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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 >> Gate Gourmet Luxembourg IV Sarl & Anor v Morby [2015] EWHC 1203 (Ch) (07 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/1203.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1203 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN BANKRUPTCY
The Rolls Building, London, WC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) GATE GOURMET LUXEMBOURG IV SARL (2) SPECIALIST AIRPORT SERVICES LIMITED |
Petitioners |
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- and - |
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GARY KENNETH MORBY |
Respondent |
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SHUVRA DEB (instructed by Mundays) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 13 April 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Registrar Briggs:
The Background
"I understand from enquiries I made with Court staff that it was necessary for a registrar in bankruptcy of the High Court to review the petition because the Statutory Demand in support of the Petition was served by way of substituted service. I understand from Ms Evans that the Court confirmed to her on 28 July 2014 that the Petition was approved by the registrar on 25 July 2014 and the Petition was endorsed by the Court with this date"
"I was in email contact with Mr Morby and we made arrangements for him to meet with a process service for the purpose of effecting personal service of the Petition which he did. I instructed Mr. Beecham to meet with Mr. Morby at 10:00am on 7 August 2014 in Terminal 3 at Heathrow Airport."
"I confirm that I personally handed the Petition to Mr. Morby. I recognized Mr. Morby because I had seen him previously on 21 July 2014 at Kingston County Court when he was pointed out to me by Mr. Reynolds….Nevertheless it is my practice to ask people to confirm their identity when serving documents, and prior to handing the Petition to Mr. Morby I asked him to confirm that his name was Gary Morby, which he did. Once I handed the Petition to Mr. Morby he immediately passed the Petition to the other gentleman. After taking a couple of minutes to read the Petition the other gentleman said that they were not accepting the Petition because it contained the wrong address and that Mr Morby had never lived at the Surrey address on the Petition. …. I immediately confirmed the above events had taken place in an email to my colleague Ben Mansell timed 10:12 on 7 August 2014."
"I was accompanied to Heathrow by a witness, Mr. Bezhad Malik, so that he could check the Petition was correct before I accepted service. I wanted to ensure that I was not accepting service of incorrect court proceedings. The agent arrived at Terminal 3 and handed the Petition to Mr. Malik……As the information contained within the Petition is incorrect, Mr. Malik requested that this information be amended by the agent so that I could accept service The agent telephoned Memory Crystal and, I assume, was instructed not to amend the Petition as the agent confirmed to Mr. Malik that he could not do so. Consequently, Mr. Malik attempted to hand the Petition back to the agent, who refused to accept it, despite repeated requests to do so from Mr. Malk. As the agent would not accept the incorrect Petition back, Mr Malik put the Petition in the bin."
"I moved to Dubai from Belgium in July 2013 to take up permanent consultancy roles which was a good opportunity for me to utilize the vast experience I have gained over the years…..I work as a consultant on a permanent basis for YQ Meet and Assist….YQ Meet and Assist provide permanent accommodation….for me and my family in Dubai….We intend to permanently reside in Dubai and have done so for the last 14 months. Dubai is my domicile of choice."
Jurisdiction
i) Domiciled in England and Wales;
ii) Personally present in England and Wales on the date on which the petition is presented; or
iii) At any time in the period of 3 years ending with the day of presentation of the petition:
a) …
b) Has carried on business in England and Wales.
The date and time of filing the petition shall be endorsed on the petition and on any copy issued under paragraph 3.
Service of the Petition
Retrospective substitution
"(1) Subject as follows, the petition shall be served personally on the debtor by an officer of the court, or by the petitioning creditor or his solicitor, or by a person instructed by the creditor or his solicitor for that purpose; and service shall be effected by delivering to him a sealed copy of the petition.
(2) If the court is satisfied by affidavit or other evidence on oath that prompt personal service cannot be effected because the debtor is keeping out of the way to avoid service of the petition or other legal process, or for any other cause, it may order substituted service to be effected in such manner as it thinks fit."
"(1) Where it appears to the court that there is a good reason to authorise service by a method or at a place not otherwise permitted by this Part, the court may make an order permitting service by an alternative method or at an alternative place.
(2) On an application under this rule, the court may order that steps already taken to bring the claim form to the attention of the defendant by an alternative method or at an alternative place is good service."
Rule 7.55 IR 1986
"No insolvency proceedings shall be invalidated by any formal defect or any irregularity, unless the court before which objection is made considers that substantial injustice has been caused by the defect or irregularity, and that the injustice cannot be remedied by any order of the court".
"The essential purpose of rules as to service is to ensure that a party has proper notice of proceedings brought and a fair opportunity to deal with them".
"In my judgment, bankruptcy is one of the most serious forms of execution that can be brought against a debtor. Bankruptcy proceedings brought against a solicitor are even more serious. In any bankruptcy proceedings it is, in my view, absolutely clear that the provisions as to service must be followed exactly. The rules provide in terms that the petition must be supported by an affidavit of service showing how the petition was served, and express reference is made to substituted service and the way in which that then is to be proved, which involves the affidavit of service having with it a sealed copy of the order.
Those provisions were not followed here, and it follows that this is a bankruptcy order that should never have been made. The only matter which needs to be brought into account in coming to that conclusion is the provision in r 7.55 which says……
I am not prepared to apply that rule to waive a defect in proof of service of a bankruptcy petition, and certainly not one brought against a solicitor"
"Such a defect cannot be characterised as purely 'formal', nor is it a mere 'irregularity'. On the contrary, it goes to the very essence of the appointment, and if it could be circumvented by reliance on a rule such as r 7.55 the effect would be tantamount to replacing a mandatory requirement with an optional one. The second reason is that the language of r 7.55 itself shows that it was never intended to apply to fundamental defects of the type with which I am now concerned. It does not make much sense to talk of an invalid appointment causing 'injustice', or of any such injustice being 'remedied' by an order retrospectively validating the appointment."
"The law of bankruptcy has developed over the years to relieve debtors as well as to give an orderly remedy to creditors. Deeds of arrangement were introduced in 1825 to provide one form of relief. We have seen references to the legislation for the relief of debtors in one of the earlier authorities. We have seen in Re Painter something of the controversy that surrounded the introduction of debtors' petitions in the nineteenth century. The last century saw considerable further liberalisation of the bankruptcy regime with the introduction by the Insolvency Act 1986 of individual voluntary arrangements and automatic discharge from bankruptcy after 3 years. In the late 1990s the Department of Trade and Industry became interested in American liberal approaches to bankruptcy and published Bankruptcy – A Fresh Start (2000) and a white paper, Productivity and Enterprise: Insolvency – A Second Chance (2001). The 3-year discharge period was reduced under the Enterprise Act 2002 to one year or less in certain cases. Emphasis was given to debtor rehabilitation in a way never seen before, so that benefit to the debtor of the various procedures introduced assumed an importance it had not thitherto enjoyed….. Rehabilitation of the debtor is, in my view, now a firmly established purpose of our bankruptcy law"
"I accept the submission of the creditors that their failure (or rather, that of their solicitors) to comply with r 6.8 was an insufficient basis of itself to justify the dismissal of the petition. To dismiss a petition on the ground of a formal defect such as that in this case, in circumstances where it is clear that the debtor has not been misled or confused as to the identity or nature of the debt or its amount or the consideration for it, is to reintroduce the excessive respect for formalities which the 1986 Rules were intended to avoid."
Insolvency Rule 6.14 is quite clear. The primary obligation on a creditor is to serve a bankruptcy petition personally, and that appears in terms from paragraph 6.14(1)….. [in this case] personal service was not effected; nor was there an application (much less an order) for substituted service. In almost every case that is likely, in my view, to be fatal to the petition. The service of a bankruptcy petition is obviously a very important step, and it is right and proper for the integrity of the system and for achieving fairness to debtors that those provisions be properly adhered to so that there can be no doubt that proper service has been established" (my emphasis)
"I confess I am not wholly satisfied that a complete failure to abide by the normal service provisions in the Bankruptcy Rules is a formal defect or irregularity. It seems to me to be a pretty fundamental defect. If I had jurisdiction under that provision to waive the defect, then (for reasons I will come to in a different context) I would exercise it, but I choose not to consider that at this stage because I am not satisfied that the defect does actually fall within that Rule." (my emphasis)
Security
[Where debt not unsecured] A debt which is the debt, or one of the debts, in respect of which a creditor's petition is presented need not be unsecured if either-
i) the petition contains a statement by the person having the right to enforce the security that he is willing, in the event of a bankruptcy order being made, to give up his security for the benefit of all the bankrupt's creditors, or
ii) the petition is expressed not to be made in respect of the secured part of the debt and contains a statement by that person of the estimated value at the date of the petition of the security for the secured part of the debt.
iii) In a case falling within subsection (1)(b) the secured and unsecured parts of the debt are to be treated for the purposes of sections 267 to 270 as separate debts.
"The prohibition on a secured creditor presenting a petition is subject to two exceptions, under s.269. The first is if the creditor states that, if a bankruptcy order is made, he is willing to give up his security for the benefit of all creditors. In that case, therefore, the creditor is secured but if the bankruptcy process follows he will be treated as unsecured and the asset over which the security exists will form part of the bankruptcy estate available for distribution as between all the creditors. The second case is where the petition is expressed not to be made for the secured part of the debt and the estimated value of the security is stated. In that case there are deemed to be two separate debts, one secured (to the amount of the value of the security) and the other unsecured (for the balance) and the bankruptcy petition is only for the unsecured balance. By virtue of s.383 of the 1986 Act the only security which is relevant for this purpose is security over an asset or assets of the particular debtor in question."
Conclusion