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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Nalto Construction Ltd -v- Companies Acts [2011] IEHC 251 (22 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2011/H251.html Cite as: [2011] 3 IR 183, [2011] IEHC 251 |
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Judgment Title: Nalto Construction Ltd -v- Companies Acts Composition of Court: Judgment by: Laffoy J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2011] IEHC 251 THE HIGH COURT 2011 266 COS IN THE MATTER OF NALTO CONSTRUCTION LIMITED
AND
IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACTS 1963 - 2009
Judgment of Miss Justice Laffoy delivered on 22nd day of June, 2011.
1. The application 1.2 Section 311(8), insofar as is relevant for present purposes, provides as follows:
2. The circumstances of strike off/application to restore 2.2 On 12th October, 2010 the Companies Registration Office (CRO) received a request for voluntary strike-off (Form H15), which was dated 16th June, 2010 and signed by Mr. Fitzgerald, in which Mr. Fitzgerald requested that the company be struck off the register pursuant to s. 311 of the Act of 1963 on the basis that it was not carrying on business. Mr. Fitzgerald confirmed that the company had no assets “or outstanding liabilities, including contingent or prospective liabilities”. According to the Company Printout the company was listed for strike-off on 24th October, 2010 and was struck off on 9th January, 2011. 2.3 The lodgment of the form H15 in the CRO was accompanied by a letter of no objection from the Revenue Commissioners. That letter was dated 6th October, 2010. It stated that, based on the information then currently available, and without prejudice, the Revenue Commissioners had no objection to the company being struck off the register. The position of the petitioner is that the letter was issued due to inadvertence and oversight. At the time it was issued, the Investigation and Prosecution Division of the Revenue Commissioners had obtained directions from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) in relation to prosecuting the company for certain alleged Revenue offences and this was flagged on the internal central Revenue system at the time, but, notwithstanding that, by mistake the letter of “no objection” was issued by the Companies Unit of the Revenue Commissioners. 2.4 On 4th November, 2010 three applications were made on behalf of the DPP to the District Court to issue three summonses alleging criminal offences against the company and three summonses were issued, in each case returnable on 2nd February, 2011. The offences alleged related to the making of an incorrect return, delivering incorrect accounts and knowingly or wilfully claiming a repayment of corporation tax to which the company was not entitled contrary to s. 1078(2) and (3) of the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997, as amended by s. 111 of the Finance Act 1999. In each case, the alleged offence related to the tax year ending on 31st March, 2000. The criminal proceedings have been adjourned pending the determination of this application. 2.5 The position of the petitioner is that he is a contingent creditor of the company on the basis that the company has an undischarged liability to the Revenue Commissioners arising from what the Revenue Commissioners believed to have been the fraudulent claiming by the company of a repayment of corporation tax to which the company was not entitled. The petitioner has quantified the liability of the company to the Revenue Commissioners at €152,166, comprising €49,710 for tax, a 100% penalty of €49,710 and interest amounting to €52,746. In broad terms, the contention of the Revenue Commissioners is that there was a fraudulent abuse of a self-administered pension scheme set up by the company for the benefit of Mr. Fitzgerald, who was a director of the company, and who was the sole member of the pension scheme. 2.6 Mr. Fitzgerald, in his replying affidavit sworn on 3rd June, 2011, disclosed that summonses have been issued against him personally, which he intends to fully defend. He has averred that there is no substance to the allegations made against the company. He has disclosed that he has been aware of an investigation commenced by the Revenue Commissioners in July 2004 on foot of which, in August 2004, the Revenue Commissioners sought and obtained a substantial volume of the company’s business records. However, no notice of assessment was raised against the company or claim made for the alleged outstanding tax prior to his request for voluntary strike off, which was acceded to six and a half years after the Revenue Commissioners’ investigation commenced. 2.7 On this application letters of consent to the restoration of the company from the CRO (dated 17th May, 2011) and Chief State Solicitor on behalf of the Minister for Finance (dated 24th May, 2011) have been exhibited in an affidavit filed on behalf of the petitioner on this application.
3. The authorities 3.2 The earliest is a decision of the High Court (Kenny J.) in In Re Nelson Car Hire Limited (1973) 107 ILTR 97. That decision concerned an application under s. 310(1) of the Act of 1963, which provides that, where a company has been dissolved, on an application being made for that purpose “by the liquidator of the company or by any other person who appears to the court to be interested”, the Court may make an order, upon such terms as the Court thinks fit, declaring the dissolution to have been void. The company in question had been wound up pursuant to a members’ voluntary winding up and dissolved on 19th September, 1967. Before dissolution the Revenue Commissioners had been interested in the company and, in particular, in property transactions which it had engaged in and, as Kenny J. put it, the Revenue Commissioners “became much more interested” in 1968 after the company was dissolved. In July 1969 the Revenue Commissioners issued a petition seeking an order under s. 310(1). Kenny J. in his judgment (at p. 101) contrasted the wording of s. 310 with s. 311 stating:
3.4 The company in the Deauville case had been struck off for failure to file annual returns. The petitioner claimed to be a creditor of the company. After the company was struck off, but before the petition to restore was brought, the petitioner had instituted proceedings against the company in the Supreme Court of Bermuda for conspiring with others to cause a breach of a licence agreement in relation to a patent. In his judgment, Keane C.J., with whom the other Judges of the Supreme Court concurred, stated (at p. 41):
Happily, however, there is authority which supports that view.” 3.5 In the Deauville case the respondents had argued that the proceedings in Bermuda were not being bona fide maintained or, at the least, that there had been insufficient evidence before the High Court to enable it to reach a conclusion that the proceedings were being bona fide maintained, in reliance of the decision of Kenny J. in In Re Nelson Car Hire Limited. Having pointed out that the application before Kenny J. was an application pursuant to s. 310(1) of the Act of 1963, Keane C.J. observed (at p. 45):
4. Conclusion 4.2 In this case I am satisfied on the evidence that the Revenue Commissioners are acting bona fide in seeking to pursue a claim for the tax alleged to be due by the company together with interest and penalties. I consider it is just to restore the company to the register, so that the Revenue Commissioners can pursue that claim and so that the DPP can prosecute the criminal proceedings against the company. 4.3 It was the mistake on the part of the Revenue Commissioners in issuing the “no objection” letter which paved the way for the strike off of the company. If that letter had not issued, this application would not have been necessary. I think it was not unreasonable for Mr. Fitzgerald to contest this application, having regard to all of the factual circumstances. Therefore, I am of the view that on the making of a restoration order the petitioner should be liable for Mr. Fitzgerald’s costs of the application on a party and party basis. 4.4 Accordingly, there will be an order pursuant to s. 311(8) that the company be restored to the register. The order will contain the usual provision that it will lapse in the event of a copy of the perfected order not being delivered to the registrar of companies within three months from the date on which the order was pronounced. Further, there will be an order that the petitioner pay the costs of Mr. Fitzgerald, as respondent, on a party and party basis, the costs to be taxed in default of agreement.
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