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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ricoh Europe Holdings BV & Ors v Spratt & Anor [2013] EWCA Civ 92 (19 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/92.html Cite as: [2013] 1 Ch 506, [2013] Ch 506, [2013] BPIR 432, [2013] WLR(D) 70, [2013] 2 BCLC 313, [2013] EWCA Civ 92, [2013] 2 WLR 1398, [2013] BCC 450, [2013] 1 CH 506 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
HH JUDGE PELLING QC
3102/2010
IN THE MATTER OF DANKA BUSINESS SYSTEMS PLC (IN MEMBERS' VOLUNTARY LIQUIDATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE TREACY
____________________
(1) RICOH EUROPE HOLDINGS BV (2) RICOH DEUTSCHLAND GMBH (3) RICOH AUSTRIA GMBH (4) RICOH ITALIA SRL (5) INFOTEC HOLDINGS FRANCE SA (6) RICOH ESPANA SLU |
Appellants/ Applicants |
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- and - |
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(1) JEREMY SPRATT (2) JOHN DAVID MILSOM (as joint liquidators of Danka Business Systems Plc) |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Peter Arden QC (instructed by Ashurst LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 7th November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
(1) Infotec Germany : nil;
(2) Infotec France : €27,990;
(3) Infotec Italy : €173,246;
(4) Infotec Spain : €67,725.
"40. In summary therefore the position is as follows – the members of a company are entitled to place their company in MVL. Once a company has been placed in MVL it is subject to the statutory process set out in the IA and the IRs. Once a creditor seeks to prove for a contingent liability with an uncertain value IRs r.4.86 applies. It is mandatory in its terms. It requires that a liquidator "... shall ..." estimate the value of a debt not having a certain value where, as here, the creditor concerned has proved for the debt or liability in the liquidation. There is no mechanism by which there can be carved out of the statutory process some extra statutory scheme by which claims that a creditor considers too difficult to quantify but which have not been disclaimed should be provided for by retention for an indeterminate future period. Such a process would be riddled with uncertainty, would prolong liquidations, would increase the cost of liquidations and at least potentially could result in unfairness to some classes of creditor in insolvent liquidations. The statutory scheme has been designed to place a present value on uncertain future claims in order to enable the liquidation process to be brought to a speedy conclusion. The alternative is likely to have precisely the opposite effect. In my judgment therefore, once notice to prove has been given and where (as here) the creditors concerned have proved then the statutory scheme must be applied.
…
47. In those circumstances I am not able to agree that the liquidators were wrong to proceed with the liquidation by valuing on the contingent claims. Had they not done so they would have been vulnerable to criticism by the members that the liquidation was not being conducted in accordance with the statutory scheme. Once (a) the MVL process had been embarked upon by the Company's members, (b) notice of intention to make a distribution had been given and (c) Ricoh had proved in accordance with that notice, the only choice the liquidators had was either to apply for directions under IA s.112 or proceed to value the claims in accordance with IRs r. 4.86. Had an application been made to the Court in those circumstances, in my judgment the Court could only have either directed the liquidators to arrive at a valuation in accordance with IRs r.4.86 or undertaken such a valuation itself or, possibly, given directions to the liquidators as to how to arrive at an appropriate valuation. I question whether the Court would have been empowered to direct a solution for which no sanction is to be found in the statutory scheme. I prefer not to express a view as to whether the Court could or would have directed the liquidators to postpone either a distribution to creditors or a decision whether to admit Ricoh to proof in respect of its contingent claims had such an application been made prior to the submission of a proof by Ricoh or a valuation of the contingent claims being made by the liquidators because the issue does not arise."
"Subject to the provisions of this Act as to preferential payments, the company's property in a voluntary winding up shall on the winding up be applied in satisfaction of the company's liabilities pari passu and, subject to that application, shall (unless the articles otherwise provide) be distributed among the members according to their rights and interests in the company."
"4.73(2) (2-CVL) In a voluntary winding up (whether members' or creditors') the liquidator may require a person claiming to be a creditor of the company and wishing to recover his debt in whole or in part, to submit the claim in writing to him.
(3) A creditor who claims (whether or not in writing) is referred to as "proving" for his debt; and a document by which he seeks to establish his claim is his "proof".
….
4.82.—(1) A proof may be admitted for dividend either for the whole amount claimed by the creditor, or for part of that amount.
(2) If the liquidator rejects a proof in whole or in part, he shall prepare a written statement of his reasons for doing so, and send it forthwith to the creditor.
4.83.—(1) If a creditor is dissatisfied with the liquidator's decision with respect to his proof (including any decision on the question of preference), he may apply to the court for the decision to be reversed or varied.
The application must be made within 21 days of his receiving the statement sent under Rule 4.82(2).
(2) A contributory or any other creditor may, if dissatisfied with the liquidator's decision admitting or rejecting the whole or any part of a proof, make such an application within 21 days of becoming aware of the liquidator's decision.
(3) Where application is made to the court under this Rule, the court shall fix a venue for the application to be heard, notice of which shall be sent by the applicant to the creditor who lodged the proof in question (if it is not himself) and to the liquidator.
(4) The liquidator shall, on receipt of the notice, file in court the relevant proof, together (if appropriate) with a copy of the statement sent under Rule 4.82(2).
(5) After the application has been heard and determined, the proof shall, unless it has been wholly disallowed, be returned by the court to the liquidator.
(6) The official receiver is not personally liable for costs incurred by any person in respect of an application under this Rule; and the liquidator (if other than the official receiver) is not so liable unless the court makes an order to that effect.
….
4.84. A creditor's proof may at any time, by agreement between himself and the liquidator, be withdrawn or varied as to the amount claimed.
….
4.86.—(1) The liquidator shall estimate the value of any debt which, by reason of its being subject to any contingency or for any other reason, does not bear a certain value; and he may revise any estimate previously made, if he thinks fit by reference to any change of circumstances or to information becoming available to him.
He shall inform the creditor as to his estimate and any revision of it.
(2) Where the value of a debt is estimated under this Rule, or by the court under section 168(3) or (5), the amount provable in the winding up in the case of that debt is that of the estimate for the time being."
"(1) In a members' voluntary winding up the liquidator may give notice of the intention to make a distribution to creditors. Such notice—
(a) shall be gazetted; and
(b) may be advertised in such other manner as the liquidator thinks fit.
(2) In addition to the standard contents, the notice under paragraph (1) must—
(a) state that the liquidator intends to make a distribution to creditors; and
(b) specify a date ("the last date for proving") up to which proofs may be lodged at a specified place, which must be the same date for all creditors and not less than 21 days from that of the notice.
(3) The liquidator is not obliged to deal with proofs lodged after the last date for proving; but he may do so, if he thinks fit.
(4) A creditor who has not proved his debt before the last date for proving or after that date increases the claim in his proof is not entitled to disturb, by reason that he has not participated in it, either at all or, as the case may be, to the extent that his increased claim would allow, that distribution or any other distribution made before his debt was proved or his claim increased; but when he has proved his debt or, as the case may be, increased his claim, he is entitled to be paid, out of any money for the time being available for the payment of any further distribution, any distribution or distributions which he has failed to receive.
(5) Where the distribution proposed to be made is to be the only or the final distribution in that winding up, the liquidator may, subject to paragraph (6), make that distribution without regard to the claim of any person in respect of a debt not already proved.
(6) Where the distribution proposed to be made is one specified in paragraph (5), the notice given under paragraph (1) shall state the effect of paragraph (5)."
"There is another point which I think must be carefully borne in mind in considering the cases on administration of estates, and that is the standing of the claimant in relation to those to whom the distribution is to be made. If the claimant is a creditor, it may well be right to be slower to shut him out if the distribution is to be made to beneficiaries than it is if the distribution is to be made to other creditors. Correspondingly, in the voluntary liquidation of a company, it may well be right to give the claimant greater latitude if the distribution is to be to members rather than to other creditors. Just as a man should seek to be just before he affects to be generous, so I think that an especial care is needed to ensure that all creditors are paid before distributions are made to the members. It is only subject to the satisfaction of the company's liabilities that the company's property is distributable among the members: see the Companies Act 1948, s 302. I do not, of course, say that a creditor has an absolute right to come in at any time, however gross his delay, whatever his conduct, and however unjust this would be to others. But I do say that the court should be slower to shut out a creditor as against members than as against other creditors.
…
With that in mind, I turn to the only two cases cited to me which deal with voluntary liquidations. Re House Property and Investment Co Ltd was very different. In it, Roxburgh J rejected a claim by a lessor to have enough of the assets of the company (which was an original lessee) set aside to meet all future liabilities for the payment of rent and the due performance of the covenants in the lease. Instead, it was held that the lessor should prove in the liquidation for the difference in value of the lease with the benefit of the original lessee's covenants and its value without that benefit. That, of course, is very far away from the present case; but in his judgment Roxburgh J ([1953] 2 All ER 1525 at 1545, [1954] Ch 576 at 612) referred to the implied obligation imposed by the Companies Act 1948 on liquidators to complete the liquidation and effect a final distribution of the assets within a reasonable time. I fully accept this; but I do not think that there flows from this duty any corresponding duty on creditors to make their claims with all reasonable diligence. Obviously both prudence and convenience require them to do so; but that is not the same saying that there is a legal obligation to do so. I think that the courts must be cautious in laying down any rules which would in effect shorten the periods available to a claimant under the Statutes of Limitation. In the case of a company in voluntary liquidation where a final distribution is in contemplation, the practical effect would be to substitute an undefined period of diligence for whatever was the appropriate statutory period of years. A doctrine of laches may be appropriate enough in claims made in equity in the administration of estates, but I do not think that it should be admitted without compelling reasons in claims at law made in the statutory process of voluntary liquidation; and I can see no compelling reasons."
"It is the right of a company to wind itself up even though it is not insolvent. It is a statutory right: [see s 278(1) of the Act of 1948]. It is part of the policy of the law of England, and it is one manifestation of that wide branch of the law which abhors perpetuity. That, to me, is a feature of the greatest importance. Of course, a liquidator is not to distribute the property among the members before he has dealt with the liabilities. That is plain enough. But I am certain that, though it does not say so in express terms, the policy of the Act, as expressed in s 302, carries the implication that he has to deal with the liabilities finally within a reasonable time, and thereafter to distribute amongst the members within a reasonable time. I imply those words in s 302 from the general policy of the Act. Parliament cannot have contemplated liquidations lasting for 999 years. Where is the line to be drawn? Of course, what is reasonable must vary according to the circumstances of the company. In some cases the time required to complete the winding-up may be very long and still be reasonable, but, in my view, the policy of the Act would abhor an arrangement under which a winding-up could not be completed for seventy years because the liquidator had to administer, for the benefit of a landlord, a fund created out of the assets of the company, which was the original lessee, when the lease had been assigned for value and was beneficial to the assignee, and the landlord, presumably, would be delighted to accept a surrender at any moment and the chance of any claim against the original lessee ever becoming a live claim for actual money was almost as remote as it could be."
"A company is certainly entitled to initiate and complete the process of winding up notwithstanding that it will thereby become unable to fulfil future or contingent obligations. Contingent creditors become entitled to prove for the value of their claims at the date of winding up, but the company cannot be required to set aside a fund against the possibility that the contingency may happen. The liquidator is entitled to distribute the assets in accordance with the rules and such distributions cannot afterwards be disturbed. Re House Property and Investment Co Ltd, in which a landlord tried unsuccessfully to require the liquidator of its original tenant company to set aside a fund to pay the rent if the assignee should default, illustrates all these principles very well.
On the other hand, it is also a rule of winding up that a creditor may submit a proof or amend an existing proof at any time during the liquidation. The rule that prior distributions cannot be disturbed means that it may not do him much good, but in principle he is entitled to make his claim. Another principle of liquidation is that contingent claims are valued in the light of subsequent events, so that a proof may be increased because the contingency has happened: see Macfarlane's Claim (1880) 17 ChD 337 Furthermore, it is possible that a creditor may be entitled to prove for an accrued debt when the contingency has occurred after the winding up. I express no opinion on this point, but whatever the form of the proof, there is no principle which excludes new or increased claims."
"[83] Under the scheme, a policyholder with an accrued claim will have that claim paid in full. If the scheme is not approved, he will still have his claim paid in full. The measure of the claim will be the amount for which he is entitled to indemnity under the policy in respect of the known claim. By contrast, the position of a policyholder with an IBNR claim is different. Under the scheme he will be entitled to have his contingent claim valued. He will then be entitled to be paid the full amount of the valuation (less a discount for the time cost of money). Although a valuation of a future (and contingent claim) can be made, and may even be described as a fair valuation, it is only a valuation. It is not an indemnity. Indeed, whatever else one may be able to say about a valuation of a future contingent claim the one thing that one can say with near certainty is that, barring a miracle, the valuation will not be the same amount as the indemnity. If, on the other hand, the scheme is not approved, the Company will remain in run-off. It will pay claims as and when they arise; and the measure of the payment will be the full indemnity to which the policyholder is entitled. It may be that anticipated claims by some policyholders will never arise; in which case the Company will not have to pay. But that is what insurance is about. The policyholder bargains for the insurer to bear the risk of a contingency materialising. The insurer is in the risk business; and the policyholder is not. Unlike the policyholder with an accrued claim, who knows the extent of his exposure to that claim, the policyholder with an IBNR claim does not. The essence of the scheme is that it retransfers the risk from the insurer (who had contracted to bear it) to the policyholder (who did not). Thus the rights of a policyholder with an IBNR claim are fundamentally different under the scheme from the rights that he would have in the absence of the scheme."
"An estimate shall be made … of the value of any debt or liability provable as aforesaid, which by reason of its being subject to any contingency or contingencies, or for any other reason, does not bear a certain value.
Any person aggrieved by any estimate made by the trustee as aforesaid may appeal to the Court, and the Court may, if it think the value of the debt or liability incapable of being fairly estimated, make an order to that effect, and upon such order being made such debt or liability shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to be a debt not provable in bankruptcy; but if the Court think that the value of the debt or liability is capable of being fairly estimated, it may direct such value to be assessed, with the consent of all the parties interested, before the Court itself, without the intervention of a jury, or, if such parties do not consent, by a jury, either before the Court itself or some other competent Court, and may give all necessary directions for such purpose, and the amount of such value when assessed shall be provable as a debt under the bankruptcy."
See Bankruptcy Act 1869 s.31 re-enacted in s.37(7) of the Bankruptcy Act 1883 and s.30(7) of the Bankruptcy Act 1914.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Treacy :
Lord Justice Mummery :