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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Wave Lending Ltd v Parmar & Anor [2017] EWHC 681 (Ch) (31 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/681.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 681 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE WAKEFIELD COUNTY COURT
IN BANKRUPTCY
IN THE MATTER OF THAKORBHAI RANCHHODJI PARMAR No 116 of 2015
AND IN THE MATTER OF RAMA PARMAR No 117 of 2015
Royal Courts of Justice Rolls Building |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE CHANCERY DIVISION)
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WAVE LENDING LIMITED |
Petitioner/Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) THAKORBHAI RANCHHODJI PARMAR (2) RAMA PARMAR |
Debtors/Appellants |
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Stuart Cutting (instructed by Moore Blatch) for the Respondents/Petitioners
Hearing date: 29 March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Martin Griffiths QC:
The facts
The issue
The law
"Subject to the next three sections, a creditor's petition may be presented to the court in respect of a debt or debts only if, at the time the petition is presented—
(a) the amount of the debt, or the aggregate amount of the debts, is equal to or exceeds [£5,000],
(b) the debt, or each of the debts, is for a liquidated sum payable to the petitioning creditor, or one or more of the petitioning creditors, either immediately or at some certain, future time, and is unsecured,
(c) 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, and
(d) there is no outstanding application to set aside a statutory demand served (under section 268 below) in respect of the debt or any of the debts."
Discussion
"269.— Creditor with security.
(1) 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—
(a) 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
(b) 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.
(2) 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."
Meaning of "liquidated sum"
"24. The first is that it does seem remarkable that a person from whom £1,000 has simply been stolen should be unable to present a bankruptcy petition (following a statutory demand), whereas a person with a £1,000 contract debt may do so, always assuming that there is not a bona fide defence to either claim on reasonable grounds. As Proudman J said in Truex v Toll [2009] 1 WLR 2121, 2129, the question whether a sum is liquidated and whether there is a defence of the claim are entirely separate issues.
25 Secondly, I have real doubt whether distinctions based on different causes of action (ie debt, account and payment, damages) satisfactorily address the purpose behind section 267(2)(b) of the Act, which seems to me to distinguish between cases where there is no issue as to the amount of a liability, and cases where some process of assessment by the court is necessary, before the amount can be identified. I can well understand that a claim for an account which depends upon the defendant providing disclosure as to the amount of an alleged secret profit cannot possibly be a claim for a liquidated sum. By contrast, a claim to recover stolen money, where the precise amount stolen is known by the claimant, seems to me in principle to be a claim for a liquidated sum, even though the form of action is one for account and payment."
"These authorities indicate and I think establish that a debt for a liquidated sum must be a pre-ascertained liability under the agreement which gives rise to it. This can include a contractual liability where the amount due is to be ascertained in accordance with a contractual formula or contractual machinery which, when operated, will produce a figure. Ex parte Ward (1882) 22 Ch D 132 is the obvious example of that. Claims in tort are invariably unliquidated because they require the assistance of a judicial process to ascertain the amount due by way of damages. In some cases the calculation of the award will be straightforward and obvious but the unliquidated nature of the claim excludes it from being a good petitioning creditor's debt which satisfies the requirements of s.267."
"In Re Broadhurst (1852) 22 LJ Bank 21, (1852) 42 ER 1145 the measure of liability under the contract was readily calculable but that did not make it a liquidated claim. As Maule J put it in his judgment, there was no specific sum engaged to be paid to the creditor."
Conclusion