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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bagnall v Official Receiver [2003] EWCA Civ 1925 (01 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1925.html Cite as: [2004] WLR 2832, [2004] 2 All ER 294, [2003] EWCA Civ 1925, [2004] 1 WLR 2832 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL WITH APPEAL TO FOLLOW IF PERMISSION GRANTED
(Mr Justice Evans-Lombe)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
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KENNETH REGINALD BAGNALL QC | Appellant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
OFFICIAL RECEIVER | Respondent/Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R RITCHIE (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"Where the court is satisfied on the application of the official receiver that an undischarged bankrupt in relation to whom subsection (1) (b) applies has failed or is failing to comply with any of his obligations under this Part, the court may order that the relevant period under this section shall cease to run for such period, or until the fulfilment of such conditions (including a condition requiring the court to be satisfied as to any matter), as may be specified in the order."
"Where the case is one of urgency, the court may (without prejudice to its general power to extend or abridge time limits) -
(a) hear the application immediately, either with or without notice to, or the attendance of, other parties, or
(b) authorise a shorter period of service than that provided for by paragraph (5);
and any such application may be heard on terms providing for the filing or service of documents, or the carrying out of other formalities, as the court thinks fit."
Paragraph (5) provides that -
"Unless the provision of the Act or Rules under which the application is made provides otherwise, and subject to [Insolvency Rule 7.4 (6)], the application must be served at least 14 days before the date fixed for the hearing."
The judge also set out Insolvency Rule 7.5. But, as the judge recognised, that does not apply where the Rules require the application to be served, as here, on the bankrupt and his trustee.
"(4) Copies of the official receiver's report under this Rule shall be sent by him to the trustee and the bankrupt, so as to reach them at least 21 days before the date fixed for the hearing.
(5) The bankrupt may, not later than 7 days before the date of the hearing, file in court a notice specifying any statements in the official receiver's report which he intends to deny or dispute.
If he gives notice under this paragraph, he shall send copies of it, not less than 4 days before the date of the hearing, to the official receiver and the trustee."
It is to be noted that Insolvency Rule 6.215 (4) requires there to be 21 days between the service of the official receiver's report and the date fixed for the hearing. However, under Insolvency Rule 12.9 (2), the court can in an appropritae case shorten this period.
The Background
"The Official Receiver in the above matter hereby reports that: -
The Bankruptcy Order was made in the Slough County Court Number 35 of 1999 on 6 August 1999, on a creditors petition and later transferred to Eastbourne County Court Number 133 on 18 August 1999.
On 15 September 1999 Shirley Angela Jackson of B N Jackson Norton was appointed Trustee of the bankruptcy estate by the Secretary of State under Section 296 of the Insolvency Act 1986.
The Trustee has requested this application for the reasons detailed in the attached letter of 19 July 2002.
The Official Receiver is of the opinion that the Bankrupt has failed to fulfil his obligations under Section 333 of the Insolvency Act 1986 and that the period until his automatic discharge should be suspended until such time that the bankrupt has complied with the requirements of the Trustee in bankruptcy."
The letter referred to in the third paragraph of the official receiver's report was a revised copy of the trustee's letter dated 12 July 2002.
Mr Bagnall's submissions
"I must now go back to consider section 279 (3). It refers to the court being satisfied in relation to an undischarged bankrupt. The well-known and reliable practitioner's book Muir Hunter on Personal Insolvency notes at 3/129:
'There seems to be no power to undo this mode of discharge, once the relevant period has expired.'
It seems to me that that is plainly right in a case where no application under section 279 (3) has been made before the expiry of the three year period. If an application has been made by the Official Receiver, I would be very doubtful whether a bankrupt could, simply by managing to obtain an adjournment for any reason, good or bad, defeat the court's power to adjudicate on an application which had been properly launched. I am therefore rather doubtful about the Official Receiver's suggestion in his official report that, in practice, it is impossible to make an application under section 279 (3) within the last 21 days before the expiration of the three year period because of the requirement of notice under rule 6.215. I should, however, note that that view attains at least slight support from a comment by Sir Mervyn Davies made in his judgment in Official Receiver v Murjani (unreported) 1 March 1995, although I do not regard that expression of view as a considered part of the decision."
The judge did not comment on this passage. However as I read it, it is an obiter expression of view by Robert Walker J that an interim order could be made if the application under Section 279 was issued before the third anniversary of the bankruptcy order.
"I am firmly of the view that it was wrong for the application to be made ex parte. It is a basic principle of justice that an order should not be made against a party without giving him an opportunity to be heard. The only exception is when two conditions are satisfied. First that giving him such an opportunity appears likely to cause injustice to the applicant by reason either of the delay involved or the action which it appears likely that the respondent or others would take before the order can be made. Secondly when the court is satisfied that any damage which the respondent may suffer through having to comply with the order is compensatable under the cross-undertaking or that the risk of un-compensatable loss is clearly outweighed by the risk of injustice to the applicant if the order is not made.
There is, I think, a tendency among applicants to think that a calculation of the balance of advantage and disadvantage in accordance with the second condition is sufficient to justify an ex parte order. In my view, this attitude should be discouraged. One does not reach any balancing of advantage and disadvantage unless the first condition has been satisfied. The principle audi alterem partem does not yield to a mere utilitarian calculation. It can be displaced only by invoking the overriding principle of justice which enables the court to act at once when it appears likely that otherwise injustice will be caused."
The judge did not comment on that passage. But it is a valuable reminder that ex parte applications should not be lightly made. The reference to the cross-undertaking in damages does not apply in this context since the official receiver is not generally required to give any such undertaking.
"Suspension of discharge is one of the weapons available to those administering insolvent estates to coerce a bankrupt into ..... performing his duty to co-operate with the trustee in bankruptcy in realising his assets for the benefit of his creditors."
The judge continued:
"Had the order of 2 August not been made this weapon would have been removed before proper consideration could take place at a full hearing of whether the Official Receiver was justified in seeking an order of suspension. The prejudice to the bankrupt in the prolongation of his status as a bankrupt in the interim was outweighed by the prejudice to the creditors in irretrievably losing the coercive effect of the continuation of the bankruptcy, without being able, through the Official Receiver's application, to justify and so obtain an order of suspension."
"To some extent at least, that delay was within the control of the bankrupt ..... "
"The authors understand that if a trustee in bankruptcy considers that an undischarged bankrupt has failed to comply with the statutory obligations and that application should be made to the official receiver to suspend the relevant period, official receivers are reluctant to make such application unless provided with a report by the trustee some six months before the expiry of the relevant period (see Hardy v Focus Insurance Co Ltd [1997] BPIR 77 at 83 and the DTi letter 'Dear I P' No 42."
Mr Ritchie has informed the court that this particular I P letter has been replaced but in substance it has not been charged.
"If trustees in bankruptcy are to ask the official receiver to make an application under Section 279 (3) the relevant facts must be put before the official receiver (who has an enormous work load) in good time in order to enable the matter to be dealt with in a sensible and satisfactory manner."
Order: Appeal dismissed