Understanding s239 Preference under Insolvency Act 1986

Insolvency officeholder's claims to avoid a transaction as a preference, discussed by Mr Hill, counsel in the section 239 preferences cases of Taylor (Liquidator of The Caprice Clothing Company Limited) v Ziya [2012] BPIR 1283, Finch Plc [2016] BCLC 394 and Lannagan & Pearson (Joint Liquidators) v Kean, Kean and Wensum Limited [2019] Lexis Citation 358. Updated 2022.

1. The law prohibiting preferences (sometimes called 'unfair preference' or 'wrongful preference'[1a]) is a small but important area of corporate insolvency law. It is designed to counter attempts to undermine or circumvent the proper application of the pari passu principle in an insolvency. The main provision, s239 of the Insolvency Act 1986 (‘the Act’) has proved an effective weapon in a liquidator or administrator’s hand; its continuing practical importance to day-to-day insolvencies in the England and Wales is evidenced by the steady stream of reported cases in this area.

THE PARI PASSU PRINCIPLE

2. It is often said that the most fundamental principle in corporate insolvency is the principle of pari passu distribution - that all creditors of a certain class within the statutory scheme should be treated equally in the distribution (see s107 of the Act (compulsory winding up); Insolvency Rules 2016 r.14.12 (formerly Insolvency Rules 1986 r.4.181) (CVL)); for the purposes of this paper, the focus will be on the principle’s application to non-preferential unsecured creditors as a class.

3. During prosperous times, a creditor’s ability to seek payment and enforcement against a company’s assets is governed by a ‘first come, first served’ or ‘race goes to the swiftest’ legal environment[1b]. During the company’s twilight, this environment can become disorderly, and unrestrained, would become a 'free for all', 'devil take the hindmost' legal environment (at worst, a company asset dismemberment melee). Once a company enters insolvency, this creditor environment is replaced by one where creditors hold general rights, standing alongside all others within the general body of creditors (of their class), to a rateable slice of the distribution of the net proceeds pari passu – see Re Gray’s Inn Construction Ltd [1980] 1 WLR 711 . The objective being that losses existing in the insolvency should be borne by the creditors equally, with each creditor receiving a certain number of pence per pound of debt.

4. The law has long recognized and made provision for the inevitable temptation that arises in some involved with a company to attempt to circumvent or undermine the application of the pari passu principle during the company’s twilight - to place a particular existing creditor (typically, it is a creditor, but sureties and guarantors can also be the alleged recipient of the unfair preference ('recipient')/impuged person) into a position which will prove more advantageous to that particular creditor when the anticipated insolvency comes to pass - more advantageous in comparison to what that particular creditor would otherwise have been entitled to, standing alongside the other creditors pari passu. The uplift or improvement gained by the particular creditor will cause a corresponding detriment to the general body of creditors, and so be 'at the expense' of the general body of creditors – distorting the ‘equal treatment’ of all those within the general body of creditors ethos, and frustrating the proper rateable distribution of the general pool of assets to the creditors within that body.

5. Frequently encountered scenarios can involve the selective repayment of loans:

a. Received by the company from persons connected to the company, like director’s spouses or relatives;

b. Provided by certain particular creditors with whom the directors wish to maintain a continuing relationship with after the company’s insolvency; or

c. From the company’s bank, including the bank’s overdraft facility, to which directors’ guarantees are linked.

THE OFFICE-HOLDERS’ ARMOURY: THE SPECIFIC STATUTORY POWERS 

6. The preference power forms part of the liquidator and administrator’s  (‘office-holder’) ‘well-stocked armoury’ of statutory powers to challenge improper depletion/divesting of a company’s assets (e.g. s212 misfeasance, s213 fraudulent trading, s214 wrongful trading, s238 transactions at an undervalue and s423 transactions defrauding creditors). However, s239 preferences, the focus of this paper, is the main weapon for protecting the proper application of the pari passu principle.

PREFERENCES

7. The starting point[1c] for considering the ambit and scope of a statutory power is the statute itself. The provisions are detailed, particularly within s240 and 241 (the supplementing provisions) and while this survey will consider the salient parts, readers are encouraged to read the specific sections themselves, to glean the exact parameters of each section before applying it to their particular factual scenario.

QUALIFYING PREFERENCES: TWO PRECONDITIONS

8. Not all potential preference transactions are vulnerable to a s239 application by the office-holder. S239 only permits applications to Court to be made in respect to an allegedly voidable preference that has occurred within the ‘relevant time’. ‘Relevant time’ breaks down into two mandatory preconditions - the preference must have occurred:

a. During the operative period; and

b. While the company was in a state of insolvency.

Precondition 1: During the Operative Period;

9. ‘Relevant time’ is defined, for the purposes of s239, by s240(1) as being either:

a. In the case of a preference given to a person who is ‘connected with’ the company, any time in the period of 2 years ending with the ‘onset of insolvency’; or

b. In any other case, any time in the period of 6 months ending with the ‘onset of insolvency’.

In Kelmanson v Gallagher [2022] EWHC 395 (Ch)(also know as Re De Weyer Limited (In Liquidation))('Kelmanson'), this was labelled the 'temporal element of "relevant time"' (paragraph 103). As will be immediately apparent, the terms ‘connected with’ and ‘onset of insolvency’ are important terms of art in the statute.

10. This time provision operates in a similar fashion to Limitation Act bars, providing a trailing time limit going back from the onset of insolvency. The length of the trailing time limit is Parliament’s attempt at striking the right balance between catching underminingly proximate preferences and providing a measure of commercial certainty to those interacting with companies, by guaranteeing finality of transaction after a certain point. Accordingly, an otherwise vulnerable preference may become immune from avoidance (i.e. being rendered void), if the company hobbles along long enough after the preference transaction is given.

‘Onset of Insolvency’

11. The ‘onset of insolvency’ is defined in s240(3) as being one of five trigger scenarios, all relating to the company either entered into administration or going into liquidation. This may be the date of presentation of the petition for the making of an administration order, or in the case of an out of court appointment of an administrator the date on which the notice of intention to appoint is filed. In the case of a company going into liquidation following conversion of administration into winding up the onset of insolvency is the date on which the company entered administration, but in all other cases under which the company goes into liquidation the onset of insolvency is the date of the commencement of the winding-up.

‘Connected with’

12. Whether the recipient of the preference was a person ‘connected with’ the company at the time the preference occurred, has an impact on two aspects of s239’s application:

a. On the length of the trailing time limit ‘relevant time’ – as outlined above; and

b. It triggers a presumption created by in s239 (6) in respect to the ingredient ‘influenced by a desire’ – this will be considered below.

13. Persons ‘connected with’ a company is defined in a combination of s249 and s435. Section 249 reads:

‘For the purposes of any provision in [Part containing s239], a person is connected with a company if-

(a) he is a director or shadow director of the company or an associate of such a director or shadow director, or

(b) he is an associate of the company

and “associate” has the meaning given by section 435 in Part XVIII of this Act’. See Darty Holdings SAS (as successor to Kesa International Ltd) v Carton-Kelly (as liquidator of CGL Realisations Ltd (in liquidation)) [2021] EWHC 1018 (Ch); [2021] BPIR 779 for a recent examination of the word 'associate'.

14. Relevant s249 terms are defined in s251 as:

 ‘”director” includes any person occupying the position of director, by whatever name called’;

‘”shadow director”, in relation to a company, means a person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the directors of the company are accustomed to act (but so that a person is not deemed a shadow director by reason only that the directors act on advice given by him in a professional capacity)’.

15. The distinction between ‘shadow director’ and ‘de facto’ director should be kept in mind here, so as not to fall into the trap described as ‘embarrassing’ by Millett J in Re Hydrodam (Corby) Ltd [1994] 2 BCLC 180 (see also Holland v HM Revenue and Customs [2011] BCC 1).

16. The term ‘associate’ is defined in elaborate detail in s435, covering a wide and varied selection of relationships (e.g. spousal, civil partner, familial, partnership or trustee etc.) too numerous to repeat here. Reference to the section itself should be made where it is not clear whether the relationship in issue is caught by s435.

17. It is important to note that s239 (6) and s240(1) expressly exclude a person from being found to be ‘connected with’ the company if that person would qualify only by reason of being the company’s employee.

18. The rationale for why those ‘connected with’ the company are singled out, is explained by Professor Prentice in Making Commercial Law: Essay’s in Honour of Roy Goode ed. Cranston, page 454:

‘The reason for singling out connected parties (e.g. directors) for special treatment is that they will more likely than other creditors know of the company’s insolvency and will also be in a position to pressurize the company to make a preferred payment.’

Precondition 2: State of Insolvency

19. A time is not ‘a relevant time’ unless the company was at that moment the preference was given, unable to pay its debts within the meaning of s123 or became so in consequence of the transaction. In Kelmanson, this was labelled the 'insolvency element of "relevant time"' (paragraph 104). This precondition is contained within s240 (2), which reads:

‘Where a company ... gives a preference at a time mentioned [2 years or 6 months], that time is not a relevant time for the purposes of … section 239 unless the company—

(a) is at that time unable to pay its debts within the meaning of section 123 in Chapter VI of Part IV; or

(b) becomes unable to pay its debts within the meaning of that section in consequence of the ... preference; ...’

20. Section 123(1) provides that a company is deemed unable to pay its debts in various circumstances, of which the only relevant one (a co-incidental s123 (1)(a) or (b) situation seems fairly unlikely) is:

‘(e) if it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the company is unable to pay its debts as they fall due.’  (‘cash-flow’ insolvent)

21. By virtue of s 123(2), a company is also deemed unable to pay its debts:

‘if it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the value of the company’s assets is less than the amount of its liabilities, taking into account its contingent and prospective liabilities.’ (‘balance sheet’ insolvent).

22. If the solvency of the company at the moment the alleged preference was given is in issue, then the Court will need to consider evidence of the company’s accounts at that time.  

WHAT TRANSACTIONS ARE PREFERENCES?

23. A transaction will be a voidable preference if three ‘ingredients’ are satisfied. A company gives a preference to a person if:

‘(a) that person is one of the company’s creditors or a surety or guarantor for any of the company’s debts or other liabilities' (‘Ingredient 1’)(s239(4)(a))

'(b) the company does anything or suffers anything to be done which (in either case) has the effect of putting that person into a position which, in the event of the company going into insolvent liquidation, will be better than the position he would have been in if that thing had not been done.' (‘Ingredient 2’)(s239(4)(b))

24. However, a Court cannot make an order setting aside a preference unless the third ingredient, contained in s239 (5), is satisfied, namely:

‘…unless the company which gave the preference was influenced in deciding to give it by a desire to produce in relation to that person the effect mentioned in [Ingredient 2]' (‘Ingredient 3’)

Ingredient 1: Recipient is an existing Creditor, Surety or Guarantor

25. This provision is relatively straightforward. The impugned person[1d], were they either a ‘creditor’ of the company, or a ‘surety’ or a ‘guarantor’ of the company’s debts or liabilities, when the impugned transaction occured? The existence or otherwise of this ingredient should be easily ascertainable from the impugned person’s pre-existing financial relationship with the company.

Ingredient 2: The Effect is Betterment

26. This ingredient centres on the effect of the impugned transaction, rather than motivation for the transaction. Further, it does not matter here whether the transaction occured by the company's commission, or by the company ‘suffering’ it. This latter word, ‘suffering’, is not easy to understand at first glance; its meaning was considered in Re Parkside [2009] BPIR 549 ('Parkside') as being ‘in the sense of allowing to happen, something it can control’ (or influence), for example, ‘…by allowing a debtor to make the relevant payment to the company’s bank or creditor on its behalf[1e]. Some transactions can occur that involve neither commission nor such suffering – the Court in Parkside said ‘the trafficking between third parties in a debt owed by the company does not involve the company in doing or allowing anything to happen’ (see also Belmont Park Investments [2012] 1 AC 383).

27. Moreover, the (mere) fact that something has been done in pursuance of a Court order does not, without more, prevent the doing or suffering of that thing from constituting the giving of a preference, s 239 (7). This seems logical, otherwise the risk would exist that the Court process could be used collusively by the company and recipient as an ‘immunity cloak’. However, this issue rarely arises as by far the majority of preferences are conferred outside of the 'cover' of legal proceedings.

28. Whether the transaction had the identified effect (which I shall, as a convenient shorthand, label ‘betterment’), is a question of fact. However, this issue will rarely be less than clear-cut, since it will usually be fairly apparent whether the impugned person's position has altered for the better, in the event of the company going into liquidation.

29. This betterment comes in different guises. For example, it will be an improvement in the impugned person's financial position in an approaching insolvency, for the impugned person to:

a. be paid some (or all) of the money owed to him by the company – for an example, see Taylor v Ziya [2012] BPIR 1283; or

b. have the debt ‘upgraded’ from being unsecured to being secured, by the granting to the impugned person, of a fixed or a floating charge over the company’s assets (or being granted further security for the debt). Secured creditors, particularly fixed charge creditors, stand in a very strong position in an insolvency - for example, see Stealth Construction v Ireland [2011] BPIR 1173 (‘Stealth’) and Re Mistral Finance Ltd [2001] BCC 27;

c. returning goods which have been delivered but not paid for - see Cork Report (1982) Command 8558;

d. have his guarantee released because the debt he stood as guarantee for has been paid off by the company – see Re Parkside [54]. A familiar scenario might be where a director stands as guarantor for the company’s overdraft; he then benefits when the bank releases him from the guarantee after the company pays off the entire overdraft.

30a. Transactions don’t always result in betterment. In Branston & Gothard Ltd [1999] BPIR 466, the company was holding money on trust for clients, the company then moved the funds from one trust bank account to another trust bank account. The Court held that this did not amount to any betterment. The beneficiaries remained in the same position.

30b. Betterment is not restricted to where there has been one transaction.

(1) The Court can deem a whole series of transactions as one single composite transaction. In Kelmanson, at all material times:

(a) a Company (DW Company) had PG as its sole director. DW Company owed money to PG (of more than £105,00) and DW (of more than £210,000);

(b) a (second) company (D Company) had PG and DW as its directors.

On 8.2.17, DW Company sold its premises and held net sale proceeds of £333,999 (paragraph 89). Despite DW Company's liabilities being twice its assets (so DW Company was balance sheet insolvent (paragraph 90)), on 9.2.17, DW Company paid c.£315,000 to D Company, and on 10.2.17 (so the next day), that sum was paid on to: (1) PG (c.£105,000) an (2) DW (c.£210,000), in satisfaction[2a] of DW Company's debts to PG and DW respectively. Subsequently, DW Company went into liquidation and a liquidator was appointed. Later, the liquidator and DW Company brought a claims[2b] against PG and DW, alleging that the c.£315,000 paid to PG and DW were unfair preferences. A restorative order is sought against each of them. PG and DW (collectively, the 'Respondents') each resisted the claims brought against them.

The Deputy ICC Judge noted, at paragraph 99: 'It was not disputed that the payment by [DW Company] to [D Company] of £315,750 on 9.2.17 was made in order that it should be used to make further payments to the Respondents on 10.2.17 in discharge of their debts and that this was done from the net proceeds of sale of the Premises.' and that it was the same money[2c] that was forwarded on by D Company to the Respondents.

The Deputy ICC Judge said, at paragraphs 109-110:

'In my judgment, the [DW Company] made a payment to [D Company] that was, as a matter of fact, part of a single coordinated scheme or composite transaction, which was effected in order to discharge the debts owed by [DW Company] to the Respondents. When [DW Company] made the payment to [D Company] it was inevitable, because that was the nature of the composite transaction into which [DW Company] had entered, that the money would then be paid to the Respondents. Accordingly, in making the payment to [D Company], the [DW Company] did something that had the necessary effect of improving the Respondents' position on liquidation in the terms required by s.239(4)(b), in that it entered into that composite transaction.

The foregoing is sufficient in my judgment to satisfy the requirement in s.239(4)(b)'

(2) The impugned transaction can involve more than 2 parties. In Ingram (Liquidator of MSD Cash & Carry Plc) v Singh [2018] EWHC 1325 (Ch); [2018] BCC 886 ('Ingram'), HHJ Hodge QC (sitting as a Judge of the High Court) held, amongst other things, that s239(4)(b) was satisfied (i.e there was betterment) where:

(a) a Company ('MSD'), an insolvent trading company which was owned and controlled by a director ('Mohinder') and his wife (paragraph 123), owed the director money (on a directors loan account)(paragraph 122);

(b) the 'relevant transaction; (paragraph 122) was:

(i) MSD transfering various vehicles/registration plates, from MSD to another company ('Lionheart'), a solvent dormant company, also owned and controlled by the director and his wife (paragraph 123); and

(ii) the 'consequential writing-off of their value against [the director’s] director’s loan account recording the monies owed to him by MSD' (paragraph 122).

The judge said, at paragraph 123:

'The effect of the transaction was that the [various vehicles/registration plates] were moved from one company, owned and controlled by [the director] and his wife...to another company, also owned and controlled by [the director] and his wife, which was dormant but solvent. Instead of looking to MSD for repayment of that element of his director’s loan account, [the director] could now look to the solvent Lionheart. The transaction had the effect of putting [the director] into a better position in the event of MSD going into insolvent liquidation than he would have been in if the transfer of the motor vehicles had not taken place, and I so find as a fact. The [various vehicles/registration plates] were now immune from any potential creditor claims in MSD’s insolvent liquidation....that none of MSD’s other creditors benefited from this transfer.'

The question is: looking at the impugned person, did their position improve (in the event of an insolvent liquidation) from the impugned transaction (which may consist of multiple component parts)?

See also Re Pappy Ltd (In Liquidation) [2018] BPIR 1451 (DJ Bever)[2d]

Ingredient 3: ‘Influenced by a Desire’

31. The core element of s239 (5), namely the phrase ‘was influenced…by a desire to produce’ introduces a disapplying provision. The Court may not set aside the voidable preference unless this motivation-based ingredient is established. The motivation ingredient has two principal parts, the ‘desire’ and that the decision by the company to enter into the preference transaction being sufficiently ‘influenced’ by that ‘desire’, to satisfy s239(5).

Desire

32. Assistance as to the nature of the ingredient can be found in M C Bacon Ltd [1990] B.C.C. 78 at 87[2e], where Millett J stated that:

‘...desire is subjective. A man can choose the lesser of two evils without desiring either. It is not, however, sufficient to establish a desire to make the payment or grant the security which it is sought to avoid. There must have been a desire to produce the effect mentioned in the subsection, that is to say, to improve the creditor’s position in the event of an insolvent liquidation. A man is not to be taken as desiring all the necessary consequences of his actions. Some consequences may be of advantage to him and be desired by him; others may not affect him and be matters of indifference to him; while still others may be positively disadvantageous to him and not be desired by him, but be regarded by him as the unavoidable price of obtaining the desired advantages. It will still be possible to provide assistance to a company in financial difficulties provided that the company is actuated only by proper commercial considerations. Under the new regime a transaction will not be set aside as a voidable preference until the company positively wished to improve the creditor’s position in the event of its own insolvent liquidation’.

33a. In Fairway Magazines [1992] B.C.C. 924 at 929, Mummery J stated that:

‘…it does not follow that, because there was a desire to grant the debenture or to make the payment, there was a desire to prefer the creditor in the event of insolvency. If the company is influenced by “proper commercial considerations” and not by a “positive wish to improve the creditor’s position in the event of its insolvent liquidation”, then the debenture is valid.’

33b. In Manolete Partners Plc v Coleman [2022] EWHC 2644 (Ch) ('Coleman'), paragraph 6, ICC Judge Jones emphasised that:

'...it is necessary to prove (subject to statutory presumption) a desire not just to confer a benefit on the recipient but to improve their position in an insolvent liquidation'

In Coleman, in respect payments to Mr Coleman, the company had not even contemplated the possibility of an insolvent liquidation, and so, while the company had a desire to confer a benefit on Mr Coleman, it did not desire to improve his position in an insolvent liquidation. 'It did not have a positive desire to produce the effect mentioned in subsection (5) of section 239.' (paragraph 62)

34a. In Kelmanson, the respondents to the liquidator's claim, argued there was no desire to prefer, because (amongst other things) the company had: (1) earlier adopted a 'company policy' to the effect that the company would pay certain unsecured creditors before others (paragraph 68), from the sale of certain premises; and that (2) the company had put that 'company policy' into effect, when it made the impugned transfer, from the sale proceeds. That is, the company's sole director said he 'was just following company policy' (paragraph 90). Deputy ICC Judge Curl QC said, after rejecting a different explanation, said at paragraph 126(iii):

'...all that is left as an explanation for the fact or the timing of the payments is the so-called "company policy", which was self-evidently not a basis to pay the Respondents ahead of the other unsecured creditors.'

He continued 'In fact, [the sole director of the company's] decision to apply the "company policy" that the Respondents would be repaid from the proceeds of sale of the Premises, despite his knowledge that the Company was insolvent, is in my judgment a clear manifestation of a desire to produce the effect in s.239(4)(b).' (paragraph 126(iv))

34b. Turning to how might such ‘desire’ be established as a fact, and in particular the availability of direct evidence and the scope for drawing inferences, the Court in Fairway stated:

‘...a desire to produce that effect is a subjective state of mind. As it is subjective, there may often be no direct evidence of that state of mind. The existence of the state of mind may, however, be inferred from all the circumstances...’

34c. Seemingly, there is no difference in approach to drawing inferences as to a state of mind, as to other facts relevant to a judicial determination[2f].

Influence

35. In MC Bacon the Court considered the required degree to which the company’s desire must influence the decision to enter into the relevant transaction; for s239 (5) to be satisfied: 

‘...it requires only that the desire should have influenced the decision. That requirement is satisfied if it was one of the factors which operated on the minds of those who made the decision. It need not have been the only factor or even the decisive one….it is not necessary to prove that, if the requisite desire had not been present, the company would not have entered into the transaction…’ [bold added]

36a. The influence required is not such that the ‘desire’ factor can be said to have ‘tipped the scales’. In Hardwick v Saville [2002] BPIR 947, a bankruptcy/section 340 case, Judge Behrens QC sitting as a Judge of the High Court, made the following observation, at paragraph 60:

'...in order for [the bankrupt] to be influenced by a desire to improve [the favoured unsecured creditor/respondent's] position, [the bankrupt] must at least be aware that he is improving the position. ...as pointed out in Re MC Bacon that it is not necessary for the trustee to show that the desire was the dominant factor, or even the factor which tipped the scales, to enter into the transaction, but it must be shown it was one of the factors which operated on the mind of [bankrupt] when he agreed to transfer the properties to [the favoured unsecured creditor/respondent]'.

Date

37. It is important to note that the crucial date for ingredient 3 is ‘…when the decision to grant [the preference] was made’. It is not the date when:

a. the transaction putting into effect the preference was executed; or

b. the underlying contractual or other obligations were created. Where contractual obligations provide for the company to make a payment by a certain date, it is not the date the contract was formed that is relevant, nor the date for payment. Here, the relevant date is the date of the decision whether the company will honour its already existing contractual obligations, as per Wills v Corfe Joinery Ltd (In Liquidation) [1997] BCC 511. On this issue, Stealth said:

‘Most preferences involve the payment of some debts in preference to others. All debts stem from an enforceable obligation to make the payment. If the decision to incur the debt, rather than the later decision to pay it, was the relevant time at which the company’s desire was to be judged, the payment of debts would rarely constitute a preference under s 239.’

38. This crucial date when the motivation is judged, applies equally to whether the company should honour its pre-existing obligation to grant a security or not. As Stealth stated, there is no ‘…distinction between the payment of debts on the one hand and other obligations, such as an obligation to grant a security, on the other’. It is the decision to comply with an obligation that is the key decision date, not the date the obligation to later grant the security, was created.

Who's state of mind or conduct?

39a. The ingredient here is only in respect to the company’s state of mind or conduct. As stated in Stealth, ‘this is entirely an issue of the thought processes of the directors of the company…Section 239 focuses not on the conduct or state of mind of the creditor concerned, but on that of the directors or others acting for the company.’ It is company-centric. A particular state of mind or conduct from the recipient is not required for the statutory power of set aside to be available to the Court. ‘In many cases, the preferred creditor will share the desire to be preferred but this need not be so.’ The statutory power is not dependent on any finding by the Court that the recipient has acted in any way improperly.  In Stealth, the Judge found that the recipient had received a voidable Preference (which he set aside), but wanted to make clear that ‘the result in this case implies no criticism of [the recipient] at all’. She had ‘reasonably believed that she had the benefit of a charge…and that she received no more than her due’.

Wrong but Genuine Belief that Transaction will not produce any Betterment

39b. This issue arose in Kelmanson, albeit that on the facts, the issue was found not to arise, as the relevant company director was found, as a fact, not to hold the asserted belief (paragraph 125 + 126). In Kelmanson, the sole director of the company that made the impugned transaction, said he thought at the time that the (ultimate) recipients were secured creditors over the company's premises, and that consequently, when the premises were sold, those recipients were entitled to be paid in priority to unsecured creditors of the company, and that he had held no desire to prefer the recipients when he, as director, decided that the company should make the impugned transfer (see paragraph 116). The Deputy ICC Judge made these (necessarily obiter) observations, at paragraphs 118-121:

'Although at first blush it may seem counterintuitive to suggest that liability for a preference could be avoided where a party believed without any rational basis at all that they were secured when they were not, it is plain from the wording of s.239 of the IA 1986 that a positive desire to improve the preferred creditor's position on insolvency must be both present and influential on the debtor's decision. There is no requirement on the face of s.239 that any alternative desire is identified in order for the court to exclude the influence of the desire to produce the effect in s.239(4)(b) and, as noted above, the mere presence of other influential factors does not of itself exclude the influence of the statutory desire. But if the debtor can be shown to have held a belief that flatly contradicts the possible influence of the statutory desire, then that is likely to go a long way towards showing that the statutory desire was absent.

There is nothing in the statutory wording to require any exploration into the merits or accuracy of any inconsistent belief, although its degree of plausibility is likely to be relevant to the court's inquiry into whether or not it was genuinely held. I note that one of the factors that led Millett J to find that the statutory desire had not influenced the decision to give the preference in Re M C Bacon Ltd was that the controlling mind of the company held the incorrect belief that if the company granted a debenture to the bank (which was the challenged transaction in that case) then the bank would have to continue to support the company for a further six months of trading. This belief had no basis in fact (and was described by Millett J as an "eccentric notion") but its wrongness did not preclude its being taken into account as part of the inquiry into whether or not the transaction was influenced by a desire to produce the effect in s.239(4)(b) in relation to the bank. The debtor's wrong belief was indicative of a desire to trade on and pointed away from a desire to improve the bank's position on insolvency.

Accordingly, it would seem that an incorrect, but nonetheless sincerely held, belief that a particular creditor held registered security and would be paid first on an insolvent liquidation in any event would appear to exclude the presence of any desire to produce the effect in s.239(4)(b).'

Need for this Ingredient

40. The comment can be made that a statutory power founded on mere betterment, without this motivation ingredient, would be unworkable in practice. Ailing companies would struggle to interact with their existing creditor base because individual creditors would be concerned that any betterment received due to the company’s actions or omissions under the company’s control or influence, would be vulnerable to being unwound later in insolvency. As the ailing company’s position deteriorated, refinancing would be increasingly impossible, as individual creditors would become more and more concerned about the unwinding risk.  

Presumption: ‘Influenced by a desire’ s239(6)

41. The statute provides that upon it being proved that the recipient was ‘connected with’ the company, the Court must find as a (secondary) fact that there was the requisite ‘influenced by a desire’ ingredient, ‘unless the contrary is shown’. The presumption that this ingredient is present can be rebutted by the recipient adducing evidence showing that any such betterment was not so motivated. Rebuttal evidence may take a myriad of different form and arguments, but examples providing a contraindication of an influencing desire to prefer, might include: 

a. Intention was to secure future funding – see Fairway;

b. the lack of good will/palpable animosity between the recipient and the company – see Taylor;

c. ‘Proper commercial considerations’ generally – MC Bacon;

d. a lack of realization within the company’s board that insolvency was on the horizon - see Coleman, but query whether there is now a tension between Re Conegrade Ltd [2003] BPIR 358 ('Conegrade') and the Coleman decision.

42. In Bright Future Software Ltd (also known as Manolete Partners Plc v Ellis) [2020] EWHC 1674 (Ch), Richard Spearman Q.C. (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division) summarised various authorities on displacing the presumption. After quoting from M C Bacon, as subparagraph (1), the Deputy Judge said, at paragraph 296:

'(2) In Re Exchange Travel Ltd [1996] BCC 933, Rattee J said, at p947, that a belief that at the date of the payments the company was not insolvent is not inconsistent with the application of the presumption of a desire to prefer.

(3) In Re Conegrade Ltd [2003] BPIR 358, Lloyd J said, at p374, that a well-intentioned but ill-founded belief that the present condition and future prospects of a company, which was in fact insolvent, would improve is not sufficient to rebut the presumption.

(4) In Re Oxford Pharmaceuticals Ltd [2009] EWHC 1753 (Ch), Mark Cawson QC (sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court), said at [76] that, in practical terms, rebutting the presumption of desire will require the court to be satisfied, on the balance of probabilities 'that [the company] was acting solely by reference to proper commercial considerations in making the payments, and that a desire (i.e. a subjective wish) to better the position of [the defendant] did not operate on the directing mind or minds of [the company] at all'[3]

43a. On the facts of Fairway, Mummery J found that the recipient had rebutted the presumption that the relevant decision to grant the debenture was influenced by a desire to prefer the recipient. The recipient had shown that the company was solely influenced by commercial considerations in its decision, namely the need to raise money from sources other than the bank, which had placed an upper limit on any overdraft, in order to keep trading with a view to sale.

43b. The question of whether the presumption has been rebutted on ‘influenced by a desire’ is a matter than should go to trial rather than be resolved at a summary judgment application, save in the clearest of cases, as per Phillips v McGregor-Paterson [2010] BPIR 239

DISAPPLICATION OF S239 TO FINANCIAL MARKET RELATED CONTRACTS

44. There exists two minor areas where s239 is disapplied; helpfully summarized in Sealy & Milman Annotated Guide to the Insolvency Legislation 2013; 13th ed, at 249 as:

a. Financial markets – a market contract to which a recognised investment exchange or clearing house is a party or which is entered into under its default rules, or a disposition of property in pursuance of such a market contract – Companies Act 1989, s165; and 

b. Payment and securities settlement systems by the Finality Regulations 1999 reg 17.

CONSEQUENCES OF A TRANSACTION BEING A PREFERENCE

45. Where a transaction falls foul of s239, the transaction is voidable at the instance of the office-holder. Power is vested in the office-holder to bring proceedings to seek an order for it to be set aside. Upon a preference being established, the Court is required to ‘make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the position to what it would have been if the company had not given that preference’. Such wording has been found to extend to making no order for relief, if that is what the Court thinks fit, as per Re Paramount Airways [1993] Ch 223[4a].

46.There are two parts to the remedy likely to be sought by the office-holder:

a. An order setting aside the transaction (or ‘avoiding’, the phrases can be used for present purposes interchangeably). From the date of the Court order onwards, the transaction is null and void (the ‘setting aside order’); and, if needed,

b. An order reversing the betterment by unwinding the improvement, thereby removing the corresponding detriment to the general body of creditors (the ‘restorative order’).

47. Without contradicting the generality of the ‘as it thinks fit’ provision, s241 (1) sets out seven orders the Court may decide to make. In essence, a non-exhaustive non-binding illustrative list of possible mechanisms for achieving the restoration – a list that should be read in full. The most salient parts of s 241(1) read:

…an order ... with respect to a ... preference entered into or given by a company may—

(a) require any property transferred as part of the transaction, or in connection with the giving of the preference, to be vested in the company [...]

(c) release or discharge ... any security given by the company

(d) require any person to pay, in respect of benefits received by him from the company, such sum to the office-holder as the court may direct ...’

48. The Court will tailor the order so as to best achieve restoration in the particular circumstances of the case. In UBS AG New York and others v Fairfield Sentry Ltd (In Liquidation) and others (British Virgin Islands) [2019] UKPC 20; [2019] 5 WLUK 296, considered a similar a preference / transaction at an undervalue provision in section 249 of the Insolvency Act 2003 (British Virgin Islands). The Privy Council observed at paragraph 11, that:

'Section 249 gives the court a discretion, once it has set aside the voidable transaction, to make such order as it thinks fit to restore the position of the company. This provision, like those in the modern statutory insolvency regimes of several common law countries, has empowered the court to devise a suitable remedy to achieve restitution rather than merely annulling the transaction and leaving the consequences of that annulment to the operation of the general law...'

See the personal insolvency case of Re Peter Herbert Fowlds (a bankrupt) [2021] EWHC 2149.

49. Where an asset is to be returned to the company in specie (i.e. the asset is to be returned, not merely its monetary value), and that asset has been improved during the interim (for instance, an extension built onto the original property), allowance can be made for the expenditure incurred by the recipient – as per Weisgard v Pilkington [1995] BCC 1108. Guarantees or sureties released or discharged following linked debt being paid off contrary to s239, can be ordered to ‘be under such new or revived obligations …as the court thinks appropriate’.

50. The ‘fruits’ of the litigation, the sum recovered pursuant to the restorative order, is vested in the office-holder. See section 176ZB (2) of the Insolvency Act 1986. Under the former common law, it was money arising from the power he exercised. As stated in Re Yagerphone [1935] Ch 392:

‘The right to recover a sum of money from a creditor who has been preferred is conferred for the purpose of benefiting the general body of creditors…the sum of money…did not become part of the general assets of [the company], but was a sum of money received by the liquidator impressed in their hands with a trust for those creditors amongst whom they had to distribute the assets of the company.’

51. Such restored sums cannot therefore be subject to any floating charge granted over the company’s assets. 

NO CHANGE OF POSITION DEFENCE

52. It seems very likely that there is no 'change of position' defence available to a s.239 preference claim, by analogy with the position in respect to preferences under s.340 in personal insolvency. In Bucknall v Wilson (also known as Re Fowlds) [2021] EWHC 2149 (Ch); [2022] 1 WLR 61 ('Bucknall'), Trower J considered a s.340 preference claim (and s.339 transaction at an undervalue claim), wherein he held, at paragraph 94(i), that 'Change of position does not operate as a defence under sections 339(2), 340(2)...'. However, Trower J said that there may be:

'...exceptional circumstances in which the facts that would establish a change of position defence (if it had been available) will weigh in the balance when the court is determining how to exercise its discretion as to the order it thinks fits for restoring the position to what it would have been if the transaction had not been entered into or the preference had not been given.' (paragraph 94(ii). Summarising the next part of Trower J's judgment in Bucknell, ICC Judge Barber in Changtel Solutions UK Ltd (In Liquidation) [2022] EWHC 694 (Ch), said, at paragraph 152:

'Trower J went on to confirm, however, that change of position cannot be a ‘strong factor’ in the exercise of the discretion because that would ‘give insufficient weight to the underlying policy considerations illustrated by Conway and the difficulty of balancing the interests of a class against the interests of an innocent transferee’ (at [94(iii)). Rather, ‘[the] policy that underpins the statute means that the balance is only likely to come down in favour of the transferee where the circumstances are sufficiently out of the norm to be exceptional’ (at [95]).' (Conway is a reference to Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB v Conway [2019] UKPC 36, PC)

DIRECTORS 

52. A separate but linked topic is the potential liability of a company director who causes/permits/fails to stop the company making the preference. Typically it will be breach of a director's duties to the company, to causes/permits/fails to stop the company to enter into such a transaction. See[4b] West Mercia Safetywear Limited v Dodd (1988) 4 BCC 30; Re Palmier Plc; Sandhu v Sidhu [2009] EWHC 983 (Ch) and Re HLC Environmental Projects Ltd [2014] B.C.C. 337. See also Byers v Chen [2021] UKPC 4, paragraphs 86 onwards. The s.212 misfeasance procedure may be used to bring such a claim.

JOINT AND SEVERAL LIABILITY - CONTRIBUTION/APPORTIONMENT AS BETWEEN THOSE LIABLE

Where there is more than one wrongdoer, while each may be made liable to the applicant, there is an additional stage to be gone through, that of determining how the burden of the liabilty is ultimately to fall as between the wrongdoers. By analogy with a s.423 of the Insolvency Act 1986/breach of directors duties case, see Re Dormco SICA Ltd (in liquidation); sub nom Dormco SICA Ltd (in liquidation) v SBL Carston Ltd [2023] EWHC 20 (Ch), a decision of ICC Judge Jones.

COSTS

53. The Court has a discretion to award costs. In the event that an adverse costs order is made against the liquidator (i.e. against him/her personally), the Court is not limited, in terms of quantum, to such sum as the liquidator can recover (as re-imbursement for properly incurred costs) out of the company estate (see Re Wilson Lovatt & Sons Ltd [1977] 1 All ER 274 (Oliver J)[5]

CONCLUSION

54. Those controlling an ailing company during its twilight may become tempted to favour certain particular non-preferential unsecured creditors over the general body of creditors of this class, by improving their positioning in the (likely) forthcoming insolvency. The availability of the Court’s power to set aside and unwind such preferences is an effective weapon in the office-holder’s fight to counter any circumventing or undermining of the fundamental pari passu principle and its ethos of sharing losses equally among the non-preferential unsecured creditors.

55. The harm to this general body is the existence of the betterment. Logically the objective of the remedy should be, and is, the restoration of the status quo ante to that betterment, with the Court given very wide power within which to achieve that stated objective.

56. However, something more is required, the ‘influenced by a desire’, motivation ingredient. Unless this is satisfied, no jurisdiction to unwind the transaction arises under s239. This ingredient ensures that only where there is an improper motive behind the betterment, namely a sufficiently influencing ‘positive wish to improve the creditor’s position in the event of its own insolvent liquidation’, will transactions be voidable. A motive consisting of proper commercial considerations, and devoid of the improper betterment desire, will not be at risk. The crucial determinant will be what the Court finds to have been the true reasons for the decision-maker deciding to commit the company to the course of action that resulted in the betterment.

UPDATE

See: 

(1) Carton-Kelly v Darty Holdings SAS [2023] EWCA Civ 1135 (Court of Appeal);

(2) Thielmann v Bersharov [2022] EWHC 2879 (Ch);

(3) Re Fastfit Station Ltd (In Liquidation)(also known as Bonney v Barker [2023] EWHC 496 (Ch);

(4) Aston Risk Management Ltd v Jones [2023] EWHC 603 (Ch);

(5) The Official Receiver (liquidator of Bodystretch (Uk) Limited) (2) Bodystretch (Uk) Limited (in liquidation) v Nadeem [2023] EWHC 2735 (Ch)

SIMON HILL © 2014-2023

BARRISTER

33 BEDFORD ROW

NOTICE: This article is provided free of charge for information purposes only; it does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied on as such. No responsibility for the accuracy and/or correctness of the information and commentary set out in the article, or for any consequences of relying on it, is assumed or accepted by any member of Chambers or by Chambers as a whole.

[1a] In BTI 2014 LLC v Sequana SA [2022] UKSC 25; [2022] 3 WLR 709, Lord Briggs (with whom Lord Kitchin agreed) described this cause of action, in paragraph 119 of his judgment, as 'wrongful preference'

[1b] In Pritchard v Westminster Bank [1969] 1 WLR 547, Lord Denning said:

“The general principle when there is no insolvency is that the person who gets in first gets the fruits of his diligence.”

Lord Chief Justice Goddard in James Bibby Ltd v Woods [1949] 2 KB 449 , said:

'Garnishee proceedings are one form of execution and, as I have said more than once in the course of the argument, it not infrequently happens that where there are several claims or may be several claims against money the person who gets in first gets the fruits of his diligence.'

(Note: Garnishee proceedings are now know as third party debt order proceedings).

These were cited with apparent approval by Cooke J in FG Hemisphere Associates LLC v Democratic Republic of Congo [2005] EWHC 3103 (QB), paragraph 17. Quoted in turn by Faux J in British Arab Commercial Bank Plc v Ahmad Hamad Algosaibi and Brothers Co [2011] 2 C.L.C. 736, at 745-746.

For a recent example of the 'first come first served', or there called 'first past the post' legal approach, see: OOO Nevskoe v UAB Baltijos Saliu Industrinio Perdirbimo Centras (formerly “UAB Alfagra”) (a company incorporated in Lithuania) [2023] EWHC 15 (KB); [2023] All ER (D) 79 (Feb) (Judge Victoria McCloud)

[1c] A different starting point would be to read the summaries of the law on unfair preferences, from:

(1) Kelmanson v Gallagher [2022] EWHC 395 (Ch) ('Kelmanson'), paragraphs 100-101;

(2) Manolete Partners Plc v Coleman [2022] EWHC 2644 (Ch) ('Coleman'), paragraphs 5-6;

(3) Ingram (Liquidator of MSD Cash & Carry Plc) v Singh [2018] EWHC 1325 (Ch); [2018] BCC 886 ('Ingram'), paragraphs 118 - 121;

(4) Re Pappy Ltd (in Liquidation); (1) Hunt (2) Hellard v Brighouse [2018] BPIR 1451 ('Re Pappy'), paragraph 20.

Taking those cases in turn:

(1) Kelmanson

Under the heading 'The Law', Deputy ICC Judge Curl QC in Kelmanson said, at paragraphs 100-101:

'Preferences: s.239

100. Section 239 of the IA 1986 enables a liquidator of a company to seek relief where that company has given a preference and certain other conditions are met. Relief is sought by Mr Kelmanson against both Respondents under this provision. So far as relevant, s.239 sets out the elements that must be shown in order to establish a preference capable of attracting such relief:

"(2) Where the company has at a relevant time (defined in the next section) given a preference to any person, the office-holder may apply to the court for an order under this section.

(3) Subject as follows, the court shall, on such an application, make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the position to what it would have been if the company had not given that preference.

(4) For the purposes of this section and section 241, a company gives a preference to a person if—

(a) that person is one of the company's creditors or a surety or guarantor for any of the company's debts or other liabilities, and

(b) the company does anything or suffers anything to be done which (in either case) has the effect of putting that person into a position which, in the event of the company going into insolvent liquidation, will be better than the position he would have been in if that thing had not been done.

(5) The court shall not make an order under this section in respect of a preference given to any person unless the company which gave the preference was influenced in deciding to give it by a desire to produce in relation to that person the effect mentioned in subsection (4)(b).

(6) A company which has given a preference to a person connected with the company (otherwise than by reason only of being its employee) at the time the preference was given is presumed, unless the contrary is shown, to have been influenced in deciding to give it by such a desire as is mentioned in subsection (5)."

101. For the purposes of s.239(2) , "relevant time" is defined by s.240 of the IA 1986 . It provides that a preference is given at a "relevant time" where it takes place at a time:

i) in the period of six months ending with the "onset of insolvency" , which may be increased to two years where the preference is given to a person who is connected with the company within the meaning of s.249 of the Act; and

ii) when the company is unable to pay, or becomes unable to pay in consequence of the preference, its debts within the meaning of s.123 of the IA 1986.'

(2) Coleman

Under the heading 'Matters to be Proved', ICC Judge Jones in Coleman said, at paragraphs 5-6:

'To establish a preference it is necessary for [the assignee/claimant/applicant] to prove on the balance of probability:

a) The transaction challenged occurred at the relevant time, as defined in s.240 Insolvency Act 1986, namely:

i) In the period of 2 years ending with the onset of insolvency (including between making of an administration application and the order) if the person receiving the preference is connected (as defined in s.249 Insolvency Act 1986 to include directors) with the company other than by reason of them being an employee but otherwise 2 years is to read 6 months; and

ii) the company is at that time unable to pay its debts within the meaning of s.123 Insolvency Act 1986, or becomes unable to pay its debts within the meaning of that section in consequence of the transaction or preference, which is to be presumed subject to rebuttal if the preference is given to a connected person other than by reason of them being an employee;

b) The person to whom a preference was given is one of the company’s creditors or a surety or guarantor for any of the company’s debts or other liabilities;

c) The preference had the effect of putting that person into a position which, in the event of the company going into insolvent liquidation, will be better than the position he would have been in if that thing had not been done.

d) The company which gave the preference was influenced in deciding to give it by a desire to produce that effect, which is to be presumed subject to rebuttal if the preference is given to a connected person other than by reason of them being an employee.

... to refer to authority ... Re MC Bacon Ltd [1990] BCLC 324 that it is necessary to prove (subject to statutory presumption) a desire not just to confer a benefit on the recipient but to improve their position in an insolvent liquidation. In other words, applying a subjective test, that the Company had a positive desire to produce the effect mentioned in s.239(5), namely to improve the creditor’s position in the event of its own insolvent liquidation. If more than one person receives the preference, that desire must be determined in relation to each.'

(3) Ingram

Under the heading 'The Preference Claim', HHJ Hodge QC sitting as a Judge of the High Court, in Ingram said, at paragraphs 118 to 121:

'By s.239 of the Insolvency Act 1986, when a company has at a “relevant time” (as defined in s.240 ) given a preference to any person, an insolvency office holder may apply to the court for an order under this s.239. On such an application, the court will make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the position to what it would have been if the company had not given that preference. By s.239(4):

“(4) … a company gives a preference to a person if -

(a) that person is one of the company’s creditors … and

(b) the company does anything or suffers anything to be done which … has the effect of putting that person into a position which, in the event of the company going into insolvent liquidation, will be better than the position he would have been in if that thing had not been done.”

By s.239(5) :

“(5) The court shall not make an order under … [ section 239 ] … in respect of a preference given to any person unless the company which gave the preference was influenced in deciding to give it by a desire to produce in relation to that person the effect mentioned in subsection (4)(b).”

By s.239(6);

“(6) A company which has given a preference to a person connected with the company (otherwise than by reason only of being its employee) at the time the preference was given is presumed, unless the contrary is shown, to have been influenced in deciding to give it by such a desire as is mentioned in subsection (5).”

Section 239(6), in terms, looks to the time the preference was given when deciding whether the preference was given to a person connected with the company. In my judgment, it is implicit in s.239 , when read as a whole, that it is also the time when the preference is given that is the relevant time for assessing whether the company was influenced by a desire to produce the relevant effect in deciding to give the preference, and in applying the presumption under s.239(6).'

Note, the last paragraph of Ingram, containing the 'was given' and 'is given' words, might lead to confusion. The weight of authority is that the key moment is the date of the decision to confer the perference, not the date the transaction, conferring the preference, occurs, that is important. See another article by the same author, available here.

(4) Re Pappy

In this case, the first instance judge, after setting out the provisions of section 239, gives this pithy summary of the test, at paragraph 20:

'The Applicants must, therefore, show, first of all, that the Company has done something, or suffered anything to be done, which had the effect of putting the Respondent in a better position than he would have been in had the transaction not taken place. The Applicants must also show that the Company was influenced by a desire to prefer the Respondent. The Applicants must also demonstrate that the preference was given at the relevant time, namely in the current case, two years before the onset of insolvency, and that at the time of the alleged transaction, or as a consequence of it, the Company was or has become unable to pay its debts.'

However, later it was noted that counsel for the respondent had:

'..accepted that the presumption set out at s 239(6) applies in this case, given the connection between the Company and the Respondent. He, therefore, accepts that the Applicants have the benefit of that presumption and that the burden is on the Respondent to demonstrate that there was no such desire on the part of the Company.' (paragraph 21).

[1d] The impugned person is the person alleged to have been the beneficiary of the alleged unfair preference.

[1e] See also in Kelmanson v Gallagher [2022] EWHC 395 (Ch) ('Kelmanson'), where after finding the case involved one composite transaction for betterment purposes, the Deputy ICC Judge said, at paragraphs 110-112:

'110. The foregoing is sufficient in my judgment to satisfy the requirement in s.239(4)(b). But I have concluded that [counsel for the liquidator's] second basis (did [DW Company] suffer anything to be done?) also satisfies s.239(4)(b) in relation to the payments made to the Respondents. [Counsel for the liquidator] submitted that the [DW Company] suffered something to be done in allowing [D Company] to use [DW Company's] funds to pay the Respondents. Goode, at 13-86, explains that a company "suffers" something to be done where it permits or allows a payment or transfer in circumstances where the company has control of that payment or transfer in the sense that its permission is needed to make it and it can be refused. In Re Parkside International Ltd [2010] BCC 309 (to which [Counsel for the liquidator] very properly drew my attention), Mr Anthony Elleray QC (sitting as a deputy High Court judge), held at [61] that a company had not "suffered" a transaction over which it had no control or influence or that did not require its consent. Of particular note, the deputy judge held that the mere fact that the insolvent company was under common control with the companies that had entered into the transaction in question did not make a difference to this conclusion.

111. In my judgment, the [DW Company] suffered the payments to be made by [D Company] to the Respondents. The critical feature is that it was not disputed at trial that the money received by [D Company] and paid on to the Respondents in their capacity as [DW Company's] creditors was ]DW Company's] money and was used to pay [DW Company's] debts. There was no suggestion by the Respondents (who were [D Company's] only two directors at that time) that [D Company] had set up any beneficial title of its own to the money that was used to pay the Respondents, nor was there any evidence to suggest that [D Company] might have had any beneficial title to that money. Moreover, the payments from [D Company] were accepted by the Respondents as a good discharge of the debts owed to them by [DW Company]. As the only directors of [D Company], the Respondents' states of mind are to be imputed to [D Company]. Accordingly, [D Company] knew it was handling [DW Company's] money and so necessarily also knew that it needed [DW Company's] permission to pay [DW Company's] money to the Respondents. [DW Company's director], as the Company's sole director, could have refused such permission.

112. My decision on this aspect is not based on the mere fact that [DW Company] and [D Company] were under common control but rather that the evidence heard at trial, including evidence about the role of [D Company] in the arrangements, enables findings of fact to be made about the subject-matter and nature of the payments made by [DW Company] to [D Company] and subsequently by [D Company] to the Respondents. I find that in allowing [D Company] to use [DW Company's] money to pay the Respondents in circumstances where [D Company] recognised [DW Company's] title to that money, [DW Company] suffered that payment to be made within the meaning of s.239(4)(b).'

[2a] It may seem an obvious point but: creditors of a company, who are paid the sum that is owed to them, are (following payment) no longer creditors of the company, even if that payment was an unfair preference.

In In Kelmanson v Gallagher [2022] EWHC 395 (Ch) ('Kelmanson'), the Deputy ICC Judge noted that PG criticised the liquidator for not including PG/DW as creditors in one of his reports (paragrpah 60). The liquidator's response was that they had both been paid by 10.2.17, and so were no longer creditors of DW Company. PG did not accept this analysis.

The Deputy ICC Judge in Kelmansonstated, at paragraphs 63-64:

'In my judgment, [the liquidators] analysis is correct. Regardless of the outcome to the current proceedings, the legal position is that the Respondents were creditors of the Company for a total of £315,700 until they were repaid on 10.2.17. At that point, the debts owed to them by the Company for that sum were satisfied, subject only to a future insolvency officeholder's right to apply (as the liquidator now applies) to the court for a restorative order. Those transactions are secure until they are impugned and any restorative order under s.239 of the IA 1986 is prospective in nature only: see Rubin v Eurofinance SA [2013] 1 AC 236, per Lord Collins, at [94]; and Goode on Principles of Corporate Insolvency Law , 5th edn (" Goode "), at 13-02.

Accordingly, the Respondents were not creditors of the Company for £315,700 after they were repaid on 10.2.17. In fact, as things stand, they are debtors of the estate as a consequence of Mr Kelmanson's claim under s.239 of the IA 1986: Hellard v Chadwick & Tehrani [2014] BPIR 1234, [21]-[28]. That debt is contingent on the outcome to the instant proceedings. If the claims are successful and the Respondents pay the judgment, then they will once again become creditors and will be entitled to prove for their debt in the liquidation. Again, in my judgment, there is nothing in the Respondents' criticism of the liquidators on this point.'

[2b] In Kelmanson v Gallagher [2022] EWHC 395 (Ch) ('Kelmanson'), the liquidator also brought a claim against PG (only), pursuant to section 212 of the Insolvency Act 1986, seeking an order that PG breached his s.172 of the Companies Act 2006 directors duty to DW Company, to promote its success, when he caused the c.£315,00 to be paid away from DW Company, at a time when he knew or ought to have known that it was insolvent or likely to become insolvent.

[2c] The Respondents accepted that it was the same money that went from DW Company to D Company and then on the Respondents. The Deputy ICC Judge recorded, at paragraph 99:

'In his oral evidence, [DW Company's director] accepted that the payment by the Company of £315,750 to [D Company] on 9.2.14 was made in order to put [D Company] in funds to repay the Respondents, "as stated in the company policy" . He also agreed that the sums paid to the Respondents by [D Company] on 10 .2.14 were the sums that [D Company] had received from the DW Company. [DW Company's director] accepted that [D Company] probably did not ever do anything except receive this money and pay it on to the Respondents.'

Later, at paragraph 109, he said:

'It was common ground at trial that the payment to [D Company] had been made so that [DW Company's] cash would then be used to repay the Respondents the debts [DW Company] owed to them.'

[2d] In Re Pappy Ltd (in Liquidation); (1) Hunt (2) Hellard v Brighouse [2018] BPIR 1451, DJ Bever considered a liquidator's s.239 preference claim.

The facts were:

(1) there was a tripartite situation, where there was:

(a) Brighouse Homes Ltd (later renamed to Pappy Ltd) (in liquidation) (the 'Company'; 'Pappy'). The liquidator of the Company was the applicant;

(b) Brighouse Group Holdings Ltd ('Group');

(c) Mr Brighouse ('B'; Respondent') - the respondent to the s.239 application.

(2) Prior to the impugned transaction, there was the following unsecured (in practice) debtor/creditor relationships:

(a) Group owed Company £84,000 (paragraph 39);

(b) Respondent owed Group £72,000 (paragraph 39);

(c) Company owed Respondent £93,000 (paragraph 39).

(3) Other relationships existed:

(a) Respondent was 100% shareholder of Group;

(b) Group was 100% shareholder of Brighouse Investments Ltd ('Investments')

(c) Investments was 100% shareholder of the Company.

(4) Also:

(a) Respondent was a co-director of the Company.

(b) although the report does not say so, it seems very likely the Respondent was a director of Group.

(5) On 2.9.10, the Respondent sent an email to the accountants for the cluster of companies, requiring the transaction which was later impugned. That transaction was:

(a) Company to owe the Respondent £75,000 less (i.e reduce the debt owed by the Company to the Respondent from £93,000, down to £18,000)(paragraph 39)

(b) Group to owe the Company £75,000 less (i.e. £84,000 - £75,000). So Group left owing £9,000 to the Company (paragraph 39);

(c) Group to owe the Respondent £75,000, which given the Respondent already owed Group c.£72,000, meant that net: Group owed the Respondent c.£3,000 (the figures were closer to c.£2,500: but: (i) that figure is 'not the precise figure' (paragraph 39); and (ii) the core point is that it reduced by £75,000 (paragraph 39))

(6) On 9.11.10, the Company entered CVL and subsequently, the Company's liquidators brought the s.239 preference proceedings.

The 2 issues (ingredients) for the court to resolve were: (1) betterment; and (2) motivation.

On betterment, the applicants argued that the transactions, or movements flowing from the 2.9.10 email, 'were part and parcel of one transaction, that they were indivisible and that the Company played a central role in that overall indivisible transaction' (paragraph 29). That '...it would be artificial to...'salami slice' the scenario.' (paragraph 29). The respondent argued that the court '...should consider the events after 2 September 2010 in their constituent parts.' (paragraph 34) and that '...the elements of the transaction should be regarded separately' (paragraph 35)

The DJ held that she/he was:

'...satisfied that it would be artificial to treat what [counsel for respondent] presents as the components of the arrangement effected by the email of 2 September 2010 as being separate and distinct from each other. There can be little doubt that the elements of the arrangement were inextricably linked. They were, in effect, part and parcel of the same transaction.' (paragraph 39)

After stating the changes to each of element of the tripartite debtor/creditor arrangement/relationships, the DJ said 'All of those three elements clearly depended on each other and they were part of the same transaction.' (paragraph 39).

Further, the DJ added that:

(1) the respondent appeared to accept it was one transaction (paragraph 40)

(2) '...intention of the email of 2 September seems to me to be clear; the liabilities or positions of the three relevant parties were to change as a consequence of the instruction. I note that the email even uses the word 'offset' and it is clear that the accountants who were acting on the email have given effect to such a reading of that email.' (paragraph 41)

(3) 'The Respondent talks about a tidying-up exercise and it is clear that the tidying-up exercise related not just to the affairs of the Company but also to the affairs of Group. It was, therefore, in my judgment, one transaction. It could only have been effected with the consent of the Company, the Respondent and Group. It could not have happened without that consent, and the Respondent agreed to it, not only on his own behalf but also on behalf of the Company and on behalf of Group. It seems to me, therefore, that the criterion of doing anything or suffering anything to be done has been met.' (paragraph 42).

In conclusion, the DJ found there was betterment. At paragraph 43, the DJ said:

'I ... find that, as a consequence, the Respondent was plainly in a better position following the transaction. He had been owed £75,000 by a company which was on the brink of insolvency. Following the transaction, he was owed £75,000 by a company with healthy finances. His position was clearly improved as a result of the transaction. I do not find in the Respondent's favour, therefore, in relation to the first element of his defence to the application, namely that, properly analysed, the transaction cannot be considered to be a preference. It seems to me that it is a preference and that s 239(4)(b) has been made out, it being common ground that s 239(4)(a) has been made out.'

As a side note, on the respondent's 'treat each components separately' argument, the respondent sought to argue that the respondent simply did worse out of the arrangement, in any insolvent liquidation. In other words, far from there having been betterment, there had been a worsening of the respondent's position. This argument was, as will be apparent, rejected as part of the wider rejection of the 'treat each components separately' argument.

[2e] In Kelmanson v Gallagher [2022] EWHC 395 (Ch) ('Kelmanson'), Deputy ICC Judge Curl QC said the folloing points, relevant to the Kelmanson case, could be found in Re M C Bacon [1990] BCC 78, at 87G to 88B:

'i) it is not sufficient to establish a desire to make the payment or grant the security that it is sought to avoid: there must have been a desire to produce the effect mentioned in s.239(4)(b), i .e. to improve the creditor's position in the event of an insolvent liquidation;

ii) the mere presence of the requisite desire to produce the effect in s.239(4)(b) will not be sufficient by itself: it must have influenced the decision to enter into the transaction;

iii) the existence of the requisite desire may be inferred from the circumstances of the case; and

iv) the requirement is satisfied if it was one of the factors that operated on the minds of those who made the decision: it need not have been the only factor or even the decisive one.'

[2f] Although in respect to fraudulent preferences under section 44 of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 (the proceeding, now obsolete, provision to voidable preferences - which contained a different test - 'intention' rather than 'desire'), there are some potentially instructive observations about the general principles of inference from the available evidence, in In re M Kushler Ltd [1943] Ch 248, 252; [1943] 2 All ER 22, where Lord Greene MR said, at 26:

'The statute is directing the court to ascertain the state of mind of the payer in relation to a particular transaction; a state of mind is as much a fact as a state of digestion; the method of ascertaining it is the ordinary familiar method of evidence and inference, and I can see nothing in the language of the section which justifies the view that this particular problem which the legislature sets the court is one which is to be dealt with on any principles different from those which are commonly employed in drawing inferences of fact.'

See also Re Cutts (Bankrupt), ex p Bognor Mutual Building Society v Trustee in Bankruptcy [1956] 1 WLR 728 and SEB AB v Conway [2019] BPIR 1561 (PC Cayman Islands), 1583/53.

[3] In Oxford Pharmaceuticals Limited [2009] EWHC 1753 (Ch), Mark Cawson QC, sitting as a judge of the High Court in July 2009, states at para 76:

'As I have said, it is common ground that the onus is on the directors to rebut the presumption that the company was, in making any of the payments, influenced by a desire to better the position of one of the directors in the event of an insolvent liquidation. In practical terms, this involves the directors satisfying me on the balance of probabilities that the company was acting solely by reference to proper commercial considerations in making the payments, and that a desire (i.e. a subjective wish) to better the position of the director in the event of an insolvent liquidation did not operate on the directing mind or minds of OPL (the company)'.

This passage is quoted by DJ Bever in Re Pappy Ltd (in Liquidation); (1) Hunt (2) Hellard v Brighouse [2018] BPIR 1451, paragraph 23. After considering the facts (see footnote [2d] for case details), the DJ found as follows, at paragraph 49:

'On the Oxford Pharmaceuticals test, I cannot be satisfied that the Company was acting solely by reference to proper commercial considerations in making the payments and that a desire to better the position of the director, the Respondent, in the event of an insolvent liquidation did not operate on the directing mind or minds of the company. I cannot find that proper commercial considerations governed the making of the payments, because no such considerations have been put to me over and above the tidying-up exercise, and as I said earlier, I have not been given any adequate explanation for that tidying-up exercise. No explanation of the rationale of that exercise has been advanced. Even leaving aside the Oxford Pharmaceuticals test, I am not able to accept, for the reasons given, and on the basis of the facts I have found, that the Respondent did not believe that his position would be improved as a result of the transaction. The presumption, therefore, stands and the test under s 239 has been made out. It seems to me, therefore, that s 239(5) has been made out, that the Company which gave the preference was influenced in deciding to give it by a desire to produce in relation to the Respondent an improvement in his position. No other explanation has been provided.'

[4a] In Re Pappy Ltd (in Liquidation); (1) Hunt (2) Hellard v Brighouse [2018] BPIR 1451, DJ Bever referred to this, at paragraph 50:

'...it is common ground, that the discretion under s 239 is plainly sufficiently wide for me to make no order if justice so requires, in the words of the authority, it strikes me that the usual order is to make the order envisaged by the legislation. As an aside, I note that the observation in the Paramount Airways case concerned the issue of jurisdiction. I do not think that it is unjust to make the order in this case.'

[4b] See another article by the same author, entitled 'Breach of Directors Duties and Unlawful Preferences under section 239' - also available on this website as an Insight.

[5] In Re Wilson Lovatt & Sons Ltd [1977] 1 All ER 274, liquidators brought claims: (1) fraudulent trading against the company's former directors and bank (abandoned early on); and (2) fraudulent preference (a cause of action now superceded by the unlawful preference cause of action) against the bank (which was unsuccessful at trial). Oliver J said, at 285-286:

'I think that a review of the authorities does disclose that a clear dichotomy between the case where the liquidator is sued and the case where the liquidator initiates proceedings, is established, and indeed it seems me to be a perfectly reasonable one. I cannot at the moment see why it should be contended that a liquidator who takes it on himself to institute proceedings, to bring parties before the court, to subject them to costs, and as against whom it is quite clearly established that no order for security can be made, should then be entitled to plead that he is not responsible beyond the extent of the assets in his hands. I can see no reason at all why a liquidator should be entitled to an immunity which is not conferred on other litigants. A trustee or a personal representative who institutes proceedings no doubt has a right to indemnity out of the estate which he represents but, if he litigates, he litigates at his own risk and so, in my judgment, it should be with the liquidator, and the authorities which point that way seem to me, if I may say so respectfully, to be completely reasonable.

I can quite see that there may be very powerful reasons of policy for a rule that a liquidator, when carrying out his functions and thus subjecting himself to the possibility of proceedings against him by parties who are discontented with the way in which he has carried out those functions, must be entitled to defend himself without being subjected to the risk of having costs awarded against him personally, because of course he cannot protect himself against claims being made. Unless there were some such rule it might be very difficult to get persons to take on the heavy responsibility of the liquidation of companies. It seems to me that it is quite a different matter where the liquidator himself takes it on himself to institute proceedings, whether they be proceedings in the winding-up or otherwise. In fact of course any other proceedings would be proceedings in the name of the company where, in the ordinary way, the litigant on the other side could get security for costs under the provisions of the Companies Act.

In the instant case, in any event, I am quite satisfied that in common justice I ought to make what I conceive to be the usual order for costs against the liquidator, namely simply an order that he do pay the costs, leaving it entirely out of the question whether there be assets of the company out of which he can indemnify himself or not.'

As to officeholders' right to re-imbursement (otherwise called 'recoupment') from the estate, costs and expense they have incurred, and when the Court might deny an officerholder his right to recoupment, His Honour Judge Mithani QC, sitting as a Judge of the High Court, surveyed the law in Patel v Barlows Solicitors (a firm) [2020] EWHC 2795 (Ch) ('Patel'). The Patel case was a personal insolvency case (so the officeholder was a trustee in bankruptcy), but Judge Mitani's survey took in authorities on other types of officeholder. He said, at paragraphs 93-94:

'93.  In Re Capitol Films Ltd (In Administration) [2010] EWHC 3223 (Ch), Mr Richard Snowden QC (as he then was), sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court, accepted that the liability of an administrator for an adverse costs order made against him, and his own costs of unsuccessful litigation, were both capable of being an administration expense in an appropriate case. However, the court had a discretion to deprive an administrator of such right of recoupment. He continued:

"[101]  The circumstances in which the court might exercise its discretion to deprive an office-holder of a right of recoupment have, in the case of liquidations, been said to include cases in which the office- holder has been guilty of misconduct (see Re Wilson Lovatt & Sons Ltd [1977] 1 All ER 274 at 286f-g); where he has made a "blunder" or serious mistake (see Re Silver Valley Mines (1882) 21 Ch D 381 at 385–386); or where it would be unjust for other reasons to permit such recoupment (see MC Bacon Ltd (No.2) [1990] BCLC 607 at 615–616)…

[102]  In the instant case, whilst I have not needed to decide whether the Administrators were guilty of misconduct, I have held that the approach of the Administrators to the application was irrational and misconceived. That conduct is, in my judgment, in the same category as the "blunder" or serious error discussed in the Silver Valley Mines case, and justifies an order preventing the Administrators from recouping themselves from the assets of the Company.

[103]  On the particular facts of the case, I also believe that it would be unjust if the Administrators were entitled to recoup themselves ahead of the claims of the holder of any floating charge or unsecured creditors. In short, I do not see why any assets that might come into the hands of the Administrators, and which are destined for the holder of the floating charge or unsecured creditors, should be diminished by the costs of an application which does not appear to have been at all likely to serve their interests."

The learned deputy judge accordingly made an order that the Administrators should not be entitled to recoup for themselves either in respect of their liability to the secured creditors or in respect of their own costs from any assets of the company which were the subject of a floating charge or which would be available for unsecured creditors.

94.  Likewise, in Nutting v Khaliq [2012] EWCA Civ 1726 , Etherton LJ (as he then was) stated, at [32], that "a trustee in bankruptcy is only to be required to bear costs and expenses personally if he or she has fallen below the standard of a reasonable insolvency practitioner acting reasonably."