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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Oriental Express (Scotland) Ltd v Purewal Enterprises Ltd [2008] ScotCS CSOH_129 (05 September 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_129.html Cite as: [2008] CSOH 129, 2008 Hous LR 71, [2008] ScotCS CSOH_129, 2008 SLT 1111, 2008 GWD 37-548 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION [2008] CSOH 129 |
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OPINION OF LORD GLENNIE in the cause CATHAY LOON FUNG LIMITED Pursuers; against PUREWAL ENTERPRISES LIMITED Defenders: ________________ |
Pursuers: Thomson; Burness LLP
Defenders: Hawkes, Dawson; Shepherd and
Wedderburn
[2] On
or about 20 May 2008 the defenders served on the pursuers a pre-irritancy
notice giving the pursuers notice that the lease might be terminated by them if
rent and other charges allegedly due in terms of the lease were not paid within
a period of 14 days. It is averred in
the summons that that pre-irritancy notice was defective and that accordingly
the letter was invalid as a pre-irritancy notice. It was further averred in the summons that on
[3] The
summons concluded for declarator that the pursuers were entitled to use and
occupy the premises and for interdict prohibiting the defenders or anyone on
their behalf from performing any act interfering with the pursuers right to use
and occupy the premises. On
"ad interim interdicts the defenders or anyone else on their behalf from performing any act which interferes with the pursuers' right to use and occupy the premises known as [the Restaurant Premises] for the permitted purposes specified in the lease ..."
The order was duly served on the defenders.
[4] On
[5] On
[6] A minute has been lodged in these proceedings ostensibly on behalf of the pursuers craving the court to ordain an office holder of the defenders to appear personally at the bar of the court to explain the defenders' breach of interdict; and thereafter to inflict upon the defenders such punishment as the court should think fit in all the circumstances. Since this minute was intimately bound up with the disputes which were the subject of the petition to wind up the Company, I agreed to hear it at the same time as dealing with those disputes. In the event, I have dealt with the two matters sequentially.
[7] The minute was instructed by Mr Liu (a director of the pursuers) at the time when their affairs were in the hands of a provisional liquidator. Mr Thomson, who appeared for the defenders, took the point that Mr Liu had no right to give instructions on behalf of the pursuers and, accordingly, that the minute was issued and lodged without the authority of the pursuers. He submitted that it should peremptorily be dismissed. I rejected that argument. It is, of course, correct that once a provisional liquidator has been appointed, the directors of the company have no power to act on its behalf or in its name (save for any application for recall of the appointment). In particular, they have no power to instruct either the commencement of proceedings or the taking of a step in existing proceedings. In such a case the other party may move, as they have done here, to sist or dismiss the action or motion as the case may be. That would not have been the appropriate course in the present case. At the time the minute was lodged, it was apparent that the directors of the company were seeking to have the appointment of the provisional liquidator recalled and the petition dismissed. I have ruled in their favour on that point and dismissed the petition. Thereafter, the directors of the company were once again able to act on its behalf. They were entitled to ratify steps taken purportedly on behalf of the company but without its authority. This is clear from the decision of the House of Lords in Alexander Ward & Co Limited v Samyang Navigation Co Limited 1975 SC(HL) 26 approving the decision of the Court of Appeal in Danish Mercantile Co Limited v Beaumont [1951] Ch 680. Mr Thomson accepted this as a correct statement of the law. The company, acting again through Mr Liu, made it clear by counsel, after I pronounced my order dismissing the petition and recalling the appointment of the provisional liquidator, that it wished to ratify the issue and lodging of the minute. The minute was therefore to be treated as having been issued and lodged with the authority of the company.
[8] The
next point taken by Mr Thomson concerned the procedure to be adopted. He said that he wanted to lodge answers, and
that thereafter there ought to be a debate or a proof. He referred me to the annotations in the
Parliament House Book to Rule of Court 60.3, in particular note 60.3.3 on
p.C485 under the heading (2) Procedure by
minute. My attention was not
directed to any Rule of Court specifically dealing with this. Answers may be appropriate in many, indeed
most, cases, where there is a dispute of fact about whether or not the party
alleged to be in breach has committed the acts of which complaint is made. But in the present Mr Thomson candidly and
expressly admitted that the interdict had been pronounced in terms restraining
his clients from performing any act which interferes with the pursuers' right
to use and occupy the premises. He
admits that the interdict was properly served on his clients before they sent
the irritancy notice. And he admits that
the irritancy notice was sent in the terms of the copy lodged in process. What he does not admit is that the pursuers
lost possession of the premises as a result of service of the notice. I can see that there might be things to be
said about that; but that is not an essential part of the case that the
defenders were in breach of interdict.
It goes to the consequence of their breach, if breach is
established. On the basis of what is
admitted I see no reason to make the resolution of this matter unduly
protracted. It serves neither the
parties nor the interests of justice for me to order or allow the lodging answers
to the minute and then adjustments to the minute and answers.
[9] Mr Thomson then asked for time to consider the ruling and to prepare his submissions. I took the view that he had had enough time already and I refused him more. At earlier hearings he had outlined the nature of his contention that service of the irritancy notice was not a breach of interdict. I have to assume that that outline of his submissions was informed by the appropriate research. He has had ample notice that the hearing on the minute was to be heard after I made an order on the motion to dismiss the winding up petition. Although he may have hoped that I would allow some written process before he was required to make submissions, he had no basis for expecting that to be the case. I had already on previous occasions sought to extract from him what his answer was to the charge of breach of interdict. He ought to have been aware that I would, or at least might, expect to be addressed on it on this occasion.
[10] Part of the background to his submission that I should not proceed immediately to hear submissions on whether or not his clients were in breach of interdict was the fact that they wished to reclaim my dismissal of the petitions. Upon doing so, I was told, the effect of my order would be suspended and the provisional liquidator would resume or continue in office until the reclaiming motion was disposed of. He no doubt hoped that the provisional liquidator would not wish to proceed with the minute alleging breach of interdict. I have no idea what attitude the provisional liquidator will take to the minutes. He is an officer of the court and will take his own view, which may or may not be that which the defenders in this action want him to take. If I had thought that any prejudice was occasioned to the defenders by continuing to hear argument on the question of breach I would, of course, have adopted some other course. However, it seemed to me that all the defenders were after was delay until the reclaiming motion in the petition action was marked and the provisional liquidator was back in place. That did not seem to me to be a proper reason for not proceeding to hear the argument.
[11] Mr Thomson's argument that the service of the irritancy notice on 1 July 2008 was not a breach of the interim interdict proceeded, as I understand it, by reference to the fact that the defenders were interdicted only from "performing any act which interferes with the pursuers' right to use and occupy the premises". Service of an irritancy notice does not interfere with any right on the part of the pursuers to use and occupy the premises. The pursuers were in default and had rendered themselves liable to have the lease terminated. They therefore had no right to continue to use and occupy the premises. Nor, if the notice was invalid, was their possession interfered with by virtue of service of the notice - in such services it was the voluntary act of the provisional liquidator in response to the notice which brought the tenancy to an end. I reject those arguments. Unless and until a valid irritancy notice is served, the pursuers have all the rights given to them under the lease. They remain in possession as of right, notwithstanding any failure on their part to pay. That right can be brought to an end by the service of a valid irritancy notice. Ex hypothesi, therefore, service of a valid irritancy notice interferes with that right. Service of an invalid notice also interferes with the right to use and occupy the premises, since it puts the tenant to the trouble and expense of vindicating that right, if he is minded to do so, or precipates a decision as to whether he ought to avoid a fight and surrender the lease. On either basis, therefore, service of the irritancy notice interferes with the tenant's right. Secondly, and in any event, the interim interdict was granted in circumstances where there was a dispute about the validity of the pre-irritancy notice. It is quite clear that the interim interdict was intended to prevent the defenders taking any further action on the basis of that notice, and its wording makes this clear. It does not leave it open to the defenders simply to proceed in the hope of justifying the validity of the pre-irritancy notice. Otherwise the grant of interim interdict in this or a similar form, which is often done in a wide range of disputes in order to hold the position pending a resolution of the underlying merits, would be wholly nugatory.
[12] I should add that the fact that the irritancy notice is in part based on the apparent insolvency of the pursuers does not assist the defenders: it remains an act which interferes with the pursuers' right to use and occupy the premises. It may be that the petition to wind up should be seen as part of a scheme to entitle the defenders to serve the irritancy notice, in which case there might be an argument that bringing that petition was itself in breach of interdict. But this was not relied on by the pursuers and I did not need to consider it further.
[13] In these circumstances it seems to me that the defenders'
action in serving an irritancy notice was plainly in breach of the interim
interdict granted on
[14] I pronounced my decision orally after retiring for a few
minutes, at about