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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 >> Binyon & Anor v Suzerain Investment Holdings Ltd & Ors (Re VE Global UK Ltd - Insolvency Act 1986) [2024] EWHC 749 (Ch) (28 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/749.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 749 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPOERTY COURT OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST
IN THE MATTER OF VE GLOBAL UK LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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TREVOR BINYON AND STEVEN JOHN PARKER (AS JOINT ADMINSITRATORS OF VE GLOBAL UK LIMITED) |
Applicants |
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- and – |
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(1) SUZERAIN INVESTMENT HOLDINGS LIMITED (2) JAMES LUPTON (3) NEW CORANGE LIMITED |
Respondents |
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The respondents did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 15 March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Deputy ICC Judge Baister:
(1) Subject to subsection (6), this section applies where a company creates a charge.
(2) The registrar must register the charge if, before the end of the period allowed for delivery, the company or any person interested in the charge delivers to the registrar for registration a section 859D statement of particulars.
(3) Where the charge is created or evidenced by an instrument, the registrar is required to register it only if a certified copy of the instrument is delivered to the registrar with the statement of particulars.
(4) "The period allowed for delivery" is 21 days beginning with the day after the date of creation of the charge (see section 859E), unless an order allowing an extended period is made under section 859F(3).
(5) Where an order is made under section 859F(3) a copy of the order must be delivered to the registrar with the statement of particulars.
(6) […]
(7) […]
Plainly a debenture is registrable within the meaning of that provision.
(1) A statement of particulars relating to a charge created by a company is a "section 859D statement of particulars" if it contains the following particulars—
(a) the registered name and number of the company;
(b) the date of creation of the charge and (if the charge is one to which section 859C applies) the date of acquisition of the property or undertaking concerned;
(c) where the charge is created or evidenced by an instrument, the particulars listed in subsection (2);
(d) where the charge is not created or evidenced by an instrument, the particulars listed in subsection (3).
(2) The particulars referred to in subsection (1)(c) are—
(a) any of the following—
(i) the name of each of the persons in whose favour the charge has been created or of the security agents or trustees holding the charge for the benefit of one or more persons; or,
(ii) where there are more than four such persons, security agents or trustees, the names of any four such persons, security agents or trustees listed in the charge instrument, and a statement that there are other such persons, security agents or trustees;
(b) whether the instrument is expressed to contain a floating charge and, if so, whether it is expressed to cover all the property and undertaking of the company;
(c) whether any of the terms of the charge prohibit or restrict the company from creating further security that will rank equally with or ahead of the charge;
(d) whether (and if so, a short description of) any land, ship, aircraft or intellectual property that is registered or required to be registered in the United Kingdom, is subject to a charge (which is not a floating charge) or fixed security included in the instrument;
(e) whether the instrument includes a charge (which is not a floating charge) or fixed security over—
(i) any tangible or corporeal property, or
(ii) any intangible or incorporeal property,
not described in paragraph (d).
(3) The particulars referred to in subsection (1)(d) are—
(a) a statement that there is no instrument creating or evidencing the charge;
(b) the names of each of the persons in whose favour the charge has been created or the names of any security agents or trustees holding the charge for the benefit of one or more persons;
(c) the nature of the charge;
(d) a short description of the property or undertaking charged;
(e) the obligations secured by the charge.
(4) In this section "fixed security" has the meaning given in section 486(1) of the Companies Act 1985.
(5) In this section "intellectual property" includes—
(a) any patent, trade mark, registered design, copyright or design right;
(b) any licence under or in respect of any such right.
(1) This section applies if—
(a) a company creates a charge to which section 859A or 859B applies, and
(b) the documents required by section 859A or (as the case may be) 859B are not delivered to the registrar by the company or another person interested in the charge before the end of the relevant period allowed for delivery.
(2) "The relevant period allowed for delivery" is—
(a) the period allowed for delivery under the section in question, or
(b) if an order under section 859F(3) has been made, the period allowed by the order.
(3) Where this section applies, the charge is void (so far as any security on the company's property or undertaking is conferred by it) against—
(a) a liquidator of the company,
(b) an administrator of the company, and
(c) a creditor of the company.
(4) Subsection (3) is without prejudice to any contract or obligation for repayment of the money secured by the charge; and when a charge becomes void under this section, the money secured by it immediately becomes payable.
In the case of registration under section 859A or 859B, the certificate is conclusive evidence that the documents required by the section concerned were delivered to the registrar before the end of the relevant period allowed for delivery.
"I cannot bring myself to doubt that it would be almost shocking if we held in this case that the certificate of the registrar, which is actually indorsed on each of these debentures, did not justify the debenture-holders in saying that they had, as against the unsecured creditors represented by the liquidator, a perfectly good charge upon the assets of the company."
"The result of the legislation as it appears to me is that if the document sent in for registration does contain a charge on particular property, even if the company sending it in has misstated that charge, or the registrar considering it judicially has misunderstood it, when once the certificate has been given the grantees are safe."
She emphasises the importance of the document that was actually delivered or sent in. She reinforces the point by reference to the following passage from the judgment of Atkin LJ:
"It appears to me to be the true view that when once such a certificate has been given by the registrar in respect to a particular specified document which in fact creates a mortgage or charge, it is conclusive that the mortgage or charge so created is properly registered, even though the particulars put forward by the person applying for registration are incomplete, and the entry in the register by the registrar is defective."
She emphasises the facts that the document delivered was specified and that it did create a mortgage or charge. That was also the case in Re Mechanisations (Eaglescliffe) Ltd [1966] Ch 20, she says, submitting that Buckley J stressed the need to look at the document creating the charge for its terms and effect, not the register. I am not sure that the point is as powerful as she contends, since the argument Buckly J was considering in the passage to which she refers (pages 34-36) is largely focussed on different points that arose in the case; but I recognise that the learned judge did say that "if there is no registration, or if the registration is in some way so defective that it is to be treated as being no registration at all, then the charge is avoided as a whole," and later held that,
"In order to discover the terms and effect of the charge (as was pointed out in the passages I have read from the judgments in National Provincial and Union Bank of England v. Charnley) one must look at the document creating the charge and not at the register. It is from that document that one will discover what moneys are secured and what is the total amount secured by the charge."
Be that as it may, the certificate prevailed as conclusive, even where the particulars misstated the sum secured.
"[I]t must follow that, even if the registrar erroneously registers a charge which should not have been registered and gives a consequent section 98 certificate, such error may be incapable of correction. However, lest it be thought that this position may give rise to undue hardship or injustice, I would draw attention to two points. The first is the limited nature of the effect of a registration and a consequent section 98 certificate. It does not operate to confer validity on a charge which is invalid for reasons other than lack of registration.
[…]
"Two special cases may arise on which I wish to express no concluded opinion in this present judgment, because it is not necessary to do so. The first is the hypothetical case where a purported certificate given by the registrar under section 98 discloses an error on the face of it. It may well be that even the protection afforded by section 98(2) would not operate in that situation. The second special situation might arise where the certificate had been obtained by fraud."