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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 >> Burlington Loan Management Ltd & Ors v Lomas & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 1462 (24 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1462.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 699, [2017] EWCA Civ 1462, [2018] Bus LR 508 |
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A3/2015/3764; A3/2016/4213; A3/2016/4216; A3/2016/4217; and, A3/2017/0043 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE (CHANCERY DIVISION)
COMPANIES COURT
MR JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
MR JUSTICE HILDYARD
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD BRIGGS OF WESTBOURNE
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(1) BURLINGTON LOAN MANAGEMENT LIMITED |
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(2) CVI GVF (LUX) MASTER SÀRL |
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(3) HUTCHINSON INVESTORS LLC |
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(4) WENTWORTH SONS SUB-DEBT SÀRL |
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(5) YORK GLOBAL FINANCE BDH LLC |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) ANTONY VICTOR LOMAS (2) STEVEN ANTHONY PEARSON (3) PAUL DAVID COPLEY (4) RUSSELL DOWNS (5) JULIAN GUY PARR (AS THE JOINT ADMINISTRATORS OF LEHMAN BROTHERS INTERNATIONAL (EUROPE) (IN ADMINISTRATION)) |
Respondents |
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Mr Antony Zacaroli QC, Mr David Allison QC and Mr Adam Al-Attar (instructed by Kirkland & Ellis International LLP) for the 4th Appellant
Mr Tom Smith QC and Mr Robert Amey (instructed by Michelmores LLP) for the 5th Appellant
Mr Daniel Bayfield QC and Mr Stephen Robins (instructed by Linklaters LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 3 - 6 April 2017; 10 - 12 April 2017; and, 25 July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
The 1986 insolvency regime
"(1) For the purpose of proving a debt incurred or payable in a currency other than sterling, the amount of the debt shall be converted into sterling at the official exchange rate prevailing on the date when the company entered administration or, if the administration was immediately preceded by a winding up, on the date that the company went into liquidation."
"(1) Where a debt proved in the administration bears interest, that interest is provable as part of the debt except in so far as it is payable in respect of any period after the company entered administration or, if the administration was immediately preceded by a winding up, any period after the date that the company went into liquidation.
(2) In the following circumstances the creditor's claim may include interest on the debt for periods before the company entered administration, although not previously reserved or agreed.
(3) If the debt is due by virtue of a written instrument, and payable at a certain time, interest may be claimed for the period from that time to the date when the company entered administration.
(4) If the debt is due otherwise, interest may only be claimed if, before that date, a demand or payment of the debt was made in writing by or on behalf of the creditor, and notice given that interest would be payable from the date of the demand to the date of payment.
(5) Interest under paragraph (4) may only be claimed for the period from the date of the demand to that of the company's entering administration and for all the purposes of the Act and the Rules shall be chargeable at a rate not exceeding that mentioned in paragraph (6).
(6) The rate of interest to be claimed under paragraphs (3) and (4) is the rate specified in section 17 of the Judgments Act 1838 on the date when the company entered administration.
(7) Any surplus remaining after payment of the debts proved shall, before being applied for any purpose, be applied in paying interest on those debts in respect of the periods during which they have been outstanding since the company entered administration.
(8) All interest payable under paragraph (7) ranks equally whether or not the debts on which it is payable rank equally.
(9) The rate of interest payable under paragraph (7) is whichever is the greater of the rate specified under paragraph (6) or the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration."
The scope of this appeal
The litigation thus far
Live issues
a. Item 1: Whether, on the true construction of Rule 2.88(7), statutory interest is to be calculated on a Bower v Marris basis, namely with dividends being first allocated to the reduction of statutory interest and then to the payment of principal (i.e. the proved debt), or vice versa, by paying down principal first (declaration (iii)).
b. Item 2: Whether, where the relevant interest rate to be applied under Rule 2.88(9) is the "rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration", and such rate is a compounding rate, accrued statutory interest continues to compound following the payment in full of the principal amount through dividends (declaration (viii)).
c. Item 4: Whether a creditor is entitled to further interest, damages, or any other form of compensation in respect of the time taken for statutory interest to be paid (declaration (iv)).
d. Item 5: Whether statutory interest payable in respect of an admitted provable debt which was a contingent debt as at the date of administration is payable from that date, or from the later date (if any) when the debt ceased to be contingent (declaration (xiv))
e. Item 11: Whether the "rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" in Rule 2.88(9) can include: (a) a foreign judgment rate of interest applicable to a foreign judgment obtained after the date of administration, or; (b) a foreign judgment rate of interest which would have become applicable to the debt if the creditor had obtained a foreign judgment, when it did not in fact do so (declaration (x)).
f. Item 12: Whether the words "the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" in Rule 2.88(9) of the Rules include, in the case of a provable debt that is a close-out sum under a contract, a contractual rate of interest that began to accrue only after the close-out sum became due and payable due to action taken by the creditor after the date of the commencement of LBIE's administration (declaration (xxvii)).
Item 1: Bower v Marris
"Whether on the true construction of Rule 2.88(7) of the Rules, Statutory Interest is calculated on the basis of allocating dividends:
(i) first to the payment of accrued Statutory Interest at the date of the relevant dividends and then in reduction of the principal;
(ii) first to reduction of the principal and then to the payment of accrued Statutory Interest; or
(iii) on the basis of some other sequencing."
a) Alternative (i) (allocation first to interest) was incompatible with the statutory scheme for proof of debts and payment of statutory interest.
b) By contrast, alternative (ii) (allocation first to principal) reflected the ordinary meaning of the language of Rule 2.88(7) in its context.
c) Alternative (ii) appeared also to reflect more closely than its rival the recommendations of the Cork Committee.
a) Attributing incoming payments to outstanding interest before principal is the ordinary commercial conduct of any creditor at liberty to do so, and is reflected in typical commercial contracts made between persons at arm's length.
b) The same approach underlies the court's historic judge-made attitude towards the award of interest from a surplus in the administration of estates.
c) The Bower v Marris approach (i.e. attribution of payments received to interest before principal) was applied by the courts in bankruptcy, at least until the Bankruptcy Act 1883, and probably thereafter.
d) The Bower v Marris approach was also used in the exercise of a judge-made jurisdiction to award interest in cases of corporate insolvency, in the event of a surplus, from its origins in the mid-nineteenth century until 1986.
e) Nothing in the travaux preparatoires preceding the 1986 insolvency legislation indicate an intention to abolish that long-standing application of commercial and equitable principle.
f) Nothing in the language used in Rule 2.88 prevents the equitable principle from continuing to be applied.
g) Attribution of dividends first to outstanding interest better ensures that contributories do not receive that which, apart from the insolvency, would have been paid to creditors, than the application of dividends to principal.
h) Bower v Marris has been widely applied in other common law jurisdictions, including the Republic of Ireland, Scotland, Canada and the USA.
i) The judgment of the Supreme Court in Waterfall I affirmed the vitality of judge-made rules within the insolvency code, where consistent with the terms and underlying principles of current legislation, and where reasonably necessary to achieve justice.
Analysis
"Any surplus remaining after payment of the debts proved shall, before being applied for any purpose, be applied in paying interest on those debts in respect of the periods during which they have been outstanding since the company entered administration."
When aggregated with the provision as to the interest rate in Rule 2.88(9) and the provision for equal ranking between creditors in Rule 2.88(8) this simple formula constitutes, in our view, a complete and clear code for the award of statutory interest on provable debts. As Mr Zacaroli QC for Wentworth put it, it contains all you need to know.
Item 2: Compounding under Rule 2.88(9)
Item 4: Compensation for Late Payment of Statutory Interest
"166. In my judgment, this submission faces two obstacles. First, while statutory interest is payable out of the surplus remaining after the payment in full of proved debts, rule 2.88 does not stipulate the time at which such payment is to be made. The reason it does not do so is that, while administrators are obliged to proceed with the administration with all reasonable speed, there may, as in the present case, be very good reasons why they cannot immediately proceed to the payment of statutory interest. The SCG have gone out of their way to say that there has been no breach by the administrators of their duties or any unreasonable or culpable delay on their part. If there had been, creditors have their remedies against the administrators under the provisions of schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986. It cannot in the present case be said that there has been any breach of the obligation to pay statutory interest or that the due date for payment has yet arrived. There is therefore no basis on which creditors could either seek an order for the payment of statutory interest or damages for any loss said to be suffered as a result of delay.
167. The second obstacle is that the legislation makes no provision for the payment of interest on statutory interest. In the absence of a breach of an obligation to pay the statutory interest, no jurisdiction exists to award interest or damages in respect of the time taken to pay the statutory interest. If it had been intended that a further sum by way of interest should be paid, on the amount of statutory interest due under rule 2.88 from the date on which all proved debts were paid or provided for in full or from some other date to the date of payment of the interest, a provision to that effect would have been included in the Rules."
Item 5: Interest on Contingent Debts
a) Distribution in administration is made to creditors pari passu in discharge of their proved debts, not their underlying claims;
b) Creditors are compensated by the payment of statutory interest for the delay in payment of their proved debts from the date of administration, not their underlying claims;
c) Although some parts of Rule 2.88 use the word "debts" to refer to the underlying claims, the reference to the periods when debts have been outstanding in Rule 2.88(7) is clearly a reference to proved debts;
d) This construction was consistent with the treatment of statutory interest on future debts (which is not subject to appeal), and with the insolvency code as a whole, in which the pari passu principle is applied as far as possible from a single common date, here the date of the administration.
a) Although there is provision for the discounting of a contingent debt for the purposes of proof by reference to a judgment about the likelihood of the contingency occurring, where the contingency occurs before dividend the debt may be proved for and is admitted in full.
b) In such a case, for example when the contingency occurred in the last month of a period of several years between the date of administration and the date of payment of dividend, the creditor would be paid interest in relation to a long period when the debt was neither interest-bearing nor outstanding in the ordinary sense of the word.
c) By paying statutory interest to a creditor for a period when his debt remained only contingent, the scheme would fail to apply pari passu treatment, by comparison with ordinary creditors with debts payable as at the date of administration, or even future creditors with debts bearing interest (as is common) in the meantime.
Item 11: Foreign Judgment Rates of Interest
a) A foreign judgment rate of interest applicable to a foreign judgment obtained after the date of administration, or;
b) A foreign judgment rate of interest which would have become applicable to the debt if the creditor had obtained a foreign judgment, when it did not in fact do so.
"The words "the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" cannot be read as including a hypothetical rate which would be applicable to a debt if the creditor took certain steps."
After giving certain examples, he concluded:
"These examples do no more than demonstrate why the words "the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" should be given their obvious meaning of the rate in fact applicable to the debt."
Item 12: Contractual Interest Rate due only after Close-out
a) The starting point is to examine what contractual or other rights to interest existed between the parties as at the administration date, which operates as a cut-off date for that purpose. Those rights might include a then current right to interest at a particular rate, a right to a variation in that rate in the future (as in a floating rate), a contingent right to a higher rate (such as a default rate), or a right for the first time to interest (as on a close-out triggered either automatically, or by the creditor). They would also include a right to interest under a pre-existing foreign judgment.
b) This process of cut-off date examination will exclude foreign judgments not yet obtained, but include every interest entitlement, actual, future or contingent, in the pre-existing contract between the parties.
c) A calculation then falls to be made whether, applying those various pre-existing contractual (or other) rights to the periods when they would have applied apart from the administration, they produce a higher rate for the proved debt than the Judgments Act rate. If they do, then that higher rate is the applicable rate under Rule 2.88(9).
d) This does not mean that, where a contractual rate is only applicable for part of the period from the administration date, statutory interest at the Judgments Act rate is not recoverable for the whole period: see Item 5 above. The calculations called for under Rule 2.88(9) are still directed to identifying the higher statutory rate for the whole period.
Conclusion