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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Agilo Ltd v Henry [2010] EWHC 2717 (Ch) (22 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/2717.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2717 (Ch), [2011] BPIR 297 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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AGILO LTD | Claimant/Appellant | |
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WILLIAM HENRY | Defendant/Respondent |
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101 Finsbury Pavement London EC2A 1ER
Tel No: 020 7422 6131 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr M Wheater Appeared On Behalf Of The Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"AGILO MASTER FUND LIMITED acting by its Delegate Investment Manager AGILO LIMITED (Company Number 05965340) having its registered office at Denman House, 20 Piccadilly, London, W1J 0DJ ("Lender")".
With Mr Mark Henry's guarantee, the names "Agilo Limited" and "Agilo Master Fund Limited" were reversed and the other party to the guarantee was given as:
"AGILO LIMITED (Company Number 05965340) having its registered office at Denman House, 20 Piccadilly, London, W1J 0DJ acting as Delegate Investment Manager of AGILO MASTER FUND LIMITED ("Lender")".
A similar description was used in the facility agreement.
"It seems to me perfectly clear that what we have here is a statutory demand issued by Agilo Limited in relation to a debt owed, if it is owed, by Mr Henry to Agilo Master Fund Limited, that therefore the statutory demand comes from the wrong person, and that there are very substantial grounds for Mr Henry to dispute that he owes anything at all to Agilo Limited."
District Judge Parker described an alternative argument advanced on Mr Mark Henry's behalf, to the effect that Mr Henry had entered into the guarantee under undue influence, as "extremely weak".
"This point can be dealt with fairly swiftly. Although the name AL [i.e. Agilo Limited] appears on the first page of the Statutory Demand the full background to the demand is set out on the second page and it is clear that the debt is owed to AMFL [i.e. Agilo Master Fund Limited]. The point raised by the Applicant [i.e. Mr William Henry] is a technical one but unless the alleged error is substantial then it would not be right to set aside the demand. It is clear from the second page that the debt which is the basis of the Statutory Demand is one due to AMFL."
In the penultimate paragraph of his judgment, the district judge stated that the statutory demand should be set aside:
"through a combination of their being a genuine triable issues and/or there are other good reasons which require that the statutory demand be set aside."
"there was no basis upon which the judge could conclude that it is arguable that Mr Henry was pressured into signing the Guarantee without understanding what it or the underlying Facility Agreement meant. There is no possible case of undue influence as found by him."
"A creditor's petition must be in respect of one or more debts owed by the debtor, and the petitioning creditor or each of the petitioning creditors must be a person to whom the debt or (as the case may be) at least one of the debts is owed."
By section 267(2)(c), a petition can be presented only if "the debt, or each of the debts, is a debt which the debtor appears either to be unable to pay or to have no reasonable prospect of being able to pay". Section 268(1) provides as follows:
"For the purposes of section 267(2)(c), the debtor appears to be unable to pay a debt if, but only if, the debt is payable immediately and either (a) the petitioning creditor to whom the debt is owed has served on the debtor a demand (known as 'the statutory demand') in the prescribed form requiring him to pay the debt or to secure or compound for it to the satisfaction of the creditor, at least 3 weeks have elapsed since the demand was served and the demand has been neither complied with nor set aside in accordance with the rules, or
(b) execution or other process issued in respect of the debt on a judgment or order of any court in favour of the petitioning creditor, or one or more of the petitioning creditors to whom the debt is owed, has been returned unsatisfied, in whole or in part."
Section 383 contains a definition of "creditor". The word is defined as follows:
"(a) in relation to a bankrupt, means a person to whom any of the bankruptcy debts is owed (being, in the case of an amount falling within paragraph (c) of the definition in section 382(1)of 'bankruptcy debt', the person in respect of whom that amount is specified in the criminal bankruptcy order in question), and
(b) in relation to an individual to whom a bankruptcy petition relates, means a person who would be a creditor in the bankruptcy if a bankruptcy order were made on that petition."
"(a) the debtor appears to have a counterclaim, set-off or cross demand which equals or exceeds the amount of the debt or debts specified in the statutory demand; or
(b) the debt is disputed on grounds which appear to the court to be substantial; or
(c) it appears that the creditor holds some security in respect of the debt claimed by the demand, and either Rule 6.15 is not complied with in respect of it, or the court is satisfied that the value of the security equals or exceeds the full amount of the debt; or
(d) the court is satisfied, on other grounds, that the demand ought to be set aside."
"In my view, 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.
This approach to sub-paragraph (d) is in line with the particular grounds specified in sub-paragraphs (a) to (c) of Rule 6.5(4). Normally it would be unjust that an individual should be regarded as unable to pay a debt if the debt is disputed on substantial grounds: sub-paragraph (b). Likewise, if the debtor has a counterclaim, set-off or cross demand which equals or exceeds the amount of the debt: sub-paragraph (a). Again, if the creditor is fully secured: sub-paragraph (c)."
"The court will exercise its discretion on whether or not to set aside the 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. There may be cases where the terms of the statutory demand are so confusing or misleading that, having regard to all the circumstances, justice requires that the demand should not be allowed to stand. There will be other cases where, despite such defects in the contents of the statutory demand, those defects have not prejudiced and will not prejudice the debtor in any way, and to set aside the demand in such a case would serve no useful purpose. For example, a debtor may be wholly unable to pay a debt which is immediately payable, either out of his own resources, or with financial assistance from others. In such a case the only practical consequence of setting aside a statutory demand would be that the creditor would promptly serve a revised statutory demand, which also and inevitably would not be complied with. In such a case the need for a further statutory demand would serve only to increase costs. Such a course would not be in the interests of anyone."
"(22) Nevertheless, it remains the position (whether or not there has been an application to set aside the statutory demand and whether or not the demand has been set aside on any such application) that a creditor's petition can only be presented by a person to whom the debt is owed section 267(1) of the Act and payable, either immediately or at some certain further time section 267(2)(b). It follows that a petition presented by a person who is not a creditor at the time that the petition is presented will be dismissed unless there is some other person who was a creditor at that date and who can be substituted as petitioner under rule 6.30.
(23) It follows, also, that an application to set aside a statutory demand where the demand has been served by a person who is not a creditor at the date of the hearing of the application ought normally to be granted under paragraph (d) of rule 6.5(4); for the reason that no bankruptcy petition can properly be presented on the basis of that demand. But that is not this case. In the present case the demand was served on behalf of the person, Mrs Stichbury, who was (on any view) the creditor at the time of the hearing of the application before the district judge by virtue of the assignment under section 136 of the Law on Property Act 1925. And, in the present case, Mrs Stichbury will be able to present a bankruptcy petition under section 267 of the Insolvency Act, 1986 on the basis of the statutory demand unless the demand is set aside. That is because, when the position is presented, she will be able to satisfy the condition in section 267(2)(c), read with section 268(1)(a). She will then be 'the petitioning creditor to whom the debt is owed' for the purposes of section 268(1)(a); and she will be the person who 'has served on the debtor a demand requiring him to pay the debt'."
"An agent who makes a contract on his principal's behalf is liable to or entitled to sue the third party in accordance with the terms of any contractual engagement, whether upon the same contract or upon some independent contract, into which he has entered."
"There is no doubt whatever as to the general rule as regards an agent, that where a person contracts as agent for a principal the contract is the contract of the principal, and not that of the agent; and, prima facie, at common law the only person who may sue is the principal, and the only person who can be sued is the principal."
Wright J went on, however, to note that there were many exceptions to this rule. One was that "the agent may be added as the party to the contract if he has so contracted, and is appointed as the party to be sued". Another exception, Wright J said (at 372), was:
"that by usage, which is treated as forming part of the contract or of the law merchant, where there is a foreign principal, generally speaking, the agent in England is the party to the contract, and not the foreign principal; but this is subject to certain limitations."
A little lower on the same page, Wright J said:
"in all cases the parties can by their express contract provide that the agent shall be the person liable either concurrently with or to the exclusion of the principal, or that the agent shall be the party to sue either concurrently with or to the exclusion of the principal."
"There long existed a strong presumption of fact (so strong that a court was 'justified in treating it as a matter of law') that in the context of sale where an agent in England contracted on behalf of a foreign principal, disclosed or undisclosed, the agent assumed personal liability to his English suppliers and had no authority to pledge the principal's credit by establishing privity of contract between the principal and the third party; and conversely, where a merchant in England contracted for a principal abroad, that merchant was not to be regarded as having authority to bring his principal into privity of contract with the home supplier."
However, in Teheran-Europe Co Ltd v ST Belton (Tractors) Ltd [1968] 2 QB 545 the Court of Appeal held that the presumption no longer existed.
"In consideration of the Lender granting time, credit and banking facilities to the Borrower, the Guarantor unconditionally and irrevocably guarantees the payment or discharge of the Secured Liabilities and shall on demand in writing pay or discharge them to the Lender."
This clause provided, Mr Craig said, for payment to Agilo as the "Lender". Among the other clauses to which Mr Craig referred was clause 16, which states (in clause 16.2):
"The address and fax number of the Lender for any communication or document to be made or delivered under or in connection with this Guarantee is the address or fax number included with its signature below or any substitute address or fax number as the Lender may notify to the Guarantor by not less than five Business Days notice."
Mr Craig pointed out that, at the end of the document, "Lender Notice Details" gave the address, "Denman House, 20 Piccadilly, London, W1J ODJ", which is Agilo's registered address.
"If the intention of the parties had been that Agilo Limited should itself be a party with rights under the agreement, it would have been very simple for this agreement, which has obviously been professionally drafted, to say so. Or, if the agreement between Mr Henry and Master Fund were to confer certain rights on Agilo Limited, it could have said that, but it does not, at least not with any clarity. So it seems to me it is beyond argument that the quoted words I have referred to simply mean that Agilo Limited was agent for Agilo Master Fund Limited and go no further. Even if that is wrong, I take Mr Rowntree's point that I am considering this application under Insolvency Rule 6.5(4)(b). The question is whether the debt is disputed on grounds which appear to me to be substantial, and I would certainly say at least that there are substantial grounds for taking the interpretation of the agreement which I have said I think is correct."