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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 >> Southern Pacific Personal Loans Ltd, Re [2013] EWHC 2485 (Ch) (08 August 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/2485.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 336, [2014] CH 426, [2013] 2 BCLC 465, [2014] 2 WLR 1067, [2014] 1 All ER 98, [2014] 1 Ch 426, [2013] EWHC 2485 (Ch), [2014] BCC 56, [2014] 1 CH 426 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
IN THE MATTER OF SOUTHERN PACIFIC PERSONAL LOANS LIMITED
IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
____________________
(1) IAN CHRISTOPHER OAKLEY SMITH (2) JULIAN GUY PARR |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER |
Interested Party |
____________________
Robin Hopkins (instructed by Richard Bailey, Information Commissioner's Office) for the Information Commissioner
Hearing date: 29 July 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Richards :
"a person who (either alone or jointly or in common with other persons) determines the purposes for which and the manner in which any personal data are, or are to be, processed."
A "data processor", in relation to personal data, means "any person (other than an employee of the data controller) who processes the data on behalf of the data controller". "Processing" includes "obtaining, recording or holding the information or data". A "data subject" is an individual who is the subject of personal data.
"5. Personal data processed for any purpose or purposes shall not be kept for longer than is necessary for that purpose or those purposes.
6. Personal data shall be processed in accordance with the rights of data subjects under this Act."
Subject to the following provisions of this section and to sections 8, 9 and 9A, an individual is entitled-
(a) to be informed by any data controller whether personal data of which that individual is the data subject are being processed by or on behalf of that controller,
(b) if that is the case, to be given by the data controller a description of –
(i) the personal data of which that individual is the data subject,
(ii) the purposes for which they are being or are to be processed, and
(iii) the recipients or classes of recipients to whom they are or may be disclosed,
(c) to have communicated to him in an intelligible form –
(i) the information constituting any personal data of which that individual is the data subject, and
(ii) any information available to the data controller as to the source of those data
(a) Whether or not Ian Christopher Oakley Smith and Julian Guy Parr (together, "the Liquidators") are 'data controllers' within the meaning of section 1(1) of the Data Protection Act 1998 ("the DPA").
(b) If question 1(a) is determined in the affirmative, whether or not the liquidators may refuse to comply with requests made by 'data subjects' (under section 1(1) of the DPA) made pursuant to section 7(1) of the DPA.
(c) Alternatively to question 1(b), whether or not the Liquidators may dispose of all 'personal data' (under section 1(1) of the DPA) in their control in their capacity as Liquidators of Southern Pacific Personal Loans Limited ("the Company").
(d) Alternatively to questions 1(b) and 1(c), whether or not the Liquidators may disclaim the personal data in their control, and thereby cease to be data controllers of the same.
As will appear, it is not necessary on this application to come to a final view on questions (b) and (d).
4. "Power to bring or defend any action or other legal proceeding in the name and on behalf of the company.
5. Power to carry on the business of the company so far as maybe necessary for its beneficial winding up.
6. Power to sell any of the company's property by public auction or private contract with power to transfer the whole of it to any person or to sell the same in parcels.
7. Power to do all acts and execute, in the name and on behalf of the company, all deeds, receipts and other documents and for that purpose to use, when necessary, the company's seal.
9. Power to draw, accept, make and indorse any bill of exchange or promissory note in the name and on behalf of the company, with the same effect with respect to the company's liability as if the bill or note had been drawn, accepted, made or indorsed by or on behalf of the company in the course of its business."
"…a liquidator is only the agent of the company. In a voluntary winding-up the liquidator is appointed by the company itself to act as their agent. In a compulsory winding up he is appointed by the Court to act for the company; and that seems to be good sense, and has been so settled. The contract with the solicitor is a contract by him as agent for the company on behalf of the company, and to be carried into effect out of the assets of the company. That is so settled; and I think we should be very loathe to disturb decisions upon the authority of which for years windings-up have been conducted."
At page 134 Mellish LJ said:
"The liquidator is in a different position from a trustee in bankruptcy. He has not the assets of the company vested in him. In the case of a voluntary winding-up he is the officer of the company who acts instead of the directors. He is no more personally liable for contracts which he makes on behalf of the company than the directors would be for the contracts they make on behalf of a company. In the case of a compulsory winding-up in the same way the official liquidator has not the assets vested in him, and the solicitor who is appointed with the sanction of the Court must be assumed, in the absence of an express bargain, to trust to the assets of the company."
"In my view a voluntary liquidator is more rightly described as the agent of the company – an agent who has, no doubt, cast upon him by statute and otherwise special duties, amongst which may be mentioned the duty of applying the company's assets in paying creditors and distributing the surplus among the shareholders."
"But the whole of these powers given to him are to do acts on behalf of the company. There is no express provision in the Act in the case of a compulsory liquidation as there is in the case of a voluntary liquidation, that the powers of the directors shall cease upon the appointment of a liquidator…, but they do in fact cease on the appointment of a liquidator in a compulsory liquidation. In that case the liquidator is imposed upon the company compulsorily by the Court to do acts on behalf of the company and to carry on the business of the company so far as it shall be necessary for the purposes of the winding-up. It is quite true that the company does not choose him; he is put there by the Court; but he is put there to do the acts which the directors of the company did before their powers ceased: with this restriction, of course, that in all that he does he must have regard to the interests of the creditors of the company."
Applying this to the case before the court, he held that the assignment of the lease would be made by the liquidator acting on behalf of the company and would therefore be an assignment by the company itself.
"In my view, the position of a liquidator appointed by the Court is not the same as that of a receiver and manager appointed by the Court. A liquidator is the agent of the company: In re Anglo-Moravian Hungarian Junction Railway Company, Ex parte Watkin; a receiver is not: Burt Boulton & Hayward v Bull. It is true that both are appointed and can be dismissed by the Court, and both control the assets of the company and may have to carry out the contracts of the company, but the liquidator acts for and in the interests of the company; whereas the receiver and manager acts for and in the interests of the debenture holders and not for the company."
"Subsection (2) does not apply in relation to the power of the liquidator –
(a) to take into his custody or under his control all the property to which the company is or appears to be entitled;
(b) to dispose of perishable goods and other goods the value of which is likely to diminish if they are not immediately disposed of; and
(c) to do all such other things as may be necessary for the protection of the company's assets."
This is bolstered by the provisions of section 234 of the Insolvency Act 1986 which applies to administrators and administrative receivers as well as to liquidators, all of whom are defined as "the office-holder" for the purposes of the section. Section 234(2) provides:
"Where any person has in his possession or control any property, books, papers or records to which the company appears to be entitled, the court may require that person forthwith (or within such period as the court may direct) to pay, deliver, convey, surrender or transfer the property, books, papers or records to the office-holder."
It was suggested that where such power was exercised, the property in question would be delivered to the office-holder acting as principal rather than as agent of the company.
"The procedure to be followed when a company is being wound up varies in detail according to whether this is done compulsorily under an order of the court or voluntarily pursuant to a resolution of the company in general meeting, and, in the latter case, whether it is a members' voluntary winding up or a creditors' voluntary winding up; but the essential characteristics of the scheme for dealing with the assets of the company do not differ whichever of these procedures is applicable."
In conformity with the 1981 Convention and the Directive, the purpose of s.7, in entitling an individual to have access to information in the form of his "personal data" is to enable him to check whether the data controller's processing of it unlawfully infringes his privacy and, if so, to take such steps as the Act provides, for example in ss.10 to 14, to protect it. It is not an automatic key to any information, readily accessible or not, of matters in which he may be named or involved. Nor is to assist him, for example, to obtain discovery of documents that may assist him in litigation or complaints against third parties. As a matter of practicality and given the focus of the Act on ready accessibility of the information – whether from a computerised or comparably sophisticated non-computerised system – it is likely in most cases that only information that names or directly refers to him will qualify. In this respect, a narrow interpretation of "personal data" goes hand in hand with a narrow meaning of "a relevant filing system", and for the same reasons (see paras [46-51] below). But ready accessibility, though important, is not the starting point.
"The obligation imposed by section 7(1)(c)(i) must be complied with by supplying the data subject with a copy of the information in permanent form unless –
(a) the supply of such a copy is not possible or would involve disproportionate effort, or
(b) the data subject agrees otherwise;
and where any of the information referred to in section 7(1)(c)(i) is expressed in terms which are not intelligible without explanation the copy must be accompanied by an explanation of those terms."