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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs v Payroll & Pension Services (PPS Umbrella Company) Ltd [2023] EWHC 3308 (Ch) (09 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/3308.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3308 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
Rolls Building London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Petitioners/Applicants |
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- and - |
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PAYROLL & PENSION SERVICES (PPS UMBRELLA COMPANY) LTD |
Respondent |
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Hearing dates: 2 and 9 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Steven Gasztowicz KC:
"135 Appointment and powers of provisional liquidator
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, the court may, at any time after the presentation of a winding-up petition, appoint a liquidator provisionally.
(2) In England and Wales, the appointment of a provisional liquidator may be made at any time before the making of a winding-up order; and either the official receiver or any other fit person may be appointed.
(3) In Scotland, such an appointment may be made at any time before the first appointment of liquidators.
(4) The provisional liquidator shall carry out such functions as the court may confer on him.
(5) When a liquidator is provisionally appointed by the court, his powers may be limited by the order appointing him."
"As Lewison LJ pointed out in Rochdale [2011] EWCA Civ 1116 at para 97, in cases where there are real questions as to the integrity of a company's management and the quality of its accounting and record-keeping functions, it will be an important factor to ensure that an incoming liquidator obtains control of all of those records so that the necessary investigations can be undertaken. These investigations may well include bringing claims against the management and whether there ought to be a report to the Secretary of State possibly leading to disqualification proceedings. These causes of action and possible steps are to be regarded as part of the assets of the company for the purposes of assessment."
"When … a statute provides that compliance with its provisions shall be enforceable by civil proceedings by the Crown for an injunction, and particularly if this is the only method of enforcement for which it provides, the Crown does owe a duty to the public at large to initiate proceedings to secure that the law is not flouted …"
Emphasis added by me.
"I agree therefore with all your Lordships that the practice of exacting an undertaking in damages from the Crown as a condition of the grant of an interlocutory injunction in this type of law enforcement action ought not to be applied as a matter of course, as it should be in actions between subject and subject, in relator actions, and in actions by the Crown to enforce or to protect its proprietary or contractual rights. On the contrary, the propriety of requiring such an undertaking from the Crown should be considered in the light of the particular circumstances of the case."
"So in this type of law enforcement action if the only defence is an attack on the validity of the statutory instrument sought to be enforced the ordinary position of the parties as respects the grant of interim injunctions is reversed. The duty of the Crown to see that the law declared by the statutory instrument is obeyed is not suspended by the commencement of proceedings in which the validity of the instrument is challenged. Prima facie the Crown is entitled as of right to an interim injunction to enforce obedience to it. To displace this right or to fetter it by the imposition of conditions it is for the defendant to show a strong prima facie case that the statutory instrument is ultra vires."
"The principle appears to be related not to the Crown as such but to the Crown when performing a particular function … the considerations which persuaded this House to hold that there was a discretion whether or not to require an undertaking in damages from the Crown in a law enforcement action are equally applicable to cases in which some other public authority is charged with the enforcement of the law: see eg Lord Reid at p341G, Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest at p352C, and Lord Cross of Chelsea at p371B-G".
"Different considerations arise in relation to law enforcement action, where a public authority is seeking to enforce the law in the interests of the public generally, often in pursuance of a public duty to do so, and enjoys only the resources which have been assigned to it for its functions. Other than in cases of misfeasance in public office, which require malice, and cases of breach of the Convention rights within section 6(1) of the Human Rights Act 1998, it remains the case that English law does not confer a general remedy for loss suffered by administrative law action. That is so, even though it involves breach of a public law duty. In the present context, the fact that an injunction is discharged, or that the court concludes after hearing extended argument that it ought not in the first place to have been granted, by no means signifies that there was any breach of duty on the public authority's part in seeking it".
"The Hoffmann-La Roche case stands at least for the proposition that public authority claims brought in the public interest require separate consideration. Consistently with the speeches of Lord Reid and Lord Diplock (and probably also of Lord Cross), it indicates that no cross-undertaking should be exacted as a matter of course, or without considering what is fair in the particular circumstances of the particular case. A starting point along these lines does not appear to me to differ significantly from the practice subsequently adopted at first instance: see para 27 above. I accept its general appropriateness".
"36 The FSA was acting under its express power to seek injunctive relief conferred by section 380(3). It was acting in fulfilment of its public duties in sections 3 to 6 of the 2000 Act to protect the interests of the UK's financial system, to protect consumers and to reduce the extent to which it was possible for a business being carried on in contravention of the general prohibition being used for a purpose connected with financial crime. I therefore approach this appeal on the basis that there is no general rule that the FSA should be required to give a cross-undertaking, in respect of loss suffered either by the defendants or by third parties".
"If the exercise of a Part IV freezing power should subsequently transpire to have been inappropriate, no basis exists upon which such third persons could claim to be indemnified in respect of such loss. Indeed paragraph 19 of Schedule 1 to the 2000 Act would again clearly exclude the FSA from any risk of liability: see para 12 above. There would be an apparent imbalance, if the FSA were required to accept potential liability under a cross-undertaking when it addresses the activities of unauthorised persons and has therefore to seek the court's endorsement of its stance in order for a freezing order to issue".
"If a business is shut down wrongly, the cross-undertaking is unlikely to provide adequate compensation to the company concerned, let alone to the employees who will have lost their jobs and to whom no cross-undertaking will usually have been offered. In addition once a provisional liquidator has been appointed the company's books and records will pass into his control; and will no longer be accessible, as of right, to the company's directors. This latter consequence may hamper the company and its directors in defending allegations made in the petition."
"166. I acknowledge the force of the points made and relied on by Sir William Blackburne [in Parkwell]. As I earlier observed, plainly HMRC as collectors of tax are not in the same position as an ordinary private litigant. Nor, however, for the reasons which I have also given are they in the same position as a public law enforcement agency such as the FSA or the Secretary of State when presenting a petition in the public interest under section 124A of the Insolvency Act 1986 . The judgments of the Court of Appeal in HMRC v Rochdale Drinks Distributors Ltd spell out clearly not only the existence of a practice of requiring an undertaking in damages from HMRC on an application to appoint a provisional liquidator but also spell out the reasons for that practice.
167. The basis for departing from that practice relied on by Sir William Blackburne and apparently put before other judges of the Chancery Division has been the decision of the Supreme Court in FSA v Sinaloa Gold plc. However, that decision did not involve any departure from the existing practice that undertakings in damages were not required in public law enforcement proceedings, as established by the majority decision of the House of Lords in F. Hoffmann-La Roche Co AG v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry. So far as relevant to applications for the appointment of a provisional liquidator, the decision in FSA v Sinaloa Gold plc adds little to the position existing before then save to re-assert the decision in Hoffmann La-Roche and to make clear that undertakings in damages are also not required to protect the position of innocent third parties. In my judgment, it is not a decision which can justify the departure from the well established practice of this court on applications by HMRC for the appointment of provisional liquidators, the correctness of which was clearly affirmed by the Court of Appeal in HMRC v Rochdale Drinks Distributors Ltd. While it may be said that hard cases make bad law, it appears to me that the facts of the present case underline the importance of the requirement for an undertaking in damages."
Following judgment, I have been told that the winding-up petition had in fact already been issued prior to it, contrary to what I was told. Nothing turns on this, however.
[After a short break HMRC provided the unlimited cross-undertaking in damages and the order appointing provisional liquidators was made.]