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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 >> International Brands USA Inc v Goldstein & Anor [2005] EWHC 1293 (Ch) (23 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1293.html Cite as: [2006] 1 BCLC 294, [2005] EWHC 1293 (Ch), [2005] BPIR 1455, [2007] BCC 960 |
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2567 of 2004 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
in the matter of Shruth Limited (in creditor's voluntary liquidation)
and in the matter of the Insolvency Act 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Between : |
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International Brands USA Inc |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Mark Stephen Goldstein Shruth Limited (in creditors' voluntary liquidation) |
Respondents |
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AND |
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International Brands USA Inc Interbrands Inc |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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Julian Haswell Mark Stephen Goldstein Shruth Limited |
Respondents |
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(instructed by Messrs Halliwells) for the Applicants
Ms Marianne Perkins (instructed by Messrs Stephenson Harwood) for Mr Goldstein
Mr John Briggs (instructed by Messrs Collyer Bristow) for Mr Haswell
Hearing dates: 17th and 18th March 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Gloster, DBE:
Parties
The applications
The US proceedings
i) advertising and promotional expenses for the Company's products during the period 1999-2001, less profits from sales in that period, in the sum of US$ 1,224,324.00;
ii) amounts due under credit invoices numbers 715 and 716 for goods returned in the sum of US$ 37,903.64;
iii) advance payment for bulk whisky less purchase price for 1,200 cases of Clubhouse Scotch whisky delivered to the Applicants in the sum of US$ 6,801;
iv) legal fees and expenses in the sum of US$ 236,579.89.
i) without counsel the Company was not permitted to represent itself;
ii) if the motion to withdraw were upheld and no new counsel were retained, then it was very likely that a default judgment would be entered against the Company;
iii) the effect of the entry of a default would be that there would be judgment on liability for the Applicants and that the Company's counterclaims would be dismissed; and
iv) there would then be a hearing for the quantification of damages based upon the evidence of the applicants, which the Company would not attend; the Company would therefore not be in a position to challenge the damages estimate of US$ 1,505,608.53 submitted by the Applicants.
The letter from the US attorneys also confirmed a conversation with Mr Goldstein that the Company would not be arranging for the attendance at the trial nor would it pay legal fees for the preparation of the Company's case.
The section 98 meeting
The r4.70 application
i) to reverse the decision of Mr Haswell as chairman of the section 98 meeting rejecting their proof (in part) for voting purposes;
ii) to remove Mr Goldstein as liquidator pursuant to sections 108 and 171 of the Act; and/or
iii) to have the section 98 meeting reconvened for the purpose of passing a resolution for the appointment of a new liquidator.
i) I would have allowed an appeal against the Registrar's order on the grounds that his decision on the preliminary or threshold point was wrong. Having allowed Mr Mulligan to vote in place of Mr Grant in respect of the limited amount of £17,876, it was not open to Mr Haswell (or indeed the court) retrospectively to assert that Mr Mulligan could not have voted for the full amount. In the circumstances here (but, of course, not always), the identity of the proxy was in fact a procedural matter of absolutely no significance; the fact that neither Mr Goldstein nor Mr Haswell appreciated that Mr Mulligan was not Mr Grant is irrelevant. Moreover, any requirement as to the identity of the proxy was waived, since no requirement was stipulated at the meeting that Mr Mulligan should produce identification to prove that he was the duly appointed proxy of Mr Grant, and he was nonetheless allowed to vote. Alternatively, the Company, Mr Haswell, the chairman, and the liquidator, Mr Goldstein, are estopped from relying on the point. If authority is needed for these propositions, it is to be found in Secretary of State for Trade & Industry v Langridge [1991] Ch 402; and in Marx –v- Estates and General Investments Limited [1976] 1 WLR 380.
ii) I would then have held that, as at the date of the section 98 meeting, before judgment had been obtained, Mr Haswell, as chairman of the meeting, was entitled, pursuant to r4.70(2) and (4) to reject that part of the Applicants' claim in the sterling equivalent of £813,842.45 as representing unliquidated damages of £795,166.45. That figure represented the total amount of the claim less the agreed credit notes of £17,876. In this respect I accept the submissions of Mr John Briggs, who appeared on behalf of Mr Haswell, that as at 26 March 2004, prior to the judgment in US proceedings, the damages for alleged breach of the distributor's agreement was an unliquidated claim.
iii) I also accept Mr Briggs' submission that, in rejecting the claim, Mr Haswell was exercising his right under r4.67(3) to reject a claim for an unliquidated amount (in the absence of agreement) and was not operating subject to the obligation imposed by r4.70(3) to mark a proof as objected to, but allow the creditor to vote, in circumstances where he was in doubt whether the proof should be admitted or rejected.
The r4.83 application appealing Mr Goldstein's decision to reject the proof for dividend purposes
i) there was no evidence that the debt was founded on a real debt;
ii) the US judgment was not conclusive in light of the fact that the Company could not defend the proceedings and so the US Court had to decide damages but not disputes of fact;
iii) there was no evidence of a distribution agreement;
iv) the proof was lodged on behalf of both International Brands and Interbrands, and the Company had had no dealings with International Brands.
i) the US judgment is a default judgment, which did not consider issues of fact;
ii) he was aware of a counterclaim;
iii) there was no evidence of a distribution agreement other than the appointment letter of 2 August 1989;
iv) Mr Haswell informed him that the Company had had no dealings with International Brands.
The law relating to a liquidator's power to go behind a judgment
"(1) A court exercising the bankruptcy jurisdiction ('a bankruptcy court') although it will treat a judgment for a sum of money as prima facie evidence that the judgment debtor is indebted to the judgment creditor for that sum may, in appropriate circumstances, go behind the judgment, that is to say, inquire into the circumstances in which the judgment was obtained and, if satisfied that those circumstances warrant such a course, treat it as not creating or evidencing any debt enforceable in bankruptcy proceedings.
(2) The reason for the existence of that power of a bankruptcy court is that such a court is concerned not only with the interests of the judgment creditor and of the judgment debtor, but also with the interest of the other creditors of the judgment debtor. The point was succinctly made by James LJ in Ex Parte Kibble, Re Onslow (1875) LR 10 Ch App at pp 376-377 …
(3) It follows that the grounds upon which a bankruptcy court may go behind a judgment are more extensive than the grounds upon which an ordinary court of law or equity may set it aside.
(4) In particular, a bankruptcy court will go behind a judgment if satisfied that the judgment creditor manifestly had no claim against the judgment debtor upon which the judgment could have been founded. Thus, in Ex Parte Kibble the court went behind a judgment obtained by default which was founded on a bill of exchange drawn by the debtor during his infancy. In Ex Parte Banner, Re Blythe (1881) 17 Ch D 480 it went behind a judgment giving effect to a compromise of an action brought by one party to a fraud against the other party to it for the fruits of it. Re Lennox, ex parte Lennox (1885) 16 QBD 315 was a somewhat similar case. In that case the court ordered an inquiry into the facts because the debtor, who had submitted to judgment, tendered evidence to the effect that the debt on which the judgment was founded never really existed but was based on the fraud of the creditor. Lastly, in Re Fraser (above) the court went behind a judgment obtained by the holders of a bill of exchange against a former partner in the firm in whose name the bill had been accepted. He was not liable on the bill, but his defence to an action on the bill had been so ineptly conducted that judgment had been obtained against him under Ord 14 and that an application made on his behalf for the judgment to the set aside had failed.
(5) There are two stages in bankruptcy proceedings at which a court may be called upon to exercise the power in question. There first is at the hearing of a petition, when the court has to consider whether or not to make a receiving order …."
"… the cases establish that what is required before the court is prepared to investigate a judgment debt in the absence of an outstanding appeal or an application to set is aside is some fraud, collusion or miscarriage of justice. The latter phrase is of course capable of wide application according to the particular circumstances of the case. What … is required is that the court be shown something from which it can conclude that had there been a properly conducted judicial process it would have been found or very likely would have been found that nothing was in fact due to the claimant."
"43. There is a long line of authority going back to the 19th century establishing the principle that, on making a winding up order or a bankruptcy order, and, in the case of both personal and corporate insolvency, in considering whether to admit a creditor's proof based on a judgment debt, the court can in appropriate circumstances go behind the judgment to see whether the debt is truly due.
44. The power of a liquidator is, in this respect, no different from that of the court itself, since the liquidator, in deciding whether to accept or reject a creditor's proof in whole or in part, is acting in a quasi judicial capacity: see Tanning Research Laboratories Inc v O'Brien [1990] 8 ACLC 248 at p253, citing Re Britton & Millard Limited [1957] 107 LJ 601. His statutory duty is to ensure that the company's property is collected in and applied in satisfaction of its liabilities pari passu among its proper creditors.
45. In deciding whether to go behind the judgment debt, and, if so, in appraising the validity of the creditor's claim, neither the court nor the liquidator nor the trustee in bankruptcy is limited to the evidence that was before the court when it gave its judgment: see re Trepka Mines Ltd [1960] 1 WLR 1273.
46. The rationale behind the principle is that the duty of the liquidator is to ensure that the assets of the insolvent company 'are distributed amongst those who are justly, legally and properly creditors ...': see re Van Laun [1907] 2 KB 23, 29, per Cozens-Hardy MR, and also Ex parte Kibble [1874] 10 Ch.App 373 at 376-377, per Sir W.M. James LJ. The same is equally true of the trustee of a bankrupt.
47. In Van Laun, the Court of Appeal approved the way the matter had been put by Bigham J at first instance, who said ([1909] 1 KB 155, 162-163):
'The trustee's right and duty when examining a proof for the purpose of admitting or rejecting it is to require some satisfactory evidence that the debt on which the proof is founded is a real debt. No judgment recovered against the bankrupt, no covenant given by or account stated with him, can deprive the trustee of this right. He is entitled to go behind such forms to get at the truth, and the estoppel to which the bankrupt may have subjected himself will not prevail against him. In the present case the trustee desires to satisfy himself that the claims for costs represent a real indebtedness. He can only do this by seeing and examining the bills. When he sees them, it may be that he thinks them fair and reasonable and, if so, he will probably admit the truth. But until Mr Chatterton furnishes him with the means of forming an opinion I think the trustee cannot do otherwise than reject the proof.'
48. It is equally well established that the court (and the liquidator or trustee in bankruptcy) will not, as a matter of course, look behind every judgment debt and consider afresh the validity of the debt. In re Flatau [1889] 22 Ch.D 83, 85, Lord Esher MR said:
'It is not necessary now to repeat that, when an issue has been determined in any other court, if evidence is brought before the Court of Bankruptcy of circumstances tending to show that there has been fraud or collusion or miscarriage of justice, the Court of Bankruptcy has power to go behind the judgment and to enquire into the validity of the debt. But that the Court of Bankruptcy is bound in every case as a matter of course to go behind a judgment is a preposterous proposition.'
49. There has been some debate before me as to the circumstances, outside fraud and collusion, in which the court will (and a liquidator or trustee in bankruptcy should) go behind a judgment in order to examine the validity of the creditor's proof. In re Flatau, as has been seen from the passage I have quoted, Lord Esher MR referred to circumstances in which there has been a "miscarriage of justice". In the earlier case of re Lennox [1886] 16 QBD 315, 323, Lord Esher MR said that the court is bound to look into the alleged debt 'upon a sufficient case being shewn'. In Van Laun Buckley LJ, drawing the two statements of Lord Esher MR together, said (at [1907] 2KB p31):
'If there be a judgment it is not necessary to show fraud or collusion, it is sufficient, in the language of Lord Esher, to show miscarriage of justice - that is to say, that for some good reason there ought not to have been a judgment.'
50. Many of the authorities were reviewed by Warner J in McCourt v Baron Meats Ltd [1997] BP1R 114. Warner J, with whose judgment Peter Gibson J agreed, said (at p120) that the bankruptcy court would 'in appropriate circumstances' go behind the judgment, that is to say, inquire into the circumstances in which the judgment was obtained and, if satisfied that those circumstances warrant such a course, treat it as not creating or evidencing any debt enforceable in bankruptcy proceedings.
51. Finally, in Dawodu v American Express Bank [2001] BPIR 983, I said (at p990), by way of observation on the summary of the law by Warner J in the McCourt case: …
'what is required before the court is prepared to investigate a judgment debt, in the absence of an outstanding appeal or an application to set it aside, is some fraud, collusion or miscarriage of justice. The latter phrase is of course capable of wide application according to the particular circumstances of the case. What in my judgment is required is that the court be shown something from which it can conclude that had there been a properly conducted judicial process it would have been found, or very likely would have been found, that nothing was in fact due to the claimant.'"
i) The claim was contested by the Company by way of voluminous and complex documentation. In particular, Mr Haswell's evidence was that the document said to evidence the distribution "agreement" was created merely for the purposes of meeting the requirements of the Connecticut Liquor Control Commission and to obtain Federal approval. Moreover, Mr Goldstein stated that he spent quite some time reviewing the background of the Applicants' claim in coming to his decision to reject their proof.
ii) The Company had a substantial counterclaim against the Applicants.
iii) It is apparent from the motion to withdraw appearance that the Company's decision not to defend or pursue its counterclaim at the hearing arose out of its inability to pay the fees of its US attorneys.
iv) Upon the withdrawal of its US attorneys, the Company was not permitted to represent itself before the Connecticut court.
v) No evidence appears to have been put before the Connecticut court on the question of the applicable law regarding the construction of the "agreement". Local law was applied by the court, which contained penalties which would not have been recoverable under English law.
vi) There was much confusion surrounding the identity of International Brands and its ability to prove for the judgment debt.
vii) The judgment is one-sided, and cannot be considered as conclusive, because the court's task was merely to assess quantum and not to consider any of the disputed underlying facts.
viii) Consequently, she submitted the court should look behind the judgment. It was, she said, apparent that, had the Company had an opportunity to defend the US proceedings, its evidence was capable of rebutting the claim against it and precluding the same from ultimately properly amounting to a provable debt.
i) Apart from the US judgment itself, there was clear evidence in the US proceedings of a distribution agreement and a trade relationship between Interbrands (and later International Brands) on the one part and the Company on the other. In particular:
a) Mr Haswell's father, Mr Robert Haswell, as managing director of the Company, signed a letter dated 23 August 1989 appointing Interbrands as the Company's exclusive agent for the sale and distribution of the Company's products in the USA.
b) On 23 May 1991, Mr Robert Haswell wrote a letter to Mr Andersen of Interbrands in which he stated:
"If you cannot comply with our request to clear this account it would obviously jeopardise the exclusive arrangement we have with your company as our distributor for the products you are handling."
On 20 September 1991, Mr Robert Haswell wrote to Mr Andersen in the following terms:
"… we shall send you in writing formal notice of the termination of the exclusive agency agreement concerning our range of Scotch Whisky products".
Despite this threat, the distribution agreement was not terminated until 21 November 2001.
c) On 1 September 1994, Interbrands gave notice that it had assigned the rights and obligations under the distribution agreement with the Company to International Brands.
d) In the US proceedings themselves, in paragraphs 11, 16 and 17 of its defence, the Company admitted that it had dealt with both the Applicants.
e) The Company raised counterclaims based on orders placed by International Brands.
ii) The affidavit of Rolf Andersen dated 8 May 2004 and the accompanying exhibit provide ample evidence that International Brands acted in reliance upon the existence of a distribution agreement with the Company. The documents exhibited include invoices, orders, price lists, correspondence regarding promotional artwork, advertisements and distribution figures.
iii) In his deposition of 7 February 2003, Mr Haswell confirmed that, with the exception of duty-free shops, the Company only sold its goods in the USA via the Applicants. In the same deposition, Mr Haswell was taken to a list of the Company's distributors.
iv) Klim Design Inc provided evidence confirming that the Applicants placed orders with it for the creation of promotional and advertising materials in relation to the Company's products.
v) A Mr Harold Gorman, who can boast of experience in the distilled spirits industry spanning over 35 years, confirmed that the letter dated 2 August 1989 was consistent with the practice of appointing a distributor. This view was confirmed by another expert, Mr Andrew Hillman.
vi) As the docket report in the US proceedings shows, the proceedings ran from 26 February 2002 to 17 June 2004. Within that period both parties took a number of steps including the filing of motions and the taking of depositions. Both sides vigorously pursued the various claims and counterclaims. The US judgment includes findings of fact which were based on the very extensive documentation presented to the judge and which it may be reasonably inferred that he read.
vii) It is clear that the US judgment is not merely a default judgment "rubber-stamping" a statement of claim. The US judgment takes into account extensive evidence and a variety of legal authorities. It is carefully considered and was obtained after two years of litigation at a stage when the parties were on the verge of trial. It does not, contrary to Miss Perkins' submissions, make any award of punitive damages, either under the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act or otherwise. Nor does it award any legal costs in favour of International Brands.
viii) It is clear from Mr Haswell's statement that he deliberately chose not to provide a guarantee in respect of the Company's legal fees. Mr Haswell and the Company were fully aware that a judgment was likely to follow as they had been advised to this effect by the Company's US attorneys. Their decision not to litigate the claim was deliberate. In my judgment, it can be inferred, when coupled with the chronology, that it was a deliberate ploy to enable Mr Goldstein, as liquidator, to be in a position to challenge any adverse judgment in a liquidation. Accordingly, in my judgment, the Company and its sole director effectively engineered the situation whereby it is faced with an adverse US judgment, and it should not be allowed the opportunity of relitigating its claim: see Re Menastar Finance (in liquidation) (above).
ix) The US judgment is a reasoned judgment. Mr Goldstein barely attempts in his witness statement to explain how he arrived at his conclusion that the proof should be rejected. Nor does he suggest that he undertook any independent investigation of the relevant issues. On the contrary, he appears to have relied on what he was told by Mr Haswell. The description of the distribution agreement as an "at will arrangement" appears to have been quoted from Mr Haswell's report to the section 98 meeting. Further, in paragraph 5.6 of his witness statement dated 10 March 2005, he concedes that he relied on information from Mr Haswell in reaching his finding that there had been no dealings by the Company with International Brands.
x) There has indeed been a properly conducted judicial process, albeit a process which the Company chose to abandon. In my judgment the Company had not shown that a properly conducted process has not taken place, nor provided any sufficient evidence to demonstrate that if a properly conducted judicial process were to take place, no debt would be found due: see Dawodu at 991