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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 >> Richmondshire District Council v Dealmaster Ltd & Anor [2021] EWHC 2892 (Ch) (01 November 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/2892.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 2892 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN LEEDS
COMPANIES AND INSOLVENCY LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF DEALMASTER LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
1 Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
____________________
RICHMONDSHIRE DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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DEALMASTER LIMITED STEPHEN PENN |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Simon Perhar instructed under the Direct Access scheme by the 1st Respondent
Mr Matthew Maddison (instructed by Walker Morris LLP) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date: 7 October 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30am, Monday 1 November 2021.
This Transcript is Crown Copyright. It may not be reproduced in whole or in part other than in accordance with relevant licence or with the express consent of the Authority. All rights are reserved
HH Judge Davis-White QC:
Introduction
(1) Hightide should not have been permitted to vote in respect of the consideration of the CVA by creditors. The decision to permit it to vote gives rise to unfair prejudice or material irregularity such that the court has the power to, and should, declare the vote as invalid and make other orders as provided for by r.15.35(3) IR 2016.(2) The CVA is unfairly prejudicial to RDC, alternatively there was a material irregularity at, or in relation to, the creditors meeting approving the CVA for the following reasons relating to a valuation of Dealmaster's properties as shown in the proposals for the CVA. The proposals were based on an illustration showing that the position of creditors to be bound by the CVA would be better in the CVA than on a liquidation. On a liquidation the illustration showed that creditors would receive a dividend of 4.6p in the pound rather than, in the CVA, an estimated 9.4p in the pound (over a 5 year period). The properties in question were not included within the CVA. RDC says that the valuation shown as being placed on the properties was too low and that (a) on a liquidation, the dividend would have been increased from that shown in the illustration and (b) would have exceeded the anticipated dividend to creditors bound by the anticipated CVA.
(3) The CVA is unfairly prejudicial to RDC, alternatively there was a material irregularity at, or in relation to, the creditors' meeting approving the CVA for the following reasons relating to a debt said to be owed by Dealmaster to its parent company, a company called Sterling Outcomes Limited ("Sterling"). Sterling was not a creditor that was to be bound by the CVA. RDC says:
(a) The quantum of the debt owed to Sterling was incorrectly inflated in the illustrations provided with the proposals for the CVA. The result was that the illustrated dividend position for creditors on a liquidation was incorrectly reduced from the true or fairly shown position. If the correct position had been shown, a liquidation would be more attractive to creditors within the proposed CVA than the anticipated position within the CVA.(b) Alternatively, it is unfair that Stirling is left outside the CVA and this unfairly prejudices RDC.
"no criticism is made of Mr Penn's conduct save for a failure to reply substantively to correspondence"
That alleged failure was then expanded upon in the letter.
"Should your client intend to make any allegations or criticisms in respect of the conduct of Mr Penn, we request that you forthwith put us on notice of such allegations so that our client has an adequate opportunity to respond."
No allegations or criticisms were raised in response.
The course of the proceedings
Representation
The Evidence
Outline facts
Mr Shepherd purchases Dealmaster
The Liability Orders
The CVA
Creditor Name | Vote | Value | Percentage |
Hightide Estates Limited | For the CVA | 372,158.34 | 83.87% |
Stoneforth Limited | For the CVA | £2,470.65 | 0.56% |
Richmondshire District Council | Against | £69,108.23 (inclusive of costs that have yet to be determined, agreed or assessed) | 15.57% |
TOTAL | £443,737.22 | 100% |
Creditor | Value | Did they vote? |
ASW Legal | £30,000 | Yes (included within Richmondshire District Council debt} |
Hightide Estates Limited | £372,158.00 | Yes |
HMRC | £581 | No |
Richmondshire District Council | £38,609.63 | Yes |
Sterling Outcomes Limited | £588,850.00 | No |
Stoneforth Limited | £2,470.65 | Yes |
Paul Graham Shepherd | £7,717.00 | No |
Uniglobal Limited | £734.00 | No |
TOTAL | £1,041,732.78 |
The terms of the CVA
"3.2 The company proposes to make two different payments to repay the creditors.
- The first Is an initial lump sum of £3,000 as a gesture of intent.
- The second is a periodic monthly contribution to the CVA Supervisor, this will be paid by the company immediately upon the CVA approval.
3.3 The summary of the regular minimum monthly contributions is as follows:
Months | For year £'000 |
Cumulative £'000 |
Initial Lump Sum | 3,000 | 3,000 |
Months 1-12@ £200 / month | 2,400 | 5 400 |
Months 13-24@ £500 I month | 6,000 | 11,400 |
Months 25-36@ £800 / month | 9,600 | 21,000 |
Months 37-48@ £1,100 / month | 13,200 | 34,200 |
Months 49-60 @ £1,400 / month | 16,800 | 51,000 |
Total | 51.000 |
3.4 Over the agreed period the total contribution (as detailed in Appendix D) is £51,000, Including the CVA contributions and lump sum payment.
…
3.7 The Supervisor will conduct an annual review of the Company's accounts to determine if profits allow for an increase in monthly contributions. This will be calculated at 50% of any increase in the profit above that disclosed in Appendix E, allowing a 5% increase in the level of profits year on year. In order to assess such sum, the Company will provide the Supervisor with management accounts within 3 months of each year end. The assessed sum under this review clause must then be paid in full within 9 months of the year end. The CVA may be extended to accommodate this clause at the Supervisor's discretion."
Hightide Debt
"2.5 Sterling Outcomes Limited bought Dealmaster Ltd with the balance sheet as shown at the end of 2017. i.e. Debt owed to Hightide Estates Limited of approximately £372K with an agreement to make repayments of that debt when the company could secure more rent by the developments the director had planned; namely potentially rent out the spare car park spaces to the neighbouring business.
2.6 With that agreement to defer payment to Hightide Estates Limited in place, Sterling Outcomes Limited bought the issued share capital and so owned Dealmaster Ltd."
"In section 2.5 of the proposals it states that Sterling Outcomes Limited bought Dealmaster with the balance sheet as at 2017 i.e with a debt shown as owed to Hightide Estates of £372K. However, the balance sheet as at 2017 shows the Company to be solvent to the tune of £226,547. The Company had outstanding charges with Abbey National (now Santander} which were satisfied on 5 December 2017 with Cambridge Counties Bank Limited registering a charge. Therefore, if the creditors who are owed amounts falling due after more than 1 year total £989,415, how much of this debt is with Cambridge Counties Bank Limited? The creditors due within 1 year only total £3,070.
Can you therefore please advise on where Hightide sits in the accounts if it is a "normal" debt?
In addition, Our Client also requests the following;
1…….
2. Full substantiating evidence of the debt between the Company and Hightide Estates Limited
3. Any and all full substantiating evidence of the steps Hightide had taken to recover this debt in the last 2 years (given that the Company was solvent when Sterling Outcomes bought the Company).
"I understand you also wish me to provide a statement detailing the history of the liability owed to Hightide Estates Limited from Dealmaster Limited.
In this regard, I can confirm the following statement to be true and accurately records the liability owed to Hightide Estates Limited from Dealmaster Limited.
Dealmaster Limited was purchased by Hightide Estates Limited on 1st April 2011. The property owned by Dealmaster Limited at that time consisted of two retail showrooms together with parts department and workshop area.
…
The purchase cost of the acquisition of Dealmaster Limited was completed using funds provided by Hightide Estates Limited.
Hightide Estates Limited required the liability to be recorded in the annual accounts and from copies of Dealmaster Limited submitted accounts.
I am able to evidence a debt owed to Hightide Estates Limited From the balance sheet records of Hightide Estates Limited, I can confirm the balances owed by Dealmaster Limited to Hightide Estates Limited at each year end were as follows:-
Balance as at April 2011 -£131,967.00
Balance as at Dec 2011 - £186,792.00
Balance as at Dec 2012 - £274,212.00
Balance as at Dec 2013 -£374,158.00
Balance as at Dec 2014 - £439,258.00
Balance as at Dec 2015 - £507,189.00
Balance as at Dec 2016 - £538,172.00
Balance as at Dec 2017 -£372,138.00
As a significant creditor, Hightide Estates Limited was aware that subsequent to the purchase of Dealmaster Limited that the original Citroen showroom, together with parts and workshop areas were no longer viable as a franchised motor dealership. Accordingly, Dealmaster had to commit to further spending on the site which was funded by additional loans from Hightide Estates Limited as per the above balance sheet entries.
Hightide Estates Limited continued to support Dealmaster Limited by allowing them to affect a change to the buildings. Hightide Estates Limited provided funds to pay for the construction and associated costs relating to the provision of three business units to rent on a commercial basis. The resulting liability which was an amalgam of loans to cover expenses including legal costs, management fees, renovation, and associated construction related expenses.
The development of the site by Dealmaster Limited resulted in a liability owed to Hightide Estates Limited at its highest of £538,172. At the end of December 2017, the liability owed to Hightide Estates Limited from Dealmaster Limited as recorded in the statutory and submitted accounts is: £372, 158.
Hightide's Estates Limited arrangement for settlement of the debt remains unchanged. The debt albeit unsecured is due for settlement as per the agreement made with Sterling Outcomes Limited.
For clarity I can confirm Hightide Estates limited waived any claim to interest on the outstanding debt so the liability of £372,158 is the total liability outstanding. Hightide Estates Limited required Dealmaster Limited to evidence the debt in the submitted accounts and to provide full accounts which I am able to provide should this be required.
Hightide Estates Limited made an agreement with the current owners of Dealmaster Limited ensuring the liability for £372,158 remained an obligation to settle as and when the site (Oaktree Business Park) had been developed and /or sold.
This statement is a true account of the facts."
"Given our client's intention to oppose the CVA, we now require you to provide us with the following information/documents (the majority of which Dealmaster should already have provided to the Nominee in the process of preparing the CVA) as a matter of priority:
1. Evidence of the debt allegedly owed by Dealmaster to Hightide Estates Limited ("Hightide"). In particular, we request copies of: (a) any loan agreement between Dealmaster and Hightide;(b) records (for example, bank statements) to substantiate the 'balances owed' set out in Mr Plummer's letter to Mr Penn of Absolute Recovery Limited (currently the Supervisor of the CVA) dated 22 August 2019 - i.e. records of monies received by Dealmaster from Hightide and of repayments made by Dealmaster to Hightide; and (c) any correspondence between Dealmaster and third parties, including Hightide, regarding the existence and/or terms of any Dealmaster/Hightide debt;
2. Please clarify whether from Dealmaster's perspective, the agreement referred to on the second page of Mr Plummer's 22 August letter (see 1. above) between Dealmaster and Hightide – to postpone repayment by Dealmaster of an alleged £372,158 liability - has been superseded by the CVA;
"1. Evidence of the debt allegedly owed by Dealmaster to Hightide. In particular, we request copies of:
(a) Any loan agreement between Dealmaster and Hightide;
(b) Records (for example, bank statements) to substantiate the 'balances owed' set out in your letter to Mr Penn of Absolute Recovery Limited (currently the Supervisor of the CVA) dated 22 August 2019 – i.e. records of monies received by Dealmaster from Hightide and of repayments made by Dealmaster to Hightide; and
(c) Any correspondence between Dealmaster and third parties, including Hightide, regarding the existence and/or terms of any Dealmaster/Hightide debt;
2. Please clarify whether from Hightide's perspective, the agreement referred to on the second page of your 22 August letter (see 1. above) between Dealmaster and Hightide - to postpone repayment by Dealmaster of an alleged £372,158 liability - has been superseded by the CVA;"
"8. This acquisition was completed after a process of a due diligence to determine all known liabilities and verification of assets. The financial records and statutory accounts from 2014 to Dec 2018 confirms the existence of liabilities due to outstanding creditors which the applicant suggests neither existed prior to the CV A or is a debt from an associated creditor which under legal definition of associated persons and companies comes from section 435 of the Insolvency act I 986 and the section 993 income Tax Act 2007, is not an associated creditor. See exhibit PS 1. which evidences the Statutory Accounts and supporting documentation as submitted to the CV A supervisor in direct response to ASW's request of the 20th September 2019, to evidence the debt within Dealmaster which is owed to Hightide Estates Limited.
9. At the time of completing the due diligence the bank reconciliation were verified with the previous year's accounts supporting the carried forward balances which ultimately resulted in the Dec 2017 accounts to be accepted as a true reflection of the trading position of Dealmaster Limited."
"evidence of payments from Hightide to Dealmaster or repayments from
Dealmaster to Hightide in the form of bank statements (redacted as appropriate). These should be contained within the company's books and records. As for the bank statements, Dealmaster is entitled to request them from their former bank (or former owner of the business)".
"arose in peculiar circumstances, is inadequately evidenced, question-begging, and the manner in which material has been released to RDC excites suspicion. Hightide should not have been permitted to vote in respect of the CVA".
(1) The debt was inadequately evidenced and recorded (despite the ledger sheets, the bank statements, the trial balance statements and the filed accounts);
(2) The CVA contained little information regarding the circumstances in which the debt arose (essentially that Sterling bought the company with the debt then being a liability of the Company).
(3) There had been a drip feed of information which "excites suspicion".
Valuation of the Dealmaster Property
"The calculation of the Units at Oaktree Business Park is based upon a professional valuation dated July 2017 which indicated that the value equated to £10,588.24 per £1,000 of rent paid)."
"2.7 Dealmaster Ltd subsequently [that is, subsequently to its acquisition by Sterling Outcomes Limited at the end of 2017] agreed with its tenant Simple Structures to allow a rent-free period of 3 years whilst it established itself as a manufacturer of modular frames for housing".
4.4 "During the course of the CVA the rent-free period afforded to a tenant will expire and facilitate Increased contributions into the scheme."
"We note that the asset value for the Units at Oaktree Business Park have a BV of £1,213,238 with an ETR of £627,980. This is based this on a calculation from 2017, which is now over 2 years ago.
As the petitioning Creditor, our Client would want to see a professional valuation of the Property as it is a material asset within the company and there is nearly a 50% reduction in the value on this ETR."
"The value of the assets at circa £1.2m has been the same for 3 years running in Accounts at Companies House and it is not considered necessary to have them professionally valued again for the CVA Statement of Affairs.
The ETR value of £627,980 is based upon the calculation of 2 or the 3 units being let as noted in the Statement of Affairs. Clearly if all 3 units were let then the ETR value would be significantly higher however as at the date of the Statement of Affairs this was not the case.
The valuation of £ 1.2m is reflective of the written down initial purchase price of over £2m which was the value of the business when it was a successful motor dealership, (well before the current director got involved).
The valuation in the accounts has not be written down further as it is a fair reflection of the valuation if the business is sold as a going concern. The value reflects the value when and if the site is developed further. The site has unused land which underpins the book value.
The book value is not a RICS valuation of the asset.
The valuation was confirmed to the director as being determined by 2 elements - The "passing" rent and the quality of the "covenant".
Meaning the actual rent received determines the valuation and the quality of the tenant and lease time to run.
Meaning if Marks and Spencer's retail were the tenant under a long lease the valuation would be higher. However, that is not the case
In this situation:
The tenant - Simple Structures Limited has a very poor credit score as a newly launched business and is struggling to survive in business and is likely not to survive if the current indebtedness cannot be traded through.
The tenant- Wackadays has only 4 years left on the lease and has already given verbal notice to leave as the business is currently up for sale.
Passing rent (rent received) used for valuation purposes was confirmed to the director as being limited by the market rate of rent that could be expected in the area reflective of the properties position and usability. The rate of rent used by the valuer to determine the valuation was therefore set at a maximum based on Market rate of rent for comparable properties in the area.
The passing rent although has a maximum based on Market rents, it is determined by actual rent received. Further information can be found in RICS guidance notes relating to the analysis of commercial lease transactions.
As a consequence of the poor covenants and the actual contracted rent being much less than the rent received at the time of the valuation. It could be argued that the valuation is overstated based on all 3 tenants paying rent.
Nevertheless, a workable and perhaps justified increase in the valuation would be to consider the projected rent over the next 5 years and base the valuation on the annual average rent. This deemed annual average rent expectation could be used to determine the expected valuation.
Such a calculation would be:
Next 3 years rent: Total rent: £177.927
The remaining 2 years at full passing rent of £85,000 per year: Total rent: £170.000.
Total rent received over next 5 years: £348,000.
Average rent per year for valuation purposes: £69,600.
Using this average rent to determine sale value: £69,600 x £10,588.24p = £736,941.50.
In this scenario the estimated dividend for unsecured creditors in a liquidation would obviously increase.
The asset has not increased in valuation since 2017 as the situation has gotten worse for the landlord and nothing has changed to warrant an uplift in valuations. Conversely there is justification for the valuation being less than already stated as one tenant is potentially going under and the other is leaving in 4 years."
"[67] Having decided that the release of the guarantees could in principle be effected through a CVA, Etherton J. then had to consider whether the proposed arrangement was unfairly prejudicial to the interests of the guaranteed landlords. He reviewed the authorities on unfair prejudice, and in [71]–[96] of his judgment distilled from them a number of principles which may be summarised as follows:
(a) Any CVA which leaves a creditor in a less advantageous position than before the CVA will be prejudicial to the creditor. The real issue is generally whether the prejudice is "unfair".
(b) There is no single and universal test for judging unfairness in this context, and the question must depend on all the circumstances of the case, including in particular the alternatives available and the practical consequences of a decision to confirm or reject the arrangement
(c) In assessing the question of unfairness, a number of techniques may be used, including what may be described as "vertical" and "horizontal" comparisons. A vertical comparison is a comparison between the position that a creditor would occupy and the benefits it would enjoy in a hypothetical liquidation, as compared with its position under the CVA. The importance of this comparison is that it generally identifies the irreducible minimum below which the return in the CVA cannot go. As David Richards J. said in Re T&N Ltd [2004] EWHC 2361 (Ch); [2005] 2 BCLC 488 at [82] of his judgment:
"I find it very difficult to envisage a case where the court would sanction a scheme of arrangement, or not interfere with a CVA, which was an alternative to a winding up but which was likely to result in creditors, or some of them, receiving less than they would in a winding up of the company, assuming that the return in a winding up would in reality be achieved and within an acceptable time-scale: see Re English, Scottish and Australian Chartered Bank [1893] 3 Ch 385."
(c) A horizontal comparison, on the other hand, is a comparison between the position of the applicant and the position of other creditors, or classes of creditors. The fact that a CVA involves differential treatment of creditors is a relevant factor which calls for careful scrutiny, although it will not automatically render a CVA unfairly prejudicial: see Re a Debtor (No.101 of 1999) [2001] 1 B.C.L.C. 54 (Ferris J.). In considering the question of differential treatment, it is necessary to ask whether the imbalance in treatment is disproportionate, and also whether the differential treatment may be justified, for example by the need to secure the continuation of the company's business by paying essential suppliers or service providers.
[68] Applying these principles, Etherton J. held that the CVA was clearly unfairly prejudicial to the guaranteed landlords. On a vertical comparison, the landlords were left in a much worse position than in a liquidation, because they no longer had the benefit of guarantees which the parent company was apparently in a financial position to honour. On a horizontal comparison, the non-scheme creditors were to be paid in full under the CVA, while the present and future claims of the guaranteed landlords were to be discharged at a fraction of their value. There was no justification for this difference in treatment.
[69] Etherton J. summed the matter up as follows, in [106]–[108] of his judgment:
"[106]. … The unusual feature of the present case, however, is that on a winding up the guaranteed landlords would still have had the benefit of the valuable guarantees, whereas all the other unsecured creditors (of this apparently substantially insolvent company) would receive nothing.
[107] In summary, the guaranteed landlords are the class or group of unsecured creditors that would suffer least, if at all, on an insolvent liquidation of Powerhouse, but they are the class or group that is most prejudiced by the CVA, under which their claims against Powerhouse and PRG, as surety, are to be compromised by payment of a dividend that places no value on the very rights (i.e. the guarantees) which improved their position over all other unsecured creditors and which were intended to and would benefit the guaranteed landlords on the insolvent liquidation of Powerhouse.
[108] Such an illogical and seemingly unfair result could not have been achieved if there had been a formal scheme of arrangement under [ s.425 of the Companies Act 1985, now s.899 of the Companies Act 2006]. It is common ground that, under such a scheme, the guaranteed
landlords would have been in a class of their own, separate from other unsecured creditors. Moreover, the scheme would not have needed to include, and would not have included, creditors who were to be paid in full. Accordingly, as was accepted by [counsel for the company], the
guaranteed landlords could and would have vetoed any such scheme. The only reason a different result has been achievable with the CVA is that all creditors form a single class for the purposes of a CVA, and that class includes every creditor entitled to a notice of the meeting to approve the CVA, including creditors who would be paid in full. In effect, the votes of those unsecured creditors who stood to lose nothing from the CVA, and everything to gain from it, inevitably swamped those of the guaranteed landlords who were significantly disadvantaged by it."
Findings and discussion
"Many thanks for agreeing that Simple Structures Limited can occupy Unit 3 at Oaktree Business Park until the end of February 2023 rent free notwithstanding the current lease providing that the non-domestic business rates are paid in a timely manner."
"I am writing to confirm the following terms are now contractual amendments to the lease dated 7 October 2016 and will be deemed to take effect from 1 March 2018.
The amendment to the lease are as follows:
- Rent will be waived and will now be charged at £ nil/month until Feb 2021
- This rent-free period will cease on the 1 March 2023 at which time the rent will be payable at a level higher than market rent and will be determined by negotiations during the last quarter of 2022
- The rent-free period will apply providing Simple Structures Limited continues to pay the business rates raised by Richmond District Council on Unit 3"
The response went on to say that both letters would be kept with the lease as an appendix. Mr Shepherd was seeking legal advice as to whether a formal amendment to the lease was required.
Sterling Outcomes Limited ("Sterling")
Disposition