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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 >> Kaupthing Singer and Friedlander Ltd, Re [2010] EWCA Civ 518 (11 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/518.html Cite as: [2010] Bus LR 1500, [2010] EWCA Civ 518, [2010] BPIR 839 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT (MR JUSTICE NORRIS)
88052 of 2008
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HUGHES
and
LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF KAUPTHING SINGER AND FRIEDLANDER LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 |
____________________
Richard Fisher (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna)
Hearing dates : 15th April 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Etherton :
Introduction
Factual background
The statutory setting
"(1) This Rule applies where the administrator, being authorised to make the distribution in question, has pursuant to Rule 2.95 given notice that he proposes to make it.
(2) In this Rule "mutual dealings" means mutual credits, mutual debts or other mutual dealings between the company and any creditor of the company proving or claiming to prove for a debt in the administration but does not include any of the following
(3) An account shall be taken as at the date of the notice referred to in paragraph (1) of what is due from each party to the other in respect of the mutual dealings and the sums due from one party shall be set off against the sums due from the other.
(4) A sum shall be regarded as being due to or from the company for the purposes of paragraph (3) whether -
(a) it is payable at present or in the future;(b) the obligation by virtue of which it is payable is certain or contingent; or(c) its amount is fixed or liquidated, or is capable of being ascertained by fixed rules or as a matter of opinion.
(5)
(6) Rules 2.86 to 2.88 shall apply for the purposes of this Rule in relation to any sums due to the company which -
(a) are payable in a currency other than sterling;(b) are of a periodical nature; or(c) bear interest.
(7) Rule 2.105 shall apply for the purposes of this Rule to any sum due to or from the company which is payable in the future.
(8) Only the balance (if any) of the account owed to the creditor is provable in the administration. Alternatively the balance (if any) owed to the company shall be paid to the administrator as part of the assets except where all or part of the balance results from a contingent or prospective debt owed by the creditor and in such a case the balance (or that part of it which results from the contingent or prospective debt) shall be paid if and when that debt becomes due and payable.
(9) In this Rule "obligation" means an obligation however arising, whether by virtue of an agreement, rule of law or otherwise."
"(1) Where a creditor has proved for a debt of which payment is not due at the date of the declaration of the dividend he is entitled to dividend equally with the other creditors but subject as follows.
(2) For the purpose of dividend (and no other purpose) the amount of the creditor's admitted proof shall be reduced by applying the following formula-
X/1.05n
Where -
(a) "X" is the value of the admitted proof; and(b) "n" is the period beginning with the relevant date and ending with the date on which the payment of the creditor's debt would otherwise be due expressed in years and months in decimalised form
(3) In paragraph (2) "relevant date" means
(a) in the case of an administration which was not immediately preceded by a winding up, the date that the company entered administration;(b) in the case of an administration which was immediately preceded by a winding up, the date that the company went into liquidation.
"
The following Rules which relate to mutual credit and set-off have been revised and new Rules substituted: -
Rules 2.85 and 4.90
The substituted Rules are designed to provide greater detail and clarity of meaning for the user to reflect the applicable case law and bring the rule on set-off for liquidation into line with the rule in administration. The main points to note are:
• Set-off in liquidation proceedings and administration proceedings are harmonised so that all amounts due to and from a company are "mutual dealings" to be included in, or excluded from, the set-off account, as applicable.• For the purposes of calculating the set-off account, the Rules which relate to the quantification of debts (Rules 2.81, 2.86 to 2.88, 2.105, 4.86, 4.91 to 4.93 and 11.13) are extended to cover debts owed to a company, as well as debts owed by a company. Accordingly, debts owed to the company that are contingent or payable at a future time are to be included in the set-off account and liquidators and administrators will be able to place a value on such debts.• Where, after the calculation of the set-off account an amount is owed to the company arising from a contingent debt or a debt payable at a future time, such an amount only has to be paid to the liquidator or administrator if and when it becomes due and payable."
The judgment
"26 ... The creditor cannot recover post-administration interest on his deposit because IR 2.88 imposes a general bar on his right to claim it. There is no such general bar on the right of the company to claim and recover post-administration loan interest. The only inhibition is on claiming post-administration interest in the process of taking the account of mutual dealings. IR 2.85(6) says that "Rule ... 2.88 shall apply for the purposes of this Rule in relation to any sums due to the company" i.e. for the purposes of conducting the insolvency set-off and nothing else. Once the balance is struck then IR 2.85(8) says:-
the balance owed to the company shall be paid to the administrator as part of the assets..."
But there is no need to read this as if it said "and the balance shall not bear interest notwithstanding what the contract says". The balance is not a newly created liability, the novel product of a statutory process. It is the balance due under a contract, the remainder of which has been extinguished in the insolvency set-off. Indeed it is quite plain that "the balance" continues to be subject to the terms of the contract under which it arises, for in the case of a contingent or prospective debt the Rule goes on to say that such a balance "shall be paid if and when that debt becomes due and payable" (i.e. under the contract, on the loan maturity date or earlier under any default provisions)."
"First, there is no warrant in the language of IR 2.85(7) for treating it as confined only to non-interest-bearing debts. It expressly says that it applies to "any sum" due from the company which is payable in the future. Second, it seems to me that the principle upon which Rule 2.85 proceeds is that in the taking of the account on the insolvency set-off the same system of categorisation of recoverable/allowable items and the same valuation approach is to apply on each side of the account. "X" does not include interest on the depositor's side of the account and I do not see why as a matter of construction "X" should include interest on the company's side. Third, I have already held that Rule 2.88 is to be read as excluding post-administration interest from the sums allowable to the company in ascertaining the balance on the insolvency set-off: it would be inconsistent with that to hold that in the formula to be used to discount to present value "X" is to include post-administration interest."
"37. When the account is taken, sums payable in the future are entered in the account on each side. In each case interest arising after the administration and before the date of the intended distribution is left out of account. In each case the sums that are to be set off against one another are reduced to their present value. The accounting exercise will produce a balance one way or the other. If the balance is in favour of the depositor the depositor will receive a dividend only upon the unextinguished part of the present value of his deposit, because he is being paid early. If the balance is in favour of the company, however, the company is not entitled to demand immediate payment of the unextinguished part of its loan, even though the loan has been reduced to present values. That discounted loan remains outstanding until the contractual maturity date, bearing contractual interest."
" a customer has deposited £100 repayable in July 2010 and borrowed £1000 repayable in July 2018. Set-off is necessary. Both deposit and loan are future debts and must be discounted to present value. The £100 is discounted by one year. The entire £1000 is discounted by nine years, even though only the present value of £100 is needed to set-off against the deposit, and even though the assumed present payment of the remaining £900 cannot occur."
The Appeal
Discussion
(1) The deposit of £100 due to the customer and repayable in July 2010[1] is discounted back to 20 May 2009, producing a sum of £94.34[2].
(2) That part of the loan of £1,000 due to the bank payable in July 2018[3], which is required to produce a figure of £94.34 when discounted back to 20 May 2009, is £147.75[4].
(3) The £94.34 (which represents the present value of the £100 deposit) and £94.34 (which represents the present value of £147.75 of the loan) are then set-off against each other, so as to extinguish both.
(4) The remainder of the loan of £852.25 (i.e. £1,000 less £147.75), which is not required for the purposes of set- off, remains due and payable by the customer in July 2018 in accordance with rule 2.85(8)."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Hughes
Lord Justice Mummery
Note 1 Say, 31 July 2010. [Back] Note 2 The period from 20 May 2009 to 31 July 2010 is 1 year, 2 months, 10 days producing a figure for n of 1.1944. [Back] Note 3 Say, 31 July 2018. [Back] Note 4 The period from 20 May 2009 to 31 July 2018 is 9 years, 2 months, 10 days producing a figure for n of 9.1944. [Back]