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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Price & Anor v Davis & Anor [2014] EWCA Civ 26 (21 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/26.html Cite as: [2014] WLR 2129, [2014] EWCA Civ 26, [2014] BPIR 494, [2014] 1 WLR 2129, [2014] WLR(D) 16 |
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ON APPEAL FROM High Court of Justice
Chancery Division
Mr Justice David Richards
CH2012/0260 & 0262
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
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PRICE & ANR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DAVIS & ANR |
Respondents |
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Jeremy Goldring QC and Adam Al-Atar (instructed by Fergusons Solicitors LLP) for the Respondents
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Lady Justice Arden :
i) Usually, there is only one meeting of creditors to approve an IVA, namely the original meeting which the court directs the nominee to summon if he files a report containing information required by sections 256 and 256A of the IA86, and the court is satisfied that it is appropriate to convene a meeting of creditors (section 257 of the IA86). As I shall now explain, here the nominee had to summon further meetings of creditors.ii) The original meetings approved the IVAs. However, after the meetings Mr and Mrs Price brought proceedings in the Brighton County Court under section 262 of the IA86 in which they successfully challenged the chairman's ruling at the meetings that their claims be valued at £1 for voting purposes. DJ Gamba decided that this valuation was wrong. He suspended the approval of the IVAs and exercised the court's power under section 262(4)(b) to direct the nominee to summon further meetings, subject to the debtors' giving notice that they would put forward a revised proposal, which they did.
iii) As a result of that successful challenge, Mr and Mrs Price additionally became creditors of Mr and Mrs Davis between the date of the first meetings and the further meetings in respect of their costs. The Prices had obtained an order that Mr and Mrs Davis pay the costs of that challenge and so they acquired a further claim against Mr and Mrs Davis.
iv) DJ Gamba did not, as empowered to do under section 262(6) of the IA86 renew the "interim orders" previously made to prevent bankruptcy proceedings being taken against Mr and Mrs Davis and execution from being levied on their assets until the meetings were held. The parties and the court seem to have overlooked that power. The court decided instead to suspend the IVAs, no doubt on the basis that the suspension would deter any creditor action. Accordingly, DJ Gamba's order (so far as material) provided that:
a) the creditor approvals of the IVAs at the original meetings should be suspended; andb) the suspension should end if the further creditors' meetings approved IVAs with variations.v) There were two potential mismatches in this order:
a) if the suspension was lifted because creditors approved a variation to the IVAs, it was provided that the IVAs as so varied - and not the original IVAs - should come into operation.b) notice of the further meetings was to be given to "the IVA creditors", defined by the order as creditors under "the IVAs". If the IVAs were approved as varied, those were the creditors to be bound. "The IVAs" were the IVAs approved at the original meetings. This would not include Mr and Mrs Price in respect of their costs. In other words, the order failed to take account of possible changes in the composition of the class of "the IVA creditors".
IVAs: further material provisions
"257 (1) Where it has been reported to the court under section 256 or to the debtor's creditors under section 256A that a meeting of debtor's creditors should be summoned, the nominee (or the nominee's replacement under section 256(3) or 256A(4)) shall summon that meeting for the time, date and place proposed in the nominee's report unless, in the case of a report to which section 256 applies, the court otherwise directs.
(2) The persons to be summoned to the meeting are every creditor of the debtor of whose claim and address the person summoning the meeting is aware…."
"260 (1) This section has effect where the meeting summoned under section 257 approves the proposed voluntary arrangement (with or without modifications).
(2) The approved arrangement—
(a) takes effect as if made by the debtor at the meeting, and
(b) binds every person who in accordance with the rules—
(i) was entitled to vote at the meeting (whether or not he was present or represented at it), or
(ii) would have been so entitled if he had had notice of it,
as if he were a party to the arrangement."
"(1) Subject as follows, every creditor who has notice of the creditors' meeting is entitled to vote at the meeting or any adjournment of it.
(2) A creditor's entitlement to vote is calculated as follows—
(a) where the debtor is not an undischarged bankrupt and an interim order is in force, by reference to the amount of the debt owed to him as at the date of the interim order;
(b) where the debtor is not an undischarged bankrupt and an interim order is not in force, by reference to the amount of the debt owed to him at the date of the meeting; and
(c) where the debtor is an undischarged bankrupt, by reference to the amount of the debt owed to him as at the date of the bankruptcy order."
"(1) Subject to this section, an application to the court may be made, by any of the persons specified below, on one or both of the following grounds, namely—(a) that a voluntary arrangement approved by a creditors' meeting summoned under section 257 unfairly prejudices the interests of a creditor of the debtor;(b) that there has been some material irregularity at or in relation to such a meeting.(2) The persons who may apply under this section are—
(a) the debtor;(b) a person who—(i) was entitled, in accordance with the rules, to vote at the creditors' meeting, ……(4) Where on an application under this section the court is satisfied as to either of the grounds mentioned in subsection (1), it may do one or both of the following, namely—
(a) revoke or suspend any approval given by the meeting;(b) give a direction to any person for the summoning of a further meeting of the debtor's creditors to consider any revised proposal he may make or, in a case falling within subsection (1)(b), to reconsider his original proposal.(5) Where at any time after giving a direction under subsection (4)(b) for the summoning of a meeting to consider a revised proposal the court is satisfied that the debtor does not intend to submit such a proposal, the court shall revoke the direction and revoke or suspend any approval given at the previous meeting.
(6) Where the court gives a direction under subsection (4)(b), it may also give a direction continuing or, as the case may require, renewing, for such period as may be specified in the direction, the effect in relation to the debtor of any interim order.
(7) In any case where the court, on an application made under this section with respect to a creditors' meeting, gives a direction under subsection (4)(b) or revokes or suspends an approval under subsection (4)(a) or (5), the court may give such supplemental directions as it thinks fit and, in particular, directions with respect to—
(a) things done since the meeting under any voluntary arrangement approved by the meeting, and(b) such things done since the meeting as could not have been done if an interim order had been in force in relation to the debtor when they were done…."
Reasoning of David Richards J
Case put forward on appeal by Mr and Mrs Price
a) David Richards J wrongly conflated suspension and revocation. Suspension must be different from revocation. On the lifting of the suspension, the IVAs approved at the original meetings would come into effect.
b) On that basis, only those persons who were creditors when they gave the original approvals which were suspended can be bound by the IVAs approved at the further meetings. Accordingly the IVAs cannot bind Mr and Mrs Price in respect of their costs because they only became entitled to those costs subsequently.
c) In any event, DJ Gamba's order restricted the class of creditors for the purposes of the further meetings to those who were creditors at the date of the original meetings.
My conclusions and my reasons for my conclusions
a) The creditors for the purpose of the further meetings are those known to the nominee at the date on which those meetings are summoned.
b) IR 5.21(2)(b) entitles creditors at the date of the summoning of the further meetings to vote at those meetings.
c) The distinction between suspension and revocation is not determinative in this case.
d) The statutory binding in section 260 of the IA86 applies to approvals given at further meetings as much as to approvals given at original meetings.
Which creditors were entitled to notice of and to vote at the further meetings?
Suspending or revoking IVAs under section 262(4)
i) It can revoke the creditors' approval and order, or decline to order, a further creditors' meeting;ii) It can suspend the creditors' approval and order, or decline to order, a further creditors' meeting.
Interpretation of IR 5.21(2)
Does the statutory binding apply to further meetings summoned under section 262 of the IA86?
i) If, as here, (1) the original IVA is suspended, and (2) the further meeting approves a varied IVA, section 260 literally construed will have the absurd effect that the IVA becomes binding in its original form.ii) If the original IVA is revoked and the court directs the nominee to summon a further meeting to consider the same or a varied IVA, another absurd result is reached because neither form of IVA will become binding on creditors. This would be a trap for the unwary.
iii) Further absurdities can be found in other provisions which ensure the integrity of the IVA process. Take the example given by Lord Justice Sullivan in the course of argument. Section 262B of the IA 86 requires the nominee or supervisor who becomes aware that the debtor has committed a criminal offence in connection with an IVA approved at a meeting "summoned under section 257" to report the matter to the Secretary of State. It would be absurd if that provision applied only to the original meeting convened by the nominee and not to any further meeting.
iv) Likewise it would be odd if section 262 did not apply to any IVA approved at any subsequent meeting, on the basis that the conditions for relief require the IVA to be approved at a meeting "summoned under section 257".
Lord Justice Sullivan
Lord Justice Davis