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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 >> Pickering & Ors v Davy [2017] EWCA Civ 30 (24 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/30.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 38, [2017] EWCA Civ 30, [2017] Bus LR 1239 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE KEYSER QC
3CF30187
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
____________________
(1) Brian Michael Pickering (2) Ann Dolores Pickering (3) 1000654 Limited |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Graham Frank Davy |
Respondent |
____________________
Seb Oram (instructed by Clarke Willmott LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS :
Introduction
"(1) The period between 20 March 2012 (being the date of the striking off of the Company) and 1 July 2014 (being the date of the Restoration Order) is not to count for the purposes of any enactment, including the Limitation Act 1980, as to the time within which proceedings against the Company must be brought by the Claimant [the limitation direction];
(2) If the Claimant shall petition for the winding up of the Company within 14 days from the date that this paragraph comes into effect, the petition shall be deemed to have been presented on 20 March 2012 [the petition direction] ,and"
The petition direction does not, by the terms of the order, come into effect until this appeal is determined.
The facts
"The sole reason it is sought to restore the name of the Company to the Register of Companies is so that the investigation by the Financial Ombudsman for mis-selling of a personal pension can be resumed and any recommendation for compensation to be paid to Mr Graham Davy can be authorised."
Statutory provisions
"(1) The general effect of an order by the court for restoration to the register is that the company is deemed to have continued in existence as if it had not been dissolved or struck off the register.
(3) The court may give directions and make such provision as seems just for placing the company and all other persons in the same position (as nearly as may be) as if the company had not been dissolved or struck off the register."
The judgment below
"It is confined only by the touchstone of justice ("as seems just") and by the express purpose that the directions must serve ("placing the company and all other persons in the same position (as nearly as may be) as if the company had not been dissolved or struck off the register")."
"Nonetheless, I consider that Mr Adams is correct to submit that the logic of Jonathan Parker LJ's dictum requires that, in the case of third-party creditors as in that of the company itself, one have proper regard to the regime in the Limitation Act 1980. The dictum makes clear that any limitation direction, if it has any effect, will tend to override the statutory limitation regime. The fact that this result may be more readily justified by considerations of common fairness when the interests of third parties are concerned does not detract from the need to show proper grounds why such a direction should be made. The dictum of Megarry J in Re Lindsay Bowman Limited (above) also makes clear that a limitation direction must be justified in each case and is not a matter of routine."
"Consideration of what is required to place persons in the same position, as nearly as may be, as if the Company had not been dissolved or struck off the register is made more difficult, particularly in a case such as the present, by the unavoidable element of the counterfactual that is involved. It does seem to me, however, that Mr Oram is correct to say that there was a window of opportunity, if only a small one, in which Mr Davy might have established the merits of his claim to the satisfaction of the FOS and been able to present the petition that he now seeks to present and bring the claim that would underpin such a petition. It is quite impossible to know whether he would have achieved those steps; that impossibility, however, arises out of the conduct of Mr and Mrs Pickering in bringing about the dissolution of the Company. If justice requires that the effects of the striking-off of the Company be undone by restoring to Mr Davy his lost opportunity, the risk that his position will be improved over what it might have been – perhaps because he is better able to take advantage of the opportunity – seems to me to be the price of seeking the best attainable equation of positions under section 1032(3)."
The principal issue
"If a creditor had six years in which to sue the company, and his time ran out after the company had been defunct for five years, he would have had only one year in which he could effectually have sued the company. He may justly say that he ought not to have been deprived of five years. He cannot have the precise five years which he has lost, but he can be given five other years by way of replacement. This will put him "in the same position as nearly as he may be as if the name of the company had not been struck off"."
"The starting point for the achievement of this purpose in relation to limitation is to recognise that time would have run against the company if it had not been dissolved in exactly the same way as it did in fact run, while it was dissolved. In a case such as the present where a limitation period expires while the company is in fact dissolved, the court must therefore ask itself whether, had it not been dissolved, the company (or any assignee of the cause of action) would have commenced the relevant proceedings within time which, ex hypothesi, continued to run against the company. Putting it another way, the question is whether the dissolution of the company was the real cause of its being disabled from pursuing its claim. If, had it not been dissolved, the court concludes that it would probably have failed to pursue its claim in time anyway then the causative prerequisite implied in the language of section 1032(3) seems to me to be missing."
"Even if an applicant for a limitation direction (whether the company or its assignee) can demonstrate that, had the company not been dissolved, the claim probably would have been brought in time, the court must still ask itself whether it would be just to provide that opportunity, after the event, by a limitation direction. In a case such as the present, where the company has been deliberately dissolved by its liquidator at the conclusion of its liquidation, it is, without more, by no means clear why it should be just to provide the company with a further opportunity, to the prejudice of the persons who would thereby be deprived of the limitation defence, and to the detriment in the public interest that stale claims should be prevented. The company's dissolution is not some accident which has befallen it, like an illness affecting a potential claimant under a disability, but the consequence of a deliberate decision by the company's responsible officer".
"I begin therefore with the question whether, had Mr Valentine not put the Company into dissolution in April 2009, proceedings would have been brought either by the Company, Mr Hawkes or some other assignee before the expiry of the relevant limitation periods in December 2011."
"On the necessarily hypothetical assumption that the company had not been dissolved there is nothing in the evidence to suggest that Mr. Hawkes would have brought about the institution of proceedings, whether on behalf of the Company or by himself after assignment, before they became statute-barred in December 2010. Accordingly, I consider that the application for a limitation direction falls at the first hurdle. Putting the Company and all interested parties in the position which they would have enjoyed if there had been no dissolution would not, probably, have led to these claims being pursued in time." [emphasis added]
"I must admit to some doubt whether the outcome in the Donald Kenyon case, however subjectively just on its own facts, really did implement the statutory purpose of the discretion now conferred by section 1032(3). But it was not criticised in the Regent Leisuretime case, nor by counsel on this appeal. I would therefore leave the question whether it should be followed to a case where it matters, on the facts."
Other grounds of appeal
Should the directions be made on the facts of this case?
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON:
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE: