BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> LDX International Group LLP v Misra Ventures Ltd (Rev 2) [2018] EWHC 275 (Ch) (21 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/275.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 275 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF LDX INTERNATIONAL GROUP LLP
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
LDX INTERNATIONAL GROUP LLP |
Applicant |
|
- and |
||
MISRA VENTURES LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Simon Goldstone (instructed by Kemp Little LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 22 January 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
David Stone (sitting as Deputy High Court Judge):
The Facts
a. Vijay Angelo, Managing Member of LDX;
b. Dorothy Delahunt, Chief Legal and Compliance Officer of LDX; and
c. Peter Dalton of MVL's solicitors.
None were cross-examined, and to the limited extent it was relied on I accept their evidence.
a. In 2016, MVL loaned LDX £200,000 pursuant to an agreement dated 19 October 2016. At the time, LDX was named Global Markets Exchange Group International LLP, but nothing turns on the difference in name. Under the terms of the agreement, the money was to be repaid on 31 October 2017.
b. On 9 May 2017, MVL served on LDX a statutory demand, alleging default by LDX which obliged LDX to repay the debt ahead of time (the First Statutory Demand). The First Statutory Demand was for the sum of £200,450 plus interest.
c. On 23 May 2017, MVL withdrew the First Statutory Demand after LDX pointed out that the wrong form had been used.
d. On 3 July 2017, MVL served a second statutory demand on MVL, this time for the sum of £160,902 plus interest (the Second Statutory Demand).
e. On 5 July 2017, LDX wrote to MVL denying that the debt was repayable prior to 31 October 2017, asserting that it could meet its obligations under the agreement as they fell due, and asserting a cross-claim against MVL and its principal Mr Hirander Misra, claiming damages of £300,000.
f. On 18 July 2017, LDX applied to this court for an injunction to restrain MVL from presenting and advertising a winding up petition (the First Injunction Application). The First Injunction Application was listed to be heard on 3 October 2017.
g. On 4 August 2017, MVL withdrew the Second Statutory Demand, on the basis that the First Injunction Application was listed close to the date of the loan repayment. The hearing date was vacated.
h. On 25 August 2017, LDX made an application for its costs of the First Injunction Application.
i. On 21 September 2017, Deputy Registrar Briggs vacated the 3 October 2017 hearing date, and listed the costs application for 12 December 2017. At the hearing on costs, at which both parties were represented, Deputy Registrar Frith awarded LDX its costs of and occasioned by the First Injunction Application. Those costs have not yet been agreed, nor has the assessment process begun.
j. On 11 October 2017, LDX sent MVL a Preliminary Notice, setting out allegations against MVL and four other potential defendants (including Mr Misra). Damages were put at £2.87million.
k. On 15 November 2017, LDX informed MVL by e-mail that it was preparing a claim against MVL for breach of contract and misrepresentation.
l. On 6 December 2017, MVL served a third statutory demand on LDX, the statutory demand on which these proceedings are based (the Third Statutory Demand.). That statutory demand was for £176,963.43, being £160,902.00 plus interest.
m. This application for injunctive relief was issued on 22 December 2017 (the Second Injunction Application). There was correspondence between the parties between then and 15 January 2018, when LDX sent MVL a Letter of Claim. The Letter of Claim notes MVL's failure to respond to the Preliminary Notice within the 21 day period set out in the relevant pre-action protocol, before setting out LDX's position. The Letter of Claim was received by MVL six clear working days before the hearing before me. I return to the contents of the Letter of Claim below, but for present purposes, it is sufficient to record that it included LDX's basis for its allegations and the facts on which it relies, and attached a large number of documents.
The Parties' Positions
a. Because MVL is seeking to obtain a collateral advantage rather than using the proceedings for the purpose for which they are properly designed; and
b. Because MVL's application is an abuse of process or otherwise bound to fail.
The Law
"The ability of a petitioning creditor to levy execution against the company does not entitle him to have it wound up. Moreover, an order that a company be wound up, unlike a bankruptcy order, is often a death knell. Nor can it be certain that a liquidator, even with security behind him, will prosecute the company's claims with the diligence and efficiency of its directors. These, I believe, are considerations which go to justify the practice in cross-claim cases. I emphasise that the cross-claim must be genuine and serious or, if you prefer, one of substance; that it must be one which the company has been unable to litigate; and must be in an amount exceeding the amount of the petitioner's debt."
"Fourthly, a winding up order is a draconian order. If wrongly made, the company has little commercial prospect of reviving itself and recovering its former position. If there is any doubt about the claim or the cross-claim, that seems to me to require that the court should proceed cautiously."
"Cases familiar to practitioners in the Companies Court were cited: Re Bayoil SA [1999] 1 WLR 147 at 155 per Nourse LJ; Re a Debtor (No 87 of 1999) [2000] BPIR 589 at 592H- 594G (Rimer J in a bankruptcy case); Montgomery v Wanda Modes Ltd [2003] BPIR 457 at paragraphs 28 to 36 (Park J). The authorities are illustrations of the well established practice of the Companies Court that, if a company has a genuine and serious cross-claim, which is likely to exceed the petition debt, the court will normally exercise its discretion by dismissing the winding up petition and allowing the company the opportunity to establish its cross-claim in ordinary civil proceedings. A company is not prevented from raising a cross-claim in winding up proceedings simply because it could have raised or litigated the claim before the presentation of the petition or it has delayed in bringing proceedings on the cross-claim. The failure to litigate the cross-claim is not necessarily fatal to a genuine and serious cross-claim defeating a winding up petition. However, in deciding whether it is satisfied that the cross-claim is genuine and serious, the court is entitled to take into account all the relevant circumstances, such as the fact that a company has not even attempted to litigate the cross-claim, or that there are reasons why it has not done so."
See also Popely v Popely [2004] EWCA Civ 463 at paragraph 123 per Jonathan Parker LJ, with whom Ward LJ and Moses J agreed.
"The practical issue is the extent to which the court must go in determining whether there is a genuine dispute on substantial grounds. The court must, as Oliver LJ put it, take a view whether, on the evidence, there really is substance in the dispute. It is not, however, practical or appropriate to conduct a long and elaborate hearing, examining in minute detail the case made on each side. Such a course will involve both delay in getting the issue ready for hearing and a potentially lengthy hearing. In this case, the evidence went through several rounds over a period of some six months. This time would have been better spent in getting a Part 7 claim underway. A lengthy hearing is likely to result in a wasteful duplication of court time. Petitioning creditors must take a realistic view of whether the company is likely to establish a genuine and substantial dispute."
"I wish to add one other point of legal principle which is in my view clearly established by the authorities. The point is familiar in cases where the company's ground of opposition to the petition is that it disputes the debt relied on by the petitioner. In the present case WML admits the debt but says that it has a cross-claim in a greater amount. However, I believe that the principle which I am about to state is equally applicable in either context. The principle is that, if the ground of opposition by the company raises substantial questions of fact or law (or both) which are genuinely disputed by it, the petition should be dismissed: a court hearing on a winding-up petition is not the appropriate forum to determine such questions. Rather they should be litigated in the normal forum for resolving them."
"I accept Mr Davies' submission that applications for injunctions to restrain the presentation or advertisement of a petition are brought on in haste and both this factor and the role of the Companies Court on such applications must temper the court's expectations as to the extent of the evidence which will be available. Nevertheless, as is clear from Warren J's judgment in Pan Interiors, there is some minimum evidential threshold necessary before it can be said that there is a substantial dispute."
a. In the absence of special circumstances, it will be appropriate to issue an injunction to prevent the presentation and advertisement of a winding up order where there is a genuine and serious cross-claim in an amount exceeding the petitioner's debt. The cross-claim must be genuine and serious, or, in other words, one of substance: In re Bayoil, at page 155.
b. If there is a genuine and serious cross-claim, the company should be allowed to establish its cross-claim in ordinary civil proceedings: the Companies Court is not the right court in which to engage in a detailed examination of claim and counterclaim: Dennis Rye, at paragraph 19.
c. It is incumbent on the recipient of the statutory demand to demonstrate, with evidence, that the cross-claim is genuine and serious: Orion Media, at paragraph 31. Bare assertions will not suffice: there is a minimum evidential threshold: Re a Company, at paragraph 33.
d. But it is not practical or appropriate to conduct a long and elaborate hearing, examining in minute detail the case made on each side. A lengthy hearing is likely to result in a wasteful duplication of court time: Tallington Lakes, at paragraph 41.
e. If there is any doubt about the claim or the cross-claim, then the court should proceed cautiously. This is because a winding up order is a draconian order, which, if wrongly made, gives the company little commercial prospect of reviving itself: In re Bayoil, at page 156.
f. Petitioning creditors must take a realistic view of whether the company is likely to establish a genuine and substantial dispute: Tallington Lakes, at paragraph 41.
g. A company is not prevented from raising a cross-claim simply because it could have raised or litigated the claim earlier, or because it has delayed in bringing proceedings on the cross-claim. However, the court is entitled to take any delay into account in its assessment of whether the cross-claim is genuine and serious: Dennis Rye, at paragraph 19.
" court proceedings may not be used or threatened for the purpose of obtaining for the person so using or threatening them some collateral advantage to himself, and not for the purpose for which such proceedings are properly designed and exist; and a party so using or threatening proceedings will be liable to be held guilty of abusing the process of the court and therefore disqualified from invoking the powers of the court by proceedings he has abused.
the court will always look strictly at the conduct of a creditor using or threatening such proceedings; and if it concludes that the creditor has used or threatened the proceedings at all oppressively, for example, in order to obtain some payment or promise from the debtor or some other collateral advantage to himself properly attributable to the use of the threat, the court will not hesitate to declare the creditor's conduct extortionate and will not allow him to make use of the process which he has abused."
LDX's Cross-claim
The Letter of Claim
a) On 1 March 2013, LDX retained MVL to provide senior executive management and advisory services relating to exchange markets, products, business development and markets structures, together with strategic business advice to the boards of directors of several subsidiaries of LDX.
b) Those services were provided to LDX by Mr Misra, acting on behalf of MVL.
c) Mr Misra was a founder member and major equity holder in LDX.
d) The services to be provided were set out in various agreements, which contained a number of usual express terms:
i. To ensure that the consulting services were provided with the care, skill and diligence required in accordance with the best practice in the industry, profession or trade;
ii. To procure that Mr Misra complied with MVL's obligations;
iii. To ensure Mr Misra carried out his duties and obligations with the utmost good faith and honesty;
iv. To maintain all business information in confidence and not to use or disclose any business information, trade secrets etc in competition with LDX's subsidiaries;
v. To require Mr Misra to "perform his duties, whether statutory, fiduciary or common law, faithfully, efficiently and diligently to a standard commensurate with both the functions of his role and his knowledge, skills and experience"; and
vi. To require Mr Misra, if appointed a director, to exercise his powers in his role as a director in an appropriate manner.
e) LDX says that Mr Misra failed to perform the services for which MVL was contracted to an acceptable standard. Mr Misra's failings are alleged to include:
i. He was the subject of multiple external and internal corporate misconduct investigations;
ii. He was notified to the FCA;
iii. He presented misleading financial accounting information resulting in the creation of a £1,000,000 contingent liability of LDX;
iv. He used confidential information to benefit the legal and financial position of MVL and himself personally in breach of his fiduciary duties;
v. He misled LDX and the LDX subsidiaries by both act and omission on the true financial and legal status of a transaction known as Continental Africa Holdings Limited (the CAHL Transaction);
vi. He misrepresented the revenues of one of the LDX subsidiaries, thereby triggering an additional £1,000,000 investment in LDX;
vii. He acted without board authorisation in relation to several high-risk commercial understandings and indicative agreements; and
viii. He used without permission the name/brand/reputation of key investors.
f) As a result, LDX claims losses including:
i. A contingent liability in the sum of £1,000,000;
ii. Extensive losses of management time devoted to internal and external corporate investigations;
iii. Loss of investment opportunities;
iv. Loss of two key blue-chip investors; and
v. Reputation damage necessitating restructuring and rebranding.
g) LDX also claims interest and costs.
The Costs Claim
Collateral Purpose
a. MVL refused to accept an offer of prepayment made by LDX on 19 June 2017; and
b. MVL specifically assigned a third party priority in the case of LDX failing thus, in the event of a winding up, MVL could not expect to recover the value of the Third Statutory Demand.
Outcome