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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Leighton Contracting (Qatar) WLL v Simms & Ors [2011] EWHC 1735 (Ch) (22 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/1735.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1735 (Ch), [2011] BPIR 1395 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
The Prior Courts 33 Bull Street Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a judge of the High Court)
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LEIGHTON CONTRACTING (QATAR) WLL | Applicant | |
-v- | ||
RICHARD FRANK SIMMS | First Defendant | |
-and- | ||
CAROLYNN JEAN CLARK | Second Defendant | |
-and- | ||
ROOFLITE LIMITED | Third Defendant |
____________________
Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 104, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838
Counsel for the First and Second Defendant: MISS STONEFROST
Counsel for the Third Defendant: MR BRIGGS
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"If the chairman is in doubt whether a claim should be admitted or rejected, he shall mark it as objected to and allow votes to be cast in respect of it, subject to such votes being subsequently declared invalid if the objection to the claim is sustained".
"A creditor may vote in respect of a debt for an unliquidated amount or any debt whose value is not ascertained and for the purpose of voting (but not otherwise) his debt shall be valued at £1 unless the chairman agrees to put a higher value on it".
Upon Mr Cook indicating that that was so, I gave directions for such an application to be prepared and heard if Leighton so desired.
"Further or in the alternative that with regard to the applicant's vote at the meeting of creditors held on 20th August 2010 in respect of the above named company the decision of the chairman be reversed or varied on such terms as shall to this honourable seem just on the footing that…"
and then here are the amendments:
"(a) the applicant's claim to the sums of US$1,299,646 and US$ 727,152 should have been marked objected to and the applicant been allowed to vote in respect of such sums" [which was the case that was argued on 17th and 18th February, so that is really an enunciation of the existing case]; alternatively,
(b) if and insofar as the applicant's claim for US$727,152 is in respect of a debt for an unliquidated amount or a debt whose value is not ascertained, the chairman should not have valued it at £1 but should have valued it at £453,698.63 and at certainly no less than £94,494.80, being the sum by which the creditors' voluntary arrangement would have been defeated". That, of course, is the import of the new, or amended, argument which Mr Cook, for Leighton, now seeks permission to advance.
"I understand that the argument raised in the March application, in addition to those already raised in the September application, is that if the applicant's claim for $727,152 is determined to be unliquidated, or to be a debt with an unascertained value, that as chairman I should not have valued the applicant's claim at £1 but should have valued it at £453,698.63, or at not less than £94,494.80 [That obviously is just picking up clause 2(b) of the proposed amended application notice].
In the light of the applicant having issued the March application I wish to record that at no time during the meeting was I asked to determine that the applicant's claim was anything other than liquidated or unliquidated. The solicitor representing the applicant presented the scenario to me as a choice between the two alternatives, liquidated or unliquidated. In her view, as set out in her witness statement at paragraph 9(ii), the correct decision for me to have reached was that her client's claim was liquidated. At no time did she suggest that her client's claim could or ought to have been characterised as unliquidated or that the value of more than £1 ought to be attributed to it.
At the meeting the solicitor did suggest, as set out at paragraph 26 of her witness statement, that her client's claim could be split, using her figures, into two parts of approximately $720,000 and approximately $1.2 million respectively and that I should determine each limb of the applicant's claim should be treated individually. For example, I could determine that one limb was liquidated and the other unliquidated.
At no time did the solicitor argue that if I did determine that either limb, or indeed both limbs, of her client's claim were unliquidated that I should attribute a value to either or both limbs of more than £1 but less than the full sum claimed in respect of each limb. She certainly did not argue that the claim for approximately $720,000 should be attributed a value of either £453,000 odd [and the precise figure is given] or £94,000 odd [and again the precise figure is given]. The solicitor argued that her client's claim was liquidated and it should be admitted in full.
On the basis that I was never asked to consider either limb of the applicant's claim as having a value of more than £1 but less than the full sum claimed I do not understand how there can have been a material irregularity at the meeting which would allow the applicant now to challenge my decision on the basis stated in the March application."
It concludes:
"I have in a supplemental statement sought to explain how matters appeared to me as the chairman of the meeting. If the court permits the September application to be amended, the court will continue to look at the applicant's claim afresh and, so far as the court's decision on the matter is concerned, the first and second respondents continue to remain neutral."
"[The solicitor] explaining that, as a starting point, it was irrelevant whether the claim was disputed for the purpose of today's meeting, since it was apparent that it was. It was also the case that [Mr Ford] would be unlikely to be able to say clearly whether the claim was a "good" or "bad" claim, therefore it should be admitted for voting purposes but marked as disputed. [Mr Ford] agreeing with this position.
[The solicitor] explaining that the question to determine was whether the claim was liquidated or not and, to this end, it was clear that it was a liquidated claim, since the sums involved were ascertainable and, should Leighton be able to defeat the Company's argument and opposition, the full sum of the claim (i.e. all monies paid over to the Company) would be repayable to Leighton.
"It provides a simple and clear rule for the chairman, not a lawyer, faced at a large meeting with speedy decisions necessary to be made to enable the meeting to reach a decision. On that basis the chairman must look at the claim; if it is plain or obvious that it is a good claim he admits it, if it is plain or obvious that it is bad he rejects it, if there is a question, a doubt, he shall admit it but mark it as objected".
"If the chairman decides to mark the claim as objected to he must allow the alleged creditor to vote, but the vote is subject to subsequently declared invalid if the objection to the proof is sustained. This is expressly provided for in r 4.70(3) itself" which has its equivalent in IR 1.17.
"Yet the only right of appeal is that contain in r 4.70(2) which allows appeal against the chairman's decision. Even if the objection to the proof is subsequently sustained, with the result that the creditor's vote is invalidated, the chairman's decision may have been entirely correct. It is an oddity if an appeal succeeds against an entirely correct decision that that seems to be inherent in the way in which the rule is framed".
"Be that as it may, r 4.70(2) is the mechanism by which an objection to a proof may be tested. It is important to emphasise, however, that what is in issue at this stage is the validity of the proof for the purposes of voting; not the validity of the proof for the purposes of participating in a dividend".
"A creditor may vote in respect of a debt for an unliquidated amount or a debt whose value is not ascertained and for the purposes of voting but not otherwise his debt shall be valued at £1 unless the chairman agrees to put a higher value on it."