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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Secretary Of State For Trade And Industry v. Gerard [2007] ScotCS CSIH_85 (21 November 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_85.html
Cite as: [2007] CSIH 85, [2007] ScotCS CSIH_85

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Johnston

Lord Wheatley

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 85

P1630/03

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

RECLAIMING MOTION

 

In

 

PETITION

 

of

 

HER MAJESTY'S SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRADE AND INDUSTRY

Petitioner and Respondent;

 

against

 

JAMES GERARD

Respondent and Reclaimer:

 

_______

 

 

 

Alt: Stewart; Biggart Baillie (Petitioner and Respondent)

Alt: Mackenzie, solicitor advocate; Pinsent Masons (Respondent and Reclaimer)

 

21 November 2007

 

[1] In this petition the petitioner seeks a disqualification order in terms of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 against the respondent and reclaimer ("the reclaimer"), arising out of and consequent upon the liquidation of Oakbank

(J & S) Limited ("the company"), of which, at the material time, the reclaimer was a director.

[2] The company was incorporated on 23 April 1998 and traded as suppliers of joinery and stone services. On 18 December 2001 an interim liquidator was appointed to the company on the making of a winding up order on 18 December 2001 at the instance of a petition by the Inland Revenue. At the material time the reclaimer was Managing Director and indeed the sole director of the company.

[3] Section 6 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 is in the following terms:

"(1) The court shall make a disqualification order against a person in any case where, on an application under this section, it is satisfied --

(a) that he is or has been a director of a company which has at any time

become insolvent (whether while he was a director or subsequently), and

(b)               that his conduct as a director of that company ... makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company.

(2) For the purposes of this section ..., a company becomes insolvent if --

(a) the company goes into liquidation at the time when its assets are insufficient for the payment of its debts and other liabilities and the expenses of the winding up,

...

and references to a person's conduct as a director of any company ... include, where that company ... has become insolvent, that person's conduct in relation to any matters connected with or arising out of the insolvency of that company".

[4] Section 8 of the 1986 Act authorises the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry to make an application for a disqualification order against any person if he considers it expedient in the public interest that such an order should be made. Section 9 and Schedule 1 of the 1986 Act specify certain matters that are to be taken into account in determining whether or not a person's conduct as a director makes him unfit to be concerned the management of the company. In particular the court is directed by paragraph 10 of Schedule 1 to have regard to:

"Any failure by the director to comply with any obligation imposed on him by or under any of the following provisions of the Insolvency Act --

...

(e) section 131 (statement of affairs in winding up by the court);

...

(b) section 235 (duty to co-operate with liquidator, etc)".

[5] The provisions of the Insolvency Act 1986 referred to in paragraph 210 of Schedule 1 are as follows. Section 131 imposes a duty on inter alios directors to provide a liquidator or provisional liquidator with a statement of affairs. In relation to a Scottish winding up, the relevant parts are in the following terms:

"(1) Where the court has made a winding-up order ... the [liquidator or provisional liquidator] may require some or all of the persons mentioned in subsection (3) below to make out and submit to him a statement in the prescribed form as to the affairs of the company.

(2) The statement shall be verified by affidavit by the persons required to submit it and shall show --

(a) particulars of the company's assets and liabilities;

(b) the names and addresses of the company's creditors;

(c) the securities held by them respectively;

(d) the dates when the securities were respectively given; and

(e) such further or other information as may be prescribed or as the

[liquidator or interim liquidator] may require.

(3) The persons referred to in subsection (1) are --

(a) those who are or have been officers of the company;

....

(4) Where any persons are required under this section to submit a statement of affairs to the [liquidator or interim liquidator], they shall do so ... before the end of the period of 21 days beginning with the day after that on which the prescribed notice of the requirement is given to them by the official receiver".

Section 235 imposes a general duty on inter alios directors to co-operate with any liquidator or interim liquidator. In terms of subsection (1), together with section 234(1), the section applies where a company goes into liquidation. In relation to a Scottish winding up, the relevant parts are as follows:

"(2) Each of the persons mentioned in the next subsection shall --

(a) give to the office-holder such information concerning the company and its promotion, formation, business, dealings, affairs or property as the office-holder may at any time after the effective date reasonably require, and

(b) attend on the office-holder at such times as the latter may reasonably require.

(3) The persons referred to above are --

(a) those who are or have at any time been officers of the

company, ..."

[6] After hearing a proof the Lord Ordinary in a lengthy and detailed judgment determined that the petitioner's case was made out, that the conduct of the reclaimer in certain specified matters rendered him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company as a director and that a disqualification order should be made for the minimum period available under the legislation, namely two years. It is against that determination that this reclaiming motion is taken.

[7] The issues canvassed before the Lord Ordinary and again before us were substantially questions of fact relating to the conduct of the reclaimer subsequent to the appointment of the liquidator and the liquidation of the company. In particular, the allegations against the reclaimer were based on the proposition that he had failed adequately to co-operate with the liquidator in the latter's investigation of the company's affairs.

[8] The Lord Ordinary heard evidence from four witnesses, the principal of which were Mr. Lewis Young, an employee of the firm Tenon Recovery, who had been appointed to manage the liquidation, as insolvency practitioners (the actual liquidator being a Mr. T.C. McLennan) and the reclaimer himself. The two other witnesses led at the proof were of lesser importance. The principal issues in the case were focused by Mr. Young and the reclaimer respectively. The substance of the Lord Ordinary's determination was that on any questions of fact where the evidence of Mr. Young and the reclaimer were in conflict, he, the Lord Ordinary, preferred that of Mr. Young and it was on the basis of that choice that he determined his decision.

[9] Before us the general position of Mr. Mackenzie, the solicitor advocate for the reclaimer, was that the Lord Ordinary had misdirected himself in respect of the reasons which he offered for his preference in respect of the crucial questions of fact of the evidence of Mr. Young to that of the reclaimer. Accordingly, the matter should be opened before us and the submission was that on the evidence led, properly understood, the issue in the case should be resolved in favour of the reclaimer. That was because the petitioner had not established the necessary material to warrant a disqualification order being pronounced against the reclaimer on the basis of his unfitness as a director.

[10] There was no basic dispute at the Bar as to the role and duties of an Appeal Court in considering the approach to be taken to determinations of fact by a Lord Ordinary. It is summarised by Lord Hamilton in Hamilton v Allied Domecq plc 2006 SC 221 where his Lordship says at paragraph 83 et, seq.:

"[83] In the context of the role of an appellate court in relation to issues of fact, counsel referred to Thomas v. Thomas, Caledonia North Sea Limited v. London Bridge Engineering Limited, Thomson v. Kvaerner Govan Limited 2004 SC (HL) 1 and Simmons v. British Steel plc 2004 SLT 595. An appeal court should bear in mind not only the advantage which the first instance judge has, on questions of credibility and of findings of primary fact, in seeing the parties and other witnesses; that advantage applied equally to the judge's evaluation of those facts (Piglowska v. Piglowska [1999] 1 WLR 1360, per Lord Hoffmann at page 1372). Accordingly, this court required to use extreme caution in its reading and analysis of Mr. Hamilton's evidence. The assessment of it, in its context, was pre-eminently a matter for the Lord Ordinary. He had found that at a meeting at Blackford on 27 May Mr. Beatty had made to Mr. Hamilton a negligent misrepresentation of fact as to Allied's then intention in respect of the strategy for marketing the product. This court was entitled to interfere with that finding only if it were demonstrated that the Lord Ordinary had, in his assessment and evaluation and in the context of the manner in which the proof had been conducted, plainly gone wrong.

[84] In approaching the task before this court I am acutely conscious of the constraints to which, on matters of fact, it is, as an appellate court, subject. These constraints are well-known and have recently been re-emphasised in a number of judgments of the House of Lords. But the existence of these constraints does not absolve this court from its obligation as a court of appeal on matters of fact to reconsider the evidence led before the Lord Ordinary and to determine upon such reconsideration whether critical findings of fact, both primary and secondary, made by the Lord Ordinary were justified. In undertaking that reconsideration it is always necessary for the appellate court to bear in mind the advantages, identified in the authorities, which a judge of first instance enjoys and which an appellate court does not. These include the opportunity to form, from the manner in which a witness gives his or her evidence before that judge, an impression as to the reliability or otherwise of the evidence given by the witness. That impression is likely also to be informed by the manner in which other witnesses, whether contradictory or confirmatory, give their evidence on the same or related matters. The personality of a witness may also have a bearing on the credibility or reliability of his or her testimony on particular matters; that cannot be assessed from the printed page. The way in which the case is conducted by legal representatives in the court of first instance (including the absence of challenge to the admission of particular evidence or to its truth or accuracy) may also legitimately affect the approach adopted by the court to the assessment of evidence. Moreover, in so far as concerns the evaluative exercise of drawing, or declining to draw, factual inferences from primary facts, an appellate court should exercise due caution before reversing such an evaluation.

[85] On the other hand, when, on examination by the appellate court of the printed evidence, it is plain that it could not constitute a proper basis for some primary finding of fact made by the judge of first instance, the appellate court has a power and a duty to reverse that finding. If findings of fact are unsupported by the evidence and are critical to the decision of the case, it may be incumbent on the appellate court to reverse the decision made at first instance."

[11] Without quoting directly from the Lord Ordinary's lengthy Opinion his position can be summarised as regards his reasons for preferring the evidence of Young on crucial matters. There were three chapters of evidence upon which the Lord Ordinary concentrated. The first related to the assets used by the company and in particular the assertions as to who owned them, as between the company and third parties, including the reclaimer. The second, chapter related to whether or not the reclaimer had ever been asked to provide a statement of affairs for the company and, in particular, whether he had been asked to complete a questionnaire known as a directors' questionnaire. In the third chapter, the Lord Ordinary identified what he described as seven "mishaps" that had occurred over the relevant passage of time, which is over the period of one year following the appointment of the liquidator. This matter he deals with in paragraph 41 of his Opinion, which is in the following terms:

"[41] In the second place, I find that the respondent's account of events is undermined by the series of mishaps that he claims have occurred. These are as follows. First, before the winding up, the company did not receive a copy of the petition at the instance of the Inland Revenue. Secondly, the company's computer, which might be expected to hold critical information, crashed and then went missing in the period between Mr Young's two meetings with the respondent. Thirdly, the respondent claims not to have received the pro forma statement of affairs for completion. Fourthly, the respondent claims not to have received a directors' questionnaire. Fifthly, the respondent claims not to have received the liquidator's letter of 22 April 2002. Sixthly, the respondent claims not have received the liquidator's letter of 16 May 2002. Seventhly, the respondent claims that he sent documents to the liquidator in January 2003 using the driver of the firm for which he now works, and that the driver confirmed that the documents were delivered, but he accepts that the documents were not received; the evidence is summarized at paragraphs [28] and [33] above. I find it highly improbable that all of the foregoing mishaps occurred. Individually, they are all no doubt possible. Cumulatively, however, I think it highly unlikely that they could all have happened. The last of them, the failure of the liquidator to receive the documents sent in January 2003, is in my opinion particularly significant because the respondent became aware shortly thereafter that the documents had been not received and made no effort to put matters right. I find his explanation for taking no further action unconvincing: see paragraph [33] above."

[12] Against that background the Lord Ordinary accordingly affirmed his preference of the evidence of Mr. Young on crucial matters and reached the following conclusions which he sets out in paragraphs 47 and 50. They are in the following terms:

"[47] As indicated above, I conclude that the respondent was provided with a pro forma statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire in about the first week or thereby of January 2002. That is based on Mr Young's evidence summarized at paragraph [11] above, and by the liquidator's letters of 22 April 2002, 16 May 2002 and 6 January 2003 (Nos 6/10-12 of process). It is also supported by Mr Young's evidence about Tenon Recovery's usual practice, and by the fact that the information was required for the first meeting of creditors, which was due to take place on 29 January 2002. I further conclude, on the basis of Mr Young's evidence, which was not challenged on this point, that the respondent at no time completed the statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire.

...

[50] The most important matter is the information provided by the respondent about the ownership of the assets within the company's premises. For the reasons stated at paragraphs [39], [40], [44] and [45] I have concluded that the respondent provided inaccurate verbal information at his initial meetings with Mr Young, in that he stated that the company did not own any of the plant and machinery on site. I further conclude, on the basis of Mr Young's evidence, that the respondent undertook to provide documentary evidence about the ownership of the assets but failed to do so. This seriously held up the progress of the insolvency, because it made it impossible for the liquidator to realize the fixed assets. No written information was provided about the fixed assets until well into 2003, and that information came from third parties. The matter is made worse by the fact that reminders relating to a list of fixed assets were given in the liquidator's letters of 22 April 2002, 16 May 2002 and 6 January 2003 (Nos 6/10-12 of process); despite these the respondent failed to reply. Mr Young stated that he had never fully resolved the question of ownership of the plant and equipment; in part this was because a detailed explanation would be required from the respondent to relate the documents that were ultimately obtained to what was on site: see paragraph [15] above. I accept that evidence. Obtaining information from third parties was time-consuming and expensive; I accept Mr Young's evidence on that point. I note, too, that Mrs Wileman stated that the insolvency was one that took a significant time."

[13] The solicitor advocate for the reclaimer submitted that the Lord Ordinary's approach to the questions of credibility and reliability as between the evidence of Mr. Young and the reclaimer was based on two critical errors.

[14] First of all the Lord Ordinary had proceeded on the basis that Mr. Young's account in relation to the statement of affairs and the ownership of the assets was supported by all the contemporary documents. The solicitor advocate maintained this was not correct and that the Lord Ordinary had misunderstood the evidence given by both Mr. Young and the reclaimer. He argued that documents which had been produced some time after the liquidator's appointment had revealed that whatever may initially have been understood to have been by the reclaimer, the reclaimer's position always had been that he owned some of the assets used by the company and the company owned the remainder. Equally, the solicitor submitted that there was no satisfactory evidence that a statement of affairs had been requested. He submitted that the failure to provide a statement of affairs, which was obviously the case, was consistent with the liquidator having been given all the records of the company and there having been various meetings between Mr. Young and the reclaimer. The solicitor advocate submitted that, properly understood, the evidence of Mr. Young should not have been preferred and, at best, the matter had been left unclear.

[15] On the issue of the question of "mishaps" the simple submission was that the Lord Ordinary had attached far too much importance to this list, only four of which were contentious, namely, those relating to the statement of affairs, the directors' questionnaire and the letters of 22 April and 16 May 2002. There was a separate issue as to the question of which documents had been sent to the liquidator. Mr. Mackenzie's final submission was accordingly that, having regard to the test laid down in Hamilton by Lord Hamilton, the Lord Ordinary had abused the advantage he had of seeing the witnesses by misunderstanding the evidence or placing improper emphasis upon it. His findings on credibility and reliability therefore could not stand and the matter unfit was at large, on the evidence, before this court.

[16] In replying to this aspect of the case counsel for the petitioner and respondent recognised that there were conflicts of facts between the evidence of Mr. Young and the reclaimer. However, he maintained that the Lord Ordinary was not only entitled to reach the conclusion he did, in preferring the evidence of Mr. Young on the crucial questions, namely, of the identification of ownership of assets and the statement of affairs and the directors' questionnaire, but he had given adequate reasons for his conclusions. Accordingly the reclaimer had not met the test of demonstrating that the Lord Ordinary had been "plainly wrong".

[17] With regard to the issue of the assets Mr. Stewart maintained that the Lord Ordinary in paras. [39] and [40] of his Opinion had plainly looked at the documents to cast light at what happened at the relevant meetings and he was entitled so to do. Even more important was the interim report of the liquidator (Appendix No. 6) which indicated that the company did not appear to have any material assets, which supported the assertion made by Mr. Young that initially, at least, the reclaimer had maintained that he owned all the assets of the company, whatever may have been the position subsequently taken up by him or on his behalf.

[18] With regard to the issue of statement of affairs and directors' questionnaire, Mr. Stewart, the counsel for the petitioner, concentrated on the transcript at, respectively, pages 23, 53 et. seq. 133 and 164, all of which supported the general proposition that in all cases the firm of Tenon Recovery requested the completion of a statement of affairs and the filling in of the directors' questionnaire. Any reference in the rules as to how such a demand could be made was purely evidential. The Lord Ordinary was accordingly entitled to hold that a request had been made of the reclaimer in this respect, which had never been complied with.

[19] Mr. Stewart went on to submit that the Lord Ordinary's analysis of the so-called mishaps was entirely relevant and was critical, on one view, to his approach to the whole case. The Lord Ordinary's reasoning with respect to these mishaps, to which we have already made reference, was clearly capable of being supported. The attack on the Lord Ordinary's assessment of the evidence, in respect of credibility and reliability, accordingly failed.

[20] Consideration of this issue is plainly critical to our assessment of this case and we consider it appropriate to deal with this question at this stage.

[21] We have no hesitation in determining that the approach of the Lord Ordinary to the issues of credibility and reliability as between Mr. Young and the reclaimer fails in respect of the high test imposed by Hamilton, which has to be the yardstick by which this court approaches the matter. It cannot remotely be said that the Lord Ordinary's conclusions on the questions of credibility and reliability were plainly wrong.

[22] With regard to the question of ownership of assets, the Lord Ordinary was more than entitled to conclude that the assertion had at some stage, in an early part of the process, being made by the reclaimer, that he owned the assets and that is entirely consistent with the interim report of the liquidator, which we consider to be a highly relevant and important document. The statement there about assets or lack of them could not have come from any other source than the reclaimer at an early time in the process of the liquidation.

[23] Against the background it is clear that a statement of affairs was never completed nor was the directors' questionnaire. We nevertheless recognise that from the evidence that the Lord Ordinary was entitled to conclude that requests for both these documents to be completed was made. In this respect, quite apart from the rather equivocal answer on one view on page 23 of the transcript, it is clear from pages 53 onwards what the normal practice of Tenon Recovery was in this respect and the Lord Ordinary, in our view, was more than entitled to conclude that it would have been followed in this case. He was therefore more than entitled to reject the assertion by the reclaimer that no such requests were ever made.

[24] Perhaps more importantly, looking at the matter overall against the background of the so-called mishaps, it is clear to us as obviously it was to the Lord Ordinary that there was a pattern of behaviour over the year in question redolent of non-co-operation by the respondent/reclaimer with the liquidators and in this respect the issue of mishaps is highly important. For example we consider, and agree with the Lord Ordinary, that it is too much of a coincidence that vital letters on three separate occasions go missing.

[25] Cases of this sort where evidential questions are confused and sometimes difficult to distinguish between the protagonists' positions, the issue of impression by the presiding judge at the proof is very important and this is emphasised by the approach of this court in Hamilton. We consider, and are greatly influenced by the fact, that the Lord Ordinary plainly concluded that the overall picture was one of non-co-operation and we consider it would be highly improper for us, at this stage of the process, as an Appeal Court, to interfere with that analysis. We cannot therefore fault the Lord Ordinary's approach to the crucial evidential questions and his conclusions.

[26] In these circumstances this reclaiming motion must fail, but there remain two other questions.

[27] In the first place, against the background of In re Grayan Building Services Limited 1995 CH 241 and re Hitco 2000 Limited 1995 BCC 162, can the finding of unfitness and therefore the order of disqualification be justified?

[28] We are in no doubt that it can on the basis of the Lord Ordinary's findings which we have supported and we take that matter no further.

[29] There remains, finally, what could be described as an esto question on the basis that this court is wrong in rejecting the attack on the Lord Ordinary's findings on credibility and reliability and that accordingly the matter of unfitness and disqualification is at large for this court.

[30] Mr. Mackenzie sought effectively to re-argue the issue as between Mr. Young and the reclaimer, suggesting that the account of his client was logical and consistent, while that of Young was untenable on the vital questions. He maintained that the evidence supported the view that the respondent/reclaimer had co-operated with the liquidator, provided company records, had kept in touch with the liquidator primarily by telephone, while he may have been dilatory in some respects and that he had to admit that there was no response to the letters of April and May 2002, there was a final response in January 2003. The reclaimer, he submitted, had provided financial information as best as he could and that while certain criticisms could have been made as to the way he had behaved, particularly when it came to the issue involving the accountants instead of himself, at the end of the day this court should hold, it was submitted, that there had been sufficient co-operation on behalf of the respondent throughout the liquidation process to acquit him of any form of misfeasance or misconduct.

[31] In reply to this Mr. Stewart's position was really to support that of Mr. Young, on the evidence, on relation to the issue of assets and the questionnaire. He was particularly critical of the admitted facts that various letters were not replied to and submitted that the fact that they had not been received was simply incredible. On any view, accordingly, the Lord Ordinary came to the conclusion which should be supported by this court if the matter was at large before it.

[32] Determination of this issue is not of course essential, or indeed necessary, for this court having regard to the conclusion it has reached on the preliminary question and it is not an easy one to resolve on the assumption that we are proceeding hypothetically de novo upon the evidence. If the matter was critical we incline to the view that the submissions made by Mr. Stewart are to be preferred in as much as that the position of Mr. Young is inherently more credible on paper than that of the respondent/reclaimer, whose position was at times inconsistent, particularly on the issue of assets and the statement of affairs and more significantly, perhaps, when the issue of mishaps is looked at in this context.

[33] In these circumstances, with some hesitation, we conclude that if the issue of whether or not a basis for disqualification has been made out on the evidence was before us, that such has been achieved for the reasons submitted by Mr. Stewart.

[34] For the reasons given, accordingly, this reclaiming motion must be refused and the decision of the Lord Ordinary affirmed.

[35] There remains, however, the question of what order should be pronounced by this court. We were informed that subsequent to the issuing of the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor a period of 20 days elapsed before this reclaiming motion was enrolled, during which time the disqualification was in place. Effectively, therefore, the reclaimer has already served a 20 day period. Furthermore, we were informed that it is normal practice to postpone the effect of a disqualification order for a period of 21 days to allow, if so advised, the disqualified Director to seek relief from the court under certain statutory provisions.

[36] In these circumstances the order to be pronounced by this court will accordingly be one of two years disqualification to take effect 21 days after the date of this court's interlocutor, but also reflecting the fact that 20 days of that two year period has already been served. If either party is dissatisfied with this approach in relation to the order being pronounced the case can be put out By Order.

 


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