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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Bootes & Ors v Ceart Risk Services Ltd [2012] EWHC 1178 (Ch) (03 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/1178.html Cite as: [2012] WLR(D) 136, [2012] EWHC 1178 (Ch), [2013] Bus LR 116, [2012] BCC 592 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF CEART RISK SERVICES LIMITED AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 (1) PETER LLOYD BOOTES (2) JEREMY CHARLES FROST (3) STEPHEN PATRICK JENS WADSTEAD |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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CEART RISK SERVICES LIMITED |
Respondent |
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The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 25 April 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Introduction
The facts
Section 362A of FSMA 2000
"Administrator appointed by company or directors
(1) This section applies in relation to a company of a kind described in section 362(1)(a) to (c).
(2) An administrator of the company may not be appointed under paragraph 22 of Schedule B1 to the 1986 Act or paragraph 23 of Schedule B1 to the 1989 Order without the consent of the Authority.
(3) Consent under subsection (2)—
(a) must be in writing, and
(b) must be filed with the court along with the notice of intention to appoint under paragraph 27 of Schedule B1 to the 1986 Act or paragraph 28 of Schedule B1 to the 1989 Order.
(4) In a case where no notice of intention to appoint is required—
(a) subsection (3)(b) shall not apply, but
(b) consent under subsection (2) must accompany the notice of appointment filed under paragraph 29 of Schedule B1 to the 1986 Act or paragraph 30 of Schedule B1 to the 1989 Order."
Were the Administrators validly appointed with effect from 19 January 2012 or 8 February 2012?
"A recurrent theme in the drafting of statutes is that Parliament casts its commands in imperative form without expressly spelling out the consequences of a failure to comply. It has been the source of a great deal of litigation. In the course of the last 130 years a distinction evolved between mandatory and directory requirements. The view was taken that where the requirement is mandatory, a failure to comply with it invalidates the act in question. Where it is merely directory, a failure to comply does not invalidate what follows. There were refinements. For example, a distinction was made between two types of directory requirements, namely (1) requirements of a purely regulatory character where a failure to comply would never invalidate the act, and (2) requirements where a failure to comply would not invalidate an act provided that there was substantial compliance. ..."
"… I am in respectful agreement with the Australian High Court [in Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355] that the rigid mandatory and directory distinction, and its many artificial refinements, have outlived their usefulness. Instead, as held in Attorney General's Reference (No 3 of 1999) [2001] 2 AC 91, the emphasis ought to be on the consequences of non-compliance, and posing the question whether Parliament can fairly be taken to have intended total invalidity. That is how I would approach what is ultimately a question of statutory construction. …"
"The appointment of an administrator under paragraph 22 takes effect when the requirements of paragraph 29 are satisfied."
Paragraph 29(1) of Schedule B1 provides:
"A person who appoints an administrator under paragraph 22 shall file with the court-
(a) a notice of appointment, and
(b) such other documents as may be prescribed."
Should a declaration be made under paragraph 104?
"An act of the administrator of a company is valid in spite of a defect in his appointment or qualification."
"6. Where there is a defect in the appointment of an administrator the judges at first instance are agreed that the Insolvency Rules 1986 (SI 1986/1925) r.7.55 cannot be used to waive the defect.
7. In G-Tech Construction Ltd [2007] BPIR 1275 Hart J. took the view that the only course open was to make a fresh administration order with retrospective effect. In Re Blights Builders Ltd [2006] EWHC 3549 (Ch); [2007] BCC 712, unaware of the decision in G-Tech Construction Ltd, I took a different course, making a fresh administration order with prospective effect and validating the acts of the administrator who had been defectively appointed under para.104 of Sch.B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986. Hart J. had also been invited to take this course but had held ([16]):
'It is certainly the case that that provision plainly may [assist] in assessing the validity of acts done by a person purporting to be an administrator, but it does [not] seem to me to provide in itself a cure for the fact that … there has been no administration … if the requirements of para 29 have not been complied with.'
8. For my own part (and with considerable diffidence in differing from Hart J.) I adhere to my view that para.104 may supply the answer in many cases. As Lord Simonds said (of similar provisions in s.143 of the Companies Act 1929 and art.88 of the then-current Table A) in Morris v Kanssen [1946] A.C. 459 at 471, 472:
'There is … a vital distinction between (a) an appointment in which there is a defect or, in other words, a defective appointment, and (b) no appointment at all. In the first case it is implied that some act is done which purports to be an appointment but is by reason of some defect inadequate to the purpose; in the second case there is not a defect, there is no act at all … [T]he section and article alike deal with slips or irregularities in appointment not with a total absence of appointment …'
It may well be that para.104 is of no assistance where there is no power to make an appointment (for example because there is no valid charge in respect of which the power under para.14 of Sch.B1 could be exercised, or the persons purporting to appoint an administrator under para.22 are not themselves directors). But it may well be that para.104 is of assistance where there is a power to make an appointment but that power has been defectively exercised through some irregularity in procedure.
9. Mr Solomons and Mr Defty made (but did not pursue) an application for validation under para.104. Thus the point was not argued before me: and I am conscious (a) that both Proudman J. in Re Kaupthing Capital Partners II Master LP Inc; Pillar Securitisation SARL v Spicer [2010] EWHC 836 (Ch); [2011] BCC 338 and Henderson J. in Re Frontsouth (Witham) Ltd [2011] EWHC 1668 (Ch); [2011] BCC 635 accepted Hart J.'s view on para.104 without comment; and (b) that a wider debate ranges around s.232 of the Insolvency Act 1986. Having reflected on the matter I have decided that the only proper course for me to take in the circumstances is to accept (with the same misgivings voiced by Morgan J. and Henderson J.) that the jurisdiction identified in G-Tech Construction Ltd provides the only answer in the instant case, and to consider whether I may properly exercise it."
Should a retrospective appointment be made?
Conclusion
i) the appointment of the Administrators took effect when the FSA's consent to their appointment was filed with Croydon County Court; and
ii) notwithstanding the defect in their appointment on 19 January 2012, the Administrators' acts between that date and the date when the FSA's consent to their appointment was filed with Croydon County Court were valid.