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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> HH Aluminium & Building Products Ltd & Anor v Bell & Anor (Rev 1) [2020] EWCA Civ 1469 (09 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1469.html Cite as: [2021] 1 WLR 1076, [2020] EWCA Civ 1469, [2021] BPIR 113, [2020] WLR(D) 600 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT BRISTOL
HHJ Paul Matthews
AND ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS AT BRISTOL
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
HHJ Paul Matthews sitting as a Judge of the High Court
Case No 43 of 2019
In the Matter of Mrs Nicola Jane Ide (in bankruptcy)
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 ARNOLD
and
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
____________________
(1) HH ALUMINIUM & BUILDING PRODUCTS LTD PETER ROBERT HOUSE |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) SARAH HELEN BELL (2) PAUL WILLIAMS (as Joint Trustees in Bankruptcy of Nicola Jane Ide) |
Respondents |
____________________
Steven Fennell (instructed by Hewlett Swanson Ltd) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 28 October 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Nugee:
Introduction
Facts
HHJ Matthews' Judgment of 4 February 2020 in the County Court
HHJ Matthews' Judgment of 12 February 2020 in the High Court
Ground 1 – power to transfer a specific application
"The County Court may order insolvency proceedings which are pending in a hearing centre to be transferred either to the High Court or to another hearing centre."
The question is whether "insolvency proceedings" in this sub-rule is to be given a narrow interpretation under which it refers only to the entirety of a set of insolvency proceedings (in the present case the entire proceedings relating to Mrs Ide's bankruptcy, and all applications in the bankruptcy) or is to be given a wider interpretation under which it is capable of including a particular application in the bankruptcy.
"1.1 Scope
(1) These Rules are made to give effect to Parts 1 to 11 of the Insolvency Act 1986 and the EU Regulation.
(2) Consequently references to insolvency proceedings and requirements relating to such proceedings are, unless the context otherwise requires, limited to proceedings in respect of Parts 1 to 11 of the Act and the EU Regulation (whether or not court proceedings)."
"12.33 Procedure following order for transfer
(1) Where a court makes an order for the transfer of proceedings under rule 12.30 …, it must as soon as reasonably practicable deliver to the transferee court or hearing centre a sealed copy of the order and the file of the proceedings.
(2) A transferee court (or hearing centre) which receives such an order and the file in winding up proceedings or bankruptcy proceedings or proceedings relating to a debt relief order must, as soon as reasonably practicable, deliver notice of the transfer to the official receiver attached to that court or hearing centre and the transferor court respectively."
Ground 3 – meaning of rule 12.9
"12.9 Service or delivery of application
(1) The applicant must serve a sealed copy of the application, endorsed with the venue for the hearing, on the respondent named in the application unless the court directs or these Rules provide otherwise.
(2) The court may also give one or more of the following directions—
(a) that the application be served upon persons other than those specified by the relevant provision of the Act or these Rules;
(b) that service upon, or the delivery of a notice to any person may be dispensed with;
(c) that such persons be notified of the application and venue in such other a way as the court specifies; or
(d) such other directions as the court sees fit.
(3) A sealed copy of the application must be served, or notice of the application and venue must be delivered, at least 14 days before the date fixed for its hearing unless—
(a) the provision of the Act or these Rules under which the application is made makes different provision;
(b) the case is urgent and the court acts under rule 12.10; or
(c) the court extends or abridges the time limit."
"12.8 Fixing the venue
When an application is filed the court must fix a venue for it to be heard unless—
(a) it considers it is not appropriate to do so;
(b) the rule under which the application is brought provides otherwise; or
(c) the case is one to which rule 12.12 applies."
That is then followed by rule 12.9 which I have already set out. Rules 12.10 to 12.13 then give the Court various procedural powers (to hear urgent matters immediately, to give directions, to determine matters without notice or without a hearing), including in rule 12.13 a power to adjourn a hearing.
"fix a venue for the application to be heard, in which case rule 12.9 applies to the extent that is relevant."
That is some indication that the drafter of the rules saw the application of rule 12.9 as logically following on from the fixing of a venue. The other is the fact that the power to adjourn in rule 12.13 is placed at the end of Chapter 3. The order in which rules are placed cannot carry any great weight, but it does perhaps suggest that the drafter of the rules saw the logical order of events to have been the filing of the application, the fixing of the venue and the service of the application before the question of adjournment arose.
"The first is to notify the defendant that the claimant has embarked on the formal process of litigation and to inform him of the nature of the claim. The second is to enable the defendant to participate in the process and have some say in the way in which the claim is prosecuted: until he has been served, the defendant may know that proceedings are likely to be issued, but he does not know for certain and he can do nothing to move things along. The third is to enable the court to control the litigation process. If extensions of time for serving pleadings or taking other steps are justified, they will be granted by the court. But until the claim form is served, the court has no part to play in the proceedings."
The third purpose may not apply in quite the same way in insolvency proceedings, but the first two undoubtedly do. These considerations apply with equal force to any form of process under which a formal claim is made in proceedings for the first time against a respondent.
"In the absence of such time limit a claimant would be able to keep alive the possibility of legal proceedings indefinitely, subverting the principle of finality of litigation and condemning the defendant's rights to perpetual uncertainty. Put differently, the objective of limitation rules would be thwarted if, having issued proceedings, claimants could indefinitely put off service and thereby keep their claims alive infinitely into the future."
This is of course written from the perspective of claim forms issued under the CPR. But the principles are equally applicable to claims made in insolvency proceedings. It is unsatisfactory for an applicant to have issued an application, thereby formally invoking the processes of the Court against a respondent, and for the respondent to be kept in ignorance of that fact for an indefinite amount of time.
Grounds 4 and 5 – impact of expiry of limitation period
"54 … The primary question [in a case where limitation is engaged] is whether, if an extension of time is granted, the defendant will or may be deprived of a limitation defence.
55 It is of course relevant that the effect of a refusal to extend time for service of the claim form will deprive the claimant of what may be a good claim. But the stronger the claim, the more important is the defendant's limitation defence, which should not be circumvented by an extension of time for serving a claim form save in exceptional circumstances."
Ground 6
Conclusion
Lord Justice Arnold:
Lord Justice Lewison