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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 >> Gaardsoe v Optimal Wealth Management [2012] EWHC 3266 (Ch) (28 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/3266.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3266 (Ch), [2013] Ch 298, [2013] BPIR 59, [2013] 2 WLR 550, [2013] BCC 53 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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MR. T. GAARDSOE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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OPTIMAL WEALTH MANAGEMENT |
Defendant |
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1st Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
DX 410 LDE
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. Fax No: 020 7831 6864.
e-mail: [email protected]
MR. A. HALL TAYLOR (instructed by Plexus Law) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
*** Transcript prepared without access to the case documents ***
MR MARTIN QC:
"No legal process (including legal proceedings, execution, distress and diligence) may be instituted or continued against the company or property of the company except -- (a) with the consent of the administrator, or (b) with the permission of the court."
"1. A declaration that the court does not have jurisdiction over this claim and 2. An order that the claim form, alternatively service of the claim form, be set aside on the grounds that the defendant was in administration prior to the issue of the claim form and so the consent of the defendant's administrator, or the permission of the court was required before the claim form was issued, pursuant to paragraph 43 of schedule B1 of the Insolvency Act 1986, such consent or permission not having been sought."
"It is [the defendant's] case that section 285(3) requires that the leave of the court to the commencement of proceedings can be given only before they commence; that in point of jurisdiction retrospective consent is not a possibility and that so-called proceedings begun without leave are a nullity which no late giving of leave can thereafter validate. On many facts such a submission would involve, if successful, only the making of a fresh start by way of the plaintiff seeking leave, obtaining it and then recommencing proceedings. Time and money would there have been wasted but nothing else. But in the cases before me there can be no effective fresh start as, if fresh proceedings were to be launched, they would assuredly be met with limitation defences to which, I think I may take it, the plaintiffs have as yet found no answer. Matters have thus been argued on the basis that if the plaintiffs' existing proceedings cannot be retrospectively validated by being given leave even at this stage, then they will all necessarily fail."
"There was a practice in England dating back at least to [1891], a practice recognised to be such at least as early as [1893], that proceedings in insolvency begun without the stipulated leave should not be regarded as irretrievably null but rather as existing and capable of redemption by the late giving of leave. Judges and counsel of great experience in England, from [1891] to [1969], treated retrospective leave in insolvency as a thing capable of being granted and as requiring no particular discussion. As the Court of Appeal emphasised in Rendall v. Blair, the legislature knows well enough how to provide that leave shall be a strict condition precedent to valid proceedings being issued and that clear words are to be used if that is intended, words perhaps even requiring a provision for the dismissal of the proceedings if the condition precedent is not satisfied. Without some such clear language being used the provision can be taken to be directory - the word used in Rendall v. Blair and in Australia. To the same effect is the view taken in [Canada] and elsewhere that a want of leave is only an irregularity. Further, the legislature in England can be expected to have observed at least the course of judicial decisions in England. Even without the persuasive analysis to such a conclusion in Nazir Ahmad v Peoples Bank of Northern India that the language used in English insolvency provisions had come, by 1913, to have a recognised legal meaning in England, I am entitled to expect the legislature in England to have had that long recognised meaning in mind when it came to legislate in 1986."
"In our view, the purposes of the insolvency legislation can quite well be served without requiring that a summons served, or an application made, without prior consent should be considered to be a nullity or incompetent. The purpose of the legislation is, in general terms, to prevent the liquidators' or administrators' task being made more difficult, by a scramble among creditors to raise actions, obtain decrees or attach assets. We cannot, however, see that there is any reason why it should be necessary for the provision of such protection to treat any proceedings which may, for one reason or another be commenced without consent as null, and, therefore, incapable of proceeding further."