord Adam referred to the
alternatives of abandoning or adopting the "feu-charter" and not the feu (see
also Lord Kinnear at 618).
[115] Air v
Royal Bank of Scotland (1886) 13 R 734 is not of direct assistance. It was
about whether dividends, in the sense of funds calculated by a trustee as due
to the creditors at the end of a sequestration, could be abandoned (ie by the
creditors). It did not relate specifically to property belonging to the
bankrupt which has vested in the trustee. The Lord President (Inglis) referred
(at 736), in what was an ex tempore opinion, to an asset "reverting" to
the bankrupt if the trustee and the creditors resolved not to "take it up".
However, in support of that view, he cited his earlier decision in Fleming v
Walker's Trs (1876) 4 R 112, which had involved whether a bankrupt could
pursue a claim that a lease had been fraudulently assigned prior to a
sequestration and, which, it was determined, had not formed part of the
sequestrated estate at all. Once again, in so far as any heritage is
concerned, what is being contemplated is a trustee's right to decline to pursue
personal rights and not the "abandonment" of real rights of ownership in land.
[116] A trustee
can elect not to enforce a personal right. If that right is to acquire ownership
of land, it can (no doubt with the consent of the creditors) be given up and in
that sense "abandoned", leaving ownership (the real right) where it rests (with
the bankrupt). In the case of moveables, the trustee can "abandon" them as any
other person may do, by deliberately throwing them away (supra). If,
however, the trustee acquires ownership of land, in the sense of having a real
right in it recorded in the appropriate register, he cannot divest himself of
that simply by declaring it to be no longer his own. The land will remain
recorded in his name until it is transferred from him, using the formal methods
already described. He may, and usually does, dispone any land by deducing
title through the decree awarding the sequestration rather than by completing
title in his own name in advance of any subsequent transfer. Unless and until
he does so, the real right will rest upon the terms of the relevant Register.
[117] There is now
an express provision whereby a trustee can "abandon" heritable property, but he
can only do so in favour of the debtor (1985 Act, s 32(9A)). This is a
statutory procedure which, again, requires appropriate documentation to be
recorded in the Register of Inhibitions (see Bankruptcy (Scotland) Regulations
2008, Form 21, and 1985 Act ss 32 (9B and C)). Although the term "abandon" is
used in the statute, the land is not abandoned. What this involves is the
abandonment of any "claim to the debtor's share and interest ... in the property"
(ibid, Form 21). No transfer of ownership is envisaged. Rather, the
trustee gives up what (as detailed above) is a personal right to acquire
ownership of (that is, a real right in) the property. In a sense it may
loosely be described as "abandonment"; but of a right to the property, not the
property itself.
[118] The degree
to which all of this is of importance in deciding the practical issues in this
case may be very limited. A trustee may be able to avoid certain liabilities involved
in an onerous contract by not adopting it. He may also be able to avoid
liability in respect of obligations which run purely with the ownership of land
by declining to take title from the bankrupt. He cannot, however, rid himself
of liabilities owed to creditors, not by the owner of the land as such, but by
the bankrupt, who may also happen to be the owner, just because these
liabilities relate to land to which he (the trustee) has declined to take title.
[119] A trustee is
the person in whom the estate vests to enable it to be ingathered, the claims
against it established and for it thereafter to be distributed according to the
rules of ranking. It is of the essence of the process that the trustee takes
the estate tantum et tale (with all its advantages and faults; Myles v
City of Glasgow Bank (1879) 6 R 718, LP (Inglis) at 725; Heritable
Reversionary Co v Millar (1882) 19 R (HL) 43, Lord Watson at 49; Burnett's
Tr v Grainger (supra)). He is liable ("represents the
bankrupt in his liabilities" (Myles (supra)) to the extent of the
estate (as at the date of vesting). His duty is to rank the creditors
accordingly. He is not bound to take on any additional liabilities as
might be contractually incumbent upon the bankrupt. That is to say, he is
entitled to do nothing by way of future performance and to leave the other
party to rank for damages. In that respect, he is doing no more than any
person might do. The only difference is that the court will not grant a decree
for specific implement against a trustee in bankruptcy, because he cannot be
forced to incur further debt by virtue of the performance of any private law
obligation. However, any obligation on, or liability of, the debtor does not
disappear upon sequestration. It remains extant; hence the availability of ranking
in respect of a claim for damages. The trustee cannot elect not to rank a
competent claim by "disclaiming" the relevant liability as relating to an asset
which he does not wish to realise. If the liability is personal to the
bankrupt, it requires to be ranked whether or not the trustee chooses to deal
with the asset to which it relates in a general, rather than real, sense.
Powers of a
Liquidator
[120] Like
a trustee, a liquidator, as manager of the company and acting on its behalf (Smith
v Lord Advocate 1978 SC 259, LP (Emslie) at 272) can decline to
perform any personal private law obligation incumbent upon the company under an
onerous contract with another party, thereby placing the company (not the liquidator)
in breach of that contract (Asphaltic Limestone Concrete Co v Glasgow
Corporation 1907 SC 463, Lord McLaren at 473, followed in Joint
Administrators of Rangers Football Club, Noters 2012 SLT 599, Lord Hodge at
para [46]). However, no such obligation is present here.
[121] Unlike the
situation of a trustee, who obtains a personal right to acquire ownership of
the bankrupt's heritage upon vesting of the sequestrated estate, a liquidator
acquires no such right. The company's property, whether moveable or heritable,
does not vest in him at all (Crown Estate Commissioners v Liquidators
of Highland Engineering 1975 SLT 58, Lord Keith at 60). The liquidator
becomes the custodier of the company's assets, but they do not vest in him.
Any real right in heritage (and indeed any other right) remains with the
company in the absence of a vesting order under section 145 of the Insolvency
Act 1986. Such orders are rare and none exists here.
[122] As has been
outlined above, a person cannot "abandon" land in which he has a real right of
ownership. He may rid himself of it by disponing it to a third party or it may
be transferred from him to another by legal process, but neither circumstance arises
here. Thus, in the absence of a specific power to do so, a liquidator (as
agent of the company) has no power to divest the company of a real right in
land by unilateral disclaimer whereby the land would become bona vacantia
and fall to be administered by the Crown, if it elected to exercise that
prerogative right.
[123] There is no
separate "patrimony" of a company, mummified, mothballed or otherwise in a
winding up. The whole assets of a company remain its property, which the
liquidator is under a statutory duty to take into his custody (1986 Act,
s 144). Equally the company's whole liabilities remain its debts, for
which the creditors are entitled to rank. From a practical point of view, the
liquidator may elect, in certain circumstances and with appropriate sanctions,
not to realise certain property, whether moveable or heritable; or he may be
unable to realise it. If that remains the position as at dissolution, then so
be it. No doubt it will be suitably described in the liquidation accounts.
The property, however, does not become separated in any legal sense from the
company's general assets in advance of that dissolution. In this context, the
idea of separate patrimonies, which can exist where a person holds property in
different legal capacities, and thus in different estates (eg trust property),
has no application.
[124] The court
notes the difference between the insolvency regimes in England and Scotland
created by section 178 of the Insolvency Act 1986 (and its predecessors),
whereby a liquidator in England can "disclaim" onerous property. There is no
such general provision in relation to Scotland albeit that, as noted above, a
Scottish liquidator may decline to adopt an onerous personal obligation. Section
178, however, does not simply confer a power. It defines what "onerous
property" is and the manner in which a disclaimer can be made. It provides
that a person may rank for damages in respect of a disclaimer and for the
exercise of certain powers by the court where a disclaimer has been made. It
is not simply that there is a difference between the two jurisdictions in
relation to the act of disclaimer. There is an absence of any provision for
Scotland not only in relation to the power of disclaimer but also in relation
to how it might be exercised and in relation to what property.
[125] It is of
some note that the Scottish Law Commission considered whether a general right
"to disclaim onerous property of the bankrupt or of the company as the case may
be" could "with advantage" be introduced into Scotland (Memorandum No 16, Insolvency,
Bankruptcy and Liquidation in Scotland (1971), para 105). The conclusion,
after consideration of a paper from its Vice Chairman, namely Professor
Halliday (Appendix D), was not so much that such a power already existed in
Scotland but that "in the absence of public demand for such a provision and in
view also of the impending changes in the law relating to feudal tenure, such a
change in the law is not required" (emphasis added). The Halliday paper
considered that, in relation to bankruptcy, the law in England and Scotland
operated "to much the same effect". It expressed the view that "[w]here land
is held by the bankrupt on feu the trustee may abandon it". For the reasons
given above, the court does not quite agree with that analysis in so far as it might
suggest that a real right, once acquired, can be abandoned to the four winds,
but otherwise it agrees that a trustee can avoid taking title to land. In a
much shorter passage relative to liquidation, Professor Halliday also thought
that the position in Scotland was similar to that in England so far as
renouncing contracts was concerned, but he did not analyse disclaimer of a real
right in land in this context.
[126] It is argued
that it would be anomalous if an English liquidator could disclaim Scottish
property, yet a Scottish liquidator could not do so in relation to English
property. The court does not regard this as anomalous. The manner in which an
item of property is treated in accounting terms in the context of a winding up
is no doubt a matter for the law applicable to the winding up (lex fori).
An English liquidation may involve disclaimer of property held anywhere in the
world and the liquidation process, and any final dividend upon dissolution, may
proceed accordingly. However, the manner in which heritable property is
actually disposed of is a matter to be determined by the lex situs (the
law where the property is situated). Whatever the powers of a liquidator may
be in terms of the law under which the liquidation is processed, the property
will not transmit from the company unless that is achieved in accordance with
the law applying where the land is located (see eg Joint Administrators of
Rangers Football Club, Noters (supra), Lord Hodge at para [19]).
The Abandonment of
Statutory Licences
[127] With a view to preserving SCC's funds for distribution among its
unsecured creditors and the floating charge holder, the liquidators wish to
shed the statutory obligations to which the mining operations of SCC are
subject by "abandoning" or "disclaiming" the CARs and other statutory licences.
Although
they are only one source of statutory obligation, SCC's several CARs licences
were taken to be appropriate exemplars of a statutory licence for the purposes
of the liquidators' request for the second direction. Such
is the level of cost associated with the proper discharge of those statutory
obligations, the liquidators estimate that compliance will exhaust the funds
realised by them from the sale of SCC's assets within 20 to 22 months.
[128] Taking the CARs
licence for the site at Muirkirk as an example, SEPA authorise a specified
controlled activity, notably the discharge of trade effluent, at or near
specified associated waters (the Stottencleugh Burn), "subject to the
requirements of [the CARs]" and to specific conditions attached to and forming
part of the licence. The first of the general conditions is that the "responsible
person", being SCC, shall secure compliance with the conditions.
[129] The
underlying scheme of the CARs is to prohibit "any controlled activity" (reg 4),
including any activity which has or is likely to have a significant adverse
impact on the water environment. In particular, activities liable to cause
pollution are controlled (reg 3). Controlled activity may, however, be
authorised (CARs, part II) by the grant of a CARs licence by SEPA to a "responsible
person" (reg 8). A person can become a "responsible person" without any
intention of so being. If it appears that a person is carrying out a
controlled activity without authorisation, SEPA may treat the activity as one
in respect of which an application for authorisation has been made (reg 10)
and, if it thinks fit, grant an authorisation (reg 8). Moreover, and
importantly for present purposes, the definition of "responsible person" (reg 2)
includes the trustee in bankruptcy of a sequestrated responsible person and, if
the responsible person is a company, a receiver, administrator or liquidator of
that company. Thus, simply by assuming the role of, for example, liquidator,
the insolvency practitioner concerned becomes "the person who is responsible
for securing compliance with the terms of [any CARs] licence" granted to the
company.
[130] A
CARs licence may be regarded as an asset. It provides the responsible person
with authority to carry out a controlled activity and thereby permits the
exploitation of a valuable resource. But it will inevitably bring with it
associated liabilities. Regulation 8 requires SEPA, in granting a CARs
licence, to impose such conditions as it considers necessary or expedient for
the purposes of protection of the water environment. A condition so imposed
may require an applicant to carry out works or do other things in relation to
land, whether or not the land is within the ownership or control of the applicant
(reg 8(3)). It is the responsibility of the applicant to obtain all consents
necessary to allow compliance with the condition.
[131] Part
VII of the CARs provides for the creation and prosecution of criminal
offences. Specifically, it is an offence, inter alia, for a person to
carry on, or permit others to carry on, a controlled activity without
authorisation (reg 44). There is provision for enforcement (part V and
sch 6), which is the responsibility of SEPA (reg 31). SEPA may suspend or
revoke an authorisation (reg 29). It may serve an enforcement notice on
the responsible person specifying preventative, mitigatory or
remedial steps (reg 32). SEPA also has power to carry out
works if it considers it necessary to do so forthwith (reg 33). If SEPA carries
out such works, it can recover the cost of doing so from the responsible person
(ibid).
[132] Variation
and termination of authorisations is dealt with in part IV of the CARs. A
responsible person may apply to SEPA for variation of a CARs licence (reg 24)
or for its transfer to a third party by way of a joint application (reg 25). Where
it is intended to cease the authorised activity, or the authorised activity has
already ceased, regulation 27 applies. The responsible person is required to apply
to SEPA to surrender the authorisation or part of it (reg 27(3)). SEPA must
determine the application, by granting it or refusing it within two months (reg 28).
SEPA must assess the steps, if any, which are necessary: (a) to avoid a risk of
adverse impact on the water environment as a result of the cessation of the
authorised activity; and (b) to leave the water environment in a state that
complies with the body of European, United Kingdom and Scottish environmental
legislation identified in part I of schedule 4 to the CARs ("any
steps necessary"). If SEPA grants the application to surrender, its notice of
determination must specify and require the responsible person to take any steps
necessary.
[133] By virtue of
it having applied for and been granted a CARs licence, SCC incurred onerous
obligations to avoid the risk of adverse impact on the water environment and to
leave it in such a state that it complies with the relevant environmental legislation.
These obligations subsist notwithstanding the cessation of any or all activity
on the part of SCC and, in particular, any controlled activity. Moreover, by
virtue of the very clear terms of regulation 2(1) of the CARs, which as
already noted include a liquidator within the definition of "responsible
person", those obligations are incumbent upon the liquidators. There may be a
situation where such obligations, or their pecuniary equivalent, have been
assumed at some stage by a third party, such as by virtue of a guarantee or
performance bond. That is not the case here. Accordingly, in this case the
relevant statutory obligations will come to an end on the dissolution of SCC
and the liquidators vacating office (cf In re Celtic Extraction [2001] Ch 475, Morritt LJ at para 44).
[134] It
is implicit in his reasoning that the Lord Ordinary accepted, as a matter of
general law, that a Scottish liquidator has a power to disclaim a statutory
licence, as he has power to disclaim other onerous property. Essentially for
the reasons which lead to the conclusion that a Scottish liquidator has no
power to divest the company of a real right in land by a unilateral disclaimer (supra),
however, a liquidator has no such power in respect of statutory licences.
[135] It is worth
emphasising that the request for the second direction uses the expression
"abandon (otherwise disclaim)" the statutory licenses. This suggests giving up
something which is of value; surrendering an asset. That a statutory licence,
such as a CARs licence, can be an asset, in accounting terms, and classified as
an item of property in legal terms (see 1986 Act, s 436) is clear,
notwithstanding that the better analysis may be that such licences confer
privileges and immunities rather than rights. At least in the case of a CARs
licence, it may be transferred and may, therefore, have commercial value. In
the present case, however, the liquidators are seeking a direction allowing
them to "disclaim" the licences because, consistent with their fiduciary duties
towards the company and its creditors, they wish to be able to extinguish or
terminate unilaterally a (very large) liability.
[136] As already
noted, a Scottish liquidator does not have the express power of an English
liquidator to "disclaim any onerous property" (1986 Act, ss 178 to 182;
see also Re Mineral Resources [1999] BCC 422, Neuberger J at 429 and In
re Celtic Extraction (supra), Morritt LJ at para 34). The
definition of "property" for the purposes of section 178 is wide and has been
held to include a waste management licence. Whether a Scottish liquidator has
power specifically to abandon a CARs licence, and thereby bring an end to its
onerous conditions, must depend on the terms of the CARs and the relevant licences.
[137] The CARs
establish a specific statutory surrender regime, which is expressly imposed on
liquidators. That, at least, is the position if the "broad interpretation" of
the CARs is the correct one (infra). The inclusion of liquidators
within the definition of "responsible person" does not impose personal
liability beyond the extent of the insolvent estate. To that extent, the broad
interpretation involves some departure from a strictly literal interpretation
of the CARs. However, such an interpretation, by which a liquidator is responsible
for compliance with the conditions of the licence as long as he remains
liquidator and has not been allowed to surrender it in the prescribed manner,
is to read the legislation "with the grain" (Ghaidan v Godin-Mendoza
[2004] 2 AC 557 Lord Rodger at para 121). It respects the ordinary meaning of
the language used.
[138] The alternative
and narrower interpretation would require the CARs to be read in a way that goes
against the ordinary meaning of the language used. Specifically, the CARs do
not say that a liquidator is a "responsible person" only for so long as he does
not exercise a power to disclaim. Such an interpretation is contrary to the
plain meaning of the CARs and ignores the additional problem that a Scottish
liquidator does not, in any event, have a general or statutory power to disclaim.
It would be a curious construction of an explicit provision that a liquidator
is a responsible person and, therefore, responsible for ensuring compliance
with the statutory licence, only for as long as he chooses. The narrower
interpretation of the CARs is further undermined by the existence of the specific
surrender provisions.
[139] The CARs
constitute a self-contained and exclusive code relating to the grant, terms,
revocation, surrender and transfer of the statutory licences. The holder of a licence
can only divest himself of the licence, and avoid the obligations imposed on
him thereunder, in accordance with that code (see Re Mineral Resources
(supra), Neuberger J at 429). A CARs licence may be an item of property,
but its various features must be determined by reference to the statute that created
it. Amongst these features is the way in which it can be brought to an end
with the result that the responsible person is divested of his
responsibilities. That is by operation of the regulations 27 and 28
surrender provisions; not by "disclaimer" or any other method. Where
legislation makes specific provision for a situation (for example, the surrender
of an authorisation) by way of a particular mechanism, then that specific
provision is to be taken as superseding any more general alternative (Re
Mineral Resources (supra), Neuberger J at 432, citing R v
Secretary of State for the Home Department ex p Hickey (No 1) [1995] QB 43,
Rose LJ at 56 quoting Bennion: Statutory Interpretation (2nd ed.)
at p 205).
[140] The CARs is
a piece of legislation which is concerned with the regulation of water use.
However, individual pieces of legislation do not operate in a vacuum. They are
intended to form part of, and fit within, a larger but nevertheless coherent
body of legal rules and principles. Accordingly, all things being equal, the
interpretation of a particular piece of legislation which does the least
violence to existing rules and principles is to be preferred (Cross: Statutory
Interpretation (3rd ed.) at p168).
[141] Among the
rules and principles which make up what is intended to be a coherent body of
law are those associated with the various insolvency regimes. The Court of
Appeal in In re Celtic Extraction (supra) considered that the
wide interpretation of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 would offend
against the rules and principles associated with the various insolvency regimes,
in particular, "the very considerable and oft-repeated public policy
requirement that the property of insolvents should be divided amongst their
unsecured creditors" (the pari passu principle). That led the Court to
favour the narrower interpretation. However, the presumption against unclear or
apparently inconsistent changes in the law must, of necessity, yield to a clear
statement of legislative intention. The CARs contain such a clear statement of
intention derived from the language used and the intended purpose.
[142] Where, as
here, the relevant legislation was enacted to implement an EU Directive, it is
taken to be the legislative intention to achieve the purpose of the Directive.
As was said by the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Justice in Pfeiffer
v Deutsches Rotes Kreuz [2005] ICR 1307 (at para 113 and reiterating
the point made in Marleasing v La Comercial Internacional de
Alimentacion [1993] BCC 421 at 440):
"... when it applies domestic law, and in particular legislative provisions specifically adopted for the purpose of implementing the requirements of a Directive, the national court is bound to interpret national law, so far as possible, in the light of the wording and the purpose of the Directive concerned in order to achieve the result sought by the Directive and consequently comply with the third paragraph of article 249 [of the Treaty]."
[143] As already
noted, the CARs were made under section 20 of the 2003 Act, which was
enacted in order to transpose the Water Framework Directive into domestic law.
The Water Framework Directive is extensive in its scope and ambitious in its
objectives. Its purposes include, for example, the establishment of "a
framework for the protection of inland surface waters, transitional waters,
coastal waters and groundwater which: ...ensures the progressive reduction of
pollution of groundwater and prevents its further pollution" (art 1(a)). Where
an insolvent company will in due course be dissolved, enforcing a statutory
licence against a liquidator affords at best only temporary and imperfect
environmental protection. Nevertheless it would seem to be beyond argument
that the broad interpretation of the CARs will better achieve the desired result.
As a consequence, SCC's environmental obligations will be treated as
liquidation expenses, thereby giving them priority over other obligations.
[144] If further
justification were required, there are persuasive factors in favour of giving
pre-eminence to the policy of maximising environmental protection over the
policy of the expeditious and equal distribution of available assets among the
unsecured creditors of an insolvent company. In Re Mineral Resources
(supra), Neuberger J observed (at 431):
"First, ... there is considerable public interest in the maintenance of a healthy environment, and in the principle pithily expressed as 'the polluter must pay'. It is the view which prevails both in the popular perception and in the legislative system in this country and, indeed, in most of the developed world. It is not merely apparent from the provisions of the 1990 Act itself, but also from the terms of the EC Council Directive of 15 July 1975 on waste .... On the other hand, while I accept that provisions of the 1986 Act relating to winding up and disclaimer are not merely for the benefit of individual shareholders, creditors, debtors and liquidators of companies, but also for the good administration of business and commerce, ... those interests are of a less wide ranging and important nature, both in the domestic sense and in the international sense, than the concerns embodied in the 1990 Act.
Accordingly, there is nothing surprising in the notion that the legislature should have intended that continued compliance with a waste management licence should override what the interests of the creditors or contributories of a company, and administrative concerns, namely the speedy winding up of companies. While other considerations must be considered, ... at least in the absence of strong factors the other way, ...the interest in the protection of the environment should prevail over the interest in fair and orderly winding up of companies."
[145] The debts of
a company that may be enforced in the liquidation process are those which were
outstanding as at the date of the winding up. It is possible to rank in
respect of future and contingent debts, but "[the] critical point is that any
personal obligation of the insolvent company, if it is to be enforceable in the
winding up process, must be in existence at the date of the winding up" (Liquidator
of Ben Line Steamers, Noter 2011 SLT 535, Lord Drummond Young at
para 21). This presents a difficulty for SEPA in respect of ranking for
losses or costs incurred by reason of post-liquidation events. In any event,
however, it is far from clear that the pari passu principle is violated
by the inclusion of environmental liabilities within the category of
liquidation expenses.
[146] For present
purposes, it is unnecessary to determine whether it might be possible for SEPA
to rank in the liquidation in respect of liabilities arising from a failure by
the company to discharge its obligations under a CARs licence. It is
sufficient to note that attempting to do so would be likely to be "both
unsatisfactory and difficult" at (Re Mineral Resources (supra)
Neuberger J at 433). While it "would be dangerous to try and suggest a
universally applicable formula" (Re the Nortel Companies [2013] 3 WLR 504, Lord Neuberger at para 77) for identifying a provable debt,
something must have occurred pre-liquidation to establish the necessary
contingent liability. In the context of the obligations imposed by a statutory
licence, however, that would by no means necessarily be the case, particularly
in respect of obligations going beyond recovery of the cost of works carried
out by SEPA (reg 33(2)). There is no question of SEPA having title and
interest to make a claim for damages on behalf of the environment.
[147] That even
partial recovery of the costs imposed on the environment by the relevant
controlled activity would be so doubtful, in the event of a liquidator being
able to abandon a statutory licence and to divest himself of the status of "responsible
person", confirms that, on a proper interpretation of the CARs, the only
available method of terminating the obligations imposed on a liquidator is by
means of statutory surrender. That is so when considering the case of an
insolvent liquidation. The point becomes more acute when one considers the
case of a voluntary winding up of a solvent company, where liquidation would
offer shareholders the prospect of ridding themselves of an onerous statutory
licence at no cost to the assets available for distribution. Indeed, the
liquidators recognised that such a prospect would be unacceptable and sought a
power to disclaim only in the circumstances of insolvency and subject to the
discretionary control of the court. No basis in principle or statutory
construction was offered, however, for drawing such a distinction between the
powers of a liquidator in either case.
Devolved competence
of the CARs
[148] Against this background of statutory interpretation, it may be
unsurprising that the Lord Ordinary observed (para [55]) that:
"had other things been equal, there were powerful considerations which might have persuaded me that I should not follow the Celtic Extractions case but instead have reached a view which was closer to that of Neuberger J in Mineral Resources by holding that the liquidators could not disclaim, but should seek to achieve the surrender of the licences by using the procedures in regulations 27 and 28 of CAR".
In other words, the Lord Ordinary might have favoured the broad interpretation of the CARs, for which the reclaimers argued, rather than the narrower interpretation advanced by the liquidators. However, he concluded (para [67]) that sections 29, 54 and 101 of the Scotland Act 1998, and schedules 4 and 5 to that Act, required him to adopt a narrower view of the provisions, so that the subordinate legislation was not outside devolved competence.
[149] The
liquidators alone advanced an argument that a wide interpretation of the CARs
would result in the provision being outside the legislative competence of the
Scottish Parliament because it would form part of the law of a country or
territory other than Scotland or confer or remove functions exercisable
otherwise than in, or as regards Scotland, in contravention of
section 29(2)(a). In short, it was said, it would remove the power of a
liquidator of a company being wound up in England to disclaim a CARs licence
forming part of the onerous property of the company (1986 Act, s 178). However,
the CARs relate only to activities in Scotland. Whether, and in what
circumstances, a licence may be granted or surrendered are matters which form
part of the law of Scotland. The effects of the CARs may be felt by persons
elsewhere, such as liquidators of companies being wound up in England which
have a CARs licence, but that does not mean that the CARs form part of the law
of England, nor that they confer or remove functions exercisable otherwise than
in or as regards Scotland. The CARs do not amend section 178 of the Insolvency
Act 1986, nor do they form part of the law of any country other than Scotland.
Thus, the liquidators' submissions under section 29(2)(a) are
misconceived.
[150] When
considering whether a provision relates to a reserved matter, the court must
determine this "by reference to the purpose of the provision, having regard
(among other things) to its effect in all the circumstances" (section 29(3)).
The purpose of a provision is different from its effect. The effect of a
provision is merely one of the circumstances to which the court must have
regard when determining the purpose.
[151] It is
important to bear in mind the observation of Lord Walker in Martin v Most
2010 SC (UKSC) 40 (at para [49]) that:
"Section 29(2)(b) prohibits legislation by the Scottish Parliament which 'relates to' reserved matters. That is an expression which is familiar in this sort of context, indicating more than a loose or consequential connection, and the language of section 29(3), referring to a provision's purpose and effect, reinforces that."
This was cited with approval by Lord Hope in Imperial Tobacco Ltd v Lord Advocate 2013 SC (UKSC) 153 (at para [16]) where he referred to Lord Rodger's observation in Martin v Most (supra at para [75]) that:
"the clearest indication of its purpose may be found in a report that gave rise to the legislation or in a report from one of the committees of the Parliament. But it may also be clear from its context. As is the case when any other statute is being construed, the context will be relevant to understanding the meaning of the words used by the 1998 Act."
In Martin v Most (supra), Lord Hope had considered the scheme of devolution and observed (para [11] et seq under reference to Gallagher v Lynn [1937] AC 863) that it was not possible, if a workable system was to be created, for reserved and devolved areas to be divided into precisely defined, watertight compartments. Some degree of overlap is inevitable. The rule required an examination of the statute that was impugned to ascertain its "pith and substance", or its "true nature and character" to determine whether it was legislation "with respect to" matters that were in the prohibited or permitted sphere.
[152] An echo of
this approach is to be found in the debate in the House of Lords on the
Scotland Bill (Hansard HL Deb 21 July 1998 column 819), in which Lord
Sewel for the Government, having referred to the "pith and substance" test in Gallagher
v Lynn (supra), observed as follows:
"'If, on the view of the statute as a whole, you find that the substance of the legislation is within the express powers, then it is not invalidated if incidentally it affects matters which are outside the authorised field'. In other words, it is intended that any question as to whether a provision in an Act of the Scottish parliament 'relates to' a reserved matter should be determined by reference to its 'pith and substance' or its purpose and if its purpose is a devolved one then it is not outside legislative competence merely because 'incidentally it affects' a reserved matter. A degree of trespass into reserved areas is inevitable because reserved and other areas are not divided into neat watertight compartments.
Clause 28(4) and (5) were intended to achieve this. Clause 28(5) provides that a provision does not relate to reserved matters merely because it makes provision for purposes relating to devolved matters which incidentally affects reserved matters. However, there may be some doubt as to whether this provision is sufficient because it does not make it clear that in determining whether a provision relates to a reserved matter the court should determine this by reference to the purpose of the provision in question. In the absence of such a provision, it is possible that the courts would apply a literal approach and hold that a provision 'relates' to a reserved matter merely if it affects it. If the courts were to adopt this approach, this would severely fetter the Scottish parliament's ability to legislate about subjects which are, in terms of the White Paper, to be devolved.
For example, the White Paper intended that pollution control should be devolved. However, an Act of the Scottish parliament containing provisions about water pollution from coal-mines or dust from open-cast coal-mining would affect the reserved matter of coal-mining. If the courts were to apply a literal approach, they could hold that these provisions related to the reserved matter and would therefore be beyond the legislative competence of the Scottish parliament. This would make a nonsense of the devolution of pollution control. The same point applies, for example, to planning or local government or even the courts and the administration of justice.
Amendment No. 153 is designed to solve this problem by providing expressly that any question as to whether a provision in an Act of the Scottish parliament 'relates to' a reserved matter is to be determined by reference to its purpose. The courts can determine that a provision is for a permitted purpose, even if, as an ancillary matter, it affects reserved matters. In ascertaining the purpose of the provision, the courts are required to have regard, among other things, to its effect in all the circumstances. In my example of pollution control, the courts would take into account that the pollution control provision had an effect upon the reserved matter of coal-mining but may nevertheless consider that its purpose was about pollution control and not about coal-mining.
In the vast majority of cases the ancillary effects of such provisions upon reserved matters are likely to be minor but in some cases they could be significant. Whether the effect of a provision on reserved matters is minor or significant, if it is to be within the powers of the Scottish parliament it must in every case satisfy the test that its purpose is a devolved one".
The foregoing extract, whilst substantial, is useful in shedding light on the exercise which must be conducted in the present case.
[153] In
considering the purpose of the CARs, it is relevant to consider the explanatory
note attached to the regulations, and the powers under which they were made. The
CARs were made under the Water Environment and Water Services (Scotland) Act
2003, which transposed the European Parliament and Council Directive
2000/60/EEC. They also implemented, in part, Council Directives 80/68/EEC, and
2006/118/EC on the protection of ground water and on environmental quality
standards. They provide a comprehensive scheme which contains a general
prohibition against the carrying on of any controlled activity except in so far
as it is authorised under the CARs and is carried out in accordance with that
authorisation. A controlled activity includes those liable to cause pollution
of the water environment, abstraction of water from the water environment,
works in surface water or wetlands and any other activity which directly or
indirectly has or is likely to have a significant adverse impact on the water
environment. As already detailed, they contain provisions for SEPA to grant an
authorisation and to enforce the conditions of any authorisation. There are
provisions for review, variation and transfer of authorisations, and for
surrender, suspension and revocation of authorisations. In short, there is
little difficulty in reaching the conclusion that the "pith and substance" of
the CARs is the protection of, and control of activities in, the water
environment.
[154] There are
provisions within the CARs which have a practical effect on liquidators of
companies (whether being wound up under the law of Scotland or England) which hold
CARs licences; notably, the express inclusion of a liquidator within the
definition of a "responsible person" (reg 2). Although the effect of a
provision is a factor in considering its purpose, it is not the only factor.
Moreover, it would be wrong to have regard only to the effect of the CARs on
liquidators. It is necessary to have regard to their overall effect in all the
circumstances. Ultimately, the CARs have practical effects for a wide variety
of persons carrying on, or wishing to carry on, any activity which directly, or
indirectly, has or is likely to have a significant adverse impact on the water
environment.
[155] The purpose
of the provision in relation to the definition of a "responsible person" is to
facilitate identification of the person responsible for operating the
activities and to ensure that there is continuity and certainty of
responsibility. It is necessary both to avoid the creation of a lacuna in the
effective coverage of the legislative regime and to prevent circumvention of the
EU obligations.
[156] The purpose
of the CARs as a whole, and the provisions relating to a liquidator in
particular, is an environmental one. Neither the CARs as a whole, nor the
provisions relating to liquidators, have as their purpose an insolvency
objective. The effect on liquidators of companies possessing a CARs licence is
no more than a loose or consequential connection. In all the circumstances,
those provisions of the CARs which are said to restrict the power of a
liquidator cannot be said to relate to reserved matters. They are, accordingly,
not outwith the competence of the Scottish Parliament by reason of section 29(2)(b)
of the 1998 Act.
[157] For the
purposes of section 29(2)(c), the exercise of determining whether the CARs
modify any enactment or rule of law, the subject-matter of which is a reserved
matter (sch 4, 1998 Act) must include the identification of the enactment or
rule of law which is being modified. Lord Hope shed some light on this
exercise in Martin v Most (supra), where he observed (at
para [34]):
"Identifying the rule is a crucial step towards reaching the right answer to the question whether the modification that is proposed is within the competence of the Scottish Parliament or must be dealt with at Westminster. ...[U]nlike section 29(3) and (4), para 2 of the schedule concentrates on the rule of law that is being modified by the enactment and makes no mention of the purpose of the modification ... But the purpose of the enactment may nevertheless be referred to in order to identify the rule of law that is being modified".
There is no suggestion in the CARs of any intention to amend or repeal any part of the Insolvency Act or the Insolvency Rules. The CARs do not create a preferential debt. Whilst there may be practical effects in a liquidation as a result of the CARs, no change to any enactment, nor to any legal rule, may be discerned.
[158] In any
event, even if there were a modification to the insolvency regime, that would
not be a modification of the law on reserved matters. It is too wide an
assertion that "insolvency" is a reserved matter. While head C2 of schedule 5
to the 1998 Act is headed "Insolvency", that is merely a heading. In fact, it
is only concerned with corporate insolvency; personal insolvency, by means of
sequestration, is not a reserved matter. There has been no modification of the
rules of law in relation to any of the specific items listed under head C2.
There has been no modification of the rules for payment of preferential debts,
nor has there been any modification of Rules 4.66 or 4.67 of the
Insolvency (Scotland) Rules.
[159] Moreover,
the prohibition on modification of the law on reserved matters applies in
relation to a rule of Scots private law (whether or not contained in an
enactment) only to the extent that it is special to a reserved matter (sch 4,
para 2(3)). There is an obvious difficulty in applying this provision where it
is not clear what enactment or rule of law it is suggested has been modified. As
Lord Hope also observed in Martin v Most (supra at
para [38]):
"In case of doubt, the words 'to the extent only' suggest that a generous application of para 2(3) which favours competence is to be preferred as opposed to one which applies it narrowly."
The purpose of regulations 2 and 27 of the CARs is to secure that the environmental objectives of the regulations are met, by providing an orderly means for bringing controlled activities to an end and for there to be a responsible person in control of the activities throughout. In light of this, it is difficult to identify any modification of a rule of law that is special to a reserved matter.
[160] For the
purposes of section 29(2)(c), modifications to the law on reserved matters
are permissible to the extent that they are incidental to, or consequential on,
a provision made (whether by virtue of the Act in question or another
enactment) which does not relate to reserved matters, and where they do not
have a greater effect on reserved matters than is necessary to give effect to
the purpose of the provision (sch 4, para 3(1)). A similar provision was
considered recently in Attorney General v National Assembly for Wales
Commission [2013] 1 AC 792, in which Lord Neuberger commented (at
para 49) that:
"The answer to the question whether a particular provision in an enactment is 'incidental to, or consequential on' another provision, obviously turns on the facts of the particular case. The answer may to some extent be a question of fact and degree, and it should turn on substance rather than form, although, of course, in any well drafted Bill, the substance will be reflected in the form, at least in relation to that sort of question".
Lord Hope agreed with Lord Neuberger and stated (at paras 82 - 83) that the words make it clear that the interpretative exercise to which it points is one of comparison:
"How significant is the removal of the pre-commencement function, when it is seen in the context of the Act as a whole? If the removal has an end and purpose of its own, that will be one thing. It will be outside competence. If its purpose or effect is merely subsidiary to something else in the Act, and its consequence when it is put into effect can be seen to be minor or unimportant in the context of the Act as a whole, that will be another. It can then be regarded as merely incidental to, or consequential on, the purpose that the Bill seeks to achieve. The provision in question meets this test. So it is within competence."
Applying this test to the present circumstances, as previously stated, the CARs have an effect on the practicalities of insolvency. However, more than that is required in order to place them beyond the devolved competence of the Scottish Parliament. If, contrary to the views expressed above, the CARs have modified the law on reserved matters (and in particular any of those aspects of the law of corporate insolvency which are listed under head C2 of schedule 5 to the 1998 Act), it remains the case that any such modifications are incidental to, and consequential on, provisions in the CARs relating to environmental matters, which are not reserved, and only to an extent that is necessary to give effect to the environmental purpose of the CARs. Having regard to each of the factors discussed above, the CARs do not go beyond the devolved competence of the Scottish Parliament as a consequence of section 29(2)(c) of the 1998 Act.
[161] In all the
circumstances, neither the CARs in general, nor regulations 2 and 27 as
they apply to liquidators in particular, are outwith the devolved competence of
the Scottish Parliament. Nor can they be read in such a way as to be outside legislative
competence. That being so, the provisions of section 101 of the 1998 Act
do not apply and it is not necessary to read the provisions narrowly in order
to bring them within competence. The Lord Ordinary fell into error in reaching
the contrary view. For completeness, and in light of the court's conclusions as
to devolved competence, it is not necessary to consider whether the 1998 Act should
be read subject to any saving provision (supra) in order to secure
implementation of EU law in devolved areas.
Directions
[162] The court
will accordingly recall the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary dated 11 July
2013 and direct that the liquidators do not have the power to "abandon
(otherwise disclaim)" the sites or the statutory licenses referred to in the
prayer of the Note.