4- Order of Distribution- New Flashcards
What is pari passu distribution?
PP is the most fundamental principle of insolvency law (British Eagle).
It means all creditors participle in the common pool in proportion to the size of their admitted claims, with creditors of the same status.
PP is based on the notion that losses caused by liquidation should be borne by unsecured creditors equally.
What is the distinction between PP and the anti-deprivation rule?
- Anti dep rule is concerned with cases where there is a contractual provision which states that on liquidation or bankruptcy the debtor should pay a non-creditor a sum or money or assets. This reduces the net assets of the co/individual.
- If a co were to give money to a creditor on liquidation/an individual were to do this on bankruptcy, this would not be in breach of the anti-dep rule, since it does not reduce the co’s net asset value, since the co/individual is owed that money.
- BUT it would be in breach of PP, because it would stop the equal distribution among the common pool of creditors (i.e. it would be a preference).
- The two are commonly confused in case law.
Barlow Clowes International Ltd v Vaughan [1992]
Explains fair basis for distribution of funds among competing claimants- not in the PP sense, but similar rationale.
Case: Concerned the distribution of assets among beneficiaries. Rule: In general the rule in Clayton’s Case (first-in first-out) applies to the distribution of trust funds, unless the application would be impractical or would result in injustice between the parties.
Reasoning: This is as first-in first-out rule is a convenient method of competing claims but would be contrary to the presumed intention of the beneficiaries.
Cork on pari passu
PP is in theory fundamental and all-pervasive, but a rateable distribution among creditors is rarely achieved for 3 reasons:
- PP is confined to assets of the co and does not affect creditors having rights in rem. These include: - secured creditors who can take security for present and future indebtedness over future and present assets; - suppliers of goods under contracts which reserve title until payment; - third parties for whom the co holds assets on trust or who have prop tracing rights in equity. These are not exceptions to the rule- these assets do not belong to the co.
- Liquidator takes the assets subject to equities affecting them - E.g right to avoid a transaction for misrep.
- Huge chunks of the assets that remain have to be applied to meet claims in ranking priority to those of the ordinary unsecured creditor.
General order of distribution
- Secured creditors with a charge over property.
- Expenses of liquidation
- Preferential creditors
- Floating charge holders
- unsecured creditors with provable debts
- Statutory interest
- Unsecured creditors with non-provable debts
- Shareholders§
Expenses of the liquidation- cases and provisions?
Bankruptcy: IR 6.22; s.324
Winding up: 4.218; s.115; s.156; s.176A, Re Lundy Granite, Re Nortel
What is the position of expenses with regards to pari passu?
They enjoy a SUPER PRIORTY because they are not provable debts existing at the date of the winding up order, they are merely costs incurred later in the carrying out of liquidation. Because they are not provable, they do not engage pari passu
IR 6.22/ IR 4.218
Order in which expenses are payable in bankruptcy/liquidation.
s.324
Bankruptcy. Payment of dividends is subject to sufficient money to cover expenses.
s.115
Expenses in liquidation are payable from the company’s assets in priority to all other claims.
s.156
Liquidation- if the co’s assets are insufficient to satisfy its expenses, the court may make an order as to the payment of expenses out of those assets in the order that it thinks is just.
s.176ZA
Where the assets available to the general pool of creditors are insufficient to cover the expenses of liquidation, they take priority over a floating charge.
Principle in Re Lundy Granite Co (1871)
The principle enables creditors in respect of leases or other contracts entered into before the liquidation to recover debts in full, as expenses of the liquidation, where contracts have been continued by the liquidators for the benefit of the liquidation.
Pension Fund Shortfalls
When an employer liable to make contributions to an occupational pension scheme suffers “an insolvency event” it becomes liable to pay to the trustees of the scheme the difference between the assets of the scheme and its liabilities.
In certain circumstances the Pensions Regulator (TPR) may issue a Financial Support Direction (FSD) against employer and associated companies or individuals- An FSD requires the target to put financial support in place for a scheme.
- To issue an FSD we must consider that the scheme’s employer was either a service company or ‘insufficiently resourced’ at a time that we choose (known as the ‘relevant time’).
- We must also consider that it is reasonable to require the target to provide financial support. We consider any relevant issues, which may include similar issues to those we consider for CNs.
Or may issue a contribution notice, requiring the target to pay money to a scheme. The individual must have been part to an act to prevent the recovery of all or part of a debt due to the scheme under section 75 of the Pensions Act 1995 (i.e. the insolvency).
*Re Nortel GmbH [2014] SC
The Supreme Court considered whether the liability that would arise on a financial support direction (FSD) being served by the Pensions Regulator on a company in administration ranked as an expense of the administration or a provable debt.
Decision: the company’s liability under the FSD regime ranked as a provable debt of the company and not an expense of the administration.
The Supreme Court called the answer ‘sensible and fair’ even though their decision overrules a number of cases dating back to 1887.
Implications of Nortel?
- Creates certainty for office holders, companies and pension schemes?
- Widens category of provable debts and narrows the category of expenses.
- The definition of expense has been narrowed to arising out of the ‘doing’ of the administrators, or from a statute whose terms make clear that the liability falls on the administrator as part of the administration.
- This may also affect the issue relating to rent as an expense in administration (Lundy Granite).
Preferential creditors- cases and provisions?
s. 328/s.175
s. 368/s.387
Sch 6, paras 8-11 and 15A-15B;
s.40;
Re Unit 2 Windows (1985)
s.175(1) (liquidation), s.328(1) (bankruptcy)
In a winding up/bankruptcy the company’s preferential debts (within meaning of s.386 such 6) shall be paid in priority to all other debts.
s.386
Preferential debts are: - contributions to occupational pension schemes; -remuneration of employees; - levies on coal and steel. All defined in Sch 6.
Sch 6
PAGE 198. Defines each of the categories of preferential debt.