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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 >> Boyle & Ors v Collins & Ors [2004] EWHC 271 (Ch) (18 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/271.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 271 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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JOHN BOYLE DENIS MULLIGAN TERRY JENKINS PETER BIRDSEYE |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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PETER COLLINS PATRICK BRIDE HENRY NIBLOCK |
Defendants |
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Marilyn Kennedy-McGregor (instructed by Machins) for the First Defendant
Sidney Ross (instructed by Machins) for the Second Defendant
Nigel Meares (instructed by Machins ) for the Third Defendant
Hearing date : 12th February 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison :
Introduction
"Any member who has not paid his subscription 28 days after it has become due shall cease to be a member.The committee, on receiving information that any member is unable to pay his subscription owing to want of work or other good cause, may, at its discretion, excuse payment of such member's subscription for such period as they think fit and the member shall not forfeit the privileges of membership."
"Except by the dissolution of the club, no profits or funds of the club shall be distributed amongst the members."
"The club may at any time be dissolved by the consent of three-fourths of the members, testified by their signatures on an instrument of dissolution in the form provided by Treasury Regulations, or by winding up in manner provided by the Industrial and Provident Societies Acts"
"Of course, no one locally paid any subscriptions after 1997, because there was no one to send them to, and nowhere to take them. However, I know that several members no longer living in Luton sent in cheques in early 1998 to renew their subscriptions and they were returned."
The Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1965
"A registered society shall by virtue of its registration be a body corporate by its registered name, by which it may sue and be sued, with perpetual succession and a common seal and with limited liability; and that registration shall vest in the society all property for the time being vested in any person in trust for the society, and all legal proceedings pending by or against the trustees of the society may be brought or continued by or against the society in its registered name."
"Subject to section 59 of this Act, a registered society may be dissolved—(a) on its being wound up in pursuance of an order or resolution made as is directed in regard to companies by the Insolvency Act 1986, the provisions whereof shall apply to that order or resolution as if the society were a company, but subject to the following modifications, that is to say—
(i) any reference in those provisions to the registrar within the meaning of that Act shall for the purposes of the society's winding up be construed as a reference to the appropriate registrar within the meaning of this Act.; …
or
(b) in accordance with section 58 of this Act, by an instrument of dissolution to which not less than three-fourths of the members of the society have given their consent testified by their signatures to the instrument."
"Where a registered society is to be dissolved in accordance with section 55 of this Act, … the society shall not be dissolved, and the registration of the society shall not be cancelled, until there has been lodged with the appropriate registrar a certificate signed by the liquidator or by the secretary or some other officer of the society approved by that registrar that all property vested in the society has been duly conveyed or transferred by the society to the persons entitled."
"As from the date of the publication in the Gazette under subsection (6) of this section of notice of the cancellation of a society's registration, the society shall absolutely cease to be entitled to any of the privileges of this Act as a registered society, but without prejudice to any liability actually incurred by the society which may be enforced against it as if the cancellation had not taken place."
How is a registered industrial and provident society dissolved?
"In my judgment there are at least four categories of cases in which an unregistered friendly society or benevolent fund, of the sort which I am considering, is to be regarded as dissolved or terminated so as to render the unspent assets distributable in some direction. The most obvious case is the occurrence of an event upon the happening of which the rules prescribe dissolution or termination. … A second type of case is where all interested parties agree. A third case is where the court orders dissolution in the exercise of its inherent jurisdiction. … A fourth category of case, in my view, is where the substratum upon which the society or fund was founded has gone. In such a case the society or fund is treated as dissolved or terminated, without any order of the court, when it has no effective purpose, with the result that the surplus assets (if not bona vacantia) are divisible among the then members."
"As a matter of principle I would hold that it is perfectly possible for a club to be dissolved spontaneously."
"The society is only the aggregation of those individuals, and the property of the former is the property of the latter."
"It is an implied term of the contract of membership of a members' club that an individual member is precluded from obtaining the realisation and distribution of the club property so long as the club functions. But once the club ceases to function the reason for this disappears and the right of the existing members must, I think, crystallise once and for all."
"For myself, I would hesitate a little about the use of the phrase "substratum has gone" in this context. It has a beguiling sound; but it has strong overtones of the Companies Court. There, it may form the basis of a winding up order, but it does not by itself initiate or complete the termination of the existence of the company. It therefore seems not altogether appropriate for establishing that there has been a spontaneous dissolution."
"The registration of a society may be cancelled or suspended. Such cancellation or suspension does not destroy the society, but only deprives it of and relieves it from the privileges and obligations which follow from registration. It can continue its existence so long as it does not infringe the provisions of s. 1, sub-s. 2, of the Companies Consolidation Act, 1908."
When did the society cease to exist?
"I do not think that mere inactivity is enough: a club may do little or nothing for a long period, and yet continue in existence. A cataleptic trance may look like death without being death. But inactivity may be so prolonged or so circumstanced that the only reasonable inference is that the club has become dissolved. In such cases there may be difficulty in determining the punctum temporis of dissolution: the less activity there is, the greater the difficulty of fastening upon one date rather than another as the moment of dissolution. In such cases the court must do the best it can by picking a reasonable date somewhere between the time when the club could still be said to exist, and the time when its existence had clearly come to an end."
"On that date, the position was that the club had ceased to operate as a club for several months. The picture was not one of mere inactivity alone; there were positive acts towards the winding up of the club. The sale of the club's stock of drinks was one instance, and others were the ending of the registration for VAT, and the dismissal of the steward. The cessation of any club activities, the ending of the use of the sports ground and the abandonment of preparing accounts or issuing membership cards were all in one sense examples of inactivity; but I think that there was in all probability some element of deliberation in these matters, and not a mere inertia. In Mr. Sher's phrase, there was a systematic dismantling of the club and its activities.However that may be, the resolution to sell the sports ground seems to me to conclude the matter. Having taken all steps, active or passive, required to terminate the activities of the club, short of passing a formal resolution to wind it up or dissolve it, the general meeting of the club resolved to sell the club's last asset. There are some questions about the validity or effectiveness of the resolutions passed at the meeting, and I shall consider these in a moment; but even if the resolutions were invalid, I would reach the same conclusion."
Who is entitled to participate in the distribution?
"I should have thought that where it becomes impossible for the time being to carry on the activities of a club, e.g., as a result of destruction of the club premises, the trustees or committee must have an implied power to suspend or reduce subscriptions; and that if they do so - whether by formal resolution or by conduct - it could not fairly be said that the full subscriptions become due for the purpose of an expulsive provision. I will not pursue the point, because, on the view that I have taken it does not arise in this present case."
"Then the second defendant calls in aid rule 4. It is said by reason of the last words of rule 4 that it is open to the committee to decide that there are extenuating circumstances, and that it will be so open to the committee until the dissolution of the association. It is not, however, suggested - nor do I see how it can be suggested in view of the explicit wording of the opening passage of rule 4 - that a member remains a member after the month in arrears, even though the committee had not in the meantime approved of extenuating circumstances within the meaning of the closing words of that rule. So the short and sufficient answer to this argument is that no extenuating circumstances have been approved by the committee under rule 4, and, therefore, the member in arrears has ceased to be a member. It may well be that the extenuating circumstances have to be approved within the month mentioned in rule 4, or within some other time limit, such as within a reasonable time: but there is no need in this case to express a view on that because the second defendant, in my view, was clearly not a member when the property was sold, nor is he a member now.I may add that although the association was inactive from 1961, there is no suggestion at all that there were not appropriate means of rents being received on behalf of the association, and the contrary seems established by the evidence."
Administrative matters