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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> The Connaught Income Fund, Series 1 v (Capita Financial Managers Ltd & Anor [2014] EWHC 3619 (Comm) (05 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/3619.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3619 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE CONNAUGHT INCOME FUND, SERIES 1 (in liquidation) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) CAPITA FINANCIAL MANAGERS LIMITED (2) BLUE GATE CAPITAL LIMITED |
Defendant |
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John L Powell QC and Shail Patel (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills) for the First Defendant
Aiden Christie QC and Paul O'Doherty (instructed by Nexus Solicitors) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 20 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Mackie QC:
Facts and background to the action
(a) The causes of action on which the Fund relies accrued to Investors in their personal capacities, not in their capacities as partners in the Fund, and as a result, cannot be pursued by the Fund, because of the terms of Paragraph 5A of C.P.R. Practice Direction 7A ("5A").
(b) If those causes of action otherwise accrued to the Fund (within the meaning of 5A) by reason of the assignments, they still cannot be pursued by the Fund, because the Fund had been dissolved by the dates of those assignments. Capita argues that following dissolution, the Fund's members were only able to bind the firm so far as was necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership, following Section 38 of the Partnership Act 1890 ("the 1890 Act") and that as a result the partnership had no authority to take assignments from investors after its dissolution.
(c) The claim against Capita is brought in the wrong name, because the Fund only became known by the name it uses in these proceedings after Capita ceased being its operator. If the Fund could pursue the assigned claims against Capita at all, it had to do so in its old name, the Guaranteed Low Risk Income Fund, Series 1.
(d) The assignments to the Fund are invalid because they were a device to circumvent the limitations on when claims under FSMA can be maintained for the benefit of persons other than "private" persons contained in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Rights of Action) Regulations 2001 ("the RAR").
(e) The assignments to the Fund were assignments of bare rights to litigate, and as such, impermissible on grounds of public policy.
(f) The Fund does not have separate legal personality and is not capable of acting as legal assignee.
(g) The Fund's liquidators have acted outside the statutory powers granted to them as joint liquidators under the Insolvency Act 1986 in purporting to take assignments on behalf of the Fund.
The law of partnership - 9(b) above
"After the dissolution of a partnership the authority of each partner to bind the firm, and the other rights and obligations of the partners, continue notwithstanding the dissolution so far as may be necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership, and to complete transactions begun but unfinished at the time of the dissolution but not otherwise...".
(1) "An order for the winding up of an insolvent partnership will, obviously, bring about an immediate dissolution, assuming the firm not already to have been dissolved…" (Lindley & Banks on Partnership, 19th ed. at 24-49).
(2) "Under the Insolvency Act 1986, which brought into partnership law the language of company insolvency, the court order that terminates a partnership is confusingly called not a 'Dissolution' but a 'Winding-up' order…" (Blackett-Ord, Partnership Law: the modern law of firms, limited partnerships and LLPs, 4th ed. at 16.2).
The Practice Direction and 5A - 9(a) and (c) above
"These Rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly and at proportionate cost…...
The court must seek to give effect to the overriding objective when it …interprets any rule…".
"Claims by and against partnerships within the jurisdiction
5A.1 Paragraphs 5A and 5B apply to claims that are brought by or against two or more persons who –
(1) were partners; and
(2) carried on that partnership business within the jurisdiction, at the time when the cause of action accrued.
5A.2 For the purposes of this paragraph, 'partners' includes persons claiming to be entitled as partners and persons alleged to be partners.
5A.3 Where that partnership has a name, unless it is inappropriate to do so, claims must be brought in or against the name under which that partnership carried on business at the time the cause of action accrued."
"Thus the relevant cause of action must have accrued to two or more persons:
as (or in the capacity of) partners or former partners; and
of a partnership:
i which carried on that partnership business within the jurisdiction, and
ii which did so at the time the cause of action accrued"
"...were not relied upon or even referred to by counsel for the plaintiffs, probably for the good reason that they would not support their case. Under this rule an action may be brought in the name of the firm against one of its members but this is a mere matter of procedure and does not affect the rights of parties or create causes of action which would not otherwise exist."
"The defence disputed the claimants' title to sue. The defendant applied to strike out the claim on the ground that the claimants had neither sought nor obtained a grant of letters of administration of his estate. The claimants admitted their lack of title, but asked the judge to exercise the discretion he was said to have under CPR 19.8(1) to authorise them to continue the claim nonetheless."
This is not a case of admitted or any lack of title. It is about the availability of 5A to the Firm and its liquidator. It is not, for example, a case where someone claims to act for the Firm but has not yet been appointed as liquidator.
"41. Arguments such as that which the defendant successfully raised before the judge in this case are never very attractive, and one of the purposes of the CPR is to rid the law of unnecessary technical procedural rules which can operate as traps for litigants. However, whatever one's views of the value of the principle applied and approved in Ingall v. Moran [1944] KB 160, it is a well-established principle, and, once one concludes that it has not been abrogated by CPR Part 19.8, it was the judge's duty to follow it, as it is the duty of this court, at least in the absence of any powerful contrary reason. The need for consistency, clarity and adherence to the established principles is much greater than the avoidance of a technical rule, particularly one which has a discernible purpose, namely to ensure that an action is brought by an appropriate claimant."
The alleged invalidity of assignments under FSMA and RAR - 9(d) above
"(1)A contravention by an authorised person of a rule is actionable at the suit of a private person who suffers loss as a result of the contravention, subject to the defences and other incidents applying to actions for breach of statutory duty…
(3)In prescribed cases, a contravention of a rule which would be actionable at the suit of a private person is actionable at the suit of a person who is not a private person, subject to the defences and other incidents applying to actions for breach of statutory duty."
"So the key point about section 150 for the purposes of this argument is that there are two conditions. There is a substantive condition that there is a cause of action for breach of statutory duty which is accrued to a private person. So it is the private person who has the cause of action. That is the actionability point and the second point is the procedural point, "at the suit of", because that defines who must actually bring the claim."
Have the Fund's liquidators acted outside their statutory powers? - 10(g) above
"The relevant causes of action were enjoyed by the members of the Fund, and concerned the circumstances in which they had come to be such. They were in no sense claims of third parties unconnected to the insolvent estate. The assignments themselves were gratuitous (and hence, effected by deed). Although the Fund undertook to be liable for any costs (see clause 2.3 at [5/19]), it was under no obligation to prosecute the claims at all (see clause 4.2 at [5/20]), and if it chose not to, it had no exposure on that undertaking. If it did, however, there was the prospect of making a substantial recovery, for the benefit of all creditors, and not just the assigning Investors. The balancing of risk and reward on the decision as to whether or not to sue was pre-eminently a matter for the commercial judgment of the creditors' committee."
Conclusion