BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Debenhams Retail Ltd, Re [2020] EWHC 921 (Ch) (17 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/921.html Cite as: [2020] 1 BCLC 747, [2020] EWHC 921 (Ch), [2020] 2 All ER (Comm) 409, [2020] 3 All ER 319 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST
CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF DEBENHAMS RETAIL LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF DEBENHAMS RETAIL LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) |
____________________
Hearing date: 15th April 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Trower :
Introduction
"None of the contracts of employees who have been furloughed will be adopted by the Joint Administrators if the employees remain furloughed and the Joint Administrators take no further action in relation to these employees except for issuing such communications as may be required to confirm the terms of the employees' ongoing engagement and to seek any required consent in relation to such terms and to pay to the furloughed employees amounts that are to be reimbursed to the Company through its participation in the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme."
(1) the Joint Administrators cause the Company to make payments to such employee or employees under and in accordance with their employment contracts including in respect of amounts which may be reimbursed to the Company by a grant under the JRS; or
(2) the Administrators make an application in respect of such employee or employees under the JRS.
These are my reasons for giving those directions.
The Company and its administration
The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme ("JRS")
"If you cannot maintain your current workforce because your operations have been severely affected by coronavirus (COVID-19), you can furlough employees and apply for a grant that covers 80% of their usual monthly wage costs, up to £2,500 a month, plus the associated Employer National Insurance contributions and pension contributions (up to the level of the minimum automatic enrolment employer pension contribution) on that subsidised furlough pay.
This is a temporary scheme in place for 3 months starting from 1 March 2020, but it may be extended if necessary and employers can use this scheme anytime during this period. It is designed to help employers whose operations have been severely affected by coronavirus (COVID-19) to retain their employees and protect the UK economy. However, all employers are eligible to claim under the scheme and the government recognises different businesses will face different impacts from coronavirus."
"Administrators
Where a company is being taken under the management of an administrator, the administrator will be able to access the Job Retention Scheme. However, we would expect an administrator would only access the scheme if there is a reasonable likelihood of rehiring the workers. For instance, this could be as a result of an administration and pursuit of a sale of the business."
"You can only claim for furloughed employees that were on your PAYE payroll on or before 19 March 2020 and which were notified to HMRC on an RTI submission on or before 19 March 2020.This means an RTI submission notifying payment in respect of that employee to HMRC must have been made on or before 19 March 2020. Employees that were employed as of 28 February 2020 and on payroll (i.e. notified to HMRC on an RTI submission on or before 28 February) and were made redundant or stopped working for the employer after that and prior to 19 March 2020, can also qualify for the scheme if the employer re-employs them and puts them on furlough"
…
"To be eligible for the grant, when on furlough, an employee cannot undertake work for, or on behalf, of the organisation. This includes providing services or generating revenue. Employers are free to consider allocating any critical business tasks to staff that are not furloughed. While on furlough, the employee's wage will be subject to usual income tax and other deductions."
…
"If you made employees redundant, or they stopped working for you on or after 28 February 2020, you can re-employ them, put them on furlough and claim for their wages through the scheme."
…
"Employers should discuss with their staff and make any changes to the employment contract by agreement. When employers are making decisions in relation to the process, including deciding who to offer furlough to, equality and discrimination laws will apply in the usual way.
To be eligible for the grant employers must confirm in writing to their employee confirming that they have been furloughed. A record of this communication must be kept for five years.
You do not need to place all your employees on furlough. However, those employees who you do place on furlough cannot undertake work for you."
…
"You'll need to claim for:
- 80% of your employees' wages (even for employee's on National Minimum Wage) - up to a maximum of £2,500 per month. Do not claim for the worker's previous salary.
- Employer National Insurance contributions that are paid on the subsidised furlough pay."
…
"You can choose to top up your employee's salary, but you do not have to. Employees must not work or provide any services for the business while furloughed, even if they receive a top-up salary."
…
"You must pay the employee all the grant you receive for their gross pay in the form of money."
"Furloughed staff must receive no less than 80% of their reference pay (up to the monthly cap of £2500)."
"Employers cannot enter into any transaction with the worker which reduces the wages below this amount. This includes any administration charge, fees or other costs in connection with the employment."
…
"Payments received by a business under the scheme are made to offset these deductible revenue costs. They must therefore be included as income in the business's calculation of its taxable profits for Income Tax and Corporation Tax purposes, in accordance with normal principles."
"The intended effect of the JRS is therefore to delay the point at which a decision needs to be made as regards redundancies and provide an interim measure of support through the grant system to preserve the employed status of the workers. The policy is readily understandable: to avoid companies having to make employees redundant as a result of temporary difficulties caused by the coronavirus pandemic in order to preserve jobs and the productive capacity of the economy for the time when the current restrictions cease."
The Company's administration, the contracts of employment and the JRS
The Administrators' concerns
"The COVID-19 pandemic is a critical situation which carries serious risks to the economy and jobs in addition to the obvious dangers to health. I think that it is right that, wherever possible, the courts should work constructively together with the insolvency profession to implement the Government's unprecedented response to the crisis in a similarly innovative manner."
Adopting Contracts of Employment: the Legal Context
"(3) The former administrator's remuneration and expenses shall be–
(a) charged on and payable out of property of which he had custody or control immediately before cessation, and
(b) payable in priority to any security to which paragraph 70 applies.
(4) A sum payable in respect of a debt or liability arising out of a contract entered into by the former administrator or a predecessor before cessation shall be–
(a) charged on and payable out of property of which the former administrator had custody or control immediately before cessation, and
(b) payable in priority to any charge arising under sub-paragraph (3).
(5) Sub-paragraph (4) shall apply to a liability arising under a contract of employment which was adopted by the former administrator or a predecessor before cessation; and for that purpose–
(a) action taken within the period of 14 days after an administrator's appointment shall not be taken to amount or contribute to the adoption of a contract,
(b) no account shall be taken of a liability which arises, or in so far as it arises, by reference to anything which is done or which occurs before the adoption of the contract of employment, and
(c) no account shall be taken of a liability to make a payment other than wages or salary."
"39. The effect of these paragraphs is that liabilities for wages or salary arising out of contracts of employment adopted by an administrator following the onset of administration (subject to the condition that no act taken within the first 14 days of the administrator's appointment may amount or contribute to such adoption) are payable out of the assets held by the administrator in priority to the administrator's remuneration and expenses, which in turn have priority over the claims of floating charge creditors and unsecured creditors.
40. This order of priority is confirmed at Rule 3.51(1) of the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016, which states (before setting out the priority among expenses of the administration) as follows:
"Where there is a former administrator, the items in paragraph 99 of Schedule B1 are payable in priority to the expenses in this rule."
41. In contrast, employees whose contracts of employment are not adopted in the first 14 days (in other words, whose employment is terminated by Administrators during this time or whose employment contracts are not adopted for some other reason), do not gain the benefit of super-priority under Paragraph 99(5), and their claims are instead merely unsecured provable debts."
"91. However, it seems to me clear that, as and when the Administrators make an application under the Scheme in respect of the Consenting Employees or make any payment to the employees under their varied contracts, this would amount to adoption of the varied contracts of employment. Alternatively, although this is not anticipated, if funds were unexpectedly to become available to the Administrators to make payments of wages to the furloughed employees prior to the receipt of monies from the Scheme, that too would amount to adoption of the varied contract. In either case, applying the concept of adoption as explained by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in Paramount at page 449B, the Administrators would be doing an act which could only be explicable on the basis that they were electing to treat the varied contract as giving rise to liabilities which qualify for super-priority.
92. Accordingly, I consider that such steps would enable super-priority payments to be made to the furloughed employees under Paragraph 99(5) using the grant monies as and when received under the Scheme; or in the alternative would enable payments to the employees to be made from other funds of the Company, which would be reimbursed when the grant money was paid."
"(1) In relation to the Consenting Employees:
…
b. Adoption (within the meaning of paragraph 99(5) of Schedule B1 of the Insolvency Act 1986) … of the employment contracts (as varied in accordance with the Variation Letter) of the Consenting Employees will occur upon the earlier of
a) the Joint Administrators making payments to the Consenting Employees under their employment contracts (as varied in accordance with the Variation Letter); or
b) the Joint Administrators making an application in respect of the Consenting Employees under the Scheme.
"However, it is clear that Paragraph 99 is the provision which is specifically designed to deal with the ability and obligation of Administrators to pay wages or salary to employees in an administration. I do not consider, and Ms Toube QC did not seek to argue, that paragraph 66, as a lex generalis, can modify or override the lex specialis of Paragraph 99: c.f. Re Allders Department Stores [2005] ICR 867 at [22]. In my view, it is therefore clear that any analysis of the present position must commence with Paragraph 99."
"Although strictly sums payable are, under s.19(5), only payable when the administrator vacates office, it is well understood that administrators will, in the ordinary way, pay expenses of the administration including the salaries and other payments to employees as they arise during the continuance of the administration."
Paramount
"In my judgment, in order to determine Parliament's intention it is necessary to look at the joint effect of adoption followed by the statutory consequences said to flow from it. If the words used by Parliament have a meaning which is consonant with its presumed intention not to frustrate the rescue culture and not to produce unworkable consequences, then in my judgment that construction should be adopted. If, having had regard to those factors, it is impossible to detect a more limited parliamentary intention then the literal words of the sections must be given effect to. Only if the consequences of not departing from the literal meaning of the words produces an absurd result is it legitimate for the court to reject those words and seek to determine what Parliament in fact meant. I will therefore first consider the consequences of the decisions appealed from in somewhat greater detail, before turning to the proper construction of the statutory words."
"The meaning of the word 'adopt' in s. 19 and 44 of the 1986 Act therefore has to be gathered from the context in which it is used. It is important to bear in mind that the appointment of an administrator or receiver does not terminate the employee's contract of employment with the company. Only if the company (acting by the receiver or administrator) gives notice terminating the employment or, by failing to pay wages as they accrue due, repudiates the contract of employment will the contract with the company terminate. Therefore, so long as wages are paid by the company the employee remains the employee of the company. The Court of Appeal lost sight of this factor when, in the passage I have quoted, they wondered how the employee continued to be employed if there had been no adoption by the receiver. Therefore, the mere continuation of the employment by the company does not lead inexorably to the conclusion that the contract has been adopted by the administrator or receiver."
"It is common ground that adoption does not mean an assumption of personal liability by the administrator or receiver since there is no question of an administrator accepting personal liability under s. 19. Nor in my judgment can it mean 'fail to disclaim' as in s.323 of the Companies Act 1948 since, as I have said, the issue is not whether the company is liable on the continued contract but whether the liability on the contract is to have a higher priority. Nor can adoption connote doing such acts as would be sufficient to make the payments due an expense of the administration since s.19(4) gives such expenses a different and lower level of priority and in Nicoll v Cutts it was held that such liability was not an expense of the receivership. In my judgment, as Mr Sumption submitted, adoption in s. 19 and 44 can only connote some conduct by the administrator or receiver which amounts to an election to treat the continued contract of employment with the company as giving rise to a separate liability in the administration or receivership."
"For these reasons, I am most reluctantly forced to the view that in the Act of 1986 the contract of employment is inevitably adopted if the administrator or receiver causes the company to continue the employment for more than 14 days after his appointment."
"I therefore reach the following conclusions: (a) for the purposes of both section 19 and section 44 an employee's contract of employment is "adopted" if he is continued in employment for more than 14 days after the appointment of the administrator or receiver; (b) it is not possible for an administrator or receiver to avoid this result or alter its consequences unilaterally by informing the employees that he is not adopting their contracts or only doing so on terms; (c) in the case of both administration and receivership the consequence of adoption of contracts of employment is to give priority only to liabilities incurred by the administrator or receiver during his tenure of office."
"adoption in s. 19 and 44 can only connote some conduct by the administrator or receiver which amounts to an election to treat the continued contract of employment with the company as giving rise to a separate liability in the administration or receivership".
"I think the important direction given in the Powdrill case is that contained at … p. 449. It is necessary to look at the facts and to decide whether there has been some conduct by the administrator or receiver which can legitimately be treated as an election to continue the contract of employment. In my view, Miss Hilliard is right in this case in saying that there is no conduct by the Administrators which could be said to amount to an election to treat the contracts of employment as continuing. Her arguments have persuaded me that in this case the administrators have at all times, once they knew of the existence of the contracts, made it clear that they elected not to continue the employment of these employees. It follows that I will give the Administrators the declaration which they seek."
Adoption in the Present Case
"50. Indeed, a conclusion that on the facts of the present case the contracts of Furloughed Employees would be adopted would be contrary to two clear policies of the Government and Parliament:
(1) First, it would undermine the understandable policy underlying the JRS of seeking to preserve jobs and the productive capacity of the economy, since it may well mean that the Joint Administrators (and other administrators in other cases) would have to make employees redundant notwithstanding the JRS. This is of course the very outcome that the JRS is intended to avoid; and
(2) Secondly, it would undermine the "rescue culture" described above. As the evidence of Mr Rowley makes clear at [45]-[48], concluding that the relevant contracts of employment have been adopted will make any attempt at a rescue of Retail's business significantly more difficult. It may force the Joint Administrators to make employees redundant, depriving them of a workforce necessary to seek to rescue the business or sell it as a going concern."
Disposition