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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Appollo Engineering Ltd, Re liquidation of [2002] ScotCS 302 (26 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2002/302.html Cite as: [2002] ScotCS 302, 2003 SCLR 144 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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P310/01
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OPINION OF LADY SMITH in application by the Noter in DUNCAN DONALD MCGRUTHER, C.A. LIQUIDATOR OF APPOLLO ENGINEERING LIMITED [IN LIQUIDATION] for An order sisting proceedings in the winding-up ________________ |
Noter: Sandison, Advocate; Boyds
First Respondent: Connal, Solicitor Advocate, Q.C.; McGrigor Donald
Second Respondents: Sellar, Q.C.; MacRoberts
26 November 2002
The statutory provisions:
"5 [3] Subject as follows, if the company is being wound up or an administration order is in force, the court may do one or both of the following, namely -
[a] by order stay or sist all proceedings in the winding up or discharge the administration order,
[b] give such directions with respect to the conduct of the winding up or the administration as it thinks appropriate for facilitating the implementation of the approved voluntary arrangement.
147 [1] The court may at any time after an order for winding up, on the application either of the liquidator or the official receiver or any creditor or contributory and on proof to the satisfaction of the court that all proceedings in the winding up ought to be stayed or sisted, make an order staying or sisting the proceedings, either altogether or for a limited time, on such terms and conditions as the court thinks fit."
It is evident that whether an application to sist is granted under s.5[3][a] or under s.147, the court has a discretion. Parties were in agreement that that was a discretion which ought to be exercised in accordance with common-sense albeit that there was an issue between them as to whether, under s.5[3] [a], it was competent to grant a sist for a limited period only. Given that dispute, counsel for the Noter moved, without opposition, in the course of the hearing, to amend the Note in the liquidation so as to bring the Noter's application not only under s.5[3] [a] but, as an alternative, under s.147. I allowed the amendment.
The facts:
"7.2 The arbiter shall have the power to order any party to provide security for the legal or other costs of any other party by way of deposit or bank guarantee or in any other manner the arbiter thinks fit.
7.3 The arbiter shall also have the power to order any party to provide security for all or part of any amount in dispute in the arbitration."
To date, no applications have been made to the arbiter under either rule. From the submissions made to me, I can surmise that Scott has not done so thus far as it has considered itself adequately protected by the fact that it has been arbitrating not only with Mr Blin in his capacity as liquidator but with the added reassurance provided by his agents' letter of 10 October 1996, to which I have already referred.
The proceedings :
Submissions for the Noter:
Counsel for the Noter invited me to sist the liquidation either under s.5[3] or s.147[1] of the 1986 Act although he had a preference for s.5[3]. He submitted that the matter was a question of the exercise of a discretion and there was no authority that compelled me in either direction. Whether I approached matters by reference to s.5[3] or s.147 [1], there were good reasons for the grant of a sist namely: whilst the company was in liquidation, there were problems with the arbitration; there was now a CVA in place and that CVA expressly envisaged the sisting of the liquidation; there was a particular significance of the CVA in that it showed that the majority of those entitled to vote at the meetings where the proposal was approved had identified the route whereby the liquidation would be sisted as the most appropriate one to secure the company's only potential asset in circumstances where the company had no other assets; there would be a benefit to the directors of the company in that they would be in charge of the arbitration without there being any scope for conflict between them and the liquidator; there would be a benefit to the creditors in that there would be savings in the expenses of the liquidation including the substantial indemnity premium that would require to be paid to protect the liquidator in respect of the expenses of the arbitration if the liquidation were not sisted; Scott did not have title to object since they were not creditors or members of the company nor were they the liquidator; and even if Scott did have title and/or interest to object their interests were adequately protected by their right to apply to the arbiter for an order for security for costs under the rules of the arbitration.
Submissions for Scott :
Decision:
The nature of Scott's interest:
"Claims again which depend on the issue of a suit are not truly contingent debts; for decree in the action merely constitutes the debt which existed at the commencement of the case."
That would all seem to suggest that a debt which did not exist at the commencement of the action but to which a party had some hope of obtaining right, could properly be characterised as a contingent claim.
The test to be applied:
"... the words 'satisfied', 'just and beneficial', 'satisfaction of the court', and 'ought to be stayed' seem to me to indicate that the appellant for a stay must make out a case that carries conviction... ."
Mr Sellar seemed to suggest that the words "case that carries conviction" implied that a particularly high and stringent standard required to be met by the applicant. If, however, that were so, that would conflict with the fact that Parliament have, in terms of both provisions which empower the court to grant a sist, conferred upon it a wide and unfettered discretion albeit that it is seems clear that in both cases, the onus is on the applicant to satisfy the court that the order sought can properly be made.
Applying the test:
Section 5[3][a] of the 1986 Act