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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 >> Housemaker Services Ltd v Cole & Anor [2017] EWHC 753 (Ch) (07 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/753.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 753 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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Housemaker Services Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Huw Cole Susan Steggles-Cole |
Defendants |
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Thomas Steward (instructed by Temple Bright LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 3 April 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Paul Matthews :
Introduction
"(1) The general effect of administrative 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.
(2) The company is not liable to a penalty under section 453 or any corresponding earlier provision (civil penalty for failure to deliver accounts) for a financial year in relation to which the period for filing accounts and reports ended—
(a) after the date of dissolution or striking off, and
(b) before the restoration of the company to 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.
(4) An application to the court for such directions or provision may be made any time within three years after the date of restoration of the company to the register."
Facts
"Dear Wayne
Re. Dispute with Mr and Mrs Cole
The Barrister has agreed to prepare the Particulars of Claim for issue at Court by 6 July so that we can check it through for any amendments required and issue proceedings prior to the limitation date and also prior to me going on holiday.
I would be grateful if you would now send me £2000 on account of costs.
Yours sincerely
Glenn Pitman".
Authorities
"2.025. The barring of the remedy has been regarded as the usual response of the law to the expiry of the limitation period. Therefore, in an action founded on contract (simple or special) or tort, the effect of the expiry of the limitation period is generally said to be that the remedy is barred, but the plaintiff's right is not extinguished."
"2.029. A number of potentially significant consequences follow from holding that the plaintiff's right is not extinguished. Limitation is a matter which must be specifically pleaded by the defendant if he wishes to take advantage of it and the plaintiff's cause of action is not regarded time-barred until that plea is made."
Submissions
Discussion
"28. The limitation regime exists mainly to serve the public interest in the prohibition of stale claims. It confers a statutory defence to such claims by reference to an essentially mechanical computation of time, without regard to the merits of the claim, to any question whether the defendant deserves protection (otherwise than by reference to the elapse of time) and applies regardless of the reasons for a claim not having been brought earlier, such as the impecuniosity of the claimant or, in the case of a corporate claimant, negligence, laziness, or even disloyalty on the part of those fiduciaries or stakeholders responsible for its affairs. Both originally and by amendment, the regime does confer limited assistance to claimants, in cases of fraud, concealment or mistake, in cases whether there has been a receipt by the defendant of trust property, and in cases of latent damage. There are various other forms of relief available, for example in defamation or personal injuries proceedings, but those are of no relevance. There is of course provision for extension of time limits where the claimant suffers from a disability. Although this might appear to be slightly analogous to the incapacity which affects a dissolved company, I consider that the better view is that the incapacity which afflicts a company because of its dissolution arises because persons of sound mind, responsible for the company's affairs, have put it there, either by failing to cause the company to comply with its obligations to make returns to the registrar or, as in the present case, deliberately at the conclusion of the company's liquidation. By contrast, individuals do not ordinarily deliberately succumb to a relevant disability."
"44. The starting position was therefore that, as the Judge acknowledged, the Company appeared to have been put into dissolution by its liquidator after a decision that a claim could not longer be pursued and where, for the reasons which I have given, the burden must lie firmly on the Company or its assignee to demonstrate why it would be just to enable that abandoned claim to be pursued with the benefit of a limitation direction. A conclusion that there was only a possibility that Mr. Valentine had misconducted himself is in my judgment a wholly inadequate basis upon which to found a conclusion that a limitation direction in favour of the Company or its assignee should be made. A party seeking to discharge the burden of showing why it would be just to enable it (or him) to avoid the consequences of the limitation regime must do better than that. The court is concerned with probabilities, not possibilities."
"60. The position is therefore that the making of a limitation direction under section 1032(3) requires the applicant to show a clear causal link between the dissolution and the failure to bring proceedings within the applicable limitation period. While Briggs LJ spoke of the court dealing with probabilities, Sir Raymond Evershed MR in Tyman's Ltd v Craven referred to steps that the company or third parties "might well have abstained from taking" by reason of the dissolution. If there is any real difference in these ways of expressing the right approach, and I doubt if there is, the decision of this court in County Leasing makes clear that it is a test of probability."
"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., sections 14A, 32 and 33). The effect of a limitation direction under section 653(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."
"24. In my judgment, [the decision of Jonathan Parker LJ in Regent Leisuretime] on the discretion issue was part of the ratio decidendi, for two reasons. First, as I have said, the case had proceeded before the judge on the basis of a concession that the primary limitation period had been extended so as to expire during the period of the company's dissolution. That concession does not appear to have been withdrawn, and the close analysis of the limitation issue in the concluding part of Jonathan Parker LJ's judgment was addressed only to the question whether under section 32 or section 14A of the Act the limitation period had been extended until after the company actually commenced proceedings. The second reason arises from the structure of his judgment, pursuant to which he arrived at the analysis of the limitation issue only by a route which required him to decide the jurisdiction and discretion issues first. Had he concluded that there had been no extension of the primary limitation period into the period of dissolution, then it would have been sufficient for him to conclude his analysis of the discretion issue by saying that, the claim having become statute-barred before dissolution, the discretion issue did not arise.
25. The result is that this court is in my view bound by the dicta about the exercise of the discretion to make a limitation direction in favour of a company, to the effect that (i) it may only be exercised in exceptional circumstances, (ii) that its effect is completely to override the statutory limitation regime, and (iii) that 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.
[ … ]
31. Even if an applicant for a limitation direction (whether the company or its assignee) can demonstrate that, had the company not been dissolved, the claim probably would have been brought in time, the court must still ask itself whether it would be just to provide that opportunity, after the event, by a limitation direction. In a case such as the present, where the company has been deliberately dissolved by its liquidator at the conclusion of its liquidation, it is, without more, by no means clear why it should be just to provide the company with a further opportunity, to the prejudice of the persons who would thereby be deprived of the limitation defence, and to the detriment in the public interest that stale claims should be prevented. The company's dissolution is not some accident which has befallen it, like an illness affecting a potential claimant under a disability, but the consequence of a deliberate decision by the company's responsible officer."
"the incapacity which afflicts a company because of its dissolution arises because persons of sound mind, responsible for the company's affairs, have put it there, either by failing to cause the company to comply with its obligations to make returns to the registrar or, as in the present case, deliberately at the conclusion of the company's liquidation."
Conclusion