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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 >> Gary Kenneth Morby v (1) Gate Gourmet Luxembourg Iv Sarl (2) Specialist Airport Services Limited [2016] EWHC 74 (Ch) (20 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/74.html Cite as: [2016] WLR(D) 24, [2016] Bus LR 218, [2016] EWHC 74 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division)
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GARY KENNETH MORBY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) GATE GOURMET LUXEMBOURG IV SARL (2) SPECIALIST AIRPORT SERVICES LIMITED |
Respondents |
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Steven Thompson QC (instructed by Fladgate LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 8 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Edward Murray (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division):
Background
The order and judgment of Mr Registrar Briggs and permission to appeal
The disputed facts
i) a witness statement dated 11 September 2014 of Peter Reynolds, a solicitor at the firm Memery Crystal LLP, then acting for the Respondents;
ii) a witness statement dated 11 September 2014 of the process server, Mr Beecham, to which was exhibited a copy of the bankruptcy petition, Mr Beecham's Certificate of Personal Service of a Bankruptcy Petition dated 8 August 2014 and an e-mail sent by Mr Beecham to a colleague, Mr Ben Mansell, dated 7 August 2014 setting out his account of the meeting with Mr Morby and another person at Heathrow Terminal 3; and
iii) a witness statement dated 5 September 2014 of Mr Morby (which apparently included an exhibit designated "GKM1", which I do not have and, in any event, do not need for present purposes).
"9. Upon being notified by the Petitioner's solicitor, Memery Crystal, that the Petitioner had issued the Petition against me and following discussions regarding service of the Petition, I arranged to meet with Memery Crystal's agent, Mr Gary Beecham, at Terminal 3 of Heathrow Airport on 7 August 2014 so that the Petition could be personally served upon me. This arrangement was necessary as I do not reside in England…
10. As notified to the agent in advance, I was accompanied to Heathrow by a witness, Mr Bezhad Malik, so that he could check the Petition was correct before I accepted service. I wanted to ensure that I was not accepting service of incorrect court proceedings.
11. The agent arrived at Terminal 3 and handed the Petition to Mr Malik. Mr Malik reviewed the Petition and noted that it provided that I was 'lately residing' at the address stated to be Brook Place, Bagshot, Cobham, Surrey GU24 8SJ (my emphasis). Not only is that address incorrectly stated but I have also never resided there.
…
14. As the information contained within the Petition is incorrect, Mr Malik requested that this information be amended by the agent so that I could accept service. The agent telephoned Memory [sic] Crystal and, I assume, was instructed not to amend the Petition as the agent confirmed to Mr Malik that he could not do so. Consequently, Mr Malik attempted to hand the Petition back to the agent, who refused to accept it, despite repeated requests to do so from Mr Malik. As the agent would not accept the incorrect Petition back, Mr Malik put the Petition in the bin.
15. I emailed Memery Crystal on 7 August 2014 at 11.18 ... to confirm these events so Memory [sic] Crystal were fully aware that personal service had not been effected upon me.
16. Following my email, instead of making the necessary arrangements to amend the inaccuracies in the Petition and effect personal service upon me as required to do under Insolvency Rule 6.14(1), Memery Crystal emailed a copy of the Petition to me at 12.11 on 8 August 2014 …"
"33. Dealing with personal service, I find that [sic] the following matters material (1) Mr. Morby flew into Heathrow for the purpose of receiving the petition (2) he knew that he would be met at Terminal 3 by a process server (3) he knew that the process server would serve the Petition (4) he directed, on his own evidence[,] that the Petition be handed to his friend (5) Mr Morby was present when the Petition was handed to his friend (6) his friend received and read the petition and spoke to Mr Morby about its contents which were seemingly read out to him or partly read out to him enabling him to comment on it and (7) the process server engaged Mr. Morby about its content.
34. The issue between the parties is, if I may term it this way, one of touch. If Mr. Morby had been touched by the Petition he would have been personally served. These are unusual circumstances. Mr. Morby had knowledge: knowledge that what was contained in the sealed envelope was the Petition. He could hear from the process server and from Mr. Malik that it was the Petition. He could see that it was the Petition. His mind was engaged with the process of service and the detail of the Petition. He had notice of the Petition. He was given the opportunity to deal with the subject of the Petition. The distinction, in my view, of the Petition touching his lap or arm followed by a refusal to grasp the Petition, or followed by the debtor throwing it in the bin himself, and the circumstances of this case is a thin one, in reality. I find in these unusual circumstances where a Petition is handed to a specified agent at the request of the debtor, in the presence of the debtor in the manner described, personal service was effected. I recognise that there may be more than one view regarding my finding and therefore go on to consider substituted service and the cure provision contained within the IR 1986."
The law applicable to personal service of a bankruptcy petition
"6.14.- Service of petition
(1) Subject as follows, the petition shall be served personally on the debtor by an officer of the court, or by the petitioning creditor or his solicitor, or by a person instructed by the creditor or his solicitor for that purpose; and service shall be effected by delivering to him a sealed copy of the petition."
"There is abundant authority for the proposition that personal service requires that the document be handed to the person to be served or, if he will not accept it, that he be told what the document contains and the document be left with or near him."
"Prima facie, the process server must hand the relevant document to the person upon whom it has to be served. The only concession to practicality is that, if that person will not accept the document, the process server may tell him what the document contains and leave it with him or near him."
"The purpose of the requirement that he be told is that he should not be able to say that he ignored the document on the grounds that it was simply junk mail or something which did not necessarily require his attention at all."
"With what degree of particularity does the rule require that the person served be told what the documents contain? In my judgment, one must look at this in a practical way. I think it is sufficient if it is brought to his attention that it is a legal document which requires his attention in connection with proceedings. The purpose of the requirement that he be told is that he should not be able to say that he ignored the document on the grounds that it was simply junk mail or something which did not necessarily require his attention at all."
"In my judgment it is plain from these authorities [in particular, the Kenneth Allison case, the Wallers case and an Australian case referred to in para 32 of his judgment] (and from the special nature and role of personal service discussed above) that the process of leaving a document with the intended recipient must result in them acquiring knowledge that it is a legal document which requires their attention in connection with proceedings. Whilst this is expressed as requiring that the intended recipient be 'told' the nature of the document, the focus is on the knowledge of the recipient, not the process by which it is required. While in most cases knowledge of the nature of the document will be found to have been imparted by a simple explanation, it is clear that it can be also readily be [sic] inferred from pre-existing knowledge, prior dealings or from conduct at the time of or after service, including conduct in evading service: sec Barclays Bank of Swaziland Ltd v Hahn [1989] 1 WLR 506 at 512A."
"Once the intended recipient, assuming him to have knowledge of its nature, had been given a sufficient opportunity of possession of the document to enable him to exercise dominion over it for any period of time, however brief, the document had been left with him within the sense intended by the rule."
The relevance of Rule 7.55
"No insolvency proceedings shall be invalidated by any formal, defect or by any irregularity, unless the court before which objection is made considers that substantial injustice has been caused by the defect or irregularity, and that the injustice cannot be remedied by any order of the court."
"The essential purpose of rules as to service is to ensure that a party has proper notice of proceedings brought and a fair opportunity to deal with them."
Conclusion