H456 Hydro Klenze Ltd -v- Companies Acts [2007] IEHC 456 (20 December 2007)


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2007/H456.html
Cite as: [2007] IEHC 456

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Judgment Title: Hydro Klenze Ltd -v- Companies Acts

Neutral Citation: [2007] IEHC 456


High Court Record Number: 2007 214 COS

Date of Delivery: 20 December 2007

Court: High Court


Composition of Court: Smyth J.

Judgment by: Smyth J.

Status of Judgment: Unapproved



Neutral Citation Number: [2007] IEHC 456





THE HIGH COURT



RECORD NO. 2007/214COS



IN THE MATTER OF HYDRO KLENZE LIMITED (LIQUIDATION)



IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 1963-2002 (AS

AMENDED)



IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 280 OF THE COMPANIES ACT 1963

(AS AMENDED) ON THE APPLICATION OF THE LIQUIDATOR,

RICHARD TREHY





BETWEEN



RICHARD TREHY APPLICANT





and



WILLIAM RUTHERFORD, LIAM DUFFY, RESPONDENTS

BRIAN CAVANAGH AND RAYMOND SCOTT










THE HEARING RESUMED AS FOLLOWS ON THURSDAY, 20TH

DECEMBER



JUDGEMENT WAS DELIVERED AS FOLLOWS



MR. JUSTICE SMYTH: This judgment is concerned

with the relationship

between the Applicant and Brian Cavanagh, in particular

in the context of section 150 of the Companies Act,

1990.



Hydro Klenze Ltd. ("The Company") is a limited

liability company incorporated in the State on 30th

April 2002 to engage in the business of wastewater

pollution control and to provide services in relation

to potable water.



The directors of the Company are Liam Duffy, Brian

Cavanagh and Raymond Scott who were directors from the

outset of the Company and Kenneth Ryan who was

appointed on 16th December 2002. Raymond Scott's

resignation was filed with the Companies Registration

Office on 24th July 2004.



The issued share capital of the Company is €100.00

comprised of 100 ordinary shares of €1.00 each. The

shareholders distribution is Liam Duffy: 25 Ordinary

Shares; Brian Cavanagh: 12 Ordinary Shares; Kenneth

Ryan: 25 Ordinary Shares; Raymond Scott: 25 Ordinary

Shares; Liam Duffy and others: 13 Ordinary Shares.

Those held by Mr. Cavanagh were described in his

affidavit as "sweat equity" - this is to describe him

not being in a position to invest capital in the

Company, but his stake in the business granted due to

the time and effort he gave to the Company.



The Company operated from premises at Ballintra, County

Donegal. Its primary business activity was the

production of a unique, dry cast, lightweight, dual

purpose concrete tank. The tank was of special design

enabling the simple installation of a biological

treatment unit directed at cleansing domestic

wastewater. As noted, the tank was dual purpose,

enabling its installation as a conventional sceptic

tank or that of treatment tank which provided a higher

level of cleansing of the domestic wastewater. While

demand for the product was good, difficulties

associated with an Irish Agrément Certificate created

considerable difficulties for the business. While

Mr. Cavanagh was appointed a director of the Company on

10th April 2002, he was appointed, along with Mr. Liam

Duffy, as joint secretary of the Company until 16th

December 2002, at which point Kenneth Ryan was

appointed.



The Company endeavoured to acquire a business, Water

Treatment Ireland, in or about June 2002 (i.e. when

Mr. Cavanagh was joint secretary of the company). This

transaction involved a cash payment by Liam Duffy and a

personal cheque payment from Raymond Scott to William

Rutherford in the sum of €31,745 each. During the

course of the dealings William Rutherford signed a bank

mandate form, which, without further explanation, such

as was necessary in his separate contest between the

Applicant and Mr. Rutherford, a person could be

pardoned for understanding Mr. Rutherford to be a

director of the Company. In the events, having heard

the dispute I made a decision and found that

Mr. Rutherford was not a director of the Company.

However, the carelessness of those responsible for

maintaining the books and records of the Company, and

in particular the secretary or secretaries of the

Company, permitted this confusion to arise, must bear

some responsibility for the events that unfolded

thereafter. In addition, certain expenditure relating

to stationery, vans and signwriting, and salt was

involved. The deal collapsed and the monies were

effectively lost. The transaction was not recorded in

the Company's records.



The directors issued a Business Plan in November 2002

in relation to its business. This was allegedly

reviewed by an expert who was appointed a director on

16th December 2002. The expert, Kenneth Ryan, an

experienced Chartered Accountant agreed to an

investment of €200,000 for a 25% interest, which

included a €50,000 premium over and above the €150,000

investment agreed by Liam Duffy and Raymond Scott for

their 25% investment. The Liquidator came to the view

that the Business Plan had serious deficiencies.

Prior to the issue of the Business Plan, Liam Duffy, a

builder by trade, entered the lands which were

allegedly owned by another director, Raymond Scott. He

carried out various works on foot of an agreement

granted to him by his fellow directors to construct a

manufacturing facility. No planning permission was in

place. Planning permission was not in place until

March 2003 and the construction was completed in July

2003.



Notwithstanding the fact that planning permission was

not in place, the Company ordered plant and machinery

with a value of €81,065 with a delivery schedule of 8

weeks on 22nd November 2002. They acquired two cranes

in January 2003.



The Financial Statements for the period ended 31st

December 2002 were approved by the directors on 14th

March 2003. In the view of the Liquidator, these did

not show a true and fair view for a number of reasons

as set out in detail in proceedings issued against the

directors. The Liquidator, in his initial report to

the Court, stated that "proper books and records were

not maintained for reasons set out in the proceedings."

Whilst the Liquidator's report to the Court notes that

"production commenced in July 2003 and the first tanks

were delivered in October 2003." On 14th October 2003

Kenneth Ryan and Raymond Scott discussed the

"shareout of cash tanks" and a third director, Brian

Cavanagh, has admitted he received €500 tax free

payments which was noted by Kenneth Ryan as "Brian -

€500 ex cash a/c no Tax."



Raymond Scott was the production manager and his two

sons were employed as operatives. The sons were sacked

and Raymond Scott effectively left his employment post

in December 2003. In early January 2004 he had an

altercation with Mr. Brian Cavanagh in front of two

employees and then served a Notice to Quit on the

Company.



The production facility was inappropriate to the

Company's needs in the view of the Liquidator, as were

the production procedures. The fact that employees

could now clean up collapsed tanks in under 15 minutes

warranted a mention in one of Brian Cavanagh's reports

after he had taken over from Raymond Scott as

production manager in January 2004.



The Liquidator, concerning bank accounts, stated as

follows in his report:-


"The Company obtained a facility letter
of offer from AIB in January 2003
containing terms that the Company never
provided. They switched banks to Bank
of Ireland in March 2004 but allegedly
continued to negotiate with AIB on a
bona fides basis until AIB eventually
issued a demand letter in October 2004.
The bank had issued and threatened
closure previously but by a series of
delaying tactics and misrepresentations
the Company managed to hold off the
Bank until October 2004.

The directors incorrectly availed of
the audit exemption provision, produced
financial statements that did not show
a true and fair view of the State of
Affairs of the Company and persistently
breached the Companies Acts."

To the extent that it is appropriate, Mr. Cavanagh is

referred to in the course of the Liquidator's report to

the Court and in particular under the heading of

"Disposal of Assets". There the Liquidator notes that

the Statement of Affairs disclosed assets with a net

book value of €579,198, but in fact it only had

realisable value of €199,500. He notes, in

particular:-


"The morning after the Liquidation I
met with Brian Cavanagh at his request
and he said he wished to make an offer
of €100,000 for the total assets,
including the buildings and he was
making the offer on behalf of a Frank
Harrington. The offer was rejected out
of hand.

An auctioneer was appointed and all the
assets, with the exception of the
building, were sold to Frank Harrington
Ltd. for a net €150,000. Dismantling
and removal costs were borne by Frank
Harrington Ltd."


On the sale of disposable of assets had a significant

impact on the deficit and in the view of the Liquidator

it was attributable to the negligence of the directors.

In specific reference to Mr. Cavanagh the Liquidator

states as follows in his report:-


"He is included in the Statement of
Affairs for Cash Loans of €5,071 which
entry was made into his account by
Journal Entry and not by lodgement to
the bank account of the Company."


In the report of the Liquidator to the High Court dated

13th April 2007, there is an "Overview" expressed by

the Liquidator and is (inter alia) in the following

terms:-


"This Company was incorporated on 13th
April 2002 and went into Liquidation on
the 14th December 2004, a very brief
period by any standard. One does not
have to look at any of the usual
yardsticks to form a view as to why
this Company failed. This Company
failed from the sheer incompetence of
the promoter/directors, which
incompetence is evident throughout the
proceedings issued by the Liquidator
against the directors. The
incompetence was compounded by an
element of dishonesty as between
themselves and towards third parties
which is quite astounding given that
three of the directors have their own
business ventures."



Mr. Cavanagh did not have a business of his own. He

was the sales director and in that capacity the

Liquidator has criticism in his "Overview" in his

report in the terms as follows:-


"The Sales Director prepared a Business
Plan which is one of the poorest the
Liquidator has ever reviewed and
according to several of the Directors
they had this expertly reviewed by an
experienced Chartered Accountant who,
while acknowledging he made a few small
changes, does not admit that he
expertly reviewed it but does state
that he invested on foot of it. The
Business Plan omitted a critical
transaction involving the loss of
€63,487 in cash and losses from related
activity in acquiring an existing
business and incorporating that
proposed acquisition into the new
venture. This information was
withheld from the fourth Director who,
quite incredibly, when he was informed
of it proceeded to go along ignoring,
for whatever reasons, what most other
people would perceive as "flashing red
lights". The plan was also fatally
deficient in regards to the Capital
Costs of the project."


The Business Plan was much criticised by the Liquidator

in his reports and affidavits and in particular he

formed the view that:-


"The failure of the promoters to draw
up such an agreement and the failure to
distinguish between their rights and
obligations as shareholders, investors,
employees and directors is another
significant feature in the very short
life span of the Company."


I am satisfied, and find as a fact, that both in

respect of the intended acquisition of Water Treatment

Ireland and in regard to the property transaction

dealing with Scott's yard, the approach of any and all

of the directors, to the extent that I am concerned

with directors other than Mr. Cavanagh, could only be

described as shambolic. The arrangements amounted to

an absolute mess and showed no regard to the actual

business problems, which even a cohesive management

team could not have overcome. Insofar as the Water

Treatment Ireland acquisition is concerned,

Mr. Cavanagh states that he did his utmost to dissuade

his co-directors from the acquisition in which it was

paid for initially by two directors, who then placed

themselves in the position of creditors, or debtors of

the Company. Insofar as the transaction with Scott's

yard is concerned, Mr. Cavanagh's defence is that Scott

was a fellow director and he trusted him, and

accordingly, all the parties proceeded on a basis of

trust.



The simplest of untutored persons dealing with a

property transaction would know that it should be in

writing and that the terms should be clear. This was

not so and Mr. Cavanagh knew about this and if he

thought sufficiently strongly about dissenting from it,

he could have resigned from the Company, but he did

not.



The case made against Mr. Cavanagh was made generally

under the following headings:



1) The Rutherford transaction.

This involved an ultimate loss to the company of over

€62,000. The wholly informal nature of the transaction

might be less blameworthy if the company got value for

money - to have squandered the sum for almost nothing

and then to fail to record the transaction in dealing

with directors in the Financial Statement during a

period when Mr. Cavanagh was joint secretary of the

company, if not dishonest, was wholly irresponsible.

Mr. Cavanagh avers he was adverse to the acquisition,

its timing and structure. In my judgment,

Mr. Cavanagh's explanation and exculpation of his

involvement (paragraph 14 - 22 of his affidavit sworn

13th January 2006 and elsewhere) betoken a want of

firmness in permitting the company to be "sucked into"

a position of loss. He may not be the primary

offender, but by failing to ensure or insist on

notification in the Financial Statement to 31st

December 2002 he permitted a false picture to be

presented to those outside the company.



As a director and secretary of the company, more

particularly in his capacity as secretary, he was under

a duty to maintain true and accurate records - to have

in any way been party to the bank mandate being signed

for which an outsider could pardonably consider

Mr. Rutherford to have been a director showed a lack of

attention to detail - it was not a dishonest act, it

may even have been oversight or inadvertence - but it

was irresponsible for Mr. Cavanagh to have so acted.



2) The failure to keep Minutes.

The Liquidator was concerned to note that apart from

the meeting of 30th April 2002 to deal with the

transfer of shares on incorporation and a meeting of

22nd October 2002 to finalise a verbal agreement

between Liam Duffy, Raymond Scott and Brian Cavanagh as

to their respective shareholdings, no other minutes of

meetings were held by the directors until 16th December

2002.



While accepting that small private companies do not

have the resources of a plc and that much of the

business of such companies is done on an informal basis

- yet this does not absolve the directors, especially

one who is a secretary of the company, from keeping

things on a proper footing by the holding of meetings,

however brief and keeping a proper record thereof. The

Liquidator identified the following as not

contemporaneously being minuted - when clearly

decisions had been made -



(a) The construction of a facility on land claimed to

be owned by Mr. Scott. Mr. Cavanagh went along with

the notion of his fellow directors trusting Mr. Scott.

However, Mr. Cavanagh as director/secretary should, in

my judgment, have acted with independence and not only

insisted on the matter being put on a proper legal

footing but to record "the agreement" that subsequently

unravelled.



(b) The acquisition of Water Treatment Ireland - this,

despite any ineffective reservations of Mr. Cavanagh,

should have been the subject of recorded minutes of

whatever type of meetings were held to decide the

matter and its implementation. The failure to

appreciate the importance of proper record keeping by

Mr. Cavanagh betokens a want of appreciation of

corporate governance and the necessity to have regard

to the rights of the public to be able to rely on the

records of the company.



(c) The awarding to Liam Duffy of contracts while not

per se in any way unlawful; it was not only prudent but

proper that such a decision when made at whatever

meeting (even in a yard or workshop) should have been

minuted even if for no other reason than ensuring

harmony amongst the directors who could point to the

minute in the event of a dispute.



(d) the preparation of a Business Plan and that it be

expertly reviewed.

This fact was not minuted even though on Mr. Cavanagh's

own evidence it was a necessary thing to do to plan

ahead. Without wishing to belittle Mr. Cavanagh, an

outsider seeking to understand what the company was

about in a six-month period could be pardoned for

considering the company moribund.



The this point of record keeping of a Business Plan is

distinct from the several criticisms of the plan by the

Liquidator. While undoubtedly the Business Plan

(exhibit "BC 1") is open to the several criticisms

levelled against it by the Liquidator, if it merely

lacked a desired degree of detail and professionalism

that would be, I believe, to use "a hindsight test",

which all of the several cases opened to me by the

parties say is impermissible. The Business Plan may

have been of an amateurish character, but such would

not amount to dishonesty. It points to a certain want

of competence and in that regard is all of a piece with

the "sloppy" record keeping.



However, the issue goes much deeper than that. A

Business Plan will generally be based on a number of

assumptions. A reader is, in my judgment, entitled to

assume that if a particular material circumstance

exists, it will be disclosed and if there is a material

change in circumstances, such will be notified (by a

rider, addendum or amended document) to the user of the

document. The Liquidator particularised (under seven

headings) the serious deficiencies in the report.

While it was submitted on behalf of Mr. Cavanagh that

many of the alleged deficiencies were either de minimis

or could be explained away, I am unable to accept that,

they are serious and they are cumulatively significant

and misleading. To advance as reliable information as

opposed to subjective opinion that an Irish Agrement

Certificate was not really required but that the Irish

Agrement Board was a promoter of an artificial barrier

could be read as fact, not as opinion. To omit to

mention the effective loss in acquiring Water Treatment

Ireland and that 'Scott's yard' was not owned by the

company amount to misleading information. These

associated with the preparation and promulgation of

this report, I find as a fact Mr. Cavanagh acted

irresponsibly and dishonestly (if not consciously so).



3) The construction of a manufacturing facility

without -

(a) Having a proper proposal duly costed placed before

the Board for its consideration; and

(b) Not seeking alternative offers for the works

envisaged.



This issue was properly raised by the Liquidator.

Mr. Cavanagh's response I could understand and accept

as a narrative of facts as they occurred if all those

involved were private persons acting in their own

personal capacity. What marks the conduct at lowest

irresponsible in a corporate context is that the

conduct of directors in "running" a company affects its

debtors and creditors not simply the directors inter

se.



In my judgment, the most reliable yardstick by which

this issue can be assessed is in exhibit "RTQ", being

the comment of Loughside Engineering and their

experience -


"Firstly, the job kept being put back
and this was a concern for us as it was
holding up money that we had invested
in plant for them. When the job
eventually started, it was a complete
nightmare, as there always seemed to be
a difference of opinion between the
directors of the company, particularly
Raymond Scott, Liam Duffy and Brian
Cavanagh".



Disharmony amongst directors can arise from honest

opinions strenuously held - however, to adopt Lord

Styen's maxim "In law context is all", such conduct can

be, and in the context of the facts - which I find

accord with the Loughside Engineering memo - it was

irresponsible.



The events surrounding the "refer to drawer" cheque of

January 2004 can be viewed as either a genuine trade

dispute (which should not have in any event arisen -

there should have been no confusion over the lodgement)

or gross irresponsibility in the carrying on of the

business for which all directors must stand condemned.

However innocent one might wish to consider

Mr. Cavanagh, he participated in and continued to be

part of the management and, in other perhaps than

degree, he was irresponsible. He could have

relinquished his directorship and if he continued with

the company as employee, or indeed elsewhere, could be

exempt from censure. No business can hope to succeed

that loses the trust of 'the bank'; a "refer to drawer"

cheque is an experience to be avoided at all costs. It

matters nothing in "responsibility" terms that there

may have been an arrangement in place between Mr. Ryan

and the bank if Mr. Cavanagh was as he avers in

paragraph 73 of his affidavit sworn on 13th January

2006 - "I was administering a matter which was not my

direct role"..."



I think that as a director in January 2004 when he knew

or ought to have known that the company was overdrawn

at the bank - he should have been extra vigilant to

ensure that no action was taken by the company or any

other director that added further risk to the company.

There is no evidence that he did so. While Loughside

Engineering may not have represented the cheque - that

does not excuse its issuance and referral in the first

place.



4) Document titled "investment Summary & Background".

This was produced by "the directors of the company

including this deponent" (affidavit of Brian Cavanagh

sworn on 28th November 2006). Its purpose was to

entice further investment. While it was referred to by

(inter alia) Mr. Cavanagh in the context of alleged

negotiations with a number of potential investors, it

was a document produced at a time when the company was

unable to meet its debts, was in dispute with AIB,

could not obtain an Irish Agrement Certificate and was

in serious dispute over its lands. None of these

matters are expressly and unequivocally referred to in

the document. The document was not an honest statement

of facts - it was a highly irresponsible document to

issue by the company or by its directors or to be used

as a true basis for negotiation.


I have considered at length the several cases on the

history of S. 150 of the Companies Act 1990 and I found

the succinct review by Clarke J. in Re the matter of

Swanpool Limited (In Voluntary Liquidation)

(unreported, 4th November 2005) particularly helpful.

Bearing in mind that the primary aim of S. 150 is to

deal with directors who have behaved irresponsibly or

dishonestly, I am satisfied and find as a fact that

Mr. Cavanagh acted irresponsibly as a director of the

company. Accordingly, I propose to make an order under

S. 150 on that ground.



THE JUDGEMENT WAS CONCLUDED



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