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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Schmitt v Deichmann & Ors [2012] EWHC 62 (Ch) (23 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/62.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 62 (Ch), [2012] WLR(D) 8, [2012] BPIR 392, [2012] 3 WLR 681, [2012] BCC 561, [2013] Ch 61, [2012] 2 All ER 1217, [2012] ILPr 18 |
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Appeal Ref: CH/2010/0684 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF PHOENIX KAPITALDIENST GmbH
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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FRANK SCHMITT |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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HENNING DEICHMANN And 14 Others |
Appellants |
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David Wolfson QC and Adam Rushworth (instructed by Kennedys, solicitors) for the Appellants
Hearing dates: 5, 6, 7 and 10 October 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman :
"(4) The courts having jurisdiction in relation to insolvency law in any part of the United Kingdom shall assist the courts having the corresponding jurisdiction in any other part of the United Kingdom or any relevant country or territory.
(5) For the purposes of subsection (4) a request made to a court in any part of the United Kingdom by a court in any other part of the United Kingdom or in a relevant country or territory is authority for the court to which the request is made to apply, in relation to any matters specified in the request, the insolvency law which is applicable by either court in relation to comparable matters falling within its jurisdiction.
In exercising its discretion under this subsection, a court shall have regard in particular to the rules of private international law."
For the purposes of the two subsections, insolvency law in England and Wales means any provision made by or under the Act: see s. 426(10).
Appeal Notice
Case-law
"The two subsections, (4) and (5), read together envisage that assistance will be requested by a foreign court to the English court. If the English court were only to exercise the jurisdiction which it would have anyway in relation to the assistance requested, there would be no need for the provisions of subsec. (5).
It appears to me clear that the purpose of sec. 426(5) of the Insolvency Act 1986 is to give to the requested court a jurisdiction that it might not otherwise have in order that it can give the assistance to the requesting court which, by subsec. (4), it is directed to give.
The scheme of subsec. (5) appears to me to be this. The first step is to identify the matters specified in the request. Secondly, the domestic court should ask itself what would be the relevant insolvency law applicable by the domestic court to comparable matters falling within its jurisdiction. Thirdly, it should then apply that insolvency law to the matters specified in the request, which, on this hypothesis, are not matters which would otherwise fall within its jurisdiction, or may not be.
Also, of course, the domestic court is authorised to apply those provisions of the foreign insolvency law which the foreign court could apply to comparable matters falling within the jurisdiction of the foreign court; but that is not an issue in this case."
"In cases in which there is a statutory authority for providing assistance, the statute specifies what the court may do. For example, section 426(5) of the Insolvency Act 1986 provides that a request from a foreign court shall be authority for an English court to apply 'the insolvency law which is applicable by either court in relation to comparable matters falling within its jurisdiction.' At common law…it is doubtful whether the assistance could take the form of applying the provisions of the foreign insolvency law which form no part of the domestic system. But the domestic court must at least be able to provide assistance by doing whatever it could have done in the case of a domestic insolvency…
The purpose of recognition is to enable the foreign office holder or the creditors to avoid having to start parallel proceedings and to give them the remedies to which they would have been entitled if the equivalent proceedings had taken place in the domestic forum."
"exercise such powers and rights as are conferred upon insolvency practitioners under the Insolvency Act 1986 and any other provisions of the relevant laws of England and Wales.
…[to] eliminate the need…to commence parallel insolvency proceedings in this country…[I]t is highly desirable that foreign office holders should be given such assistance by the English court as will enable them to exercise the powers that are open to an English insolvency practitioner…without having to go through the expense, cost and delay of initiating parallel insolvency proceedings here."
"The respondents relied in the alternative…on the inherent jurisdiction of the Grand Court. This point was not much developed in argument and their Lordships can deal with it quite shortly. If the Grand Court had no statutory jurisdiction to act in aid of a foreign bankruptcy it might have had some limited inherent power to do so. But it cannot have had inherent jurisdiction to exercise the extraordinary powers conferred by s. 107 of its Bankruptcy Law in circumstances not falling within the terms of that section. The non-statutory principles on which British courts have recognised foreign bankruptcy jurisdiction are more limited in their scope (see Dicey & Morris, Conflict of Laws, 13th ed (2000), vol 2, pp1181-2, 1186-3) and the inherent jurisdiction of the Grand court cannot be wider."
"Although section 426(4) is couched in mandatory terms, it is common ground that the court retains a discretion, but the discretion is a limited one. The discretion should be exercised in favour of assisting a foreign court unless it would be improper to do so. The scope of the discretion has been considered twice by the court of Appeal in Hughes v. Hannover Re [1997] 1 BCLC 497, and England v. Smith [2000] BPIR 28…The latter case emphasises the mandatory terms in which section 426(4) is drawn; the important public policy of comity between nations; and the weight that must be given to the very fact that a foreign court has asked for assistance, all the more so if the foreign court has itself considered whether a request should be made."
"That leaves the position at common law. Strictly speaking, it is unnecessary to consider this since I hold that I have power under section 426. Nevertheless it is clear from Rubin that in cases where section 426 does not apply, the common law to assist survives. It is not so clear from [HIH] whether the common law power is superseded by or runs in parallel with the statutory power. Lords Hoffmann and Walker said that the powers were parallel. Lords Scott and Neuberger thought that the statutory power succeeded the common [sic] power, and Lord Phillips was, if I may respectfully say so, somewhat gnomic. But in Rubin the Court of Appeal applied the approach of Lords Hoffmann and Walker, so that is the path that I must follow.
On the basis that the common law power subsists in parallel with the statutory power, the discretionary considerations that have led me to exercise the statutory power would lead me to exercise the common law power in favour of assisting the Australian court…"
"The important point is that bankruptcy, whether personal or corporate, is a collective proceeding to enforce rights and not to establish them."
"(1) the ordinary rules for enforcing, or more precisely not enforcing, foreign judgments in personam do not apply to bankruptcy proceedings. (2) Bankruptcy proceedings include the mechanisms provided by sections 238 and 239 of the Insolvency Act 1986, and the equivalent provisions in the United States which allow for the office holder/legal representative to bring actions against third parties for the collective benefit of all creditors. These mechanisms are integral to and central to the collective nature of bankruptcy and are not merely incidental procedural matters. (3) I am reinforced in my view that the orders with which we are concerned are part of the bankruptcy proceedings because in Re HIH… para 19 Lord Hoffmann himself said:
"Furthermore the process of collection of assets will include, for example, the use of powers to set aside voidable dispositions, which may differ very considerably from those in the English statutory scheme."
(4) Albeit they have the indicia of judgments in personam, the judgments in the New York court made in the adversary proceedings, are nonetheless judgments in and for the purposes of the collective enforcement regime of the bankruptcy proceedings and as such are governed by the sui generis private international law rules relating to bankruptcy and are not subject to the ordinary private international law rules preventing enforcement of judgments because the defendants were not subject to the jurisdiction of the foreign court. This is a desirable development of the common law founded on the principles of modified universalism. It does not require the court to enforce anything that it could not do, mutatis mutandis, in a domestic context…
…There remains the question of enforcement of the judgments against the defendants. I accept the general private international law that bankruptcy, whether personal or corporate, should be unitary and universal. There should be a unitary bankruptcy proceeding in the court of the bankrupt's domicile which receives worldwide recognition and it should apply universally to all the bankrupt's assets. That is the law stated in the Cambridge Gas case…and the HIH Insurance case… and I would follow it. Add to that the further principle that recognition carries with it the active assistance of the court which should include assistance by doing whatever this court could have done in the case of domestic insolvency. As Lord Hoffmann said in the Cambridge Gas case, at para 22:
"The purpose of recognition is to enable the foreign office holder or the creditors to avoid having to start parallel insolvency proceedings and to give them the remedies to which they would have been entitled if the equivalent proceedings had taken place in the domestic forum."
In my judgment that assistance extends to enforcing against the defendants the orders made by the New York court. Applying the common law, I would therefore allow the appeal."
"The striking similarities conceded by the defendants between sections 238 and 239 of the Insolvency Act 1986 and sections 547 and 548 of the American Code, and thus between these aspects of our law and the equivalent parts of the American law, justify a harmonised interpretation."
"Mr Hill for the JLs was unable to formulate any coherent juristic basis for contending that, in circumstances in which the local insolvency statute does not apply to the overseas company seeking assistance pursuant to due recognition of its winding-up abroad, this Court has the common law power to make orders which could otherwise only be made pursuant to statute. Nor was there any convincing basis for contending that the effect of recognition of the foreign liquidators was to "domesticate" their appointment and afford them the same legal rights as would be enjoyed by liquidators to whom our statutory regime applies. As Mr Riihiluoma rightly submitted, all that common law recognition achieves is to enable the recognised foreign liquidator to act within this jurisdiction on behalf of the company (in place of the directors) and to seek whatever assistance this Court can properly afford having regard to the terms and effect of local law as it applies to the foreign company.
It is ultimately obvious that assistance can only be given by way of the deployment of common law powers forming part of the general law of Bermuda or statutory powers which apply to the foreign insolvent company which is seeking specific relief…"
Litigation in Germany
Conclusions
"It is therefore seen as an essential aspect of the process of liquidation that antecedent transactions whose consequences have been detrimental to the collective interest of the creditors must be amenable to adjustment or avoidance."
"Section 426…extends the jurisdiction of the English court and the choice of law which it can make in the exercise of its own jurisdiction, whether original or extended. For example, section 426 can confer jurisdiction to make an administration order in respect of a foreign company when that jurisdiction is ordinarily confined to UK companies: In Re Dallhold Estates (UK) Pty Ltd [1992] BCLC 621. Or it may enable the court to apply a foreign law when, as in In Re Suidair International Airways Ltd [1961] Ch 165, it would otherwise be obliged to apply only English law, as in England v. Smith [2001] Ch 419 (Australian law applied to examination of accountant connected with insolvent Australian company)."
"to involve the inherent jurisdiction almost thwarting the statutory purpose."
"to ensure that all of the company's assets are distributed under a single system of distribution."