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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 >> Duffy & Anor v Mederco (Cardiff) Ltd [2021] EWHC 386 (Ch) (23 February 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/386.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 386 (Ch), [2021] BCC 597, [2021] 2 BCLC 60 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN LEEDS
INSOLVENCY AD COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF MEDERCO (CARDIFF) LTD (09477164)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
____________________
(1) PHILIP FRANCIS DUFFY (2) STEVEN MUNCASTER |
Applicants |
|
- and – |
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MEDERCO (CARDIFF) LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing date: 15 February 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Davis-White QC :
Introduction
(1) Can the Court make a retrospective administration order?
(2) Can the court extend the period of administration with retrospective effect, either from January 2020 or from January 2021?
(3) If not, can the court now make two administration orders with retrospective effect, one to take effect in January 2020 and one from 17 January 2021?
(4) If not, can and should the court now make a retrospective administration order to take effect at a date no earlier than a year before the date of any order now made?
(5) If the Court should make an administration order with retrospective effect, what are the appropriate recitals to any order given that the United Kingdom has now left the European Union and the relevant transitional period has passed?
The Facts
"[4] The Company was incorporated on 9 March 2015 as a special purpose vehicle to own and develop five blocks of student accommodation incorporating 350 self-contained studio style apartments, and a community centre/boxing club on a valuable area of development land located at Mynachdy Road, Mynachdy, Cardiff, CP14 3HN ("the Property").[5] To raise funding for the development, the Company, inter alia:
(i) Invited a number of investors to buy long leasehold interests in the apartments off-plan at a discount to market value and took a sizeable deposit (25-75% of the purchase price) from the investors upon exchange of the agreements for lease; and(ii) Acquired a loan facility taken from Lendy Limited ("Lendy"). This discharged previous secured lending obtained by the Company. As security for the loan, the Company granted a fixed charge over the Property and floating charges over all of its other assets and undertakings. Saving Stream Security Holding Limited ("Saving Stream") acted as security trustee for Lendy for the purpose of holding the security on trust for Lendy. The fixed and floating charges were all registered in the name of Saving Stream[6] In respect of the funding obtained by the investors:
(i) Between May and September 2016, the Company exchanged contracts with a number of investors in relation to approximately 60 flats. Unilateral notices in relation to the same are noted on the charges register for the Property.(ii) Between September 2016 and July 2018, the Company exchanged contracts with investors in relation to a further 90 flats. Unilateral notices in relation to such contracts are also noted on the charges register for the Property.(iii) The investors who [have the benefit] of the notices detailed above shall be collectively referred to herein as ("the Investors").[7] Despite the funding, it became apparent that …funds had been misapplied and the construction and development of the Property was significantly behind schedule.
The …appointment
[8] As a consequence and increasing pressure from the Company's creditors, Stewart Paul Day ("the Director"), the sole director of the Company, invited Lendy to appoint the Applicants as joint administrators pursuant to paragraph 14 of Schedule B1 as a qualifying floating charge holder. [3]
[9] On the instruction of Lendy, Saving Stream, as the registered holder of a fixed charge over the Property and floating charges over all of the Company's other assets on trust for Lendy, swore a notice of appointment on 16 January 2019 ("the NOA") and the Applicants were appointed as joint administrators of the Company at 12.15pm on 17 January 2019 ("the Prior Administration")….
[10] Pursuant to paragraph 76(1) of Schedule B1, the administration would come automatically to an end on 16 January 2020. During this initial 12-month period of the Prior Administration, the Applicants marketed the Property (being the Company's sole asset of any material value), but no offers were received. Accordingly, the Applicants as joint administrators sought an extension by consent of the secured creditors.
[11] The Applicants obtained the consent of the administrators of Lendy to extend the term of the administration to 17 January 2021. At the time, the Applicants believed Lendy to be the only "secured creditor" whose consent was required for the purposes of paragraphs 76 and 78. At that stage, therefore it was assumed that the appointment was valid and the relevant statutory requirements had been met. The Applicants therefore proceeded in the belief that the administration and their appointment continued to exist.
[I should explain that, normally, consent of all creditors to effect an extension to an administration is required. However, in the case of unsecured and preferential creditors such consent may be given by a "decision" of over 50 per cent in value of such creditors. Where, however, the administrator has included in his proposals, as in this case, a statement under para 52(1)(b) of Sched. B1 IA 1986 to the effect that he thinks that the company has insufficient property to enable a distribution to be made to unsecured creditors, the need for consent of such unsecured creditors is dispensed with. In such circumstances consent of preferential creditors is only required where he thinks that there will be a distribution to such preferential creditors. In this case, the administrators did not consider that there would be such a distribution. Accordingly, the only consent required was of secured creditors As regards secured creditors, consent of each secured creditor is required. A majority decision process is not available.]
Application to extend the administration
[12] As the Applicants believed that the term of the administration was due to end on 17 January 2021, on 6 November 2020 the Applicants (believing themselves to be administrators) made an application to the Court for an extension.
[13] By order dated 1 December 2020, the Court granted the application on paper and ordered that the term of the administration be extended by a period of 12 months until 17 January 2022.
[14] Following that extension, believing they continued to act, the Applicants accepted an offer of £1,550,000 for the purchase of the Property from the Welsh Government and have been in the process of finalising the sale of the Property.
Realisation that the extension may be defective
[15] By operation of law (explained more fully below), the Applicants believe the Investors may hold an equitable lien over the part of the Property to which their contract relates to the value of their deposits.
[16] However, it was only after the application to the Court for an extension having taken advice on a similar but unconnected matter and considered s.248 of the Act that the Applicants realised that the Investors, as lien holders, are and should have been treated as "secured creditors". It was not a conscious decision not to seek the Investors' consent and the Applicants now understand and appreciate they possibly should have been treated as secured creditors and their consent obtained. The Applicants therefore consider that the term of the administration may have ended on 17 January 2020[4] and the consent procedure may have been defective, and possibly invalid, and make these applications to the Court accordingly."
Analysis and discussion: preliminary matters
"[27] …
(iii) A secured creditor includes a creditor who holds a security over property of the Company, security including "any mortgage charge, lien or other security": s.248 of the Act.
(iv) A purchaser who has entered into a contract to buy land and has paid some or all of the purchase price to the vendor will have an equitable lien over the property to secure repayment of that amount, if the contract remains uncompleted through no fault of the buyer and even if the subject matter of the contract has yet to be constructed.
(v) Each of the investors entered into a sales agreement for the purchase of long leasehold interests in apartments at the Property which would be built and developed. The Company took 25-75% of the purchase price as deposit on exchange. The contracts remain uncompleted. The Applicants accept, therefore, that the Investors may have equitable purchasers' liens attaching to the subject matter of the contract and, accordingly, may be secured creditors of the Company within the meaning of s.248.
(vi) The Investors' consent to the extension of the administration to 17 January 2021 was not obtained at the time."
"it was held that it would be unsatisfactory to determine the validity of an appointment where (a) submissions would take a significant period of time to be heard (b) only one side of the argument would be fully presented, although counsel had a duty to put any counter-points. Nevertheless, counterpoints would not be fully argued. As held in that case, even if the appointment were valid the Court would nonetheless have jurisdiction to remove and re-appoint the administrations by the retrospective orders sought and pursuant to paragraph 79 of Schedule B1 – the order could provide for this eventuality, insofar as is necessary."
Analysis and discussion: retrospective administration orders and extensions
"[122] As regards the question of the appointment being retrospective: the jurisdiction to make a retrospective appointment, though it has been questioned has now been relied upon (and exercised) consistently for many years. I agree with Mann J in the Bradford Bulls case that that if there is to be a challenge to the existence of that jurisdiction, such challenge should now be raised in the Court of Appeal."
Accordingly, I act on that basis.
"77.(1) An Order of the court under paragraph 76 [extending an administrators term of office]-
(a)…(b) may not be made after the expiry of the administrator's term of office".
"[39] The use of the word "may" in paragraph 77(1)(b) is directory and permissive, but it is not mandatory. As a matter of statutory construction, therefore, it is submitted that it is not mandatory for an order extending the term of office must be made within that term and could be made, if the Court considered appropriate, after that date.
[40] In the alternative, it is submitted that a retrospective order backdating the extension of a term of office does comply with the requirements of paragraph 77(1)(b) as it would take effect within the term of the administration and thus be, in reality, made in that time. This is consistent with both the wording of the statute and in line with the wide jurisdiction of the Court under paragraph 13 to make a retrospective administration order generally."
"[42] The general position regarding the consequence of breach of statutory requirements where that is not expressly set out in the provisions themselves is now, and for present purposes, most conveniently found in the trilogy of cases: London & Clydeside Estates Ltd v Aberdeen District Council [1980] 1 WLR 182 ; R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex p Jeyeanthan [2000] 1 WLR 354 and R v Soneji [2005] UKHL 49; [2006] 1 AC 340
[43] In short, the old distinction between "mandatory" and "directory" provisions has been abandoned. Instead, the focus as a matter of statutory interpretation is an inquiry as to the consequences Parliament intended to follow if the (mandatory) requirement was not followed."
" [6] I do not consider that any of the relevant provisions about extending time can assist in the answer to this question.
(1) Paragraph 107 of Sch.B1 relates to "[provisions] which provide that a period may be varied in accordance with [that] paragraph". By para.107(2) a time period may be extended in respect of a company under that paragraph "after expiry". But para.76 is not one of those paragraphs (like para.49(8), 50(1) and 52(4) ) which refer to para.107 .
(2) Section 376 of the Insolvency Act 1986 provides for extensions of time even after the relevant period has expired, but this provision relates only to individual insolvencies.
(3) Rule 12.9(2) of the Insolvency Rules 1986 (SI 1986/1925) [see now para 3 of Sch 5 to the IR 2016[5]] provides that the provisions of the CPR ("CPRs") shall apply so as to enable the court to extend or shorten the time for compliance with "anything required or authorised to be done by the Rules": but the relevant provisions to be complied with is to be found in Sch.B1 , not the Rules.
To meet the difficulty, what has to be extended is the original period of administration if the literal meaning of para.77 is its true meaning: and in the instant cases periods of administration determined out of court. The problem it seems to me is one of jurisdiction, rather than one of procedural compliance. (emphasis supplied)
[7] Nor can any solution be found in provisions relating to the dating of court orders. The provisions of Rules of the Supreme Court, O.42 have now been replaced by those in CPR, r.40.7 which now provide that an order takes effect from the date when it is given or made "or such a later date as the court may specify". But even if the former power to antedate orders remained in existence, it could not properly be exercised to confer a jurisdiction if none otherwise existed.
[8]……Mr Willetts pressed the argument as far as he reasonably could on this material, resisting the conclusion that the administration order could not be extended simply because Mr Fender's application had not been heard during the subsistence of the administration. Recognising that he might need some ultimate fall back position, Mr Willetts submitted that the solution was perhaps to be found in the making of a fresh administration order. I do not consider that this is a proper solution. First, the issues with which the court is concerned when considering the grant of an extension are different from those with which the court is concerned when deciding whether to make an administration order in the first place. Secondly, the grant of a fresh administration order will not bridge the gap created by the lapse of the original administration and the commencement of the new administration, so as, for example, to validate the sale of TT's premises.
"[10] In my judgment the principle is that found set out in Re Keystone Knitting Mills' Trade Mark [1929] Ch. 92 , and there expressed in the Latin maxim "actus curiae neminem gravabit", which in the present context means that the rights of the parties should not be determined by the vagaries of the court's case handling and listing procedures."
"[19] The order which I am asked to make on that application is an order appointing Mr Clarke as administrator and directing, under paragraph 13(1) of Schedule B1 , that the appointment of the administrator should take effect from 30 September 2004. The magic of 30 September as opposed to 14 September is that were the appointment to be made to take effect from 14 September — assuming that such an appointment can be made at all — it would have already expired as of today's date, as the … is disabled by the provisions of Schedule B1 from extending a period of administration after it has expired. Accordingly, the date of 30 September has been selected, it happily being the case that no substantive acts of Mr Clarke as purported administrator took place between 14 and 30 September. The question then is whether the court order can be made retrospectively in the manner suggested. The statute does not say that it cannot be done, and the wording is certainly, in my judgment, wide enough to give the court jurisdiction, both to order there is a proper case, although it is a jurisdiction to be exercised in relation to administration orders with extreme caution, given the effect it may have."
"[58] Mr Todd submitted that if the appointment were invalid, I could and should cure the invalidity by making a fresh appointment dating back to October 2008. It appears to be within the jurisdiction of the Court to make an administration order dating back to a time before the date of the order: see the wording of Schedule B1 paragraph 13(2)(a) . However, by Schedule B1 paragraph 76(1) the appointment of an administrator automatically ceases to have effect at the end of a period of one year beginning with the date on which it takes effect. An appointment made today dating back to October 2008 would already have been deemed to have terminated. Although paragraph 76(2) confers power on the Court to extend the term on the application of the administrator, paragraph 77(1)(b) provides that such an order may not be made after expiry of the administrator's term of office. It is not therefore open to the court to make a fresh appointment starting in October 2008 and continuing down to today or some later date.
[59] Mr Todd QC sought to get round this by submitting that the court could and should make two administration orders, one following immediately upon the other. If Mr Todd QC's submission were correct, this device could be deployed in every case to get round the prohibition in paragraph 77(1)(b) against extending the term. The submission must be wrong and I reject it.
[60] An alternative would be to do what Hart J did in G-Tech and make an administration order dating back only 364 days so that paragraph 77(1)(b) is not engaged. However, Mr Todd QC faces a difficulty in that administrators have no standing to seek an administration order: see Schedule B1, paragraph 12(1) . ….
[61] It seems to me that the issue of a 364-day appointment, the ramifications of such an appointment and of the application itself ought to be left over, if necessary, for mature consideration and further argument on another day…."
"[27] With some ingenuity, the courts have devised a partial solution to the problem in cases of the present type by acceding to an application for the re-appointment of the same persons as administrators and then back-dating the appointment so that it takes effect 364 days before the date of the order. It has been held that the jurisdiction to back-date the appointment in this way is provided by paragraph 13(2) of Schedule B1, which provides that an appointment of an administrator by the court takes effect:
"(a) at a time appointed by the order, or
(b) where no time is appointed by the order, when the order is made."
The appointment cannot be back-dated for more than a year, because in that case the maximum period of one year for an initial appointment of administrators would already have expired. If, on the other hand, the appointment is back-dated for 364 days, the longest possible period of retrospective validation is obtained, and the court can immediately make a further order pursuant to paragraph 76(2) extending the administrators' term of office for a specified future period."
"[29] One thing that clearly cannot be done, however, is to make successive retrospective appointments for more than one period of 364 days. This possibility was canvassed before Proudman J in Kaupthing, where she was invited to make two successive administration orders in order to validate the acts of the administrators since their original purported appointment in October 2008. Proudman J had no difficulty in rejecting this submission".
He then cited part of paragraph [59] of her judgment (cited above) and went on to say:
"I respectfully agree; and although Mr Atkins told me that he had at one stage contemplated making such an application in the present case, he had wisely thought better of it, and in the event he sought only a single order back-dated for 364 days. This would have the effect of leaving a relatively short period of a few months during
which the acts of the administrators could not be validated, but fortunately only three or four of the relevant disposals of flats took place during that period and the inconvenience of taking steps to regularise the position with the affected purchasers would not be too great. Accordingly, having heard argument on 23 June I indicated that I was provisionally minded to make such an order."
"….Mr Doyle accepts that in G-Tech , at paragraph [19], the appearance in the draft judgment is that Mr Justice Hart would not have been prepared to make a retrospective administration order which "cast back" more than one year. The difference between G-Tech and the present case, however, is said by Mr Doyle to be that G-Tech involved a retrospective order where the appointment of an administrator, albeit invalid, had already been made. In the present case the court is being asked to effect an appointment on a retrospective basis where there has been no purported appointment of an administrator. I must confess that I find difficulty in identifying that as a valid point of distinction.
21. In my judgment, the real difficulty in the present case is presented by paragraph 76(1) of Schedule B1 . That provides that the appointment of an administrator shall cease to have effect at the end of the period of one year beginning with the date on which it takes effect. That difficulty was adverted to by Mr Justice Hart at paragraph 19 of his judgment in G-Tech (previously cited). That difficulty was also recognised by Mr Justice Henderson in Frontsouth . There it was held, on the basis of a practice which was said by now to be fairly well established, that an alternative solution could be provided by making a fresh appointment by order and retrospectively back-dating that order for a maximum of 364 days. In that case it was said that that would leave the administrators with only a few months in which they had had no authority to act."
"The first is to make an administration order retrospective to the date sought in the application of 23 November 2010. The first difficulty with that approach is that such an administration order would automatically have come to an end (by paragraph 76(1) of Schedule B1) 12 months thereafter, and thus on 23 November 2011. It is difficult to see what would be achieved by making such an order."
In any event he did not consider that, on the facts, the making of such an order would further the statutory purposes of administration. This case may identify a theoretical possibility of a factual situation where an administration order made with retrospective effect more than a year before the making of the order may be justified but it again confirms the problem of making such an order where the desire is to continue its effect beyond a year after the date when it takes retrospective effect.
Should an administration order be made in this case with retrospective and prospective effect, the retrospective date being no more than 364 days prior to the order?
The appropriate recitals regarding the EU Regulation
(a) Introduction
(1) Regulation 4(2) of the 2019 Regulations (as amended by the 2020 Regulations) provides:
"The amendments made by these Regulations do not apply in respect of any insolvency proceedings and actions falling within Article 67(3)(c) of the withdrawal agreement.[7]"
(2) Article 67(3) of the withdrawal agreement provides:
"Regulation (EU) 2015/848 of the European Parliament and of the Council (78) shall apply to insolvency proceedings, and actions referred to in Article 6(1) of that Regulation, provided that the main proceedings were opened before the end of the transition period."
The question of when proceedings are "opened" is one that is determined by EU law interpreting the 2015 Regulation.
(b) the regime where main proceedings are opened prior to 31 December 2020
(c) the regime where main proceedings have not been opened prior to 31 December 2010
"1. The grounds for jurisdiction to open insolvency proceedings set out in paragraph 1B are in addition to any grounds for jurisdiction to open such proceedings which apply in the laws of any part of the United Kingdom.
1A.—
There is jurisdiction to open insolvency proceedings listed in paragraph 1B where the proceedings are opened for the purposes of rescue, adjustment of debt, reorganisation or liquidation and—
(a) the centre of the debtor's main interests is in the United Kingdom; or
(b) the centre of the debtor's main interests is in a Member State and there is an establishment in the United Kingdom.
1B.—
The proceedings referred to in paragraph 1 are—
(a) winding up by or subject to the supervision of the court;
(b) creditors' voluntary winding up with confirmation by the court;
(c) administration, including appointments made by filing prescribed documents with the court;
(d) voluntary arrangements under insolvency legislation; and
(e) bankruptcy or sequestration.".
"3.13(h) a statement that the court is satisfied either that the EU Regulation as it has effect in the law of the United Kingdom does not apply or that it does
(i) where the EU Regulation does apply, a statement whether the proceedings are COMI proceedings or establishment proceedings
main, secondary or territorial proceedings"
"2.16""COMI proceedings" means insolvency proceedings in England and Wales to which the EU Regulation applies where the centre of the debtor's main interests is in the United Kingdom;
"establishment" has the same meaning as in Article 2(10) of the EU Regulation;
"establishment proceedings" means insolvency proceedings in England and Wales to which the EU Regulation applies where the debtor has an establishment in the United Kingdom;".
(d) when are proceedings "opened" when there is a retrospective administration order?
'the time of the opening of proceedings' means the time at which the judgment opening insolvency proceedings becomes effective, regardless of whether the judgment is final or not'.
"(i) the decision of any court to open insolvency proceedings or to confirm the opening of such proceedings; and
(ii) the decision of a court to appoint an insolvency practitioner."
"the order is treated as having been made on the backdated date for all intents and purposes, including the date of proving debts, antecedent transactions etc. It would result in a perverse outcome if the time of opening of proceedings was held to be the date of judgment in 2021, but the relevant date for all other intents and purposes would be the date of the backdated order."
Note 1 See para. 76 Sch B1 Insolvency Act 1986 (“IA 1986”). [Back] Note 2 See paras. 76 and 78 IA 1986. [Back] Note 3 The Director had sought to appoint administrators under para 22(2) but was unable to do so due to an extant winding up petition: paragraph 25(1) of Schedule B1. [Back] Note 4 I interpose, technically, 16 February 2020. [Back] Note 5 The Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 (the “IR”). [Back] Note 6 Regulation (EU) 2015/848 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 May 2015 on insolvency proceedings [Back] Note 7 i.e. the agreement between the United Kingdom and the EU under Article 50(2) of the Treaty on European Union which sets out the arrangements for the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the EU (as that agreement is modified from time to time in accordance with any provision of it): see s39 European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020.
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