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La Moselle Clothing Ltd. v. Soualhi [1998] IEHC 66; [1998] 2 ILRM 345 (11th May, 1998)
THE
HIGH COURT
Record
Nos. 1994/304 COS &
1996/68 COS
IN
THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACTS 1963-1990
AND
IN THE MATTER OF LA MOSELLE CLOTHING LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
AND
IN THE MATTER OF ROSEGEM LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
BETWEEN
LA
MOSELLE CLOTHING LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) AND
ROSEGEM
LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
APPLICANTS
AND
DJAMEL
SOUALHI
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
of Mr Justice Peter Shanley delivered the 11th day of May 1998.
1. This
is an application by the Liquidator of La Moselle Limited (hereinafter referred
to as
"La Moselle"
)
and Rosegem Limited (hereinafter referred to
as
"Rosegem"
)
pursuant to Section 150 of the Companies Act 1990 for a declaration from this
Court restricting the Respondent for a period of 5 years from acting as a
director of any company (other than one that meets the requirements of Section
150(3) of the Companies Act, 1990.
(1)
The
Court shall unless it is satisfied as to any of the matters specified in
sub-section (2) declare that a person to whom this chapter applies shall not
for a period of five years, be appointed or act in any way, whether directly or
indirectly, as a director or secretary or be concerned or take part in the
promotion or formation of any company unless it meets the requirements set out
in sub-section (3); and in subsequent provisions of this Part, the expression
'a person to whom Section 150 applies' shall be construed as a reference to a
person in respect of whom such a declaration has been made.
(2) The
matters referred to in sub-section (1) are -
(a) that
the person concerned has acted honestly and responsibly in
relation
to the conduct of the affairs of the company and that there is
no
other reason why it would be just and equitable that he should be
subject
to the restrictions imposed by this section, or
(b) subject
to paragraph (a), that the person concerned was a director of
the
company solely by reason of his nomination as such by a financial
institution
in connection with the giving of credit facilities to the company by such
institution, provided that the institution in question has not obtained from
any director of the company a personal or
individual
guarantee of repayment to it of the loans or other forms of credit advanced to
the company, or
(c) subject
to paragraph (a), that the person concerned was a director of
the
company solely by reason of his nomination as such by a venture
capital
company in connection with the purchase of, or subscription
for,
shares by it in the first mentioned company.
(3) The
requirement specified in sub-section (1) are that -
(a) the
nominal value of the allotted share capital of the company shall -
(i) in
the case of a public limited company, be at least £100,000.
(ii) in
the case of any other company, be at least £20,000.
(b)
Each
allotted share to an aggregate amount not less than the amount
referred
to in sub-paragraph (i) or (ii) or paragraph (a) as the case
may
be, shall be fully paid up, including the whole of any premium
thereon,
and
(c) Each
such allotted share and the whole of any premium thereon
shall
be paid for in cash.
(4) Where
a Court makes a declaration under sub-section (1) a prescribed
officer
of the Court shall cause the Registrar of Companies to be furnished
with
prescribed particulars of the declaration in such form and manner as
may
be prescribed.
(5) In
this section -
'Financial
Institution' means -
(a) a
licensed bank, within the meaning of Section 25, or
(b) a
company, the ordinary business of which includes the making of loans or the
giving of guarantees in connection with loans and
"Venture
Capital Company" means a company prescribed by the Minister the principal
ordinary business of which is the making of share investments.
2. The
insolvent companies to which the restriction provisions of Section 150 apply
are those companies referred to in Sections 149 and 154 of the 1990 Act (being
the sections comprised in Chapter 1 of Part VII of that Act).
(1) This
chapter applies to any company if -
(a)
at the date of the commencement of its winding up it is proved to
the Court, or
(b) at
any time during the course of its winding up the liquidator of
the
company certifies, or it is otherwise proved, to the Court, that it
is
unable to pay its debts (within the meaning of Section 214 of the
Principal
Act).
(2)
This
chapter applies to any person who was a director of a company to which this
section applies at the date of or within twelve months prior to the
commencement of its winding up.
(3) This
chapter shall not apply to a company which commences to be wound up
before
the commencement of this section.
(4)
In this chapter "company" includes a company to which Section 351 of the
Principal
Act applies.
(5) This
chapter applies to shadow directors as it applies to directors.
"Where
a receiver of the property of a company is appointed, the provisions of this
chapter shall, with the necessary modification, apply as if the references
therein to the liquidator and to winding-up were construed as references to the
receiver and to receivership."
3. It
is clear from Sections 149 and 154 of the Companies Act, 1990, that the
insolvent companies to which Section 150 applies are not just companies wound
up by the Court but also insolvent companies wound up voluntarily and those
over whose assets a Receiver has been appointed. In
Business
Communications Limited v. Keith Baxter and Colm Parsons
(unreported, 21st July, 1995), Murphy J. observed (at page 5 of his judgment)
that, while the provisions of Section 150(1) are mandatory in their language,
the Act does not in fact impose on any particular party the obligation of
bringing before the Court an application for the restriction of a director of a
company to which Sections 149 and 154 apply. He noted that:-
"In
windings-up by the Court this lacuna has been over-come by the Court on
the
further consideration of the Order for liquidation directing the official
liquidator
to bring the appropriate application on notice to persons
appearing
to be the directors thereof.
In
the case of voluntary liquidations the Court does not have either the
responsibility or the machinery for giving comparable directions. It may be
that voluntary liquidators and receivers are not sufficiently conscious of the
provisions of Chapter 1 of Part VII of the 1990 Act or else they do not see it
as their function to bring relevant cases before the Court. Perhaps it will be
necessary for the legislature to consider the provision of a particular
sanction to ensure that the many cases which have obviously arisen since
August, 1991, are duly pursued. If not, there would be a apparent injustice to
the directors of insolvent companies wound up by the Court as against those
wound-up voluntarily."
4. The
Court's directions in windings-up by the Court has resulted in Section 150
applications being pursued in almost all such cases; however, it must be said
that only a handful of cases of insolvent companies in receivership or
voluntarily wound-up, have come before the Courts on an application under
Section 150 of the Companies Act, 1990. Having regard to the large volume of
insolvent companies which are wound up voluntarily, the injustice envisaged by
Murphy J. still remains unredressed, whereby directors of such companies are
permitted to avoid the sanction of Section 150 of the Companies Act, 1990, by
the fortuitous circumstance of a voluntary winding-up, or indeed a
receivership.
5. Quite
apart from the injustice that results from the failure to restrict directors
whose conduct merits restriction, there is also the factor that the primary
purpose of the Section 150 restriction is the protection of the public from
persons who, by their conduct, have shown themselves unfit to hold the office
of, and discharge the duties of, a director of a company and, in consequence,
represent a danger to potential investors and traders dealing with such
companies. Where far more insolvent companies are wound up voluntarily than
are wound up by the Court, it is clear that the purpose of Section 150 cannot
be fully achieved in the absence of a statutory obligation cast on the
liquidators (of insolvent companies wound up voluntarily) and on receivers of
insolvent companies to bring before the Courts applications under S 150 of the
1990 Act where the conditions stipulated by Section 149 of that Act are met.
6. As
appears clear from Section 150, the Court is obliged to restrict a director
unless he brings himself within one of the three exceptions set out in
sub-section (2). In the present case I am only concerned with the first such
exception. As is clear from the wording of sub-section (2)(a), there are three
hurdles that a director has to surmount:-
(a) He
must establish that he has acted honestly in relation to the affairs of
the
company.
(b) He
must establish that he has acted responsibly in relation to the affairs of the
company.
(c) He
must satisfy the Court that there is no other reason why it would be just and
equitable that he should be subject to the restrictions imposed by the section.
7. In
considering the meaning of the word
"responsibly"
Murphy J. said in
Business
Communications Limited v. Keith Baxter and Colm Parsons
,
supra:-
"Ordinarily
'responsibly' will entail compliance with the principal features of the
Companies Acts and the maintenance of the records required by those Acts. The
records must be basic in form and modest in appearance. But they must exist in
such a form as to
enable
the directors to make a reasonable commercial decision and auditors (or
liquidators) to understand and follow the transactions in which the company was
engaged."
8. As
Murphy J. noted, the simple fact that a business fails is not evidence of a
lack of responsibility nor indeed is it evidence of dishonesty. But there may
well be circumstances where a business will fail due to a lack of business
probity or indeed sheer incompetence (without actual dishonesty or
non-compliance with the principal features of the Companies Acts) such as to
amount to such a want of responsibility as to permit a restriction under
Section 150, sub-section (1), of the Companies Act, 1990.
9. In
England and Wales there is no directly comparable legislation to the
restriction provisions of Section 150: However, Section 300 of the Companies
Act, 1985 in England and Wales does provide for the disqualification of
directors where their conduct makes them
"unfit
to be concerned in the management of a company"
.
In the case of Re.
Lo-Line
Motors Limited,
1988, B.C.L.C. 698, Brown-Wilkinson V.C. said at page 703:-
"What
is the proper approach to deciding whether someone is unfit to be a director?
The approach adopted in all the cases to which I have been referred is broadly
the same. The primary purpose of the section is not to punish the individual
but to protect the public against the future conduct of companies by persons
whose past record as directors of insolvent companies have shown them to be a
danger to creditors and others ...... Ordinary commercial misjudgement is in
itself not sufficient to justify disqualification. In the
normal
case, the conduct complained of must display a lack of commercial probity,
although I have no doubt that in an extreme case of gross negligence or total
incompetence, disqualification could be appropriate".
10.
The conduct referred to by Brown-Wilkinson VC. is similar to the conduct
identified by Mr Justice Murphy, namely, that a director, broadly complying
with his obligations under the provisions of the Companies Acts and acting with
a degree of commercial probity during his tenure as a director of the company,
will not be restricted on the grounds that he has acted irresponsibly.
11. Thus
it seems to me that in determining the "responsibility" of a director for the
purposes of Section 150(2)(a) the Court should have regard to:-
(a) The
extent to which the director has or has not complied with any obligation
imposed on him by the Companies Acts 1963-1990.
(b) The
extent to which his conduct could be regarded as so incompetent as to amount to
irresponsibility.
(c) The
extent of the directors responsibility for the insolvency of the company.
(d) The
extent of the directors responsibility for the net deficiency in the assets of
the company disclosed at the date of the winding up or thereafter.
(e) The
extent to which the director, in his conduct of the affairs of the company, has
displayed a lack of commercial probity or want of proper standards.
12. These
criteria necessarily overlap: for example a failure to keep proper books of
account may directly contribute to the company becoming insolvent and may be
caused by the incompetence of a director. But not all situations of a want of
responsibility will result from a breach of obligations imposed by the
Companies Acts; for example, a director's inability to see the "writing on the
wall" (e.g. an inability to see from a perusal of the company's management
accounts that the company was trading while insolvent) may result from sheer
incompetence and justify a restriction (see Re:
Continental
Assurance Co. of London Plc, Secretary of State and Industry -v- Burrows 1997 1
BCLC 48,
where an inability to read and understand the statutory accounts of a company
was considered a ground for disqualification of a director). Equally, a
director who takes excessive sums from the company by way of drawings for
salary without regard to the financial state of health of the company may be
said to have acted without commercial probity although he did not necessarily
fail to comply with his obligations under the Companies Acts 1963 - 1990.
13. Apart
from satisfying the Court that he as a director acted honestly and responsibly,
the director must also satisfy the Court that there are no other reasons why it
would be just and equitable to restrict him from acting as a director of a
company. It is to be noted that acting honestly and responsibly relates to
"the
conduct of the affairs of the company"
and arguably such bears no relation to any period after the commencement of a
winding-up or receivership of the particular company where the person may not
be involved any further in the conduct of the affairs of the company. That the
director must satisfy the Court that the there is no other reason why it would
be just and equitable to restrict the director, allows the Court to take into
account, in my view, any relevant conduct of the director after the
commencement of the winding-up or the receivership (for example, any failure to
co-operate with the liquidator or receiver) in deciding whether or not to make
an Order under Section 150, sub-section (1), of the Companies Act, 1990.
THE
FACTS
14. La
Moselle was incorporated on 3rd April, 1984; Rosegem was incorporated on the
13th November, 1987. Both companies had their registered offices at 15 Castle
Market, Dublin 2. 99 of the 100 issued shares in La Moselle were owned by Mr
Soualhi who also was the beneficial owner of the shares in Rosegem. He was
also a Director of both of these companies. La Moselle was a wholesaler of
ladies and children's clothing which was mostly sourced in Portugal. Of the
retailers to whom La Moselle sold its clothing, some 65% of it was sold to
retail companies owned and controlled by Mr Soualhi. Rosegem was such a
company: It operated a retail shop at the G.P.O. Arcade in Dublin, where it
rented premises from a subsidiary of An Post. In the clothing and fashion
industry there are two seasons: firstly, there is the Spring and Summer seasons
stretching from March to August; then there is the Autumn and Winter season
stretching from September through to February. La Moselle financed the
purchases of its clothing by entering into an agreement with a company called
Cambridge Confirming Limited, a finance house (hereinafter referred to as
"CCL"
),
who from 1989 onwards agreed to discharge the liabilities of La Moselle at each
month end to La Moselle suppliers, providing La Moselle's liabilities to CCL
were discharged at each year end. Initially, the arrangement between La
Moselle and CCL was that CCL would allow La Moselle a facility of up to
£250,000.00 per season. In June, 1993, with rumours of difficulties in
CCL, that facility was reduced by agreement between Mr Soualhi and CCL to
£165,000.00 per season. This according to Mr Soualhi adversely affected
his business and he had to close down two of his shops in Galway and Limerick.
These were shops operated by two companies owned and controlled by Mr Soualhi:
The first of the companies was called Cougar Styles Limited and the second of
the companies was called Ballyclover Limited.
15. The
June 1993 agreement which Mr Soualhi entered into with CCL, apart from reducing
the facilities provided to La Moselle, also made provision for the clearing by
La Moselle of all its liabilities to CCL by the 15th October, 1993. One of the
terms of the agreement involved CCL issuing a cheque for £20,000.00 to La
Moselle on the 1st August, 1993 and La Moselle in turn issuing a cheque payable
to CCL for £50,000.00 on the 31st July, 1993. The La Moselle cheque was
stopped by Mr Soualhi: He says it was stopped because CCL had refused to
honour their agreement to pay to La Moselle the sum of £20,000. A further
La Moselle cheque payable to CCL dated 31st August, 1993 was also stopped by Mr
Soualhi. La Moselle did not clear its indebtedness to CCL by the 15th October,
1993, in accordance with its June agreement. Although it entered into a
further agreement with CCL for the purposes of clearing up its indebtedness to
that company, it failed to do so and on the 17th November, 1994, CCL presented
a petition in respect of the sum then due to them of £219,688. On foot of
that petition a winding-up Order was made on 6th March, 1995. La Moselle in
fact had ceased trading in November, 1994. Rosegem itself had ceased to trade
in September, 1994, at which date it was indebted to La Moselle in the sum of
£169,602.
16. The
statement of affairs of Mr Soualhi in relation to La Moselle was sworn on the
20th April, 1995; it disclosed gross assets of £695,075 with gross
liabilities of £487,891, leaving a surplus of £207,184. The gross
assets included a claim for damages for breach of contract against CCL valued
at £650,000. The statement of affairs of Rosegem which was sworn by Mr
Soualhi on the 23rd May, 1996 disclosed no assets and a deficiency of
£48,479.26 made up, as to £26,991 unsecured creditors and
£21,437 preferential creditors. What is noteworthy about the statement of
affairs of each of these companies is that there were no trade creditors.
17. There
are audited accounts for La Moselle for the year ending 31st August, 1992.
There are management accounts for that company for the years ending the 31st
August, 1993, the 31st August, 1994, and the 31st August, 1995. A perusal of
the profit and loss accounts of La Moselle for the years 1993, 1994 and 1995
show losses for each of those years of £85,746, £19,156, and
£238,054, respectively. For Rosegem management accounts exist for the
years 1991 to 1994 and show losses on the profit and loss account of
£87,400 for the year 1991, £14,970 for the year 1992, £9,957 for
the year 1993 and £25,545 for the year 1994. Viewing each of these
companies on a net worth basis, La Moselle's position in 1993 disclosed a net
deficiency of £181,572, in 1994 a deficiency of £200,728 and in 1995
a deficiency of £440, 819. For Rosegem the position in 1991 was that
there was a net deficiency of £38,310; for 1992, there was a net worth of
£49,500; in 1993 there was a net deficiency of £63,237 and in 1994
there was a net deficiency of £88,782. The Liquidator has forcefully
expressed his opinion that La Moselle continued to trade and to supply Rosegem
at a time when Mr Soualhi clearly knew that La Moselle and Rosegem were both
insolvent companies. In particular, he suggests that La Moselle so traded from
September, 1992 to November, 1994, when Mr Soualhi knew that it was insolvent
and that even when it ceased to trade in November, 1994 no efforts were made by
Mr Soualhi to wind-up the company. Apart from this aspect of matters the
Liquidator also draws the Courts attention to a number of other matters which
he says establish that Mr Soualhi acted irresponsibly, if not dishonestly. The
other matters to which he draws attention are:-
(a) No
effort was made by Mr Soualhi to stop trading or to wind-up Rosegem when it was
clear that it had become insolvent.
(b) The
unsecured creditors of La Moselle did not include any trade suppliers of
clothing. Mr Soualhi so organised his affairs that he was able to secure the
payment of all suppliers of clothing to him at the expense of the Revenue and
other creditors such as Dublin Corporation and his landlords.
(c) La
Moselle wrote off debts to the other companies that were owned and controlled
by Mr Soualhi of some £476,717.
(d)
Extreme
difficulty was encountered by the Liquidator and his staff in obtaining the
books and records of La Moselle and Rosegem. The Liquidator points to
paragraphs 8 and 9 in Mr Soualhi's Affidavit of Discovery in relation to
Rosegem. This Affidavit was sworn by Mr Soualhi on 1st August, 1997 and
discloses, says the Liquidator, Mr Soualhi's cavalier attitude to the books and
records of Rosegem.
18. Paragraph
8 of that Affidavit states as follows:-
"(8) I
say and believe that up until the time the company ceased to trade it operated
from premises as Unit 6, G.P.O. Arcade, Henry Street, Dublin 1. I say that
when the company ceased trading I caused the offices to be shut down and all
possessions, documents and equipment belonging to the company or otherwise were
removed from the offices and/or thrown out.
(9) I
say and believe that any documents relating to the company which were removed
from the said offices (if any) were brought to another premises at 15 Castle
Market, Dublin 2 from which I regularly operated. I say that I subsequently
moved from these premises in December, 1994 and further caused another
clear-out of documentation, equipment and possessions to 3 Ely Place, Dublin 2
where I operated from until the end of September, 1995. Since that date I
caused a further clear-out of documentation, equipment and possessions to an
office premises at Stephen's Court, Dublin 2."
(e) The
credit card statements relating to Mr Soualhi disclosed that payments to credit
card companies were made by La Moselle between 1991 and 1994 in the amount of
£99,447.99, of which £35,259.96 represents payments by La Moselle to
restaurants and night-clubs. These payments are described as
"motor
and travel expenses
"
in the management accounts of the company.
(f) Mr
Soualhi drew £39,034 from Rosegem between 1992 and 1994 at a time when,
according to the Liquidator, he must have known that the company was clearly
insolvent and these drawings were made without provision for tax. Equally, in
relation to La Moselle in the same period, Mr Soualhi drew £29,950 without
any provision for tax being made. While Mr Guilfoyle, as Liquidator, maintains
this to be the position it should be noted that Mr Soualhi's Accountant, Mr
Maxwell, gave evidence that the sums in question which were drawn by Mr Soualhi
and those sums in respect of which the credit card payments were made, were
sums which were properly accounted for in the management accounts of the
company and in relation to which any liability for tax had been discharged.
(g) The
Liquidator did an analysis of the cash-flow of all the related companies of Mr
Soualhi for the year ending the 31st August, 1992. This analysis disclosed a
negative cash-flow of some £21,000. In the same period the Liquidator
points to the fact that Mr Soualhi paid himself a salary (according to his
Accountant) of some £106,800. The Liquidator views such drawings in all
the circumstances as being highly irresponsible on the part of Mr Soualhi.
(h) As
at the 31st July, 1993, the evidence established that La Moselle had a current
account and two deposit accounts at Bank of Ireland, Westland Row, Dublin. Mr
Soualhi contended during the course of the case that he only stopped La
Moselle's cheque for £50,000 (drawn on La Moselle's current account at
Bank of Ireland, Westland Row) because CCL had itself dishonoured its cheque
payable to La Moselle for £20,000. An analysis of the current and deposit
accounts of La Moselle at Westland Row disclose, according to the Liquidator,
that there were no funds to meet a cheque for £50,000 at the time it was
presented for payment or indeed thereafter.
19. Against
this series of allegations Mr Soualhi says:-
(1) He
did not wish to wind-up La Moselle because he believed he had a bona fide cause
of
action against CCL and that he wished to sue CCL. He gave evidence that he had
sought the advice of his Solicitors as to whether or not he had a cause of
action against CCL. He also gave evidence of the fact that his Solicitors had
informed the Liquidator of his contention that he had a claim for damages for
breach of contract against CCL.
(2) Mr
Soualhi was adamant that he had not preferred trade creditors over other
creditors such as the Revenue Commissioners. While he was so adamant, it must
be said, that no credible explanation was given for the total absence of any
trade creditors from the list of unsecured creditors in the statement of
affairs of La Moselle.
(3) Both
Mr Soualhi and his Accountant, Mr Maxwell, contended that they had given full
co-operation to the Liquidator and his staff in answering any queries they had
and in terms of providing any books and records of either company which had
been sought by the Liquidator. Mr Maxwell expressed his annoyance to the Court
in relation to queries made of him by the staff of the Liquidator: He said
that most of these queries were made at a time when Court hearings were
imminent and never allowed him a reasonable time within which to respond to the
queries.
(4) As
to the credit card payments, Mr Soualhi maintained that each and every one of
such payments (including the restaurant and night-club payments) were payments
made for the benefit of La Moselle or its related companies in that they
represented entertainment of clients of La Moselle or those companies.
(5) Mr
Soualhi was adamant that La Moselle could easily have ensured (as it had done
on a previous occasion) that funds were in the current account of La Moselle
at Bank of Ireland, Westland Row to meet the cheque for £50,000 which was
payable to CCL and dated the 31st July, 1993.
(6) Mr
Soualhi stated that the statement of affairs which he had sworn in relation to
Rosegem was true and accurate. He indicated that the statement of affairs did
not disclose a liability to Rosegem's landlords, Arcade Property Company
Limited, of arrears of rent and service charge in the sum of £44,475.92.
That sum, said Mr Soualhi, had been forgiven by the landlord in exchange for a
surrender of the lease to the premises which they had rented: To that end he
produced to the Court two letters (these letters comprise exhibit DS3 to an
Affidavit sworn by Mr Soualhi on the 2nd May 1997) and they are dated 3rd
October, 1994 and 26th September, 1994. The latter of which letters stated:-
"This
is to confirm that the handing over of the leasehold interest with all the
fixtures and fittings was in full and final settlement of all debts past and
present and future as already discussed and agreed with you".
20. He
did not refer to or produce letters from An Post Solicitors dated 29th
September, 1994 and 13th October, 1994, the latter of which stated:-
"Dear
Sir,
Further
to my letter of 29th September, 1994, and your reply thereto dated 3rd October,
1994, in connection with the above unit.
I
have been instructed by Mr Eamon Harrington that the keys to Unit 6 have been
handed over by you.
I
must now refer to the second paragraph of your letter of 3rd October, 1994,
and it appears that you have misunderstood the last paragraph of my letter of
29th September, 1994 in which I informed you that your liabilities to our
client at the end of August, 1994 stands at £66,358 which remains until
the said sum has been paid.
Yours
faithfully
Alan
Gasker,
Solicitor,
An
Post."
21. Judgment
was in fact obtained by Arcade Property Company Limited against
22. Rosegem
on the 15th November, 1993. In his Affidavit of 8th October, 1997, Mr Soualhi
says (at paragraph 3):-
"The
judgment was obtained against Rosegem by default, the company having been taken
by surprise as no letter or warning or receipt of proceedings was ever received
by the company."
23. On
the 7th September, 1993, the Solicitor for An Post wrote to Mr Soualhi claiming
payment of £44,475.92 and threatening proceedings to recover that sum and
also stated in the letter that
"proceedings
will be issued against you company without further notice"
.
CONCLUSIONS
(i) I
do not regard Mr Soualhi as a reliable witness. In particular, I do not accept
the
explanations advanced by him for stopping the cheque payable to CCL on
31st
July, 1993: The most likely explanation is that there was no funds to meet
that cheque which would have been dishonoured on presentation if it had not in
fact been stopped. Equally, I am also satisfied that Mr Soualhi was less than
frank in his explanation of Rosegem's relationship with its landlord, Arcade
Property Company Limited. I am satisfied that, contrary to what Mr Soualhi
says, he was aware of correspondence from Rosegem's landlord threatening
proceedings, that he was aware of the proceedings, and that his surrender of
the premises to the landlord was not in fact in consideration of the landlord
waiving arrears of rent. It follows from this last matter that I do not accept
as accurate or reliable the statement of affairs of Mr Soualhi sworn on 29th
April, 1996 in relation to Rosegem.
(ii) I
accept the Liquidator's view that La Moselle continued to trade and to supply
Rosegem when Mr Soualhi well knew that both those companies were insolvent. I
believe that state of affairs continued in relation to both companies from
September, 1992 until September and November, 1994 when Rosegem and La Moselle
ceased trading respectively. During this lengthy period of in excess of two
years, Mr Soualhi was assiduous in ensuring that his trade creditors were paid.
I also accept the Liquidator's view that upon an examination of the accounts of
La Moselle and its associated companies, that La Moselle forgave debts of those
companies which between 1992 and 1994 amounted in total to the sum of
£476,717 without any apparent reason or justification.
(iii) In
circumstances where both Rosegem and La Moselle were insolvent in 1993 and
1994, Mr Soualhi was nonetheless maintaining a very busy and indeed expensive
lifestyle, all of which according to himself was business related. His credit
card statements (paid for by his companies) disclosed that in 1994 alone (when
he surely knew that Rosegem and La Moselle were insolvent) he managed to travel
to Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Seoul, Taiwan, San Francisco,
Shanghai, Boston, Jamaica, Paris, New York, London and San Tropez. Whilst as I
have indicated Mr Soualhi claimed that this travel was business related, I had
no evidence other than his oral evidence that this was in fact the case. There
was no evidence of any sales or purchases resulting form any one of these trips
and even if one did allow that the trips were for business purposes, the travel
and associated costs show a want of commercial probity on Mr Soualhi's part,
having regard to the overall parlous financial position of La Moselle and
Rosegem.
(iv) Apart
from the credit card payments between 1992 and 1994, Mr Soualhi drew
£29,950 from La Moselle in this period; he further drew £39,034 from
Rosegem in this period; in the year ending 31st August, 1992, - when the cash
flow of his five companies was a negative one of £21,000 - he drew
£106,800 from these companies. Having regard to the financial condition
of these companies (which included Rosegem and La Moselle) I do not regard the
drawings made by Mr Soualhi as being the actions of a responsible Director.
(v) Finally,
the cavalier approach of Mr Soualhi to the books and records of Rosegem, as
detailed in his Affidavit of Discovery of 1st August, 1997, are the actions of
a person who does not realise that the protection afforded by limited liability
carries with it certain obligations which he clearly failed to discharge in not
ensuring the safety of all the books and records of Rosegem, despite the fact
that it had ceased trading.
24. In
conclusion, I have no doubt whatsoever that Mr Soualhi traded at a time when he
knew that Rosegem and La Moselle were insolvent. I am quite satisfied that he
used monies due to the Collector-General and CCL to finance his trading
activities and his travel. I have little doubt that he was aware that Rosegem
and La Moselle could not trade and at the
same
time discharge their liabilities to the Collector-General and CCL. Such
conduct was, in my view, improper conduct and if it was not to be described as
actually dishonest it was certainly irresponsible. Accordingly, I propose to
make an Order declaring that Mr Soualhi shall not for a period of five years be
appointed or act in any way whether directly or indirectly as a director or
secretary or be concerned or take part in the promotion or formation of any
company unless it meets the requirements set out in sub-section (3) of
Section
150 of the
Companies Act, 1990.
© 1998 Irish High Court
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1998/66.html