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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 >> Hyde & Anor (Liquidators of One Blackfriars Ltd) v Nygate & Anor [2021] EWHC 1151 (Ch) (30 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/1151.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1151 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (CHD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Adrian Charles Hyde Kevin Anthony Murphy (As Joint Liquidators of One Blackfriars Limited) |
Applicants |
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- and – |
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Anthony David Nygate (in his capacity as representative of the estate of James Joseph Bannon, Former Joint Administrator of One Blackfriars Limited Appointed under CPR 19.8(1)) Sarah Megan Rayment (As Former Joint Administrators of One Blackfriars Limited) |
Respondents |
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Simon Davenport QC and Tom Poole (instructed by Humphries Kerstetter) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 12th April 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
John Kimbell QC, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge:
The Grounds of appeal
The legal test
The principles
(a) There is a single test under the CPR for permission to appeal which is applicable to all claims irrespective of the court or specialist court from which they originated; and
(b) that applications for permission to appeal on questions of fact or, on the evaluation of expert evidence, must meet the high threshold summarised in Grizzly Business Limited v Stena Drilling Limited [2017] EWHC Civ 94 at 39 to 40, and Thomson v Christie Manson & Woods Limited [2005] EWHC Civ 555 at paragraph 141.
"In short, to be overturned on appeal, a finding of fact must be one that no reasonable judge could have reached. In practice, that will usually occur only where there was no evidence at all to support the finding that was made, or that the judge plainly misunderstood the evidence in order to arrive at the disputed finding."
"A first instance judge's assessment of, or evaluations based upon, expert evidence adduced at trial must be approached by an appellate court with similar caution. Whilst it has been said that a reconsideration of an expert's opinion may be slightly easier than a finding of fact, because the underlying report will be in writing ... the same case also provides a salutary warning that, since the evaluation of expert evidence is likely to be bound up with a wider evaluation of matters of fact, an appellate court will still be very slow to intervene. At paragraph 141 of his judgment in Thomson, May LJ said:
"But, even accepting that individual points such as these are amenable to judicial appellate evaluation whatever the expert opinion, no appellate court should cherry pick a few such points so as to disagree with a composite first instance decision which, in the nature of a jig-saw, depended on the interlocking of a very large number of individual pieces, each the subject of oral expert evidence which the appellate court has not heard."
Summary
Para 10
Para 11
Para 12
a. First of all, I found, that the Site was sold at its market value following a properly conducted sales and marketing exercise. Far from failing to address the value of the site on October 2010, I made a finding of fact that the Site was sold at its market value - see the second sentence in paragraph 465(20) in the Judgment.b. Secondly, insofar as it was a matter of conflicting valuation evidence between Mr Fourt and Mr Clarke as to the value of the site in October 2010, I have given my reasons for strongly preferring the evidence of Mr Fourt over Mr Clarke's evidence. Mr Fourt's evidence was consistent with my finding of fact that the Site was ultimately sold at its market value and not below.
Para 13
Para 14
Para 15
Para 16
Para 17 -22
"While a prior decision of a High Court judge is not binding, it remains persuasive authority, as described in Halsbury Laws of England, volume 11, paragraph 32:
"'Where a judge at first instance after consideration has come to a definite conclusion on a matter arising out of a complicated and difficult enactment, the opinion has been expressed that the second judge at first instance of coordinate jurisdictions should follow that decision and the modern practice is that a judge at first instance will, as a matter of judicial comity, usually follow the decision of another judge at first instance unless he is convinced that the judgment was wrong."
a. First, it seems to me quite clear from my analysis in paragraphs 208 and following of the Judgment that I considered and dealt with each and every one of Mr Davenport's suggestions as to why Snowden J's decision should not be followed and I was not persuaded of any of them.b. Secondly, the question of substance is: is this the sort of case where the judge has applied the wrong test and, had she or he applied the correct test, would he/she have reached a different result? The answer, it seems to me, is plainly no, because I was not persuaded of any of reasons suggested for departing from the decision of Snowden J.
c. I was positively persuaded that the decision in Davey v Money ws correct. See paragraph 222 of the judgment, where I conclude:
"For all of those reasons, I am satisfied I should follow Snowden J's decision in Davey v Money ... in declining to extend the rule of non-delegability to administrators."d. In terms of the standard of review, I again considered each of the points made by Mr Davenport and dismissed each of them. That is clear from paragraphs 240 to 248, where I say that there is nothing objectionable, still less anything plainly wrong, with considering what standard rule is applied to decisions by administrators or liquidators in other insolvency contexts. I reached the conclusion that the Joint Liquidators had not persuaded me that Snowden J's decision of the standard of review was wrong, and I then added "let alone plainly wrong". But it seems to me given my conclusion in paragraph 250 that the Joint Liquidators did not persuade me that Snowden J's decision was wrong, that constitutes an application of the correct test, and the fact that I added in superfluous further comment about the conclusion not being plainly wrong cannot make any difference.
Para 23
Paras 24 - 26
Para 28
Para 29
Para 30
Conclusion