[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Perkier Foods Ltd v Halo Foods Ltd [2019] EWHC 292 (QB) (21 February 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/292.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 292 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
PERKIER FOODS LIMITED |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
HALO FOODS LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Stephen Brown (instructed by RDP Law Limited) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 6th February 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Blair QC :
Background
"I refer to the Manufacturing Agreement between Perkier Foods Limited and Halo Foods Limited dated 5 July 2017 (the "Agreement").
"This letter constitutes written notice of immediate termination of the agreement pursuant to clause 10.2.d."
The preliminary question
"(1) A company is deemed unable to pay its debts—
(a) if a creditor (by assignment or otherwise) to whom the company is indebted in a sum exceeding £750 then due has served on the company, by leaving it at the company's registered office, a written demand (in the prescribed form) requiring the company to pay the sum so due and the company has for 3 weeks thereafter neglected to pay the sum or to secure or compound for it to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor, or
(b) if, in England and Wales, execution or other process issued on a judgment, decree or order of any court in favour of a creditor of the company is returned unsatisfied in whole or in part, or…
…(e) if it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the company is unable to pay its debts as they fall due.
(2) A company is also deemed unable to pay its debts if it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the value of the company's assets is less than the amount of its liabilities, taking into account its contingent and prospective liabilities.
(3) The money sum for the time being specified in subsection (1)(a) is subject to increase or reduction by order under section 416 in Part XV."
"…the "cash-flow" test is concerned, not simply with the petitioner's own presently due debt, nor only with other presently due debt owed by the company, but also with debts falling due from time to time in the reasonably near future. What is the reasonably near future, for this purpose, will depend on all the circumstances, but especially on the nature of the company's business."
"…The express reference to assets and liabilities is in my view a practical recognition that once the court has to move beyond the reasonably near future (the length of which depends, again, on all the circumstances) any attempt to apply a cash-flow test will become completely speculative, and a comparison of present assets with present and future liabilities (discounted for contingencies and deferment) becomes the only sensible test. But it is still very far from an exact test, and the burden of proof must be on the party which asserts balance sheet insolvency..." [my emphasis.]
"Essentially, s.123(2) requires the court to make a judgment whether it has been established that, looking at the company's assets and making proper allowance for its prospective and contingent liabilities, it cannot reasonably be expected to be able to meet those liabilities. If so, it will be deemed insolvent although it is currently able to pays its debts as they fall due. The more distant the liabilities, the harder this will be to establish." [my emphasis.]
"…(iii) The cash-flow test and the balance-sheet test stand side by side: para [35]. The balance-sheet test, especially when applied to contingent and prospective liabilities is not a mechanical test: para [30]. The express reference to assets and liabilities is a practical recognition that once the court has to move beyond the reasonably near future any attempt to apply a cash-flow test will become completely speculative and a comparison of present assets with present and future liabilities (discounted for contingencies and deferment) becomes the only sensible test: para [37]."
"(iv) But it is very far from an exact test: para [37]. Whether the balance-sheet test is satisfied depends on the available evidence as to the circumstances of the particular case: para [38]. It requires the court to make a judgment whether it has been established that, looking at the company's assets and making proper allowance for its prospective and contingent liabilities, it cannot reasonably be expected to meet those liabilities. If so, it will be deemed insolvent even though it is currently able to pay its debts as they fall due: para [42]."
And at [28]:
"In the course of his judgment in Eurosail Lord Walker approved what he described as the 'perceptive judgment' of Briggs J in Re Cheyne Finance plc [2007] EWHC 2402 (Ch), [2008] 1 BCLC 741. Two of the points that Briggs J made bear on our case:
"(i) Cash-flow solvency or insolvency is not to be ascertained by a blinkered focus on debts due at the relevant date. Such an approach will in some cases fail to see that a momentary inability to pay is only the result of temporary illiquidity. In other cases it will fail to see that an endemic shortage of working capital means that a company is on any commercial view insolvent, even though it may continue to pay its debts for the next few days, weeks, or even months: para [51].
"(ii) Even if a company is not cash-flow insolvent, the alternative balance-sheet test will afford a petitioner for winding up a convenient alternative means of proof of a deemed insolvency: para [57]."
(A) Serious issue to be tried - re: an injunction prohibiting a credit limit
a term would be implied into a detailed commercial contract only if that were necessary to give the contract business efficacy or was so obvious that it went without saying; that the implication of a term was not critically dependent on proof of an actual intention of the parties when negotiating the contract but was concerned with what notional reasonable people, in the position of the parties at the time at which they had been contracting, would have agreed; and that it was a necessary but not sufficient condition for implying a term that it appeared fair or that the court considered that the parties would have agreed it if it had been suggested to them.
(B) Serious issue to be tried/a high degree of assurance that Applicant will establish his right re: a mandatory injunction to manufacture Bites under the Manufacturing Agreement
"In both cases, the underlying principle is the same, namely, that the court should take whichever course seems likely to cause the least irremediable prejudice to one party or the other: see Lord Jauncey [Ex p Factortame (No 2)]...What is true is that the features which would ordinarily justify describing an injunction as mandatory are often more likely to cause irremediable prejudice than in cases in which a defendant is merely prevented from taking or continuing with some course of action."
The inadequacy of damages as a remedy to either side
Other considerations