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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 >> Official Receiver v May [2008] EWHC 1778 (Ch) (25 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1778.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1778 (Ch), [2008] BPIR 1562 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM NEWBURY COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE OFFICIAL RECEIVER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GARY LEE MAY |
Respondent |
____________________
The Respondent in person
Hearing date: 13 June 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Christopher Nugee QC:
i) Mr May, who traded as Affordable Autos, had a secondhand car business. According to his statement of affairs this business started trading in August 2000.ii) On 22 December 2004 Mr May acquired a new Yamaha WR50 F motorbike on hire purchase from Close Motor Finance. The cash price was £5,699 of which he paid £614 as an advance payment; he agreed to pay 36 monthly payments of £168.90 to discharge the balance and the various charges for credit (which together came to £6,080.40).
iii) By May 2005, Mr May was being pressed by his creditors. In particular he had bailiffs demanding money from him. He sold the motorbike for £1,250 in cash, of which he thinks he paid some £800 to the bailiffs, spending the rest of the money (ie some £400) on his own living costs and alcohol. He does not know the name and address of the purchaser.
iv) Mr May did not seek the permission of Close Finance to sell the bike; nor did he tell them that he had done so. He continued to make monthly payments to them: the copy ledger which I have unfortunately cuts off the dates of these payments but indicates that 7 standing orders of £168 were received in 2005 and some other payments (equal to a further 7 monthly payments) were paid by debit card or bank giro credit in 2005 and 2006; it also shows that some payments must have been late or missed as there are a number of entries for "notice of default fee".
v) The bike was sold at a considerable undervalue. Mr May's own estimate is that it was worth about £3,500. He deliberately priced it at £1,250 for a quick sale as he was desperate for cash.
vi) Affordable Autos ceased trading at the end of December 2005; a second business which traded under the name of Low Cost NT Motor Co, and which Mr May had started in March 2005, ceased trading in July 2006.
vii) Mr May presented a petition for his own bankruptcy on 15 December 2006 and was made bankrupt on 18 December 2006. The Official Receiver's report to the Court shows nil assets, and liabilities of £72,952. The total due to Close Finance at the date of bankruptcy was £4,066, made up of the outstanding balance of the monthly instalments of £3,716 and £350 for various fees incurred by reason of defaults.
"On 5 May 2005, without requesting authority from the finance company, Gary Lee May (hereinafter referred to as "Mr May") sold a Yamaha WR50 F motorcycle, which was subject to a hire-purchase agreement, for the sum of £1,250 in cash. Mr May believes, keeping in mind that he purchased the motorcycle on 22 December 2004 for £5,699 and the good condition thereof; its true value was approximately £3,500 at the date of the sale.
None of the sale proceeds were paid to the HP-company and consequently, at the date of bankruptcy, £4,066 remained outstanding to the aforementioned finance company."
"Mr MacLeay, I am rather hesitant about this particular case. I think that, as Mr May says, he is not someone who has been out to con people, and I believe him. It was obviously an act of desperation, and I do not think actually that I feel inclined to make a restrictions order in this case. It is at my discretion. Usually I look at the circumstances, and I think this is the first time I have not made such an order, but I am going to accept what Mr May has said, and it is unlikely to happen again.
So I am not going to make a further order. So you are discharged from your bankruptcy."
No criticism was suggested of this judgment for its conciseness; the workload of the District Judges is no doubt such as to require applications such as this to be dealt with very efficiently. I have also seen a copy of the District Judge's own handwritten notes recording the judgment; these are as follows:
"facts not disputed – he had a 2nd hand vehicle business – sold a motorcycle at an undervalue without inf the hire purchase people – Mr May is involved in car sales business – the facts are undisputed – not dishonest – but it is a culpable action. Mr May described the circumstances and I felt the mitigation was genuine.
No further order.
Application refused."
"Bankruptcy restrictions order
1(1) A bankruptcy restrictions order may be made by the court.
(2) An order may be made only on the application of
(a) the Secretary of State, or
(b) the official receiver acting on a direction of the Secretary of State.
Grounds for making order
2(1) The court shall grant an application for a bankruptcy restrictions order if it thinks it appropriate having regard to the conduct of the bankrupt (whether before or after the making of the bankruptcy order).
(2) The court shall, in particular, take into account any of the following kinds of behaviour on the part of the bankrupt:
(a) failing to keep records which account for a loss of property by the bankrupt, or by a business carried on by him, where the loss occurred in the period beginning two years before petition and ending with the date of the application;
(b) failing to produce records of that kind on demand by the official receiver or the trustee;
(c) entering into a transaction at an undervalue;
(d) giving a preference;
(e) making an excessive pension contribution;
(f) a failure to supply goods or services which were wholly or partly paid for which gave rise to a claim provable in the bankruptcy;
(g) trading at a time before commencement of the bankruptcy when the bankrupt knew or ought to have known that he was himself to be unable to pay his debts;
(h) incurring, before commencement of the bankruptcy, a debt which the bankrupt had no reasonable expectation of being able to pay;
(i) failing to account satisfactorily to the court, the official receiver or the trustee for a loss of property or for an insufficiency of property to meet bankruptcy debts;
(j) carrying on any gambling, rash and hazardous speculation or unreasonable extravagance which may have materially contributed to or increased the extent of the bankruptcy or which took place between presentation of the petition and commencement of the bankruptcy;
(k) neglect of business affairs of a kind which may have materially contributed to or increased the extent of the bankruptcy;
(l) fraud or fraudulent breach of trust;
(m) failing to co-operate with the official receiver or the trustee.
(3) The court shall also, in particular, consider whether the bankrupt was an undischarged bankrupt at some time during the period of six years ending with the date of the bankruptcy to which the application relates.
(4) ...
...
Duration of order
4(1) A bankruptcy restrictions order
(a) shall come into force when it is made, and
(b) shall cease to have effect at the end of a date specified in the order."
(2) The date specified in a bankruptcy restrictions order under sub-paragraph (1)(b) must not be
(a) before the end of the period of two years beginning with the date on which the order is made, or
(b) after the end of the period of fifteen years beginning with that date."
"65. Secondly, paragraph 2(1) provides in mandatory terms that the court shall grant an application for a BRO "if it thinks it appropriate having regard to the conduct of the bankrupt". The words "if it thinks it appropriate" clearly require the court to form a judgment, but the exercise that has to be carried out is not in my view properly characterised as the exercise of a discretion. The question whether it is appropriate to make a BRO is not at large, but has to be answered "having regard to the conduct of the bankrupt". It therefore requires the court to examine and evaluate the bankrupt's conduct and to form a view whether that conduct merits the making of a BRO. If the court concludes that it does, the court then has no choice in the matter and is obliged to make a BRO for at least the minimum period of two years."
He went on to say (at [66]) that while the types of conduct to which the Court had to have regard were not exhaustively set out, the Court was obliged to have regard to conduct of the type set out in paragraph 2(2), all of which involved
"some element of misconduct or neglect or financial irresponsibility"
and (at [68]) that although no express guidance was given on the standards the Court was to apply
"in general terms, however, it seems to me that what is envisaged is a failure in some significant respect to live up to proper standards of competence or probity in the conduct of one's financial affairs."
He then (at [69]) referred to the minimum period of 2 years for a BRO which he regarded as indicating that the jurisdiction was intended not just to protect the public, but to have a deterrent effect, saying:
"The minimum period suggests rather that Parliament intended to impose a substantial sanction in any case where the bankrupt's conduct was shown to have fallen below the appropriate standard, whether or not he still represented a danger to the public by the date of the hearing."
"has fallen below the standards of probity and competence appropriate for persons fit to be directors of companies."
"74 I accept Mr Nourse's submission that the reasoning of Hoffmann LJ in In re Grayan Building Services Ltd should be applied with the necessary modifications to the BRO regime, and I find in it confirmation of several of the points which I have already made in paras 64 to 69 above. It follows that I reject Mr Mithani's submissions about the discretionary nature of the BRO jurisdiction. In oral argument Mr Mithani made it clear that the sheet-anchor of his case was the use of the word "appropriate" in paragraph 2(1). However, for the reasons I have given I do not read this word as importing a general discretion, but rather as setting a standard by reference to which the court must judge whether or not the conduct specified by the official receiver merits the making of a BRO. The standard has to be fixed by the court, in the same way as the standard of unfitness to be a director is fixed by the court. I agree with Mr Nourse that if Parliament had intended to confer a general discretion it would not have used the mandatory word "shall" in paragraph 2(1)."
"One judge does not gratuitously depart from, still less review, another's decisions. The law having been stated by one judge, another judge will not lightly differ from what he has said. Where the judgment in question is fully reasoned after full argument it will have very great persuasive authority which it may be difficult for any litigant at first instance to displace."