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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 >> Davy v Pickering & Ors [2015] EWHC 380 (Ch) (19 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/380.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 380 (Ch), [2015] CN 327 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
GRAHAM FRANK DAVY | Claimant | |
- and – | ||
(1) BRIAN MICHAEL PICKERING | ||
(2) ANN DOLORES PICKERING | ||
(3) THE REGISTRAR OF COMPANIES | ||
(4) 1000654 LIMITED | Defendants |
____________________
Hearing date: 30 January 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
H.H. Judge Keyser Q.C.:
Introduction
"That the period between the striking off of the Company and the making of the order for restoration 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."
"That if the claimant shall petition for the winding up of the Company within 14 days of the making of this Order the petition shall be deemed to have been presented on 20 March 2012."
The facts in more detail
- The Company's balance sheet as at 31 January 2010 showed a surplus of £256,410 and a figure of £580,633 in respect of tangible assets. The notes showed that the figure for tangible assets included £577,287 in respect of freehold land.
- On or about 26 June 2010 it transferred its freehold land as mentioned above.
- The Company's last filed accounts, for the year ended 31 January 2011, showed that the Company had no fixed assets and that its current assets were valued at only £6731. There was a net deficiency on the balance sheet of £96,201. No provision was made for creditors with claims falling due after one year.
Part 31 of the Companies Act 2006
"Section 1003
(1) On application by a company, the registrar of companies may strike the company's name off the register.
(2) The application—(a) must be made on the company's behalf by its directors or by a majority of them, …"
"Section 1006
(1) A person who makes an application under section 1003 (application for voluntary striking off) on behalf of a company must secure that, within seven days from the day on which the application is made, a copy of it is given to every person who at any time on that day is … (c) a creditor of the company."
"Section 1011
In this Chapter [sections 1000 to 1011] 'creditor' includes a contingent or prospective creditor."
"Section 1029
(1) An application may be made to the court to restore to the register a company … (c) that has been struck off the register … (ii) under section 1003 (voluntary striking off), whether or not the company has in consequence been dissolved.
(2) An application under this section may be made by … (f) any person with a potential legal claim against the company, … (i) any person who was a creditor of the company at the time of its striking off or dissolution."
"Section 1030
(1) An application to the court for restoration of a company to the register may be made at any time for the purpose of bringing proceedings against the company for damages for personal injury.
(2) No order shall be made on such an application if it appears to the court that the proceedings would fail by virtue of any enactment as to the time within which proceedings must be brought.
(3) In making that decision the court must have regard to its power under section 1032(3) (power to give consequential directions etc) to direct that the period between the dissolution (or striking off) of the company and the making of the order is not to count for the purposes of any such enactment.
(4) In any other case an application to the court for restoration of a company to the register may not be made after the end of the period of six years from the date of the dissolution of the company …"
"Section 1031
(1) On an application under section 1029 the court may order the restoration of the company to the register … (b) if the company was struck off the register under section 1003 (voluntary striking off) and any of the requirements of sections 1004 to 1009 was not complied with; (c) if in any other case the court considers it just to do so."
"Section 1032
(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 such 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."
Discussion
"One example of the use of this limb is in inserting in the order a provision that in the case of creditors who were not statute-barred at the date of dissolution, the period between the date of dissolution and the date of restoration to the register is not to be counted for the purposes of any Statutes of Limitation: see, for example, Re Donald Kenyon Ltd [1956] 1 W.L.R. 1397. Such a direction seems to me to effectuate the general purpose of the concluding limb of the subsection. 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 another five years by way of replacement. This will put him 'in the same position as nearly as may be as if the name of the company had not been struck off'. I may add that Re Huntingdon Poultry Ltd [1969] 1 W.L.R. 204 shows that such a provision will be inserted in the order only if sufficient grounds for doing so appear, and not as a matter of routine …"
In Jodrell v Peaktone Ltd [2013] 1 WLR 784, Munby LJ, with whom Etherton and Lewison LJJ agreed, gave his reasons for dismissing the appeal and added some further observations, among them the following:
"[44] First, the words 'general effect' in section 1032(1) cannot be read … as cutting down the otherwise unrestricted language of the subsection. The significance of these words is to signal that the 'general' provision in section 1032(1) is subject to what follows in sections 1032(2) and 1032(3).
…
[46] Third, the sweeping effect of section 1032(1) is illustrated by section 1032(3), which enables the Companies Court to make directions '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'. That, as it seems to me, is a powerful and illuminating indication of the policy which Parliament had in mind. As Sir Raymond Evershed MR observed in Tyman's Ltd v Craven [1952] 2 QB 100, 111, of the corresponding provision in section 353 of the 1948 Act, these words
'seem to me designed, not by way of exposition, to qualify the generality of that which precedes them, but rather as a complement to the general words so as to enable the court (consistently with justice) to achieve to the fullest extent the 'as-you-were position', which, according to the ordinary sense of those general words, is prima facie their consequence.'"
It is convenient to set out slightly more of that dictum of the Master of the Rolls in Tyman's Ltd v Craven:
"[S]ome sensible content must be given to the final words of the subsection, and this problem at first seemed to me to create a difficulty in the company's way. Without, however, attempting to define the scope of the words exhaustively, counsel for the company was able to give instances in answer to the question put to him. During the period of the company's suspended animation the company, as well as third parties, might well have abstained from taking those steps—a step in the action, or the exercise of some contractual right—for which the proper time might have in the meantime expired. In my judgment, the final words of the subsection can properly and usefully be regarded as intended to give to the court, where justice requires and the general words would or might not themselves suffice, the power to put both company and third parties in the same position as they would have occupied in such cases if the dissolution of the company had not intervened. More generally, the final words of the subsection seem to me designed, not by way of exposition, to qualify the generality of that which precedes them, but rather as a complement to the general words so as to enable the court (consistently with justice) to achieve to the fullest extent the 'as-you-were position', which, according to the ordinary sense of those general words, is prima facie their consequence."
"89. Although, for reasons given earlier, I have concluded that there is jurisdiction to give a limitation direction in favour of the company being restored, the scope for giving such a direction must in my judgment be extremely limited. To my mind the jurisdiction ought only to be exercised in exceptional circumstances. My reasons for this conclusion are as follows.
90. So far as I can see, the question whether a limitation direction should be given in favour of the company being restored to the register can only arise in circumstances where the company has an asset in the form of a claim based on a cause of action which was not statute-barred at the date of dissolution. The 1980 Act provides a detailed limitation regime under which, in certain specified circumstances, the running of time may be postponed (see, e.g., ss. 14A, 32 and 33). The effect of a limitation direction under section 65(3) is completely to override that regime. Whilst considerations of essential fairness may justify the giving of a limitation direction in favour of third party creditors (as they did, for example, in Donald Kenyon), the same cannot so readily be said of a limitation direction in favour of the company being restored to the register: indeed, on the face of it, fairness will generally require that the company, like any other claimant faced with a limitation defence, should be left to attempt to meet that defence by recourse to the statutory regime in the 1980 Act.
91. In the instant case, I cannot discern any such exceptional circumstances as might serve to justify the limitation direction …"
"At the date of the dissolution those creditors whose debts were not already statute-barred could have stopped the period of limitation running against them by issuing, and perhaps serving, a writ. Counsel said that after the dissolution a creditor could have applied to have the name of the company restored to the register and then have issued his writ. It seems to me, however, that, when a company has been dissolved and, therefore, nobody can sue it without having its name restored to the register, it is only common fairness that, if the contributories for purposes of their own want to have the company's name restored to the register years later, the period between the dissolution and the date of the restoration should be disregarded for the purposes of the statutes of limitations.
I do not think that counsel really suggested that by doing this I was violating the Limitation Act 1939. He did suggest that I was violating the policy of that Act but, with all respect to him, this case does not seem to have been envisaged by that Act at all. … Common justice requires that some such provision as that which I have suggested should be inserted. … It is, I think, true to say that I am giving perhaps some slight benefit to the creditors as against the company, but it will be observed that s. 352(6) says 'as nearly as may be', contemplating that the precise equation may be unattainable. In my judgment, I am much nearer precise equation if I put some stipulation in the order than I should be if I did not."
In Regent Leisuretime at 598 Jonathan Parker LJ referred with approval to part of the judgment in Re Donald Kenyon Ltd, including part of the passage set out above, and expressed the view that Roxburgh J's decision was plainly right. As Mr Adams pointed out, the facts of that case were very different from those of the present case. But the approach of Roxburgh J seems to me to be instructive nonetheless.