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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Kevythalli Design Ltd v Ice Associates Ltd [2009] EWHC 3676 (TCC) (16 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/3676.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 3676 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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KEVYTHALLI DESIGN LIMITED |
Claimant/Respondent |
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- and - |
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ICE ASSOCIATES LIMITED |
Defendant/Appellant |
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Ronan Hanna (instructed by Hegarty LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Judgment
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead
"The Defendant do provide a draft amended defence and counterclaim by 4.00pm on Friday, 19 September 2008, failing which the Defendant's Defence and Counterclaim should be struck out and the Claimant shall be at liberty to enter judgment on its claim in the sum of £104,250 plus interest of £29,570 and costs to be assessed on the standard basis if not agreed."
There are consequential orders that were made with a view to having a trial of the matter in the Central London County Court Technology and Construction Division by "Judge alone" some time presumably shortly after 27 April 2009.
"(1) The application [that is for a final third party debt order] will be heard at 10.30am on 20 November 2009 at Central London County Court when a judge will decide whether a final third party debt order should be made.
(2) Until that hearing the third party must not, unless the court orders otherwise, pay to the judgment debtor or to any other person any sum of money due or accruing due by the third party judgment debtor except for any part of that sum which exceeds the total shown below."
The total shown below is £143,844.05.
"This is a potential second appeal. No important point of principle or practice is involved, however it is reasonably arguable that there is another compelling reason why there should be an appeal, namely that the decisions of the courts below erred in approach are plainly wrong. However, as the question of PTA and the appeal are so closely bound up it is right the two should be dealt with in an oral hearing together."
He said that he has granted permission to appeal. What he has effectively ordered rather is that the application for permission to appeal is to be adjourned to an oral hearing and if permission to appeal is granted the appeal is to be dealt with at the same time. He continues on the face of this order to say this, "Stay of execution granted pending oral hearing". The time estimate is said to be two hours including judgment and that expedition is required.
"I have spoken with Steven Rattle, the sole director of the defendant, regarding the defendant's present financial situation. He advises me that the company is no longer trading and that it continues to exist only until such time as it recovers sums due to it from the claimant, amongst others.
I am also advised by Mr Rattle that the defendant has a number of unsecured creditors, these include HMRC to whom approximately £18,000 is due in respect of VAT, and other secured creditors who are due around £45,000 in total. Once the adjudicator's decision was made and it became apparent that some cash would be received by the defendant it advised those unsecured creditors that payments would be made imminently. Cheques were drawn up in their favour but were not posted because of the interim third party debt order obtained by the claimant. Without the money payable by the third party under the adjudicator's decision the defendant will continue to be unable to pay these creditors.
I therefore consider that the third party debt order sought by the claimant would lead to a preference of one creditor (the claimant) over all the defendant's other unsecured creditors. The order would therefore be inequitable having regard to the position of those other creditors."
He asks not only that a final third party debt order should not be made but the interim order should be discharged.
"...about the extension of the lease of the temporary ice rink at Cardiff International Sports Village, which is the subject of the underlying proceedings. It is clear from the correspondence that whilst the third party [that is Cardiff] has offered the sum of £158,979 per annum (for each of the two years of the lease extension) the claimant is, in fact, seeking somewhere between £200,000 and £225,000."
He attaches correspondence which is said to support that. I certainly make no findings about that but has not been challenged in later witness statements.
"(a) the financial value of the claim and the amount in dispute, if different; (b) whether it would be more convenient or fair for hearings (including the trial) to be held in some other court; (c) the availability of a judge specialising in the type of claim in question and (e) the importance of the outcome of the claim to the public in general."
Those seem to be the primary matters which are arguable relevant to this case.
"We turn finally to the more difficult questions raised in respect of English law. Counsel for the creditor submits that so long as a foreign judgment is subject to a stay or its equivalent the English courts will not regard it as final and conclusive. Accordingly he argues that under English Law the foreign judgment only became effective and time only began to run in England from July 1964 when the bankruptcy was terminated and the creditor was free to levy execution. He relies chiefly on a dictum of Russell LJ in Colt Industries Inc v Sarlie (No 2) suggesting that if a judgment in New York, was subject to a stay, an English Court would not treat the judgment as final and conclusive so long as the stay continued. Counsel for the creditor summarised the point by saying that since there was a stay under s 14 of the ordinance that could be no implied assumption of a promise to pay. Likewise the money could not with certainty be said to be due and payable. We cannot accept this argument. In our view Russell LJ was contemplating only the normal case in which after judgment a general stay of execution is granted pending the hearing of an appeal. We can well understand that in such a case the judgment under appeal would not be regarded as final and conclusive; nor as establishing an implied promise to pay, let alone the existence of a debt presently due and payable.
"A stay imposes a halt on proceedings, apart from taking any steps allowed by the rules or the terms of the stay. Proceedings can be continued if a stay is lifted."
That, in the context of what the Court of Appeal is saying, seems broadly to be correct. It is a halt on proceedings. It does not involve the wholesale setting aside of orders which are not directly the subject matter of the appeal which have been made, at least from an administrative point of view, legitimately by the court.