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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Kaye v Lees [2023] EWHC 758 (KB) (31 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/758.html Cite as: [2023] 1 WLR 3527, [2023] WLR 3527, [2023] BPIR 879, [2023] WLR(D) 187, [2023] EWHC 758 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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IVAN KAYE |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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AMANDA LEES |
Respondent |
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No appearance for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the Judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date for hand-down is deemed to be on 31 March 2023.
Mr David Lock KC, sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court:
The facts
"6) The solicitors for the Claimant believe that the moratorium was wrongly imposed. They contend that the debt is not a qualifying debt because it is a "non-eligible debt" for the purposes of regulation 5(4)(i) which include "any debt which consists of a liability to pay damages for negligence, nuisance or breach of a statutory, contractual or other duty, or to pay damages by virtue of Part 1 of the Consumer Protection Act 1987…, being in either case damages in respect of any death of or personal injury (including any disease or other impairment of physical or mental condition) to any person."
7) It is unclear how the solicitors contend that this debt in this case is within the italicised words.
8) Faced with the unsuccessful review, the Claimant had two choices: (1) dispute the review result and apply to the Court for cancellation of the moratorium (regulation 19); or (2) accept that the moratorium had been correctly applied but seek permission to take certain steps notwithstanding it (regulation 7).
…
10) It is equally unclear why, as enforcement is in the High Court, application has been made to the county court. The High Court has appropriate jurisdiction in these matters and since the matter of enforcement is with the High Court and in the hands of the HCEOs the application ought properly to have been made to that Court: see Axnoller Events Ltd v Brake (mental health crisis moratorium) [2021] EWHC 2308 (Ch)."
"An injunction
42. I turn finally to whether an injunction should be granted to prevent Ms Lees from seeking a further breathing space or mental health crisis moratorium which would have the effect of preventing Mr Kaye from finally enforcing the Judgment Debt. There is plainly a serious issue here, given that if Ms Lees were immediately after this judgment to seek a further moratorium the effect if it were granted is that Mr Kaye would be prevented from enforcing the Judgment Debt. Had Ms Lees been present for the hearing of this Application I would have considered with her the best way of balancing her interests and those of Mr Kaye in that regard but she was not present.
43. I have no doubt that, notwithstanding the statutory nature of the debt respite scheme (which includes the scheme for mental health crisis moratoria), the High Court has power to restrain potential abuses of the scheme by placing sensible limits on the ability to access it. Taking that as my starting point I am satisfied that there is a real risk, given the history of this case, that were she not to be restrained Ms Lees might seek to obtain a further moratorium the effect of which would be to frustrate the terms of this judgment and prevent Mr Kaye from enforcing the Judgment Debt. A chronological analysis of the steps Ms Lees has, and has not, taken in the litigation from its inception in 2015 demonstrates clearly to me that there is such a risk. She failed to observe orders made in the county court and failed to engage with the trial process. She did not appeal the decisions made by HHJ Roberts. She has made repeated applications for moratoria at points in time when Mr Kaye was getting closer to enforcement, including on the eve of scheduled evictions. She has failed to engage properly with the Application leaving me with the paucity of material as to her alleged disorder and treatment which I have set out in detail above.
44. In all the circumstances I have no doubt that a fair and proportionate approach dictates that I should restrain Ms Lees from seeking a further breathing space or mental health crisis moratorium for a period which I will discuss when I hand down judgment. However, to protect her interests it is right that I should provide first, that she has permission to apply within 7 days of the date of the order to be made today to vary or discharge that part of it which relates to the proposed injunction but secondly, if she does not avail herself of such permission, she should nevertheless have permission to apply to vary or discharge the injunction at any point in the course of its duration if she wishes to seek a further breathing space or mental health crisis moratorium so long as any such application is made on notice and is accompanied by the evidence which she proposes to rely on in support of request for a further moratorium.
45. For all those reasons I will cancel the Current Moratorium and grant the injunctive relief which I have just outlined"
"3. The Respondent be restrained (whether by herself or by instructing or through any other person) from applying for any further moratorium (being either a breathing space or a mental health crisis moratorium) under the Regulations until 4pm on 31 March 2023, subject to the following:
a. The Respondent has permission to apply to vary or discharge the provisions of paragraph 3 of this Order within 7 days of service of it on her. Any such application is not to operate as a stay of the terms of this Order and shall be served by email on the Applicant's solicitors;
b. In any event, during the period that paragraph 3 of this Order continues to be effective, the Respondent has permission to apply to vary or discharge this injunction provided that:
i. on making any such application she simultaneously files with the court and serves on the Applicant's solicitors the evidence (including the medical evidence) which she intends to rely upon to support any application for a further moratorium under the Regulations which she shall serve by email on the Applicant's solicitors;
ii. she does not to make an application for a further moratorium without permission of the court granted at the hearing of any such application;
iii. any such application is not to operate as a stay of the terms of paragraph 3 of this Order;
c. Any application under the terms of this paragraph shall be heard expeditiously but on not less than 7 days' written notice"
"The property is now either about to be resold to Ms Chelsea Dixon who originally purchased the property prior to it being declared a nullity or alternatively, there is another purchaser for the property who has offered the sum of £580,000 with a view to completing the sale within one month. Whilst nothing has been heard from the Respondent to date, the Applicant fears that as soon as the prohibition expires On 31 March 2023, the Respondent will immediately apply for a further Breathing Space Order a Mental Health Crisis Moratorium in order to thwart the sale process"
The Regulations.
"14. The 2020 Regulations were made on 17 November 2020 by the Economic Secretary to the Treasury under the Financial Guidance and Claims Act 2018, and came into force on 4 May 2021. They followed extensive consultation on establishing a so-called 'debt respite scheme', which had been a manifesto commitment of the Conservative Party at the 2017 General Election. The consequence is that there is a wealth of material, both parliamentary and non-parliamentary, dealing with the purpose of the 'debt respite scheme'. …
…..
17. The Treasury's published response in June 2018 to a call for evidence noted that "requiring someone to access debt advice before entering the breathing space could act as an important safeguard against abuse of the scheme". However, specific reference was made to persons experiencing mental health crises. The Treasury confirmed that "individuals in receipt of NHS treatment for a mental health crisis will be provided with an appropriate mechanism to access the scheme".
18. In October 2018 the Treasury published a policy proposal, which set out two policy objectives for the debt respite scheme, called "breathing space":
"the first objective is to provide sufficient protections for individuals to help them to enter into a sustainable debt solution"; and
"the second objective is to encourage more individuals to seek debt advice".
The proposal set out eligibility criteria for entering "breathing space". However, it also said:
"There would be one exception to these eligibility criteria. Those experiencing a mental health crisis would be able to use an alternative access mechanism to enter the scheme … This is because it is difficult to effectively engage with debt advice during a mental health crisis".
However, "the protections afforded to individuals who access the scheme via the alternative access mechanism would be the same" as for those who satisfy the standard criteria.
19. The explanatory memorandum accompanying the draft legislation commented (at paragraph 7.3):
"The policy objective is to incentivise more people in problem debt to access professional debt advice to do so sooner, and to enable them to enter the debt solution that is most appropriate in view of their individual circumstances…"
In relation to individuals in mental health crises, the memorandum said (at paragraph 7.14)
"People receiving mental health crisis treatment will receive the protections of the scheme but through a different entry mechanism. This reflects the fact that while this group could benefit from the protections in the standard scheme, they may face challenges in meeting the requirement to engage with debt advice in order to meet the eligibility criteria."
"A debt respite scheme is a scheme designed to do one or more of the following—
(a) protect individuals in debt from the accrual of further interest or charges on their debts during the period specified by the scheme,
(b) protect individuals in debt from enforcement action from their creditors during that period, and
(c) help individuals in debt and their creditors to devise a realistic plan for the repayment of some or all of the debts".
"Any person who makes an application for a moratorium under these Regulations must—
(a) take reasonable care to provide accurate information to the debt advice provider, and
(b) not deliberately withhold relevant information from the application"
"Although all applications must be considered, the debt adviser might decide a breathing space is not appropriate for a debtor.
For example, if a person can access funds or income, they might be able to pay their debts with some budgeting help. Another example would be if they already have assets that could easily be sold to clear the debt. In these cases, a breathing space would not be the right solution. A breathing space might also not be appropriate for a someone who can enter a more suitable debt solution straight away, without needing the protections"
Should the court exercise its powers to grant an injunction to prevent a debtor making a further application for a BSM or a MHCM?
"The 2020 Regulations establish a scheme for the time within which review proceedings may be initiated, may be determined by the debt advice provider, and for any subsequent application to a court. The language used is prescriptive. I can see no reason to go behind the ordinary and clear meaning of those words. As made, the timetable the Regulations set serves a clear and obvious purpose – to ensure that any review is conducted promptly following the decision to make the moratorium. Further, any attempt to revisit the timetable in the Regulations will cause difficulty. Most obviously, if there is a power to extend time, against what standard should the power be exercised? Need it be no more than "reasonable" for time to be extended, or ought the parties who request the extension of time be required to show "exceptional circumstances" or the like? Put shortly, the court is in no position to set the standard required without itself stepping into the shoes of the legislator (here the maker of the Regulations). Further, if a power to extend time exists, does it only apply to regulation 19, or could it also apply to the time prescribed in either of regulations 17 or 18? If it did, who would exercise the power: the debt advice provider himself, or would he have to apply to the court to extend time? This point also demonstrates that there is no legitimate basis on which to read-in to the scheme of the 2020 Regulations some form of power to extend time. There is no reliable standard that the court could legitimately use to supplement that which is provided for in the Regulations. For these reasons Mr Kaye's application under regulation 19 must fail"
"A right to obtain an interlocutory injunction is not a cause of action. It cannot stand on its own. It is dependent upon there being a pre-existing cause of action against the defendant arising out of an invasion, actual or threatened by him, of a legal or equitable right of the plaintiff for the enforcement of which the defendant is amenable to the jurisdiction of the court."
Note 1 See https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/debt-respite-scheme-breathing-space-guidance/debt-respite-scheme-breathing-space-guidance-for-creditors [Back]