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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Lees v Kaye [2022] EWHC 1151 (QB) (13 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/1151.html Cite as: [2022] WLR 5121, [2022] 1 WLR 5121, [2022] WLR(D) 216, [2022] EWHC 1151 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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AMANDA LEES |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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IVAN KAYE CHELSEA DIXON |
Respondents |
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Ian Peacock (instructed by Perrin Myddleton) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent appeared in person
Hearing date: 30 March 2022
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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 and time for hand-down is deemed to be 2pm on 13 May 2022.
His Hon Judge Dight CBE:
Introduction
The Application
The issues
i) Whether the Moratorium was properly registered and effective at the date of execution of the Writ of Possession in accordance with regulation 31(2)(a);ii) Whether the judgment debt in the Substantive Claim was exempted from the effect of the Moratorium because it was a "non-eligible debt" by reason of regulation 5(4)(i) of the Regulations as a debt consisting of damages for personal injury because £12,000 of the sum awarded was in respect of what was in effect personal injury;
iii) Whether the judgment debt was excluded from the effect of the Moratorium by reason of regulation 7(13) because it was secured by a charging order;
iv) Whether at the time of the sale to the Second Respondent the Applicant had an interest in the Lease of a type which was caught by the Moratorium, it being said that the sale was of legal interest in the Lease whereas the interest of the Applicant was solely a beneficial interest under a trust;
v) Whether, on a proper construction of regulation 7(12), the sale of the Lease to the Second Respondent is null and void even if the execution was in breach of the Moratorium;
vi) Should the court exercise its discretion in favour of the Applicant if she otherwise succeeds in the Application?
The facts
"The personal distress or discomfort which the claimant may experience as a result of nuisance is part of the assessment of the claimant occupier's loss of amenity. Therefore if the claimant is compensated for personal distress or discomfort as well as diminution in the amenity value of the land, which has already been informed by the personal distress or discomfort of the claimant, there will be double recovery. In contrast, the 1997 Act is different in that it provides a civil remedy for harassment. Section 3(2) of the 1997 Act expressly provides that damages can be awarded for any anxiety caused by the harassment and any financial loss resulting from it. Such financial loss in my judgment includes diminution in value of the land. The damages for anxiety and the damages for diminution in value are distinct and separate losses and therefore there is no double recovery."
"2. The Property shall be sold without further reference to the court at a price no less than £470,000 unless that figure is changed by a further order of the court."
3. [The First Respondent's solicitors] shall have conduct of the sale.
4. To enable the [First Respondent] to carry out the sale, there be created and vested in the [First Respondent] pursuant to section 90 of the Law of Property Act 1925 a legal term in the property of one day less than the remaining period of the term created by the lease under which the [Applicant] holds the property.
5. The [Applicant] must deliver up possession of the property to the [First Respondent] on or before 3 April 2020."
The order also made provision for how the shareholding in the freehold owing company should be dealt with and what should happen in the event that the Applicant failed to cooperate with the mechanics involved in sale of the Lease.
"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)."
"6. Part of my role is to check whether an individual is eligible for a Mental Health Moratorium and that a Moratorium is appropriate for them. Once I have decided that an individual is eligible and the Moratorium is appropriate for them, I enter their details and their debts onto the Government Mental Health Breathing Space portal, maintained by the Insolvency Service. Once I have entered the details in the portal the electronic service sends out a notification to the individual to confirm the start date of the Moratorium. The electronic service also sends out a notification to the individual's creditors."
7. My understanding is that the Moratorium comes into force the day after I enter the individual's details onto the portal…
10. The portal confirms that the Applicant's Moratorium started on 13 January 2022 and ended on 12 February 2022…the Applicant was entered into a new Breathing Space Moratorium on 15 February 2022 and this remains live…
The email notification from the Gov.UK portal to the Applicant timed at 15.56 on 12 January stated that she had been put into a breathing space on 13 January. It appears to me to be an automatically generated notification. I was also shown what appears to be a print-out from the government breathing space portal setting out the debts which had been reported to the administrators. The information on the portal does not specifically identify the First Respondent as a creditor. It gives the appearance that the relevant creditors were the solicitors who represented him.
"a….the Judgment Debt is a non-eligible debt by reason of regulation 5(4)(i) of the Regulations. "
b….the Judgment Debt is excluded from the scope of regulation 7 of the Regulations by reason of regulation 7(13)(a).
c…regulation 7(12) of the Regulations does not render the sale of the Property to the Second Respondent null and void."
The legal framework
"(1) In order to initiate a mental health crisis moratorium a debt advice provider must provide to the Secretary of State –"
(a) confirmation that –
(i) the debtor meets the eligibility criteria in regulation 30(3), and
(ii) the conditions in regulation 30(4) are met,
…
(2) Where the Secretary of State receives the confirmation and information referred to in paragraph (1), the Secretary of State must, by the end of the following business day –
(a) cause an entry to be made on the register, and
(b) send a notification of the start of the mental health crisis moratorium to –
(i) the debtor's nominated point of contact…"
"(a) a secured credit agreement,"
(b) a hire-purchase agreement, or
(c) a conditional sale agreement;"
Also included within the category of non-eligible debts are:
"(i) any debt which consists of a liability to pay damages for negligence or 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 the death of or personal injury (including any disease other impairment of physical or mental condition) to any person."
"7 – Effect of a moratorium"
(2) Subject to paragraph (3), during a moratorium period a creditor may not, in relation to any moratorium debt, take any of the steps specified in paragraph (6) in respect of the debt unless-
(a) these Regulations specify otherwise, or
(b) the county court or tribunal where legal proceedings concerning the debt have been or could be issued or started has given permission for the creditor to take the step.
(3) A court or tribunal may not give permission for a creditor or agent to take any of the steps specified in paragraph (6)(a) or (b).
"…
(6) The steps mentioned in paragraph (2) that a creditor is prevented from taking are any steps to –
(a) require a debtor to pay interest that accrues on a moratorium debt during a moratorium period,
(b) require a debtor to pay fees, penalties or charges in relation to a moratorium debt that accrues during a moratorium period,
(c) take any enforcement action in respect of a moratorium debt (whether the right to take such action arises under a contract, by virtue of an enactment or otherwise), or
(d) instruct an agent to take any of the actions mentioned in sub-paragraphs (a) to (c).
(7) A creditor takes enforcement action if they take any of the following steps in relation to a moratorium debt –
(a) take a step to collect a moratorium debt from a debtor,
(b) take a step to enforce a judgment or order issued by a court or tribunal before or during a moratorium period regarding a moratorium debt,
(c) enforce security held in respect of a moratorium debt,
(d) obtain a warrant,
(e) subject to regulation 12(4)(d), sell or take control of a debtor's property or goods."
"(12) Any action taken contrary to this regulation shall be null and void."
"…the following to the extent that they relate to a debtor –
(a) a charging order made before the start of the moratorium under the Charging Orders Act 1979…"
Regulation 10, headed "Existing legal proceedings at the start of a moratorium", says:
"(1) If at the start of a moratorium a creditor to whom a moratorium debt is owed has a bankruptcy petition or any other action or other proceedings in any county court or tribunal in relation to a moratorium debt, then the creditor must notify the court or tribunal of the moratorium."
Finally, by virtue of paragraph (5), subject to paragraph (7) which has no bearing on the issues before me,
"…during a moratorium a court or tribunal must take all necessary steps to ensure that any action or proceedings to enforce a court order or judgment concerning a moratorium debt does not progress during the moratorium period."
The parties' submissions
Discussion
Issue (i). Was the Moratorium properly registered and effective?
Issue (ii). Was the debt a non-eligible debt because it consisted of damages for personal injury.
"13. A claim 'for personal injuries' (rule 44.13(1)(a)) is defined at rule 2.3 as follows:
"'claim for personal injuries' means proceedings in which there is a claim for damages in respect of personal injuries to the claimant or any other person or in respect of a person's death, and 'personal injuries' includes and disease and any impairment of a person's physical or mental condition…"
This is the same definition as appears in the Limitation Act 1980 at section 38(1). It is trite law that "distress", "upset", "fear" and other similar human emotions do not constitute personal injury: see most recently Stewart J in Kimathi v Foreign and Commonwealth Office [2018] EWHC 1305 (QB)."
The other two members of the Court of Appeal agreed with the judgment given by Coulson LJ.
"The wording of s.14 of the 2008 Act establishes that a 'nationally significant infrastructure project' means a project 'which consists of any of the following…'. In their ordinary meaning the words "consists of" require that the project must fall entirely within the relevant definitions of an NSIP to fall within the scope of s.14. Otherwise, the word "includes", or an equivalent, would have been used."
Issue (iii). Was the judgment debt excluded from the effect of the Moratorium because it was secured by a charging order?
Issue (iv). Was the sale to the Second Respondent of an interest caught by the Moratorium?
"The estate, rights and powers of a mortgagee, however, are only vested in a mortgagee to protect his position as a mortgagee and to enable him to obtain repayment. Subject to this, the property belongs in equity to the mortgagor. "
Issue (v). Was the sale "null and void"?
Issue (vi). Discretion.
Conclusion