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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 >> Liberty Commodities Ltd v Citibank NA London & Ors [2023] EWHC 2020 (Ch) (28 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2020.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2020 (Ch) |
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Case No: CR-2021-00622 |
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST
The Rolls Building 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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LIBERTY COMMODITIES LTD |
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- and - |
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CITIBANK NA LONDON WHITE OAK FINANCE EUROPE (non-levered) LTD and NPS 40 GP LTD |
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291-299 Borough High Street, London SE1 1JG
Tel: 020 7269 0370
[email protected]
MR FISHER KC instructed by Baker McKenzie LLP on behalf of Citibank NA London
MS PETERS instructed by Taylor Wessing LLP on behalf of White Oak Finance Europe (non-levered) Ltd
MS PETRIE instructed by Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP on behalf of NPS 40 GP Ltd
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Crown Copyright ©
CHIEF ICC JUDGE BRIGGS:
The White Oak Claim
"In April 2020, White Oak Europe began to participate in the receivables purchase programme, which was pursuant to a Master Assignment Agreement entered into between White Oak Europe (as Purchaser) and GCUK dated 29 April 2020 (the "MAA")."
"While the Company had made vague assertions in correspondence that the debt is disputed, no particulars or evidence have been provided and the Company identified no valid basis on which any one of the debts comprising the total sums due can be genuinely disputed."
a. The debt is not due as there was an oral modification to the receivable finance documentation to the effect LCL need not be concerned with the terms of the agreements. In his statement dated 22 August 2022 Mr Gupta says that Mr Greensill informed him, contrary to the agreements, that finance provided by Greensill Capital was for a minimum of three years. This ignores the maturity dates. Mr Gupta says that Mr Greensill made certain oral representations such as: "you don't have to worry about the documents" and "the documents are irrelevant". Against this is professionally drawn finance documents that include an entire agreement clause and non-oral modification clause.
b. A modification to the agreements that a particular method of payment by White Oak for the receivables enables LCL to claim a set-off.
c. The payment obligation in the MAA is governed by the laws of the State of New York. Any dispute as to the construction of the MAA is to be decided in accordance with the laws of a foreign jurisdiction where expert evidence is required. It is said that the payment obligations are unenforceable or "do not exist".
d. There is insufficient evidence of a valid assignment.
The NPS Claim
Law and procedure for substitution
Determination
"(1) This rule applies where the petitioner—
(a) is subsequently found not to have been entitled to present the petition;
(b) fails to give notice of the petition in accordance with rule 7.10;
(c) consents to withdraw the petition, or to allow it to be dismissed, consents to an adjournment, or fails to appear in support of the petition when it is called on in court on the day originally fixed for the hearing, or on a day to which it is adjourned; or
(d) appears, but does not apply for an order in the terms requested in the petition.
(2) The court may, on such terms as it thinks just, substitute as petitioner—
(a)a creditor or contributory who in its opinion would have a right to present a petition and who wishes to prosecute it…"
"…the discretionary jurisdiction to order substitution would clearly not be exercised in favour of a would-be petitioner who would not be able successfully to invoke the jurisdiction to make a winding up order."
"As a matter of power as distinct from discretion, the Court may order a company to be wound up in insolvency where the creditor's debt is disputed if the Court determines that the applicant has standing to bring the application. The Court has the power to determine the disputed question and if it determines that the applicant is a creditor it may make an order for winding up. (Re QBS Pty Ltd [1967] Qd R 218 per Gibbs J at 225; Community Development Pty Ltd v Engwirda Construction Co (1969)120 CLR 455… As a matter of discretion, where the debt and hence the applicant's standing is disputed, the Court will usually not entertain the application for winding up."
"There is some authority that a "creditor" in this context was a person who claims to be a creditor. (Re A Private Company at 127 citing Ex parte The Rydydefed Colliery Co, Glamorganshire Ltd (1858) 3 De G & J 80 at 84; 44 E.R 1199 at 1201). However the decision in Ex parte The Rydydefed Colliery Co was to stand over the petition until it was established at law whether the petitioner was a creditor or not. When Turner LJ said that a "creditor" in s 68 of the Joint Stock Companies Act 1856 (UK) meant a person who claimed to be a creditor, his Lordship was contrasting the plaintiff with a creditor whose debt is admitted. The case provides no support for the view that an insolvent company could be wound up on the petition of a creditor whose debt was disputed without that dispute being resolved. The preponderance of authority is that a company may not be wound up on the application of a person claiming to be a creditor whose debt is disputed unless that dispute is resolved."
"A person who does not have standing to petition will not be substituted as petitioner. In particular, in Australia and New Zealand, it has been held that the court will not permit a disputed creditor to be substituted as petitioner…In one Australian case, it was held that a disputed creditor may be substituted as applicant for the winding up of a company if the court has found that the company is insolvent and adopts the view that it can order the company to be wound up without resolving the dispute about the petitioner's debt.1393 But in subsequent cases, Australian courts have maintained the rule that a creditor whose claimed debt is disputed on substantial grounds cannot even be substituted as petitioner."
"… the Court may, upon such terms as it may think just, substitute as petitioner any creditor or contributory who in the opinion of the Court would have a right to present a petition, and who is desirous of prosecuting the petition."
"that substitution could not take place unless the Court, in accordance with the terms of rule 27, found that the substitution applicant had standing to present a petition."
"In my judgment the Court has the power to grant substitution provisionally, pending a subsequent determination of any standing controversy which cannot conveniently be determined on the hearing of the substitution application. Rule 27 requires the Court to determine that a substituting creditor has "a right to present a petition" when making a substitution order, but the time for making the requisite determination can surely be extended…"
"If the company wishes to object to a creditor being able to substitute, it must do so at the hearing of the application to substitute and not later at the hearing of the winding-up petition. Thus, once an order is made permitting substitution, the substituting creditor has standing to pursue the petition to wind up as the substituting creditor is taken to fall within the list of persons entitled to present a winding-up petition…."
"In England, in Re Invicta Works Ltd, the court did permit a disputed creditor to be substituted, but adjourned the petition for the substituted petitioner to produce evidence of his debt."
"In the vast majority of cases, a supporting creditor or contributory will make his application for an order for substitution orally in open court on the hearing or adjourned hearing of the petition when it becomes clear that the present petitioner does not appear or is not pursuing his petition, has failed to advertise the petition or seeks an adjournment. No formal application need be issued. Where more than one supporting creditor appears and seeks substitution, the court will usually substitute as petitioner the creditor claiming the largest undisputed debt. Where there is only one supporting creditor and the petitioner does not pursue the petition, the court will not refuse substitution merely because the company contends that the alleged debt of the applicant for substitution is disputed: in such cases, the court will usually order substitution and give directions for the filing of evidence."
"If the debtor company objects to the creditor being substituted as petitioning creditor, it should make those arguments when the court hears the substitution application, rather than after substitution at the adjourned hearing of the actual petition. Arguments about whether the debtor company has a valid dispute about the debt claimed by the substituted creditor, should be dealt with at the adjourned hearing of the winding-up petition and not at the hearing of the application for substitution.
[Postscript: White Oak withdrew its application for substitution. White Oak stated that the withdrawal of the application was motivated by the realisation that the relation-back period did not apply owing to the provisions of the 2020 Act. Withdrawal was not made due to the arguments raised by LCL in respect of the debt claimed.]