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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 >> Whiteley Insurance Consultants (a/k As Kingfisher Travel Insurance Services), Re v [2008] EWHC 1782 (Ch) (25 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1782.html Cite as: [2009] Bus LR 418, [2008] EWHC 1782 (Ch), [2009] Lloyd's Rep IR 212 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF WHITELEY INSURANCE CONSULTANTS (also known as KINGFISHER TRAVEL INSURANCE SERVICES) (A FIRM) | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE FINANCIAL SERVICES AND MARKETS ACT 2000 | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 |
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Peter Wright (solicitor-advocate, The Financial Services Authority) for The Financial Services Authority
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice David .Richards:
Introduction
Facts
The present application
Did WIC carry on insurance business?
"The jury found that the appellant was playing an active and significant part in selling insurance, and he did this in contravention of s 2, whether he was acting on his own behalf or on behalf of a genuine company, which was unauthorised under the Act. If there was such a company and his dealings were solely on behalf of the company, then we can assume that he would not incur any personal liability towards third parties and he committed no offence under s 2 although the company would do so; as stated above, we need not decide whether that is correct or not. But if the company was a figment of his imagination, or if he had no authority to act on its behalf, then he would incur personal liability towards third parties and in our judgment he would commit the offence under s 2. That would be because the business that he carried on, whatever it consisted of, could only be his."
Claims under FSMA: general points
The Earlier Period: ss 26 and 28 FSMA
"(1) No person may carry on a regulated activity in the United Kingdom, or purport to do so, unless he is-
(a) an authorised person; or
(b) an exempt person.
(2) The prohibition is referred to in this Act as the general prohibition."
"Agreements made by unauthorised persons.
26. (1) An agreement made by a person in the course of carrying on a regulated activity in contravention of the general prohibition is unenforceable against the other party.
(2) The other party is entitled to recover-
(a) any money or other property paid or transferred by him under the agreement; and
(b) compensation for any loss sustained by him as a result of having parted with it.
(3) "Agreement" means an agreement-
(a) made after this section comes into force; and
(b) the making or performance of which constitutes, or is part of, the regulated activity in question.
(4) This section does not apply if the regulated activity is accepting deposits.
…
Agreements made unenforceable by section 26 or 27
28. (1) This section applies to an agreement which is unenforceable because of section 26 or 27.
(2) The amount of compensation recoverable as a result of that section is-
(a) the amount agreed by the parties; or
(b) on the application of either party, the amount determined by the court.
(3) If the court is satisfied that it is just and equitable in the circumstances of the case, it may allow-
(a) the agreement to be enforced; or
(b) money and property paid or transferred under the agreement to be retained.
(4) In considering whether to allow the agreement to be enforced or (as the case may be) the money or property paid or transferred under the agreement to be retained the court must-
(a) if the case arises as a result of section 26, have regard to the issue mentioned in subsection(5); or
(b) if the case arises as a result of section 27, have regard to the issue mentioned in subsection(6).
(5) The issue is whether the person carrying on the regulated activity concerned reasonably believed that he was not contravening the general prohibition by making the agreement.
(6) The issue is whether the provider knew that the third party was (in carrying on the regulated activity) contravening the general prohibition.
(7) If the person against whom the agreement is unenforceable-
(a) elects not to perform the agreement, or
(b) as a result of this section, recovers money paid or other property transferred by him under the agreement, he must repay any money and return any other property received by him under the agreement.
(8) If property transferred under the agreement has passed to a third party, a reference in section 26 or 27 or this section to that property is to be read as a reference to its value at the time of its transfer under the agreement.
(9) The commission of an authorisation offence does not make the agreement concerned illegal or invalid to any greater extent than is provided by section 26 or 27."
"(1) Where a debt proved in the liquidation bears interest, that interest is provable as part of the debt except in so far as it is payable in respect of any period after the company went into liquidation or, if the liquidation was immediately preceded by an administration, any period after the date that the company entered administration.
(2) In the following circumstances the creditor's claim may include interest on the debt for periods before the company went into liquidation, although not previously reserved or agreed.
(3) If the debt is due by virtue of a written instrument, and payable at a certain time, interest may be claimed for the period from that time to the date when the company went into liquidation.
(4) If the debt is due otherwise, interest may only be claimed if, before that date, a demand for payment of the debt was made in writing by or on behalf of the creditor, and notice given that interest would be payable from the date of the demand to the date of payment.
(5) Interest under paragraph (4) may only be claimed for the period from the date of the demand to that of the company's going into liquidation and for all the purposes of the Act and the Rules shall be chargeable at a rate not exceeding that mentioned in paragraph (6).
(6) The rate of interest to be claimed under paragraphs (3) and (4) is the rate specified in section 17 of the Judgments Act 1838 on the date when the company went into liquidation."
Discretion under s 28(2) FSMA
"whether the person carrying on the regulated activity concerned reasonably believed that he was not contravening the general prohibition by making the agreement."
Again the focus is on the agreement in question, although of course it is a consideration which will normally be applicable to a significant number of agreements. It is clear that WIC did not reasonably believe that it was not contravening the general prohibition, as the creditors' committee accepts.
"It therefore seems to their Lordships that the principle of pari passu distribution according to the values of debts at the date of winding up does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that someone who was a creditor at that date must be allowed to participate in the distribution even when he is no longer a creditor at all. There is nothing unfair, or contrary to principle, in a rule which requires that anyone who claims to participate in a distribution should have the status of a creditor at the time when he makes that claim. It would be strange if the court can have regard to subsequent events in valuing a creditor's contingent claim at much less than it would have been thought to be worth at the date of the order but not to the fact that someone has ceased to be a creditor at all."
It would, Lord Hoffmann said at para 29, be "pure conceptualism" to apply the principle of valuation as at the winding-up date "so as to require payment of a dividend to someone who, at the time of the distribution, is not a creditor at all".
The Later Period: s 20 FSMA
Valuation of claims under the policies
"any person who is carrying on a regulated activity of the kind specified by article 10(1) or (2) of the Regulated Activities Order (effecting and carrying out contracts of insurance) but who is not-
(a) exempt from the general prohibition in respect of that regulated activity;
(b) a friendly society; or
(c) a person who effects or carries out contracts of insurance all of which fall within paragraphs 14 to 18 of Part I to the Regulated Activities Order in the course of, or for the purposes of, a banking business."
"Except in relation to amounts which have fallen due for payment before the liquidation date and liabilities referred to in paragraph 2(1)(b) of Schedule 1, the holder of a general business policy shall be admitted as a creditor in relation to his policy without proof for an amount equal to the value of the policy and for this purpose the value of a policy shall be determined in accordance with Schedule 1. "
Paragraph 1 of schedule 1 deals with periodic payments under a general business policy, which is not relevant to WIC's business. Paragraph 2 and 3 provide as follows:
"2.—(1) This paragraph applies in relation to liabilities under a general business policy which arise from events which occurred before the liquidation date but which have not—
(a) fallen due for payment before the liquidation date; or
(b) been notified to the company before the liquidation date.
(2) The value to be attributed to such liabilities shall be determined on such actuarial principles and assumptions in regard to all relevant factors as the court shall direct.
3.—(1) This paragraph applies in relation to liabilities under a general business policy not dealt with by paragraphs 1 or 2.
(2) The value to be attributed to those liabilities shall —
(a) if the terms of the policy provide for a repayment of premium upon the early termination of the policy or the policy is expressed to run from one definite date to another or the policy may be terminated by any of the parties with effect from a definite date, be the greater of the following two amounts:
(i) the amount (if any) which under the terms of the policy would have been repayable on early termination of the policy had the policy terminated on the liquidation date, and
(ii) where the policy is expressed to run from one definite date to another or may be terminated by any of the parties with effect from a definite date, such proportion of the last premium paid as is proportionate to the unexpired portion of the period in respect of which that premium was paid; and
(b) in any other case, be a just estimate of that value."