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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Official Receiver v Stern & Anor [2001] EWCA Civ 1787 (20 November 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1787.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 1787, [2002] 1 BCLC 119, [2004] BCC 581 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
MR. JUSTICE LLOYD
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Wednesday 20th November 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
and
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
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OFFICIAL RECEIVER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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STERN AND ANOTHER |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr. David Richards QC and Mr. Richard Hill (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor for the Respondent)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
THE VICE CHANCELLOR :
a) whether to allow Mr Stern to adduce the fresh evidence he seeks in respect of the Drawings Charges;
b) whether, with or without such evidence, to allow Mr Stern to appeal the judge's findings in relation to the Drawings Charges;
c) whether Lloyd J was wrong to conclude that Mr Stern was unfit to be concerned in the management of a company in respect of the Drawings Charges, if permission to appeal is granted, the Trading Charges and the Diligent Charge;
d) whether, in the light of the charges we consider to have been made out, the period of disqualification should be reduced.
"In essence, from 1990 onwards DLM, and then Westminster, continued to trade with the benefit of such support as they were able to gain from within the group or from Keristal, and with the benefit of the forbearance that was extended, whether or not on an informed basis, by creditors. Mr. Stern knew that the company could not pay its debts as they fell due."
"Keristal paid, or caused to be paid, substantial sums into the bank account of the management company from time to time, that the management company was not free to deal with these amounts as it chose but could only deal with them in accordance with directions received from Keristal, that Keristal was therefore entitled to have all or any part of these moneys paid out for its own benefit....and that he himself was entitled, under bilateral arrangements reached directly with Keristal, to draw sums out of the funds so paid in by Keristal, up to a limit agreed in December 1990 of £500,000 each year."
DLM | DLM | DLM | Westminster | |
1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993-4 | |
William Stern | £441,000 | £170,891 | £168,216 | £731,996 |
Mark Stern | £49,500 | £99,600 | £62,000 | £80,609 |
Keristal | £1,181,088 | £737,279 | £409,510 | £114,228 |
"(1) [Mr Stern] traded in respect of DLM at the risk of creditors and/or knowingly continued the company's business when there was no reasonable prospect of all creditors being paid.
(2) [Mr Stern] financed DLM's business with £5.2 million retained from revenues collected on behalf of the Crown.
(3) [Mr Stern] drew undue remuneration and benefits having regard to the prospective turnover or profitability of DLM and the interests of creditors.
(4) [Mr Stern] knowingly operated the business of Westminster when there was no real prospect of all creditors being paid.
(5) [He] had no reasonable grounds for expecting that the business of Westminster would succeed, it having been carried on without any significant change in its financing or method of operation following the business which had previously been carried on unsuccessfully by DLM.
(6) The operation of Westminster in a phoenix manner unfairly and improperly exploited the privilege of limited liability.
(7) [Mr Stern] financed Westminster's business with sums retained from revenues collected on behalf of the Crown; having regard to the point on withholding tax that I have mentioned this point is still relied on but in respect of a smaller amount.
(8) [Mr Stern] drew excessive remuneration from Westminster."
"drew substantial sums from each company in turn in addition to [his] remuneration which drawings constituted either simply misapplication of corporate funds or unlawful loans to directors."
The Diligent Charge was made against Mr Stern alone. It is that
"he caused payments to be made by Westminster for purposes that were not in the interests of Westminster, this being a case of Westminster meeting a liability for interest which was not incurred by it but by DLM, by then in liquidation."
"5. When considering the evidence which I should be calling in support of my case during the trial before Mr. Justice Lloyd I had (wrongly as it turned out) assumed that my arguments and contentions regarding the audited accounts of the Dollar Land Group were so self-evident and corroborative of my case on the Drawings Charges that it did not occur to me that the matters specifically dealt with by Mr. Angus in his Witness Statement should have been included in the evidence upon which I was relying at that stage.
6. On the other hand, I did realise that Mr. Neumann was in a position to corroborate my evidence and to support my case on the Drawings Charges, but following the service of the Company Directors Disqualification Act proceedings on me (and indeed generally, so far as the consequences of the liquidation of the Company were concerned) he made it clear to me that he was unwilling to become involved in any way, or to assist either by giving evidence on my behalf or otherwise. This was made clear to me on more than one occasion, and in the circumstances I had little option to proceed with my defence to the disqualification proceedings without his help.
7. Having received advice from my Solicitors on the evidence which I should try to obtain for the purposes of my....defence to the drawings claim, I went to New York for the specific purpose of trying to persuade Mr. Neumann to change his mind, and to provide a Witness Statement in relation to the drawings claim. Quite frankly, I expected Mr. Neumann to react in the way that he had previously. However, I was able to persuade him to assist me, and on that basis he was prepared to make and sign the Witness Statement dated 19 April 2001."
"remain relevant to any application for permission to rely on further evidence, not as rules but as matters which must necessarily be considered in an exercise of the discretion whether or not to permit an appellant to rely on evidence not before the court below."
Those matters may be summarised as (1) whether with reasonable diligence the fresh evidence could have been adduced in the court below; (2) whether the fresh evidence is such that, if given, it would probably have an important, though not decisive, influence on the result and (3) whether the evidence is such as is presumably to be believed.
"8. These payments out by DLM, and subsequently by the Company, both to Mr. Stern (and to his son, at his direction) and to Keristal were known to me at the time, and were paid out with my agreement. Whether paid to Keristal, or otherwise for Keristal's benefit, or to Mr. Stern (or his son, at his direction) or otherwise for their benefit, it was understood and agreed by me and Mr. Stern, that all these payments were to be regarded as a loan from Keristal to Mr. Stern, with the monies in question being debited to the Keristal-DLH loan account, or (if that loan account was overdrawn) would be covered by substantial monies which Mr. Stern and I had agreed would be advanced by Keristal to DLH from profits on non-DLH transactions which were about to be realised.
9. Having agreed to this arrangement in principle, Mr. Stern and I would discuss each year, and confirm, the maximum which he would be allowed to draw in this way (technically as a loan to him from Keristal) on account of his and his family's 24.5% share of the realised, and anticipated, profits from non-DLH transactions - including the profits received or anticipated by Hollandale and Remile from the sale of the Brussels properties."
DLM DLM DLM Westminster
1990 199l 1992 1993 –4
£490,500 £270,491 £230,216 £812,605
Accordingly, over the three years 1990 to 1992, Mr Stern drew £991,207 from DLM and, over the two years 1993-4, a further £812,605 from Westminster, making a total of £1,803,812.
"In a solvent company the proprietary interests of the shareholders entitle them as a general body to be regarded as the company when questions of the duty of directors arise. If, as a general body, they authorise or ratify a particular action of the directors, there can be no challenge to the validity of what the directors have done. But where a company is insolvent the interests of the creditors intrude. They become prospectively entitled, through the mechanism of liquidation, to displace the power of the shareholders and directors to deal with the company's assets. It is in a practical sense their assets and not the shareholders' assets that, through the medium of the company, are under the management of the directors pending either liquidation, return to solvency, or the imposition of some alternative administration."
a) as at 31 December 1989 Keristal was a debtor of the Group in the sum of £3,675,000 and, after that date but before the date on which the 1989 accounts were signed, Keristal had paid £5,000,000 to DLH;
b) as at the 31 December 1990 Keristal was a debtor of the Group in the sum of £2,680,000 but that the subsequent receipt, as recorded in a note to the 1990 accounts, of £3,600,000 after the year end discharged that debt;
c) unless included under "other creditors", at 31st December 1991 and 1992 there were no balances due to or from Keristal.
"Q. (Mr Richards QC) Would you not expect to see, if payments are being drawn by Mr Stern out of moneys provided by Keristal, that it reduces the amount due to Keristal?
A. (Mr Angus) Absolutely correct.
Q. And that is not to be found ….
A. Yes.
Q. … in the accounting records of Westminster?
A. No, because the account with Keristal in the books of Holdings and Mr Stern's drawings would be debited to the account of Holdings at the year end following review, which would result in a reduction of the balance.
Q. I think we have agreed that this is really all speculation, have we not, because there was not a year end audit either or Westminster or of Holdings?
A. Correct.
MR JUSTICE LLOYD: You drew a distinction a moment ago between drawings which might be debited to account 7741 in Dollar Land Holdings and other drawings which might be debited to account 7371 – WGS in Westminster?
A. Yes, my Lord.
Q. If they were drawings of the latter kind, would you expect that in the fullness of time, if matters had proceeded as one would have hoped, that they would reflect in any way on the amounts shown to the credit of Keristal?
A. Yes, my Lord because they would have been debited to the account of Keristal en masse rather than individually posted there. Everything could have been individually posted there, it makes little difference."
"Holdings' policy is to have all management functions - including the purchase and sale of properties - carried out through the medium of a management company which has always been based in London, essentially under my direction and control...Although I am not a registered director of Holdings I execute all major decisions over its activities and that of its subsidiaries"
The responsibility of Mr Stern was not in issue. It is unsurprising that it is not discussed in the judgment.
"I do not accept that either [the Inland Revenue or the Customs and Excise] was willing to allow the group to trade out of its difficulties. In each case, though with different degrees of emphasis at different times, there was a requirement that liabilities falling due be paid."
"[Mr Stern] claimed that he had the 'informed knowledge and consent' of the Inland Revenue, but it seems to me that he presented an overoptimistic and incomplete picture of the position to Mr Barnes"
Counsel said that he did not challenge the judge's finding in paragraph 96, nor could he have done. He nonetheless contended that Mr Barnes' attitude gave Mr Stern reasonable encouragement in his policy of trading while insolvent.
"So far as Keristal was concerned, again it was a question of discussing the funds which became available as and when they appeared. Keristal had its own needs, and generally wanted some of the funds for itself. In addition it often owed money to the group. As regards making additional funds available, beyond the repayment of its debts, and moreover the question what those funds should be used for, there was no policy or prior agreement. Mr Stern suggested in evidence that there was an understanding, at least as regards the prospective proceeds of Ilot 68, but his evidence was in very general and vague terms. In my judgment the position was the same in relation to this property as for the others."
"wholly inadequate reasons to believe that creditors would be paid in full within a reasonable time, at any time after April 1991".
"At the time when Westminster made these payments to Diligent, it could not pay its own creditors, as Mr Stern knew"
"the proof of this charge confirms that Mr Stern is unfit to be concerned in the management of a company".
"It seems to me on balance, having taken account of Mr. Stern's submissions, that this is a serious case. It is a case in which there was a protracted period of trading while insolvent and I accept Mr. Richards submission that that seriousness in itself is exacerbated by the fact that at a time when creditors of the company's group were not being paid Mr. Stern was receiving substantial funds from the companies which would otherwise have been available to creditors. Whether if a CVA had been proposed it would have been successful either in obtaining approval or in carrying on is I think a matter in some doubt in circumstances in which there was no cash flow with which to pay current liabilities.
So far as the drawings are concerned, I have accepted Mr. Angus's evidence as being helpful and truthful so far as he was concerned, but his source of information was entirely indirect. He was in no position to check or monitor whether the drawings were properly based and that is I think also true of the auditors. I am not aware of any verification on their part of the basis of these drawings. How far they were aware of the drawings, I do not know. I can take the clean audit certificate as only a very minor matter to bear in mind in this context.
I do accept, as Mr. Stern submits, that the consideration of what else the company's board should have done in the context had to be adjudged in relation to circumstances as they were at the time and not with hindsight. Nevertheless it seems to me that Mr. Stern's conduct in continuing the management of these two companies in turn, in putting Westminster in place without any change in the system on the failure of DLM and the substantial drawings that he made without adequate justification does seem to me to make this a serious case.
Thinking about the case in the light of my judgment and in the preparation for this hearing, I had independently come to the conclusion that it was a case in the top bracket and that a period of 12 years, subject to submissions made to me, might be the appropriate period. Having heard Mr. Stern's submissions I remain of that view and I will therefore impose a period of disqualification of 12 years."