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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Trade & Industry v Vohora & Anor [2007] EWHC 2656 (Ch) (15 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/2656.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2656 (Ch), [2008] Bus LR 161 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Secretary of State for Trade and Industry |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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Rajesh Vohora Shailja Vohora |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Gabriel Buttimore (instructed under the public access scheme) for the Defendants/Appellants
Hearing date: 8/11/2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Evans-Lombe:
"(2) Except with the leave of the court, an application for the making under that section of a disqualification order against any person shall not be made after the end of the period of two years beginning with the day on which the company of which that person is or has been a director became insolvent."
"3 The proceedings were brought in the Newcastle upon Tyne County Court but were transferred to this court by order of 7th June 2005. The claim form was sent or delivered to the court under cover of a letter of 26th April 2004. The letter bears a court date stamp of the same date. Miss Wilson-Barnes produced a copy of the receipt (No. 2803702) for the court fee of £130 which also bears that date. It is beyond doubt, therefore, that the papers were received by the court on 26th April 2004, which is within the relevant two-year period.
4 The claim form languished in the court for some time before being sealed (the seal bears no date) and before an issue date was inserted on the front page. The date which was inserted was 17th May 2004.
5 Dickinson Dees [The Secretary of State's solicitors] must have received the sealed claim form on 18th May 2004, since on that date it seems Mr Terry Phillips of that firm rang the court to complain. "
"We act on behalf of the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry in relation to proceedings to be commenced against Rajesh Vohora and Shailja Vohora pursuant to Section 6 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986. We enclose for issue the following documents:
1 Claim form together with two copies for sealing and return "
"7.2 (1) Proceedings are started when the court issues a claim form at the request of the claimant.
(2) A claim form is issued on the date entered on the form by the court."
"5.1 Proceedings are started when the court issues a claim form at the request of the claimant (see Rule 7.2) but where the claim form as issued was received in the court office on a date earlier than the date on which it was issued by the court, the claim is "brought" for the purposes of the Limitation Act 1980 and any other relevant statute on that earlier date."
"5.2 The date on which the claim form was received by the court will be recorded by a date stamp either on the claim form held on the court file or on the letter that accompanied the claim form when it was received by the court."
"7 The question for us is when is a claim "brought" for the purpose of the 1980 Act under the procedural regime introduced by the CPR? Is it on the date which appears on the claim form when the court issues it and the proceedings are started as provided for by Rule 7.2, or is it when the court receives the request to issue it? I think the meaning of Rule 7.2 is clear: proceedings start on the date entered on the claim form by the court which is their date of issue. The question is whether this is also the time when the claim is brought as Mr Norman for the Defendant contends."
"The other post CPR case is [the Salford case] in which the court had to consider when proceedings were "begun" for the purposes of the statutory provisions in part V of the Housing Act 1996 dealing with introductory tenancies. The court held that proceedings were begun when they were started as provided by CPR 7.2. Issue of the claim form by the court was a transactional act. The proceedings were not begun on the day when the claim form was delivered to the court because this would cause difficulties: the tenant was entitled to rely on the date of appearing on the claim form as the date when the proceedings had begun and should not have to enquire of the court official whether it had been received on some earlier date. Counsel for the housing authority had relied by analogy on paragraph 5.1 of the Practice Direction."
"Before turning to the facts in this case which are not in dispute it is convenient to set out the relevant statutory provisions. Part V of the 1996 Act was enacted to give local housing authorities and other social landlords new powers to deal with antisocial conduct by tenants, their families or other visitors. Section 124 (1) of the Act gives a local authority or a Housing Action Trust power at its election to operate what is described as "an introductory tenancy regime." Where such an election is in force as it is in relation to tenancies granted by this local authority landlord every periodic tenancy of a dwelling house entered into by the authority or trust shall, if it would otherwise be a secure tenancy, be an introductory tenancy unless certain conditions particular to the tenant are satisfied (which is not this case) see Section 124 (2) of the Act."
"This section applies where the landlord has begun proceedings for the possession of a dwelling house under an introductory tenancy and:-
(a) the trial period ends"
"The court shall not entertain any proceedings for possession of the dwelling house unless they are begun after the date specified in the notice of proceedings."
"7 The effect is that unless there has been compliance with Section 128 and, in particular, with sub-sections 1 and 5 of that Section, the court cannot entertain proceedings for possession of a dwelling house let under an introductory tenancy. But, if there has been compliance with Section 128 of the Act, then the court is required to make an order for possession at the behest of the landlord. There is no discretion to refuse such an order."
"It is of obvious importance, therefore, that the point of time at which proceedings are "begun" for the purposes of part V of the 1996 Act should not be in doubt "
"23 The basis of the decision in Pritam Kaur is that, as a matter of construction, a statute which requires something to be done on a day on which the court is shut for business is to be read as if the act were to be done on the first day on which the court office is open after that day. So understood, the decision is of no assistance in the present case if, and it is only in those circumstances that the point is material the trial period ended on 8th November 2002. As I have said 8th November 2002 was a Friday. The court office was open on that day. If the statute required that possession proceedings were begun on Friday 8th November 2002 they could have been begun on that day. The principle in Pritam Kaur is of no assistance."
It is of no assistance in the present case.
"Adopting that distinction, what is required in order to begin proceedings? The answer to that seems to me clear enough under the Rules. What is required to begin proceedings is that the proceedings should be started. And proceedings are started by the issue of a claim form by the court. That, in this case, took place on 11th November 2002. In my view, that was the date on which the landlord began proceedings for possession for the purposes of Section 130 of the Housing Act 1996."
"I agree, and would add only this on the question of when proceedings are begun for the purposes of Section 130 of the 1996 Act. It is in my judgment axiomatic that the beginning of proceedings under that section must bear the same meaning as the start of proceedings as described in CPR 7.2, that point being defined as the point of issue of a claim form at the request of the claimant."
"34 Mr Moor submits that the present situation is analogous to that specific provision which is based on the Limitation Act and the wording of when a claim is "brought".
35 In my judgment there is no such analogy. That specific provision is, as my Lord has demonstrated, based on earlier authority decided in the context of the bringing of proceedings for the purpose of the Limitation Act. Here the language in issue is not the "bringing of proceedings" but the "beginning of proceedings". Where there is a general provision aimed at a point of time at which the proceedings are started, it follows that the assimilation of when proceedings are begun and when they are started is conclusive. The extended meaning, given specifically in the context of the bringing of proceedings for the purposes of the Limitation Act, has no bearing on the present circumstances."