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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Financial Services Compensation Scheme Ltd v Larnell (Insurances) Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 1408 (29 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1408.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1408, [2006] 2 WLR 751, [2006] QB 808 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
and
SIR PETER GIBSON
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FINANCIAL SERVICES COMPENSATION SCHEME LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LARNELL (INSURANCES) LIMITED (in creditors' voluntary liquidation |
Respondent |
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Adam Tolley (instructed by Squire & Co) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 7 November 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
i) Does the special statutory regime for the administration of a company's assets in liquidation, which prevents time running under the Limitation Act 1980 after the winding-up resolution, apply to the present claim
a) as a matter of general principle; and if so
b) despite the fact that the Claimant has to rely on section 14A?
ii) If so, does the expiry of the long-stop period under section 14B after the winding-up resolution but before the proceedings were commenced make a difference?
The Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Act 1930
"Where under any contract of insurance a person (hereinafter referred to as the insured) is insured against liabilities to third parties which he may incur, then … (b) in the case of the insured being a company, in the event of ... a resolution for a voluntary winding-up being passed, with respect to the company, … if, either before or after that event, any such liability as aforesaid is incurred by the insured, his rights against the insurer under the contract in respect of the liability shall, notwithstanding anything in any Act or rule of law to the contrary, be transferred to and vest in the third party to whom the liability was so incurred."
"Upon a transfer under subsection (1) … of this section, the insurer shall, subject to the provisions of section 3 of this Act, be under the same liability to the third party as he would have been under to the insured, but … (b) if the liability of the insurer to the insured is less than the liability of the insured to the third party, nothing in this Act shall affect the rights of the third party against the insured in respect of the balance."
The operation of limitation periods in an insolvent administration: Re General Rolling Stock Co Ltd
"As I have indicated, I accept that the period of limitation does not cease to run when the petition to wind up is presented, save as regards the petitioning creditor. It is, however, an over-simplification to say that the period ceases to run on the making of the winding-up order or the passing of a resolution to wind up. The true question, as I see it, is whether the original contracts of the creditors were discharged by operation of law and replaced by other rights before time had run out by which actions would have had to be brought to enforce them. It is not simply that time has stopped running against the creditor; the cause of action itself is destroyed and replaced by other rights."
"One may conclude that the effect of an order to wind up is to convert the contractual rights of the creditors into proprietary rights under a trust. It may still be necessary and appropriate for a creditor to bring an action after the liquidation for the purpose of elucidating his original contractual rights, for which purpose he would have to get leave; but it is not necessary for the purpose of stopping time running against him in relation to his erstwhile contractual rights."
"26. … It is first necessary to remember that a winding up order is not the equivalent of a judgment against the company which converts the creditor's claim into something juridically different, like a judgment debt. Winding up is, as Brightman LJ said in In re Lines Bros Ltd [1983] Ch 1, 20, "a process of collective enforcement of debts". The creditor who petitions for a winding up is "not engaged in proceedings to establish the company's liability or the quantum of the liability (although liability and quantum may be put in issue) but to enforce the liability".
27. The winding up leaves the debts of the creditors untouched. It only affects the way in which they can be enforced. When the order is made, ordinary proceedings against the company are stayed (although the stay can be enforced only against creditors subject to the personal jurisdiction of the court). The creditors are confined to a collective enforcement procedure that results in pari passu distribution of the company's assets. The winding up does not either create new substantive rights in the creditors or destroy the old ones. Their debts, if they are owing, remain owing throughout. They are discharged by the winding up only to the extent that they are paid out of dividends. But when the process of distribution is complete, there are no further assets against which they can be enforced. There is no equivalent of the discharge of a personal bankrupt which extinguishes his debts. When the company is dissolved there is no longer an entity which the creditor can sue."
Limits to the application of the General Rolling Stock principle
"that in the bankruptcy a debt does not become barred by lapse of time if it was not so barred at the commencement of the bankruptcy, and of this there can be no doubt, but this is only in the bankruptcy."
"It does not have any effect on the operation of the statute on any rights or remedies which are unaffected by the bankruptcy. In my judgment a mortgagee who relies upon his security retains and stands on rights which he had before the bankruptcy, and which remain unaffected by the bankruptcy.
…
Although the bankruptcy takes away the rights of ordinary creditors to sue for their dues and regulates their right of proof in the bankruptcy, the rights of secured creditors are unaffected ... and there is no reason, in my judgment, why time should not continue to run under the Limitation Act as regards those rights and remedies which the secured creditors have outside the bankruptcy."
"it is as if [the bankruptcy] had never occurred and the previous rights revert. It is therefore impossible in those circumstances to say that there has been in some way a suspension of rights."
"There was considerable argument before me as to what is meant by the words "in the bankruptcy" as distinct from the words "outside the bankruptcy". Mr Adair [for the Defendant] submitted that the question can be formulated in this way. Is the claim being directed at property within the statutory trust, or does it relate to property outside of the trust; for example after-acquired property, or property which cannot form part of the estate. It seems to me that that is the correct formulation and is consistent with the analysis of Buckley J in Cotterell v. Price."
Later, at paragraph 66 he said this:
"It seems to me that the judgment of the Court of Appeal in In Re Benzon is binding authority on me and that there is nothing to indicate that it was based on any false premise. The result of that Court of Appeal decision is that the Statute of Limitations, having begun to run against the claimant before the commencement of the bankruptcy, continues to run, notwithstanding the bankruptcy, in respect of a claim in relation to a fund pursued outside of the bankruptcy."
Is the present case outside the limits of the General Rolling Stock principle?
"I too accept that paragraph as accurately summarising the law. Reverting to the present case, it is clear from Re Benzon that the impact of the limitation provisions is only avoided in respect of debts or claims in the bankruptcy. This technical exception introduced, it would seem to me, more as a matter of convenience than as a matter of principle, only applies, in my judgment, where the relevant assets whereby the liabilities are to be discharged are to be shared amongst the creditors. The exception has no application to claims directed at property outside the administrative estate. It is accepted that the whole purpose of this claim was to take advantage of the transferred rights of the Defendant's insurance cover. It is correct that the effect of the liquidation is to transfer the relevant insurance cover to the Claimant, nevertheless the underlying cause of action remains as against the insured. The potential for recovery under the policy can nonetheless be treated as an asset outside the bankruptcy. Indeed, to that extent, the Claimants are secured creditors. The whole purpose of the 1930 Act is to ensure that the benefit of the bankrupt's right to an indemnity under the policy does not fall into the general estate – see Bradley v. Eagle Star [1989] AC 957. By the same token, the beneficiary should look to the insurer first: see Freakley."
Limitation Act 1980 section 14A
Limitation Act 1980 section 14B
"(1) An action for damages for negligence [other than one for personal injury] shall not be brought after the expiration of fifteen years from the date (or if more than one, from the last of the dates) on which there occurred any act or omission
(a) which is alleged to constitute negligence; and
(b) to which the damage in respect of which damages are claimed is alleged to be attributable (in whole or in part).
(2) This section bars the right of action in a case to which subsection (1) above applies notwithstanding that
(a) the cause of action has not yet accrued; or
(b) where section 14A of this Act applies to the action, the date which is for the purposes of that section the starting date for reckoning the period mentioned in subsection (4)(b) of that section has not yet occurred;
before the end of the period of limitation prescribed by this section."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Moore-Bick:
(i) The effect of the winding up
"A duty and trust are thus imposed upon the Court, to take care that the assets of the company shall be applied in discharge of its liabilities. What liabilities? All the liabilities of the company existing at the time when the winding-up order was made which gives the right. It appears to me that it would be most unjust if any other construction were put upon the section. After a winding-up order has been made, no action is to be brought by a creditor except by the special leave of the Court, and it cannot have been the intention of the Legislature that special leave to bring an action should be given merely in order to get rid of the Statute of Limitations. It must have been intended that such leave should be given only in cases where the Court thought that an action was the most proper means of determining the question as to the liability of the company."
"I am of the same opinion. I think that the case is governed by the 98th section of the present Act, and that it is unnecessary to consider what was the proper construction of the former Acts. It appears to me to be the clear meaning of that section, that the assets should be applied in satisfaction of all the liabilities which existed at the time of the winding-up order."
"As to the second point, cases were quoted beginning with Ex parte Ross which shew that in the bankruptcy a debt does not become barred by lapse of time if it was not so barred at the commencement of the bankruptcy, and of this there can be no doubt, but this is only in the bankruptcy. From the nature of the case, as there are usually no means of recovering a debt provable in a bankruptcy other than under the machinery of the bankruptcy, there is likely to be little authority on the point whether bankruptcy keeps alive the right to take such other remedies, if there are any notwithstanding the lapse of time, and we find no direct authority on this point.
The real difficulty in the way of the appellants is the well-established rule that if the statute once begins to run it continues to run whatever happens.
. . . . . . . . . . . . We think the statute applies and is fatal to the appellants' case. The fund is only assets for the payment of debts which are not barred, and in fact there are other creditors in this case whose debts were incurred after the bankruptcy but more than six years before the death whose claims have already been rejected. It would be curious if the effect of the bankruptcy were to make these much older claims maintainable."
(ii) Section 14B - the 'Long stop'
"This section bars the right of action in a case to which subsection (1) above applies notwithstanding that
(a) the cause of action has not yet accrued; or
(b) where section 14A of this Act applies to the action, the date which is for the purposes of that section the starting date for reckoning the period mentioned in subsection (4)(b) of that section has not yet occurred;
before the end of the period of limitation prescribed by this section."
Sir Peter Gibson