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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 >> Eason & Anor v Skeggs Beef Ltd [2019] EWHC 2607 (Ch) (05 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2607.html Cite as: [2020] BCC 43, [2019] EWHC 2607 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY DIVISION
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF SKEGGS BEEF LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1996
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF SKEGGS BEEF LIMITED | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1996 | ||
GEORGINA MARIE EASON AND MICHAEL COLIN JOHN SANDERS OF MACINTYRE HUDSON LLP, AS JOINT ADMINISTRATORS OF SKEGGS BEEF LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) |
Applicants | |
-and- | ||
SKEGGS BEEF LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) | Respondent |
____________________
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 18 September 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Marcus Smith:
INTRODUCTION
(1) Their appointment was valid and took effect at 5:03pm, on 10 September 2019; and(2) All acts by them as joint administrators were not invalid by reason of the failure to file the notice of their appointment in accordance with rules 3.20 and 3.21.
At an oral hearing, I indicated that I would grant declarations along the lines sought by them, with my written reasons to follow. These are those reasons.
THE PROVISIONS IN THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 AND THE INSOLVENCY RULES
(1) Faxing it to the designated telephone number: see rule 2.19(1) of the Insolvency Rules 1986 (as so amended); and(2) Attaching a statement providing full reasons for the out of hours filing, including why it would have been damaging to the company and its creditors not to have so acted: see rule 2.19(8) of the Insolvency Rules 1986 (as so amended).
"(1) When (but only when) the court is closed, the holder of a qualifying floating charge may file a notice of appointment with the court by –(a) faxing it to a designated telephone number; or(b) emailing it, or attaching it to an email, to a designated email address.(2) The notice must specifiy the name of the court (and hearing centre if applicable) that has jurisdiction.
(3) The Lord Chancellor must designate the telephone number and email address.
(4) The Secretary of State must publish the designated telephone number and email address on the Insolvency Service webpages and deliver notice of them to any person requesting them from the Insolvency Service.
(5) The appointer must ensure that –
(a) a fax transmission report giving the time and date of the fax transmission and the telephone number to which the notice was faxed and containing a copy of the first page (in part or in full) of the document faxed is created by the fax machine that is used to fax the notice; or(b) a hard copy of the email is created giving the time and date of the email and the address to which it was sent.(6) The appointer must retain the fax transmission report or hard copy of the email.
(7) The appointer must deliver a notice to the administrator of the filing of the notice of appointment as soon as reasonably practicable.
(8) The copy of the faxed or emailed notice of appointment as received by the Courts Service must be delivered by the Lord Chancellor as soon as reasonably practicable to the court specified in the notice as the court having jurisdiction in the case, to be placed on the relevant court file.
(9) The appointer must take to the court on the next occasion that the court is open for business –
(a) three copies of the faxed or emailed notice of appointment;(b) the fax transmission report or hard copy required by paragraph (5);(c) all supporting documents referred to in the notice in accordance with rule 3.21(1) which are in the appointer's possession; and(d) a statement providing reasons for the out-of-hours filing of the notice of appointment, including why it would have been damaging to the company or its creditors not to have so acted.…"
THE PROVISIONS RELATING TO THE ELECTRONIC WORKING PILOT SCHEME
"2.1 Electronic Working enables parties to issue proceedings and file documents online 24 hours a day every day all year round, including during out of normal court office opening hours and on weekends and bank holidays, except where there is –(a) planned "down-time": as with all electronic systems, there will be some planned periods for system maintenance and upgrades when Electronic Working will not be available; and(b) unplanned "down-time": periods during which Electronic Working will not be available due, for example, to a system failure or power outage, or some other unplanned circumstance.2.2 For the avoidance of doubt, Electronic Working applies to and may be used to start and/or continue…insolvency proceedings…"
"2.1 Electronic Working enables parties to issue proceedings and file documents online 24 hours a day every day all year round, including during out of normal court office opening hours and on weekends and bank holidays, exceptwhere there is–(a) where there is planned "down-time"planned "down-time": as with all electronic systems, there will be some planned periods for system maintenance and upgrades when Electronic Working will not be available; and(b) where there is unplanned "down-time"unplanned "down-time": periods during which Electronic Working will not be available due, for example, to a system failure or power outage, or some other unplanned circumstance.; and(c) where the filing is of a notice of appointment by a qualifying floating charge holder under Chapter 3 of Part 3 of the IR 2016 and the court is closed, in which case the filing must be in accordance with rule 3.20 of the IR 2016."2.2
For the avoidance of doubt,Electronic Working applies to and may be used to start and/or continue…insolvency proceedings…"
THE INTER-RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE INSOLVENCY RULES AND THE ELECTRONIC FILING RULES
(1) The Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 are a statutory instrument (SI No 1024 of 2016) and were made by the Lord Chancellor in exercise of the powers conferred by sections 411 and 4122 of the Insolvency Act, with the concurrence of the Chancellor of the High Court (by authority of the Lord Chief Justice under sections 411(7) and 412(6) of the Insolvency Act) in relation to those rules which affect court procedure, and with the concurrence of the Secretary of State.(2) Practice Direction 51O, by contrast, is made under rules 5.5, 7.12 and 51.2 of the CPR, and the CPR are made under section 1 of the Civil Procedure Act 1997.
These rules constitute separate and distinct forms of secondary legislation and one cannot override the other, although of course one can supplement the other: there are many cases where the Insolvency Rules expressly or implicitly draw on the CPR. Nevertheless, these two sets of rules exist in parallel, equally valid in their own spheres.
(1) In that case, the directors of two companies electronically filed notices of appointment of administrators at 5:54pm on 28 December 2018.(2) The view clearly taken by the directors was that Practice Direction 51O permitted the electronic filing of such notices. Significantly, the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 contain no provision for the out-of-court filing of notices of appointment of administrators by directors: the out-of-court provisions in the Insolvency Rules are expressly limited to notice of appointment of an administrator by the holder of a qualifying floating charge.
(3) In short, the directors saw the Practice Direction as permitting something altogether not permitted by the Insolvency Rules. They were clearly wrong in this view: as the amendment to Practice Direction 51O makes clear (see paragraph 11 above), notice of appointing administrators must comply with the Insolvency Rules to be valid. If the Insolvency Rules do not provide a mode of out-of-court notice, then none exists by virtue of the Practice Direction.
(4) Barling J proceeded on the basis that the law was ambiguous in this regard and that the appointments were thus only potentially defective. He was not shown the amendment to Practice Direction 51O, but only an Insolvency Practice Direction made in 2018 relating to the point (the 2018 Insolvency Practice Direction). As to this:
(a) On 6 April 2017, the Chancellor, Vos C, issued Practice Note: Relating to the Practice Direction: Insolvency Proceedings, [2017] BCC 221. This did no more than note that as a result of the coming into force of the Insolvency Rules (England and Wales) 2016, significant amendments would be required to the earlier Practice Direction: Insolvency Proceedings, [2014] BCC 502.(b) On 25 April 2018, the 2018 Insolvency Practice Direction – Practice Direction: Insolvency Proceedings, [2018] BCC 241 – came into force. This was the Practice Direction shown to Barling J. Only paragraph 8.1 is material:"Attention is drawn to paragraph 2.1 of the Electronic Practice Direction 51O – The Electronic Working Pilot Scheme, or to any subsequent electronic practice direction made after the date of this [Insolvency Practice Direction], where an application is made, or intention to appoint an administrator is made, using the electronic filing system. For the avoidance of doubt, and notwithstanding the restriction in sub-paragraph (c) to notices of appointment made by qualifying floating charge holders, paragraph 2.1 of the Electronic Practice Direction 51O shall not apply to any filing of a notice of appointment of an administrator outside court opening hours, and the provisions of Insolvency Rules 3.20 – 3.22 shall in those circumstances continue to apply."(c) Barling J referred to the "somewhat byzantine terminology" in this Practice Direction. Not only this, but the fact is that the 2018 Insolvency Practice Direction does not refer explicitly to the primacy of the Insolvency Rules, but merely makes clear that the provisions of Rules 3.20 – 3.22 "shall in those circumstances continue to apply". Barling J was not shown the legislative history that I have described in this ruling. He therefore said the following about paragraph 8.1:"5. The administrators are concerned that the somewhat byzantine terminology of that provision means that the notice of appointment of the administrators in the present case was made in breach of that rule, because it was made under the Electronic Working Pilot Scheme outside court opening hours. These are generally presumed to cease at 4.30pm on a working day, whereas this notice was given approximately one hour and 24 minutes after that time.6. The curious aspect of paragraph 8.1 is that it states that the provisions of Insolvency Rules 3.20 to 3.22 shall in those circumstances continue to apply. However, those paragraphs of the Rules are only dealing with a notice of appointment filed by the holder of a qualifying floating charge and do not have any relevance to a notice of appointment filed by the company or its directors. So, the concept of those rules "continuing" to apply can only be a reference to a notice of appointment filed by a qualified floating charge holder.7. Nevertheless, because there is an ambiguity in the rule, the administrators have quite properly considered that they should remedy any problem in view of the urgency and importance of this administration…"(5) Thus, Barling J considered that whilst the 2018 Insolvency Practice Direction made clear that Practice Direction 51O could not apply for the notification of the appointment of an administrator by the holder of a qualifying floating charge, it was arguable that Practice Direction 51O could be used to notify the appointment of administrators by the company or its directors.
THE PRESENT CASE
CURING THE DEFECT
(1) Cases where the defect is fundamental. In such cases, the purported administration appointment is a nullity. There are no insolvency proceedings on foot, and so there is nothing that the court can cure.(2) Cases where the defect is not fundamental and causes no substantial injustice. Rule 12.64 of the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 provides:
"No insolvency proceedings will be invalidated by any formal defect or 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."Thus, provided the defect is not fundamental (i.e. not falling within paragraph 21(1) above), so that there are indeed insolvency proceedings on foot, the court must first satisfy itself that the defect or irregularity has caused no "substantial injustice". If so satisfied, then the proceedings will not be invalidated by any formal defect or irregularity.(3) Cases where the defect is not fundamental, but substantial injustice is caused. If the defect – again, not being a fundamental defect within paragraph 21(1) above – is found to cause "substantial injustice", then the court must ask itself whether that substantial injustice can be remedied by an order of the court. Of course, the court will consider, in light of all the circumstances, whether it is appropriate to make a remedial order. If so, then the defect is cured on the court making the order. If the court cannot make a remedial order or does not consider that it is appropriate to do so, then the defect remains uncured.
(1) The failure to file a notice of appointment in the prescribed form. This appears to amount to a fundamental flaw which renders a purported out-of-court appointment a nullity: Re G-Tech Construction Ltd, [2007] BPIR 1275; Re Kaupting Capital Partners II Master LP Inc, [2010] EWHC 836 (Ch); Re MTB Motors Ltd, [2010] EWHC 3751 (Ch); and Re Frontsouth (Witham) Ltd, [2011] EWHC 1668 (Ch). In short, this is a case falling within that described in paragraph 21(1) above.(2) The filing of a notice of appointment, in the prescribed form, in the wrong manner. This appears to amount to a "defect" or "irregularity" that is not fundamental, and that can be dealt with in one of the two ways set out in paragraphs 21(1) and 21(2) above: Re Assured Logistics Solutions Ltd, [2011] EWHC 3029 (Ch); Re Euromaster Ltd, [2012] EWHC 2356 (Ch).
Postscript
This Judgment was finalised on 5 October 2019, when it was allocated a Neutral Citation Number. Unfortunately, it was not immediately thereafter published. Since 5 October 2019, Mr Passfield (counsel for the Applicants) has drawn to my attention the decision of Insolvency and Companies Court Judge Burton in Edwards v. SJ Henderson & Company Limited, [2019] EWHC 2742 (Ch). Given that my order was made on 18 September 2019, and this reserved Judgment completed on 5 October 2019 on the basis of submissions made on 18 September 2019, it is inappropriate for me vary the terms of the judgment I have reached on the basis of this later decision. However, it is appropriate to note that the Judgment was written and finalised without reference to this decision.