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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 >> Harvey v Dunbar Assets Plc [2015] EWHC 3355 (Ch) (26 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3355.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3355 (Ch), [2015] Bus LR 1383, [2015] WLR(D) 492, [2015] BUS LR 1383 |
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(A02NE674) |
CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE
(DJ Pescod)
The Courthouse, 1, Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a High Court Judge)
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JOHN SPENCER HARVEY |
Appellant |
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and – |
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DUNBAR ASSETS Plc |
Respondent |
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Mr David Schmitz instructed by Hindle Campbell Law LLP appeared for the Appellant
Mr Joseph Curl instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP appeared for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5 November 2015
Hand down Judgment: 26 November 2015 (2pm)
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Roger Kaye QC:
Introduction
The Background
The Issues
- First, can Mr Harvey raise the same promissory estoppel point a second time?
- Second, if so, ought the statutory demand to be set aside on grounds that the Bank's debt arising under the Guarantee is disputed on grounds which appear to the court to be substantial or on other grounds (see Insolvency Rules, 1986 (as amended, "the Rules"), rule 6.5(4)(b),(d)).
The Insolvency Framework
Can Mr Harvey Raise the Promissory Estoppel Point Again?
- First, the court, on the hearing of a bankruptcy petition at least, has a duty to consider, on the material before it, whether the conditions for the making of a bankruptcy order are satisfied (Eberhardt, Turner, Crammer, Lee-Phipps);
- Second, on such a hearing where there has been a previous hearing on the merits, whilst the court ought always to ask itself whether the arguments have been previously run and failed, and, why arguments now advanced have not been run before, absent a change of circumstances or some other special or good reasons or circumstances, the debtor can not go back on the hearing of the petition (or for that matter on an application to annul or review under s 375(1)) to re-argue or reiterate arguments presented earlier, or which he had an opportunity to present. The basis of this principle (which has been referred to in the recent cases as the Turner principle) is that to hold otherwise would be to encourage a waste of court time, a waste of the parties' money and defeat the obvious purpose of the statutory scheme which was that arguments on whether or not there was a genuine debt ought to be raised at the earliest stage i.e. on the application to set aside the statutory demand (Brillouet, Farley, Turner, Barnes, Crammer, Lee-Phipps, Barnes, Adams, Coulter, Roseoak, Vaidya, Hayes);
- Third, if there has not been a hearing on the merits, the court will have a residual discretion to satisfy itself, on the material before it, whether a bankruptcy order ought to be made but, subject to the court enquiring into the reasons why the point was not argued, raised or (as the case may be) abandoned previously, ordinarily, in the absence of exceptional circumstances (to be considered on a case by case basis), the court will not allow a point which could have been raised before but was not, or which was abandoned, to be raised because to do so would be an abuse of process (Atherton, Lee-Phipps, Barnes, Adams);
- Fourth, because of the residuary discretion left in the court on the hearing of the petition and no doubt also because of the power of review given by s 375(1) the Turner principle is not based on issue estoppel or res judicata but, at most, on abuse of process or public interest (Turner, Atherton, Coulter);
- Fifth, these principles apply equally throughout the bankruptcy process including on an application to annul or to review under s 375(1) (where even here the court will not generally permit a previously argued point to be reiterated in the absence of change of circumstances: see, e.g. Papanicola v Humpreys [2005] 2 All ER 418, Ahmed and Vaidya). It is noteworthy that in Atherton Neuberger J (as he then was) said this (at p. 27) (where amongst other authorities he was referred to Turner):
"… in general, it seems to me right in principle and in the public interest that, if a party has raised an argument in a proper forum, where it has been considered, in connection with a particular process, in this case a bankruptcy or a prospective bankruptcy, and from which forum he had a right of appeal if he wished to exercise it, if that argument is rejected and he does not appeal, it requires exceptional circumstances before he can raise the same argument at a later stage during the same process. … the principle should not be abrogated simply because the party has found a better way of putting the same point, or wants to put in more evidence to support the same point."
"Estoppel and res judicata were not canvassed before the court in Turner. The basis of the observations of mine to which Evans-Lombe J [in the court below] referred was that it would be a waste of court time and the parties' money to allow a debtor, who had already failed on his application to set aside a statutory demand, to advance the same arguments by way of challenge to the petition debt on the hearing of the petition …"
"The [Turner] principle is not based on estoppel, whether of a Henderson v Henderson (1843) 3 Hare 100 nature or res judicata. It goes no further than this: (i) that it is indeed a waste of the court's time and the parties' money to rehearse arguments which have already been run and have failed; and (ii) that, in the circumstances where it is desired to run arguments which have not already been run, then, as His Honour Judge Maddocks pointed out in Barnes v Whitehead, the court will inquire why those arguments were not run at the time when they could, and should, have been run."
- The so-called new evidence adds nothing material to the case previously advanced. The evidence in support of the application is in truth and substance so far as affects Mr Harvey the same.
- Mr Harvey chose on previous occasions in seeking permission to appeal and on the appeals themselves not to pursue the promissory estoppel point;
- He is now seeking to re-argue that point on the same substantial material and on the same arguments as before.
The Promissory Estoppel Point
"Tony [i.e. Mr Cullen] told me that the [Guarantee] was just an exercise which needed to be carried out before [the Bank's] credit committee would approve the loan facility agreement for [the Company]. He also assured me during the phone call that [the Bank] had never enforced a personal guarantee in the past and would never do so in the future."
"Where, by his words of conduct one party to a transaction, (A) freely makes to the other (B) a clear and unequivocal promise or assurance that he or she will not enforce his or her strict legal rights, and that promise or assurance is intended to affect the legal relations between them … or was reasonably understood by B to have that effect, and, before it is withdrawn, B acts upon it, altering his or her position so that it would be inequitable to permit the first party to withdraw the promise, the party making the promise or assurance will not be permitted to act inconsistently with it. B must also show that the promise was intended to be binding in the sense that (judged on an objective basis) it was intended to affect the legal relationship between the parties and A either knew or could have reasonably foreseen that B would act on it."
Conclusion