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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 >> Lomas & Ors v Burlington Loan Management Ltd & Ors [2015] EWHC 2269 (Ch) (31 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/2269.html Cite as: [2015] WLR(D) 349, [2015] EWHC 2269 (Ch), [2016] Bus LR 17 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
IN THE MATTER OF LEHMAN BROTHERS INTERNATIONAL (EUROPE)
(IN ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Rolls Building, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) ANTHONY VICTOR LOMAS (2) STEVEN ANTHONY PEARSON (3) PAUL DAVID COPLEY (4) RUSSELL DOWNS (5) JULIAN GUY PARR (THE JOINT ADMINISTRATORS OF LEHMAN BROTHERS INTERNATIONAL (EUROPE) (IN ADMINISTRATION)) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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(1) BURLINGTON LOAN MANAGEMENT LIMITED (2) CVI GVF (LUX) MASTER SÀRL (3) HUTCHINSON INVESTORS LLC (4) WENTWORTH SONS SUB-DEBT SÀRL (5) YORK GLOBAL FINANCE BDH LLC |
Respondents |
____________________
(instructed by Linklaters LLP) for the Applicants
Robin Dicker QC, Richard Fisher and Henry Phillips
(instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP, Ropes & Gray International LLP and Schulte Roth & Zabel International LLP) for the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Respondents
Antony Zacaroli QC, David Allison QC and Adam Al-Attar
(instructed by Kirkland & Ellis International LLP) for the 4th Respondent
Tom Smith QC and Robert Amey (instructed by Michelmores LLP)
for the 5th Respondent
Hearing dates: 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26 February and 9 March 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Richards:
Introduction
i) a first interim dividend of 25.2 pence in the pound pursuant to a notice given on 26 November 2012;ii) a second interim dividend of 43.3 pence in the pound pursuant to a notice given on 19 June 2013;
iii) a third interim dividend of 23.7 pence in the pound pursuant to a notice given on 21 November 2013; and
iv) a fourth and final interim dividend of 7.8 pence in the pound pursuant to a notice given on 23 April 2014.
Rule 2.88
"(1) Where a debt proved in the administration bears interest, that interest is provable as part of the debt except in so far as it is payable in respect of any period after the company entered administration or, if the administration was immediately preceded by a winding up, any period after the date that the company went into liquidation.
(2) In the following circumstances the creditor's claim may include interest on the debt for periods before the company entered administration, although not previously reserved or agreed.
(3) If the debt is due by virtue of a written instrument, and payable at a certain time, interest may be claimed for the period from that time to the date when the company entered administration.
(4) If the debt is due otherwise, interest may only be claimed if, before that date, a demand or payment of the debt was made in writing by or on behalf of the creditor, and notice given that interest would be payable from the date of the demand to the date of payment.
(5) Interest under paragraph (4) may only be claimed for the period from the date of the demand to that of the company's entering administration and for all the purposes of the Act and the Rules shall be chargeable at a rate not exceeding that mentioned in paragraph (6).
(6) The rate of interest to be claimed under paragraphs (3) and (4) is the rate specified in section 17 of the Judgments Act 1838 on the date when the company entered administration.
(7) Any surplus remaining after payment of the debts proved shall, before being applied for any purpose, be applied in paying interest on those debts in respect of the periods during which they have been outstanding since the company entered administration.
(8) All interest payable under paragraph (7) ranks equally whether or not the debts on which it is payable rank equally.
(9) The rate of interest payable under paragraph (7) is whichever is the greater of the rate specified under paragraph (6) or the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration."
The argument on the present application centres largely on sub-paragraphs (7) to (9).
The issues
Issue 1 (paragraph 1 of the application notice)
"Whether on the true construction of rule 2.88(7) of the rules, Statutory Interest is payable on a simple or compound basis where the rate applicable is the rate specified in section 17 of the Judgments Act 1838? If payable on a compound basis, with what frequency is it to be compounded?"
Issue 3 (paragraph 3 of the application notice)
"Whether the words "the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" in Rule 2.88(9) of the Rules refer:
(i) only to a numerical percentage rate of interest; or
(ii) also to a mode of calculating the rate at which interest accrues on a debt, including compounding of interest, such that where a creditor has a right (beyond any right contained in Rule 2.88) to be paid compound interest, whether under an Original Contract or otherwise, the creditor is entitled to compound interest under Rule 2.88(7)."
Issue 5 (paragraph 5 of the application notice)
"Whether, for the purposes of establishing, as required under Rule 2.88(9) of the Rules, "whichever is the greater of the rate specified under paragraph (6) and the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration", the comparison required is of:
(i) the total amounts of interest that would be payable under Rule 2.88(7) based on each method of calculation; or
(ii) only the numerical rates themselves,
and in either case, how the total amount of interest is calculated when the "rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" varies from time to time."
Issue 2 (paragraph 2 of the application notice)
"2. Whether on the true construction of Rule 2.88(7) of the Rules, Statutory Interest is calculated on the basis of allocating dividends:
(i) first to the payment of accrued Statutory Interest at the date of the relevant dividends and then in reduction of the principal;
(ii) first to reduction of the principal and then to the payment of accrued Statutory Interest; or
(iii) on the basis of some other sequencing."
"Where several separate debts are due from the debtor to the creditor, the debtor may, when making a payment, appropriate the money paid to a particular debt or debts, and if the creditor accepts the payment so appropriated, he must apply it in the manner directed by the debtor; if, however, the debtor makes no appropriation when making the payment, the creditor may do so."
"Where there is no appropriation by either debtor or creditor in the case of a debt bearing interest, the law will (unless a contrary intention appears) apply the payment to discharge any interest due before applying it to the earliest items of principal."
"insists that the amount is to be calculated by applying the amount of dividends from time to time received, in discharge of the interest then due, and the surplus, if any, in discharge, pro tanto, of the principal. This, no doubt, is the ordinary mode of calculation, and is the general course of dealing in cases of mortgages, bonds, and other securities, as the principal does, and the interest due does not, carry interest. No creditor would apply any payment to the discharge of part of the principal whilst any interest remained due. If, therefore, these had been merely payments on account, there would be no question between the parties; but it is said on behalf of the obligor's estate, that the payments by way of dividends under the bankruptcy of the co-obligor were appropriated and were paid to and received by the obligee on account of so much principal money, and therefore that interest from that time ceased upon the amount of such principal money, although large sums were due for interest at the time.
The question, so far as it is a question of principle, turns upon the accuracy of this view of the case: the proposition rests upon this, that the payments consisted of dividends of so many shillings in the pound, and that the sum upon which such dividends were made, being the debt proved, consisted, except a very small part, of the principal due on the bonds, and therefore that, upon the payment of every dividend, so many shillings in each pound of such principal money as the dividends consisted of, was, upon each payment, discharged.
In the first place, as this mode of payment is regulated by acts of parliament, the doctrine of appropriation, which is founded upon the intention, expressed or implied, of the debtor or creditor, cannot have any place in the consideration of the present question. The estate of the obligor under administration is liable to pay all that the obligee has not received from the co-obligor; that is to say, the obligee is entitled to his principal and interest up to the time of payment; and he is entitled to apply all payments on account, to the interest due, before he would be bound to apply any part of it towards discharge of the principal."
"All bankrupts are considered in some degree as offenders, they are called so in the old acts, and all the acts are made to prevent their defeating and delaying their creditors, and it would be an extraordinary thing, that the delay of payment should prevent the creditors from having interest out of an estate able to pay it, when interest in all cases is given for delay of payment."
"… all the creditors of Sir Stephen Evance by bonds, contracts or notes carrying interest, are intitled to receive interest out of his estate for the principal sums, which were owing at the time the commission issued, from the day of its issuing, till they received full satisfaction, before any surplus shall be conveyed to the representatives of Sir Stephen Evance."
"The Master to take an account of what has been paid to such creditors by way of dividends, and what has been so paid to be applied in the first place to keep down the interest, and afterwards in sinking for principal."
There is no discussion in the judgment of this aspect of the order, but similar orders were made in subsequent cases: see, for example, the order made by Lord Eldon LC in Ex parte Koch (1813) 1 V & B 342, 35 ER 134.
"All creditors whose debts are now by law entitled to carry interest, in the event of a surplus, shall first receive interest on such debts at the rate of interest reserved or by law payable thereon, to be calculated from the date of the commission, and after such interest shall have been paid, all other creditors who have proved under the commission shall receive interest on their debts from the date of the commission at the rate of £4 per centum."
"If there is any surplus after payment of the foregoing debt, it shall be applied in payment of interest from the date of the receiving order at the rate of £4 per centum per annum on all debts proved in the bankruptcy."
"The bankrupt shall be entitled to any surplus remaining after payment in full of his creditors, with interest, as by this Act provided, and of the costs, charges, and expenses of the proceedings under the bankruptcy petition."
"If, therefore, he is bound, because those payments are made under a bankruptcy, to apply them towards discharge of part of the principal which bears interest, and thereby to leave interest due, which does not bear interest, he is a loser by the bankruptcy, although the whole of principal and interest is ultimately paid, and, what is more extraordinary, the co-obligor will, as in the present case, be a gainer by it in the same proportion; for although, being himself bound to pay principal and interest, he could not compel the obligee to accept payment of the principal whilst interest remained unpaid, he would derive the benefit of such payments being so made out of his co-obligor's estate. This would be to give to this mode of payment in bankruptcy the effect of depriving the obligee of part of his debt, and of relieving the obligor from the liability to which he had, by his bond, subjected himself. That would be, manifestly, most unreasonable and unjust, and is attempted to be supported only by the supposed appropriation of the dividends to the payment of so much of the principal: but, in fact, there is no such appropriation."
"Why should such payments [out of the bankruptcy estate] have a different effect, than they would have if made by a solvent obligor? Why should they lessen or destroy the remedy which the obligee would have had against a co-obligor?"
"Suppose the bankrupt does not obtain his certificate, but afterwards acquires property, and is sued by the obligee, ought not the obligee to be entitled to compel payment of all he could have demanded if there had not been any bankruptcy? Suppose the assignees realise a surplus of the estate, ought the obligee, in the case supposed, to suffer, and the bankrupt's estate to benefit, by the bankruptcy?"
"the bankrupt is not to receive the surplus until all creditors have received interest on their debts, to be calculated from the date of the commission. This provision obviously intended to make good to the creditors that interest which, by the course of administration in bankruptcy, they had lost. Interest is stopped at the date of the commission, because it is supposed that the estate will be deficient: it proves to be more than sufficient: Why is the creditor to suffer, and the bankrupt to benefit, by attributing the dividends to principal, instead of to the interest due? The creditor in that case will not have received interest upon his debt to the same extent as he would, if there had been no bankruptcy; and yet, the act must have intended to place him in as favourable a situation."
"25. The value of such debts and claims as are made admissible to proof by the 158th Section of the said Act, shall, so far as is possible, be estimated according to the value thereof at the date of the order to wind up the company.
26. Interest on such debts and claims as shall be allowed shall be computed, as to such of them as carry interest, after the rate they respectively carry; any creditor whose debt or claim so allowed does not carry interest, shall be entitled to interest, after the rate of 4% per centum per annum, from the date of the order to wind up the company, out of any assets which may remain after satisfying the costs of the winding up, the debts and claims established, and the interest of such debts and claims as by law carry interest."
"I apprehend that in whatever manner the payments may have been made, whether originally they may have been made in respect of capital or in respect of interest, still, inasmuch as they have all been paid in process of law, and without any contract or agreement between the parties, the account must, in the event of there being an ultimate surplus, be taken as between the company and the creditors in the ordinary way; that is, in the manner pointed out in Bower v Marris, by treating the dividends as ordinary payments on account, and applying each dividend, in the first place, to the payment of the interest due at the date of such dividend, and the surplus (if any) to the reduction of the principal. That disposes of the question where there is a surplus, as to which there is no doubt or difficulty."
"… it works with equal fairness, because, as soon as it is ascertained that there is a surplus, the creditor whose debt carries interest is remitted to his rights under his contract; and, on the other hand, a creditor who has not stipulated for interest does not get it."
He added, but clearly as a reason for not allowing proof for post-liquidation interest in the case of an insolvent company:
"I may add another reason, that I do not see with what justice interest can be computed in favour of creditors whose debts carry interest, while creditors whose debts do not carry interest are stayed from recovering judgment, and so obtaining a right to interest."
"Under the rules laid down by those authorities dividends are notionally applied first in satisfaction of post-liquidation interest accrued down to the date of the relevant dividend and thereafter to capital. Interest is then calculated on the notionally reduced capital balance down to the next dividend and so on."
This common ground was recorded by the judge at page 446.
"One of the premises upon which this rule is based is the proposition that neither bankruptcy nor winding up, as such, effects a discharge of a debtor's liability for future interest, although each limits the means by which, and the asset against which, such a liability may be enforced".
"1383. Section 33(8) of the Act of 1914 provides that if, after all the proving creditors have been paid in full, the bankrupt's estate still has a surplus, it is to be applied first in paying interest from after the date of the receiving order at the rate of 4% per annum on all debts proved in the bankruptcy. Any balance then belongs to the bankrupt.
1384. There is no similar provision in the winding up code; moreover, unlike section 66 of the Act of 1914, the provisions of section 33(8) are not imported into the Companies Acts. Section 317 of the Act of 1948 which imports the rules in force for the time being in bankruptcy affecting the respective rights of creditors, refers specifically to 'insolvent companies' and case law has distinguished the treatment of creditors of insolvent companies on the one hand and of solvent companies on the other. Provided that there is a surplus after the proving creditors have been paid in full, therefore, the company is to be treated as no longer insolvent. This means that the creditor who is entitled to interest on the debt for which he has proved may recover the interest accruing after the presentation of the winding up petition as if there had been no winding up at all. On the other hand, the creditor who is not entitled to interest at the commencement of insolvency proceedings has no means of recovering interest at a later stage even though the company may be in a position to pay."
"there should be a common code of rules for situations which occur both in personal insolvency and in winding up proceedings and that, in particular, interest should be payable on debts in the same way in both administrations. We agree."
"during the insolvency, in the event of there being a surplus after payment of all admitted debts and liabilities (including interest prior to the commencement of the insolvency, where applicable) interest should run on all such debts and liabilities until a final dividend is declared, the rate being that currently applicable to judgment debts at the commencement of the insolvency."
"Previously to the Orders of 1841, the Court of Chancery did not give interest to a creditor coming in under a decree for the administration of the estate of a deceased person where the debts did not by law carry interest. The orders of 1841, relating to interest, were in substance repeated in the Consolidated Orders of 1861 and are now embodied in the subsisting Rules of Court, Order LV rr.62, 63. The rules of 1841 were founded on [section 17 of the Judgments Act 1837]. Previously to that enactment, a judgment debt did not carry interest at law; and the Court of Chancery had no jurisdiction to give interest to creditors, who came in under its decree for administration, where the debts did not by law carry interest. But the court would not, after such a decree, permit a creditor to proceed at law to recover judgment for his debt. Consequently, after the passing of [the Judgments Act 1837], a court of equity, while interfering with this legal right for the common benefit of all the creditors, was bound, on equitable principles, to put him in the same position as if he had exercised it. Hence the order of 1841. Lord Romilly explained the matter substantially to the same effect when he said, in Re The Herefordshire Banking Company (17 LT Rep NS 58; LR 4 Eq 250), that the court allowed interest at 4%. From the date of its decree, because the decree is a judgment in equity for the benefit of all the creditors, and prevents them from getting a judgment at law which would give them interest. The right of the creditor whose debt does not carry interest by law is, therefore based upon the provisions of [the Judgments Act 1837], and the Orders of 1841, and the existing Rules of Court merely give effect to such right."
"The remaining question relates to the manner in which the dividends received ought to be accounted for, in ascertaining the amount of interest due. All the dividends have been paid in process of law, and the account ought to be taken in the manner pointed out in Bower v Marris and The Warrant Finance Company's Case …, viz., by treating the dividends as ordinary payments on account, and applying each dividend in the first place, to the payment of interest calculated to the day of such dividend and the surplus (if any) to the reduction of the principal."
It would not appear that Chitty J drew any distinction in this respect between interest on interest-bearing debts and interest arising by virtue of the orders or rules of court.
"The distinction which was pointed out to me yesterday is very clear, namely, that though in the administration of assets the Court does allow, by its own authority, interest at £4 per cent from the date of the decree, it is because the decree is a judgment in equity in favour of all the creditors, and prevents them from getting a judgment at law which would give them interest. But though a winding-up order is a decree in equity, and therefore a judgment, it is a judgment and decree of a different character. It is in point of fact a decree amongst a great number of co-partners to settle their equities among themselves, and to wind up the affairs of the partnership, but that does not give the creditors of the partners a judgment against the company, or entitle them to any interest in respect of it."
"If statutory interest is payable, it seems to me that it should be computed as running interest (following Bower v Marris …). Accordingly the dividends already paid should be applied to payment of statutory interest due on the date of the dividend and the surplus in reduction of principal; no distinction being made between the different creditors."
"If the estate of any bankrupt is sufficient to pay £1 in the pound with interest at the rate currently payable on judgment debts, and to leave a surplus the Court shall order such surplus to be paid or delivered to or vested in the bankrupt, his personal representatives or assigns."
"(1) The court shall distribute among the persons entitled thereto any surplus that remains after the satisfaction of the debts and liabilities of the company and the winding-up charges, costs and expenses, and unless otherwise provided by law or by the Act, charter or instrument of incorporation of the company, any property or assets remaining after the satisfaction shall be distributed among the members or shareholders according to their rights and interests in the company.
(2) Any surplus referred to in sub-section (1) shall first be applied in payment of interest from the commencement of the winding-up at the rate of 5% per annum on all claims proved in the winding-up and according to their priority."
"[25] To say this is not to give the provision retroactive effect. Although it is not free from doubt, I do not accept the contention that the Claimants [ie the general unsecured creditors] acquired a vested right to post-liquidation interest at the Liquidation Date. In my opinion, they acquired, at best, a contingent right to the payment of post-liquidation interest conditional upon there being a surplus in the liquidated estate after payment of all the Company's debts and obligations and of the costs associated with the liquidation. The condition cannot be determined and satisfied until the liquidation of the estate is at least substantially completed."
"[29] The traditional rule in insolvency situations is that dividends are to be applied first to the payment of interest and then to the payment of principal. This is said to prevent injustice, promote equity amongst the creditors, and protect the contractual relationship between the parties. See Bower v Marris, supra, at pp.527-28 Cr.&Ph; In re Humber Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company, supra, at p.645 Ch.App. PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc. submits the traditional rule should be applied to the payment of post-liquidation interest pursuant to subsection 95(2). The respondents contest this interpretation of the provision and contend for the reverse methodology.
[30] There is nothing in the language of s.95 of the Winding-up and Restructuring Act itself to indicate that Parliament intended to alter this traditional methodology in the case of a post-liquidation surplus. The respondents submit, however, that post-liquidation interest is only payable after payment in full of all proven claims and that there is nothing in the legislation to suggest a recalculation is to be done regarding distributions already made (which would be necessary if the interest portion of the surplus is to be distributed on a "payment of interest first" basis). Section 95 therefore mandates that distributions are to be credited, first, to the proven claim amounts, they say. Consistent with its choice of a common and consistent rate of interest (5 per cent), Parliament has chosen not to differentiate between claimants based upon the composition of claims as between principal and interest. Such a methodology is also consistent with the statutory regime of pre-judgment interest under provincial legislation, where interim payments are credited towards payment of unliquidated claims for damages first, then to interest: see, for example, Downey v Maes (1992), 8 O.R. (3d) 440 (Gen.Div.); Illingworth v Elford [1996] O.J. No.2893 (QL) (Gen.Div.).
[31] ….
[32] I see no reason why s.95 should be interpreted in a fashion that departs from the traditional approach. The general purpose of winding-up legislation is to ensure the rateable distribution of the assets of the insolvent company, in accordance with the creditors' priorities. In the rare circumstance of a winding-up surplus, creditors who have proven their claims ought to be placed – as closely as the surplus permits – in the same position they would have been in if the proven claims had been paid on the date of the winding-up. The comments of Wachowich A.C.J. (as he then was) in Canada Deposit Insurance Corp v Canadian Commercial Bank (1993), 21 C.R.B. (3d) 12, 11 Atla. L.R. (3d) 371 (Q.B.), at p.24 C.B.R. are apt:
The passage of time alone should not alter the ratio of the funds available to the different classes of creditors. In the present circumstances, the priority creditors have been deprived of their funds for nearly a decade. As Mutual Life pointed out, the unsecured creditors as a class will be enriched with every passing year of delay in the distribution of the estate. One might add to Lord Selwyn's statement [Note 8] "that no person should be prejudiced by the accidental delay which, in consequence of the form and proceedings of the Court and other circumstances, actually occur in realizing the assets" a further caution: no person should be so prejudiced by such delay in the distribution of assets.
[33] In the circumstances of this case, it is not so much the unsecured creditors who will be enriched by the passing of time as it is Confederation Life in its capacity as the 100 per cent indirect shareholder of Confederation Trust (and CDIC, as a result of the Co-operation Agreement between it and Confederation Life). While I agree with the respondents' submission that there is no inherent policy or goal of maximising post-liquidation interest so [page 530] as to minimize any recovery to the debtor or the shareholder of the debtor pursuant to subsection 95(1) of the Winding-up and Restructuring Act, I do not see why the insolvent company and its shareholders should receive a windfall out of the insolvency before the Claimants have been made as whole as possible in the circumstances. I am satisfied that "the interests of fairness, equality and predictability" amongst the creditors and as between the debtor company and its creditors, call for the application of the generally accepted rule for the allocation of payments made: see In re Cardelucci, 202 U.S.App.LEXIS 6770 (9th Circ.2002), at p.2."
"Mr Ley, for the debtor, submitted that the test to be applied by the court in determining whether a statutory demand ought to be set aside is the objective one, of whether the demand is calculated to perplex, formerly applied on applications to set aside bankruptcy notices.
I am unable to accept this. I do not think that on this the new bankruptcy code simply incorporates and adopts the same approach as the old code. The new code has made many changes in the law of bankruptcy, and the court's task, with regard to the new code, must be to construe the new statutory provisions in accordance with the ordinary canons of construction, unfettered by previous authorities. Those authorities, on the setting aside of bankruptcy notices, were concerned with a different scheme, in that the operation of a bankruptcy notice was not, in all respects, the same as the effect of the new statutory demand. For example, unlike bankruptcy notices, the statutory demand can be relied upon by the creditor serving it." (emphasis added)
"I therefore emphatically protest against the citation of cases decided under the old law. They cannot be of any assistance when the language of the statute has been so completely and deliberately changed. It may be that many of the cases which will come before the courts in future will be decided in the same way that they would have been decided under the old law. That may be so, but the grounds of decision will be different. What the court has to do is to interpret the language of the statute and apply it."
"The bankrupt shall be entitled to any surplus remaining after payment in full of his creditors, with interest, as by this Act provided, and of the costs, charges, and expenses of the proceedings under the bankruptcy petition."
"in the manner pointed out in Bower v Marris, by treating the dividends as ordinary payments on account, and applying each dividend, in the first place, to the payment of the interest due at the date of such dividend, and the surplus (if any) to the reduction of the principal."
"One of the premises upon which this rule is based is the proposition that neither bankruptcy nor winding up, as such, effects a discharge of a debtor's liability for future interest, although each limits the means by which, and the assets against which, such a liability may be enforced."
Issue 2A (paragraph 39 of the application notice)
"Whether a creditor entitled to Statutory Interest, Currency Conversion Claims and/or other non-provable claims is entitled to any form of compensation for or in respect of the time taken for such claim to be discharged and, if so, whether such compensation is taken into account as part of the current methodology for calculating Statutory Interest and/or the distribution of the surplus, or should take the form of interest at the Judgments Act Rate, damages for loss, restitution or another form."
"The winding up leaves the debts of the creditors untouched. It only affects the way in which they can be enforced. When the order is made, ordinary proceedings against the company are stayed (although the stay can be enforced only against creditors subject to the personal jurisdiction of the court). The creditors are confined to a collective enforcement procedure that results in pari passu distribution of the company's assets. The winding up does not either create new substantive rights in the creditors or destroy the old ones. Their debts if they are owing, remain debts throughout. They are discharged by the winding up only to the extent that they are paid out of dividends."
Issue 4 (paragraph 4 of the application notice)
"Whether the words "the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" in rule 2.88(9) of the Rules are apt to include (and, if so, in what circumstances) a foreign judgment rate of interest or other statutory interest rate."
Issues 6-8 (paragraphs 6-8 of the application notice)
"6. Whether, for the purposes of establishing, as required under Rule 2.88(9) of the Rules, "whichever is the greater of the rate specified under paragraph (6) and the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration", the amount of interest to be calculated based on the latter is calculated from:
(i) the Date of Administration;
(ii) the date on which the debt became due; or
(iii) another date.
7. Whether Statutory Interest is payable in respect of an admitted provable debt which was a contingent debt as at the Date of Administration from:
(i) the Date of Administration;
(ii) the date on which the contingent debt ceased to be a contingent debt (including in circumstances where the contract was "closed out" after LBIE entered administration); or
(iii) another date,
having regard to whether:
(i) the contingent debt remained contingent at the time of the payment of
a) the final dividend; or
b) Statutory Interest; and/or
(ii) (to the extent applicable) the Joint Administrators revised their previous estimate of the contingent debt by reference to the occurrence of the contingency or contingencies to which the debt was subject.
8. Whether Statutory Interest is payable in respect of an admitted provable debt which was a future debt as at the Date of Administration from:
(i) the Date of Administration;
(ii) the date on which the future debt ceased to be a future debt; or
(iii) another date,
having regard to whether the future debt remained a future debt at the time of the payment of:
(i) the final dividend; or
(ii) Statutory Interest."
"(1) "Debt", in relation to the winding up of a company, means (subject to the next paragraph) any of the following –
(a) any debt or liability to which the company is subject at the date on which it goes into liquidation;
(b) any debt or liability to which the company may become subject after that date by reason of any obligation incurred before that date; and
(c) any interest provable as mentioned in Rule 4.93(1).
(2) …
(3) For the purposes of references in any provision of the Act or the Rules about winding up to a debt or liability, it is immaterial whether the debt or liability is present or future, whether it is certain or contingent, or whether its amount is fixed or liquidated, or is capable of being ascertained by fixed rules or as a matter of opinion; and references in any such provision to owing a debt are to be read accordingly.
(4) In any provision of the Act or the Rules about winding up, except in so far as the context otherwise requires, "liability" means (subject to paragraph (3) above) a liability to pay money or money's worth, including any liability under an enactment, any liability for breach of trust, any liability in contract, tort or bailment, and any liability arising out of an obligation to make restitution.
(5) This Rule shall apply where a company is in administration and shall be read as if references to the winding-up were a reference to administration."
"(1) The administrator shall estimate the value of any debt which, by reason of its being subject to any contingency or for any other reason, does not bear a certain value; and he may revise any estimate previously made, if he thinks fit by reference to any change of circumstances or to information becoming available to him. He shall inform the creditor as to his estimate and any revision of it.
(2) Where the value of a debt is estimated under this Rule, the amount provable in the administration in the case of that debt is that of the estimate for the time being."
"A creditor may prove for a debt of which payment was not yet due on the date when the company entered administration, or, if the administration was immediately preceded by a winding-up, up to the date that the company went into liquidation subject to Rule 2.105 (adjustment of dividend where payment made before time)."
"(1) Where a creditor has proved for a debt of which payment is not due at the date of the declaration of dividend, he is entitled to dividend equally with other creditors, but subject as follows.
(2) For the purpose of dividend (and no other purpose) the amount of the creditor's admitted proof (or, if a distribution has previously been made to him, the amount remaining outstanding in respect of his admitted proof) shall be reduced by applying the following formula –
X |
1.05n |
where –
(a) "X" is the value of the admitted proof; and
(b) "n" is the period beginning with the relevant date and ending with the date on which the payment of the creditor's debt would otherwise be due expressed in years and months in a decimalised form.
(3) In paragraph (2) "relevant date" means –
(a) in the case of an administration which was not immediately preceded by a winding up, the date that the company entered administration;
(b) in the case of an administration which was immediately preceded by a winding up, the date that the company went into liquidation."
"What the court is seeking to do in a winding up is to ascertain the liabilities of the company at a particular date and to distribute the available assets as at that date pro rata according to the amounts of those liabilities. In practice the process cannot be immediate, but notionally I think it is, and, as it seems to me, it has to be treated as if it were, although subsequent events can be taken into account in quantifying what the liabilities were at the relevant date. In the context of a liquidation, therefore, the relevant date for the ascertainment of the amount of liability is the notional date of discharge of that liability, and, despite what was said by Lord Wilberforce and Lord Cross by way of illustration, that date must, in my judgment, be the same for all creditors and it must be "the date of payment" for the purposes of any judgment which has been entered for the sterling equivalent at the date of payment of a sum expressed in foreign currency."
"… the amount of the creditor's admitted proof (or, if a distribution has previously been made to him, the amount remaining outstanding in respect of his admitted proof) ..."
By using the expression "the amount of the creditor's admitted proof" the draftsman made clear that the reference was not to the underlying debt but to the admitted debt. I do not find this difference in drafting persuasive, given the terms and context of rule 2.88(7). Against Mr Trower, the draftsman has used "outstanding" in relation to an admitted proof. Telling also is that the draftsman has used the expression "the date on which the payment of the creditor's debt would otherwise be due" in the definition of "n" for the purposes of the formula in rule 2.105(2). If it had been used in rule 2.88(7), it would give effect to the administrators' proposed construction.
"The first is to take into account everything which has actually happened between the bankruptcy date and the moment when it becomes necessary to ascertain what, on that date, was the state of account between the creditor and the bankrupt. If by that time the contingency has occurred and the claim has been quantified, then that is the amount which is treated as having been due at the bankruptcy date."
Issue 10 (paragraph 28 of the application notice)
"Whether, and if so how, the calculation of a Currency Conversion Claim should take into account the Statutory Interest paid to the relevant creditor by the Joint Administrators."
Leap Year
"Assuming for the sake of argument that a six year limitation period is applicable to the Revenue, I cannot see any breach of the Statute of Limitations by the inclusion of a 366th day for one of the six years to account for the occurrence of a leap year. In any six year period, obviously, there will be a leap year. Thus, in calculating interest for a six year period, I can see nothing intrinsically wrong in allowing for the fact that one of the years concerned is a leap year. It is not adding on an extra day which would not have occurred within the six year period. If one was considering whether or not an action was statute barred after a six year period, one would not, in calculating the period of six years do so on the basis of disregarding the leap year and the extra day that occurs within the six year period by virtue of the leap year. In other words, one would not calculate the period of six years by carrying out an exercise of calculating the six year period on the basis that 6 years = 365 days multiplied by 6."
"In calculating the appropriate amount of interest, the number of days in the period since the last payment of interest is expressed as a fraction of a normal 365-day year, not the 366 days of a leap year, which ensures that full value is given for the "extra" day."
Examples are then given which demonstrate how this works in practice.
"Normal practice for the calculation of interest in leap years is to disregard 29 February if it falls within one of the complete calendar years. Only when it falls within the remaining period is it counted as an additional day with the divisor remaining at 365."
"Every judgment debt shall carry interest at the rate of £8 per centum per annum from such time as shall be prescribed by rules of court until the same shall be satisfied …"
Conclusion
i) Bower v Marris does not apply to the calculation of post-administration interest under rule 2.88(7)-(9);ii) rule 2.88 represents a complete code for the payment of post-administration interest on proved debts, leaving no room for any non-provable claim for further interest;
iii) interest is not payable on statutory interest in respect of the period between the payment in full of the debts proved and the date or dates on which statutory interest is paid;
iv) "the rate applicable to the debt apart from the administration" in rule 2.88(9) does not include judgment rate on a judgment obtained after the commencement of the administration or the judgment rate which would apply to a debt if the creditor had obtained judgment for it but did not in fact do so;
v) statutory interest is payable on future debts and on the amount admitted to proof in respect of contingent debts from the date of the commencement of the administration; and,
vi) the calculation of currency conversion claims should not take into account the statutory interest paid to the relevant creditor.