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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Demarco v Perkins [2006] EWCA Civ 188 (23 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/188.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 188 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH NOTTINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE INGLIS
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
(The Master of the Rolls)
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
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ANTHONY RICARDO DEMARCO | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
- v - | ||
MICHAEL PERKINS | ||
BULLEY DAVEY (A Firm) | DEFENDANTS/RESPONDENTS |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR N BRIGGS (instructed by Messrs CMS Cameron McKenna, Wapping Road, Bristol, BS1 4RW) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"… where the creditors' meeting summoned under section 257 [i.e. the meeting of creditors to consider a proposed IVA] approves the proposed individual voluntary arrangement … and the debtor is an undischarged bankrupt the court may … (a) annul the bankruptcy order by which he was adjudged bankrupt; ..." (My italics)
"… continues to suffer the stigma of bankruptcy, and the associated loss and damage in both his business and his personal affairs, whereas he should have obtained an annulment, and thereby brought such stigma loss and damage to an end, not later than 25 March 2000".
(1) "for the cost of obtaining an annulment";
(2) "for the loss and damage sustained by reason of not having obtained an annulment, during the period from 25 March 2000 to the date when the annulment is obtained"; and
(3) "further or alternatively, for the recovery so far as may be appropriate of charges made by Mr Perkins and/or the firm which were wholly wasted and/or may be duplicated as and when a new Trustee has been appointed".
"It is the Defendants' case that the lost claimed is too remote and/or has not been caused by the actions or inactions of the Defendants. It is denied that the costs of annulment pursuant to section 282(1)(b) is the proper measure of any loss suffered."
"75. The claimant submits, and I agree, that it is not the case of remoteness. The defendants' duty was to take steps that, as I have found, would have achieved for the claimant a particular status, that of someone who had been made bankrupt but his bankruptcy had been annulled. Failure to achieve that status is a natural consequence of failing to take the effective steps leading to it so that the cost now of achieving that status is the measure of loss naturally following from the breach, if that status as contemplated can now be achieved.
"76. I do not think that purpose or motive is relevant to quantify the damage that has been suffered nor that Ruxley helps the defendants since the defendants achieved nothing at all in performance of the contract and I do not take the case of Ruxley as authority for the general proposition that where compensation would be disproportionately large the court in contract cases can generally search round for a more modest measure."
"82. I have considered these arguments and I do not find the outcome as being without difficulty. What I do not feel able to do is to concentrate, as asked, upon the outcome of annulment separately from the IVA. What the claimant engaged the defendant to use care and skill in trying to achieve was a particular status for him. Instead of being a discharged bankrupt he would in the end be someone whose debts had not been discharged by bankruptcy but debts the liability for which had been eliminated by an IVA. He would not simply be someone whose bankruptcy had been annulled.
"83. Both a bankruptcy and an IVA are registered, though over different periods and on different registers. Both, however, proclaim that the debtor is someone who could not and did not pay his debts. In answer to the question: have you ever been bankrupt or made a composition of your creditors, the answer in each case would have to be yes.
"84. It seems to me that the claimant is now seeking to be put in a position that is different in kind from the position he would have been in but for the breach of contract. It has not been possible at any time after 25 March 2000 to put him in that position or anything like it. Therefore, putting him in the position now that he could never have been in is not compensation to which, in my judgment, he is entitled. It would involve the payment of debts that were never expected to be paid. There is no alternative basis for financial loss proposed and in those circumstances the claim based on the costs of obtaining an annulment now fails.
"85. If I am wrong about that I would, subject to a 15 per cent reduction, have awarded the claimant £154,521.92 in accordance with paragraph 14 of the claimant's schedule. Though not formally admitted, the computation of the net cost of obtaining an annulment now after deducting the concession the insurance company creditor is apparently prepared to make, the assets in the hand of the first defendant as trustee in bankruptcy and what would have been paid by the claimant into the IVA seems to me to be the right compensation. For the reasons I have given, however, I do not award it."
"[Mr Demarco] now has the status of being a discharged bankrupt. He would not have had that status [sc. but for the defendants' breach of duty] but would have had the status of having made a composition with his creditors through an IVA, which he does not now have."
"90. There may be some force in Mr Perkins' view given to me from the witness box that in some people's eyes there is not a great deal of difference between the two. But I think there is a difference that can be measured and that is not just because of the obvious subjective feeling that Mr Demarco himself has about his status. Moreover, and importantly, this status of being a discharged bankrupt is a continuing one as it will never leave him. Nonetheless, I think the award must be modest. Bearing in mind that the status is, however, permanent, I would award £2,000 but that must be discounted by the 15 per cent that I have already identified, so the award of general damages will be £1,700".
"91. Under the head of general damages evidence was advanced, at least in writing, on various matters. Mr Demarco said that he wishes to emigrate to Australia but there is in fact no evidence of the effect on his chances of being able to do so at his age and with his status as a discharged bankrupt as opposed to an IVA status. He wishes for the purposes of a business project to find a business partner but feels he may be inhibited in that. At one stage, two applications for a credit card were refused, although he now has one. Mancetter's relations with its bankers were affected after the claimant's discharge by their attitude towards the company because he was a discharged bankrupt running it. He was declined the opportunity to negotiate for the purposes of a nightclub that he thinks probably was because he was a discharged bankrupt.
"92. In none of these cases a financial loss has been proved or even now asserted. This is an area which in any event is likely to throw up genuine problems of remoteness as well as uncertainty to the point where an award would be speculative. They are not put forward as financial loss items nor do I think that compensation for loss of reputation is the right approach. I prefer to adhere to the approach set out above, which I think is consistent with the approach of McKinnon J in Rey that the compensation is for the awareness and the fact of the status that he has as a discharged bankrupt compared with the status that would have been the position had the bankruptcy been annulled under the scheme that was proposed".
"It seems to me that the approach in Heywood v Wellers is applicable to this case and that a personal bankruptcy is somewhat akin to a criminal conviction. Scott Baker J, in the Ricardo McLeish case, awarded £6,000 for mental distress where a plaintiff remained convicted for more than two years of assaults upon police officers and being in possession of an offensive weapon. It seems to me that an appropriate award for mental distress and inconvenience in respect of a personal bankruptcy which lasted from 6 September until 8 December 1994, that is just over three months, should be modest. It is not as serious as a criminal conviction. It seems to me that an award of £1,500 would be appropriate."
- that the defendants knew that Mr Demarco wanted an annulment so that he would not have to describe himself as a former bankrupt;
- that the defendants must have known that, if an annulment under section 261(1)(a) was not available, the only route to an annulment was under section 282(1)(b);
- that the defendants knew that Mr Demarco did not have sufficient funds at his disposal to enable him to obtain an annulment under section 282(1)(b);
- that once it became clear to the defendants that it was too late to obtain an annulment via the IVA route, the defendants investigated the possibility of an annulment under section 282(1)(b) and attempted to persuade the Revenue to agree to a reduction in their debt;
- that the use of section 282(1)(b) only ceased to be a possibility once the Revenue had refused to do so, requiring payment of its debt in full; and
- that the defendants advised Mr Demarco that an annulment would "wipe clean" the bankruptcy.
Order: Appeal allowed in part.