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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Trustee In Bankruptcy of Louise St John Poulton v Ministry of Justice [2010] EWCA Civ 392 (22 April 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/392.html Cite as: [2010] 3 WLR 1237, [2011] 1 Ch 1, [2010] BPIR 775, [2010] EWCA Civ 392, [2011] Ch 1 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
HER HONOUR JUDGE MARSHALL QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE PITCHFORD
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THE TRUSTEE IN BANKRUPTCY OF LOUISE ST JOHN POULTON |
Claimant Respondent |
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- and - |
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MINISTRY OF JUSTICE |
Defendant Appellant |
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for the Appellant
Augustus Ullstein Q.C. and James Dawson
(instructed by DWF Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 23 and 24 February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Relation back of the trustee in bankruptcy's title and its implications
The legislative provisions
The position under the Bankruptcy Act 1914 and before 1926
The changes made in 1926
"149A. The Senior Registrar in the High Court and the Registrar of every County Court having jurisdiction in bankruptcy shall on the filing of a bankruptcy petition by or against a debtor forthwith send notice thereof to the Chief Land Registrar and a request that such petition may be registered in the register of pending actions."
"61(1) The registrar shall as soon as practicable after registration of a petition in bankruptcy as a pending action under the Land Charges Act 1925, register a notice (in this Act called a creditors' notice) against the title of any proprietor of any registered land or charge which appears to be affected, and such notice shall protect the rights of all creditors, and unless cancelled by the registrar in the prescribed manner such notice shall remain in force until a bankruptcy inhibition is registered or the trustee in bankruptcy is registered as proprietor.
No fee shall be charged for the registration of the notice.
(2) Until a creditors' notice is registered, a petition in bankruptcy filed after the commencement of this Act shall not, as respects any registered disposition for money or money's worth of any registered land or charge, be notice or evidence of any act of bankruptcy therein alleged.
…
(6) Where under a disposition to a purchaser in good faith for money or money's worth such purchaser is registered as proprietor of an estate or a charge, then, notwithstanding that an available act of bankruptcy has been committed by the person making the disposition, the title of his trustee in bankruptcy acquired after the commencement of this Act shall, as from the date of such disposition, be void as against such purchaser unless at the date of such disposition, either a creditors' notice or a bankruptcy inhibition had been registered, but a purchaser who, at the date of the execution of the registered disposition, has notice of an available act of bankruptcy, or of the receiving order, or adjudication, shall not be deemed to take in good faith.
Nothing in this section shall impose on a purchaser a liability to make any search under the Land Charges Act, 1925.
(7) Where the estate or assets of a bankrupt proprietor suffer loss by reason of the omission of the registrar to register a creditors' notice or bankruptcy inhibition, as required by this section, or on account of the execution or registration of a disposition after a petition is registered as a pending action or after a receiving order is registered and before the registration of a creditors' notice or bankruptcy inhibition, the trustee in bankruptcy shall be entitled to indemnity as a person suffering loss by reason of an error or omission in the register."
"147. On the filing of a petition the Registrar shall forthwith send to the Chief Land Registrar notice of the petition together with a request that it may be registered in the register of pending actions."
""Registrar" means a registrar in bankruptcy of the High Court or the registrar or deputy registrar of a county court having jurisdiction in bankruptcy."
"(1) There may be registered in the register of pending actions—
(a) a pending land action;
(b) a petition in bankruptcy filed on or after 1st January 1926.
(2) Subject to general rules under section 16 of this Act, every application for registration under this section shall contain particulars of the title of the proceedings and the name, address and description of the estate owner or other person whose estate or interest is intended to be affected.
(3) An application for registration shall also state—
(a) …
(b) if it relates to a petition in bankruptcy, the court in which and the day on which the petition was filed.
(4) The registrar shall forthwith enter the particulars in the register, in the name of the estate owner or other person whose estate or interest is intended to be affected.
…
(6) No fee shall be charged for the registration of a petition in bankruptcy if the application for registration is made by the registrar of the court in which the petition is filed.
…
(8) A petition in bankruptcy shall not bind a purchaser of a legal estate in good faith, for money or money's worth, without notice of an available act of bankruptcy, unless it is for the time being registered under this section.
(9) As respects any transfer or creation of a legal estate, a petition in bankruptcy which is not for the time being registered under this section shall not be notice or evidence of any act of bankruptcy alleged in the petition."
The only relevant amendments to this section since then have been the omission of the words shown as italicised in subsection (8) and the repeal of subsection (9). These were consequential on the 1986 reform of insolvency law, to which I now turn.
The new bankruptcy legislation in 1986
"When the petition is filed the court shall forthwith send to the Chief Land Registrar notice of the petition together with a request that it may be registered in the register of pending actions."
"(1) Anything to be done under or by virtue of the Act or the Rules by, to or before the court may be done by, to or before a judge or the registrar.
(2) The registrar may authorise any act of a formal or administrative character which is not by statute his responsibility to be carried out by the chief clerk or any other officer of the court acting on his behalf, in accordance with directions given by the Lord Chancellor.
(3) In individual insolvency proceedings, "the registrar" means a Registrar in Bankruptcy of the High Court, or the registrar or deputy registrar of a county court."
"(1) Where a person is adjudged bankrupt, any disposition of property made by that person in the period to which this section applies is void except to the extent that it is or was made with the consent of the court, or is or was subsequently ratified by the court.
(2) Subsection (1) applies to a payment (whether in cash or otherwise) as it applies to a disposition of property and, accordingly, where any payment is void by virtue of that subsection, the person paid shall hold the sum paid for the bankrupt as part of his estate.
(3) This section applies to the period beginning with the day of the presentation of the petition for the bankruptcy order and ending with the vesting, under Chapter IV of this Part, of the bankrupt's estate in a trustee.
(4) The preceding provisions of this section do not give a remedy against any person—
(a) in respect of any property or payment which he received before the commencement of the bankruptcy in good faith, for value and without notice that the petition had been presented, or
(b) in respect of any interest in property which derives from an interest in respect of which there is, by virtue of this subsection, no remedy."
"(1) In this Act, references to an interest affecting an estate or charge do not include a petition in bankruptcy or bankruptcy order.
(2) As soon as practicable after registration of a petition in bankruptcy as a pending action under the Land Charges Act 1972, the registrar must enter in the register in relation to any registered estate or charge which appears to him to be affected a notice in respect of the pending action.
(3) Unless cancelled by the registrar in such manner as rules may provide, a notice entered under subsection (2) continues in force until—
(a) a restriction is entered in the register under subsection (4), or
(b) the trustee in bankruptcy is registered as proprietor.
(4) As soon as practicable after registration of a bankruptcy order under the Land Charges Act 1972, the registrar must, in relation to any registered estate or charge which appears to him to be affected by the order, enter in the register a restriction reflecting the effect of the Insolvency Act 1986.
(5) Where the proprietor of a registered estate or charge is adjudged bankrupt, the title of his trustee in bankruptcy is void as against a person to whom a registrable disposition of the estate or charge is made if—
(a) the disposition is made for valuable consideration,
(b) the person to whom the disposition is made acts in good faith, and
(c) at the time of the disposition—
(i) no notice or restriction is entered under this section in relation to the registered estate or charge, and
(ii) the person to whom the disposition is made has no notice of the bankruptcy petition or the adjudication.
(6) Subsection (5) only applies if the relevant registration requirements are met in relation to the disposition, but, when they are met, has effect as from the date of the disposition.
(7) Nothing in this section requires a person to whom a registrable disposition is made to make any search under the Land Charges Act 1972."
The statutory duty alleged
"I do not propose to try to formulate any rules by reference to which such a question can infallibly be answered. The only rule which in all circumstances is valid is that the answer must depend on a consideration of the whole Act and the circumstances, including the pre-existing law, in which it was enacted. But that there are indications which point with more or less force to the one answer or the other is clear from authorities which, even if they do not bind, will have great weight with the House. For instance if a statutory duty is prescribed but no remedy by way of penalty or otherwise for its breach is imposed, it can be assumed that a right of civil action accrues to the person who is damnified by the breach. For if it were not so, the statute would be but a pious aspiration."
"If there is no penalty and no other special means of enforcement provided by the statute, it may be presumed that those who have an interest to enforce one of the statutory duties have an individual right of action. Otherwise the duty might never be performed."
"This category comprises those cases where the statement of claim alleges simply (a) the statutory duty, (b) a breach of that duty, causing (c) damage to the plaintiff. The cause of action depends neither on proof of any breach of the plaintiff's common law rights nor on any allegation of carelessness by the defendant.
The principles applicable in determining whether such statutory cause of action exists are now well established, although the application of those principles in any particular case remains difficult. The basic proposition is that in the ordinary case a breach of statutory duty does not, by itself, give rise to any private law cause of action. However a private law cause of action will arise if it can be shown, as a matter of construction of the statute, that the statutory duty was imposed for the protection of a limited class of the public and that Parliament intended to confer on members of that class a private right of action for breach of the duty. There is no general rule by reference to which it can be decided whether a statute does create such a right of action but there are a number of indicators. If the statute provides no other remedy for its breach and the Parliamentary intention to protect a limited class is shown, that indicates that there may be a private right of action since otherwise there is no method of securing the protection the statute was intended to confer. If the statute does provide some other means of enforcing the duty that will normally indicate that the statutory right was intended to be enforceable by those means and not by private right of action: Cutler v. Wandsworth Stadium Ltd. [1949] A.C. 398; Lonrho Ltd. v. Shell Petroleum Co. Ltd. (No. 2) [1982] A.C. 173. However, the mere existence of some other statutory remedy is not necessarily decisive. It is still possible to show that on the true construction of the statute the protected class was intended by Parliament to have a private remedy. Thus the specific duties imposed on employers in relation to factory premises are enforceable by an action for damages, notwithstanding the imposition by the statutes of criminal penalties for any breach: see Groves v. Lord Wimborne [1898] 2 QB 402."
"The object of the register is to provide security for two classes of people, incumbrancers and purchasers."
"It is clear that section 17(1), (2) and (3) of the Land Charges Act 1925 were enacted particularly for the benefit of chargees, incumbrancers (of whom the Minister is one) and purchasers rather than for the benefit of the general public. Purchasers, chargees and incumbrancers may suffer the most grave financial loss if the search which section 17(2) requires is not properly carried out or the certificate which it requires is inaccurate."
"It was, in my view, designed to protect those working in the registry from being plagued by vexatious actions. It accordingly provided that any claim, save a claim in fraud, could be struck out in limine. The indemnity in section 85 was a beneficent provision, possibly in part to compensate for the loss of a cause of action in negligence, and which, in any event, justice demanded. It might well have been introduced into the Land Charges Act, 1925, but only in so far as concerned Her Majesty's Land Registry, for in 1925 Parliament could hardly have been expected to set up a central fund in effect to indemnify local authorities against the mistakes of their own servants. Accordingly, the fact that no provisions corresponding to sections 83, 85 or 131 of the Land Registration Act appear in the Land Charges Act seems to me to be irrelevant to the question we have to decide."
"In 1888 the registrar [i.e. the Chief Land Registrar] was expressly exempted from liability to be sued for acts done in exercise of his powers under the Land Transfer Act, 1875; so Parliament at that date cannot have thought that there was anything inherently objectionable in the fact that members of the public who suffered through innocent mistakes in the registry should have no civil remedies. As he was exempt from liability under the Land Transfer Act, to subject him to liability under the Land Charges Act would, prima facie, be anomalous. The anomaly would, however, be explicable if and so far as the various officers of the Supreme Court who were directed to maintain registers by the Acts scheduled to the Conveyancing Act, 1881, and similar Acts, were themselves liable to be sued, for the provisions for official searches and certificates made applicable to the registrar in 1888 were taken from the provisions in section 2 of the Conveyancing Act, 1882. Further, in 1900, two registers formerly kept by the registrar of judgments were transferred to the land registrar. But if and so far as the court officials were not themselves liable to be sued I find it very difficult to suppose that Parliament intended to subject the land registrar to liability by the Act of 1888. The natural assumption would be that Parliament either considered that no express exemption corresponding to the Land Transfer Act provision was necessary or, more probably, simply forgot to put one in.
So the point which to my mind is crucial is to what extent, if at all, the various "proper officers" were liable to be sued. Douglass v. Yallop, (1759) 2 Burr. 722, to which the Master of the Rolls refers, shows that the senior master of the Court of Common Pleas, who received five shillings for each entry, would have been liable to be sued for any damages suffered by the plaintiff for his failure to register a judgment presented for registration under the Judgments Act, 1838. Of course, by 1888, the registrar of judgments (the senior master of the Queen's Bench Division) received a fixed salary and it might perhaps be argued that his personal liability to be sued for the failure of one of his clerks to register a judgment did not survive the legislation which reorganised the courts. But even if that is not so, what we are concerned with is the obligation to issue certificates of search which was first created by the Conveyancing Act, 1882. That Act was a code applicable to all registers kept, or apparently to be kept, in the Central Office under the Acts scheduled to the Conveyancing Act, 1881, and any other Acts; so that it might apply to functionaries of varying status. I find it difficult to suppose that Parliament in the year 1882 intended by such an Act to make these unidentified officers of the court paid by salary personally liable to ensure the accuracy of the certificates of search issued in respect of registers under their charge."
"Lord Mansfield intimated that it very much concerned the chief clerk to take care that judgment be actually entered up upon the roll in due time, and docketed; for that after he has received his fees for making such an entry, he would be liable to an action upon the case, to be brought by a purchaser who should have become liable to it, and had searched the roll without finding it entered up."
"That approach to construction was approved by the House of Lords in In re Smith (A Bankrupt), Ex parte Braintree District Council [1990] 2 A.C. 215, in which Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle said, at p. 238, that, in view of the changes in policy shown by the new Act, he felt justified in construing the provision of the Act of 1986 "as a piece of new legislation without regard to 19th century authorities or similar provisions of repealed Bankruptcy Acts."
Those authorities show that, in approaching the language of the Act of 1986, one must pay particular attention to the purposes and policies of its own provisions and be wary of simply carrying over uncritically meanings which had been given to similar words in the earlier Act. It does not, however, mean that the language of the new Act comes to one entirely free of any of the intellectual freight which was carried by words and phrases in earlier bankruptcy or other legislation.
Decisions of the court upon the meanings of phrases used in Acts of Parliament may come, in the course of time, to give them the quality of terms of art which Parliament may well be assumed to have intended them to bring with them when used in subsequent legislation. In section 265, for example, terms such as "domiciled," "personally present," "ordinarily resident," have had attributed to them, both in the context of bankruptcy and in that of civil procedure generally, a wealth of refined construction which it is difficult to suppose Parliament did not intend equally to apply when those words were used in the Act of 1986. Is there any reason why that should not apply equally to the words "has carried on business?" There does not seem to me to be anything in the policy of the new Act which suggests that in this provision Parliament was intending to give those words a different meaning from those which they had been held to bear under the Act of 1914."
Common law duty
"Since the existence of these statutory powers is the only basis upon which a common law duty was claimed to exist, it seemed to me relevant to ask whether, in conferring such powers, Parliament could be taken to have intended to create such a duty. If a statute actually imposes a duty, it is well settled that the question of whether it was intended to give rise to a private right of action depends upon the construction of the statute … . If the statute does not create a private right of action, it would be, to say the least, unusual if the mere existence of the statutory duty could generate a common law duty of care."
Later, at paragraph 32, he said:
"Speaking for myself, I find it difficult to imagine a case in which a common law duty can be founded simply upon the failure (however irrational) to provide some benefit which a public authority has power (or a public law duty) to provide."
"If a statutory duty does not give rise to a private right to sue for breach, the duty cannot create a duty of care that would not have been owed at common law if the statute were not there. If the policy of the statute is not consistent with the creation of a statutory liability to pay compensation for damage caused by the breach of the statutory duty, the same policy would, in my opinion, exclude the use of the statutory duty in order to create a common law duty of care that would be broken by a failure to perform the statutory duty."
"39. There is, in my opinion, a compelling analogy with the general principle that, for the reasons which I discussed in Stovin v Wise, the law of negligence does not impose liability for mere omissions. It is true that the complaint is that the bank did something: it paid away the money. But the payment is alleged to be the breach of the duty and not the conduct which generated the duty. The duty was generated ab extra, by service of the order. The question of whether the order can have generated a duty of care is comparable with the question of whether a statutory duty can generate a common law duty of care. The answer is that it cannot: see Gorringe v Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council. The statute either creates a statutory duty or it does not. (That is not to say, as I have already mentioned, that conduct undertaken pursuant to a statutory duty cannot generate a duty of care in the same way as the same conduct undertaken voluntarily.) But you cannot derive a common law duty of care directly from a statutory duty. Likewise, as it seems to me, you cannot derive one from an order of court. The order carries its own remedies and its reach does not extend any further."
"110. The closest case to the present on which Mr Sales can rely is Ministry of Housing and Local Government v Sharp. But the statutory scheme there was aimed at protecting persons in respect of property purchases and, so far as necessary for that purpose, overriding other proprietary interests. Again, it would have been incongruous if a person relying on such a certificate to his detriment could have a claim because of the closeness of the situation to Hedley Byrne, but the minister whose cause of action for reimbursement was extinguished had none … I consider that Ministry of Housing and Local Government v Sharp was rightly decided. It was referred to without disapproval in the speeches of both Lord Templeman and Lord Griffiths in Smith v Eric S Bush [1990] 1 AC 831, 846d-g, 862f. The result reached was eminently fair, just and reasonable. The role of land registrar was established as a public service to keep accurate records and provide reliable information. The information was to enable buyers to be secure in the property rights they acquired but concomitantly to override other property interests in the public interest in order to achieve this, even though such security and overriding occurred through negligence of the registrar or a clerk fulfilling his function. It would be unjust if no compensation could be obtained for the adverse consequences on property rights of negligence of an official performing such a service in the public interest."
"118. The complaint here is simply that the Defendant did not do an act which was in fact what a statutory rule required. Without that provision, that omission would not give rise to a claim in negligence by the Claimant against the Defendant. Indeed, without that provision – or some other factual assumption of responsibility which is not this case – even if the Defendant had taken steps to send the relevant notice but had (say) carelessly misaddressed it so that it did not arrive, no cause of action would arise, because there would have been nothing giving rise to any duty to send the notice at all in the first place, and thus no damage caused by the particular carelessness. The defendant's only obligation to do anything at all arose out of the statutory provision. There is therefore no basis for any cause of action apart from under that provision."
Lord Justice Pitchford
Lord Justice Pill
"Whether the general rule is to prevail, or an exception to the general rule is to be admitted, must depend on the scope and language of the Act which creates the obligation and on considerations of policy and convenience."
There is no specified sanction in this case and the general rule as formulated does not apply. However, Lord Macnaghten's broad approach to statutory construction is in my view appropriate to the issue whether a private law right of action exists in a particular statutory context. In Cutler, Lord Normand stated, at page 412:
". . . the proper approach to the case is to consider whether on a true construction of the statute as a whole a right of action by an individual aggrieved by the breach of one of the statutory duties ought to be implied."