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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 >> Crumpler & Anor v Candey Ltd [2018] EWCA Civ 2256 (16 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2256.html Cite as: [2019] Bus LR 899, [2019] BPIR 49, [2018] WLR(D) 628, [2019] PNLR 8, [2019] WLR 2145, [2018] EWCA Civ 2256, [2019] 1 WLR 2145 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST
His Honour Judge Davis-White QC sitting as a Judge of the High Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
SIR COLIN RIMER
____________________
(1) RUSSELL CRUMPLER (2) SARAH BOWER (Joint liquidators of Peak Hotels and Resorts Limited in liquidation) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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CANDEY LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Robert Miles QC and Andrew de Mestre (instructed by Candey LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21 June 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Colin Rimer :
Introduction
The facts
The Fixed Fee agreement
'[Peak] does not wish to pay [Candey's] invoiced and unbilled costs incurred to date or provide further funds in advance on account on a weekly basis and wishes instead to agree a fixed liability fee payable at a future date. It is therefore agreed that [Peak] will pay [Candey] a fixed fee of £3,860,637.48 (the "Fixed Fee"). It is agreed that to assist [Peak's] cash flow [Peak] is not obliged to pay the Fixed Fee before judgment on liability is handed down or a settlement is agreed in the Tarek proceedings unless [Peak] obtains cash from elsewhere as set out in this agreement. Interest at 8% per annum will accrue from judgment or settlement.'
'8. [Candey] may terminate this agreement at any time for any reason without liability to [Peak]. In those circumstances, or if [Peak] wishes to terminate this agreement, [Peak] will remain liable for the Outstanding Costs, plus the Fixed Fee and all disbursements, subject of course to all its legal rights. The Fixed Fee and Outstanding Costs become immediately due for payment in the event that [Peak] is subject to any bona fide insolvency proceedings or arrangement or insolvency related Court order.
11. As continuing security for the payment and discharge of all liabilities due from [Peak] to [Candey] pursuant to this agreement [Peak] shall execute a Deed of Charge and Security in the form annexed to this agreement. '
The charge
'As continuing security for the payment and discharge of all liabilities to [Candey] pursuant to the fixed fee agreement of today's date [Peak] hereby charges to [Candey]:
(1) by way of fixed charge, all assets and undertakings of [Peak], including shares, present or future, and including all monies in Court in all jurisdictions worldwide;
(3) by way of floating charge, all such or further assets belonging to [Peak] that are not today capable of being charged by way of fixed charge (including any such assets described at (1) or (2) above in the event the fixed charge is defective for any reason).' (My emphasis.)
Peak's entry into liquidation
' There was a liability in respect of Counsel's brief fees and an outstanding obligation pursuant to a court order to pay additional security for costs. There was a risk of adverse costs in respect of the Defendants' costs in the London Litigation, which was covered neither by insurance nor fully covered by the existing sums paid into court. Having unsuccessfully attempted to obtain a third party fortified indemnity in respect of adverse costs, the Liquidators decided that the appropriate course was to seek to settle the London Litigation. Ultimately they were successful in this endeavour. The terms of settlement provided for the release to Peak of the two sums of money paid into court of US $10 million and £1,648,000. These sums were paid to the Liquidators by order of Asplin J dated 7 March 2016.'
'The parties have agreed that the matter is conveniently dealt with by the English court. This is against the background of an exclusive English jurisdiction clause in the Fixed Fee Agreement, the close co-incidence between the English s245 Insolvency Act 1986 and s247 of the Virgin Islands Insolvency Act 2003, the recognition of the BVI liquidation in this jurisdiction and that the assets considered by Candey to be caught by the relevant charges are held by the Liquidators within this jurisdiction.'
Did Peak have a proprietary interest in the money it paid into court?
'Mr Pennycuick [leading counsel for the purchaser] is entitled to say that, apart from any authority, no other possible meaning can be put upon the [Greenwood v. Turner] order than that what has to be paid into court is not a sum of money equivalent to the purchase price but is the purchase price or that part of it which remains unpaid; and he says that if the purchase price is paid into court, then, by application of the rule of equity that that must be treated as done which ought to be done, in equity it goes to the vendor and must therefore be a quittance of the purchaser.
I cannot accept that view. On looking at the order and considering its ancestry, I do not think that such a thing was in the contemplation of those who started this convenient practice. The court is doing no more than to take the money into its keeping to abide the result of the action. Both the purchaser and the vendor may fairly say they have equitable interests in it. I certainly do not think it right to say that the vendor has such a paramount equitable interest in the fund as to make it equivalent to the type of equitable interest a purchaser has in the land which the vendor has agreed to sell him. (My emphasis.)
My brother Jenkins, at the end of Mr Pennycuick's reply, asked what would happen if, for some reason, after payment in the contract went off altogether; and Mr Pennycuick was forced to say that, apart from some court rate of interest which the payer-in would get back, any interest on the sum invested would go to the vendor; in other words, it would be wrong to deprive him of the equitable interest which, on that view of it, he acquired by virtue of the payment in. I cannot think that that is right.'
' I am clearly of opinion that if the proof is admitted, or to the extent to which it is admitted, the plaintiff is a secured creditor by reason of the payment into court. The money paid into court, even with a plea denying liability, has become subject to the plaintiff's claim by the act of the defendant, who thereby agrees that the sum paid in shall remain in court subject to the conditions of Order XXII., r.6. It is not a question of execution at all, but of the effect of a conventional charge. It is in effect a conditional payment to the plaintiff. The money is to be the money of the plaintiff if he succeeds in establishing his title to it: In re Mojen 12 Ch. D. 26'.
' it is settled that where money is ordered to be paid into court to abide the event it must be treated as security that the plaintiff shall not lose the benefit of the decision of the court in his favour: The very object of such an order is that the plaintiff shall be in as good a position, so far as money paid in extends, against contingencies such as bankruptcy as if he had got an immediate judgment.'
' if the money were allowed to remain in court, and the plaintiffs succeeded in recovering a judgment in excess of anything to which the defendants might be entitled on the counterclaim, they would be able to satisfy that judgment, in whole or in part, by taking money out of court. To that extent, if it turned out that the company were indeed insolvent, they would be given a preference over the general body of creditors, which would produce a result which in a general sense would be inequitable.'
'Secondly (and for my part I attach a good deal of importance to this), the receiver is acting as receiver on behalf of Lloyds Bank, who are the debenture holders and have a fixed and floating charge upon the whole of the defendant's assets. Any money, therefore, that comes into the hands of the receiver will be applied in accordance with his obligation towards those who appointed him. If the money is allowed to remain in court, and if the plaintiffs recover upwards of £4,000, it is likely that that money would be paid out to the plaintiffs in pro tanto satisfaction of what would be recoverable under the judgment. They would thus become in the position of secured creditors, or preferred creditors, and thus in a far better position than that in which they would be as judgment creditors.'
'1. The Peal Furniture case proceeds upon two propositions which, if I may respectfully say so, appear to me to be open to doubt. The first is that in exercising the discretion as to payment out to a defendant it is right to have regard to matters occurring right outside and having no connection with the litigation, that is to say the interests of some person who is a stranger to the litigation and whose relationship with the defendant in no way affects the dispute between plaintiff and defendant. The second is that the money in court remains, as it were, an asset of the defendant which, on his bankruptcy, forms part of his property available for distribution. Speaking entirely for myself, I question that approach. That the money in court may become such an asset is unquestionable if an order is made for payment out. But in my judgment a defendant paying into court under RSC, Ord 22, r.1, parts outright with his money. I doubt whether it can be said that the Accountant-General is a trustee in whose hands his money can be traced. Nor is there a "debt" or chose in action in the accepted sense of the word. The money becomes entirely subject to whatever order the court may see fit to make and to treat it as the defendant's property available for distribution in his bankruptcy is to assume, for the purposes of exercising the court's discretion, the very situation which will only arise if the court exercises its discretion in a particular way.
2. In my judgment the principles emerging from the In re Gordon line of cases are still applicable to money paid in under the current rules. The plaintiffs are therefore secured creditors to the extent of that money in the defendants' liquidation and that event cannot, by itself, constitute a change of circumstances which can properly be regarded as justifying the court in exercising its discretion to order repayment. While, therefore, I appreciate the dilemma with which the judge was faced, I am forced to the conclusion that in adopting the starting position that the plaintiffs were unsecured creditors, he misdirected himself. I would allow the appeal and restore the order of the registrar.'
'Any such sum will normally be paid into court "to the credit of the action." It is thereafter governed by RSC, Ord. 22, r.8 which among other things provides that it shall not be paid out except in pursuance of an order of the court. However that rule also provides that where the party who has paid money into court has done so in pursuance of an order made under RSC Order 14 he may by notice to the other party in the action appropriate the money, or any part of it, to a particular claim made in the writ or he may plead tender and by his pleading appropriate the whole or part of the money to that tender, and in either case the money is thereafter to be treated as if it had been paid into court in accordance with Ord. 22, r.1 and/or Ord. 18, r. 16. The provisions of Ord. 22, r. 8 reflect the fact that the money although paid into court is still the defendant's money. The defendant has the general property in that money. Referring to the ordinary position where money has been paid into court under Order 22, Eveleigh LJ in Polish Steam Ship Co. v. Atlantic Maritime Co. [1985] QB 41, 50, said:
"generally money in court was not treated as belonging to the person claiming damages. He could take out the money in court, although if he delayed in doing so leave was required. He did not at the same time take out any interest which had accrued: the interest, if any, belonged to the person who had paid the money in."
The status of the money in court as the defendants' money and the nature of the rights which the plaintiffs have in respect of that money are further confirmed by cases concerning defendants who have gone bankrupt after making the payment into court. A plaintiff is still a creditor of the insolvent defendant but to the extent of the payment into court he is a secured creditor. The leading cases on the subject were followed and applied by Wright J in In re Ford, Ex parte The Trustee [1900] 2 QB 211 [from whose judgment Hobhouse J cited, after which he continued as follows]. The money in court has not ceased to be the property of the bankrupt but the plaintiff in the action has acquired the right to treat it as security for his claim. The right of the plaintiff is thus analogous to having an equitable charge on the money. The precise nature of the plaintiff's interest in the fund may depend upon the cause of action which he is asserting and the claim that he is making in the action. Where he is claiming in debt, or claiming an identified sum, there may be some basis for treating him as if he was in the position of asserting a title to the sum in court. Where the plaintiff's claim, as in the present action, is a claim for unliquidated damages no such proprietary interest could arise, and the plaintiff's interest can at best be of the nature of an equitable charge giving him a right after judgment to have recourse to that fund to satisfy his judgment.
The decision in Pearlberg v. May [1951] Ch 699 is consistent with these conclusions. [Hobhouse J then summarised the issue in Pearlberg, cited from the headnote in the report at [1951] 1 All ER 1001, which referred to the decision in the case that both vendor and purchaser had equitable interests in the fund and continued as follows.] In other words, even in such a case the payment in did not transfer the title to the money to the vendor or discharge the purchaser's liability. But it did give the vendor equitable rights in respect of the fund.
Therefore if this money had been paid into court to the credit of the present actions the position in my judgment would be that the money remained the general property of the defendants but was charged with whatever may be found to be the liability of the defendants to the plaintiffs. When the money is in court it is not necessary or profitable to consider the relationship of the court or its officials to that fund. The fund can only be dealt with in accordance with orders or authorisations of the court.
In the present case the money has not been paid into court but into a joint account in the names of the parties' then solicitors "to abide the event of the action." I consider that the use of this phrase is intended to create a situation which is equivalent to that where the money has been paid into court. The difference is simply a ministerial difference for the convenience and benefit of the parties. '
' when the £275,000 odd reached the husband's solicitors, it ceased to be part of the husband's own estate. Thus the interim receiver had no right to claim this money when he was appointed. He was no more entitled to claim this money than he would have been if this had been a sum of money in court.'
' the money in court is the defendant's property, but it is subject to a relatively flexible control of the court, which, on any application, must take into account the interests and rights and duties of the claimant, the defendant, and of Sporting and City and, at least arguably, of others, such as any Trustee in Bankruptcy of the defendant if he is made bankrupt, or the equivalent, strikingly called en desastre in Guernsey, or possibly any other creditor.'
The decision in Cantor is, so far as it goes, therefore favourable to Candey and adverse to the liquidators.
'Even if, with the benefit of the Court's final judgment, the funds could, in retrospect, be said to have been owned by one side of the record or the other, or in particular proportions, the fact is that ownership of the whole was in dispute at the time the funds were paid into court, and neither side could be said, at that time, to have had more than rights contingent upon the Court's determination of their dispute '.
'97. My decision not now to make an order for payment out of the disputed funds has three bases. First, the funds in court were paid into court, and are retained in court, as "security" for any monetary liability that might be established in the proceedings, including a liability for costs. Secondly, the defendants, and their lawyers, have no property interest in the funds in court that mandates that they have "priority" over the plaintiffs in the due administration of the funds in court. Thirdly, as the plaintiffs' costs entitlements have yet, in the ordinary course, to be quantified in the pending assessment process there is no compelling reason to do other than await the completion of the process.
98. The defendants' application is no stronger for presentation in terms of a claim to a charge over funds in court granted to their lawyers. Even if the defendants had a proprietary right to payment out, any charge in favour of their lawyers was taken with notice of the fact of payment in and subject to orders of the Court for disposition of the funds. The defendants cannot dictate the fate of the funds in court by an ex post facto grant of a charge.
99. At least in proceedings in which parties have agreed that moneys be paid into court "to abide the order of the Court" in circumstances in which there is no pre-existing trust, the right of the claimant of funds in court may, generally, be a right to due administration of the funds in court, and a right to be heard about disposition of those funds, rather than a right of property: Harmer v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1991) 173 CLR 264, at 272-274.
100. Four points of present interest can be drawn from Harmer's case.
101. First, if funds paid into court are the subject of a pre-existing trust, the funds paid in remain (as between competing claimants to the fund) subject to the pre-existing trust notwithstanding the payment in: 173 CLR 272, 272-273 and 274.
102. Secondly, if the funds paid into court are not the subject of a pre-existing trust but are the subject of a disputed liability in debt, no party has an interest in the funds that is vested in interest or possession; each party has no more than an interest contingent upon orders of the Court; and competing claimants have an interest in the funds in the sense that they are entitled to insist that the funds be properly administered and applied for the purposes for which they were paid in: 173 CLR 272-273.
103. Thirdly, insofar as funds in court may be held on trust pursuant to legislation governing court practice and procedure, the trust may be regarded (subject to the terms of the legislation) as a trust for statutory purposes and the interest of contributors to the fund (vis-ΰ-vis the trustee) is an entitlement in equity to have the trust fund duly administered rather than a property interest in the fund in specie
111. Fourthly (and by inference from the first three of these propositions), funds paid into court for a particular purpose associated, as it must be, with the administration of justice by the Court, are dedicated to that purpose and orders made by the Court in pursuit of that purpose. It is not open to claimants to the funds, by private agreement unattended by an order of the Court, to divert the funds away from a purpose to which they are dedicated or to override orders of the Court.'
' a party cannot create or charge a property right to funds in court that does not exist; it can only deal with what it has or, as discussed in Norman v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1963) 109 CLR 9 at 24-34, by a contract to deal with "future property", what it might ultimately receive when funds are paid out of court. '
'For present purposes, the relevant part of Oliver LJ's judgment begins at 1056G, where he expressly doubted the proposition (upon which the Court of Appeal had proceeded in an earlier case) "that money in court remains, as it were, an asset of the defendant which, on his bankruptcy, forms part of his property available for distribution.'
'30. Having set out his views as to the proper approach to rule 72.10, the judge held, at paras 2225, that once money was paid into court it was the equivalent of unencumbered cash. It followed, in the judge's view, that the right to receive the money did not constitute an asset of MWP and could not be the subject of a charge in favour of KHI. On this basis, even if the charges relied on by KHI were valid, there was nothing for them to "to bite on" unless and until the funds were credited to MWP's account; and that would not happen if Mr Emmott were able successfully to assert a claim under rule 72.10.
31. This conclusion gives rise to the second issue that arises on the appeal.
32. Mr Samek [leading counsel for MWP] submitted that where money has been paid into court it is still the judgment debtor's money, although the judgment creditor is entitled to treat it as security: see Halvanon Insurance Co Ltd v. Central Reinsurance Corpn [1988] 1 WLR 1122, 1126, 1127, per Hobhouse J. Thus the sum of £150,000 paid into court by MWP was MWP's property, subject to [the AP's] security interest, and the sum of £166,000 representing the sum paid into court by [the AP] remained their property, subject to MWP's security interest. Once the Court of Appeal made the order for payment out, MWP retained the interest in the fund it had paid in and acquired an interest in the sum paid by [the AP].
33. We accept this submission. As at 2 December 2014 (the date of the Court of Appeal's order for payment out to MWP of the money in court), MWP became entitled to that money. It became an asset of MWP or, to use the words of rule 72.10, it became money "standing to the credit of the judgment debtor in court".'
'By acquiescing in the payment of the moneys in the CFO to MWP's current account with HSBC, which would be subject to no more than a floating charge, KHI was precluded from asserting any right or interest that would defeat Mr Emmott's claim as a judgment creditor.'
Discussion and conclusion
Disposition
Lord Justice Henderson :
Lord Justice Patten :