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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Heritable Bank plc, Administrators of v The Winding-Up Board of Landsbanki Islands HF [2013] UKSC 13 (27 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2013/13.html Cite as: [2013] 1 BCLC 465, [2014] WLR(D) 100, [2013] 1 All ER (Comm) 1257, [2013] UKSC 13, [2013] WLR(D) 85, 2013 GWD 9-202, 2013 SLT 634, 2013 SC (UKSC) 201, [2013] 1 WLR 725, [2013] 2 All ER 355 |
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Hilary Term
[2013] UKSC 13
On appeal from: [2011] CSIH 61
JUDGMENT
Joint Administrators of Heritable Bank plc (Respondent) v The Winding-Up Board of Landsbanki Islands hf (Appellant) (Scotland)
before
Lord Hope, Deputy President
Lord Walker
Lord Kerr
Lord Reed
Lord Carnwath
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
27 February 2013
Heard on 4 and 5 February 2013
Appellant | Respondent | |
David Alexander QC | Gabriel Moss QC | |
Stephen Robins Paul O'Brien |
Martin Pascoe QC Sarah Wolffe QC Georgina Peters |
|
(Instructed by Morrison and Foerster (UK) LLP) | (Instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) |
LORD HOPE (with whom Lord Walker, Lord Kerr, Lord Reed and Lord Carnwath agree)
The competing claims
The proceedings in Iceland
The proceedings in Scotland
The legal framework
(a) Icelandic law
(b) the Directive
"(6) The administrative or judicial authorities of the home Member State must have sole power to decide upon and to implement the reorganisation measures provided for in the law and practices in force in that Member State. Owing to the difficulty of harmonising Member States' laws and practices, it is necessary to establish mutual recognition by the Member States of the measures taken by each of them to restore to viability the credit institutions which it has authorised.
…
(14) In the absence of reorganisation measures, or in the event of such measures failing, the credit institutions in difficulty must be wound up. Provision should be made in such cases for mutual recognition of winding-up proceedings and of their effects in the Community.
…
(16) Equal treatment of creditors requires that the credit institution is wound up according to the principles of unity and universality, which require the administrative or judicial authorities of the home Member State to have sole jurisdiction and their decisions to be recognised and to be capable of producing in all the other Member States, without any formality, the effects ascribed to them by the law of the home Member State, except where this Directive provides otherwise.
(17) The exemption concerning the effects of reorganisation measures and winding-up proceedings on certain contracts and rights is limited to those effects and does not cover other questions concerning reorganisation measures and winding-up proceedings such as the lodging, verification, admission and ranking of claims concerning those contracts and rights and the rules governing the distribution of the proceeds of the realisation of the assets, which are governed by the law of the home Member State.
…
(23) Although it is important to follow the principle that the law of the home Member State determines all the effects of reorganisation measures or winding-up proceedings, both procedural and substantive, it is also necessary to bear in mind that those effects may conflict with the rules normally applicable in the context of the economic and financial activity of the credit institution in question and its branches in other Member States. In some cases reference to the law of another Member State represents an unavoidable qualification of the principle that the law of the home Member State is to apply."
"(c) the conditions under which set-offs may be invoked;
…
(g) the rules governing the lodging, verification and admission of claims;
(h) the rules governing the distribution of the proceeds of the realisation of assets, the ranking of claims and the rights of creditors who have obtained partial satisfaction after the opening of insolvency proceedings by virtue of a right in re or through set-off;
…
(l) the rules relating to the voidness, voidability or unenforceability of legal acts detrimental to all the creditors."
"(1) The adoption of reorganisation measures or the opening of winding-up proceedings shall not affect the right of creditors to demand the set-off of their claims against the claims of the credit institution, where such a set-off is permitted by the law applicable to the credit institution's claim.
(2) Paragraph 1 shall not preclude the actions for voidness, voidablity or unenforceability laid down in article 10(2)(l)."
(c) the Regulations
"An EEA insolvency measure has effect in the United Kingdom in relation to –
(a) any branch of an EEA credit institution,
(b) any property or other assets of that credit institution,
(c) any debt or liability of that credit institution,
as if it were part of the general law of insolvency of the United Kingdom."
Regulation 5(2) provides that a competent officer may exercise in the United Kingdom in relation to a credit institution which is subject to an EEA insolvency measure any function which he is entitled to exercise in relation to that credit institution in the relevant EEA State. Regulation 5(6), read together with the definition of the expressions it uses in regulation 2, provides that an EEA insolvency measure means, as the case may be, a reorganisation measure or winding-up proceeding as defined in article 2 of the Directive (see para 25, above) which has effect in relation to an EEA credit institution by virtue of the law of the relevant EEA State. The winding-up of Landsbanki would appear to be an insolvency measure for the purposes of regulation 5(1).
"The general law of insolvency has effect in relation to UK credit institutions subject to the provisions of this Part."
There then follow provisions dealing with various procedural matters, such as consultation with the Financial Services Authority prior to a voluntary winding-up, notification to the Financial Services Authority by the court of any decision, order or appointment that it makes, notification by the Financial Services Authority to the EEA regulator of any EEA state in which the UK credit institution has a branch, notification to creditors, submission of claims by EEA creditors, reports to creditors, service of notices and documents and disclosure of confidential information received from an EEA regulator.
"(1) This regulation is subject to the provisions of regulations 23 to 35.
(2) In a relevant winding up, the matters mentioned in paragraph (3) are to be determined in accordance with the general law of insolvency of the United Kingdom.
(3) Those matters are –
…
(d) the conditions under which set-off may be invoked;
…
(g) the claims which are to be lodged against the estate of the affected credit institution;
…
(i) the rules governing –
(i) the lodging, verification and admission of claims,
(ii) the distribution of proceeds from the realisation of assets,
(iii) the ranking of claims,
(iv) the rights of creditors who have obtained partial satisfaction after the opening of the relevant winding up by virtue of a right in rem or set-off."
"(1) A relevant reorganisation or a relevant winding up shall not affect the right of creditors to demand the set-off of their claims against the claims of the affected credit institution, where such a set-off is permitted by the law applicable to the affected credit institution's claim.
(2) Paragraph (1) does not preclude actions for voidness, voidability or unenforceability of legal acts detrimental to creditors under the general law of insolvency of the United Kingdom."
The issue
"It is not only expedient, but required by the plainest principles of equity, that where one of the parties becomes unable to pay his debt to the other, he should not be entitled to require payment from that other of an equal debt that is due to him. Thus, the settlement of mutual debts may be referred to two distinct principles: the one is virtual payment and extinction; the other, retention till counter performance."
At p 119, having noted that the latter operates only in bankruptcy, he observes:
"The former is known by the name of Compensation (in England Set-off), and is amply discussed by our authors; the latter, sometimes vaguely, called Retention, but which may be distinguished as the Balancing of Accounts in Bankruptcy."
The latter he describes as the more important branch of the doctrine. It is not merely an arrangement of convenience, but is an equitable adjustment of mutual debts and credits, to avoid manifest injustice.
Some preliminary observations
"Any judgment opening insolvency proceedings handed down by a court of a Member State which has jurisdiction pursuant to Article 3 shall be recognised in all the other Member States from the time that it becomes effective in the State of the opening of the proceedings."
The effects of that recognition are set out in article 17(1). It states that the judgment opening the proceedings referred to in article 3(1) shall, with no further formalities, produce the same effects in any other Member State as under the law of the State of the opening of proceedings. Articles 3, 9 and 10 of the Directive (see paras 26-28, above) carry the principles referred to in the recitals forward into the provisions of the Directive, except that the home Member State alone is empowered to take measures with regard to branches of a credit institution established in other Member States: article 3(1).
Discussion
Conclusion