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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Secretary Of State For Trade And Industry, Re A Disqualification Order [2006] ScotCS CSOH_153 (10 October 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_153.html
Cite as: 2006 GWD 31-663, [2006] CSOH 153, [2006] ScotCS CSOH_153

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 153

 

P1630/03

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD DRUMMOND YOUNG

 

in the petition of

 

HER MAJESTY'S SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRADE AND INDUSTRY

 

Petitioner;

 

for

 

a Disqualification Order in terms of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986

 

 

in respect of

 

JAMES GERARD

 

Respondent:

 

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­________________

 

 

Petitioner: Ross; Biggart Baillie

Respondent: Mackenzie, Solicitor; Pinsent Masons

 

10 October 2006

 

[1] The petitioner has raised proceedings against the respondent for a disqualification order under section 6 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986. The events that gave rise to the petition arose out of the affairs of a company known as Oakbank (J&S) Limited. It is a matter of agreement that the respondent was and remains a director of that company. It is further agreed that an order for the winding up of the company was made in the Court of Session on 18 December 2001, in a petition at the instance of the Inland Revenue. The present petition is based upon allegations regarding the respondent's conduct in the course of the winding up.

[2] Certain matters of fact are agreed or not in dispute. These are as follows. The company, Oakbank (J&S) Limited, was incorporated on 23 April 1998. It traded as suppliers of joinery and stone services. Its last principal trading address was at Oakbank, Mid Calder, Livingston. In the company's returns, 20,000 ordinary shares of £1 each were shown as issued and fully paid. The respondent, according to the returns, held 16,000 of those shares. One other shareholder, NWH International Limited, was disclosed as the holder of the other 4,000 issued shares. The respondent was appointed a director of the company on 23 April 1998 and remains in office. He was the managing director of the company. On 18 December 2001, when the winding up order was made, Thomas Campbell MacLennan, an insolvency practitioner with Tenon Recovery, Chartered Accountants, 1 Royal Terrace, Edinburgh, was appointed interim liquidator of the company. At the date of winding up the company was insolvent. The estimated statement of affairs prepared by the interim liquidator as at 29 January 2002 (part of No 6/4 of process) disclosed a deficiency to creditors of £140,275. Both that statement of affairs and the company's statutory accounts for the year ended 30 September 2000 showed plant and equipment owned by the company to the value of £57,290.

 

The relevant legislation

[3] Section 1 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 provides that, in the circumstances specified later in the Act, a court may make a disqualification order against a person. The effect of such an order is that the person should not be a director of a company or, whether directly or indirectly, be concerned or take part in the management of a company without leave of the court. In the circumstances specified in section 6 of the Act, the court is obliged to make such an order. The present application is made under section 6. So far as relevant, section 6 is in the following terms:

"(1) The court shall make a disqualification order against a person in any case where, on an application under this section, it is satisfied --

(a) that he is or has been a director of a company which has at any time become insolvent (whether while he was a director or subsequently), and

(b)                    that his conduct as a director of that company ... makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company.

(2) For the purposes of this section ..., a company becomes insolvent if --

(a) the company goes into liquidation at the time when its assets are insufficient for the payment of its debts and other liabilities and the expenses of the winding up,

...

and references to a person's conduct as a director of any company ... include, where that company ... has become insolvent, that person's conduct in relation to any matters connected with or arising out of the insolvency of that company".

Section 7 of the 1986 Act authorizes the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry to make an application for a disqualification order against any person if he considers it expedient in the public interest that such an order should be made. That procedure has been followed in the present case. Section 9 and Schedule 1 specify certain matters that are to be taken into account in determining whether a person's conduct as a director makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company. In particular, the court is directed, by paragraph 10 of Schedule 1, to have regard to

"Any failure by the director to comply with any obligation imposed on him by or under any of the following provisions of the Insolvency Act --

...

(e) section 131 (statement of affairs in winding up by the court);

...

(b) section 235 (duty to co-operate with liquidator, etc)".

[4] The provisions of the Insolvency Act 1986 referred to in paragraph 210 of Schedule 1 are as follows. Section 131 imposes a duty on inter alios directors to provide a liquidator or provisional liquidator with a statement of affairs. In relation to a Scottish winding up, the relevant parts are in the following terms:

"(1) Where the court has made a winding-up order ... the [liquidator or provisional liquidator] may require some or all of the persons mentioned in subsection (3) below to make out and submit to him a statement in the prescribed form as to the affairs of the company.

(2) The statement shall be verified by affidavit by the persons required to submit it and shall show --

(a) particulars of the company's assets and liabilities;

(b) the names and addresses of the company's creditors;

(c) the securities held by them respectively;

(d) the dates when the securities were respectively given; and

(e) such further or other information as may be prescribed or as the

[liquidator or interim liquidator] may require.

(3) The persons referred to in subsection (1) are --

(a) those who are or have been officers of the company;

....

(4) Where any persons are required under this section to submit a statement of affairs to the [liquidator or interim liquidator], they shall do so ... before the end of the period of 21 days beginning with the day after that on which the prescribed notice of the requirement is given to them by the official receiver".

Section 235 imposes a general duty on inter alios directors to co-operate with any liquidator or interim liquidator. In terms of subsection (1), together with section 234(1), the section applies where a company goes into liquidation. In relation to a Scottish winding up, the relevant parts are as follows:

"(2) Each of the persons mentioned in the next subsection shall --

(a) give to the office-holder such information concerning the company and its promotion, formation, business, dealings, affairs or property as the office-holder may at any time after the effective date reasonably require, and

(b) attend on the office-holder at such times as the latter may reasonably require.

(3) The persons referred to above are --

(a) those who are or have at any time been officers of the company,

..."

"The effective date" is defined by subsection (4) as, in the present case, the date on which the company went into liquidation.

 


The parties' contentions

[5] The petitioner alleges that the respondent has failed to co-operate with the liquidator of the company, and that the effect of that was to hamper the liquidator in the discharge of his duties to identify and ingather the company's assets and to adjudicate on and pay the company's creditors. More particularly, the petitioner contends that the respondent failed to prepare and submit a statement of affairs, in breach of section 131 of the Insolvency Act 1986, and failed to submit a directors' questionnaire, despite being requested to submit those documents by the liquidator. The petitioner further alleges that the respondent has failed to account for the company's assets or to answer questions posed by the liquidator to assist him in identifying and ingathering those assets. The particular questions related to rights of set-off in respect of one of the company's debtors, D Bathgate Construction Limited, the clarification of the position of a Citroën Relay van held on hire purchase from a company known as PSA Finance, and the ownership of the company's plant and equipment. As the proof progressed, however, it became clear that the major complaint related to the alleged failure of the respondent to assist in identifying which of the assets situated in the company's premises were the company's and which belonged to the respondent.

[6] The respondent denies those allegations. He asserts that he was never asked to submit a statement of affairs or a directors' questionnaire. He further claims that he provided the liquidator with all the information that was necessary for the purposes of the winding up, either directly or through the company's auditor.

 


Evidence

[7] Evidence was led from four witnesses. Mr Lewis Young, an insolvency manager with Tenon Recovery and Mrs Frances Wileman, an officer with the Disqualification Unit of the Insolvency Service of the Department of Trade and Industry, gave evidence on behalf of the petitioner. The respondent gave evidence on his own behalf, as did Mr David Cheetham, the chartered accountant who was the company's auditor. In the course of the evidence, a sharp conflict emerged between Mr Young and the respondent. I propose first to summarize the evidence of each witness and then, in the following sections of this opinion, to consider the differences that arose in that evidence.

[8] Mr Young gave evidence that he was the insolvency manager responsible for the day-to-day work in respect of Oakbank (J&S) Limited. In that capacity, he consulted with Mr Thomas MacLennan, the director of Tenon Recovery who had been appointed liquidator of the company. Mr Young had been responsible for preparing the official report (Form D1 (Scot)) on the respondent as director of the company. In section 5 of that report Mr Young had summarized the case against the respondent, in terms that are similar to paragraph [5] above. Mr Young explained that the result of the respondent's failure to provide a statement of affairs and to provide information about certain of the company's assets was that further cost was incurred, both in ascertaining the further information that the respondent ought to have provided and as a result of the consequential prolongation of the winding up.

[9] Mr Young stated that he had spoken to the respondent at the company's premises immediately after the date of winding up. The respondent had informed him that the premises and plant used by the company were not owned by it. Mr Young had not instructed a valuation of the assets on the company's premises, but referred matters back to the company's creditors. The respondent had informed Mr Young that he had documentation supporting these statements. The foregoing information was recorded in the interim liquidator's report to creditors dated 29 January 2002 (No 6/4 of process), where it is stated in paragraph 4 that "The premises, plant and equipment have been stated not to be owned by the company". Mr Young indicated that the question of whether assets are owned by the company is of central importance in a winding up. In the estimated statement of affairs asset 29 January 2002 the deficiency to creditors was stated to be £140,275, but if the plant and equipment had been owned by the company that would have been substantially reduced. Mr Young referred to the company's financial statements for the year ended 30 September 2000 (No 6/6 of process). In that document, the balance sheet and relative notes indicated that the company had title to tangible assets valued at £57,290. Note 4 to the balance sheet further indicated that plant and equipment valued at £40,801 had been added during the year to 30 September 2000. The same note dealt with assets held on hire purchase, and indicated that those assets were treated for accounting purposes as owned by the company. Mr Young stated that, despite what was said in the financial statements, the respondent had claimed that the assets used by the company belonged to him, and he had not mentioned that any plant or machinery was held on hire purchase.

[10] Mr Young then spoke in greater detail about the visit that he made to the company's premises immediately after the liquidation, on 19 or 20 December 2001, when he had met the respondent. Following a brief discussion about events leading to the insolvency, Mr Young asked to view the premises, to see what was there. At that stage the respondent stated that the plant and machinery were not owned by the company. He did not make reference to specific items, but merely made a blanket statement. Mr Young had said that he would require to see the relevant documentation, but at that stage he took the respondent's statement at face value. At that meeting Mr Young was told that the company's accounting system, on its computer, had crashed a few weeks earlier. This was confirmed by the person who acted as bookkeeper. Mr Young had had a further meeting with the respondent at the premises on 8 January 2002. When he arrived at the premises Mr Young discovered that the computer had been removed by third parties subsequently to the first meeting. At the second meeting the respondent made representations regarding the plant and machinery in terms similar to those used at the first meeting. Once again Mr Young had stated that he would require documentation to back up that statement, and the respondent said that that would be supplied.

[11] In relation to the statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire, Mr Young stated that there was no note in the file of the time when these were sent to the respondent. Nevertheless, Tenon Recovery had procedures in place to ensure that the documents were issued. Their practice was to send out three forms, namely the directors' questionnaire, Form 4.4, which was the statement of affairs to be provided by a director, and Form 4.3, which was a request for the director to supply a completed statement of affairs. Forms 4.4 and 4.3 were taken from the Insolvency Regulations. Mr Young would have expected the forms to be sent out on about 8 January 2002; the information in question was required quickly, for the first meeting of creditors; that meeting was due to take place on 29 January 2002. Consequently the form would have been sent out in about the first week in January. Neither the directors' questionnaire nor the statement of affairs had been returned. So far as the ownership of the assets was concerned, Mr Young stated that his request for the relevant information was followed up subsequently. He was advised by the respondent that the relevant documentation would be produced. Despite that no proper answer has ever been received.

[12] Subsequently a number of letters were sent to the respondent by the liquidator. The first of these (No 6/8 of process) was an undated request to contact the liquidator. The reference to the "liquidator" indicated that the letter was sent on or after 29 January, when Mr MacLennan had ceased to be interim liquidator. The second was dated 28 March 2002 (No 6/9 of process). In that letter the liquidator asked to be updated on three issues which, it was stated, had previously been raised with the respondent. These were, first, the question of set off with D Bathgate Construction Limited; secondly, a vehicle (a Citroen van) leased to the company by PSA Finance; and, thirdly, whether the respondent had been contacted by two named individuals regarding the remaining stone at the company's premises. A further letter was sent to the respondent by the liquidator on 22 April 2002 (No 6/10 of process). This letter, which I consider to be significant, was in the following terms:

"I refer to the above matter and should be obliged if you would supply the following information.

1. D Bathgate Construction Limited (Bathgate) had forwarded a list of work which was to be off set against the invoice raised by Oakbank (J&S) Limited (Oakbank) on 26 October 2001. Would you confirm whether or not the sum claimed by Bathgate is reasonable.

2. Would you please confirm if you have contacted Mr Wardlaw re the vehicle from PSA Finance.

3. Please supply the completed directors questionnaire which was sent to you previously.

4. David Cheetham & Co [the company's auditors] have not supplied me with information relating to the fixed assets and associated finance or ownership information. Please compile a list of the fixed assets of the company at the date of liquidation together with any finance associated and ownership clarification. I require you to supply this information urgently.

5. Would you please advise whether any contact has been made with you by Jack Ness or James McGovern regarding the remaining stone at Oakbank.

 

Please contact Lewis Young on 0131 550 4020 or 07747 621083 as soon as possible to discuss these matters. This information is required to be in my hands by 30 April 2002".

It is plain that that letter made specific reference both to the directors' questionnaire and to the company's fixed assets, including clarification of ownership.

[13] A further letter was sent on 16 May 2002 (No 6/11 of process). This began

"I refer to the above matter and previous correspondence to which I have received no response. The undernoted information was requested for 30 April 2002 and should now be supplied without delay".

There followed the same list of matters as in the letter of 22 April. Some months passed thereafter, and a further letter was sent to the respondent on 6 January 2003 (No 6/12 of process). This began as follows:

"I refer to the above matter and previous written and verbal requests for information which have not been complied with. In respect of your conversation with Lewis Young earlier today when you agreed to provide the information by Friday 10 January 2003, I have listed below the information which remains outstanding".

The same five matters were listed as in the two previous letters. In relation to this letter, Mr Young explained that by this time he was considering making a report to the Department of Trade and Industry regarding the respondent's conduct. In addition, he had still not got to the bottom of the asset situation. A further letter was sent on 20 February 2003 (No 6/13 of process), in the following terms:

"I refer to the above matter and previous written and verbal requests for information which have not been complied with. Your lack of co-operation has been outlined to the Department of Trade and Industry and further investigations may be undertaken.

 

The main issue which you have to clarify is in respect of the fixed assets. David Cheetham & Co have not supplied me with information relating to the fixed assets and associated finance or ownership information. You are required to compile a list of the fixed assets of the company at the date of liquidation together with any finance associated and ownership clarification".

The letter went on to state that the liquidator had given contact information regarding the respondent to a firm of valuers, who would make arrangements with him to visit the premises to inspect the machinery on site; it was indicated that the respondent should co-operate fully with that request. Mr Young further stated that he had made contact with David Cheetham & Company, and had received a response; nevertheless this did not help to confirm the position in relation to the fixed assets.

[14] Before the letter of 28 February 2003 had been sent to the respondent, Mr Young had submitted the form D1 to the Insolvency Service. Thereafter, in September 2003, correspondence passed among Mrs Wileman of the Insolvency Service, Mr David Kidd, the solicitor who acted for the Insolvency Service, and the liquidator. In a letter of 3 September 2003 (No 6/21 of process) Mrs Wileman had reported that the respondent had stated to her that he had had only one meeting with the liquidator to discuss in depth all issues relating to the insolvency and that he had at that time provided everything that had been requested. Mr Young stated that it was not correct that there had been a single meeting; at least three meetings had taken place between December 2001 and March 2002. It was also false to assert that, by the date of that letter, the respondent had fully explained which items were owned by him personally and which belonged to the company. The liquidator's position had been put in a letter to Mrs Wileman dated 9 July 2003 (No 6/20 of process) and a letter to Mr Kidd dated 12 September 2003 (No 6/22 of process). In the first of these the liquidator indicated that he had written to the respondent on a number of occasions over a six-month period (the correspondence referred to above) setting out specific points and issues that require explanation. No response to the written correspondence was forthcoming. It was further stated that Mr Young had spoken to the respondent by telephone a number of times, and that undertakings to provide the necessary information and documentation were received but not carried out. The letter repeated the statement that the respondent had maintained that the plant and equipment within the premises did not belong to the company. In addition, the letter indicated that, in the absence of further funding or co-operation from the respondent it was not economically viable to proceed with further action to resolve the position. Mr Young indicated in his evidence that matters had never been fully resolved, and that, in the absence of evidence from the respondent as the assets that he owned, it had not been possible to identify the assets referred to in the company's accounts.

[15] Mr Young then referred to three specific matters where information had been requested from the respondent. The first of those, which is referred to in the liquidator's letters of 28 March, 22 April and 16 May 2002 and 6 January 2003, was the question of set off in respect of work carried out by D Bathgate Construction Limited. Mr Young stated that he had received no response to those queries, and that the question of set off remained unresolved. The second matter was the question of the Citroen van leased from PSA Finance; this was referred to in the same letters. In this case the liability for the vehicle had been taken on by the respondent at some stage during 2002; thus resolution had been reached. The third matter was the ownership of the fixed assets. In this case, some information had been received from Baker Tilley in January or February 2003. This indicated certain items of plant which the respondent and his wife had purchased in 1998 in the liquidation of an earlier company, William Gerard Limited. In this case Mr Young had spoken to Baker Tilley directly, and that had resulted in the receipt of written documentation. Despite the information received from them, however, it was not clear which of the plant and machinery on the company's premises belonged to the respondent and his wife and which had been purchased by the company; the documentation had to be related to what was on site. In addition, certain of the plant that had existed in 1998 might have been lost to natural wastage.

[16] The respondent had suggested that he had asked Cheetham & Co to deal with the liquidator, and in particular to prepare the statement of affairs. Mr Young stated that he was not aware of that, and had never been told that they were. In the conclusion of his examination in chief, Mr Young stated that he would have expected the information requested from the respondent to be within his knowledge as a director of the company. The liquidator's view was that the respondent was unfit to be a director because of his conduct during the liquidation.

[17] In cross examination Mr Young stated that he remained uncertain as to the ownership of the assets on site. He was no longer supervising the site, and the assets had not been taken away by the respondent. Mr Young further accepted that the respondent had personally guaranteed a large part of the company's unsecured debt, in particular its overdraft to Lloyds TSB, which amounted to £40,000. That had been paid by the respondent. Mr Young was then questioned in detail about the initial meeting that he had had with the respondent at the company's premises. It was suggested that the respondent had said that some of the assets were owned by him and some by the company. Mr Young did not accept that. He did accept, however, that the respondent had spent £250,000 of his own money on purchasing assets, that assets worth £57,000 appeared in the company's accounts, and that the respondent must therefore have kept his assets separate. Mr Young further accepted that the respondent had not claimed that items such as tables and chairs and the computer were his; he only claimed to own the plant and machinery.

[18] Mr Young further stated in cross examination that establishing ownership of the company's assets was essential to allow the liquidator to intromit. It was put to him that he had said to the respondent at the initial meeting that the costs of selling the company's assets were likely to exceed the sale proceeds. Mr Young stated that he was certain that he would not have said that; it would not have made sense. He was questioned at some length about the statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire. He accepted that the latter document was more important; failure to submit the former on its own would not be sufficient for a form D1 report. The critical failure in Mr Young's opinion was the failure on the respondent's part to give information to establish the company's financial position at the outset of the liquidation. At that stage Mr Young had been told that the information existed, but he had not received it.

[19] Mr Young was referred at length to two documents issued by the Insolvency Service; these were the Guidance Notes for the Completion of Statutory Reports and Returns and chapters 9 and 10 of the Technical Manual. It is sufficient in respect of this part of his evidence to record that Mr Young reiterated the fundamental basis of his complaint, namely that the respondent had failed to provide essential information in relation to certain of the company's assets and rights, and that that had made it impossible for the liquidator to conduct the liquidation properly. Thereafter Mr Young was asked about the correspondence that had passed between the liquidator on one hand and the respondent and Cheetham & Co on the other. The liquidator had written to the respondent as early as 5 February 2002 with a request to contact Mr Young, but nothing had been said in that letter about ownership of assets or other problems that had arisen. On 20 March 2002 the liquidator had written to Mr David Cheetham with a request to provide various documents and other information; these included a schedule of assets as the date of the last accounts, and referred to "Any other matters which may be of significance". Mr Cheetham had replied on 15 April; he enclosed a copy of the last annual accounts and related corporation tax return and corporation tax computations, and stated that he did not hold the company's statutory books or any other records. He further stated that he was not aware of any other matters which might be of significance. Mr Young stated that he had not followed up that letter, but was still discussing matters with the respondent. He accepted that in correspondence with the respondent in March, April and May of 2002 he had not mentioned the statement of affairs, although he had requested the completed directors' questionnaire. In addition, he had not stated what the consequences would be if the respondent failed to reply.

[20] Mr Young stated that during the period between the liquidator's letter of 16 May 2002 and his letter of 6 January 2003 he had spoken to the respondent on and off by telephone; he had not, however, received the information that he was looking for. Form D1 had then been sent by the liquidator to the Insolvency Service, although the liquidator had not threatened that course of action previously. Mr Young stated that he did not think that such a threat would have had any effect on the basis of the respondent's reaction to previous letters and discussions. Following the submission of form D1, the Insolvency Service had corresponded with Mr Cheetham about the company's fixed assets. Mr Cheetham, in a letter dated 25 April 2003 (No 7/23 of process), had provided copies of the fixed assets sections of his firm's files for the years ended 30 September 1999 and 30 September 2000, together with copies of the nominal ledgers which gave details of the source of assets. These disclosed a list of fixed assets, including plant (No 6/7 of process). In addition, certain documents were available that disclosed the purchase of assets by the respondent and his wife from William Gerard Limited in 1998 (Nos 6/15 and 6/16 of process). Mr Young stated that these had been obtained from Baker Tilley, the accountants who had acted in the liquidation of that company, shortly after the form D1 had been submitted. Mr Young further explained that he had to look for evidence of who owned the assets. He would have expected to obtain documentation about the purchase of assets in 1998. In addition, the description of the assets in the documentation that Baker Tilley had made available was rather general; items were given a description such as "saw". Consequently further information was required to identify which precise assets were being referred to. In addition, to the extent that assets owned by the respondent and his wife were leased to the company, further documentation would be required, such as formal leases and cheques or bank statements to evidence payment.

[21] In re-examination Mr Young stated that the respondent had said that he had the relevant documents to prove ownership, and that he would make them available. Documentary evidence of ownership was essential; verbal evidence by itself would not be sufficient. It followed that telephone calls from the respondent would never be enough. The letters sent to the respondent in 2002 and 2003 (nos 6/10-6/12 of process) had stressed the urgency of the need for information. Furthermore, the respondent had never said that he did not understand the references in those letters to a statement of affairs and directors' questionnaires. Nor did he ever state that he had not received a directors' questionnaire. Furthermore, if the respondent was correct in his contention that he owned at least a significant part of the assets used by the company, it was the respondent rather than the company that should have held the evidence relating to ownership. In the present case, a report had been submitted to the effect that the respondent was unfit to be a director because throughout the case there had been a lack of information. In conclusion, Mr Young stated that he did not consider that he was being pedantic in recommending proceedings against the respondent. Each case must be looked at as a whole, and if information is available from other sources the lack of, for example, a completed directors' questionnaire by itself might not be critical. If, however, there was a lack of information throughout, that was much more serious.

[22] Mrs Frances Wileman gave evidence about the involvement of the Insolvency Service in the respondent's case. That involvement obviously came at a relatively late stage, and consequently her evidence was of less importance than that of Mr Young and the respondent. Mrs Wileman had attended a meeting with the respondent and others on 14 August 2003, at which time the Baker Tilley list of assets was available. The respondent had stated that that was the only documentary evidence that existed, but the problem was matching the list with the assets in the premises. At that meeting the respondent had asserted that neither the statement of affairs nor the directors' questionnaire had been received by him. Following the meeting Mrs Wileman had instructed that a further series of questions should be put to the respondent; these are found in her letter to the solicitors acting for the Insolvency Service dated 3 September 2003 (No 6/21 of process). Those questions covered inter alia the rental agreement and copy invoices in respect of plant and machinery hired to the company by the respondent. Mrs Wileman stated that the letter had been followed up but there had been no response from the respondent. A response had, however, been received from Cheetham & Co on 13 October 2003 (06/23 of process). In that letter Cheetham & Co had stated that the stonecutting equipment hired by the respondent and his wife to the company was not, so far as they were aware, covered by a formal agreement, but copies of invoices raised to the company were enclosed. I should further record that Mrs Wileman commented that the insolvency was one that had taken a significant time to resolve, and that the questions regarding the ownership of the assets on site had never been fully answered.

[23] The respondent described the history of William Gerard Limited, the company from which he and his wife had purchased assets, and of Oakbank (J & S) Limited. He had personally guaranteed the overdraft of the latter company to Lloyds TSB. The company had ultimately fallen into financial difficulty because of a PAYE debt owed to the Inland Revenue. The respondent had discovered that the company had been the subject of a winding up order through a notice in the Scotsman on 19 or 20 December 2002. He had not previously received any papers in connection with a winding up, nor a copy of the petition. He had telephoned the liquidator's office and stated that he had seen the notice and did not understand why no contact had been made with him. He was eventually given Mr Young's mobile telephone number and was asked to telephone him. The respondent did so, and Mr Young visited the company that afternoon. The respondent introduced Mr Young to the labour force, and left him with them to allow freedom of conversation. Mr Young had then spoken to the respondent. He had asked where the company's principal files were, and was told that the information was on the computer in the office, which had crashed. The respondent had given Mr Young the key to the office. On that occasion there had been no specific questions about the company's assets. A further meeting had taken place on 8 January 2003. On that occasion the respondent said that the land and buildings belonged to the company's pension scheme, of which the company was trustee. Mr Young had accepted that. The respondent had then explained that the assets fell into two categories. The first consisted of the stone plant, which was situated in the yard. None of that belonged to the company. The second was the assets in and associated with the joinery shop. Apart from one saw, the respondent had stated that those belonged to the company. The respondent and Mr Young had then walked around the premises to get a feel for what was there. The respondent stated in particular that everything that was seen in the joinery shop belonged to the company.

[24] The respondent further gave evidence that Mr Young had discovered that the bulk of the joinery plant was subject to two hire purchase agreements. He took the view that it was not worth retaining those contracts; if the hire purchase creditors had been paid so that the plant could be resold, it would be necessary to dismantle it, and that would not be profitable. A further problem was that the main building on the site had a 40 foot container built on to it to take sawdust from the dust extraction equipment. If the building were to be resold, that would have to be taken out. Once again, according to the respondent, Mr Young thought that that would be an unprofitable exercise for the liquidation. A further problem was that the computer had gone missing. The respondent stated that he thought that Mr Young had taken it, but in fact he had not. The respondent had, however, shown him the files. Mr Young had stated that the respondent would have to be available if he had further questions, and the respondent had said that he would be. At the meeting Mr Young had not given anything to the respondent or asked him to fill in any forms.

[25] The respondent was then referred to the lease agreement regarding the Citroën van (No 7/4 of process). He stated that he had explained to Mr Young that the van was leased. Thereafter Mr Young had been in contact with the owners, PSA Finance; the respondent had given him their representative's mobile telephone number. The representative sent by that company had understood that his role was to collect their van, because he had not realized that the respondent had guaranteed payments under the hire purchase agreement. Thereafter PSA had enforced the hire purchase agreement against the respondent, and the debt had been paid off by him.

[26] The respondent was referred to the interim liquidator's report dated 29 January 2002 (No 7/6 of process). He disagreed with the statement in that report that the company's premises, plant and equipment were not owned by it. He stated that he had no idea where the information came from. In the estimated statement of affairs appended to that report the plant and equipment was not expected to realize anything. The respondent stated that that reflected his discussion with Mr Young. Thereafter the respondent had spoken to Mr Young by telephone and, at the latter's request, visited him in his office to deal with three or four specific points. The first of these involved the claim by D Bathgate to offset sums against a debt due to the company. According to the respondent, he had told Mr Young that there was no basis for Bathgate's claim. On the same occasion the respondent and Mr Young talked about PSA and the Citroën van. The company's assets were not discussed on that occasion.

[27] On 20 March 2002 the liquidator had written to David Cheetham & Co. The respondent stated that he had not been aware of that, but he was still having conversations with Mr Cheetham on other matters. He had told Mr Cheetham that the company's records were with either the liquidator or with Mr Cheetham's firm. Consequently he asked Mr Cheetham to answer any questions on his behalf. No restrictions had been placed on Mr Cheetham's power to act in this respect. The respondent accepted that he had received the liquidator's letter of 20 March 2002 (Nos 6/9 and 7/9 of process). Thereafter he had telephoned Mr Young to discuss matters. He stated, however, that he did not recall receiving the liquidator's letter of 22 April 2002 (Nos 6/10 and 7/12 of process). In relation to the questions in that letter, which is set out above at paragraph [12], the respondent stated that he would have had nothing to add in relation to Bathgate and PSA Finance. He had also dealt with the fifth question, dealing with the possible sale of the company's stock of stone. The third question dealt with the directors' questionnaire; the respondent stated that that did not mean a thing to him because he had not received it. In relation to the fourth question, dealing with the company's fixed assets, the respondent stated that he would have asked Mr Cheetham to deal with that. The respondent also had no recollection of receiving the liquidator's letter of 16 May 2002 (Nos 6/11 and 7/13 of process). If he had received that letter, his response would have been the same as his response to the letter of 22 April.

[28] The respondent was then referred to the liquidator's letter of 6 January 2003 (Nos 6/12 and 7/14 of process). That letter referred to a conversation with Mr Young on that date. The respondent maintained that that conversation had not been as stated in the letter. Mr Young had been asking for a list of the stone plant and machinery, and the respondent had agreed to provide that information by a specific date. He then got a photocopy of a list of the stone plant, and gave it to the driver of the firm where he now works and asked him to deliver it to the liquidator. The following week Mr Young stated that he had not received any list. The driver, however, had said that he had dropped it off. The respondent further stated that the list in question, which was the same as the list of plant obtained from Baker Tilley, was not what Mr Young had wanted, but it was all that the respondent had.

[29] Thereafter the liquidator returned the Form D1 to the Insolvency Service. The respondent had not been aware that the recommendation in the form had been made; if he had been, matters would have received his attention. In relation to the matters referred to in the form which were said to constitute unfit conduct, he denied having received a request for a statement of affairs; in relation to the plant and machinery situated in the company's premises, he stated that apparently the liquidator wanted him to prove that he owned the assets of the company, but he could not; he could only give proof of ownership of the stone plant and machinery. The report was also in error in stating that there were no personal guarantees; the respondent had given such guarantees. I observe that that is correct; this was a plain error in the report.

[30] On 14 August 2003 the respondent met Mr David Kidd, the solicitor who acted for the Insolvency Service. On this occasion the joinery and stone plant were discussed. In the letter that followed the meeting (No 7/25 process), which the respondent accepted as a fair record, Mr Kidd requested details of hire purchase and finance agreements in respect of the joinery plant, and also the rental agreement and copy invoices in respect of the plant and machinery hired to the company by the respondent. Finally the respondent referred to a series of photographs of the company's premises, which showed the plant situated there.

[31] In cross-examination, the respondent was questioned at length about Mr Young's account of his conversations with the respondent in December 2001 and January 2002. The respondent maintained that he had not told Mr Young that none of the plant belonged to the company. He was unable to explain the statement to that effect in the interim liquidator's report of 29 January 2002 (No 6/4 of process); he stated that he had certainly not said that. Mr Young had understood exactly what the respondent had told him at those meetings. The fact that in that report the company's plant was estimated to realize nothing was a judgment made by Mr Young. It was put to the respondent that it was in his interests to give little or no information to the liquidator, and hope that he would thus gain the company's assets. The respondent replied that, if Mr MacLennan was that poor a liquidator, he should not be in the job. I did not find that a wholly satisfactory answer. The respondent continued to maintain that he had not received either the statement of affairs or the directors' questionnaire.

[32] The respondent was asked whether he had promised to send Mr Young documentation vouching his ownership of the assets at the company's premises. The respondent's replies to this and the following questions were I think significant. The respondent stated that Mr Young had wanted him to provide documentation that he owned Oakbank's assets. The respondent could not do that; such documentation did not exist. The only undertaking that he had given was to supply a copy of the stone machinery and plant listing, which distinguished his plant and company's. He had supplied that. It was then put that that document had not been delivered by the respondent but had been obtained from Baker Tilley in February 2003. The respondent replied that Mr Young had a copy of that document months before he had asked the respondent for it. I observe that this suggestion was not put to Mr Young in cross-examination. Counsel for the petitioner then suggested that Mr Young had looked for information regarding ownership from the outset; in particular in about January 2002 the respondent had promised Mr Young that he would deliver documentation vouching his ownership of the assets at the company's premises. At this point the respondent's answers appeared to me to become very combative, drawing unduly nice distinctions. In summary, he asserted that Mr Young had wanted confirmation that the respondent owned not only the assets that truly belonged to him but assets that truly belonged to Oakbank, and the respondent was unable to do that. At this point I must observe that it would have been manifestly unreasonable for Mr Young to take such an attitude, and I do not believe that it is the position that he did take; on the basis of Mr Young's evidence I am of opinion that Mr Young made perfectly clear that he was looking for proof of ownership of such of the assets at the company's premises as were owned by the respondent.

[33] The respondent was asked about the liquidator's letter of 22 April 2002 (No 6/10 of process), and continued to maintain that he had not received it. In that letter the liquidator had asked the respondent to compile "a list of the fixed assets of the company at the date of liquidation together with any finance associated and ownership clarification". In relation to that request, the respondent commented that it only covered the assets of the company, and not his own assets. That is no doubt literally true, but it is an example of the unduly nice distinctions that the respondent was prone to draw during his evidence. Counsel put to the respondent that he knew that the ownership of his own assets was in issue, and the respondent replied that he did not know that. In my view that cannot be correct; it was obvious on any view of the true factual position that the question of which assets were owned by the respondent was of great importance. The respondent maintained that he had not received the liquidator's letter of 16 May 2002 (No 6/11 process), but accepted that he had received the liquidator's letter of 6 January 2003 (No 6/12 process). He repeated his evidence in chief that, following that letter and a telephone conversation with Mr Young, he had sent a copy of the Baker Tilley list to the liquidator using the driver who worked for his present firm. Mr Young had then telephoned the respondent to ask where the list was, and the respondent had confirmed with the driver that it had been delivered. Counsel asked whether a fresh copy had been sent, and the respondent replied in the negative. His explanation was that it was becoming clear that what Mr Young was looking for was not the information in that list, but rather information that the respondent owned Oakbank's assets. In respect of this part of his evidence, I observe that sending a fresh copy of the list was an obvious thing to do; moreover, the reason given by the respondent for not sending a further copy seemed contrived, and indeed evasive.

[34] The respondent was also questioned about his dealings with David Cheetham & Co during the liquidation. It was suggested that he did not contact them until after the Department of Trade and Industry had been involved and he had met Mr Kidd. The respondent replied that he thought the evidence was to the contrary, and that earlier letters, such as Mr Cheetham's letter to the liquidator of 15 April 2002 (No 7/11 of process), indicated that he had been in contact with them at that time. Counsel suggested that that letter was a reply to the liquidator's letter of 20 March 2002 (No 7/8 of process). The respondent accepted that; indeed the matter is very clear from the terms of the letter of 15 April. The respondent nevertheless would not accept that the letter of 15 April was not written on his instructions; he stated that he thought that he had told Mr Cheetham to reply. Mr Cheetham, in evidence summarized in the next paragraph, stated that he had told the respondent that he was supplying information to the liquidator. My overall impression was that the respondent was trying to elevate a conversation of that nature into a relatively formal instruction to the liquidator to deal with all matters on his behalf. I do not accept that he gave instructions of the latter sort.

[35] Mr David Cheetham described his involvement with the company. He recalled receiving the letter of 20 March 2002 (No 7/8 of process) from the liquidator. In that letter he was asked to deal with any other matters that might be of significance. Mr Cheetham stated that he understood that to refer to such matters as a transfer to new accountants, or anything of an illegal nature. If fixed assets had been shown in the accounts at £57,000 but the company did not own any, Mr Cheetham would have regarded that as being of significance. Mr Cheetham was asked if he had discussed that letter with the respondent. He replied that he certainly told the respondent that he was supplying information. The respondent had not expressed any concerns about the matter. Mr Cheetham further discussed his reply to that letter, dated 15 April 2002 (No 7/11 of process). Certain further correspondence passed between Mr Cheetham and the Insolvency Service. With a letter of 25 April 2003 (No 7/23 of process) he enclosed copies of the fixed asset sections of his firm's files for the years ending 30 September 1999 and 30 September 2000, together with copies of the nominal ledger giving details of the source of the assets (No 6/7 of process). He stated that these would contain full details of all of the assets in the balance sheet. In cross-examination Mr Cheetham accepted that in earlier correspondence the information provided did not appear to amount to details of the fixed assets, as in the letter of 25 April 2003. He expressed surprise at the delay in providing this information. Mr Cheetham further accepted in cross-examination that, if he were aware that a large number of the assets on site were not owned by the company, he would have regarded that as a matter of significance.

 

Discussion

[36] As will be clear from the foregoing summary, the evidence disclosed a sharp conflict on certain critical issues of fact between Mr Young and the respondent. These related principally to two matters: the information given by the respondent to Mr Young in relation to the assets at the company's premises, and whether the respondent was given and failed to complete a statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire. Of these issues, I consider that the former is the more important. In any insolvency it is plainly of vital importance for the liquidator or other insolvency practitioner to establish what assets the company owns, and to realize these for the benefit of the company's creditors. That is elementary, and it is a point that should in my opinion be obvious to any person who is a director of a trading company. If the liquidator is to perform this task, however, it is clearly essential that he should obtain full information about the assets. In cases where assets do not belong to the insolvent company because, for example, they are held on lease or hire purchase or subject to retention of title arrangements, the liquidator must determine which assets belong to the company and which do not, and must obtain the necessary information at an early stage; without such information it is very difficult for the liquidation to progress. Because of the importance of title to the assets, it is also necessary for the liquidator to obtain proper documentary evidence as to ownership; vague verbal assurances are not sufficient. Once again, I regard these matters as elementary.

[37] Completing a statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire, by comparison, is of critical importance only in cases where essential information is not available from other sources. In relation to a matter such as ownership of assets, if full documentary evidence is available, either from the company's own files or because it has been supplied by a director, the statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire assume much lesser importance. In a case of the latter sort I would not regard failure to complete such documents as a serious breach of a director's duties. Where, however, critical information is not readily available from other sources, the duty to complete those documents assumes much greater importance. In my opinion the present is such a case.

[38] On the critical issues of fact, I prefer the evidence of Mr Young. In particular, I accept his evidence that, at the meetings held at the company's premises on 19 or 20 December 2001 and 8 January 2002, the respondent claimed that all of the plant and machinery on the premises belonged to him rather than the company. I further accept Mr Young's evidence that the respondent did not subsequently provide documentation substantiating that claim, at least until after the Insolvency Service became involved and then only through Cheetham & Co. I likewise accept that a statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire were sent or given to the respondent, and that the respondent was asked to complete those but did not do so. My reasons for preferring the evidence of Mr Young are as follows.

[39] In the first place, Mr Young's account was supported by all of the contemporary documents. It was supported in particular by the letters that were sent by the liquidator (but written by Mr Young; they bore his reference) on 20 March 2002, 22 April 2002, 16 May 2002, 6 January 2003 and 20 February 2003 (Nos 6/9-13 of process). I have summarized these at paragraphs [12] and [13] above, and have set out the terms of the letter of 22 April at length. The letters from 22 April onwards indicate very clearly that ownership of the fixed assets was of critical importance and that Mr Young was looking to the respondent to provide the necessary information. That is consistent with the account that Mr Young gave, and clearly inconsistent with the account that the respondent gave. The letters of 22 April, 16 May and 6 January all refer to a directors' questionnaire. That is important for two reasons: first, it tends to support Mr Young's statement that he had sent a directors' questionnaire for completion by the respondent; and, secondly, it indicates that the respondent was put on notice that he was expected to complete a directors' questionnaire. Even if the respondent had not been given a directors' questionnaire, the statements in these letters about the document should have alerted him to the requirement to complete such a document, and in that event he should have indicated to Mr Young or the liquidator that he had not received the document. The respondent stated in evidence that he had not received the letters of 22 April and 16 May. I deal with this matter below at paragraphs [41] and [43].

[40] Mr Young's evidence was further supported by the terms of the interim liquidator's report of 29 January 2002 (No 6/4 process). In paragraph 4 this records that the premises, plant and equipment had been stated not to be owned by the company, and that therefore no valuation was carried out. That is clearly consistent with Mr Young's evidence that he had been told that the respondent owned all of the plant and equipment. The interim liquidator's report is plainly an important document; the proposition that is stated is a simple one; and in all the circumstances I find it difficult to believe that Mr Young would have made a major error on this point a very short time after the relevant meetings with the respondent. Certain further support for Mr Young's account of matters is found in the later correspondence after the Insolvency Service became involved, notably in the liquidator's letters to Mrs Wileman of 9 July 2003 (No 6/20 of process) and to Mr Kidd of 12 September 2003 (No 6/22 of process). These are consistent with Mr Young's evidence in court, and also with the earlier documents. They are not, of course, contemporaneous with events, and for that reason I regard them as of lesser importance than the correspondence in 2002 and January and February 2003 and the interim liquidator's report. Nevertheless, they do provide some support for Mr Young's account.

[41] In the second place, I find that the respondent's account of events is undermined by the series of mishaps that he claims have occurred. These are as follows. First, before the winding up, the company did not receive a copy of the petition at the instance of the Inland Revenue. Secondly, the company's computer, which might be expected to hold critical information, crashed and then went missing in the period between Mr Young's two meetings with the respondent. Thirdly, the respondent claims not to have received the pro forma statement of affairs for completion. Fourthly, the respondent claims not to have received a directors' questionnaire. Fifthly, the respondent claims not to have received the liquidator's letter of 22 April 2002. Sixthly, the respondent claims not have received the liquidator's letter of 16 May 2002. Seventhly, the respondent claims that he sent documents to the liquidator in January 2003 using the driver of the firm for which he now works, and that the driver confirmed that the documents were delivered, but he accepts that the documents were not received; the evidence is summarized at paragraphs [28] and [33] above. I find it highly improbable that all of the foregoing mishaps occurred. Individually, they are all no doubt possible. Cumulatively, however, I think it highly unlikely that they could all have happened. The last of them, the failure of the liquidator to receive the documents sent in January 2003, is in my opinion particularly significant because the respondent became aware shortly thereafter that the documents had been received and made no effort to put matters right. I find his explanation for taking no further action unconvincing: see paragraph [33] above.

[42] When the alleged mishaps are taken as a whole, I find that they seriously undermine the respondent's evidence. For that reason I have little hesitation in preferring the evidence of Mr Young that the respondent was given a statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire and asked to complete them in about the first week of January 2002 (see paragraph [11] above). In this connection, Mr Young is supported by his evidence that it was his firm's usual practice to issue such documents. He also indicated that the information provided in the statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire would be required for the first meeting of creditors, which was due to take place on 29 January 2002; that provides further support for his account. There was of course no record that the documents had been issued; that is unfortunate, and has created unnecessary difficulties for the petitioners in the present litigation. Nevertheless, ultimately I am satisfied that the documents were issued, at the time indicated by Mr Young. Furthermore, as indicated in paragraph [39] above, the correspondence from the liquidator, including the letter of 6 January 2003, put the respondent on notice about the directors' questionnaire, but he did nothing in response to that correspondence.

[43] I also draw the inference that the respondent received at least one of the letters of 22 April and 16 May 2002, and probably both of them. There was no suggestion that the letters had been sent other than in the ordinary course of business and through the ordinary postal service. Both were correctly addressed, according to the terms of the letters themselves. There is no reason to suppose that they would not have been delivered. Those letters were quite clear in their terms, and the failure to respond to them is in my opinion clearly culpable. Apart from the directors' questionnaire, those letters are of importance because they indicate very clearly that further information is required about the fixed assets of the company.

[44] In the third place, in the whole circumstances of the insolvency, I find that Mr Young's explanation of events at the meetings of the respondent held in December 2001 and January 2002 is itself inherently probable. Mr Young was clearly an experienced insolvency practitioner. The solicitor for the respondent suggested that the overriding impression that he made was of a junior member of staff who was a "case worker", and submitted that Mr Young's evidence was of little assistance. He was in fact a Chartered Accountant who worked as an insolvency manager with a firm of accountants that specializes in insolvency and associated work; I thought it clear that he had very substantial experience in that field. In any insolvency, it is obvious that the ownership of the assets is a matter of fundamental importance. I have no reason to doubt that Mr Young understood that fact, and that he would accordingly pay close attention to whatever the respondent said to him about ownership of the assets on site. Moreover, the competing accounts of what the respondent said are simple. Mr Young gave evidence that the respondent told him that none of the plant and equipment on site was owned by the company. The respondent gave evidence that he had told Mr Young that he owned the stoneworking equipment, but that the company owned the joinery equipment. It is difficult to believe that Mr Young would have had any difficulty in grasping that explanation if it had been made to him at the initial meetings with the respondent. Indeed, when the point was put to Mr Young in court, he had no difficulty in understanding it. I accordingly conclude that Mr Young was told that the company did not own any of the plant and equipment on site. In reaching this conclusion I have had regard both to the matters discussed in this paragraph and to the terms of the interim liquidator's report of 29 January 2002 (No 6/4 of process); as indicated in paragraph [42] above, the latter is a nearly contemporaneous document which supports Mr Young's account of events. I have also had regard to the matters discussed in paragraphs [41] and [42] above, which in my opinion have the effect of undermining the respondent's evidence generally.

[45] For the respondent it was submitted that Mr Young must have realized from the company's accounts that it owned substantial assets; in the balance sheet as at 30 September 2000 (part of No 6/6 of process) fixed assets were stated at £57,290; that figure included plant and machinery valued at £32,816. That is no doubt so. Nevertheless, Mr Young explained that his fundamental difficulty was obtaining proper evidence as the ownership of what was on site; for this purpose documentary evidence was essential. It is easy to understand why Mr Young insisted on documentary evidence; otherwise the directors of an insolvent company could readily claim that everything that was there belonged to them rather than the company. In any event, the figures in the balance sheet were book values, and they included additions to the company's assets after it started to trade and assets on hire purchase. Documentary evidence was ultimately made available, by Baker Tilley and Cheetham & Co (found at Nos 6/7 and 7/1-3 of process), although only at a fairly late stage in the liquidation, after the Insolvency Service had become involved; the information from Cheetham & Co was received on 25 April 2003 (No 7/23 of process), following correspondence with the Insolvency Service that began on 5 March 2003; the other information was obtained directly from Baker Tilley. That information was clearly late; by the time it was received the liquidation had been proceeding for over a year. In addition, even when the information was received, it was clear that explanation was required in order to relate the documentary evidence to the machinery situated in the company's premises. It is difficult to understand who other than the respondent could provide such an explanation.

[46] The solicitor for the respondent submitted that Mr Young was an unsatisfactory witness, who had limited ability to recollect matters. He had clearly been responsible for a large number of cases, and he had to reconstruct matters from his files. It is true that Mr Young's direct recollection of matters was at times vague; that is perhaps hardly surprising in view of the number of cases that he no doubt dealt with. Nevertheless, Mr Young's account was backed up by contemporaneous documents, and for the reasons discussed above I regard that as a matter of great importance. Consequently I consider that Mr Young's evidence, although at times vague on points of detail, is correct in its essentials.

 

Conclusions

[47] As indicated above, I conclude that the respondent was provided with a pro forma statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire in about the first week or thereby of January 2002. That is based on Mr Young's evidence summarized at paragraph [11] above, and by the liquidator's letters of 22 April 2002, 16 May 2002 and 6 January 2003 (Nos 6/10-12 of process). It is also supported by Mr Young's evidence about Tenon Recovery's usual practice, and by the fact that the information was required for the first meeting of creditors, which was due to take place on 29 January 2002. I further conclude, on the basis of Mr Young's evidence, which was not challenged on this point, that the respondent at no time completed the statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire.

[48] In relation to the question of set off with D Bathgate, counsel for the petitioner accepted that the respondent met Mr Young in March 2002 and explained that the right of set off claimed by that company was not well founded. Mr Young had accepted in evidence that such a meeting had taken place, and that it was concerned primarily with set off. Consequently that complaint was withdrawn.

[49] In relation to the finance agreement with PSA, counsel for the petitioner accepted that the matter appeared eventually to have been resolved. The respondent was a guarantor under that agreement. Consequently the only issue was whether the respondent had told the liquidator about the whereabouts of the van at an appropriate stage in the liquidation. In fact the matter was still outstanding in January 2003; the liquidator's letter of 6 January (No 6/12 of process) made that clear. Counsel conceded that this was a small item, but pointed out that a minimal effort would have been enough to resolve matters. I agree with that approach. Nevertheless, I think it clear that this matter is of minor importance.

[50] The most important matter is the information provided by the respondent about the ownership of the assets within the company's premises. For the reasons stated at paragraphs [39], [40], [44] and [45] I have concluded that the respondent provided inaccurate verbal information at his initial meetings with Mr Young, in that he stated that the company did not own any of the plant and machinery on site. I further conclude, on the basis of Mr Young's evidence, that the respondent undertook to provide documentary evidence about the ownership of the assets but failed to do so. This seriously held up the progress of the insolvency, because it made it impossible for the liquidator to realize the fixed assets. No written information was provided about the fixed assets until well into 2003, and that information came from third parties. The matter is made worse by the fact that reminders relating to a list of fixed assets were given in the liquidator's letters of 22 April 2002, 16 May 2002 and 6 January 2003 (Nos 6/10-12 of process); despite these the respondent failed to reply. Mr Young stated that he had never fully resolved the question of ownership of the plant and equipment; in part this was because a detailed explanation would be required from the respondent to relate the documents that were ultimately obtained to what was on site: see paragraph [15] above. I accept that evidence. Obtaining information from third parties was time-consuming and expensive; I accept Mr Young's evidence on that point. I note, too, that Mrs Wileman stated that the insolvency was one that took a significant time.

 

Application of Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986
[51
] The foregoing conclusions lead on to the essential question: whether the conduct of the respondent justifies disqualification under the Act of 1986. In my opinion it does. I have regard in particular to the failure of the respondent to provide adequate information regarding the ownership of the assets in the company's premises, as summarized in paragraph [50]. In this connection, I have regard to the importance to any company of having proper information available about the ownership of its assets. In general, I consider that any company director should be aware of the need for proper information about company assets. The matter is particularly important where, as frequently happens, the company is permitted to use assets belonging to a director. In such a case it is vital that full information should be given to indicate what is the company's and what is the director's. Normally, the director should keep proper records of what is his, and the basis on which the company is allowed to use the assets should normally be properly documented. In the present case the information about the assets owned by the respondent was ultimately


obtained from third parties, namely Baker Tilley and Cheetham & Co; neither the company nor the respondent appears to have had the relevant documentation. The documentation in question was not sufficient by itself to indicate what assets were the respondent's and what assets were the company's; further detailed explanations were required to separate the two. I have found that the respondent failed to provide either documentation or the necessary explanations, and to the extent that he provided an explanation during the initial meetings it was inaccurate. In view of the foregoing matters, I conclude that the failure to provide adequate information regarding the assets amounted to a failure to give the liquidator information concerning the company that the liquidator reasonably required; as such it amounted to a breach of the duty contained in section 235 of the Insolvency Act 1986. Such conduct accordingly fell within paragraph 10(g) of Schedule 1 to the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986. The failure to provide information regarding the finance agreement with PSA also amounted in my opinion to such a breach of duty; nevertheless, as indicated at paragraph [49], I regard this aspect of the case as of minor importance.

[52] I have also found, as indicated at paragraph [42] above, that the respondent received copies of a directors' questionnaire and pro forma statement of affairs. It was not suggested that he had completed any such documents. The failure to complete the statement of affairs amounts in my opinion to a clear breach of section 131 of the Insolvency Act 1986. Such conduct accordingly fell within paragraph 10(e) of Schedule 1 to the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986. I further find that the failure to complete and return the directors' questionnaire amounted to a breach of section 235 of the Insolvency Act 1986, and that such conduct accordingly fell within paragraph 10(g) of Schedule 1 to the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986.

[53] The next question is the application of section 6 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986. The first requirement for the application of that section is that a person is or has been a director of a company which has become insolvent; it was not in dispute that that requirement was satisfied. The second requirement is that the person's conduct as a director makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company. Under section 9 of the Act, in determining whether a person's conduct as a director makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company, in cases where the company has become insolvent the court is to have regard in particular to the matters mentioned in Part II of Schedule 1 to the Act. Those matters include breaches of section 131 and section 235 of the Insolvency Act 1986. For the reasons discussed above I am of opinion that the respondent was in breach of those two sections. That by itself, however, is not sufficient to justify a disqualification order. In my opinion section 9 and Schedule 1 contemplate that the matters referred to in the Schedule should be weighed and assessed by the court, to determine how serious they are and whether, in particular, they are sufficiently serious to merit disqualification. In performing that exercise, two matters seem to be of importance. The first is the degree of blameworthiness of the director's conduct; that must be of primary importance. The second is the consequences, or more strictly the foreseeable consequences, of that conduct. The consequences seem to me to be relevant, to the extent that they were or ought to have been foreseen by the director, because a director can be expected to pay greater attention and exhibit greater diligence in relation to matters that are likely to have a significant effect on the financial position of the company or the financial outcome of its insolvency.

[54] In the present case, I am of opinion that the respondent's conduct, in particular his failure to provide adequate information about the assets within the company's premises, was sufficiently serious to merit disqualification. On the facts that I have found established, I consider that the respondent's conduct was clearly blameworthy to a significant degree. In the first place, information on the ownership of assets is nearly always essential in an insolvency, and in cases where it is claimed that a significant part of the apparent assets is not the property of the company adequate information about ownership is plainly of critical importance. That ought to have been apparent to any director of a company. In the second place, the respondent asserted during his initial meetings with Mr Young that a substantial part of the assets on the company's premises did not belong to it, and was told that he would have to provide documentary evidence to establish the true position. In the third place, the respondent was reminded of the need to provide such information by, for example, the liquidator's letters of 22 April 2002 and 16 May 2002 (Nos 6/10 and 11 of process). Despite all of these considerations, I have concluded that the respondent failed to provide anything like adequate information, and indeed provided almost no accurate information, until after the Insolvency Service had become involved.

[55] So far as the foreseeable consequences of the respondent's conduct are concerned, it ought in my opinion to have been obvious to a director that information about the ownership of assets was of critical importance to the conduct of the insolvency; without such information it was very obvious that the liquidator could not proceed to realize the company's assets and thus to obtain funds to pay its creditors. Moreover, as Mr Young made clear in his evidence, the failure to obtain information about the assets of the company was liable to cause serious delay to the liquidation and to add substantially to the liquidator's expenses. These are matters that I think ought to have been apparent to a director of the company. The general importance of information about the assets of the company is such that the courts must in my opinion ensure that directors' responsibility to provide that information is taken seriously in all cases; a general standard of conduct must be maintained. That can only be done by treating the failure to give such information as a serious matter.

[56] On the basis of the various considerations discussed in the last two paragraphs, I have come to the conclusion that the respondent's conduct merits disqualification. That conclusion proceeds upon the more serious of the two breaches of section 235 of the Insolvency Act. It is also supported by the respondent's failure to complete a directors' questionnaire, also in breach of section 235, and by his failure to provide a statement of affairs when requested, in breach of section 131 of the Insolvency Act. I would not have regarded the latter breaches by themselves as sufficiently serious to merit disqualification; nevertheless, they compound the more serious breach, and add to the impression of unfitness to be concerned in the management of a company.

[57] The solicitor for the respondent invited me to dismiss the petition. He referred me to certain English cases where judges had attempted to set out the criteria for disqualification: Re Sevenoaks Stationers Ltd, [1991] Ch 164, at 176C-G; Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Gill, [2004] EWHC 993. In the latter case Blackburne J. stated (at paragraph 153) that the conduct complained of must ordinarily be either dishonest or otherwise lacking in commercial probity or display incompetence to a marked degree. At the same time, he pointed out that the test in section 6 is laid down in terms involving ordinary English words which should be simple to apply in most cases; the question was ultimately one of fact. That approach seems to me to be clearly appropriate. The present case does not involve allegations of dishonesty or a lack of commercial probity. Nevertheless, it appears to me that the attitude of the respondent towards providing information about the company's fixed assets displays incompetence to a marked degree. That is especially so in view of two factors: first, the very obvious importance of information about the assets, and secondly, the failure to respond to the reminders which, as a matter of fact, I have found were issued by the liquidator. On the application of the plain wording of section 6, I have concluded for the reasons stated above that the respondent's conduct was such that he is unfit to be concerned in the management of a company.

[58] The solicitor for the respondent further drew my attention to the Guidance Notes for the Completion of Statutory Reports and Returns issued by the Insolvency Service for the purposes of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986, and to provisions of the Technical Manual issued by the Insolvency Service. In section 4 of the former document the categories of conduct that are likely to be considered unfit are summarized. These include "serious failures to comply with statutory duties". In addition, it is suggested that consideration should be given to how much damage has been done to creditors' interests. Specific consideration is given to the duty of a director to assist an insolvency practitioner and to deliver property of the company to an insolvency practitioner; in this connection, the relevant questions are said to include whether the director had failed to co-operate in providing information to an insolvency practitioner, and what steps were taken to enforce compliance. These are all no doubt relevant considerations. Nevertheless, when a court is called upon to apply section 6 it is the statutory wording that must be applied. As Blackburne J. pointed out in Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Gill, supra, the words used are ordinary English words which should be simple to apply in most cases. In my opinion the courts should resist the temptation to put a gloss on such wording. For that reason I find the Guidance Notes issued by the Insolvency Service to be of relatively little assistance in construing section 6. I do not, however, think that there is anything in the Guidance Notes that is inconsistent with the approach that I have taken.

[59] The same is true of the Technical Manual; once again I consider the document of limited assistance so far as the court's task is concerned. In this case, the solicitor


for the respondent drew my attention to paragraph 12.20, where it is pointed out that a statement of affairs might not be required in every case, paragraph 12.24, where is pointed out that the company's accountant or auditor may be required to submit a statement of affairs, and paragraph 12.26, where it is stated that when a notice requiring a statement of affairs is submitted a receipt should be obtained in writing. In the present case the liquidator did not obtain a written receipt as suggested in that paragraph. Nevertheless, I am satisfied for the reasons stated above that a notice requiring a statement of affairs was issued to the respondent, and I do not think that the failure to obtain a written acknowledgement is fatal. In any event, I do not regard the failure to complete the statement of affairs as the most seriously culpable part of the respondent's behaviour. My attention was also drawn to Chapter 13 of the Technical Manual, which deals with the duty to co-operate with an insolvency practitioner. In paragraph 13.3 it is stated that an insolvency practitioner should take all reasonable steps to secure the co-operation of the relevant company officer; he should include a formal written warning advising the officer of the legal position as regards co-operation. Such a course of action may often be necessary. In the present case, however, I consider that the failure to provide information about the company's assets was so obviously fundamental that the need for warnings was less. Moreover, I have found that a number of letters were sent reminding the respondent of the need to provide information, and the matter was ultimately taken up by the Insolvency Service. In all the circumstances, I consider that he should not have been under any reasonable doubt as to the need to provide much greater information that he had in fact provided. Paragraph 13.6 of the Technical Manual states that enforcement action should be proportionate to the seriousness of the consequences of non co-operation. In my opinion that test is satisfied in the present case. Finally, paragraph 13.9 states that it is only in exceptional cases that a disqualification report should be submitted where the failure to co-operate is the sole matter of unfitness. In the present case it was not the sole such matter; the respondent had also failed to submit a statement of affairs. Even if the failure to provide information about the assets had been the sole basis, however, I am of opinion that test of exceptional circumstances would be made out; the liquidator's need to establish ownership of the assets was so fundamental that any failure to provide full information, including the relevant documentation, must be taken very seriously.

[60] The solicitor for the respondent made detailed submissions about the evidence led. I have attempted to deal with these in my consideration of the evidence at paragraphs [7]-[35] above. He summarized the respondent's position as follows. First, the respondent co-operated with the liquidator and provided the records sought. For the reasons discussed above I do not accept this contention; there was a failure of co-operation, and records were only provided at a very late stage. Secondly, it was said that no criticism was made of the financial records kept by the company. That is correct, but it does not avoid the need for information about the ownership of the plant and equipment on the company's premises. Thirdly, it was said that the respondent kept in contact with the liquidator, primarily by telephone, and responded to letters. Mr Young accepted that there was contact by telephone. Nevertheless, the fundamental problem was a failure to provide full information about the assets on site, and in particular to provide documentary information about that. I consider that documentary information was essential, for the reason stated at paragraph [45] above; without documentary evidence, it would be very easy for directors of companies to commit fraud by asserting that the company's assets were theirs. That point should have been obvious to any director of a company. In relation to the response to letters, for the reasons discussed above I do not accept that the respondent did reply properly to letters. Fourthly, it was said that the respondent provided financial information as best he could, referred financial matters to Cheetham & Co, and did not restrain that firm in the information that they provided. For the reasons discussed at length above, I do not accept that the respondent did his best to provide financial information. He did refer matters to Cheetham & Co; nevertheless the formal referral to that firm only came at a very late stage, after the Insolvency Service was involved. At the early stages of the liquidation, as indicated in paragraph [34] above, I do not accept that the respondent had anything more than an informal conversation with the accountants; there was certainly no attempt to pass responsibility to them for supplying financial information. In any event, since part of the fixed assets on site were said to belong to the respondent himself, it is not obvious how Cheetham & Co would have had the relevant documentation.

[61] The solicitor for the respondent also made detailed submissions that bore on the degree of the respondent's culpability. I have taken these into account in the decision recorded in the next paragraph.

 

Length of disqualification

[62] Although I take a serious view of failure to provide information about the assets of a company, I consider that the present case is at the lowest end of the scale of culpability. Indeed, counsel for the petitioner accepted that the case was towards the lower end. It does not involve any allegation of dishonesty, or a failure to keep proper accounts. The minimum period of disqualification that is available is two


years, in accordance with section 6(4). In all the circumstances of the present case, I consider that a period of two years' disqualification is appropriate. I will make an order accordingly.


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