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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) >> KS v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2009] UKUT 122 (AAC) (02 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/AAC/2009/122.html Cite as: [2009] UKUT 122 (AAC), [2010] AACR 3 |
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IN THE UPPER TRIBUNAL Appeal No. CJSA/526/2009
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER
Before Deputy Upper Tribunal Judge Mark
Decision: The appeal is allowed. I set aside the decision of the tribunal and I remit the matter to be reheard by a new tribunal in accordance with the directions given below.
The effect of a bankruptcy order
.
"22. There are obvious close similarities between a restraint order and a freezing order (formerly known as a Mareva injunction) made by the Court under the powers in Part 25 of the Civil Procedure Rules. As noted by Mitchell Taylor & Talbot on Confiscation and the Proceeds of Crime, para. III.021:
"Obviously, as the purpose of the restraint order is to prevent disposal of assets, similar principles and practice have arisen between restraint orders and conventional civil freezing orders. In some cases under the confiscation legislation the court has specifically referred to the similarity."
The authors cite a number of cases in support of that, including DPP v Scarlett [2000] 1 WLR 515.
23. There is clear authority that a freezing order "gives the applicant no proprietary right in the assets seized and no advantage over other creditors of the defendant" (Supreme Court Practice, Vol. 2 para. 2555): see Cretanor Maritime v Irish Marine Management [1978] 1 WLR 966; Derby v Weldon [1990] Ch 65. Gee on Commercial Injunctions, 5th Ed, summarises the position as follows:
"A Mareva injunction does not affect the defendant's proprietary interest in his assets. The claimant gains no priority over any other creditor of the defendant and no proprietary interest in or charge over the assets which are subject to the injunction." (p.132).
24. However, although I have not been referred to it by either party, I should also consider Re M (restraint order) [1992] 1 All ER 537. It concerned the interplay between the jurisdiction (under s.8(1) of the Drug Trafficking Offences Act 1986 in that case) to make a restraint order and the court's jurisdiction in bankruptcy. A restraint order had been made against the debtor under that Act. When his creditors pressed for payment of their debts the defendant applied to the Court and obtained an interim order under s.252 of the Insolvency Act 1986 authorising a nominee appointed under a voluntary arrangement with his creditors to realise sufficient of his assets to discharge all debts to creditors. By s.252(2) such an order had the effect that no proceedings, execution or other process might be commenced or continued against the debtor or his property without the leave of the court.
25. When the prosecution applied for the appointment of a receiver pursuant to s.8(6) of the Drug Trafficking Offences Act, the defendant argued that s. 252(2) of the Insolvency Act prevented the prosecution from pursuing such an application. However, Otton J. held that an interim order under s.252 did not prevent the prosecution from applying for the appointment of a receiver in respect of property which was subject to a restraint order which had been made before the s.252 order, because the property to which a restraint order applied was no longer to be considered as part of the debtor's estate. Otton J. said (p.543):
"The property to which the restraint order applies is no longer to be considered a part of the defendant's estate. He holds only notional title to such property. All dealings with such property are to be held in abeyance until such time as the defendant is acquitted or a confiscation order is made and satisfied. Any doubt is removed by consideration of the purpose of the Drug Trafficking Offences Act 1986, which is to be found in s.13 ……. The purpose, in short, is to make available the value of the realisable property and, by its realisation, to satisfy the confiscation order.
Here Mr M is a defendant. He has been charged with a drug trafficking offence. The High Court on two previous occasions has been satisfied that there exists a reasonable likelihood that he will be convicted. It has made a restraint order pursuant to s.8 of the 1986 Act. All property rights in the property to which the order relates lie in abeyance. The property can no longer be considered part of his estate until the outcome of his criminal trial."
26. Those statements, although made in a different context, would appear to provide quite strong support for an argument that assets of a claimant which are subject to a restraint order are not the claimant's capital for the purpose of calculating his entitlement to income support/JSA.
27. I have come to the conclusion that it unnecessary for me to decide whether that is so or not, for two reasons. First, if (as I am strongly inclined to think) such assets remain his capital, their "market value" (and therefore their value for the purpose of means tested benefits (see, in the case of JSA, reg. 111 of the Jobseeker's Allowance Regulations 1996)) must surely be nil. An asset which a person is prohibited by court order from disposing of must surely be treated as having no market value. "
Possible deprivation of capital
Additional grounds of appeal
Powers of the tribunal under rule 43
Michael Mark
Deputy Upper Tribunal Judge
2 July 2009