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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 >> Oldham & Ors v Kyrris & Anor [2003] EWCA Civ 1506 (04 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1506.html Cite as: [2003] NPC 133, [2004] BCC 111, [2004] BPIR 165, [2004] 1 BCLC 305, [2004] PNLR 18, [2003] EWCA Civ 1506 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HHJ Behrens)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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Mr Michael John Oldham & Ors |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Mrs Georgina Kyrris & Anor |
Respondents |
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Mr John Haines (instructed by Messrs Irwin Mitchell) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 7 and 8 October 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTS
The general background
"3. Under section 20 of the [1986 Act], as applied by Article 6 of the [1994 Order], the [administrators] and each of them shall be absolutely and unconditionally released from all liabilities in respect of their acts or omissions in the administration and otherwise in relation to their conduct as administrators of the Partnership with effect from 28 days after the filing of their final receipts and payments account, save in respect of:
3.1 (subject to paragraph 4 below) any claim made by [Mrs Kyrris] and/or [Mr Royle] by 2 months after the filing of the [administrators'] final receipts and payments account; and
3.2 ......
4. The [administrators] shall have permission to apply to the Court for their release from any liability under any claim made by [Mrs Kyrris] and/or [Mr Royle] in accordance with paragraph 3.1 above in so far as such claim(s) is/are demurrable."
The facts alleged
"[t]his is ... not one of those cases where I am being invited to treat the allegations of fact contained in witness statements as manifestly untrue."
Mrs Kyrris' equitable charge claim
"Reference: Personal loan of £100,000
Further to our letter of 11th December 1995 and confirming our telephone conversation of to-day's date we are prepared to offer a first charge on the property known as Angel Row Nottingham, as below.
We hereby acknowledge receipt of a loan of £100,000 repayable at the discretion of the Partners and Directors. The loan is not payable on demand and will attract interest at the London Inter Bank Borrowing Rate (LIBOR) to be set at some time in the future at a mutually agreed date. The loan will not accrue any marginal interest rate above LIBOR, interest will only accrue from the mutually agreed date.
In recognition of the loan the Partnership will give you a fi[r]st charge over the above named property until and as such time [sic] the loan and all accrued interest has been satisfied in full. The charge will cover all the three in place on this property.
We will instruct solicitors to effect this charge on this property at a date to be mutually agreed by both parties, however not before 31st March 1996.
We would be grateful if you would signify your agreement to the above by signing and returning the copy enclosed."
"Following our telephone conversation this evening I can confirm that the loan referred to in our letter of 11th December is to be to the Partnership & will be secured by a legal charge over the Angel Row restaurant. This is, as you know, unencumbered.
I have spoken to our solicitor about this and he confirms that he will prepare an agreement.
Gompertz has promised to arrange for the legal charge to be completed and registered on your behalf.
I hope that this puts you mind at rest that you are fully secured & not at risk."
"The obligation on the partnership arises out of a letter from [sic] 14 December 1995 in which it was agreed that the premises at Angel Row would be charged to secure the debt of £100,000. That was an agreement to execute a charge signed by both parties and could be protected by Mrs Kyrris as a land charge against the Partnership.
In my view the form of charge proposed by Mrs Kyrris' lawyers goes well beyond what was probably intended in that for example it is an all monies charge. I would have expected the form of charge to be more as attached which is a simple Legal Charge over the property and gives certain legal remedies under the Law of Property Act to the chargee Mrs Kyrris.
Under the Insolvency legislation you will recall no steps may be taken to enforce any security etc. without the consent of the court. It is unlikely they would fall foul if there is an existing commitment. …."
"Briefly the partnership cannot execute any Legal Charge now. What they could and did, however, was agree that the form of charge envisaged would have been in a certain form. In that connection there was an intention merely to charge the property with the sum advanced together with interest to the extent that was payable under the agreement. We accept that was omitted from the form of Charge we produced."
"If your clients contend that there is an agreement subsisting to execute a formal charge, then in the absence of a formal charge, there may be an agreement that can be protected."
"I understand that you are the Administrators of the [partnership] business and as a result would like to place my claim to you as a creditor of the business.
Back in December 1995, I lent the [partnership] business a secured loan to be charged on the store at Angel Row, Nottingham. The sum of £100,000. The details of this loan are set out in the copy of the agreement which I enclose.
As you are in the process of the sale of the business I am registering my claim with yourselves as to the amount that is outstanding to me.
I look forward to your acknowledgment of this notice."
"We act on behalf of Mrs Kyrris, as you would be aware, our Client is an unsecured creditor of the partnership, having loaned to the partnership the sum of £100,000 on 14th December 1995. We are aware that our client did, through her previous solicitors, Messrs Nelsons, seek to secure the monies loaned by obtaining a first charge over the properties know[n] as Angel Row Nottingham. Unfortunately the partnership went into administration before the matter could be formally concluded. However, our Client's then Solicitors proceeded to register a C(iv) land registration charge against [the Angel Row property]. We understand the registration of this charge was completed on 20th May 1997, against the estate owners, J & H Kyrris respectively."
".... only go to prove that you do not hold an executed charge .... but just an agreement to execute a charge, which is not security".
Mr Royle's equitable charge claim
"RE: Charge for amounts due through services to the J & H Kyrris Group.
Following our telephone conversation yesterday, and as a result of recent discussions on the matters regarding payments due to you for the work which you have carried out over the last two years and any future work.
Our offer will be on the following basis:
- That all amounts will outstanding [sic], which we confirm commenced on 1st June 1991, and any future amounts will be settled when your current agreement expires in seven years from this date, and is renewable upon mutual consent.
- We will offer you the vehicles that have been made available for the use of your work and your family as possession[s] of yours, we will maintain those, their repayments and their servicing and running costs. Those we will change from time to time as we will see fit.
- We will provide the first charge of the property at 8/10 Upper Parliament Street & [another property]. This charge will remain in force so long as our debt remains outstanding, as [sic] is not settled in full. Our instructions to solicitors will not be made any earlier than the commencement of the next financial year, 6th April 1993.
- The amounts owed will be liable for interest at 1% Bank of England base rate.
We thank you for your co-operation in these negotiations and look forward to continuing a fruitful relationship. It is a result of this co-operation that these conditions and terms have been agreed by the partners and yourself. It is therefore that we would request that you sign along with a witness that you acknowledge receipt and its contents."
"I would like to bring to your attention the following.
Mario Royle has been employed by the Partnership to the best of my knowledge for about 12-14 years. The last time I remember him being paid was when he was the Restaurant Manager at Angel Row.
Of course Mario was paid when we were making profits ...., but after the Burger King conversion we had a great need of someone to look after the restaurants, which were in a a terrible state when we acquired them from the Franchisor. As Mario was very skilful and hard working .... I had to persuade this extremely hard working, totally loyal and committed man into my team, as the only way to achieve the highest of standards.
Mario Royle was responsible for revamping most of the restaurants himself .... At this time he was not being paid, as the family believed the best way to build the company was to take nothing out of it ourselves. We promised Mario that his reward would be £30,000 per annum, but paid later as a secured creditor – this was my promised agreement with him. ...."
The alternative claims of Mrs Kyrris and Mr Royle as unsecured creditors
THE PLEADINGS
Mrs Kyrris' action
Mr Royle's action
"In the premises from the date of the written agreement dated 24 March 1993 the Claimant was entitled to an equitable charge over the [Upper Parliament Street] property. By 28 April 1997 the partnership had not executed a legal charge over the property and the property remained subject to an equitable charge in the Claimant's favour to secure the arrears of unpaid salary. At that time the Claimant was owed the sum of £192,876.71 together with interest at 1% above Bank base rate by the partnership by way of unpaid salary."
"On a date after the administration order one Jack Kyrris on behalf of the Claimant gave the administrators oral notice of the sums due to the Claimant and the charge to which the Claimant was entitled over the property to secure the sums due to him. Further by letter dated 20 May 1997 the said Mr Kyrris informed the Defendants that the Claimant was a secured creditor. The Defendants and each of them owed a duty to account to the Claimant for the sums due to him by way of unpaid salary, namely the sum of £192,876.71 plus interest, were paid to him as the holder of an equitable charge over the property, and they have failed to do so. Further or alternatively they owed a duty of care to the Claimant to ensure that the sums due to him under the charge were paid to him and they have failed to do so. As a result the Claimant has suffered loss, namely the loss of salary of £192,876.71 plus interest."
".... a duty of care in negligence and/or a fiduciary duty to the Claimant as a creditor of the partnership to take reasonable care to ensure that his interests and those of other creditors were protected."
"As a result of the breaches of duty by the Defendants, the Claimant has suffered loss and damage. But for the breaches of duty, there would have been a substantial surplus payable for unsecured creditors and the Claimant would have recovered all or part of his unpaid salary."
".... constitutes an agreement to create a charge in the future and the timing of the execution of that charge was dependent only upon the partnership."
"It is admitted that in a letter dated 20 May 1997 Mr Kyrris made a passing reference to Mr Royle being 'paid later as a secured creditor'. However, this was the only mention of Mr Royle being a secured creditor prior to 10 October 2001. Mr Royle never asserted a right to payment as a secured creditor. Mr Royle was not included as a secured creditor in the statement of affairs submitted by the partners. It is denied that the Defendants owed Mr Royle a duty to account for the sums claimed or any sums. It is admitted that the Defendants have not paid any sums to Mr Royle in respect of his alleged salary. If, which is denied, the Defendants did have an obligation to account it is denied that they are liable in the absence of negligence. The Defendants were not negligent. The Defendants will rely, inter alia, on the fact that Mr Royle never asserted a right to a charge prior to 10 October 2001."
THE JUDGE'S JUDGMENT
The equitable charge claims
"67. On this point I prefer the submissions of Mr Haines. First it seems to me to be well arguable that the court would imply a term that the charge be executed within a reasonable time of 31st March 1996. Second it seems to me that the crucial question is not whether Mrs Kyrris could have called for a charge in December 1995 when the contract was made but whether the obligation to grant the charge was specifically enforceable.
68. It may well be that Mrs Kyrris could not have called for a charge prior to 31st March 1996; however once a reasonable time had passed after that date it seems to me that it is well arguable that she could have applied for specific performance of the obligation to create the charge. Thus as from that date it is arguable that she had an equitable charge on the Angel Row property."
"73 It is a case where the Partnership had the advantage of Mr Royle's labour for which payment was being deferred. For reasons that are very similar to those in Mrs Kyrris' case it seems to me to be well arguable that :
1. The charge in favour of Mr Royle would be executed within a reasonable time after 6th April 1993.
2. After such a time Mr Royle had a specifically enforceable agreement for a charge and thus an equitable charge.
74 As already noted Miss Hilliard accepted that for the purpose of this application I was to assume that the Administrators had notice of the terms of the letter shortly after their appointment.
75 In those circumstances it seems to me that the principles to be applied lead to the same result as in the case of Mrs Kyrris. I would not strike out the claim or grant the Administrators summary judgment."
Mr Royle's alternative claim as unsecured creditor
"77 She accepts, of course, that the Administrators may be liable for misfeasance under section 212 of the Act. So far as relevant that section provides that if in the course of the winding up of the Partnership it appears that the Administrators have been guilty of any misfeasance or breach of fiduciary or other duty in relation to the Company, the liquidator or any creditor may apply to the Court and compel him to contribute such sum by way of compensation for the misfeasance as the Court thinks just. If the Administrators have had their release the power is only exercisable with the leave of the court.
78 Miss Hilliard makes the point that the remedy is a class remedy. The Administrators would be required to contribute to the assets of the Partnership and not to individual creditors. She further makes the point that the application has to be made "within the winding up". The claims made by Mr Royle and proposed by Mrs Kyrris are not made within the winding up and seek damages for themselves. Mr Haines recognised this but made no attempt to amend the claim. Both Mrs Kyrris and Mr Royle have the benefit of public funding. Public funding is not available for applications under section 212. Thus, as Mr Haines recognised, he was forced to argue that in addition to section 212 the Administrators owed duties of care to unsecured creditors."
"83 A number of points can be made about the above passage. First Jacob J recognised that in the ordinary case outside creditors cannot sue. Second in cases where the claim has been upheld there has either been a direct contract with the liquidator or as a result of the negligence the creditors have suffered some special damage which differentiates them from other creditors.
84 There is no suggestion in this case that either Mrs Kyrris or Mr Royle is in any different position from the other unsecured creditors."
"85 Miss Hilliard submits that there are good practical reasons for not allowing such a claim. First she points to the multiplicity of suits at the behest of disgruntled creditors who may have the benefit of public funding. She points to the expense of such claims and the inevitable difficulties it will pose for the Administrators. Second she points to section 212 as the convenient and practical remedy if the Administrators have acted in breach of duty. Finally she points to the fact that the Administrators owe a duty to the creditors as a whole rather than individual creditors. She says there will be inevitable conflicts if individual creditors can sue if a decision is made which favours some creditors at the expense of others.
86 Mr Haines accepted that the claim was unprecedented. He, however, contended that that was no reason to strike it out. He said that if the 3-fold test envisaged in the authorities was applied the claim should be permitted to proceed. There was sufficient proximity between the Administrators and the individual creditors. It was foreseeable that if the Administrators were negligent or in breach of duty the individual creditors would suffer loss and there were no sufficient policy reasons to reject such a claim.
87 I see the force of Mr Haines' arguments but I cannot accept them. In my judgment Miss Hilliard's arguments are to be preferred. The policy reasons set out above are sufficient to satisfy me that, save in the special circumstances identified in the authorities to which Jacob J referred, there is no general right for individual creditors to sue the Administrators for breach of duty. Once the Partnership is in liquidation they must proceed by way of a misfeasance application under section 212. Furthermore if the Administrators have obtained their release the permission of the Court is required."
THE ARGUMENTS IN THIS COURT
Mrs Kyrris' equitable charge claim
Mr Royle's equitable charge claim
The alternative claim in negligence
CONCLUSIONS
Mrs Kyrris' equitable charge claim
"The first question that arises is whether or not this document does create a mortgage or charge, and to determine that it is necessary to form an idea of what is meant by 'charge'. It is not necessary to give a formal definition of a charge, but I think there can be no doubt that where in a transaction for value both parties evince an intention that property, existing or future, shall be made available as security for the payment of a debt, and that the creditor shall have a present right to have it made available, there is a charge, even though the present legal right which is contemplated can only be enforced at some future date, and though the creditor gets no legal right of property, either absolute or special, or any legal right to possession, but only gets a right to have the security made available by an order of the Court. If those conditions exist I think there is a charge. If, on the other hand, the parties do not intend that there should be a present right to have the security made available, but only that there should be a right in the future by agreement, such as a licence, to seize the goods, there will be no charge."
Mr Royle's equitable charge claim
The alternative claim in negligence
"31. …. [Counsel for the directors] accepted that the fiduciary duties owed by the directors to the company do not necessarily preclude, in special circumstances, the coexistence of additional duties owed by the directors to the shareholders. In such cases individual shareholders may bring a direct action, as distinct from a derivative action, against the directors for breach of duty.
32. A duality of duties may exist. In Stein v. Blake & Ors (No 2) [1988] 1 BCLC 573 at 576 …. Millett LJ recognised that there may be special circumstances in which a fiduciary duty is owed by a director to a shareholder personally and in which breach of such a duty has caused loss to him directly (e.g. by being induced by a director to part with his shares in the company at an undervalue), as distinct from loss sustained by him by a diminution in the value of his shares (e.g. by reason of the misappropriation by a director of the company's assets) for which he (as distinct from the company) would not have a cause of action against the director personally.
33. The fiduciary duties owed to the company arise from the legal relationship between the directors and the company directed and controlled by them. The fiduciary duties owed to the shareholders do not arise from that legal relationship. They are dependent on establishing a special factual relationship between the directors and the shareholders in the particular case. Events may take place which bring the directors of the company into direct and close contact with the shareholders in a manner capable of generating fiduciary obligations, such as a duty of disclosure of material facts to shareholders, or an obligation to use confidential information and valuable commercial and financial opportunities, which have been acquired by directors in that office, for the benefit of the shareholders, and not to prefer their own interests at the expense of the shareholders.
34. These duties may arise in special circumstances which replicate the salient features of well-established categories of fiduciary relationships. Fiduciary relationships, such as agency, involve duties of trust, confidence and loyalty. Those duties are, in general, attracted by and attached to a person who undertakes, or who, depending on all the circumstances, is treated as having assumed responsibility to act on behalf of, or for the benefit of, another person. That other person may have entrusted or, depending on the circumstances, may be treated as having entrusted, the care of his property, affairs, transactions or interests to him. There are, for example, instances of the directors of a company making direct approaches to, and dealing with, the shareholders in relation to a specific transaction and holding themselves out as agents for them in connection with the acquisition or disposal of shares; or making material representations to them; or failing to make material disclosure to them of insider information in the context of negotiations for a take-over of the company's business; or supplying to them specific information and advice on which they have relied. These events are capable of constituting special circumstances and of generating fiduciary obligations, especially in those cases in which the directors, for their own benefit, seek to use their position and special inside knowledge acquired by them to take improper or unfair advantage of the shareholders."
"…. an order directing that, during the period for which the order is in force, the affairs, business and property of the company shall be managed by a person ("the administrator") appointed for the purpose by the court."
"…. to do all such things as may be necessary for the management of the affairs, business and property of the company".
"(a) to repay, restore or account for the money or property or any part of it, with interest at such rate as the court thinks just, or
(b) to contribute such sum to the company's assets by way of compensation in respect of the misfeasance or breach of fiduciary or other duty as the court thinks just."
"In my view a voluntary liquidator is more rightly described as the agent of the company – an agent who has no doubt cast upon him by statute or otherwise special duties….. If this be the true position of a liquidator, and I think at any rate agency more nearly defines his true position than trusteeship, it is clear that he could not as agent be sued by a third party for negligence apart from misfeasance or personal misconduct."
"It is true that it is employees of the firm who were the liquidators, but they only took their position as such by virtue of the contract between the plaintiff[s] and Grant Thornton. Grant Thornton, in accepting the consideration of £5,000, were contracting to put their man in as liquidator. Of course once in as liquidator he would owe his duties to the company. But there is nothing inconsistent between the pleaded contract and the employee having duties to the company. The pleaded contract is, in short, that the employee/liquidator undertakes to do a proper job as liquidator. That is what Grant Thornton contracted would happen."
"As a generality, that may well be true, but in two cases the courts have recognised that a liquidator is under a direct duty to creditors, or owes a direct duty to creditors."
"But the duty to pay the debts .... is an absolute statutory duty, without limit in point of time and with no provision for the release of the voluntary liquidator .... It is not necessary to resort to trusteeship or equitable doctrines: the case is one of a duty imposed by a statute on an individual for the benefit of a class of persons, namely, creditors and the only peculiarity of the case is that the remedy created by the statute is not co-extensive in point of time with the duty, for the [1890] Act permits the destruction of the remedy before the duty has been performed. .... Now the principles applicable to such a duty as I have mentioned are well settled and rest on the well-founded assumption that the Legislature does not intend its enactment to be brutum fulmen: if, therefore, a statute creates such a duty but no remedy, an action at common law (in former days action on the case) will lie for breach of such duty...."
"It was urged in argument that the liquidator is merely the agent of the company; but assuming this to be so, I can see nothing inconsistent in the imposition on such agent of a duty to the company's creditors."
"Again a liquidator made errors in paying out. The details do not matter."
"Given there is a duty on these liquidators to get the money in, there was a duty to investigate what money could be got in. The pleading says they failed in that duty; in particular, they failed to keep the plaintiffs informed of the state of their investigations, and did so for such a long time that any possibility of a claim became statute-barred.
[Counsel for Grant Thornton] says, again, that the plaintiffs have got the wrong party. If there was a duty in tort it was a duty on the individual liquidators, and they should be the defendants. No doubt they could be, but it seems to me that once those defendants were put in as Grant Thornton men, Grant Thornton owed a duty coterminous and dependent upon the duties of the individual liquidators to these plaintiffs."
"Those who undertake the task of being liquidators should reasonably expect to have to do their job properly, and should reasonably expect that if they do not do so they are answerable to those ultimately for whom they are acting, namely the creditors."
RESULT
Lord Justice Dyson:
Lord Justice Thorpe :