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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 >> Brown v Brown & Anor [2007] EWHC 405 (Ch) (01 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/405.html Cite as: [2008] 2 WLR 283, [2007] EWHC 405 (Ch), [2008] Ch 357 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN BANKRUPTCY
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SURJIT K. SINGLA (Trustee in Bankruptcy of RODNEY THOMAS LAMBTON BROWN) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) RODNEY THOMAS LAMBTON BROWN (2) AMANDA JANE MALDEN-BROWNE |
Defendant |
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Joshua Winfield (instructed by Travers Smith) for the Defendant
-and-
Hearing date: 6, 7 February 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(i) whether the charge over the house was voidable; and
(ii) whether the notice of severance and receipt were fabricated in the sense of being back dated, having really been signed some date after Mr. Moscow obtained the charging order in October 2003.
The Application under s. 339
(i) whether the notice of severance and receipt fall within s. 339 of the Insolvency Act 1986; and, if so,
(ii) what order the Court should make, and in particular whether the Court can and should decline to make any order in the exercise of its discretion, notwithstanding that the transaction falls within s. 339.
Was there an agreement or understanding that Mr. Brown was only to have a nominal interest?
Discretion
"The court shall, on such an application, make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the position to what it would have been if that individual had not entered into that transaction".
That wording may be contrasted with the wording found in s.423(2) (transactions defrauding creditors): "the court may…make such order as it thinks fit…". The use of the word "shall" rather than "may" in s.339(2) might suggest that the Court must make an order under s.339(2) if the relevant conditions are satisfied. However, the Court of Appeal in Re Paramount Airways Limited [1993] Ch. 223 rejected that interpretation.
"This conclusion is not so unsatisfactory as it might appear at first sight. The matter does not rest there. Parliament is to be taken to have intended that the difficulties such a wide ambit may create will be sufficiently overcome by two safeguards built into the statutory scheme. The first lies in the discretion the Court has under the sections as to the order it will make. Section 423(2) provides that the Court "may" make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the position and protecting victims of transactions intended to defraud creditors. Sections 238, 239, 339 and 340 provide that the Court "shall," on an application under those sections, make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the position. Despite the use of the verb "shall," the phrase "such order as it thinks fit" is apt to confer on the court an overall discretion. The discretion is wide enough to enable the court, if justice so requires, to make no order against the other party to the transaction or the person to whom the preference was given. In particular, if a foreign element is involved the court will need to be satisfied that, in respect of the relief sought against him, the defendant is sufficiently connected with England for it to be just and proper to make the order against him despite the foreign element ……" [1993] Ch 223 @239F-240A per Sir Donald Nicholls V.-C. with whom Russell and Farquharson LJJ agreed.
So the Court does have an overall discretion which is wide enough to enable the Court to make no order at all "if justice so requires".
"I respectfully agree with the observations of His Honour Judge Havelock-Allan QC in Walker v WA Personnel Limited … to the effect that, as a matter of general approach, in deciding what is the appropriate remedy where there has been transaction at an undervalue the Court does not start with the presumption in favour of monetary compensation as opposed to setting the transaction aside and reinvesting the asset transferred. Indeed, in my judgement, in considering what is the appropriate remedy on the facts of any particular case the Court should not start from any priori position. Each case will turn on its particular facts, and the task of the Court in every case is to fashion the most appropriate remedy with a view to restoring, so far as it is practicable and just to do so, the position as it "would have been if [the debtor] had not entered into the transaction". In some cases that remedy may take the form of reversing the transaction; in others it may not. In some cases it may take the form of an order for monetary compensation; in others it may not".