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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Thomas & Anor (Joint Trustees In Bankruptcy of Stephen John Edmondson) v Edmondson [2014] EWHC 1494 (Ch) (12 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/1494.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1494 (Ch), [2014] BPIR 1070, [2015] WLR 1395, [2014] 3 All ER 976, [2015] 1 WLR 1395 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
IN THE MATTER OF STEPHEN JOHN EDMONDSON
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
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(1) SIMON ROBERT THOMAS (2) NICHOLAS O'REILLY (Joint Trustees in Bankruptcy of Stephen John Edmondson) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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STEPHEN JOHN EDMONDSON |
Respondent |
____________________
John Briggs (instructed by Irwin Mitchell) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 29 April 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Asplin:
Background
The Relevant provisions and the argument in summary
"310.-Income payments orders.
(1) The court may [...] make an order ("an income payments order") claiming for the bankrupt's estate so much of the income of the bankrupt during the period for which the order is in force as may be specified in the order.
(1A) An income payments order may be made only on an application instituted -
(a) by the trustee, and
(b) before the discharge of the bankrupt.
…
(6) An income payments order must specify the period during which it is to have effect; and that period -
(a) may end after the discharge of the bankrupt, but
(b) may not end after the period of three years beginning with the date on which the order is made.
(6A) An income payments order may (subject to subsection (6)(b)) be varied on the application of the trustee or the bankrupt (whether before or after discharge)."
"310A Income payments agreement
(1) In this section "income payments agreement" means a written agreement between a bankrupt and his trustee or between a bankrupt and the official receiver which provides -
(a) that the bankrupt is to pay to the trustee or the official receiver an amount equal to a specified part or proportion of the bankrupt's income for a specified period, or
(b) that a third person is to pay to the trustee or the official receiver a specified proportion of money due to the bankrupt by way of income for a specified period.
(2) A provision of an income payments agreement of a kind specified in subsection (1)(a) or (b) may be enforced as if it were a provision of an income payments order.
…
(4) The following provisions of section 310 shall apply to an income payments agreement as they apply to an income payments order -
(a) subsection (5) (receipts to form part of estate), and
(b) subsections (7) to (9) (meaning of income).
(5) An income payments agreement must specify the period during which it is to have effect; and that period -
(a) may end after the discharge of the bankrupt, but
(b) may not end after the period of three years beginning with the date on which the agreement is made.
(6) An income payments agreement may (subject to subsection (5)(b)) be varied -
(a) by written agreement between the parties, or
(b) by the court on an application made by the bankrupt, the trustee or the official receiver.
(7) The court -
(a) may not vary an income payments agreement so as to include provision of a kind which could not be included in an income payments order, and
(b) shall grant an application to vary an income payments agreement if and to the extent that the court thinks variation necessary to avoid the effect mentioned in section 310(2)."
"I have referred to, and relied on, the residence requirements in section 1(1) in its original form. In the Court of Appeal at para 25, Carnwath LJ said that he was inclined to think that no assistance could be gathered from provisions in the 1967 Act as originally enacted, because one should construe the 1967 Act in its current form. Consequently, he considered that no help in construing section 2(1) could be gathered from the residence requirement of every enfranchisement claim originally contained in section 1(1). I do not agree. In Suffolk County Council v. Mason [1979] AC 705, Lord Diplock said at 714E that certain "provisions … have since been amended by the Countryside Act 1968: but this cannot affect the construction of the Act of 1949 as it was originally enacted". There are earlier observations to similar effect from Bramwell and Brett LJJ at 227 and 229 in Attorney General v. Lamplough (1878) 3 Ex D 214. In my opinion, the legislature cannot have intended the meaning of a sub-section to change as a result of amendments to other provisions of the same statute, when no amendments were made to that sub-section, unless, of course, the effect of one of the amendments was, for instance, to change the definition of an expression used in the subsection."
That was a case in which the court was required to construe the phrase "designed or adapted for living in" in the definition of "house" contained in the Leasehold Reform Act 1967.
"(6) An income payments order shall not be made after the discharge of the bankrupt, and if made before, shall not have effect after his discharge except -
(a) in the case of a discharge under section 279(1)(a) (order of court), by virtue of a condition imposed by the court under section 280(2)(c) (income, etc. after discharge), or
(b) in the case of a discharge under section 279(1)(b) (expiration of relevant period), by virtue of a provision of the order requiring it to continue in force for a period ending after the discharge but no later than 3 years after the making of the order."
"In general terms, it is undoubtedly correct that the effect of an amendment to a statute should be ascertained by construing the amended statute. Thus, what is to be looked at is the amended statute itself as if it were a free-standing piece of legislation and its meaning and effect ascertained by an examination of the language of that statute.
However, in certain circumstances it may be necessary to look at the amending statute as well. This involves no infringement of the principles of statutory interpretation; indeed it is an affirmation of them. The expression of the relevant parliamentary intention is the amending Act. It is the amending Act which is the operative provision and which alters the law from that which it had been before. It is the expression of the parliamentary will as to what changes in the law Parliament wishes to make. . . . ."
"38. The court must of course give effect to the intention of Parliament. In this case, the literal meaning of section 260 is that it applies only to the original meeting and that a further meeting summoned by a nominee under section 262 has none of the consequences which the IA86 attaches to the original meeting summoned under section 257.
39. However, where the effect of a literal interpretation of a statute is to create significant anomalies which the court is satisfied Parliament could not have intended, the court should seek to find an interpretation which avoids those anomalies."
"Across the broad spectrum of civil debt enforcement the government is committed to Payments ensuring that those who can pay should pay. In order to ensure this happens - and against the background of a very much reduced period of bankruptcy - the Enterprise Bill will make it clear that bankrupts will be liable to make an affordable contribution from their income for up to three years from the date of the bankruptcy order regardless of whether they are discharged."
" . . . Explanatory notes are not endorsed by Parliament. On the other hand, in so far as they cast light on the setting of a statute, and the mischief at which it is aimed, they are admissible in aid of construction of the statute. . "
The relevant Explanatory Notes in this case state:
"755. The current income payments order regime is designed to ensure bankrupts make an affordable contribution towards their debt from their income for up to three years, but in most cases they cease on discharge (see section 310(6)). Against the background of a reduced period of bankruptcy for non-culpable bankrupts, income payments orders will now last for a term of up to three years from the date of the order, irrespective of discharge (see new section 310(6) inserted by section 259).
756. Income payments orders are made by the courts on the application of the trustee in bankruptcy. In practice most are not usually contested. Income payments orders can be varied on the application of the trustee or the bankrupt.
757. In order to remove the need for court involvement in non-contentious cases, section 260 introduces the concept of the income payments agreement by inserting a new Section 310A into the Insolvency Act 1986.
758. Income payments agreements will provide a legally-binding written agreement between the bankrupt and the Official Receiver or trustee that requires the bankrupt (or a third party) to make specified payments to his trustee for a specified period. This will be enforceable as if it were an income payments order made by the court. Whilst in force, an income payments agreement may be varied on an application to the court by the bankrupt, trustee or the Official Receiver or by written agreement between the parties. A court may not vary an income payments agreement to include a provision that could not be included in an income payments order and must grant a variation if it takes the view that the variation is necessary to enable the bankrupt to retain sufficient funds to meet the reasonable domestic needs of the bankrupt and his or her family.
759. An income payments agreement must specify the period in which it is to have effect and that period can apply after a bankrupt is discharged but cannot extend to a date more than three years after the date of the income payments agreement."
Conclusion:
"A possible anomaly carries less weight" if there is interposed the discretion of some responsible person by the sensible exercise of which the risk may be obviated."
The editor of Bennion went on to note:
"In a bankruptcy case both sides sought to support their arguments by citing anomalies which the opposite view would produce. That of the debtor however, depended on the possible making of orders discharging a person from bankruptcy subject to conditions subsequent. Thus it could be avoided by the careful exercise of the power to make such orders, although in practice these were rarely made."
The footnote refers to Re, ex p Official Receiver v Debtor [1980] 1 WLR 263.