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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 >> Raiffeisenlandesbank Oberösterreich AG v Meyden [2016] EWHC 414 (Ch) (28 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/414.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 414 (Ch) |
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7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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RAIFFEISENLANDESBANK OBERÖSTERREICH AG | APPLICANT/APPELLANT | |
and | ||
NIKOLAUS MEYDEN | RESPONDENT |
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61 Southwark Street, London SE1 0HL
Tel: 020 7269 0370
MR MEYDEN appeared In Person
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE NUGEE:
"A bankruptcy petition shall not be presented to the court under section 264(1)(a) or (b) unless the debtor-
(a) is domiciled in England and Wales,
(b) is personally present in England and Wales on the date on which the petition is presented, or
(c) at any time in the period of 3 years ending with that day-
(i) has been ordinarily resident, or has had a place of residence, in England and Wales, or
(ii) has carried on business in England and Wales".
Section 265(2) then deals with what carrying on business requires.
"This Regulation shall provide for immediate recognition of judgments concerning the opening, conduct and closure of insolvency proceedings which come within its scope and of judgments handed down in direct connection with such insolvency proceedings".
"The courts of the Member State within the territory of which the centre of the debtor's main interests is situated shall have jurisdiction to open insolvency proceedings. In the case of a company or legal person, the place of the registered office shall be presumed to be the centre of its main interests in the absence of proof to the contrary".
"Save as otherwise provided in this Regulation, the law applicable to insolvency proceedings and their effects shall be that of the Member State within the territory of which such proceedings are opened, hereafter referred to as, the 'State of the opening of proceedings'".
"However, it is well established that an order of a court of competent jurisdiction which is good on its face must be treated as a valid order until it has been set aside. (See the observations of Lord Diplock in Isaacs v Robertson [1984] 3 WLR 705, the report of which unfortunately only became available after the conclusion of the argument in this court). Consequently, the wife should have applied to the court to set aside the order as the first step. Had she done so, the court would have been obliged to set it aside ex debito justitiae".
Then, a little bit further on:
"An order made without jurisdiction which one party is entitled ex debito justitiae, to have set aside cannot possibly be saved by the slip rule or by the inherent jurisdiction. Once the court's attention is brought to the fact that the order was made without jurisdiction, there is no alternative but to set it aside.
Counsel for the husband submitted that the order had been acted on to the extent of handing over the car and the wife was estopped from challenging the validity of an order. It is, however, well settled that jurisdiction cannot be conferred by consent or estoppel. Moreover, any person who might be affected by such an order is entitled as of right to have it set aside".
"It is common ground that notwithstanding Mr Allason's pending attempt to appeal, if I am satisfied that I had no jurisdiction to permit the issue of a writ of possession I should set aside paragraphs 2 and 3 of my 22 January order and transfer the proceedings to the appropriate county court for the purposes of execution. (See in relation to setting aside orders made without jurisdiction: Munks v Munks [1985] FLR 576)".
"31. The result of that conclusion, that the centre of main interests is in Germany, is that no main insolvency proceedings are possible in this country. The status of the appointment of the administrators is therefore not entirely clear and there are two possible views. One is that the appointment was altogether null and void. The second that it was effective as a territorial insolvency proceeding…
35. It follows from what I have said that I am prepared to declare that the centre of main interests of HBH is in Germany and I am prepared to declare that the appointment of the administrators is invalid as an appointment under Article 3(1) and that it does not give rise to a main proceeding.
36. The more problematic issue is whether I should make a declaration that the appointment is altogether void. It seems to me that other persons who are not before the court may be affected by that, and in particular the directors, whom it may be sought to make liable under Paragraph 34.1 of Schedule B(1), and may wish to argue that the appointment is effective as a territorial insolvency proceeding and that they are therefore without that paragraph".
"Court's power to annul bankruptcy order.
(1) The court may annul a bankruptcy order if it at any time appears to the court-
(a) that, on any grounds existing at the time the order was made, the order ought not to have been made, or
(b) that, to the extent required by the rules, the bankruptcy debts and the expenses of the bankruptcy have all, since the making of the order, been either paid or secured for to the satisfaction of the court".
"In my judgment, on the evidence before me, the bankruptcy order made by Registrar Derrett ought not to have been made, although on the evidence before her, the Order was the correct Order for her to have made. It follows that the bankruptcy order dated 27th March 2003 must be annulled under Section 282(1)(a) of the 1986 Act, an Order that it gives me no pleasure to make, since it means that the Debtor, who has huge debts both in Austria and in England, and no assets in either country, will escape bankruptcy altogether.
76. It is true that I have a discretion under Section 282(1)(a) whether or not to annul the Bankruptcy Order made by Registrar Derrett, but I do not see how, in the exercise of my discretion, I could properly refuse to make such an Order, given my conclusion that this Court had no jurisdiction under the Regulation to make the Bankruptcy Order in the first place. There was no evidence before me that the Debtor has ever had an establishment here, so there can be no question of this Court being able to make a Bankruptcy Order under Article 3(2) of the Regulation".
"he pointed out that under the Regulation the first respondent's bankruptcy was governed by English law (see Article 4). It followed that the court would take an English law based approach to deciding whether or not to annul or rescind its order. Thirdly, there was nothing in the Regulation that entitled the court simply to ignore the question of the jurisdiction to open proceedings. The question of jurisdiction, to the contrary, lay at its heart. If the court did not have jurisdiction to open proceedings, that was the end of the matter: it could not assume the jurisdiction it never had".
"All those matters [which are various factors which go to the merits] also point overwhelmingly in favour of exercising the discretion given to the court by section 282(1) of the Insolvency Act in favour of the applicant rather than the first respondent who, as Mr Boardman points out, did not in the first place come to this court with clean hands and does not do so now. It seems to me that the court ought to be slow to assist a bankrupt who has obtained his bankruptcy order on the basis of a manifestly and substantially false statement of affairs.
169. Mr Briggs also relies on the fact that annulment in this case would now be late, long after the making of the order. The length of this bankruptcy is, however, in my view, primarily the first respondent's fault and not that of the applicant. It is he who has prolonged the income payments application, just as he has dragged out this application, brought in 2009, to disposal in the summer of 2011 by filing evidence late and resisting a legitimate application for discovery.
170. The jurisdiction point, it seems to me, ought in any event to outweigh the exercise of discretion save in exceptional circumstances".
"The bank has a separate point which is that, where a question of COMI is involved it is a question of jurisdiction and not one of discretion at all. In such circumstances, it is said there is no discretion under Section 282. Mr Jack, on the other hand, says that regulation 4(1) of the regulation preserves both the discretion under section 282 and also the authorities on how the discretion should be exercised".
8. Bearing in mind the conclusions I reach later in this judgment, I do not consider it necessary to decide the issue whether discretion applies at all and I will not therefore do so. I merely flag up the point".
"The power to annul is discretionary. Once it appears, however, that an order has been made without jurisdiction, the presumption must, in a case such as the present, be in favour of annulment. Mr Benk petitioned on the express basis that England was his COMI. If, as the Bank contends, he did no more than create the illusion of an English COMI, he has presented a petition upon a false basis and there is little room for sympathy if his plans come unstuck once the illusion is exposed".
At paragraph [30] he deals with it as follows:
"Mr Lilly also contends that, as Mr Benk has been through the best part of 2 bankruptcies here, I should not in my discretion annul the Order. I reject that contention. Mr Benk has persuaded the English court – twice – to make bankruptcy orders based on a false assertion of an English COMI. This court had no jurisdiction to make either Order. The first order has already been annulled. The same should apply in the case of the second order. If this seems harsh on Mr Benk, he is the author of his own misfortune".
"Granting relief is a matter of discretion and the burden of proving that the order ought not to have been made rests with the applicant. I accept that if this court had no jurisdiction to make a bankruptcy order it would almost invariably exercise a discretion to annul".
He said at paragraph [45]:
"I agree with that contention and therefore hold that my discretion remains".
46. It is, however, unusual to refuse an annulment in the situation we have here, once the court has found that the debtor's COMI was not in England and Wales, and I entirely agree with the approach of the learned Chief Registrar".
"The delay point I think underlines the fact that the court must retain discretion. If there is absolutely no discretion whatsoever, and if it is the case that the court must annul if it is established that the debtor did not have COMI, then that means it would, say in a very extreme case, mean that if the true facts do not emerge for 10 to 15, even 20 years or even more after the bankruptcy then the court would have no alternative but to annul. To me, that simply cannot be right".
46. It is finally said that having weighed the delay point against all the other relevant factors, his decision was wholly wrong. The test which is most commonly applied to appeals against the exercise of discretion is whether the decision-maker has exceeded the generous ambit of his discretion; see Re G v G [1985] UKHL 13. Miss Meech referred me to a different formulation taken from a case called Roache v News Group Newspapers Ltd [1998]: "it must be shown that the judge has either erred in principle in his approach, or has left out of account, or taken into account, some feature that he should, or should not, have considered, or his decision is wholly wrong because the court is forced to a conclusion that he has not balanced the various factors fairly in the scale". I do not find it possible to come to a conclusion, if he had a discretion, that his discretion indicates an error of principle in approach or a failure to take account of factors that he really should have taken account of or the Court is forced to a conclusion that he has not balanced the factors fairly in the scale.