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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary Of State For Trade & Industry v Blackhouse [2001] EWCA Civ 67 (26 January 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/67.html Cite as: [2001] 1 BCLC 468, [2002] BCC 441, [2001] EWCA Civ 67 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
MR JUSTICE HART
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Friday 26th January 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
and
MR JUSTICE CHARLES
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF NORTH WEST HOLDINGS PLC (IN LIQUIDATION) | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF NORTH WEST HOLDINGS LIMITED (REGISTERED IN ALDERNEY) | ||
AND IN THE MATTTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 | ||
The Secretary of State For Trade and Industry | ||
Applicant | ||
and | ||
John Backhouse | ||
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr R. Hildyard QC and Miss B. Lucas (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor for the Respondent)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE ALDOUS:
"The Secretary of State's case in relation to the scheme is, first, that charges are not appropriately explained in that or any other document. That is a question that may strike different minds differently. It is certainly the case that one has to read the document with care and patience in order to discover exactly how the charges work, both as to obtaining and as to amount and the document is certainly not designed to make that task easy. The real objection, however, is not only to the obscure way in which charging structure is explained in that document, but to the level of charges which result and to which I have already briefly referred. The expert evidence which is before me, and which in the case of the company's expert has been fully tested in cross-examination, agrees that the level of charges allowed for by this document is a very excessive one if one takes the comparison of a ten year endowment scheme and is even excessive by reference to the charges levied on a typical 25 year endowment policy, assuming that to be for any reason an appropriate analogy to take."
"It seems to me that the Secretary of State has made out the case sought to be made out, that is that this product has so little intrinsic merit that the probabilities that clients who decided to devote monthly savings to it must in some way have been under a misconception, whether or not induced by actual misrepresentation as to what they were getting for their money. As I have already indicated, what they were getting for their money was no more than first, the promise, by a nominally public limited company which was in fact being operated on the footing that it was dormant, that that public limited company would in future provide services, which it might never be under any obligation to provide, and of uncertain value if it did provide them. Secondly, a savings account with a bank which the client could easily have provided himself if he chose to devote his savings in that particular form of investment. Thirdly, a term of life assurance policy for a period of four years, with no particular vice and no particular virtue, again something which the client could provide himself without having to submit himself to the egregious charges which Holdings inserted an entitlement to in the scheme."
"For all those reasons it seems to me that the Secretary of State's proffered reasons for winding-up both the companies on public interest grounds are fully justified. Quite apart from the fact that, as it is now common ground, the companies are insolvent, I would have been able to see little in the evidence so far as I have heard it to tip the balance in favour of the Respondents. I recognise that, so far as part of the companies' case is concerned, the evidence was not complete in the sense of all of it having been tested by cross-examination, but subject to that comment I should have seen little to place in the balance against the powerful reasons which the Secretary of State has adduced for my making the compulsory winding-up order in this case."
"The question is whether sufficiently exceptional circumstances exist to justify the court in ordering a non-party to pay costs. In the present context the fact that, without regard to the requirements of company law or (as I find) any justification by reference to responsible professional advice, Mr Backhouse had simply treated the companies as an extension of himself is a feature capable of taking this case outside the ordinary run of cases where a director has been responsible for causing his company to defend legal proceedings. I do not say that it is a feature necessarily sufficient in itself to justify the making of a costs order but it is a feature whose presence at the very least requires me to examine very carefully what Mr Backhouse's motives were in causing the companies to defend the petitions."
"You advised that you have three objectives in fighting this case:
1. That you would like to continue with a similar scheme albeit under another company umbrella in the future;
2. That you wish to avoid proceedings being brought against you to disqualify you as a director and possibly any criminal charges for fraud or false accounting.
3. That you do not wish your political aspirations to be tainted by proceedings going against you."
"The legitimacy of the scheme itself was always likely to be the critical issue, and this was in my judgment a matter in respect of which serious argument could be made on his behalf. As noted in my judgment, the scheme was defended by one financial services expert (Mr Doney) on the grounds which, although I do not accept them in their entirety, were cogent. I made, and make, no finding that in devising or promoting it Mr Backhouse was guilty of any conscious dishonesty. Indeed I should record that I was unable to accept the more lurid allegations made by one of the witnesses tendered by the Secretary of State on the hearing of the petitions."
"The controlling director of a one-man company is inevitably the person who causes the costs to be incurred, in one sense, by causing the company to defend the proceedings. But it could not be right that in every case he should be made personally liable for costs, even if he knows that the company will not be able to meet the plaintiff's costs, should the company prove unsuccessful. That would be far too great an inroad on the principle of limited liability. I do not say that there may not be cases where a director may not properly be liable for costs. Thus he might be made liable if the company's defence is not bona fide, as, for example, where the company has been advised that there is no defence, and the proceedings are defended out of spite, or for the sole purpose of causing the plaintiffs to incur irrevocable costs. No doubt there will be other cases. But such cases much necessarily be rare. In the great majority of cases the directors of an insolvent company which defends proceedings brought against it should not be at personal risk of costs."
MANCE LJ:
CHARLES J:
"I agree with Hart J who pointed out in Northwest Holdings (supra) that public interest petitions are themselves an unusual form of proceedings which are more likely to attract orders for costs against non-parties."
Mummery L.J. went on to cite with approval a passage from the judgment of Hart J concerning the characteristics of public interest winding up petitions which founded this view.
(a) the petition is based on a conclusion of the Secretary of State that it appears to him to be expedient in the public interest that the company should be wound up,
(b) that conclusion, and thus the proceedings, are often based on information obtained by the Secretary of State as a result of an investigation instigated by him (or another regulator) pursuant to a statutory power (e.g. section 447 Companies Act), and
(c) the allegations which found such conclusion of the Secretary of State and the application to wind up will often include allegations that amount to an assertion that the directors (or others who have been in control of the company and caused it to trade) have abused the privilege of trading with limited liability.
Such an abuse can be, but does not have to be, based on allegations of dishonesty. Certainly it is often not necessary to allege dishonesty to explain why the Secretary of State concluded that it is expedient in the public interest for a company to be wound up and seeks a winding up order on that basis, or to prove dishonesty to show that it is just and equitable that the company be wound up.