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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 >> Mehers v Khilji [2023] EWHC 298 (Ch) (17 February 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/298.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 298 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF SCHERZADE KHILJI (IN BANKRUPTCY)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AMY MEHERS (TRUSTEE IN BANKRUPTCY OF SCHERZADE KHILJI) |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) SCHERZADE KHILJI (2) DAVID GEORGE HARTWELL (PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF ABDUR BASHEED TAJ KHILJI (DECEASED)) |
Respondents |
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Peter Wareing (instructed under the Public Access Scheme) for the First Respondent
Nicholas Evans (instructed by Harrison Clark Rickerbys) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 8 December 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Deputy ICC Judge Curl KC:
Background
The hearing
Relevant statutory provisions
"306 Vesting of bankrupt's estate in trustee
(1) The bankrupt's estate shall vest in the trustee immediately on his appointment taking effect or, in the case of the official receiver, on his becoming trustee.
(2) Where any property which is, or is to be, comprised in the bankrupt's estate vests in the trustee (whether under this section or under any other provision of this Part), it shall so vest without any conveyance, assignment or transfer."
"…it is undesirable for trustees to wait for many years before resolving their rights in respect of the home of the bankrupt or his spouse. This [i.e. s.283A] introduces a general rule that the trustee must take steps to realise his interest in the home of the bankrupt or his spouse within three years of the bankruptcy, subject to specified exceptions. If he fails to do so the property vests in the bankrupt and the creditors lose all rights to it…"
"283A Bankrupt's home ceasing to form part of estate
(1) This section applies where property comprised in the bankrupt's estate consists of an interest in a dwelling-house which at the date of the bankruptcy was the sole or principal residence of –
(a) the bankrupt,
(b) the bankrupt's spouse or civil partner, or
(c) a former spouse or former civil partner of the bankrupt.
(2) At the end of the period of three years beginning with the date of the bankruptcy the interest mentioned in subsection (1) shall –
(a) cease to be comprised in the bankrupt's estate, and
(b) vest in the bankrupt (without conveyance, assignment or transfer)."
"In my judgment, the interest that section 283A(1) is concerned with is an interest which is part of the bankrupt's estate because it was vested in the bankrupt at the commencement of the bankruptcy…Correspondingly, in my judgment, the trustee in bankruptcy does not become aware of such an interest for the purposes of section 283A(5) unless the interest of which he becomes aware is an interest which is already vested in the bankrupt estate because it was vested in the bankrupt at the commencement of the bankruptcy."
"(5) If the bankrupt does not inform the trustee or the official receiver of his interest in a property before the end of the period of three months beginning with the date of the bankruptcy, the period of three years mentioned in subsection (2) –
(a) shall not begin with the date of the bankruptcy, but
(b) shall begin with the date on which the trustee or official receiver becomes aware of the bankrupt's interest."
"normal means by which a bankrupt would, within three months of the commencement of the bankruptcy, inform the official receiver or the trustee in bankruptcy or both of his interest in a relevant property."
The parties' positions
"When I told [the OR] that I made contributions to the mortgage, this means that I should have a higher claim to some more of the Property that is in addition to my Statutory Legacy. [The OR] and the [Trustee] should have known this.
In my limited knowledge of legal terminology, I do not know what other notice the [Trustee] expected me to give her. I disclosed everything I know about my entitlements to [the OR] as early as I could."
"I have not been divorced in the past 5 years.
My husband passed away 2014. He died without a will. I did not receive anything following my husbands death. Everything is in dispute and its not decided yet. My husbands estate was one house
49 Slough Lane
NW9 8YR
It is in his sole name.
Abdul Rashid Taj Khilji.
There is a dispute regarding this property between his four sons.
I was married to him for 28 years. The mortgage was in my husband's name.
He purchased the property in 1989. I did contribute to the mortgage after he passed away
I don't think I was ever joint owner of this property."
"At the very least, this ought to have triggered a thought as to the basis upon which [Ms Khilji] continues to occupy the Property…It is apparent that [the Trustee] failed to consider this."
"We [the Administrator's solicitors] are able to confirm that we will make a payment to you [the Trustee's solicitors] of any sum that Ms Khilji is due under the rules of intestacy given that the deceased did not leave a will."
"Literally, at the same time of me giving the same statement to [the OR], the [Trustee] had been given independent confirmation of my interest in the Property and that my inheritance will be paid to her."
"beneficial right arises automatically on the death of her husband under the laws of intestacy; she hasn't hidden or denied it. She has not positively asserted it, but in the interview with the Official Receiver, she sets out clearly that she was married to her husband, was not divorced, and so was going to get it by reason of the intestacy."
The nature of the interest
"in the way of an onion, there are layers to this; the constructive trust point adds weight to the intestacy point."
The quality of knowledge
"…where the bankrupt has failed to co-operate with his trustee and has failed to disclose the existence of relevant after-acquired property to his trustee, I consider that the court should be slow to accede to a self-serving claim by the bankrupt that his trustee first obtained knowledge at a significantly earlier date of the acquisition by the bankrupt of the property, with the convenient result (if the claim is upheld) that the s 307 notice served by the trustee would be out of time. In practical terms, it seems to me that in such cases a trustee should normally be held to have first obtained the relevant knowledge for the purposes of s 309(1) only when it has become clear to him, on cogent evidence verified to his reasonable satisfaction, that the property in question (a) was acquired by the bankrupt, and (b) was acquired by him after the commencement of the bankruptcy. If it is objected that this test may set the bar too high, the answer is in my judgment obvious. In a situation where the bankrupt has failed to comply with his statutory duty, in relation to a matter within his personal knowledge, it is entirely reasonable that the standard of knowledge required from his trustee for the purposes of s 309(1) should be set at a fairly high level of certainty.
A further factor which appears to me to strengthen this conclusion is the effect of service of a notice under s 307(1). By virtue of s 307(3), the property in question vests automatically in the trustee as part of the bankrupt's estate, subject only to the limited protection for third parties conferred by s 307(4). Proprietary consequences of this significance should not be triggered, in my judgment, in a case where the bankrupt himself has not informed his trustee of his acquisition of the property, unless the trustee's knowledge that the property is indeed after-acquired property is firmly based."
"…the Official Receiver or the Trustee must have had actual knowledge (themselves or imputed from their agent) of the fact that the Bankrupt had an actual interest in the Property; assertions or claims that she might have an interest would not suffice."
"…the position in which the trustee in bankruptcy becomes aware of the interest must be equivalent of that in which he would be having received information from the bankrupt that he does have an interest in the property, from whatever source he may gain this knowledge. If becoming aware means anything less than that, then it does not put the trustee in bankruptcy into an equivalent position as regards knowledge as he would be in if the bankrupt had provided the information in the first place. It seems to me that there is no sufficient reason to suppose that the legislature intended the trustee in bankruptcy to be put on the spot, so to speak, with the limited time provided for under 283A in which to take steps with a view to the realisation in one way or another for the benefit of creditors of the interest of the bankrupt, unless he knows of an interest which is already vested in the bankrupt's estate."
Interests that do not fall within s.283A(1)
"In English law the rights of a testamentary legatee in the unadministered estate of a testator are well settled: see Lord Sudeley v Attorney General [1897] AC 11 and Comr of Stamp Duties (Queensland) v Livingston [1965] AC 694…A legatee's right is to have the estate duly administered by the personal representatives in accordance with law. But during the period of administration the legatee has no legal or equitable interest in the assets comprised in the estate."
The interest falling within s.283A(1)
Conclusion