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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Green v Bramston & Ors [2010] EWHC 3106 (Ch) (02 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/3106.html Cite as: [2011] BPIR 44, [2010] EWHC 3106 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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Elliot Green (Trustee in Bankruptcy of Geoffrey Alan Tranckle) |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Timothy Bramston (Liquidator of Kingshouse Developments Ltd) (1) and Kingshouse Developments Ltd (2) |
Respondents |
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Peter Shaw (instructed by Howes Percival LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 22 October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
Effect of the settlement deed
"… the parties have agreed to compromise their various claims in respect of the Partnership [ie the partnership between Mr Tranckle and Mr Greensitt] and in respect of Kingshouse, in the manner set out below. "
"The parties" included "Elliott Green (as trustee in bankruptcy of Geoffrey Alan Tranckle)".
"5 It is declared and agreed that MJG [Mr Greensitt] has no claim against Kingshouse in respect of director's remuneration or salary…
6 MJG hereby releases any and all valid claims which he may have against Kingshouse and in particular any claim in respect of any director's loan.
9 MJG releases any and all claims which he may have against GAT [Mr Tranckle] and accordingly he will withdraw his claim in GAT's bankruptcy."
"12 This deed shall take effect in full and final satisfaction of all claims and causes of action vested in the Trustee or otherwise affecting the bankrupt estate of GAT and subsisting between (1) MJG and/or GAT and (2) Kingshouse and between (1) MJG and (2) GAT, and in particular of any claim for partnership accounts or otherwise in respect of the distribution of Partnership property. "
" the authorities establish, in my judgment, a general principle that where a person seeks to enforce a claim to an equitable interest in property, the court has a discretion to require as a condition of giving effect to that equitable interest that an allowance be made for costs incurred and for skill and labour expended in connection with the administration of the property. It is a discretion which will be sparingly exercised; but factors which will operate in favour of its being exercised include the fact that, if the work had not been done by the person to whom the allowance is sought to be made, it would have had to be done either by the person entitled to the equitable interest … or by a receiver appointed by the court whose fees would have been borne by the trust property … ; and the fact that the work has been of substantial benefit to the trust property and to the persons interested in it in equity …"
Scope of the award
" accordingly I propose to declare that the liquidator is entitled to be paid his proper expenses and remuneration out of the trust assets if the assets of the company are insufficient. I am not deciding how such expenses and remuneration should be borne as between the company's assets and the trust assets, nor as between the different classes of trust assets, nor whether any part of them should be borne by the trust assets if the company's own assets should in the end prove sufficient to meet them. It is premature to determine questions of incidence when the full extent of the liquidator's claims to expenses and remuneration are not yet known and the assets of the company may yet be swelled as a result of the litigation in which it is engaged. But the liquidator is entitled to know at this stage that his proper expenses and remuneration will be paid if necessary out of the trust assets and that he will not be left at the end of the winding up with the possibility of receiving no recompense for his work or of having to bear part of the expenses out of his own pocket."
" I have already given directions as to the sums the liquidator should receive as remuneration by way of reimbursement of costs and expenses… The total amounts to about £686,000 of which some £41,500 are estimated by the liquidator to represent expenses of the liquidation only, as distinct from expenses of administering the trust, but these sums will increase as neither the liquidation nor the administration is complete. In addition there are solicitors costs to be paid. I am now asked to determine the incidence of the remuneration and costs and expenses which I have allowed. "
"The point is to my mind a short one, and largely one of first impression. Looking at s 115 [of the Insolvency Act 1986], for my part I have no doubt that the remuneration of the liquidator for administering trust assets which are not the assets of the company and the costs and expenses incurred by the liquidator, again not in getting in or paying out or distributing the assets of the company, but in administering trust assets, are outside the wording of the section. To my mind it is clear that the section is simply dealing with the winding up of the company, involving as it does the getting in of the assets of the company, ascertaining its creditors, paying its liabilities in accordance with the statutory provisions and distributing any surplus. I do not think that on any ordinary reading "expenses properly incurred in the winding up, including the remuneration of the liquidator" would include expenses and remuneration which the liquidator has incurred and has been awarded by the court in respect of the work he has done administering the trust property held by the company as trustee, and in my judgment the section must be construed as limited to the liquidator's expenses in, and remuneration for, dealing with assets of the company. Take the reference to the remuneration of the liquidator. There is no doubt to my mind that that does not include what the court in its inherent jurisdiction has awarded to the liquidator in respect of the work he has been doing not as liquidator but as trustee in administering the trust assets. Similarly the other expenses that are referred to as being incurred in the winding up cannot be expenses in relation to what are not the assets of the company.
On that short point therefore, I would hold that the remuneration in question and the costs and expenses are outside what it is permissible to pay out of the company's assets… The effect therefore is that if there be any surplus of corporate assets over expenses of the liquidation alone, unsecured creditors will be entitled to claim in respect thereof."
"the court has an inherent jurisdiction to require persons beneficially interested in property to subject their beneficial entitlements to a right of payment to persons who have come otherwise than by officious intermeddling into the position of fiduciaries in relation to the relevant fund and have incurred time and cost in realising the fund and identifying the entitlements of the beneficiaries and paying out to those beneficiaries that entitlements."
Priority of the award