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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 >> Bland & Anor v Keegan [2024] EWCA Civ 934 (05 August 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/934.html Cite as: [2024] Bus LR 1694, [2024] EWCA Civ 934, [2024] WLR(D) 391 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
His Honour Judge Hodge KC (sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
IN THE MATTER OF JDK CONSTRUCTION LIMITED
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
and
LORD JUSTICE SNOWDEN
____________________
ANDREW BLAND and JANET FRANCIS MAYO |
Applicants/Respondents |
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- and – |
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JEANETTE KEEGAN |
Respondent/Appellant |
____________________
Louis Doyle KC and Douglas Cochran (instructed by Primas Law) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 9 May 2024
(additional written submissions received on 26 July 2024)
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Snowden:
Background
"It is admitted that [Julie] signed the [Stock Transfer Form], but it is denied that she did so with the intention of forging, or purporting to forge, the signature of [Jeanette], or of any other person. [Julie] intended to sign, and did as a matter of fact sign, the [Stock Transfer Form] in her own capacity, i.e. as herself. The circumstances in which she did so were that Darren placed the [Stock Transfer Form] in front of her, and aggressively demanded that she sign it, raising his voice in the process. Darren informed [Julie], when placing the [Stock Transfer Form] before her, that it was an "internal" Company document that she was required to sign in order to resolve a dispute that had arisen between himself and [Jeanette] in respect of tax on dividends. [Julie] signed the [Stock Transfer Form] on that basis, i.e. that (i) she was aggressively told to do so by Darren, (ii) did not properly consider its contents, and believed Darren when he told her it was an internal document that she was required to sign in order to end a disagreement between Darren and [Jeanette] and (iii) she did not intend to forge, and did not forge, the signature of [Jeanette]."
"1. [Julie] acknowledges that she does not own the 50 shares in the [Company] purportedly transferred to her on 20 April 2019 from [Jeanette].
2. Julie will transfer the 50 shares that she does own to [Jeanette] for the consideration of £1.00 within 2 working days of receipt of a sealed copy of the [Tomlin Order].
…
4. Julie shall cause to appoint [Darren] as director of the [Company] and immediately after Darren's appointment resign as director of the [Company] herself….
5. Darren agrees to indemnify Julie against all and any claims made against her by the [Company] in relation to any matter arising on or before the date of this Agreement …
6. Darren shall pay the contribution of £8,000 plus VAT to Julie in respect of costs of this action on an ex-gratia basis and without any admission of liability.
…
8. This Agreement is in full and final settlement of, and each of Darren and Julie hereby releases and forever discharges, all and/or any actions, claims, rights, demands and set-offs, whether in this jurisdiction or any other, whether or not presently known to the parties or to the law, and whether in law or equity, that it ever had, may have or hereafter can, shall or may have against the other party arising out of or connected with [the Company] …"
The Judgment
"30. Mr. Fennell [for Jeanette] has invited the court finally to determine all outstanding matters today. He submits that nothing is to be gained by any further investigation of the evidence. There has been no application for cross-examination of either Darren or Jeanette. There is no evidence before the court from Julie, beyond the defence to the rectification claim, which she has verified by a statement of truth.
31. Mr. Fennell submits that nothing is to be gained by any further investigation of the evidence. There has been no suggestion that Jeanette in any way authorised the forging of her signature on the [Stock Transfer Form], or that she has in some way acquiesced in that transfer, or is estopped from denying [sic] that it is a forgery. I accept that submission. I can see that no valid purpose is to be served by any attempt at any further investigation of the facts of this case.
32. Mr. Cochran [for the Liquidators] began by emphasising that the [Liquidators] have been placed in an invidious position. As innocent liquidators, they find themselves caught in the middle of what has been an unsavoury shareholders' dispute between Julie, on the one hand, and Jeanette and Darren, on the other. He emphasises that this [Company] has at all times been a creature of Darren, and that it is he who stands to gain from removing the [Liquidators] from office, because it is he who is in de facto control of the [Company]. Mr. Cochran submits that the limited evidence before the court suggests that it is Darren who was the person who effectively orchestrated the production and use of the share transfer form, although he has now decided that it is in his own best interests to deny its validity and effect. Mr. Cochran emphasises, rightly, that there is no court finding that there has been any forgery."
"48. As it seems to me, the real issue in the present case is therefore whether, even on the footing that the share transfer form was a forgery, Jeanette should have been treated as a member of the [Company] for the purposes of the requirement to participate in the special resolution to place the [Company] into voluntary winding-up. It therefore seems to me that the real issue in the present case becomes one as to Jeanette's continuing status as a member when, on the evidence based on the filings at Companies House, her name did not, at that time, appear on the [Company's] register of members."
"49. Notwithstanding the provisions of section 127 of the Companies Act, it does seem to me that the register is conclusive as to those who were members of the [Company] at the time of the special resolution. Section 112(2) is, in my judgment, clear that every person whose name is entered in the [Company's] register of members is a member of the [Company]. That is reinforced by the power under section 125 that is conferred upon the court to rectify the register.
50. When one looks at the scheme of the Companies Act as a whole, it seems to me that the register is conclusive as to those who are members of the [Company] at any particular point in time. On that basis, even if the register of members were liable to be rectified, following a decision that the share transfer form was a forgery and of no effect, since Jeanette's name was not on the register at the time of the passing of the special resolution to wind-up the [Company], it seems to me that the [Company] was validly placed into voluntary winding-up."
The Judge therefore declared that the Liquidators' appointment was valid.
The arguments on appeal
Assumptions
Analysis
"112. The members of a company
(1) The subscribers of a company's memorandum are deemed to have agreed to become members of the company, and on its registration become members and must be entered as such in its register of members.
(2) Every other person who agrees to become a member of a company, and whose name is entered in its register of members, is a member of the company."
"113. Register of members
(1) Every company must keep a register of its members.
(2) There must be entered in the register–
(a) the names and addresses of the members,
(b) the date on which each person was registered as a member, and
(c) the date at which any person ceased to be a member.
(3) In the case of a company having a share capital, there must be entered in the register, with the names and addresses of the members, a statement of–
(a) the shares held by each member, distinguishing each share -
(i) by its number (so long as the share has a number), and
(ii) where the company has more than one class of issued shares, by its class, and
(b) the amount paid or agreed to be considered as paid on the shares of each member."
"(1) A company is a "subsidiary" of another company, its "holding company", if that other company –
…
(c) is a member of it and controls alone, pursuant to an agreement with other members, a majority of the voting rights in it."
The question was whether a company (Enviroco) remained the subsidiary of another (ASCO) in circumstances in which ASCO had pledged its shares in Enviroco by way of security to a bank by a method which involved registration of the shares in the name of a nominee for the bank on Enviroco's register of members.
"37. The starting point is that the definition of "member" in what is now section 112 of the [Companies Act 2006] … reflects a fundamental principle of United Kingdom company law, namely that, except where express provision is made to the contrary, the person on the register of the members is the member to the exclusion of any other person, unless and until the register is rectified: in re Sussex Brick Co [1904] 1 Ch 598 (retrospective rectification of register did not invalidate notices).
38. Ever since the Companies Clauses Consolidation Act 1845 (8 & 9 Vict c 16) and the Companies Act 1862 (25 & 26 Vict c 89) membership has been determined by entry on the register of members. The companies legislation proceeds on that basis and would be unworkable if that were not so. Among the many provisions relating to members are these: (1) a member will be bound by alterations in the company's articles, subject to specified exceptions (section 25 of the 2006 Act); (2) there are elaborate provisions relating to the register of members (sections 113 et seq.), including a duty to keep an index of members (section 115) and rights to inspect and require copies (sections 116–121), and documents in hard copy form must be sent to a member at his address as shown in the register of members (Schedule 5, Part 2); (3) a subsidiary cannot be a member of its holding company (section 136); (4) elaborate provision is made for voting by members, by proxies appointed by members, and by joint holders (sections 281 et seq.); (5) the company must send its annual accounts and report to every member (section 423); (6) unlawful distributions may be recovered from a member who knows or has reasonable grounds for believing that it is unlawfully made: section 847(2).
39. For those and other purposes the legislation makes it clear that the member is the person on the register, and where it is necessary to apply the legislation to persons who are not on the register, special provision is made. Thus where the shares are bearer shares, special provision is made to allow the bearer to be deemed to be a member: section 122(3). So also the right of a member to bring a derivative claim or present an unfair prejudice petition is expressly extended "to a person who is not a member of a company but to whom shares in the company have been transferred or transmitted by operation of law": sections 260(5) and 994(2)."
"239. This section restates section 22 of the [Companies Act 1985]. There are additional words to make it clear that the subscribers to the memorandum become members on registration of the company, even if the company fails to enter their names in the register of members."
"I cannot see upon what principle your Lordships can hold that the defendants are liable in this action. The forged certificate is a pure nullity. It is quite true that persons dealing with limited liability companies are not bound to inquire into their indoor management, and will not be affected by irregularities of which they had no notice. But this doctrine, which is well established, applies only to irregularities that otherwise might affect a genuine transaction. It cannot apply to a forgery.
Another ground was pressed upon us, namely, that this certificate was delivered by [the secretary] in the course of his employment, and that delivery imported a representation or warranty that the certificate was genuine. He had not, nor was held out as having, authority to make any such representation or to give any such warranty. And certainly no such authority arises from the simple fact that he held the office of secretary and was a proper person to deliver certificates."
"Now, in this case there can be no doubt but that the names of these gentlemen ought to have been on the register at a date earlier than the time of the holding of the meetings in relation to the reconstruction of this company. Under those circumstances, when one looks at re Joint Stock Discount Company (1866) LR 3 Eq 77 ("Nation's Case"), which was a decision by Lord Romilly MR, there can be no doubt that that is an authority for the proposition that when it is right that an order for rectification should be made - whether the order be for rectification by taking a name off the register or by putting a name on - the Court may make an order, not only that the right name shall be put on or taken off, as the case may be, but that the register shall be treated as if the name had been on or off at the time it ought in fact to have been on or off."
"I have only to add this, that I do not mean for a moment to suggest that any one is entitled to such an order ex debito justitiæ; it is a matter in the discretion of the judge, and there might be cases in which the judge, although he considered such an order essential to completely establishing the rights of the applicant, might refuse to do so because he thought it would work injustice to other members of the company. If I thought here that such an order would work injustice to other persons, especially to persons who are not in any way bound by the mistake of the company, I should feel considerable hesitation in making the order; but in the present case there is no evidence before us that any injustice will be caused at all. It has been suggested that if we make the order asked for we shall invalidate the resolutions, because the meetings will not have been properly called; and other suggestions of a similar kind were made in the course of the argument. As the matter stands, we can do justice and prevent any wrong accruing to these two gentlemen … without doing any injustice to anyone else."
"[Nation's Case] is, therefore, an authority that in a proper case the Court has power to fix a date as from which the change in the register is to be made operative. But then after that there arises a point which requires serious consideration. The application of the appellants here is, in substance, that the registration be made nunc pro tunc. Now, when an order of that sort is made the Court ought to be very careful to see that it does no injustice by making the registration retrospective. I may point out that the power which is conferred by section 35 [of the Companies Act 1862] is not imperative. All it says is that the Court "may" in a proper case make an order for rectification. Therefore the Court has full discretion to deal with every particular case which comes before it in such a way as may do complete justice; but in the present case I fail to see that any injustice can be done if the alteration is made as asked."
"(Gore-Browne KC for the liquidators) In the present case, if the argument of the appellants … is right, and they were in truth members of the company before the meetings in question, it follows that they ought to have had notice of the meetings, and it may be that as they had no notice the meetings were badly held, the resolutions passed are void, and there is no liquidation at all.
(Vaughan Williams LJ) It is not suggested that, in remedying the injury done to these appellants by the unnecessary delay in the registration of their transfers, injury should be done to other people, such as by holding the meetings to be bad. The only question is whether these shareholders who expressed their dissent from the resolutions are, for the purposes of that dissent, to be treated as having had their names on the register before the meetings, or at all events before the confirmatory meeting. I cannot conceive why they should not. That would not affect the validity of the meetings or the validity of any proceedings under them in the slightest degree. In Nation's Case no one suggested that the order there made would have the effect of making any resolution or any subsequent proceedings bad."
The result in the instant case
Lady Justice Asplin:
Lady Justice King: