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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Trade & Industry v Aviss & Ors [2006] EWHC 1846 (Ch) (20 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/1846.html Cite as: [2007] 1 BCLC 618, [2006] EWHC 1846 (Ch), [2007] BCC 288 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF MEA CORPORATION LIMITED AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANY DIRECTORS DISQUALIFICATION ACT 1986 SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRADE AND INDUSTRY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) JOHN STEWART AVISS (2) WILLIAM JOHN BERRY (3) PHILIP DAVID TONKIN (4) DAVID HENRY WALKER |
Defendants |
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Mr John Aviss in person (on 10 July only)
Hearing dates: 10 and 11 July 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison:
Introduction | 1 |
Background | 3 |
Mr Aviss | 3 |
Mr Berry | 6 |
Procedural matters | 7 |
Directions for hearing | 7 |
Adjournment application | 10 |
Abuse of process? | 14 |
Witnesses | 16 |
Mr David Bartley | 18 |
Mr Simon Bartley | 19 |
Mr Robert Evans | 20 |
Mr John Fitzpatrick | 21 |
Mr Ian Rennison | 22 |
Mr David Walker | 23 |
The acquisition of subsidiaries | 24 |
Projects | 25 |
CJB | 27 |
A hole in the accounts? | 28 |
Centralisation | 31 |
Wolverstone | 40 |
Pressure from creditors | 43 |
Mea | 44 |
Projects | 45 |
CJB | 46 |
Mr Berry | 47 |
Mr Aviss | 50 |
Inter-company support | 53 |
The decisions to cease trading | 75 |
Conclusion | 76 |
Responsibility of Mr Aviss and Mr Berry | 77 |
Mr Aviss as formal director of Mea | 78 |
Director in fact or shadow director | 82 |
Director in fact | 82 |
Shadow directors | 86 |
The evidence of the directors and company secretary | 92 |
Mr David Walker | 92 |
Mr Robert Evans | 96 |
Mr David Bartley | 97 |
Mr Simon Bartley | 98 |
Mr Ian Rennison | 99 |
Mr Philip Tonkin | 100 |
Mr Aviss and Mr Berry act together | 102 |
The key allegation | 104 |
Unfitness | 107 |
Period of disqualification | 113 |
Introduction
Background
Mr Aviss
"John Aviss joined his father's electrical contracting business from school, and completed an electrician's apprenticeship. He began running the business from the age of 20. He developed a specialism in heating systems and acquired a heating company, Davis & Rutherford He set up [Mea] in 1981 (as Aviss Heating Limited) and transferred Davis & Rutherford's business into the new company. He diversified into pet product distribution in 1981, with the acquisition of Woodpecker Pet Products Ltd and is now Chairman and majority shareholder of companies with turnover totalling in excess of £50 million. In November 1999 Woodpecker was demerged into Zoa Corporation plc, which was admitted to [AIM]."
i) Woodpecker Pet Products Ltd, whose holding company was Zoa and which was floated in November 1999;ii) Aviss Holdings Ltd;
iii) Plantagenet Press Ltd;
iv) Holcot Press Ltd and
v) Bau Corporation.
Mr Berry
Procedural matters
Directions for hearing
i) A time estimate for trial of 10 days and an order to attend the Listing Office by 25 August 2005;ii) An order that all deponents attend for cross-examination on 21 days notice, in default of which their evidence should not be read out or used at trial without the permission of the Court.
Adjournment application
i) Mr Aviss had ceased to be represented by solicitors about a month before the trial date (by which time he knew that the trial date was fixed for 10 July 2006);ii) He wished to call a large number of witnesses (some twelve in all), four of whom he was able to name, in support of his defence;
iii) Mr Berry was medically unfit to attend court;
iv) Even if fit, Mr Berry could not afford the train fare to travel from the Midlands to court each day.
i) Within the month available to him, it did not appear to me that Mr Aviss had made any serious effort to prepare for trial. Mr Berry (with whom he had been in contact at least three times during that period) did not suggest that he himself was unaware of the trial date and indeed appears to have been notified of it when it was fixed, over nine months earlier;ii) Neither Mr Berry nor Mr Aviss had taken any step to obtain the witnesses they said they wished to call; and had not referred to the possibility of calling them in their own evidence. There were no draft statements or notes of interviews. They did not indicate what they hoped this evidence would establish. They did not even say that they had made any approach to the potential witnesses. Nor had either of them notified the Secretary of State that any of the deponents who had given evidence in support of his case were required for cross-examination, and consequently the evidence of those deponents stood unchallenged;
iii) Mr Berry had been recently examined by a specialist medical practitioner who assessed him as fit to attend court;
iv) The material relating to Mr Berry's means was exiguous; and Mr Berry did not explain what (if any) steps he had taken to try to raise the money for his travelling expenses, or how his financial position might improve in the future in the event that the trial were to be adjourned;
v) If adjourned the case would not be re-listed until the summer of 2007.
Abuse of process?
i) A disqualification order prohibits a person not only from being a director of a company but also from being concerned, directly or indirectly, in the management of a company. It would not have been necessary for the Crown to prove, in a criminal prosecution, that Mr Berry had acted as a director. By contrast, in order to found jurisdiction under section 6 of the Act it is necessary for the Secretary of State to prove that fact. The two issues are not necessarily the same.ii) The primary purpose of seeking a disqualification order is to protect the public. The primary purpose of a criminal prosecution is to punish crime. The Secretary of State is performing his duty as guardian of the public interest by seeking a disqualification order in a case in which he considers it in the public interest to do so.
iii) Many cases of disqualification involve criminal conduct. A director may, for example, be accused of defrauding the public; of fraudulent trading; of offences under the Companies Act or under health and safety legislation and so on. The logic of Mr Berry's position is that once criminal conduct is alleged, the civil courts become a no-go area. If this were the case the utility of the disqualification procedure would be gravely undermined.
iv) If Mr Berry were to be prosecuted, he would be exposed to the possibility of imprisonment for up to two years. He suffers no such exposure in the civil courts.
Witnesses
Mr David Bartley
Mr Simon Bartley
Mr Robert Evans
Mr John Fitzpatrick
Mr Ian Rennison
Mr David Walker
The acquisition of subsidiaries
Projects
CJB
A hole in the accounts?
"You stated that you would not wish to raise my hopes but would speak to John Aviss and Bill Berry on Thursday and let me know whether they would be willing to reconsider the terms of their offer."
i) Debtors had been materially overstated primarily because contract claims had insufficient provisions made against them. The uncertain nature of these debts had been largely ignored.ii) Accruals for contract costs had been materially understated. In effect contract income had been assessed at a particular percentage of contract completion, whereas costs had been assessed at a lower level. This had been going on before Mea acquired Projects.
iii) The company's previous owners had applied insufficient effort to credit control in order not to upset its more important customers.
iv) The overhead burden was too high compared to the income generating capacity of the company.
v) Overall, Mr Evans formed the view that whereas the accounts showed net assets of £500,000 at acquisition, the true position was than they should have shown net liabilities of £1 million.
Centralisation
"There are no immediate funds to meet the Revenue payment. I would point out that the funds you refer to are Mea Corporation funds and for part of the Group treasury function."
"When I had to get creditors of [Projects] paid, I would telephone David Walker or Phil Tonkin and explain why a particular creditor needed to be paid as a matter of urgency. They would say to me that they would do their best and see what they could do but that they would have to speak to Bill Berry."
"Bill Berry was issuing instructions on treasury control and totally managing the relationship with the company's bankers. This situation was supported by [Mr Aviss]."
"I have decided to centralise our stationery purchases. With effect from Friday 5th January none of our companies will pay any bills to any stationery supplier, including any petty cash expenditure on what may be considered "emergency" type stationery, except as above."
"Electronic banking has been installed today.
The circular to your suppliers needs to go out forthwith.
We will cease making payments by cheque on Friday 2nd February. No cheques thereafter will be issued."
Wolverstone
"From Wednesday 10th January onwards the companies will operate as one single unit to be called the Wolverstone group I am pleased to announce the new board of Wolverstone Group is as follows "
"It is important that we further formalise, as the business grows bigger, the structure of the management teams.
To effect this, I will work as part of a team comprising
I will have a direct responsibility for driving forward the profitability of the distribution and engineering businesses and for monitoring their performances.
I have delegated to Bill the continued task of the development of the group with an additional responsibility for the media and creative interest.
Working closely with Bill will be Bob Evans with a remit ranging from corporate governance to control of overheads and capital expenditure.
Similarly David Walker, Deputy Chairman, will work closely with Bill in managing the treasury function for the entire company."
Pressure from creditors
Mea
Projects
CJB
Mr Berry
"[Mr Robson] requested [Mr Berry] to reconsider the level of bank facility made available to [Projects] as the current limit was now impacting on the company's performance and standing with suppliers. [Mr Berry] advised that with the flotation now being put back, [Mr Berry] will have to leave the current facility in place as Mea is committed to the above purchases. The [Projects] facility will need to remain as it is until the flotation which is predicted for 15 September 2000 "
"Debtors Cover Reporting
We continue to be late with debtor cover reporting in the engineering business. A consolidated report will henceforth be provided for Barclays for October on Friday 25th November and or November on Tuesday 5th December and for December on Tuesday 9th January. Copies of these reports are to be on my desk at the same time."
"Mr Berry has the right to negotiate on behalf of this board and is empowered to commit the board at his discretion in this matter."
Mr Aviss
Inter-company support
"If this were repaid, the Co would have no cash flow pressure at all!"
"Mea will have to learn to operate under the (malign) influence of himself and John Aviss."
"It was clear that [Mr Aviss] and [Mr] Berry had made their decisions prior to this meeting and essentially required the majority of collections from trade debtors at [Projects] to be used to satisfy Zoa creditors."
"[He] would do this as and when it was appropriate to the benefit of the group of John Aviss' companies."
"Bill Berry explained that in his capacity as a banker he had to advise John Aviss that money had to be disbursed where it was most needed and if this meant taking money from [CJB] to assist [Projects] so be it."
"Bill Berry said priority for paying moneys is being decided by John Bayne for [Projects] projects and Phil Tonkin for [CJB] projects, with the overriding instruction from Bill Berry that money is to go where non-payment would mean most risk."
"[U]nless we can persuade Bill Berry and John Aviss that [CJB's] suppliers and sub-contractors are a special case and should have some priority over [Projects'] suppliers and sub-contractors then things are going to be extremely difficult for us in the next few weeks."
"The "published accounts" show that 3 associated Companies owe the Mea Corporation a total of £2,249,000. Could I please know:
(i) On what terms these "loans to associated companies" have been made
(ii) When was this out flow of cash was approved by the Directors of the Mea Corporation (I, and I believe Simon, have previously been told that no Mea money has been used to support companies outside Mea, this has been told to suppliers, clients and CJ Bartley Staff this is plainly not the case)
Since there is a liquidity problem with the Mea Corporation is it not our duty as responsible Directors of the Mea Corporation to demand this money back so that we can reduce our reliance on short term overdraft borrowing and/or improve the desperate payment situation with our creditors."
"For reasons I understand, and perhaps on Friday accepted, two new policies were put in place. First, and you will recall that I disagreed with it, was that the payment of the Group's Creditors should be carried out centrally at Croydon under your control. I suppose that it is the first and last of these that I can not now accept namely that Croydon will determine who gets paid and when "
"Bill said that because of the circumstances in the group he needed to keep central control of the money for the time being but that once refinancing of the group was in place the original plan to make each company responsible for its own financial dealings would be re-stated."
The decisions to cease trading
Conclusion
Responsibility of Mr Aviss and Mr Berry
Mr Aviss as formal director of Mea
Director in fact or shadow director
Director in fact
"a person who assumes to act as a director. He is held out as a director by the company, claims and purports to be a director, although never actually or validly appointed as such. To establish that a person was a de facto director of a company it is necessary to plead and prove that he undertook functions in relation to the company which could probably be discharged only by a director. It is not sufficient to show that he was concerned in the management of a company's affairs or undertook tasks in relation to its business which can probably be performed by a manager below board level."
"At the forefront of the test I think I have to go on to consider by way of further analysis both what Millett J meant by "functions properly discharged only by a director", and Mr Lloyd QC meant by "on an equal footing". As to one it seems to me clear that this cannot be limited simply to statutory functions and to my mind it would mean and include any one or more of the following: directing others, putting it very compendiously, committing the company to major obligations, and thirdly (really I think what we are concerned with here) taking part in an equally based collective decision process at board level, i.e. at the level of a director in effect with a foot in the board room. As to Mr Lloyd's test, I think it is very much on the lines of that third test to which I have just referred. It is not, I think, in any way a question of equality of power but equality of ability to participate in the notional board room. Is he somebody who is simply advising and, as it were, withdrawing having advised, or somebody who joins the other directors, de facto or de jure, in decisions which affect the future of the company?"
"It may be difficult to postulate any one decisive test. I think what is involved is very much a question of degree. The court takes into account all the relevant factors. Those factors include at least whether or not there was a holding out by the company of the individual as a director, whether the individual used the title, whether the individual had proper information (e.g. management accounts) on which to base decisions, and whether the individual had to make major decisions and so on. Taking all these factors into account, one asks "was this individual part of the corporate governing structure", answering it as a kind of jury question. In deciding this, one bears very much in mind why one is asking the question. That is why I think the passage I quoted from Millett J is important. There would be no justification for the law making a person liable to misfeasance or disqualification proceedings unless they were truly in a position to exercise the powers and discharge the functions of a director. Otherwise they would be made liable for events over which they had no real control, either in fact or law."
Shadow directors
i) The definition of a shadow director is to be construed in the normal way to give effect to the parliamentary intention ascertainable from the mischief to be dealt with and the words used. In particular, as the purpose of the Act is the protection of the public and as the definition is used in other legislative contexts, it should not be strictly construed merely because it also has quasi-penal consequences in the context of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986.ii) The purpose of the disqualification legislation is to identify those, other than professional advisers, with real influence in the corporate affairs of the company. But it is not necessary that such influence should be exercised over the whole field of its corporate activities.
iii) Whether any particular communication from the alleged shadow director, whether by words or conduct, is to be classified as a direction or instruction must be objectively ascertained by the court in the light of all the evidence. In that connection it is not necessary to prove the understanding or expectation of either giver or receiver. In many, if not most, cases it will suffice to prove the communication and its consequence. Evidence of such understanding or expectation may be relevant but it cannot be conclusive. Certainly the label attached by either or both parties then or thereafter cannot be more than a factor in considering whether the communication came within the statutory description of direction or instruction.
iv) Non-professional advice may come within that statutory description. The proviso excepting advice given in a professional capacity appears to assume that advice generally is or may be included. Moreover the concepts of "direction" and "instruction" do not exclude the concept of "advice" for all three share the common feature of "guidance".
v) It will, no doubt, be sufficient to show that in the face of "directions or instructions" from the alleged shadow director the properly appointed directors or some of them cast themselves in a subservient role or surrendered their respective discretions. But it is not necessary to do so in all cases. Such a requirement would be to put a gloss on the statutory requirement that the board are "accustomed to act" "in accordance with" such directions or instructions.
i) If the directors usually took the advice of the putative shadow director, it is irrelevant that on the occasions when he did not give advice the board did exercise its own discretion; andii) If the board were accustomed to act on the directions or instructions of the putative shadow director it is not necessary to demonstrate that their action was mechanical rather than considered.
"that an individual who was not a de jure director is alleged to have exercised real influence (otherwise than as a professional adviser) in the corporate governance of a company. Sometimes that influence may be concealed and sometimes it may be open. Sometimes it may be something of a mixture, as the facts of the present case show."
"If a substantial shareholder in a small company a quasi-partnership company for example wishes, as well he may, to take an active part in running the affairs of the company in order to protect his investment, that raises the very question whether in so doing he may not be constituting himself a de facto director of the company."
The evidence of the directors and company secretary
Mr David Walker
"We [i.e. himself and Mr Tonkin] feel that the titles given to individuals were somewhat superfluous, and that to all intents and purposes Mr Aviss and Mr Berry were dictating strategy and policy."
" I am afraid that I no longer feel able to carry out duties as a puppet director when I am constantly questioning the reasons and motives for the actions being taken . Since January in general, October in specific issues, my view on the future prospects of the Aviss "group" seem to be at odds with the "majority" of the various boards. I have reached the point where I feel that I cannot continue as a director of any board where I am responsible for decisions over which I have effectively had no control or influence."
i) Mr Berry was involved in the recruitment of senior employees for Mea;ii) Mr Berry instructed Mr Walker to make substantial monthly payments by Mea to Holcot to pay the latter's salary bill. Mr Walker complied with those instructions, despite his misgivings;
iii) Mr Berry instructed Mr Walker in October 2000 to set up a monthly payment to Pridie Brewster (the accountants), which he did;
iv) Mr Berry took the lead in attempting to negotiate funding from Barclays Bank and in negotiations with the Inland Revenue over arrears of tax;
v) Mr Walker was given lists of creditors to pay, following meetings with Mr Aviss and Mr Berry;
vi) Mr Berry dominated all company meetings at which he was present.
Mr Robert Evans
"The idea that significant decisions could be taken affecting any company controlled by John Aviss without reference to and approval from John Aviss and Bill Berry bears no relation to the reality of the situation while I was involved with those companies."
Mr David Bartley
"I had been told by Bill Berry during the discussions about Mea acquiring CJB that John Aviss would be chairman of all the companies in the Mea group and that was the position that I understood him to hold throughout the time that I was a director of the company. As regards Bill Berry, whilst he had not been formally appointed as a director of Mea, based on my own experience, I saw him as the key person in the company in terms of overall strategy and policy. I consider (and considered at the time) that it was inconceivable that Dave Walker, Phil Tonkin, Simon [Bartley] and myself, as a board of directors could have acted independently of Bill Berry and John Aviss. As far as I was aware, no-one in the company would take any action of consequence unless Mr Berry or Mr Aviss first authorised it."
Mr Simon Bartley
"I saw [Mr Berry] together with John Aviss, as the ultimate decision maker in terms of the overall strategy of the group and therefore of the individual companies within it, including CJB. If anything was to be changed then it was not going to come from Dave Walker or Phil Tonkin, at least not without their first having got the approval of John Aviss or Bill Berry. I basically saw John Aviss and Bill Berry as one; they had both said, on separate occasions, words to the effect that "you couldn't get a fag paper" between them, that they spoke with one voice and that what one said should be taken as what the other one wanted. Even though I was nominally the managing director of CJB, I did not have the freedom to cause the company to do what I considered to be the right thing, particularly in relation to its financial affairs and its longer term strategy. Similarly, I did not consider that the formally appointed board of CJB was able to take and implement decisions without reference to Bill Berry and John Aviss; the idea that we could have acted on any significant matter affecting the companies of which I was a director (CJB and Mea) without the involvement of Bill Berry and John Aviss bears no relation to the reality.."
Mr Ian Rennison
"On the basis of my own experience in [Projects] and Mea, the main decision makers in relation to the affairs of the companies were Bill Berry and John Aviss. They were not involved in most of the everyday aspects of running the businesses but in terms of decisions such as overall strategy, the payment of creditors and relations with the bank, no major decision would be taken without reference to them and without their approval."
Mr Philip Tonkin
"I find myself in a position in which I can no longer support the Company in the role as Managing Director, as the decisions related to management, finance and the general running of the company have clearly been delegated by you, as Director and Shareholder, to Bill Berry."
Mr Aviss and Mr Berry act together
"I basically saw John Aviss and Bill Berry as one; they had both said, on separate occasions, words to the effect that "you couldn't get a fag paper" between them, that they spoke with one voice and that what one said should be taken as what the other one wanted."
The key allegation
Unfitness
i) The company was unable to pay its debts as they fell due;ii) The director in question knew (or ought to have known) that that was the case;
iii) The company nevertheless continued to trade;
iv) The continued trading resulted in an increase in the company's deficit, thus prejudicing creditors;
v) The continued trading exposed the company's creditors to a greater risk that the company would fail; and
vi) The continuation of trading was unreasonable in all the circumstances.
"Central to the concept of limited liability is the concept that a company has a separate legal personality. A company retains its separate legal personality even if it is a member of a group of companies. Every director of a company, whether executive or non-executive, owes fiduciary duties to that company. Respect for the separate legal personality of each company, and recognition of a director's duty to exercise his powers in the best interests of the particular company of which he is a director are essential attributes of fitness to be concerned in the management of a company. These duties are personal and inescapable. .. [A] failure to understand or respect these fundamental principles could lead to the conclusion that a person was not competent to be a director."
Period of disqualification
i) Between two and five years;ii) Between six and ten years and
iii) Between ten and fifteen years.