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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Kaye v Lees [2023] EWHC 152 (KB) (27 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/152.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 152 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IVAN KAYE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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AMANDA LEES |
Defendant |
____________________
No appearance by or on behalf of the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23 January 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
His Hon Judge Dight CBE:
Introduction
The Application
"(2)…file and serve evidence upon which she intends to rely, including evidence of her mental health crisis treatment upon which the debt advice provider submitted the application for the Moratorium [made on 8 November 2022], to include ongoing evidence as to duration, severity, prognosis and timescale for improvement, by 4pm on the day 14 days after Mr Justice Swift hands down judgment…"
The order went on to make provision for Mr Kaye to file evidence in reply and then, by agreement, for the Application to be relisted on an expedited basis. I observe in passing that this matter had obviously become urgent and that the parties were right to seek expedition even though more recently Ms Lees has sought to argue that it is not urgent and should be dealt with at a later date.
An adjournment
The moratoria and reviews
i) on 30 June 2021 the Applicant was granted a breathing space moratorium for the period 1 July 2021 to 29 August 2021. The eviction which had been due to take place on 8 July 2021 did not go ahead;
ii) shortly afterwards Mr Darren Caisley, a Mental Health and Money Advisor, working for Rethink, a national debt charity contracted by the Government to run the Mental Health Access to Breathing Space Scheme, was appointed to assist the Applicant under the scheme. An Approved Mental Health Professional ("AMHP") confirmed Ms Lees' eligibility for a Mental Health Breathing Space and on 26 October 2021 the Applicant was granted the first mental health crisis moratorium under the Regulations which remained in place until 25 December 2021. A Writ of possession had been due to be executed on 27 October 2021, the day after the moratorium commenced;
iii) on 12 January 2022 Mr John McGovern, an AMHP, certified that Ms Lees was receiving mental health crisis treatment and she was granted a further mental health crisis moratorium which was in effect from 13 January 2022 until 12 February 2022. Notwithstanding this moratorium the eviction which had been scheduled to take place on the same day as the moratorium was due to come into force (ie 13 January 2022) was effected and possession was taken of the Flat. It is that eviction which led ultimately to the issues which I ruled on in the May judgment holding that the eviction and subsequent sale of the Lease had been in breach of the moratorium and were null and void;
iv) on 15 February 2022 a further mental health crisis moratorium was granted. It lapsed on 6 November 2022. There is a number of unanswered queries about the lapsing of this third mental health crisis moratorium and the initiation of the subsequent fourth mental health crisis moratorium within a matter of days. On 13 October 2022 Rethink wrote to Ms Lees saying that as a result of her mental health treatment having ceased on 7 October the related moratorium would come to an end 30 days afterwards, in other words on 6 November 2022. Mr Kaye's solicitors were notified of the termination of the moratorium and asked Ms Lees' then solicitors to update them as to what was happening. Ms Lees' solicitors declined to do so on the basis that their client was under no obligation to provide an update. The reason why Ms Lees' treatment ceased or why it appears shortly thereafter to have restarted has not been clarified;
v) on 7 November 2022 a further application was made by Ms Lees and the current mental health crisis moratorium was granted on 8 November 2022. On 14 November Mr Kaye's solicitors asked Ms Lees' solicitors for the latest advice from Dr Sacks, the relevant mental health consultant, adding "This is in relation to her dramatic change leading her to go back into crisis treatment as soon as the latest Breathing Space Order expired." The bald response was that Ms Lees' solicitors had not received any recent documents from Dr Sacks.
The current medical evidence
"1. Any mental health condition(s) that Ms Lees has been diagnosed with
Ms Lees has a diagnosis of Adjustment Disorder, which was made following her presentation in crisis in October 2021. Further assessment is taking place to determine any underlying psychopathology. Possible comorbid diagnoses have not yet been discussed with Ms Lees.
2. The care/treatment that Ms Lees is receiving for her mental health condition(s)
Ms Lees is currently receiving 3-monthly outpatient psychiatric follow-up appointments. Her initial assessment was face to face, but subsequent appointments have been telephone-based, as she has been residing outside of London following eviction from her home. Her relocation outside of London has limited what other supportive interventions we have been able to offer her.
Alongside her psychiatric outpatient appointments, she is currently undergoing a Care Act assessment by my Social Work Hub colleagues.
3. Your view as to the condition(s)'s duration, severity, prognosis and timescale for improvement.
Ms Lees has a history of trauma from a young age, which I believe has significantly impacted the development of her personality, coping strategies and the way she relates to others. These characteristics are typically enduring in nature therefore likely to be long-lasting and dependent on what longer-term interventions she is able to engage with. Her symptoms related to Adjustment Disorder, which have been characterised by low mood, anxiety and suicidal thoughts, appear more directly related to stressors sound the eviction from her home. The timescale for improvement is therefore dependent on resolution of those stressors."
"I am able to confirm that to the best of your knowledge (sic), I am 100% confident that the Ms Amanda Lees is receiving mental health crisis treatment as per section 2 of the referral form:-
receiving crisis, emergency or acute care or treatment in any setting from a specialist mental health service (i.e. crisis treatment from a crisis home treatment team, liaison mental health team, community mental health team or any other specialist mental health crisis service) for a mental disorder of a serious nature."
In her email of 12 January 2023 Ms Lees described that second document as "evidence of my mental health crisis treatment as stated in the order of 6 December 2023".
Submissions
(1) he is unfairly prejudiced by the Current Moratorium;
(2) Ms Lees is not eligible for the Current Moratorium;
(3) Ms Lees is deploying the Regulations to evade a judgment debt, which is now over 4 years old and stems from proceedings issued 7 years ago. That is not the purpose of the Regulations and is a consequence which the court should guard against;
(4) Ms Lees has had the benefit of four previous moratoria, all of which were obtained on the eve of enforcement, and then allowed to lapse. She has never devised a realistic repayment plan, or any repayment plan, which is the very purpose of the statutory scheme;
(5) There is no relevant evidence of Ms Lees' mental health condition, in particular as to severity, prognosis and duration. Her condition appears to be not serious nor to require acute or emergency intervention and is directly and solely related to her eviction, which, on her construction, would render her forever immune from enforcement;
(6) There is contemporary evidence that Ms Lees, an author, is able to write, publish and publicise two new works of fiction, one of which is being published at the date of the hearing. That supports the obvious inference that her condition is not serious, or has significantly improved;
(7) It is just to grant an injunction to prevent further attempts by Ms Lees to frustrate the enforcement of a very stale judgment and to give finality to this matter and, in particular to Mr Kaye who is an innocent victim of Ms Lees' conduct and to the innocent purchaser of Ms Lees' property, Ms Chelsea Dixon.
1) there is plenty of material before the court from which it can conclude that she is receiving mental health crisis treatment which satisfies the statutory criteria;
2) as a person who is suffering from a mental health crisis she is under a disability and the conduct of Mr Kaye towards her has been discriminatory;
3) there has been a breach of her rights under the European Convention on Human Rights in the way in which she was evicted from her Flat and subjected to repeated applications to bring the moratoria to an end;
4) the Application is an abuse of the process;
5) Mr Kaye has failed to provide evidence that the Application is urgent or that his health has suffered in the way alleged in the witness statements filed by his solicitor on his behalf.
Discussion
The Legal Framework
"(2) A debt respite scheme is designed to do one or more of the following:
(a) protect individuals in debt from the accrual of further interest or charges on their debts during the period specified by the scheme,
(b) protect individuals in debt from enforcement action from their creditors during that period, and
(c) help individuals in debt and their creditors to devise a realistic plan for the repayment of some or all of the debts."
"(a) has been detained in hospital for assessment under sections 2 or 4 of the Mental Health Act 1983,
(b) has been detained in hospital for treatment under section 3 of that Act,
(c) has been removed to a place of safety by a police constable under sections 135 or 136 of that Act,
(d) has been detained in hospital for assessment or treatment under sections 35, 36, 37, 38 , 45A, 47 or 48 of that Act, or
(e) is receiving any other crisis, emergency or acute care or treatment in hospital or in the community from a specialist mental health service in relation to a mental disorder of a serious nature."
"(3) In this regulation "specialist mental health service" means a mental health service provided by a crisis home treatment team, a liaison mental health team, a community mental health team or any other specialist mental health crisis service."
Pausing there, it is apparent that the two conditions for the making of a mental health crisis moratorium under Regulation 28(2) (e) are that
(1) the debtor is suffering from a "mental disorder of a serious nature" and
(2) in respect of that disorder the debtor is receiving "crisis, emergency or acute" care or treatment in hospital or in the community.
"(1) In these Regulations a "debt advice provider" is—
(a) an authorised person who has Part 4A permission to carry on any regulated activity of the kind specified in article 39E (debt-counselling) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001, or
(b) a local authority."
Regulation 30(4) permits a debt advice provider to initiate a mental health crisis moratorium if the following conditions are met:
"(4) The conditions referred to in paragraph (2)(b) are that, in light of the information provided in accordance with regulation 29(2) and (4) and any other information obtained by the debt advice provider—
(a) the debtor is unable, or is unlikely to be able, to repay some or all of their debt as it falls due,
(b) a mental health crisis moratorium would be appropriate, and
(c) an approved mental health professional has provided evidence that the debtor is receiving mental health crisis treatment.
(5) For the purpose of paragraph (4)(b), when considering whether a mental health crisis moratorium is appropriate, the debt advice provider—
(a) must consider whether the debtor has sufficient funds or income to discharge or liquidate their debt as it falls due, and
(b) may have regard to any other factor that the debt advice provider considers relevant."
The duration of a mental health crisis moratorium is different to that of a breathing space in that, in accordance with regulation 32(2).
"(2) A mental health crisis moratorium ends on the earliest of —
(a) the end of the period of 30 days beginning with the day on which the debtor stops receiving mental health crisis treatment,
(b) the end of the period of 30 days beginning with the day on which a debt advice provider makes a request to the debtor's nominated point of contact in accordance with regulation 33 and during which period the debt advice provider does not receive a response,
(c) the day on which cancellation of the mental health crisis moratorium takes effect under regulations 18. 19 or 34, or
(d) the day on which it ends in accordance with regulation 21 as a result of the death of the debtor."
Thus a mental health moratorium continues, in essence, so long as the debt advice provider is satisfied where an application is made under sub-paragraph 28(2)(e) that the debtor is continuing to receive mental health crisis treatment for a mental disorder of a serious nature.
"17. — Creditor's request for review of a moratorium
(1) Subject to paragraph (4), a creditor who receives notification of a moratorium under these Regulations may request that the debt advice provider who initiated the moratorium or (as the case may be) the debt advice provider to whom the debtor has been referred since the start of the moratorium reviews the moratorium to determine whether it should continue or be cancelled in respect of some or all of the moratorium debts on one or both of the following grounds, namely that—
(a) the moratorium unfairly prejudices the interests of the creditor, or
(b) there has been some material irregularity in relation to any of the matters specified in paragraph (2).
(2) The matters in relation to which a creditor may request a review on the ground of material irregularity are that—
(a) the debtor did not meet the relevant eligibility criteria when the application for the moratorium was made,
(b) a moratorium debt is not a qualifying debt, or
(c) the debtor has sufficient funds to discharge or liquidate their debt as it falls due."
It is common ground, or at least as I understand it it is not in dispute, that the request for a review of the Current Moratorium was made in accordance with Regulation 17(3) and (4) within 20 days of the date the moratorium started and the debt advice provider completed the review and notified the creditor of the outcome well within the 35 days directed by the Regulation 18.
"19. – Court application by creditor for cancellation of a moratorium"
If a debt advice provider has carried out a review of a moratorium following a request made by a creditor under regulation 17 and the moratorium has not been cancelled under regulation 18 in respect of some or all of the moratorium debts as a result, then the creditor may make an application to the county court on one or both of the grounds in regulation 17(1)".
The power of the court on such an application is to be found in sub-paragraph (3) of Regulation 19:
"(3) Where on an application under this regulation the court is satisfied as to either of the grounds in regulation 17(1), it may do either or both of the following, namely –
cancel the moratorium debt owed to the creditor who made the application to the court,
cancel the moratorium in respect of any other moratorium debt."
It is common ground that although Regulation 19(1) refers to an application under Regulation 19 being made to the county court nevertheless the High Court has concurrent jurisdiction and, in the context of this case, it is appropriate for the Application to be made within the existing High Court proceedings, support for which view is to be found in the decision of HHJ Paul Matthews in Axnoller Events Limited v Brakes [2021] EWHC 2308 (Ch) [paras 8 to 10]. It is to be noted that Swift J in the December judgment did not suggest otherwise in respect of an application which have been made to the county court.
Were the conditions for the Current Moratorium met?
"It is not for me on this application, to assess the evidence provided to Mr Casson for the purposes of the discharge of his functions under regulation 32 of the 2020 Regulation in this case. One document I have seen that might be relevant to such issues is a letter dated 15 August 2022 from Dr Sophie Sacks, the Consultant Psychiatrist at the NHS West London Trust responsible for Ms Lees' treatment. The material part of that letter is as follows:
"2. The care/treatment that Ms Lees is receiving for her mental health condition(s);
Ms Lees is currently receiving 3-monthly outpatient psychiatric follow-up appointments. Her initial appointment was face to face, but subsequent appointments have been telephone-based, as she has been residing outside of London following eviction from her home. Her relocation outside London has limited what other supportive interventions we have been able to offer her.
Alongside her psychiatric out-patient appointments, she is currently undergoing a Care Act assessment by my Social Work Hub colleagues.
3. Your view as to the condition(s)'s duration, severity, prognosis and timescale for improvement.
Ms Lees has a history of trauma from a young age, which I believe has significantly impacted the development of her personality, coping strategies and the way she relates to others. These characteristics are typically enduring in nature therefore likely to be long-lasting and dependent on what longer-term interventions she is able to engage with. Her symptoms related to Adjustment Disorder, which is characterised by low mood, anxiety and suicidal thoughts, appear more directly related to stresses around the eviction from her home. The time scale for improvement is therefore dependent on the resolution of these stressors."
Were information of that nature to have been the only information available to Mr Casson, say for the purposes of the exercise of his functions under regulation 32 of the 2020 Regulations, I can see there could be good reason to conclude that it fell someway short of demonstrating that Ms Lees is now receiving treatment of the nature required by regulation 28(2)(e) in relation to a "mental disorder of serious nature". However, as I have said, I am not privy to all the information that is available to Mr Casson, and his exercise of his functions under regulation 32 of the 2020 Regulations is not, on this application, a matter for me."
I respectfully agree. However, there is no evidence before me to suggest that there was any other information before the debt advice provider at the time that the Current Moratorium was being sought.
"In reaching these conclusions I recognise they are conclusions capable of having harsh effects on a creditor. I accept that the case before me is a "hard case" because the overall effect of the conclusions I have reached on the application of regulations 13 and 19 is that Mr Kaye will have no opportunity to request a review of the moratorium granted on 15 February 2022. However, it is readily apparent, that, as made, the 2020 Regulations are intended to and do strike the balance between debtors and creditors in favour of debtors. This is particularly striking for mental health crisis moratoriums. Breathing space moratoriums are limited to 60 days in length. Mental health crisis moratoriums are subject to the provisions of regulations 32 to 34; such moratoriums can endure indefinitely. This places a great burden both on debt advice providers and also on the mental health professionals who provide the opinion on which the debt advice providers act. All must act with scrupulous care to ensure that mental health crisis moratoriums are maintained only for so long as, taking the facts of this case as an example, the debtor is in receipt of mental health crisis treatment. Since it is unrealistic to expect a debt advice provider to assess the debtor's health for himself (and the 2020 Regulations do not anticipate this to be a task for the debt advice provider at all), it is essential that evidence that establishes whether a debtor is receiving mental health crisis treatment – i.e., that one or other of the conditions in regulation 28(2) is met is clear, considered and reliable. This is especially so when the matter rests on the application of regulation 28(2(e). Each of the other conditions within regulation 28(2) sets a clearly observable benchmark. Condition (e) is different, requiring an opinion on the mental disorder – it must be one "of a serious nature" – and of the treatment being provided for that mental disorder. Although debt advice providers will not be in a position to second-guess medical evidence, they must ensure the evidence they have is cogent. Where necessary they must be prepared closely to assess the information available and seek clarification or further information as necessary, before concluding that the conditions for continuation of a mental health crisis moratorium are met. Any other approach risks bringing the scheme of the 2020 Regulations into disrepute."
Again, I respectfully agree and adopt those comments.
Unfair Prejudice
"I accept that unfairness is to be assessed objectively, and that this will require the court to embark upon a balancing exercise. I further accept that, where the moratorium discriminates unfairly between creditors, so that the impact on one is significantly more severe than on another, that may well be a proper basis on which the court can say that the moratorium "unfairly prejudices" the applicant creditor. But I also accept that the phrase "unfairly prejudices" should not be confined to that. These are ordinary English words, undefined in the legislation, and not obviously terms of art. They can properly be understood to go wider."
Ms Bretherton also submitted that the following principles can be derived from Axnoller, a decision with which Deputy ICC Judge Schaffer agreed in IV Fund Limited SAC v Mountain [2021] EWHC 2870 (Ch):
(1) In assessing prejudice, post-moratorium conduct can alter the balance of prejudice. Improvement in condition may enable a debtor to engage with the debt problem, and failing to do so having sufficiently improved might make the moratorium unfairly prejudicial; at [34]
(2) The Regulations necessarily require a Court to consider prejudice which outweighs any mental health crisis which the debtor may demonstrate. The interests of creditors and debtors are chalk and cheese, and the Court may determine for itself where the line is to be drawn; [35];
(3) Disclosure of treatment and prognosis is required to carry the balancing exercise out, without which it will be difficult to assess the debtor's interests; [37];
(4) Accordingly, sufficient detail of the duration and severity of the illness, the prognosis and the timescale for improvement are required; [39];
(5) Where the evidence, if any, suggests that the debtor's mental health has improved to an extent that it would be reasonable to expect them to engage with debt advice, that would weigh in favour of cancellation; [45].
(6) In assessing where the balance lies, Regulation 19(3) enables a court to distinguish between the effects on a particular creditor, and creditors generally, and make a tailored order; [25] and [36].
i) The Judgment Debt is substantial, it is longstanding and no attempts have been made by Ms Lees to discharge it notwithstanding that one of the express purposes of the breathing space legislation is, as the name suggests, to provide the debtor with the opportunity of making a "realistic plan for the repayment of some or all of the debts" (section 6(2) of the Financial Guidance and Claims Act 2018);
ii) Either the debt is no longer fully secured or will cease to be fully secured in the near future as the sums owed by Ms Lees to Mr Kaye continue to grow;
iii) The evidence suggests that Mr Kaye, whose claims have been vindicated by a court which awarded appropriate compensation, has exhausted his financial means in seeking to enforce that award;
iv) Ms Lees did not participate in the trials before HHJ Roberts and has not directly engaged with the merits of the Application;
v) Ms Lees has subsequently been protected by a sequence of moratoria the basis for which must now be in doubt, which must be to the detriment of Mr Kaye;
vi) There is no evidence to suggest that Ms Lees requires any further protection from her debts whereas there is evidence that she has been able to continue to work and be economically productive.
An injunction