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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Perpetual Trustee Company Ltd & Anor v BNY Corporate Trustee Services Ltd & Ors [2009] EWCA Civ 1160 (06 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1160.html Cite as: [2010] Bus LR 632, [2010] 3 WLR 87, [2010] Ch 347, [2010] BPIR 174, [2010] BCC 59, [2009] EWCA Civ 1160, [2010] 1 BCLC 747 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(The Rt Hon Sir Andrew Morritt, Chancellor)
(Claims Nos HC09CO1612 and HC09CO1931)
(The Hon Mr Justice Peter Smith)
Case No 10689/2009
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
____________________
PERPETUAL TRUSTEE COMPANY LIMITED BELMONT PARK INVESTMENTS PTY LIMITED |
Respondents Claimants |
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- and - |
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BNY CORPORATE TRUSTEE SERVICES LIMITED LEHMAN BROTHERS SPECIAL FINANCING INC |
Appellants Defendants |
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- AND - |
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(1) DANIEL FRANCIS BUTTERS (2) NEVILLE BARRY KAHN (3) NICHOLAS JAMES DARGAN (Joint Administrators of WW Realisation 8 Limited and Woolworths Group plc) |
Claimants Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) BBC WORLDWIDE LIMITED (2) 2 ENTERTAIN LIMITED (3) BBC VIDEO LIMITED |
Defendants Respondents |
____________________
Mr Gabriel Moss QC and Mr David Allison (instructed by Sidley Austin LLP) for Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd
Mr Richard Salter QC and Mr Jonathan Davies-Jones (instructed by Lawrence Graham LLP) for Belmont Park Investments Pty Ltd
Mr Stephen Midwinter (instructed by Lovells LLP) for BNY Corporate Trustee Services Ltd
Mr Richard Sheldon QC and Mr Barry Isaacs (instructed by Denton Wilde Sapte LLP) for Messrs Butters, Kahn and Dargan
Mr Mark Howard QC, Mr Daniel Jowell and Mr Mark Arnold (instructed by Olswang LLP) for BBC Worldwide Ltd
Mr Edmund Cullen (instructed by Wiggin LLP) for BBC Video Ltd
Hearing dates : 13th, 14th and 15th October 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Master of the Rolls :
Introductory
The facts in the Perpetual appeal
"(1) the issue of Notes ("the Notes") to investors by an SPV ("the issuer") formed by a Lehman company in a tax friendly jurisdiction;
(2) the purchase by the issuer with the subscription money paid for the Notes of government bonds or other secure investments ("the collateral") vested in a trust corporation;
(3) a swap agreement entered into by a Lehman company and the issuer under which the Lehman company paid the issuer the amounts due by the issuer to the Noteholders in exchange for sums equal to the yield on the collateral;
(4) the amount by which the sum payable under the swap agreement by the Lehman company exceeded the yield on the collateral represented the premium for the, in effect, credit insurance provided by the Noteholders;
(5) the amount payable by the Lehman company to the issuer on the maturity of the Notes (or on early redemption or termination) was the initial principal amount subscribed by the investors less amounts calculated by reference to events defined as credit events occurring during a specified period by reference to one or more reference entities, thereby giving effect to the effective insurance aspect of the programme;
(6) the collateral was charged by the issuer in favour of the trust corporation to secure its obligations to the Noteholders and the Lehman company on terms which changed their respective priorities on the occurrence of certain specified events, including the insolvency of the Lehman company,
(7) each of the transactions summarised above (except the purchase of the collateral) is governed by English law."
"The Trustee shall apply all moneys received by it under this Deed in connection with the realisation or enforcement of the Mortgaged Property as follows: Swap Counterparty Priority unless … an Event of Default … occurs under the Swap Agreement and the Swap Counterparty is the Defaulting Party…in which case Noteholder Priority shall apply."
"[LBSF] hereby agrees that, if an Event of Default … occurs under the Swap Agreement and [LBSF] is the Defaulting Party ....and Unwind Costs are payable by the Issuer to [LBSF], the Issuer shall apply the net proceeds from the sale or realisation of the Collateral first in redeeming the Notes in an amount as set out in the Conditions and thereafter in payment of such Unwind Costs to [LBSF]."
"If at any time an Event of Default with respect to a party (the "Defaulting Party") has occurred and is then continuing, the other party … may, by not more than 20 days notice to the Defaulting Party specifying the relevant Event of Default, designate a date not earlier than the day such notice is effective as an Early Termination Date in respect of outstanding transactions..."
(1) On 15 September 2008, LBHI filed for Chapter 11. As it was specified in Clause 10(iv) of the Swap Confirmation as the Credit Support Provider of LBSF, the filing constituted an Event of Default for the purposes of the swap agreements, by virtue of clause 5(a)(vii)(4) of the ISDA. Prima facie, that event gave rise to Noteholder Priority and triggered Condition 44.2.(2) From 15 September 2008, interest payments due under the Notes were not paid on their respective due dates and remain unpaid. Such non-payment also, at least prima facie, constituted an Event of Default by virtue of Condition 10 in Part C of Schedule 2 to the PTD.
(3) On 3 October 2008 LBSF filed for Chapter 11. Such filing also constituted an Event of Default for the purposes of the swap agreements, and, prima facie, gave rise to Noteholder Priority and triggered Condition 44.2.
(4) Between 28 November and 3 December 2008 the Noteholders gave notice to the Trustee in reliance on the Event of Default constituted by the filing for Chapter 11 effected by LBSF on 3 October 2008, designating 1 December 2008 as the Early Termination Date under clause 6(a) of the ISDA. The Trustee caused the issuer to serve swap termination notices in those terms on LBSF on 1 December 2008.
(5) On 8 May 2009 Perpetual passed extraordinary resolutions requiring the Trustee to serve notice on the issuer to the effect that the Notes were immediately due and requiring the Trustee to enforce its security.
The facts in the Butters appeal
"If [Media] or any parent undertaking of [Media] or (if [Media] is a member of [the Woolworths group]) [Group] suffers an Insolvency Event the following provisions shall apply:
26.7.1 [BBCW] may by written notice delivered to [Media] require [Media] to sell all … of the V Shares to them at Fair Value. If any notice is so given, [Media] shall be bound to sell, and [BBCW] shall be bound to buy, all of the V Shares. No notice under this clause 26.7 may be given after sixty … Business Days following the day on which [Media] notifies [BBCW] that it, any parent undertaking of it and/or [Group] has suffered an Insolvency Event.
26.7.2 In determining Fair Value for the purpose of this clause 26.7, the Investment Bank shall be directed to take into account the continuation (on the same or on different terms) or the termination in accordance with their terms as a consequence of the Insolvency Event in question of the agreements referred to in this clause 26.7 and the consequences of any such continuation or termination.
26.7.3 The provisions of clause 16.2.5 of the Master Licence shall apply.
….."
"If [Media] or any parent undertaking of [Media] or (if [Media] is a member of [the Woolworths group]) [Group], suffers an Insolvency Event and [BBCW] serve notice in accordance with the provisions of clause 26.7.1 of the Joint Venture Agreement (and become unconditionally bound to buy V Shares) this Agreement shall immediately terminate…".
The anti-deprivation rule
The 19th century and early 20th century authorities
"[T]he owner of property may, on alienation, qualify the interest of his alienee by a condition to take effect on bankruptcy; but cannot by contract or otherwise qualify his own interest by a like condition, determining or controlling it in the event of his own bankruptcy, to the disappointment or delay of his creditors. The jus disponendi, which for the first purpose is absolute, being, in the latter instance, subject to the disposition previously prescribed by law."
The House of Lords' decision in British Eagle [1975] 1 WLR 758
The Insolvency Act 1986
The ambit of the rule: general approach
The anti-deprivation rule and the Perpetual appeal
Was there any "deprivation" which fell within the anti-deprivation rule?
If there was a deprivation, does the rule apply in the light of the timing of the deprivation?
Differences relating to some of the other eleven issues of Notes
The anti-deprivation rule and the Butters appeal
Do clause 26.7 of the JVA and clause 16.2.5 of the MLA give rise to a deprivation?
Would the rule have applied as the deprivation was prior to Media's administration?
Concluding remarks on the rule
The effect of the grant of the temporary licence in the Butters case
Conclusion
Lord Justice Longmore :
Did the MLA come to an end in any event?
"We are writing to inform you that we have today served notice on [Media] in accordance with clause [26.7.1.] … The MLA has therefore terminated pursuant to clause 16.2.5 of the MLA, and all rights granted under or pursuant to the MLA have automatically reverted to us…
In the light of the termination of the MLA and the reversion of rights that has occurred in consequence, we hereby offer you a new licence containing the same terms as are contained in the MLA save that the "Term" of such licence shall also be terminable by either party on one month's written notice…this new licence will apply to all rights under licence under or pursuant to the MLA as at the date of its termination…
We will take the continued exploitation by 2e after today's date of rights previously granted as your acceptance of these offers of new licences…unless we hear from you to the contrary."
BBCV and 2e responded on 5 February 2009 by saying:-
"BBCW has further informed us that it has served notice on [Media] pursuant to clause 26.7.1. of the JVA, with the result that the MLA has terminated pursuant to clause 16.2.5.
We have also seen the offer of a new licence containing the same terms as the MLA, save that the Term shall be terminable by either party on one month's written notice with a sell-off provision…
In the light of the serious consequences of the termination of the MLA for the 2 entertain group of companies, the Directors of [BBC Video] and [2e] have concluded that it is appropriate to accept the BBCW Offer".
The Judge considered the correspondence and what he described as the "coy" evidence given on both sides in relation to the question whether the parties were aware that there were possible grounds for challenging the termination of the old licence. He concluded that both parties were aware there were possible grounds for challenge on the basis of "unfairness" (para 48) but (para 52) that Media and BBCV had no confidence in any such grounds when they were negotiating the new (temporary) licence. The Judge concluded that the MLA could not stand alongside the new licence but was supplanted by it and had governed the parties' relationship since February 2009 (para 54).
"… before one can turn to the rules as to mistake, whether at common law or equity, one must first determine whether the contract itself, by express or implied condition precedent or otherwise, provides who bears the risk of the relevant mistake. It is at this hurdle that many pleas of mistake will fail or prove to be unnecessary."
If there had been a condition precedent, argument about mistake is unnecessary. As it is, on the facts as found, the plea of mistake must fail.
Lord Justice Patten :
"When a liquidator takes over the property of a company in order to apply it according to law he may disregard an arrangement pursuant to which there would be application of the property contrary to law: but he cannot disregard or ignore or alter the features of and the nature of the property itself by describing it as something that genuinely it is not.
So in the present case if the defendant company had owed money to the plaintiff company but if there was a direction to the defendant company which required them in the event of a liquidation to pay the money to some particular persons rather than for the benefit of all the creditors the liquidator could prevent what would be an evasion of the law (see Ex parte Mackay (1873) 8 Ch. App. 643). But if an airline company makes a contract with a number of other airline companies (the contract being in no way colourable but made for commercially beneficial reasons) for the mutual rendering of services on the terms that no money is to become payable between the various parties inter se, I do not think that a liquidator while seeking to rely on and to extract a benefit from the contract can do so on the basis of ignoring or transforming some of its terms or on the basis of requiring a breach of its terms.
…….
I see no reason to think that the contracts which were entered into by the members of the clearing house offended against the principles of our insolvency laws. Services rendered before the end of September 1968 were as I have stated the subject of "clearances" within the scheme before the date of the liquidation. "Clearance" differs from "settlement" (see regulations B.12, 14 and 15) and "clearance" in regard to the September items was complete before November 8. Services rendered during October and the first few days of November were in my view rendered under perfectly lawful contracts which were made in the same way as contracts had been made for years past. Because of the terms of the contracts which were made the appellants had no claims against and no rights to sue other individual members of the clearing house. It is a general rule that a trustee or liquidator takes no better title to property than that which was possessed by a bankrupt or a company. In my view the liquidator in the present case cannot remould contracts which were validly made. He cannot assert or assume or surmise that different contracts could or might have been made and then advance claims on the basis that such different contracts had in fact been made."
"It is true that if the respondents are right the "clearing house" creditors will be treated as though they were creditors with valid charges on some of the book debts of British Eagle. But the parties to the "clearing house" arrangements did not intend to give one another charges on some of each other's future book debts. The documents were not drawn so as to create charges but simply so as to set up by simple contract a method of settling each other's mutual indebtedness at monthly intervals. Moreover, if the documents had purported to create such charges, the charges - as the judge saw (see [1973] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 433) - would have been unenforceable against the liquidator for want of registration under section 95 of the Companies Act 1948. The "clearing house" creditors are clearly not secured creditors. They are claiming nevertheless that they ought not to be treated in the liquidation as ordinary unsecured creditors but that they have achieved by the medium of the "clearing house" agreement a position analogous to that of secured creditors without the need for the creation and registration of charges on the book debts in question. The respondents argue that the position which, according to them, the clearing house creditors have achieved, though it may be anomalous and unfair to the general body of unsecured creditors, is not forbidden by any provision in the Companies Act, and that the power of the court to go behind agreements, the results of which are repugnant to our insolvency legislation, is confined to cases in which the parties' dominant purpose was to evade its operation. I cannot accept this argument. In Ex parte Mackay, 8 Ch.App. 643, the charge on this second half of the royalties was - so to say - an animal known to the law which on its face put the charge in the position of a secured creditor. The court could only go behind it if it was satisfied - as was indeed obvious in that case - that it had been created deliberately in order to provide for a different distribution of the insolvent's property on his bankruptcy from that prescribed by the law. But what the respondents are saying here is that the parties to the "clearing house" arrangements by agreeing that simple contract debts are to be satisfied in a particular way have succeeded in "contracting out" of the provisions contained in section 302 for the payment of unsecured debts "pari passu." In such a context it is to my mind irrelevant that the parties to the "clearing house" arrangements had good business reasons for entering into them and did not direct their minds to the question how the arrangements might be affected by the insolvency of one or more of the parties. Such a "contracting out" must, to my mind, be contrary to public policy. The question is, in essence, whether what was called in argument the "mini liquidation" flowing from the clearing house arrangements is to yield to or to prevail over the general liquidation. I cannot doubt, that on principle the rules of the general liquidation should prevail. I would therefore hold that notwithstanding the clearing house arrangements. British Eagle on its liquidation became entitled to recover payment of the sums payable to it by other airlines for services rendered by it during that period and that airlines which had rendered services to it during that period became on the liquidation entitled to prove for the sums payable to them. So, while dismissing the appeal so far as concerns the September clearance, I would allow it so far as concerns the period from October 1 to November 6."
"[76] …..
… There appear to be two strands of thought in this passage. One is that the Clearing House arrangements, as they then stood, so operated as to give British Eagle an asset, the money claim against Air France, and that in the face of the mandatory operation of s 302 of the Companies Act 1948 (UK), this asset could not be captured for the netting-off system. This conclusion would flow from the operation of s 302 and would be analogous to the situation in Re Jeavons, ex parte Mackay discussed above. No recourse to 'public policy' would be called for. The second strand of thought is apparent in the references to 'mini liquidation', 'contracting out' and 'public policy'. But the critical point is that there was 'property' of British Eagle to which s 302 applied and a contractual provision negating that outcome could not prevail against the terms of the statute. Hence it perhaps is not surprising that Lord Cross did not spell out the content of any relevant public policy.
[77] Subsequently, however, in Horne v Chester & Fein Property Developments Pty Ltd [1987] VR 913, at 919, the rule was expressed as being that, 'in insolvency law, the whole of the debtor's estate should be available for distribution to all creditors, and that no one creditor or group of creditors can lawfully contract in such a manner as to defeat other creditors not parties to the contract' (emphasis added). And Ansett submitted that this formulation of the rule captures the essence of a public policy said to have been recognised and applied as a 'fundamental tenet of insolvency law generally' in various common law jurisdictions.
[78] It is not necessary to examine in any detail the several cases in which the rule is said to have been recognised and applied. Many can be understood as depending upon the proper application of a generally expressed provision in the relevant statute requiring that all debts proved in an insolvency rank equally and, if the property of the insolvent is insufficient to meet them in full, they are to be paid proportionately, See, for example, Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (the Corporations Act), s 555. Others, including British Eagle, turned upon what was the 'property' of the company that was to be applied in satisfaction of its liabilities (Companies Act 1948 (UK), s 302; cf the Corporations Act, s 478). Instead, it is essential to begin from the elementary proposition that insolvency law is statutory and primacy must be given to the relevant statutory text.
[79] Whether the whole of the debtor's estate is available for distribution to all creditors, and whether all creditors are to participate equally in the distribution of that estate, are questions that depend entirely upon what the relevant statute provides. What is advanced as a rule of public policy assumes that there can be both an affirmative and a negative answer to each of those questions. To the extent that the rule of public policy depends upon there being universal and invariable rules that the whole estate is available to all creditors and all creditors are entitled to participate equally, the rule of public policy depends upon an affirmative answer to both of the identified questions. Yet by asserting that the public policy achieves what the statute otherwise does not achieve, the rule assumes that the questions identified have been answered in the negative. This contradiction suggests that the rule that is asserted is unsound."
"Thus the principle that I would extract from that case is that where the effect of a contract is that an asset which is actually owned by a company at the commencement of its liquidation would be dealt with in a way other than in accordance with section 302 of the Companies Act 1948, then to that extent the contract as a matter of public policy is avoided, whether or not the contract was entered into for consideration and for bona fide commercial reasons and whether or not the contractual provision affecting that asset is expressed to take effect only on insolvency."
"(1) The discretion vested in the court by s 522 is entirely at large, subject to the general principles which apply to any kind of discretion, and subject also to limitation that the discretion must be exercised in 'the context of the liquidation provisions of the statute.
(2) The basic principle of law governing the liquidation of insolvent estates, whether in bankruptcy or under the companies' legislation, is that the assets of the insolvent at the time of the commencement of the liquidation will be distributed pari passu among the insolvent's unsecured creditors as at the date of the bankruptcy.
In a company's compulsory liquidation this is achieved by s 227 of the 1948 Act (now s.127 of the Insolvency Act 1986 of the current legislation).
(3) There are occasions, however, when it may be beneficial not only for the company but also for the unsecured creditors, that the company should be able to dispose of some of its property during the period after the petition has been presented, but before the winding-up order has been made. Thus, it may sometimes be beneficial to the company and its creditors that the company should be able to continue the business in its ordinary course.
(4) In considering whether to make a validating order, the court must always do its best to ensure that the interests of the unsecured creditors will not be prejudiced.
(5) The desirability of the company being enabled to carry on its business was often speculative. In each case the court must carry out a balancing exercise.
(6) The court should not validate any transaction or series of transactions which might result in one or more pre-liquidation creditors being paid in full at the expense of other creditors, who will only receive a dividend, in the absence of special circumstances making such a course desirable in the interest of the creditors generally. If, for example, it were in the interests of the creditors generally that the company's business should be carried on, and this could only be achieved by paying for goods already supplied to the company when the petition is presented (but not yet paid for) the court might exercise its discretion to validate payments for those goods.
(7) A disposition carried out in good faith in the ordinary course of business at a time when the parties were unaware that a petition had been presented would usually be validated by the court unless there is ground for thinking that the transaction may involve an attempt to prefer the disponee – in which case the transaction would not be validated.
(8) Despite the strength of the principle of securing pari passu distribution, the principle has no application to post-liquidation creditors; for example, the sale of an asset at full market value after the presentation of the petition. That is because such a transaction involves no dissipation of the company's assets for it does not reduce the value of its assets."
"26.7.2 In determining Fair Value for the purpose of this clause 26.7, the Investment Bank shall be directed to take into account the continuation (on the same or on different terms) or the termination in accordance with their terms as a consequence of the Insolvency Event in question of the agreements referred to in this clause 26.7 and the consequences of any such continuation or termination.
26.7.3 The provisions of clause 16.2.5 of the Master Licence shall apply."
"114. In my view clause 26.7.3 of the JVA and its linkage to clause 16.2.5 of the MLA inevitably means that upon insolvency of any of the companies in the Woolworths Group that provision enables BBCW to acquire the shares at less than the Fair Value price that would have appertained but for the Insolvency Event. That in my view is a classic situation where the deprivation principle would apply. It does not matter in my view that it was a negotiated provision nor does it matter that it was not intended to be the effect nor does it matter that the Insolvency Event relied upon is not connected (as BBCW would argue) with the insolvency of Media.
115. It would have been otherwise in my view if the two agreements had not been linked. Thus for example if clause 16.2.5 had removed from it the linkage to the Notice so it became a general insolvency clause this would not pose a difficulty to BBCW. In that eventuality in my view the deprivation principle would have no application. The reason for that is that the MLA would have a standard provision for termination on insolvency. It has long been the case that such a provision is not subject to the deprivation principle see Neuberger J above. Mr Sheldon QC initially accepted that was the case even if the Insolvency Event was a different company within the group. He later resiled from that proposition and said it would only be a normal provision if the insolvency was the party to the MLA. I do not accept that. There are compelling reasons why the Insolvency Event would be triggered for any company within the group. That too in my view is not an unusual provision it merely reflects refinement of the clause over the years to deal with the possibility of the contracting company being kept alive artificially while all the other companies in the group collapse around it to avoid the determination provision. Thus if the clause read:-
"If a holder of [Media's shares] or any parent undertaking of a holder of [Media's shares] or if the holder of [Media's shares] is a member of the Woolworths Group as defined in the Joint Venture Agreement Woolworths suffers an Insolvency Event ……this Agreement should immediately terminate….."
116. That of course is not the agreement that was negotiated between the parties. I have no power to renegotiate the agreement. Thus it is of no assistance to BBCW to argue that the clause reflects the ordinary provision that on insolvency BBCW will have the right to terminate the MLA (per BBCW's supplemental note paragraph 7). I fully accept the gestation of the clause and why BBCW would consider it unfair in effect to have to "buy back" its own rights. However one is concerned as Neuberger J sets out above with the consequences of the operation of the clause in the facts of the case. The consequence is inevitable namely that as a determination only takes effect on the insolvency and the giving of the Notice its sole purpose is to produce a termination of the MLA for the purposes of calculating the Fair Value in the light of the Notice given by the BBCW. Nobody could expect that clause operating that way to achieve anything other than a reduced price in my view. It is self evident that 2e does not have much of a business if the MLA is terminated.
117. As I said in argument (and this is relevant to a further part of my judgment) the reality is that the situation has come about by a drafting problem. There would have been no reason why the agreed terms of the parties could not have been achieved by redrawing clause 16.2.5 of the MLA as set out above. Thus the application of the deprivation principle has an unintended consequence. I cannot believe that either BBCW or Media ever contemplated that there would be some principle that would prevent their freely negotiated agreement coming into effect.
118. I therefore nevertheless conclude that clause 16.2.5 and the linkage to the JVA by clause 26.7.3 is also void. They both together infringe the deprivation principle.
119. Finally, the fact that the event which causes the problem (clause 16.2.5 of the MLA) is in a document to which Media is not a party is in my view irrelevant. One looks at the facts, one looks at the events and if the consequence is that an asset is removed from the availability for the creditors at a lesser value than otherwise it would have been then the deprivation principle is infringed. Support for this is to be found in the Hong Kong Court of Appeal decision provided by Mr Sheldon QC in Peregrine Investments Holdings Ltd (In liquidation) & Ors v Asian Infrastructure Fund Management Company Ltd LDC & Ors CACV 32/203 at paragraph 87."
"I have no doubt, therefore, whether, on general principle, or on the construction of the deeds, that the law of this case is, that the partnership was dissolved by bankruptcy; and the property must be divided as in the ordinary event of dissolution without special provision. The consequence is, that the assignees of the bankrupt partner are become, quoad his interest, tenants in common with the solvent partner; and the Court must then apply the principle on which it proceeds in all cases, where some members of a partnership seek to exclude others from that share to which they are entitled, either in carrying on the concern, or in winding it up, when it becomes necessary to sell the property, with all the advantages relative to good will, &c."
"…the law is too clearly settled to admit of a shadow of doubt that no person possessed of property can reserve that property to himself until he shall become bankrupt, and then provide that, in the event of his becoming bankrupt, it shall pass to another and not to his creditors."
"I entertain no doubt that there is a good charge upon one moiety of the royalties, because they are part of the property and effects of the bankrupt. But, on the other hand, it is equally clear to me that the charge cannot extend to the other moiety. If it were to be permitted that one creditor should obtain a preference in this way by some particular security, I confess I do not see why it might not be done in every case - why, in fact, every article sold to a bankrupt should not be sold under the stipulation that the price should be doubled in the event of his becoming bankrupt.
It is contended that a creditor has a right to sell on these terms; but in my opinion a man is not allowed, by stipulation with a creditor, to provide for a different distribution of his effects in the event of bankruptcy from that which the law provides. It appears to me that this is a clear attempt to evade the operation of the bankruptcy laws. The result is that the order will be varied so as to declare that there is a security on one moiety only."
"… it appears to me that it is governed by the decisions of this Court in Ex parte Mackay and Ex parte Williams , which only followed much older decisions. The principle of those decisions is this, that a simple stipulation that, upon a man's becoming bankrupt, that which was his property up to the date of the bankruptcy should go over to some one else and be taken away from his creditors, is void as being a violation of the policy of the bankrupt law. Now that we have all the facts before us, I think we cannot escape from applying that principle to the present case. According to the debtor's own evidence everything that he was bound to do under the agreement had been performed by him up to the date of the bankruptcy, and therefore no right was vested in the lessor except by virtue of the bankruptcy. Her title is founded only on the stipulation that in the event of the builder's bankruptcy the materials which had been placed on the land should become her property. It seems to me impossible to distinguish the case from those authorities to which I have referred."
"I am of the same opinion. This case is governed by the decision of Lord Eldon in Higinbotham v. Holme , that there cannot be a valid contract that a man's property shall remain his until his bankruptcy, and on the happening of that event shall go over to some one else, and be taken away from his creditors. Here the forfeiture is to take place on the happening of either of two events. There is no stipulation as to the mode in which the lessor shall use the materials when they become forfeited to her. One of the two events is not hit by the decided cases. But, as to the other, though the contract is good as between the parties to it, it is on principle void in the event of the builder's bankruptcy."
"… it is immaterial at what particular moment the seizure was made. The broad general principle is that the trustee in a bankruptcy takes all the bankrupt's property, but takes it subject to all the liabilities which affected it in the bankrupt's hands, unless the property which he takes as the legal personal representative of the bankrupt is added to by some express provision of the bankrupt law. There is no such provision applicable to the present case. The building agreement provides, in effect, that in a certain event certain property of the builder may be taken by the landowner in full satisfaction of the agreement. It appears to me analogous to a sale of property with a power of repurchase in a certain event. I am of opinion that this point fails like the others. I think that the Judge of the County Court has miscarried, and that the Bills of Sale Act does not apply, and I am of opinion that the landowner is entitled at Law and in Equity, as he certainly is morally, to the benefit of the stipulation in the agreement."
"33. In the first place, the anti-deprivation policy looks to whether a person can insist on retaining an unfair advantage to himself at the expense of creditors in a bankruptcy. In any event, whether it is the insolvent himself, or itself, who disposes of his property or its value to the detriment of the creditors or whether it is a trustee of the insolvent's property or whether it is whoever is in charge of the insolvent's asset or the maintenance of the value of an asset for the ultimate benefit of the insolvent (in this case the directors of PII whose duty it was to maintain the value of PII for the ultimate benefit of PIH), matters not. It is the dealing with property the benefit of which the insolvent is ultimately entitled to and the diminution of the value therein that is important."
"86. Mr Thomas' argument is that if the property deprived is not the property of the insolvent company the anti-deprivation principle does not normally apply, because there is no deprivation. This is tantamount to saying that since the property that is disposed of is not within the reach of section 182 of the Companies Ordinance because it is not legally vested in the insolvent company, the common law anti-deprivation principle similarly has no application. In my view, however, if the subject matter is an asset of the company, although not strictly property of the company within the ambit of section 182, if the effect of a contractual provision is to deprive the company of it or reduce its value to the detriment of the company's general creditors in insolvent liquidation, that must equally be contrary to the public policy of equitable and fair distribution amongst unsecured creditors in insolvency.
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106. It was, indeed, based on the separate legal personality of companies that the judge rejected the plaintiffs' case that PII was the nominee or bare trustee of PIH in PII's holding of the Shares. However, Mr Tong stresses that he is not asking this Court to pierce the corporate veil. He is relying on the fact that the Shares held by PII were an asset of PVC and in turn an asset of PIH, which would but for clause 14 be available for pari passu distribution to PIH's general creditors. Clause 14 had the effect of diminishing the value of the asset to the detriment of the creditors. The court does not pierce the corporate veil to give effect to the anti-deprivation principle in striking down clause 14. I agree."
"148. It is clear that the rationale of principle is to ensure that the assets of an insolvent is made available for distribution to its creditors who will share it on an equal footing. I am happy to accept that this is a matter of public policy in light of the insolvency law. But what is equally clear is that this public policy is developed from a situation of an insolvent making provisions prior to his insolvency in respect his own property. In such a situation the public policy will interfere and set aside the transaction made pursuant to the arrangement of the insolvent and another party. This is no doubt a drastic measure but is nonetheless an acceptable one because the court is only interfering with an arrangement that had been made personally by the insolvent who had put his assets out of the reach of the creditors.
149. However, there has never been a case, like the present case, where the insolvent had not made an arrangement in respect of his own property and yet the principle was nonetheless applied. Although in both Higinbotham and MacKay there were statements which seemed to refer to a wider principle that no one can have the benefit from a contract that is a fraud on the bankruptcy law, the courts there were really concerned with an arrangement made by the bankrupt himself. These statements were made in respect of the corollary of the situation, namely, how the other party to the transaction would be affected when there was a fraud of the bankruptcy laws. The courts held that they could not take the benefit of the arrangement. They were not propounding a free standing principle which would apply whenever the property of a bankrupt is affected as a result of his bankruptcy irrespective of whether the bankrupt has made the arrangement himself or not.
150. Likewise the cases on the disposal of the insolvent's assets at an undervalue were merely illustrations of the original principle. They did not articulate a free standing wide principle which is to be applied as soon as the value of the insolvent's property is affected by an arrangement not entered into by him personally."