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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Papanicola v Humphreys & Ors [2005] EWHC 335 (Ch) (14 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/335.html Cite as: [2005] 2 All ER 418, [2005] EWHC 335 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN BANKRUPTCY
RE: SAMUEL SING KEE MAK
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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T. PAPANICOLA (trustee in Bankruptcy of Samuel Sing Kee Mak) |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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BENJAMIN TOBY HUMPHREYS CRAIG DUNNE READYGAME LIMITED |
Respondents |
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Mr Jamie Riley (instructed by RHF Solicitors) for the First Respondent
Hearing dates: 16 – 17 February, 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Laddie :
"all sums generated by credit card receipts from the bankrupt's business between the week ending 1 March 2003 and the week ending 13 September 2003 (subject to any proper deduction by Ready Game Ltd under the contract dated 17 February 2003) are prior bankruptcy income of the Bankrupt."
"Judge Sykes Frixou acting on behalf of the Claimant (i.e. the Trustee's solicitors) contacted us with regard to the credit card processing machine claiming all monies that we had received to date. We stated that they were not entitled to the money as it was Mr Mak's income and under the Insolvency Act 1986, the Trustee in Bankruptcy can only apply to the Bankrupt for an Income Payments Order. As such, we have refused to make a payment to the Trustee in Bankruptcy and we have deducted our fees from the monies held as detailed in our Contract of Engagement.
The Claimant maintains he is entitled to the money by describing the funds received by us as property. We have clearly demonstrated that the funds received are income and not property. As such the Claimant has no right to bring this action against us and we are not indebted to the Claiment."
(1) The Registrar should have rejected Mr Humphreys' application because no or no sufficient grounds existed for exercising the powers to rescind under s 375 of the Insolvency Act 1986.
(2) Mr Humphreys was a party to the proceedings in which the order of District Judge Blomfield dated 30 January 2004 was made. For that reason the Registrar should have held that Mr Humphreys was estopped from seeking the relief which he secured by the November Order.
(3) The Registrar's decision that the restaurant revenue was post-bankruptcy income of the bankrupt was wrong in law.
(4) The decision to rescind the order for examination of Mr Humphrey and Mr Dunne was wrong in law.
S 375 Insolvency Act 1986
" Every court having jurisdiction for the purposes of the Parts in this Group may review, rescind or vary any order made by it in the exercise of that jurisdiction."
" … unique to insolvency, (having recently been extended from bankruptcy to company winding up), in that it allows the court to review and rescind or vary an order made by a court of co-ordinate jurisdiction. It applies to any order made in the exercise of the bankruptcy jurisdiction. It is available to rescind a bankruptcy order as it was formerly available to rescind a receiving order. The court's power to review and if thought fit rescind a bankruptcy order is, in theory at least, virtually unlimited." (p 246)
"None of the members of the court doubted the existence of the jurisdiction or that section 104 of the Bankruptcy Act 1883 gave the bankruptcy court an absolute discretion to rescind or vary any of its orders. By a majority the court held that a receiving order may properly be rescinded where the debtor has afterwards come to a private arrangement with his creditors, but emphasised that the court will act only with great caution and under special circumstances which make it clear that the arrangement is for the benefit of the creditors and where the debtor has not been guilty of any misconduct in connection with his insolvency." (p 247 – 8)
"In our judgment the exceptional circumstances that justify the exercise of the power under section 108(1) to rescind a receiving order and set aside the bankruptcy must be such as are closely analogous to the expressly recognised circumstances which enable a bankruptcy to be halted or annulled."
"The statutory discretion is in terms unlimited. The effect of a rule of law to the effect alleged would be to distort the nature of the inquiry upon which the court ought to embark. That inquiry is whether the circumstances justify the rescission of the bankruptcy order, not whether they are sufficiently close to an informal scheme of arrangement."
"While, therefore, the discretion is still to be exercised with caution and only in exceptional circumstances, we do not accept that those circumstances are limited in the manner alleged. It remains to consider whether the circumstances of the present case are exceptional and if so whether they justify the rescission of the bankruptcy order. In our opinion they are and do." (p 249)
"In my judgment, the decision in In re A Debtor [1971] 1 W.L.R. 1212 has no bearing on the present case, which raises the question: what grounds should exist to invoke the jurisdiction to rescind or vary an order dismissing an application to set aside a statutory demand. In my judgment, what is needed is evidence to show either that there was no debt or that for some other reason the statutory demand ought to have been set aside. The statutory demand ought to have been set aside either where the debt is proved to have been paid or to be no longer owing, or never to have arisen or where the debt is bona fide disputed on substantial grounds. It follows that in the rare case where the court would entertain an application to rescind an order dismissing an application to set aside a statutory demand any fresh evidence must be cogent evidence that the debt is bona fide disputed. Where credible - it obviously need not be incontrovertible - it must be such that if unanswered it would undoubtedly lead to the setting aside of the statutory demand if made at the appropriate time."
"As a matter of discretion, I have no doubt that the jurisdiction ought to be rarely exercised, since the effect of doing so would be to allow what would amount to a renewed application to set aside a statutory demand after the period limited for making the application." (p 318)
(1) The section gives the court a wide discretion to review vary or rescind any order made in the exercise of the bankruptcy jurisdiction.
(2) The onus is on the applicant to demonstrate the existence of circumstances which justify exercise of the discretion in his favour.
(3) Those circumstances must be exceptional.
(4) The circumstances relied on must involve a material difference to what was before the court which made the original order. In other words there must be something new to justify the overturning of the original order.
(5) There is no limit to the factors which may be taken into account. They can include, for example, changes which have occurred since the making of the original order and significant facts which, although in existence at the time of the original order, were not brought to the court's attention at that time.
(6) Where the new circumstances relied on consist of or include new evidence which could have been made available at the original hearing, that, and any explanation by the applicant gives for the failure to produce it then or any lack of such explanation, are factors which can be taken into account in the exercise of the discretion.
"[A]n appellate court can quash a bankruptcy order only if it is satisfied that, on the evidence which was before the court which made the order or on new evidence which is admitted in accordance with the rule in Ladd v. Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489, the order should not have been made. An application under section 375(1) is essentially different. It must be based on a change in circumstances since the order was made or, more rarely, on the discovery of further evidence which could not be adduced on appeal." (p 246)
"Where an application is made to the original tribunal to review, rescind or vary an order of its own, however, the question is not whether the original order ought to have been made upon the material then before it but whether that order ought to remain in force in the light either of changed circumstances or in the light of fresh evidence, whether or not such evidence might have been obtained at the time of the original hearing. The matter is one of discretion, and where the evidence might and should have been obtained at the original hearing that will be a factor for the court to take into account; but the rationale of the rule in Ladd v. Marshall, that there should be an end to litigation and that a litigant is not to be deprived of the fruits of a judgment except on substantial grounds, has no bearing in the bankruptcy jurisdiction. The very existence of section 375 is inconsistent with such a rationale." (p 318-9)
The circumstances in this case
"As Hoffmann J pointed out in Re Calmex Ltd [1989] BCLC 299 at 301, [1989] 1 All ER 485 at 486, the power is expressed in completely general terms. But, although I would hold that, as a matter of jurisdiction, the power to review conferred by r 7.47(1) is unfettered, it is, of course, a power which is to be exercised judicially. It would, in my view, be inappropriate - save in the most exceptional circumstances - for a judge to exercise that power in order to substitute his own decision for that of another judge of co-ordinate jurisdiction reached on the same material after a full consideration of the arguments. The power to review is not to be used in order to hear an appeal against a judge of coordinate jurisdiction. The exercise of the power should be confined, as a matter of discretion, to cases in which there has been some change in circumstances (which may, perhaps, include the consideration of material which was not previously before the court) since the original order was made - see the observations of Millett J in Re a debtor (No 32/SD/91) [1993] 2 All ER 991 at 995, [1993] 1 WLR 314 at 318-319."