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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 >> Highbury Pension Fund Management Company & Anor v Zirfin Investments Ltd & Ors [2013] EWHC 238 (Ch) (14 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/238.html Cite as: [2014] 2 WLR 1129, [2014] 1 CH 359, [2013] WLR(D) 71, [2013] EWHC 238 (Ch), [2014] CH 359 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
The Rolls Building London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Highbury Pension Fund Management Company (A Liberian Company) Cezanne Trading (A BVI Company) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Zirfin Investments Limited Golden Bay Securities Mandarin International Holdings Corporation Columbia Overseas Trading SA Cantala Securities Corporation Barclays Bank Plc The Serious Fraud Office Achilleas Michalis Kallakis |
Defendants |
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Giles Bedloe (instructed by CJ Jones) for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 8th Defendants
Charlotte Cooke (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) for the 6th Defendant
Richard Salter QC & Penny Small (instructed by The Serious Fraud Office) for the 7th Defendant
Hearing dates: 9-10 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris:
a) Does the doctrine of marshalling permit the marshalling of securities held over property that does not belong to the common debtor? In particular, is a creditor of a guarantor entitled to marshal (or be subrogated to) securities which have been granted to another creditor of the guarantor by the primary debtor liable under the guaranteed debt?
b) Does the answer depend in any way on the rights which the guarantor has as against the holder of the guarantee or as against the primary debtor?
c) Does any such claim to marshalling or subrogation take precedence over prohibitions contained in the Restraint Order, either as of right or by virtue of the exercise of some discretion of the Crown Court?
"This Guarantee is to be applicable to the ultimate balance that may become due to the Bank from [an Affiliate] and until payment of such balance no Guarantor shall be entitled to participate in any security held or money received by the Bank on account of such balance or to stand in the Bank's place in respect of any such security or money".
Secondly, by clause 12 it was provided:-
"The Bank is to be at liberty without thereby affecting its rights hereunder at any time and from time to time… to give up modify exchange or abstain from perfecting or taking advantage of or enforcing any security or guarantees or other contracts or the proceeds of any of the foregoing… and to realise any securities in such manner as the Bank may think expedient".
a) That the assets of Zirfin and the Affiliates are to be treated as "realisable property" caught by the Restraint Order: but
b) It is not to be assumed that there is a general piercing of the corporate veil (with everything being treated as belonging to Mr Kallakis), on which assumption Zirfin and the Affiliates are to be treated as separate debtors.
a) A right to call on the Affiliate to pay the debt in exoneration of Zirfin's liability under the Guarantee:
b) A right to an indemnity from the Affiliate in respect of liabilities discharged:
c) A right of contribution from other Affiliates who are co-guarantors with Zirfin:
d) A right to be subrogated to the security rights of Barclays in respect of that Affiliate.
"So in a case where two or more creditors are owed money by the same debtor but only one of them has a charge over more than one of his properties equity empowers the court to marshal the securities so that the creditor with a choice of security satisfies his claims so far as possible out of the proceeds of the security over which the other creditors have no claim. This equitable principle does not extend to compelling a first mortgagee to realise any particular security in preference to another. He is entitled to realise them in whatever order he chooses. What amounts to a principle of maximum distribution therefore takes effect by permitting a second chargee of property which is realised and utilised by the first chargee to rely on the benefit of the surplus (and possibly unrealised) security of the first chargee over other property of the debtor in satisfaction of his own claim. He is in effect (but not as a matter of law) subrogated to the first chargee's rights under that security to the extent of the debtor's secured liabilities to him…".
"The object of this petition is to relieve the creditors of the bankrupt by marshalling the assets of Devaynes."
"The real question upon the petition is, whether at the instance of the creditors of the four bankrupts, suggesting, that there are creditors of the four, who are also creditors of the five, I ought to stay the dividend; until payment shall have been recovered out of the Devaynes' estate by those creditors, who are creditors upon both funds. That the creditors of the four have a clear interest to turn those creditors upon Devaynes' estate is evident upon the circumstances: but whether they have the right, whether it is just that they should do so, is a very different consideration".
"Another question is, whether, if this was a Bill, filed by the creditors of the four, they would have a right to insist upon the benefit, sought by this Petition. We have gone this length: if A has a right to go upon two funds and B upon one, having both the same debtor, A shall take payment from that fund, to which he can resort exclusively; that by those means of distribution both may be paid. That course takes place, where both are creditors of the same person; and have demands against funds, the property of the same person. Here, it is true, there may be creditors, who have demands against the four, and others who have demands against the one: but it was never said, that, if I have a demand against A and B, a creditor of [B*] shall compel me to go against A; without more; as, if B himself could insist, that A ought to pay in the first instance; as in the ordinary case of… principal and surety; to the intent, that all the obligations arising out of these complicated relations, may be satisfied: but, if I have a demand against both, the creditors of B have no right to compel me to seek payment from A; if not founded upon some equity, giving B the right for his own sake to compel me to seek payment from A. If therefore I had before me a case in which it was clear, that the creditors of the five could go against the estate of Devaynes and the four, yet, if it was not also clear, that the latter could have turned those creditors against the other fund, it does not advance the claim, that without such an arrangement they will get less. Unless they can establish, that it is just and equitable, that Devaynes estate should pay in the first instance, they have no equity to compel a man to go against that estate, who has resort to both funds".
"It has never been said that if Barclays has a demand against the Affiliates and Zirfin, then Highbury can compel Barclays to go against the Affiliates; at least without something more, such as if Zirfin could insist that the Affiliates ought to pay in the first instance, as would be the case between principal and surety. Rather, if Barclays has a demand against both the Affiliates and Zirfin, Highbury has no right to compel Barclays to seek a payment from the Affiliates unless it is founded on some equity giving Zirfin the right (for its own sake) to compel Barclays to seek payment from the Affiliates".
"[Marshalling] is never allowed to delay or defeat the creditor with several securities in the collection of his debt and the enforcement of his securities. He is allowed to realise his securities as he pleases".
The passage I have cited from the judgment of Patten LJ in Szepietowski (supra) makes the same point.
"Generally, three conditions must be satisfied in order that the doctrine of marshalling maybe applied as regards claims by creditors: (1) the claims must be against a single debtor; if one creditor has a claim against C and D and another creditor has a claim against D only, the latter creditor may not require the former to resort to C unless the liability is such that D could throw the primary liability on C, for example where C and D are principal and surety…" (Emphasis supplied).
The authority cited for that proposition is Ex parte Kendall itself. The passage is to be found in the 1st edition of Halsbury's Laws (1910) at Vol. 13 p.142 para.165.
"The doctrine applies where one creditor has a charge or lien on two funds and another has a charge or lien on only one of the funds… there must, however, normally be two funds or securities, both originally the same owner's property. Possibly there may be some cases where the two securities have not been actually subject to the same ownership. But at least the owners of the security against which the claim is made must not be entitled to throw the paramount liability on the claimant's security…"
"This rule is subject to the qualification, implicit in the words of Lord Eldon LC in Ex parte Kendall … that, even if funds belonged to different parties, where there is an obligation recognised in equity upon the owner of the fund charged once to the owner of the fund charged twice, to bear the burden of all charges as between themselves, equity will enforce that duty at instance of the second chargee of the doubly charged fund; it will do this by permitting marshalling against the single funds charged to the double chargee even though the chargor is another person to the chargor of the doubly charged fund…Thus if one creditor has a claim against X and Y and another creditor has a claim against Y only, the latter cannot require the former to resort to X in the first instance, unless Y could throw the primary liability on X, as where X and Y are principal and surety."
The authorities relied on are from the United States and from Canada.
"In the absence of independent and separate equities, the right of marshalling can only apply where the creditors have a common debtor and both funds are derived from that common debtor. This general rule is qualified where there is an independent equity which requires one debtor to pay the debts of another. In this situation, it does not matter that there is not one common debtor because the court will enforce the duty of the principal debtor to exonerate the secondary debtor by subjecting the principal debtor's funds to the discharge of the debt of the secondary debtor. In other words, it is sufficient for the doctrine of marshalling that, as between the persons interested, the two debts ought to be paid by the same person even though that person may not be directly liable to the creditors for the two debts. Marshalling is therefore applicable to guaranteed debts so that upon demand being made upon the guarantor, the creditor can be compelled to satisfy itself from the security which it holds."
By way of authority for these propositions the authors draw heavily upon American cases and upon the analysis in Meagher, Gummow and Lehane. My attention was not directed to any passage to the same effect in Andrews & Millett "Law of Guarantees" 6th edition
"Here is a surety, whose money has been applied in payment of the debt of his principal, to the exclusion of his own proper creditors. That he would be entitled to come in, by way of substitution, upon the estate of the principal is everyday equity: and I think it equally clear that his creditor, who has suffered by the appropriation of a fund which otherwise would have been available for the discharge of his claim, may well ask to stand upon this equity, to the extent of the deprivation to which he has been subjected".
The debtor whose property was taken (D) had a right to require the other debtor (X) to pay in the first instance: and if that right had been invoked there would have been no resort to No 24 (S1). So Southey J allowed Brown (C2) to be subrogated to the claims of Imperial (C1) to the Court fund (S2)
"There is no doubt that, at least as a general rule, the doctrine of marshalling only operates in relation to securities given by the debtors themselves. That is, there must be a common debtor…".
"The general rule that assets will be marshalled only among creditors of the common debtor is subject to some apparent exceptions, which, however, are within its spirit. Where proof is made of independent equities from which arise a duty on the part of one debtor to pay in exoneration of another, the court will enforce that duty by subjecting the fund of the principal debtor, to give effect to the equities in favour of the creditors of that debtor who is only secondarily liable for the debt".
"Although there is no English, Australian or New Zealand authority which develops the point to the same extent as the Canadian and American decisions, it seems to me that the exceptions to the common debtor rule as stated in Meagher, Gummow & Lehane, and the Canadian and American textbooks apply in Australia… the right will only arise where there is an equity and there will only be an equity where there is a duty on the part of one debtor to pay the debts of another. The right does not arise merely because the court as a matter of abstract justice thinks that it ought to apply".
"The creditors of the four have no other right than the four themselves would have had; and the equity of the creditors in these cases is worked out through the equity, which the debtors themselves have."
That is why the doctrine of marshalling will only make available to Highbury security for the amount it has discharged as surety (and not for the whole of its debt): though that restriction is of no importance in the present case.
"After the guaranteed debt has become due, and before he has been asked to pay it, the guarantor may require the creditor to call upon the principal debtor to pay off the debt. It is doubtful, however, whether the guarantor has any right to require the creditor to do so if he has not discharged himself of his liability. In the absence of agreement the creditor is not bound to sue the principal debtor before suing the guarantor".
"(a) must be exercised with a view to the value for the time being of realisable property being made available (by the property's realisation) for satisfying any confiscation order that has been or may be made against the defendant;
(b) must be exercised, in a case where a confiscation order has not been made, with a view to securing that there is no diminution in the value of realisable property;
(c) must be exercised without taking account of any obligation of the defendant… if the obligation conflicts with the object of satisfying any confiscation order that has been made or may be made against the defendant…".
"(a) the powers must be exercised with a view to allowing a person other than the defendant… to retain or recover the value of any interest held by him".
At section 84(2) of POCA it is provided:-
"(f) references to an interest, in relation to land in England and Wales…are to any legal estate or equitable interest or power…
(g) …
(h) references to an interest, in relation to property other than land, include references to a right (including a right to possession)".
Lexi successfully argued that it had such an "interest" because its claim to equitable compensation carried with it the right to an equitable charge or lien over the proceeds in which the misappropriated assets had been mixed: see paragraph [57] of the judgment.
"… if no assertion of a prior proprietary interest in the form of an equitable charge were even capable of now being raised on the variation application by Lexi then the amount of the assets which are subject to the restraint order and which are potentially available to (unsecured) victims of the alleged criminal conduct would appear to have been increased by assets which in part originated from Lexi itself and in circumstances where it originally had a proprietary claim to that money in the hands of M. That does not seem at all just".
"The principle of marshalling is not such as to confer an equitable right of property on a party to whom the right is available. It is no more than a right to seek from the court an equitable remedy in certain circumstances".
"This order does not prevent any financial institution from enforcing or taking any other steps to enforce any existing charge it has in respect of a property or properties so secured".