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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 >> Lewis & Anor v Metropolitan Property Realisations Ltd [2009] EWCA Civ 448 (12 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/448.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 448, [2010] 2 WLR 615, [2010] 1 Ch 148, [2009] BPIR 820, [2009] Fam Law 794, [2009] 4 All ER 141, [2009] 3 FCR 251, [2010] Ch 148, [2009] NPC 76 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION IN BANKRUPTCY
MRS JUSTICE PROUDMAN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
MR JUSTICE MANN
____________________
PAUL WARREN LEWIS GONDA TARYN LEWIS |
Appellants/Applicants |
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- and - |
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METROPOLITAN PROPERTY REALISATIONS LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR. J. BRIGGS (instructed by Messrs. Mishcon de Reya) for the Respondent.
Hearing date: 20th May 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
Introduction
The facts
"4. In consideration of the sum of one pound (£1.00) now paid by the Assignee to the Assignor [sic] the Assignors [ie the trustees in bankruptcy] HEREBY ASSIGN to the Assignee all the equitable and beneficial rights and interest as the Assignor has in the Property.
5. In the event that the Assignee effects a sale of the Property, then following completion of the sale and upon receipt of the proceeds of sale and the deduction of all costs and expenses including but without limitation to professional and legal fees, marketing costs and further taxes, twenty-five per cent (25%) of the net proceeds of sale of the Property will be paid by the Assignee to the Assignor."
The statute and the principal issue
"283A Bankrupt's home ceasing to form part of estate
(1) This section applies where property comprised in the bankrupt's estate consists of an interest in a dwelling house which at the date of the bankruptcy was the sole or principal residence of:
(a) the bankrupt,
(b) the bankrupt's spouse or [civil partner], or
(c) a former spouse [or former civil partner] of the bankrupt.
(2) At the end of the period of three years beginning with the date of the bankruptcy the interest mentioned in subsection (1) shall
(a) cease to be comprised in the bankrupt's estate, and
(b) vest in the bankrupt (without conveyance, assignment or transfer).
(3) Subsection (2) shall not apply if during the period mentioned in that subsection
(a) the trustee realises the interest mentioned in subsection (1),
(b) the trustee applies for an order for sale in respect of the dwelling-house,
(c) the trustee applies for an order for possession of the dwelling-house,
(d) the trustee applies for an order under section 313 in Chapter IV in respect of that interest, or
(e) the trustee and the bankrupt agree that the bankrupt shall incur a specified liability to his estate (with or without the addition of interest from the date of the agreement) in consideration of which the interest mentioned in subsection (1) shall cease to form part of the estate.
(4) Where an application of a kind described in subsection (3)(b) to (d) is made during the period mentioned in subsection (2) and is dismissed, unless the court orders otherwise the interest to which the application relates shall on the dismissal of the application
(a) cease to be comprised in the bankrupt's estate, and
(b) vest in the bankrupt (without conveyance, assignment or transfer).
(5) If the bankrupt does not inform the trustee or the official receiver of his interest in a property before the end of the period of three months beginning with the date of the bankruptcy, the period of three years mentioned in subsection (2)
(a) shall not begin with the date of bankruptcy, but
(b) shall begin with the date on which the trustee or official receiver becomes aware of the bankrupt's interest.
(6) The court may substitute for the period of three years mentioned in subsection (2) a longer period
(a) in prescribed circumstances, and
(b) in such other circumstances as the court thinks appropriate.
(7) The rules may make provision for this section to have effect with the substitution of a shorter period for the period of three years mentioned in subsection (2) in specified circumstances (which may be described by reference to action to be taken by a trustee in bankruptcy).
(8) The rules may also, in particular, make provision
(a) requiring or enabling the trustee of a bankrupt's estate to give notice that this section applies or does not apply;
(b) about the effect of a notice under paragraph (a);
(c) requiring the trustee of a bankrupt's estate to make an application to the Chief Land Registrar.
(9) Rules under subsection (8)(b) may, in particular
(a) disapply this section;
(b) enable a court to disapply this section;
(c) make provision in consequence of a disapplication of this section;
(d) enable a court to make provision in consequence of a disapplication of this section;
(e) make provision (which may include provision conferring jurisdiction on a court or tribunal) about compensation."
The judgment below
i) The dictionary definition, which she did not find helpful.ii) The use of the word elsewhere in the 1986 Act, together with other provisions of the Act, which she found did not clearly support Mr and Mrs Lewis's construction of "realises" in the subsection.
iii) A trustee's power to sell on deferred consideration, which she found did not sit well with the submission that a realisation required that all the cash should be got in (paragraph 17). This seems to have been an important point for the judge.
iv) Other authorities on the meaning of "realise" in different contexts, which she found unhelpful.
v) The scheme of the section.
vi) Ramsay v Hartley [1977] 1 WLR 686 which satisfied her that the assignment was absolute notwithstanding that part of the consideration to be paid by the bankrupt was a future consideration.
vii) Policy considerations, which she found did not point against the assignment being a realisation.
"there is nothing in section 283A requiring any realisation for the purposes of that section to be on terms more restrictive than are available to the trustee generally under the 1986 Act"
and determined that
" a trustee who sells the estate's interest for deferred contingent consideration 'realises' the interest within the meaning of s.283A of the Insolvency Act 1986." (paragraph 32)
The basis of this appeal
The issues and their resolution
"convert into cash or money"
That is a good starting point for the Lewis's case. Alternative definitions are recorded by the judge as being "sell out" and "fetch as a price", which she described as being more general, but we still think that they import the general impression of a completed transaction as opposed to one where the price is still outstanding.
" 'realised' must there have its ordinary commercial meaning, which, if not equivalent to 'reduced to actual cash in hand', must at least be rendered tangible for the purposes of division."
"What does 'realisation' here mean? I should say it has the same meaning as it would have in any of the everyday transactions of life. If you speak of realising stocks or securities, or give your broker instructions to do so, what is meant by realising? Nothing more than their sale and conversion into money at the highest price that can reasonably be obtained."
"However, there was no issue in either case as to the point of time when the realisation occurred. I would therefore distinguish such authorities." (paragraph 20)
"In my judgment the word 'realised' in the context of section 82(1) simply means 'got in or reduced into cash', and the words 'by the trustee' mean simply in his capacity as trustee, that is from assets which vested in him as trustee."
He was faced with a different contrast than that which arises in this case. His case turned on the extent to which a trustee had to do something in order to "realise" an asset, which is not the same question we have. Accordingly Vinelott J's remarks as to the meaning of "realised" were not directed to our issue. Proudman J made a similar observation in paragraph 19 of her judgment. However, it is not without significance that, in a bankruptcy statute, he applied what has already been held to be the ordinary English meaning of the words. We think it is more significant to the present case than she thought it was.
"Parliament has now made it clear in the new s.383A [sic s.283A] of the Insolvency Act 1986 (not yet in force) that it is undesirable for trustees to wait for many years before resolving their rights in respect of the home of the bankrupt or his spouse. This introduces a general rule that the trustee must take steps to realise his interest in the home of the bankrupt or his spouse within three years of the bankruptcy, subject to specified exceptions. If he fails to do so the property vests in the bankrupt and the creditors lose all rights to it. All parties concerned would know where they stand within a reasonable time. Although the section is not in force and will not apply to this case when it is, it can be taken as a strong indication of public policy, and the court should take into account that policy in deciding what is equitable."
"the amount specified in the charging order as the value of the bankrupt's interest in the property at the date of the order" [plus interest; emphasis supplied]
Thus the bankrupt, and not his estate, gets the benefit of any increase in value from the date of the order. The estate's interest is fixed in monetary terms. So the combined effect of this amended section and section 283A is that the trustee has 3 years to apply for the charging order. If he does so within that 3 years, the value of his interest is fixed at the then value. If the trustee does not apply (and has not taken any other steps in relation to the interest) then the estate loses its interest. The interests of the bankrupt and the trustee are crystallised at that time in financial terms.
i) The section only applies to that part of the bankrupt's estate comprising his or his spouse/civil partner's dwelling-house. It does not apply to other property.ii) The trustee has three years to decide what to do where the estate has such an interest.
iii) If he does nothing, then (subject to the provisions of subsection (6), which presumably allow for special cases which we do not consider further) the estate loses the property interest.
iv) If the interest is of low value (within the meaning of the Act) the trustee, while technically owning the interest, will in practice have no enforcement mechanism available to him. If he does nothing, the interest reverts to the bankrupt under section 283A. If he starts proceedings (whether for an order for sale or a charging order), that will technically keep his interest alive while the proceedings are pending (section 283A(3)(b) and (d)) but the interest will revest when the proceedings are dismissed under section 313A (see section 283A(4)).
v) If the interest is of significant value, the trustee can do the following:
a) Apply for an order for sale. This keeps the interest out of the scope of section 283A while the proceedings are alive and gives the co-owner the opportunity to buy the trustee out at the then value. Alternatively the property will be ordered to be sold and the trustee gets the then value.b) Apply for a charging order (if the conditions of section 313 are fulfilled). This secures the then value to the trustee, with future increases going to the bankrupt.c) Reach an agreement with the bankrupt under subsection (3)(e) in effect, sell to the bankrupt. That will obviously reflect the then value and secure future increases for the bankrupt.vi) Sell the interest to someone other than the bankrupt or the civil partner/spouse at a price payable and paid on sale. It is accepted by the Lewises that this would be a realisation. It would be a sale at the then value, with future increases accruing to the purchaser.
vii) It should not be forgotten that he might agree with the co-owner to sell, or the co-owner might want to sell anyway, in which case the trustee gets the estate's interest at its then value.
i) For the reasons given above, it would extend the meaning of "realises" beyond its normal English sense.ii) It would be an unusual transaction for Parliament to have contemplated in these circumstances. Section 283A is designed to deal with a real world problem, operating in a world of real, not fanciful, commercial transactions. A sale of a beneficial interest to an outsider is unusual enough. A sale with fixed monetary consideration left outstanding would be even more unusual. It is hard to imagine who would do such a thing.
iii) A sale with a contingent monetary consideration left outstanding is more conceivable, particularly if the consideration is dependent on a future sale of the property and is otherwise not payable, as the present case demonstrates. But the contingency of the obligation makes it look even less like a "realisation" in everyday terms (pending the fulfilment of the contingency), and it seems to create the very uncertainty that the rest of the scheme seems, by and large, to seek to remove. While the scheme is not spelled out and has to be inferred, and while it is not perfect, this sort of transaction sticks out like a sore thumb against the background of the rest of the section.
i) Mr Davies sought, from time to time, to deploy the claim of Mrs Lewis to an equity of exoneration which he said, on the facts of this case, reduced the bankrupt's interest to a low value one for the purposes of disentitling the trustee to a charging order. There has been no determination of Mrs Lewis's rights in this respect, and we ignore the possibility of such a claim.ii) Mr Davies's skeleton argument sought to say that the transaction between the trustee and MPRL was collusive or a sham, "done in a corner". This issue was not raised in the application, in the evidence or in the court below. It is too late to raise it now.
Conclusions