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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Shalson v DF Keane Ltd [2003] EWHC 599 (Ch) (21 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/599.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 599 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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SHALSON | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
DF KEANE LTD | (DEFENDANT) |
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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 J STUART (instructed by Merriman White) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"(1) A party to an arbitration agreement against whom legal proceedings are brought (whether by way of claim or counterclaim) in respect of a matter which under the agreement is to be referred to arbitration may (upon notice to the other parties to the proceedings) apply to the court in which the proceedings have been brought to stay the proceedings so far as they concern that matter.
(2) An application may be made notwithstanding that the matter is to be referred to arbitration only after the exhaustion of other dispute resolution procedures.
(3) An application may not be made by a person before taking the appropriate procedural step (if any) to acknowledge the legal proceedings against him or after he has taken any step in those proceedings to answer the substantive claim.
(4) On an application under this section the court shall grant a stay unless satisfied that the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed."
I do not think I need to read subsection (5). Section 82(1) of the Act defines "legal proceedings" as meaning "civil proceedings in the High Court or a county court."
"8. Mr Clay submitted that the effect of the arbitration clause in the contract is that in the event that a petition is issued the debtor will be entitled to apply for a stay of the petition pending referral to arbitration. He had to accept that the argument set out in his skeleton that the statutory demand itself should be stayed for this reason could not be upheld because the statutory demand is not a 'legal proceeding' for the purpose of s 9 Arbitration Act 1996.
9. The petition, however, would be such a legal proceeding. He submitted that the fact that it could be stayed under section 9 was sufficient ground for the purposes of rule 6.5(4)(d) to set aside the demand. In the present case there has not yet been any referral to arbitration.
10. I indicated at an early stage that I did not accept this argument. It seems to me that the operation of a stay cannot take effect unless 'legal proceedings are brought'. The legal proceedings in question are the petition and the petition itself cannot be brought unless the statutory demand stands. A statutory demand is an essential precursor to the presentation of a petition because failure to pay the sum claimed in the demand within the prescribed period gives rise to a presumption of insolvency upon which a petition may be based. In the present circumstances it is not even certain that either a referral to arbitration or an application for a stay will be made."
".... although 'action' is to be construed liberally I cannot accept that it is wide enough to embrace a non-legal process such as a statutory demand. A statutory demand is one of the statutorily prescribed prerequisites to obtaining remedies afforded to creditors by a bankruptcy order. The demand is not issued by a court. It does have legal consequences for a debtor, and it is for this reason that the legislation provides a court process which debtors can invoke in order to have the demand set aside. Despite this framework, Parliament cannot be taken to have intended that making a demand was within the scope of the prohibition on commencing actions. The phrase 'no action shall be brought' is too specific a reference to legal process for that to be a tenable construction."
Similarly here. Parliament has defined "legal proceedings" for the purposes, among others, of section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996 to mean civil proceedings in the High Court or a county court. It is impossible in my view to stretch that definition to include the service of a statutory demand.
".... the right approach to paragraph (4) of rule 6.5 is this. Under the Act, a statutory demand which is not complied with founds the consequence that the debtor is regarded as being unable to pay the debt in question, or if the debt is not immediately payable, as having no reasonable prospect of being able to pay the debt when it becomes due. That consequence, in turn, founds the ability of the creditor to present a bankruptcy petition because, under section 268(1), in the absence of an unsatisfied return to execution or other process, a debtor's inability to pay the debt in question is established if, but only if, the appropriate statutory demand has been served and not complied with.
When therefore the rules provide, as does rule 6.5(4)(d), for the court to have a residual discretion to set aside a statutory demand, the circumstances which normally will be required before a court can be satisfied that the demand 'ought' to be set aside, are circumstances which would make it unjust for the statutory demand to give rise to those consequences in the particular case. The court's intervention is called for to prevent that injustice."
Then a little later:
"The court will exercise its discretion on whether or not to set aside a statutory demand, having regard to all the circumstances. That must require the court to have regard to all the circumstances as they are at the time of the hearing before the court."
"Under paragraph (4)(d) the court has a residual discretion to deal with such a situation as justice and fairness require in the circumstances. Under the paragraph the court has power to set aside a demand in a case where there is no defence or counterclaim in respect of a balance of indebtedness which is less than the bankruptcy level.
Furthermore, that jurisdiction is properly to be exercised if, in the circumstances, the consequence otherwise would be to permit the presentation of a bankruptcy petition which is bound to fail."
The principle underlying this treatment of the statutory demand is to be found a little later in the judgment when, discussing what in that case the purpose was in leaving the statutory demand extant, the Vice-Chancellor said this:
"The only purpose in doing so would be for this demand to form the foundation for a bankruptcy petition. Here such a petition would be bound to fail. That being so, the very presentation of a petition would be oppressive and an abuse of process. It could be struck out summarily. Accordingly, at the earlier stage of the statutory demand the court should intervene. When able to foresee the inevitable the court will always intervene summarily to anticipate it. The court does not countenance parties proceeding to a blank wall."
"Where the debtor (a) claims to have a counterclaim, set off or cross demand (whether or not he could have raised it in the action in which the judgment or order was obtained) which equals or exceeds the amount of the debt or debts specified in the statutory demand or (b) disputes the debt (not being a debt subject to a judgment or order) the Court will normally set aside the statutory demand if, in its opinion, on the evidence there is a genuine triable issue."
This entitles the court to inquire into the genuineness of the cross-claims. I mention this because there was, I think, a suggestion in the second ground of appeal, questioning the extent to which the Chief Registrar discounted the cross-claims, that he should not have done so but should simply have accepted the assertion of cross-claims by Mr Shalson, supported as they were by the evidence of Mr Chambi, and that it was inappropriate to subject them to any kind of critical appraisal. I do not agree. It is not the court's function to resolve genuinely contested issues but, as the practice direction makes clear, it is its function to evaluate whether there are genuinely triable issues. I do not consider that the Chief Registrar was going beyond that task.