Bankruptcy Order - Creditor Refusing Offer of Security for Bankruptcy Petition Debt

Authors: Simon HillLara Hicks
In: Article Published: Monday 24 October 2022

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Can a debtor/respondent defend/oppose a bankruptcy petition on the basis that, although the petitioning creditor is pursuing a bankruptcy petition founded upon unsecured debt, the debtor offered to secure that debt, but the petitioning creditor refused the offer? To put it another way, in what circumstances may a petitioning creditor refuse an offer of security for the petition debt sum, from the debtor/respondent, and be permitted to continue pursuing the bankruptcy petition?

This article will consider this question, in light of the key section on this, section 271(3) of the Insolvency Act 1986, and relevant authorities: (1) Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 ('Re a Debtor 32'); (2) Inland Revenue Commissioners v A Debtor [1995] BCC 971 ('IRC v A Debtor'); (3) HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269, ChD ('Dougall'); (4) Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652 (Ross'); (5) Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837 ('Garwood'); (6) Cooke v Dunbar Assets Plc [2016] EWHC 579 (Ch) ('Cooke') and (7) Hughes v Howell [2021] EWCA Civ 1431; [2022] BPIR 135 ('Hughes')(Supreme Court (Lord Hodge, Lord Sales and Lady Rose) refused permission to appeal in Hughes).

The Insolvency Act 1986
It is well known that, subject to certain specific exceptions[1a], a bankruptcy petition may not be presented to the court in respect of a debt/each of the debts, unless the debt, or each of the debts (as the case maybe), is/are unsecured. Security here, is any form of  mortgage, charge, lien or other security, over the debtor's property[1b].

Moreover, the court will not impose a bankruptcy order upon a debtor/respondent where the bankruptcy petition before the court is founded upon a debt which is secured. This prohibition is contained in section 271 of the Insolvency Act 1986, entitled 'Proceedings on creditor's petition'. Subsection 271(1) reads:

'The court shall not make a bankruptcy order on a creditor's petition unless it is satisfied that the debt, or one of the debts, in respect of which the petition was presented is either-
(a) a debt which, having been payable at the date of the petition or having since become payable, has been neither paid nor secured or compounded for, or
(b) a debt which the debtor has no reasonable prospect of being able to pay when it falls due.'
[bold added][2]

So, where the bankruptcy petition debt is secured, section 271(1) dis-empowers the court from making a bankruptcy order upon the petition. This seems most relevant to where, during the currency of the bankruptcy proceedings, the debtor made an offer of security and the petitioning creditor accepted that offer.

What then for the scenario expressed at the start of this article? In that scenario, the debt remains unsecured because the offer of security is refused/rejected. Clearly, section 271(1) will not apply - since the debt remains unsecured. The answer to the question posed, is to be found, not in section 271(1), but in section 271(3). 

Subsection 271(3) provides (so far as presently material):

'The court may dismiss the petition if it ... is satisfied-
(a) that the debtor has made an offer to secure ... a debt in respect of which the petition is presented,
(b) that the acceptance of that offer would have required the dismissal of the petition, and
(c) that the offer has been unreasonably refused;
...
[3]

As will be apparent, Parliament has set down that:

(1) where the court is satisfied of 3 cumulative conditions ((a), (b) and (c) to subsection 271(3) - the gateway conditions); then

(2) the Court has a discretion to dismiss the bankruptcy petition - the discretion arising from the word 'may' in subsectoin 271(3). As Lewison LJ (with whom Coulson LJ and Vos MR agreed) said in Hughes, when referring to section 271(3), at paragraph 20:

'That section is expressed in discretionary rather than mandatory terms.'

Similarly, in Garwood, Chief Registrar Baister said, at paragraph 20:

'Section 271(3) makes clear that the court has a discretion. The case-law provides guidance as to how that discretion is to be exercised.'

A consequence of note, from the existence of this discretionary second stage, is, as observed by Robert Walker J, that the overall statutory provision contemplates that a petitioning creditor could act unreasonably (IRC v A Debtor, at 973G; see also Garwood, paragraph 33), and yet still be permitted to continue, despite this, to pursue the bankruptcy petition (because the court decides, at the discretionary stage, not to dismiss the petition).

Underlying Rationale to Section 271(3)

Before considering section 271(3) in detail, it is helpful to record Lewison LJ's explanation (in Hughes) of the underlying rationale for section 271(3). At paragraph 25, Lewison LJ said:

'The reason why a petition is liable to be dismissed if the debt is secured is that eh (sic) security gives the creditor the ability to procure repayment of the debt without recourse to bankruptcy.'

Offer Made and Effect, if Offer had been Accepted

Looking at the 3 gateway conditions in section 271(3), in a typical case, it should be clear:

(1) what debt is founding the petition, and whether the debtor has made an offer to secure that debt; and

(2) whether, had the offer been accepted, the debt would have become secured, such that the Court would have been required to dismiss the petition.

Whether these conditions ((a) and (b)) are satisfied should be fairly easy to determine. 

The Offer has been Unreasonably Refused

Commonly, the area of most contention, will be whether or not section 271(3)(c) is satisifed; that is, whether or not the Court is satisfied that the offer has been 'unreasonably' refused.

In Garwood, Chief Registrar Baister reviewed all the relevant authorities on section 271(3)[4] and said, at paragraph 23, that the '...principle propositions that emerge may conveniently (although not necessarily exhaustively) be summarised as follows', before setting down the following principles (references in paragraph 23 are omitted here but are available in the footnote[5])

'1. The starting point is to ask whether a reasonable hypothetical creditor in the position of a petitioning creditor would accept or refuse the offer, bearing in mind, however, that there could be a range of reasonable positions that such a creditor could adopt.

2. The test is objective.

3. It is necessary to consider the extent to which the reasonable hypothetical creditor may be taken to have the characteristics of a petitioning creditor.

4. The court must look at the position at the date of the hearing.

5. The court is not limited to considering the matters taken into account by the petitioning creditor when the offer of security was refused. It must look at all the relevant factors and their impact on the reasonable hypothetical creditor.

6. That includes the history.

7. The debtor must be full, frank and open in providing the necessary information to enable the creditor to make an informed decision.

8. A rigid institutional policy of rejecting offers to secure could be a relevant consideration, since the reasonable hypothetical creditor was obliged to consider an offer on its merits. Coherent inhouse policies, however, are not necessarily wrong.

9. A creditor is entitled to have regard to his own interests and is not obliged to take a chance or to show patience or generosity.

10. The costs and resources implications for the creditor are a highly material consideration.'

In Hughes, Lewison LJ   set out the 10 principles from Garwood, and said at paragraph 8 of Hughes:

'I am content to approve that summary as a correct statement of principle.'[6a]

Lewison LJ in Hughes went on to give particularly approval to the ninth principle, describing it as '...a sound point'[6b].

A few of the above principles can be expanded. 

Hypothetical Reasonable Creditor

Whether or not an offer was refused unreasonably, is judged using the concept of the hypothetical reasonable creditor, operating and acting objectively in defined circumstances (knowing all the relevant factors) - looking at the range of reasonable positions that hypothetical reasonable creditor might take, and then asking whether the petitioning creditor's decision was within, or conversely, outwith (outside), that range. In Dougall, Lightman J said, at 272:

'First, the test of unreasonableness is whether a [...] reasonable creditor1 in the position of the petitioning creditor and in the light of the actual history as disclosed to the court could have reached the conclusion that the petitioning creditor reached. There may be a range of reasonable positions on the part of the hypothetical reasonable creditors and a rejection of an offer by the petitioner is only to be categorised as unreasonable if no reasonable creditor would have refused the offer and accordingly the refusal is beyond the range of reasonable responses to it. Secondly, the test is objective, namely the response of the hypothetical reasonable creditor. The court is not limited to considering the considerations that were taken into account by the petitioning creditor himself when he refused to agree to the offer. The court must look at all the relevant factors and decide what are the relevant factors and what impact those relevant factors would have on the hypothetical reasonable creditor.'[7] [bold added]

Extent that hypothetical reasonable creditor has actual characteristics of the Petitioning Creditor

On the question of how far the hypothetical reasonable creditor should be taken to have the actual characteristics of the petitioning creditor, Henderson J in Ross said, at paragraph 53, that:

'the test only makes sense if the hypothetical creditor is regarded as having at least the main characteristics of the petitioning creditor and as standing in his shoes.'

For instance, where the petitioning creditors is HMRC, 'the hypothetical creditor must ... be regarded as a national revenue authority in the same position, and subject to the same constraints, as HMRC...' (Ross, paragraph 53; see also Garwood, paragraph 33)

Past history of offers and payments in that case

A factor the hypothetical reasonable creditor will consider is the past history between the creditor and the debtor. Past history will affect the range of positions the hypothetical reasonable creditor might reasonably take on the offer.

Quite what affect past history will have on that range, naturally depends on what that past history contains, and how relevant and substantial it is to a hypothetical reasonable creditor's decision, whether to accept the offer of security, or not. For instance, in Re A Debtor 32 (an offer to compound a debt case[8]) after commenting that there was 'a good deal of justification' (910) for the petitioning creditors criticisms of the debtor’s attitude, as being one of prevarication and delay, the deputy High Court Judge said, at 910:

'...the past history would be of substantial relevance to the hypothetical reasonable creditor when deciding whether or not to accept an offer or rather to press for a bankruptcy order.'

And that, at 910-911 'the hypothetical reasonable creditor, on the facts of this case, might well be influenced, in deciding whether to accept the offer or to press for a bankruptcy order, by the unsatisfactory record of the debtor’s past dealings'[9]

Availability of a Full investigation into the Debtor's finances with Bankruptcy

In Re a Debtor 32, after noting the 'unsatisfactory record of the debtor’s past dealings' (910-911), the deputy High Court Judge also said, at 911:

'In that context, ... the hypothetical reasonable creditor might well regard it as relevant that, whatever the eventual outcome of the bankruptcy, in financial terms for the creditors, a bankruptcy order would at least result in a full investigation, fuller than could be achieved by inquiries on behalf of the creditor on an ad hoc basis.'

The Nature of the Property Offered to be Made Subject to Security

The hypothetical reasonable creditor will consider the nature of the property over which the security is offered, including factors such as:

(1) whether it is a usual or unusual asset to be made subject to a security;

(2) whether it is immediately realisable property;

(3) The degree of certainty/uncertainty as to:

(i) the debtor's ownership of the property/beneficial interest in the property;

(ii) the value of the property (whether it is sufficient)[10a]; and

(ii) the likely timing of its conversion into money (and so, available to be used to pay the petition debt).[10b]

In Hughes, the debtor offered a security over an unusual form of asset, the rights of a testamentary legatee (residuary beneficiary) in the unadministered estate of a testator (his deceased (May 2018) aunty) - the principal right being the right to compel the due administration of the estate. In simple terms, the debtor offered to give security over his entitlement to this prospective residuary estate, to the petitioning creditor[10c].

While such an entitlement to a residuary estate can be made subject to a security - it was undoubtedly an unusual asset to make subject to a security. Lewison LJ in Hughes, at paragraph 19, described it as:

'...an unusual kind of security.'

Similarly, Lewison LJ in Hughes considered its attributes/characteristics, and noted, at paragraph 19, that the security offered:

'...was not a security over immediately realisable property.'

Similarly, a likely factor for the hypothetical reasonable creditor will be how long he will have to wait, after the security is accepted, before he will receive his money, pursuant to the security (in satisfaction of the petition debt). A submission to the contrary, that '...if a debt is secured it does not matter how long the creditor will have to wait before being able to realise the security' (paragraph 25), was rejected by Lewison LJ in Hughes. Lewison LJ explained that 'Security is only of value if it enables a debt to be paid within a reasonable time.'

Where the nature of the security situation means that:

(1) the petition debt is not likely to be paid, pursuant to the security, within a reasonable period of time, this is likely to be a material factor for the hypothetical reasonable creditor when the court determines whether a hypothetical reasonable creditor could decide to refuse the offer of security.

(2) there is a lack of clarity as to whether payment is likely to be received, pursuant to the security, within a reasonable time of the security being accepted, this is also likely to be a material factor for the hypothetical reasonable creditor when the court determines whether a hypothetical reasonable creditor could decide to refuse the offer of security, in such circumstances.

Further, a lack of clarity as to whether the debtor holds the beneficial interest in property, will likely to be material to the hypothetical reasonable creditor. In Shrimpton v Darbys Solicitors LLP [2011] EWHC 3796 (Ch), the debtor/bankrupt had offered security over land (at Watermead), which at HM Land Registry, the debtor/bankrupt (and another) were recorded as holding as trustees for Watermead Village Cricket Club. The offeree/petitioning creditor had refused the offer of security, and the issue arose as to whether the DJ had erred in his approach to whether that refused was unreasonable. Richards J said, at paragraph 30, that:

'It goes without saying that if [the debtor/bankrupt and another] hold the land of Watermead as trustees, then [the debtor/bankrupt] is not in a position to give any security over his interest in the land for his own personal debts.'

After going through the surrounding evidence (paragraph 30) indicating the debtor/bankrupt was indeed merely a trustee of the land, Richards J said, at paragraph 30:

'On the face of it... he was not the beneficial owner of the land. The onus would therefore be firmly on him to establish that notwithstanding those matters, he was in fact and in law the joint beneficial owner of the land. The onus would be on him to establish that to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor to whom he offered security.'

Richards J rejected the submission that the onus lay on the petitioning creditors to demonstrate that he was not the beneficial owner of the land. Richards J said, at paragraph 32:

'In my judgment, the District Judge was correct to regard the apparent status of [the debtor/bankrupt and another], as trustees, as constituting a reasonable ground on which the petitioners were entitled to refuse the offer of security made to them. Their refusal to accept such security would, in my judgment, remain reasonable unless and until [the debtor/bankrupt] could establish that he was indeed the beneficial owner.'

Moreover, a lack of clarity as to whether the money raised from the security, will cover the petition debt entirely, will likely to be material to the hypothetical reasonable creditor.

Where there are these uncertainties, or indeterminates/indeterminacies if you will, this may well prove fatal to a debtor's section 271(3) call for the petition to be dismissed on the basis of unreasonable refusal.

In Hughes, these issues were present. Lewison LJ said:

(1) 'The uncertainty relating to both the value and timing of the security would undoubtedly be something that the hypothetical creditor would bear in mind.' (paragraph 25);

(2) of the nature of the property to be covered by the security: 'Its value would depend on how much was received from [the debtor's] aunt's house and when.' (paragraph 19)

before concluding that:

(3) 'A creditor is not unreasonable in refusing to wait for an indeterminate time for an indeterminate amount before the security can be realised.' (paragraph 25)

On the facts in Hughes, the existence/extent of these indeterminates (paragraph 25) were very material to the Court of Appeal decision to dismiss the debtor's (second) appeal against the first instance judge's decision: (i) not to dismiss the petition under section 271(3); and to (ii) make a bankruptcy order against the debtor.

It is worth noting though, that this uncertainty about when payment will be received, is relative; relative to the uncertainty as to when an unsecured creditor will receive a dividend out of a bankrupt estate (the alternative path pursued by the petitioning creditor). To put in another way, a petitioning creditor pressing for a bankruptcy order, will have to wait, to a degree, an indeterminate amount of time for an indeterminate amount anyway, until he receives, his unsecured creditor dividend (if any) out of the bankrupt estate; how does this compare to the indeterminate aspects to accepting the offer of security.

Further points

Further points can be made (provided in footnotes) about the following:

(1) the court must look at the position at the date of the hearing[11];

(2) a party's solicitors' view on what the hypothetical reasonable creditor would think, is not relevant (quite obviously)[12];

(3) the debtor must be full, frank and open in providing the necessary information to enable the creditor to make an informed decision[13];

(4) rigidity/flexibility of an institutional policy[14];

(5) a creditor is entitled to have regard to his own interests, qua creditor[15];

(6) delay vs prospect of payment in full out of the bankrupt estate[16];

(7) resources of the petitioning creditor, to act as a secured creditor (typically, chargee/mortgagee) and to administer the sale of the charged/mortgaged property[17a].

(8) any additional inconvenience the type of security will bring, when enforcement is instigated[17b].

(9) encouraging compliance with obligation to pay taxes timeously[18]

Where Security will not cover whole of Petition Debt

Where the property over which security is offered, lacks sufficient value to secure the whole petition debt, the debtor will need to cover the shortfall some other way (at least, to reduce it to less than the bankruptcy level, potentially[19]).

(1) One potential way is to augment the section 271(3) offer of security, with sufficient evidence that there is a reasonable prospect of the shortfall being paid off (or at least, to bring it below the bankruptcy level) within a reasonable period of time. This two pronged approach, was attempted in Hughes, albeit unsuccessfully on the facts, but, the case shows that the law permits this two pronged approach[20a].

To go into more detail, in Hughes:

(a) it was common ground that there was a shortfall, but a key problem for the debtor's case, was that there was uncertainty as to the size of the shortfall; further,

(b) the debtor failed to make a proper offer to meet/make up the shortfall. A vague statement the debtor made just prior to the bankruptcy order being made, was just not good enough. Lewison LJ put it this way, at paragraph 24:

'An offer simply to top up the shortfall is, in my judgment, not enough. Nor is it up to the creditors to negotiate with the debtor before the debtor makes an offer. The offer that the debtor makes is one for him to make and him alone. I do not consider that [the debtor's] vague statement in the course of submissions, unsupported by any credible or objective evidence, that if someone thought that it ought to be more than £10,000 then he would go along with that amounts to an offer at all. It is certainly not one that no reasonable creditor would refuse. A reasonable creditor is entitled to know where the money is to come from, what other liabilities the debtors has that need to be satisfied and when the money would be forthcoming.'

(2) Another potential way is to augment the section 271(3) offer of security, with an offer to compound. See for instance, Cooke.

Unreasonable Refusal of Offer of Security can be run in the alternative

A section 271(3) ground of opposition to a bankruptcy order, can be run in the alternative to other grounds of opposition to a bankruptcy order.

For instance, in Shrimpton v Darbys Solicitors LLP [2011] EWHC 3796 (Ch); [2012] BPIR 631[20b], Richards J heard an appeal by a bankrupt, against his bankruptcy order.

At the first instance bankruptcy hearing, the then debtor ('debtor/bankrupt') had made 2 submissions in opposition the making of a bankruptcy order, that:

(1) there was expectation of income which, if received, would enable him to pay the petition debt (described as the 'prospect of income coming to [debtor/bankrupt] within a reasonable time and enabling him to pay the petition debt' submission (paragraph 22); and

(2) the petitioning creditor has unreasonably refused his offer of security over his property.

Where Court Determines that Refusal was Unreasonable

Where Court determines that refusal was unreasonable, the Court may adopt the approach of Chief Registrar Baister in Garwood. That is, to give judgment on the issues of the reasonableness of the refusal, then adjourn to enable the parties to enter into the security, before the petition is dismissed[21].

Where Bankruptcy Petition is Dismissed under section 271(3)

Where the 3 conditions in section 271(3) are found (so, of course, finding the refusal was unreasonable), and the Court does exercise its discretion, to dismiss the petition, the situation will be (post petition dismissal), by analogy with Re a Debtor 32, as follows:

(1) the debt will still be owing (since the dismissal of a bankruptcy petition, founded upon a debt, does not affect the existence of that debt); but,

(2) '... in the absence of any material change of circumstances, the petitioning creditor could not expect to be able to obtain a bankruptcy order on fresh proceedings.' (Re a Debtor 32, at 907)

(3) 'However, if any other creditor were to obtain a bankruptcy order, the petitioner's debt would be proved in the bankruptcy and there seems no obvious basis for holding that the petitioner could not enforce in any other way available to it after obtaining judgment for the outstanding debt.' (Re a Debtor 32, at 907)

Factual Example - Hughes

It may be helpful to run though the facts in Hughes, to provide worked example of Court determining whether an offer of security, which was refused by the petitioning creditor, was 'unreasonably' refused.

In Hughes, the petitioning creditors (Mr and Mrs Hughes) were judgment creditors, having obtained judgment (c.10 September 2015; paragraphs 1 and 21) against the debtor (Mr Howard), the judgment debtor, for: (1) c.£47,000; with (2) £26,000 costs. In May 2017, the judgment creditors presented the bankruptcy petition. There were some [22] adjournments, before hearings on: (1) 20-21 June 2018; (2) 11 December 2018; (3) March 2019 and (4) 21-25 March 2019 where the bankruptcy order was made. By hearing (2), the debtor had paid the petitioning creditors c.£29,500, leaving c.£43,500 outstanding.

The debtor sought to meet the outstanding petition debt, as follows:

(1) security over his rights to a testimentary residuary gift, of a 20% share of his deceased aunt's residuary estate. That estate contained: (a) a house; (b) garage. The debtor offered to make an immediate payment to the petitioning creditor of £15,000, and the balance to come from his share of the sale of his aunt’s house. He had provided irrevocable instructions to the executor’s solicitors to pay the proceeds to which he was entitled to the creditor. The debtor maintained that this was sufficient security for the purposes of section 271 and accordingly the petition should be dismissed.

Subsequently, initial optimism about the house selling at a certain price proved unfounded. The house did not sell and the executors lowered the price. Rather than the debtor's testimentary residuary gift being valued at over £60,000, his maximum entitlement would be £46,200 (paragraph 12).
 
By the 21 March 2019 hearing (when the bankruptcy order was made), the house had still not sold, though the executors hoped for an offer within the next month (paragraph 13). The debtor said he anticipated that there could be a shortfall between the petition debt and realised share of his aunt's estate, but promised to pay by the end of the month, £10,000.  He further gave a vague statement that 'if someone thought it ought to be more than £10,000 then I would go along with that, but at the moment it seems to me that £10,000 would be more than adequate." (paragraph 19).

The first instance judge found that: (1) it was no longer the case that the debtor's testimentary residuary gift "might soon be realised in a sufficient amount to discharge the petition debt" (paragraph 21); there would be a shortfall; (2) it would be very likely to take at least several months before the value of the shortfall could even be calculated (paragraph 21); and (3) the debtor's offer to pay the shortfall within days did not provide any clear assurance to the petitioning creditors that the petition debt would be paid within a reasonable period. She concluded therefore that the debtor's offer was not one that no reasonable hypothetical creditor could have refused. Accordingly she made the bankruptcy order.

SIMON HILL AND LARA HICKS © 2022

BARRISTERS

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] There are specific exceptions.

Section 267 of the Insolvency Act 1986 is entitled 'Grounds of Creditor's Petition' and subsection (2) reads:

'Subject to the next three sections, a creditor’s petition may be presented to the court in respect of a debt or debts only if, at the time the petition is presented

(a) the amount of the debt, or the aggregate amount of the debts, is equal to or exceeds the bankruptcy level,

(b) the debt, or each of the debts, is for a liquidated sum payable to the petitioning creditor, or one or more of the petitioning creditors, either immediately or at some certain, future time, and is unsecured,' [Bold added]

The next three sections are (as you might expect): (i) section 268; (2) section 269; and (3) section 270.

Section 268 is entitled 'Definition of “inability to pay”, etc.; the statutory demand' and does not contain anything relevant.

Section 270 is entitled 'Expedited petition' and does not contain anything relevant.

Section 269 is entitled 'Creditor with security' and does contain relevant provisions. Section 269 reads:

'(1) A debt which is the debt, or one of the debts, in respect of which a creditor’s petition is presented need not be unsecured if either

(a) the petition contains a statement by the person having the right to enforce the security that he is willing, in the event of a bankruptcy order being made, to give up his security for the benefit of all the bankrupt’s creditors, or

(b) the petition is expressed not to be made in respect of the secured part of the debt and contains a statement by that person of the estimated value at the date of the petition of the security for the secured part of the debt.

(2) In a case falling within subsection (1)(b) the secured and unsecured parts of the debt are to be treated for the purposes of sections 267 to 270 as separate debts.' [Bold added]

Where a debt is secured but, given the (relatively low) value of the property under the security, the whole of the debt is not, in monetary terms, secured, then the debt is 'treated' as if 2 separate debts (section 269(2)). The effect of this, is that:

(1) the secured part of the debt, is treated as a separate debt, and is, by defintion, fully secured; it is not unsecured at all;

(2) the unsecured part of the debt, is treated as a separate debt, and is, by defintion, fully unsecured.

In a situation where section 269(2) applies, the unsecured part of the debt will need to have been above the bankruptcy level at the time of presentation of the bankruptcy petition. Will the bankruptcy court retain jurisdiction to impose a bankruptcy order if, by the date of the hearing, the unsecured part of the debt has falled below the bankruptcy level? Seemingly so, if the court adopts the same approach as the approach taken in Lilley v American Express Europe Ltd [2000] BPIR 70 ('Lilley') - that the court retains a discretion as to whether or not it is proper to make a bankruptcy order in the circumstances. See further, an article written by one of this article's co-authors, on Lilley, here.

[1b] As per section 383(2) of the Insolvency Act 1986, which provides:

'[…] a debt is secured for the purposes of this Group of Parts to the extent that the person to whom the debt is owed holds any security for the debt (whether a mortgage, charge, lien or other security) over any property of the person by whom the debt is owed.'

Lewison LJ in Hughes v Howell [2021] EWCA Civ 1431; [2022] BPIR 135, refers to this section, at paragraph 4.

[2] In Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899, Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge) said, at 901:

'...on hearing the petition, there must be at least one debt, on which the petition is based, as to which, if it is already due and payable, it has neither been paid nor secured nor compounded for or, if it is a future debt, there is no reasonable prospect that the debtor will be able to pay it when it falls due. Payment is a question of fact, securing or compounding I take to be a matter of agreement between the debtor and the creditor, and the prospects of payment of future debts must be a question of evidence.'

While compounding will occur by agreement, not all securing will occur by agreement. A judgment creditor can apply for, and obtain, a charging order against a judgment debtor's assets, without needing the judgment debtor's consent. Accordingly, it might be said that not all securing will be a matter of agreement between the debtor and the creditor.

[3] Though not strictly speaking relevant to this article at this stage, it is noted that section 271(3) harbours 2 alternative basis for the Court to dismiss the petition.

Subsection 271(3) provides:

'The court may dismiss the petition if it is satified that the debtor is able to pay all his debts or is satisfied-
(a) that the debtor has made an offer to secure ... a debt in respect of which the petition is presented,
(b) that the acceptance of that offer would have required the dismissal of the petition, and
(c) that the offer has been unreasonably refused;'
[bold added]

Highlighting these 2 alternatives, Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge) in Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 said, at 901:

'If the threshold conditions of subsection (1) are satisfied the court may nevertheless dismiss the petition if it is satisfied that the debtor is able to pay all his debts. Alternatively it may dismiss the petition if an offer within subsection (3) has been made and has been unreasonably refused.'

In Shrimpton v Darbys Solicitors LLP [2011] EWHC 3796 (Ch); [2012] BPIR 631, Richards J heard an appeal by a bankrupt, against his bankruptcy order.

At the first instance bankruptcy hearing, the then debtor ('debtor/bankrupt') had made 2 submissions in opposition the making of a bankruptcy order, that:

(1) there was expectation of income which, if received, would enable him to pay the petition debt (described as the 'prospect of income coming to [debtor/bankrupt] within a reasonable time and enabling him to pay the petition debt' submission (paragraph 22); and

(2) the petitioning creditor has unreasonably refused his offer of security over his property. Focusing on the first submission for present purposes, Richards J said about the relevant law, at paragraph 9:

'So far as the relevance of income expected to be received is concerned, building on the opening words of section 271(3), “The court may dismiss the petition if it is satisfied that the debtor is able to pay all his debts”, a number of decisions have established that the court has a discretion to adjourn a petition for payment, or perhaps even to dismiss it, if there is a reasonable prospect of the petition debt being paid in full within a reasonable period of time. If the court were to dismiss such a petition, it would no doubt wish to be assured to a high degree that payment would be received.'

On the facts, the [debtor/bankrupt] had, at the bankruptcy hearing, relied on income coming to him as commission. His evidence was that:

(1) there was a commission agreement between him and a company, that '...he would receive a commission of three per cent on any contracts introduced by him to that company' (paragraph 22).

(2) there were negotiations or the prospect of a deal between the company and Lockheed Martin, the large US aeronautical company (paragraph 22)

However, dismissed the debtor/bankrupt's appeal on this point. Richards J said, at paragraph 22:

'As the District Judge himself concluded, there was no certainty about any proposed income stream from this source. No contracts were in place between [the company] and Lockheed Martin and there could be no confidence that any such contracts would be in place. It is to be observed that there is no evidence before the court that any contracts have since been put in place. In so far as criticism is made of the District Judge's decision in respect to that issue, his approach was in my judgment, fully justified by the evidence before him.'

[4] In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, Chief Registrar Baister considered section 271(1) and (3) in paragraph 20, and the authorities, in paragraphs 21 and 22 of his judgment. In respect to the latter (paragraphs 21 and 22), though these are long passages, for which the Chief Registrar Baister at paragraph 23 provides a helpful summary (quoted in the main body of the article), it is still worth quoting the long passages in paragraphs 21 and 22, in full: 

'[21] The test to be applied was first formulated by Timothy Lloyd QC, as he then was, in Re A Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899, at 910 (although the case concerned compounding for the petition debt rather than an offer of security):

‘as being whether a reasonable creditor, in the position of this petitioning creditor, and in the light of the actual history as disclosed to the court, would have accepted or refused the offer. However, I think it has to be borne in mind that there could be a range of reasonable positions on the part of hypothetical reasonable creditors. In order to conclude that the refusal was unreasonable, it seems to me that the court has to be satisfied that no reasonable hypothetical creditor would have refused the offer, and that the refusal of the offer was therefore beyond the range of possible reasonable actions in the context.’

It was adopted and clarified by Lightman J in HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269, at 272:

‘The relevant legal principles governing this case are encapsulated in the judgments of Mr Timothy Lloyd QC, sitting as a deputy High Court judge in a case called In Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 and of Robert Walker J in Commissioners of Inland Revenue v The Debtor, Re a Debtor (No 6349 of 1994) [1996] BPIR 271. The relevant principles are as follows. First, the test of unreasonableness is whether a[...]reasonable creditor1 in the position of the petitioning creditor and in the light of the actual history as disclosed to the court could have reached the conclusion that the petitioning creditor reached. There may be a range of reasonable positions on the part of the hypothetical reasonable creditors and a rejection of an offer by the petitioner is only to be categorised as unreasonable if no reasonable creditor would have refused the offer and accordingly the refusal is beyond the range of reasonable responses to it. Secondly, the test is objective, namely the response of the hypothetical reasonable creditor. The court is not limited to considering the considerations that were taken into account by the petitioning creditor himself when he refused to agree to the offer. The court must look at all the relevant factors and decide what are the relevant factors and what impact those relevant factors would have on the hypothetical reasonable creditor. The third proposition is that the debtor must be full, frank and open and provide all the necessary information to enable an informed decision to be made by the creditor.’

[22] That passage was referred to by Henderson J in Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652, [2010] 2 All ER 126. He added further guidance derived from the foregoing authorities and from the judgment of Robert Walker J, as he then was, in Inland Revenue Commissioners v A Debtor [1995] BCC 971:

‘[44] I have already set out in [31] above the helpful summary of the relevant legal principles given by Lightman J in HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269 at 272. There are, however, some further points which can usefully be gleaned from the authorities.

[45] First, in Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1995] 1 All ER 628, [1994] 1 WLR 899, Timothy Lloyd QC held that the district judge had erred in attaching little significance to the past history of offers and payments in that case. He said ([1995] 1 All ER 628 at 639, [1994] 1 WLR 899 at 910): “It seems to me that the past history would be of substantial relevance to the hypothetical reasonable creditor when deciding whether or not to accept an offer or rather to press for a bankruptcy order.” Having commented that there was “a good deal of justification” for describing the debtor’s attitude as one of prevarication and delay, the deputy judge said again that in his view “the hypothetical reasonable creditor, on the facts of this case, might well be influenced, in deciding whether to accept the offer or to press for a bankruptcy order, by the unsatisfactory record of the debtor’s past dealings” (see [1995] 1 All ER 628 at 640, [1994] 1 WLR 899 at 910-911).

[46] It follows from these observations, with which I respectfully agree, that the Registrar in the present case cannot in my judgment be criticised for having had regard to the history of the matter as a factor which a reasonable creditor would have taken into account in deciding whether or not to accept the offer of security. Of course it is true that the purpose of such an offer is to guarantee that payment will be made in full at a future date, but in the light of a history of default, partial payments and promises which come to nothing, there comes a time when a reasonable creditor may prefer to press for an immediate bankruptcy order. That is particularly so where, as in the present case, the debtor appears to have ample assets to meet his debts, with the consequence that the making of a bankruptcy order is still likely to lead to full recovery for the creditor, albeit at a considerably greater cost to the debtor (because of the costs of the bankruptcy, and the forced realisation of assets by the trustee).

[47] Secondly, and following on from the point which I have just made, in IRC v Debtor [1995] BCC 971 at 974, Robert Walker J said that it seemed to him reasonably clear:

“that in considering an offer a creditor is entitled to have regard to his own interests (so long as they are his interests as a creditor, and not in some other capacity so as to bring in collateral considerations). The creditor is not required to balance his interests against those of the debtor, or to take a chance, or to show patience or generosity, even though some creditors might do so. As Lord Phillimore put it in [Viscount Tredegar v Harwood [1929] AC 72 at 82, [1928] All ER Rep 11 at 15], acting reasonably is not the same as acting justly, fairly or kindly. That was a landlord and tenant case but this point at least is of general application.”

[48] In the same case, the judge made some pertinent comments about the position of the Revenue, which had refused an offer of a third charge over the debtor’s house to secure a debt of about £36,000. The house was worth around £150,000, but was subject to first and second charges totalling about £80,000 and there was evidence that enforcement by sale would probably be difficult and protracted: see in particular [1995] BCC 971 at 976. The judge doubted (differing on this point from Timothy Lloyd QC) whether there could be any strong presumption that large and impersonal creditors, such as the insurance company in Re a Debtor (No 32 o f 1993) [1995] 1 All ER 628, [1994] 1 WLR 899 or the Revenue, are unlikely to act unreasonably. As he said ([1995] BCC 971 at 974):

“Large and impersonal bodies are much less likely to act unreasonably from motives of personal vindictiveness ... but bureaucratic inflexibility can sometimes produce an impersonal sort of oppression. On the other hand, large organisations constantly have to take decisions affecting large numbers of debtors (whether they are taxpayers, borrowers or trade debtors) and they can sensibly do so only by delegating the decisions to be made in accordance with coherent in-house policies.”

[49] After setting out the factors which weighed both for and against the taking of security, Robert Walker J (at 976) stated his conclusion:

“Having looked at the rival submissions in some detail I remind myself that the crucial question is: am I satisfied that the Revenue has acted unreasonably in rejecting the offer? The Revenue is, as Mr Tidmarsh says, under a statutory duty to collect tax (and interest on tax) that is due but unpaid. The officials of the Revenue concerned with collection ought not (and therefore are, on the face of it, unlikely) to refuse an offer which increases the likely net recovery to public funds. But the Revenue is, on the face of it, the best judge of what internal costs and diversion of resources may be involved in accepting security in a case like this. Without going back on what I have said about the possibility of institutional oppression, I see no real evidence of it in this case. At worst some officials have been careless and imprecise in explaining the Revenue’s position.”

Bearing in mind the range of reasonable positions open to the hypothetical creditor, the judge held, reversing the decision of Mr Registrar Rawson, that the Revenue had not gone outside that range and acted unreasonably.

[50] Thirdly, the decision of Lightman J in HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269 is of interest because one of the arguments advanced by the debtor was that the Commissioners operated a rigid institutional policy of conceding nothing to a debtor who had defrauded them. The judge (at 273) said that it was clear to him that the Commissioners did not regard themselves as bound to adhere to any rigid policy, and they viewed the debtor’s proposal on its merits, as they were obliged to do. He then referred to certain aspects of the evidence which supported this conclusion, and continued (at 274):

“I should, however, add, that even if I had held that there was a rigid policy which constrained the [Commissioners] in regard to the proposal made, I would not have regarded that as a matter of any significance for this simple reason: the exercise required, as I have already said, is an objective valuation of the offer and subjective considerations which operated on the mind of the creditor are not matters of any weight.”

[51] This last point is a significant one, because like the Registrar I find it disturbing that Mr Ross and Mr Holmes were repeatedly told that it was the policy of HMRC not to accept security in the form of legal charges over land. A variety of explanations for this policy were given, but its existence was never denied, and consistently with its existence there is no indication that the security offered by Mr Ross and Mr Holmes was ever considered on its merits. In the course of the hearing Mr Lopian told me, on instructions, that despite all appearances to the contrary in the present case HMRC do not, in fact, have a rigid policy, and all offers of security are (or should be) considered on their merits. I do not doubt that Mr Lopian’s instructions were to this effect, but I have to say that there is no evidence in the present case of the application of a flexible policy of that nature, and there is instead every indication that the offer of security was rejected out of hand without any serious consideration. I think it is regrettable, to say the least, and especially so in view of the comments made by Robert Walker J in IRC v Debtor [ 1995] BCC 971, that if HMRC do have a coherent in-house policy in this area, effective steps have apparently not been taken to ensure that it is known to, and applied by, the enforcement officers who actually deal with debtors. In the circumstances, it is not surprising that Mr Ross and Mr Holmes gained the firm impression that their offer of security was for all practical purposes ignored. Furthermore, there is in my judgment a real risk of institutional oppression if a rigid policy is unthinkingly applied, and debtors are fobbed off with inadequate or generalised justifications for the policy.

Henderson J in Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs turned to the HMRC's justification for refusing the debtor/respondents' offer of security, and whether the 5 reasons HMRC tendered, were sound reasons:

[52] It is worth at this point making some brief comments on the justifications proffered by Mr Webber in his witness statement. First, it is said that HMRC are not prepared to accept legal charges ‘as there is no guarantee as to when payment will be forthcoming’. That is of course true, but the purpose of security is normally to ensure that payment in full will be made when the security is realised, and it will often be the case that the prospects of obtaining payment in full are far less certain if the offer is refused and a bankruptcy order is made. Secondly, it is said that immediate settlement of the debt is required “to maintain the flow of funds to the exchequer”. But where enforcement proceedings have reached the stage of an offer of security, the debtor will long since have failed to settle his taxation liabilities when they fell due, and the issue is rather how to maximise the likely net recovery to public funds (as Robert Walker J said at 976). The third reason is that HMRC do not have the resources to act as mortgagees and to administer the sales of mortgaged property. This, by contrast, appears to me to be a highly material consideration, and in my view debtors cannot reasonably complain if in the general run of cases HMRC decline to incur such responsibilities. Their primary function, after all, is to collect tax, not to act as an institutional lender. The fourth reason is that Mr Ross and Mr Holmes had already had plenty of time to raise money on the security of their properties. This, too, was in my judgment a relevant consideration, and it formed part of the history which, as the deputy judge said in Re a Debtor (No 32 o f 1993) [1995] 1 All ER 628, [1994] 1 WLR 899, the creditor is entitled to take into account. Finally, it is said that it would be unfair to other taxpayers who pay their taxes on time if HMRC were to accept legal charges in the present case. This seems to me a bad reason. In general, fairness to other taxpayers will best be achieved by adopting the policy which is best calculated to maximise the net recovery to public funds. It seems to me fanciful to suppose that acceptance of the charges offered by Mr Ross and Mr Holmes, over a substantial portfolio of properties, would somehow have encouraged other taxpayers not to pay their taxes on time, or penalised them for doing so.''

As to the extent to which the hypothetical reasonable creditor is taken to have the actual characteristics of the petitioning creditor, Henderson J in Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs said:

'[53] A related question is how far the hypothetical reasonable creditor should be taken to have the actual characteristics of the petitioning creditor. This is not a question which has been much explored in the authorities, but it seems to me that the test only makes sense if the hypothetical creditor is regarded as having at least the main characteristics of the petitioning creditor and as standing in his shoes. Thus Timothy Lloyd QC formulated the relevant test as being “whether a reasonable creditor, in the position of this petitioning creditor, and in the light of the actual history as disclosed to the court, would have accepted or refused the offer” : see [1995] 1 All ER 628 at 639, [1994] 1 WLR 899 at 910, followed by Lightman J in HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269 at 272. Accordingly, in the present case the hypothetical creditor must in my view be regarded as a national revenue authority in the same position, and subject to the same constraints, as HMRC, and the test has to be applied in the light of the actual history as set out in the evidence before the court.’

Note: the '1' in the above extract is a footnote reference in the judgment of Chief Registrar Baister in Garwood. The footnote reads 'I have here corrected an obvious error. The text of the judgment actually reads: ‘whether an unreasonable creditor...’ [bold added]. Clearly the test relates to the hypothetical reasonable creditor, not the hypothetical unreasonable creditor.

[5] In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, Chief Registrar Baister said, at paragraph 23 (with cited authorities):

'(1) the starting point is to ask whether a reasonable hypothetical creditor in the position of the petitioning creditor would accept or refuse the offer, bearing in mind, however, that there could be a range of reasonable positions which such a creditor could adopt (Timothy Lloyd QC at 447G);

(2) the test is objective (Robert Walker J at 974A; Lightman J at 272G);

(3) it is necessary to consider the extent to which the reasonable hypothetical creditor may be taken to have the characteristics of the petitioning creditor (Henderson J at para [53]);

(4) the court must look at the position at the date of the hearing (Timothy Lloyd QC at 447D);

(5) the court is not limited to considering the matters taken into account by the petitioning creditor when the offer of security was refused; it must look at all the relevant factors and their impact on the reasonable hypothetical creditor (Lightman J at 272G-H);

(6) that includes the history (Henderson J at para [45]);

(7) the debtor must be full, frank and open in providing the necessary information to enable the creditor to make an informed decision (Lightman J at 272H);

(8) a rigid institutional policy of rejecting offers to secure could be a relevant consideration, since the reasonable hypothetical creditor was obliged to consider an offer on its merits (Lightman J at 273 referred to the creditors’ viewing the proposal on its merits ‘as they were obliged to do’; cf Robert Walker J’s reference to ‘bureaucratic inflexibility’ which could give rise to ‘an impersonal sort of oppression’ at 974G and Henderson J at para [51]); ‘coherent in-house policies’, however, are not necessarily wrong;

(9) a creditor is entitled to have regard to his own interests and is not obliged to ‘take a chance, or to show patience or generosity’ (Robert Walker J at 974; Henderson J at para [47]);

(10) the costs and resources implications for the creditor are a ‘highly material consideration’ (Robert Walker J at 976; Henderson J at paras [49] and [52]).'

The authorities referenced are:

(1) Commissioners of Inland Revenue v The Debtor, Re A Debtor (No 6349 of 1994) [1996] BPIR 271, [1996] BCC 971, ChD (Robert Walker J);

(2) Re A Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899, [1995] 1 All ER 628. [1994] BCC 438, ChD (Timothy Lloyd QC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge);

(3) HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269, ChD (Lightman J);

(4) Inland Revenue Commissioners v A Debtor [1995] BCC 971, ChD (Robert Walker J);

(5) Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652, [2010] 2 All ER 126, ChD (Henderson J).

[6a] Similarly, in Sahota v Singh [2018] EWHC 2646 (Ch), Carr J said that '...the approach to be adopted in relation to such cases under s.271(3) of the Insolvency Act...' (paragraph 11) has been considered in detail by Chief Registrar Baister in HMRC v Garwood [2012] 2012 BPIR 575 and that the Chief Registrar had '...helpfully summarised the relevant propositions...' (paragraph 11) before setting some of the Chief Registrar's Garwood propositions (oddly, it was some rather than all; he set out 7 of the 10 propositions, presumably taking the view the other 3 were not relevant).

[6b] In Hughes v Howell [2021] EWCA Civ 1431; [2022] BPIR 135, after noting it was 'pertinent to the present case' (paragraph 8), Lewison LJ said, at paragraph 8:

'It is based on a judgment of Robert Walker J in IRC v A Debtor [1995] BCC 971 and that of Henderson J in Ross and Anor v HMRC [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] 2 All ER 126. In my judgment, it is a sound point.'

[7] There are a few points to make here:

(1) First, a note. The '1' in the quoted passage is because an obvious error has been corrected in the quotation. Lightman J actually said '...whether an unreasonable creditor...' but that is clearly a mistake. It should read 'reasonable creditor' rather than 'unreasonable creditor. This error has been picked up and pointed out judicially. Chief Registrar Baister in Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837 ('Garwood') pointed out the error, and adopted the practice of quoting it with the error corrected, but using a footnote to point this out. In Garwood, Chief Registrar Baister's footnote reads: 'I have here corrected an obvious error. The text of the judgment actually reads: ‘whether an unreasonable creditor...’. See also paragraph 31 of Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HMRC [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch); [2010] BPIR 652.

(2) Secondly, the first formulation of the hypothetical reasonable creditor test was made in Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 ('Re a Debtor 32'), wherein Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge) said, at 910, the appropriate test was:

'whether a reasonable creditor, in the position of this petitioning creditor, and in the light of the actual history as disclosed to the court, would have accepted or refused the offer.'

He continued, at 910:

'However, I think it has to be borne in mind that there could be a range of reasonable positions on the part of hypothetical reasonable creditors. In order to conclude that the refusal was unreasonable, it seems to me that the court has to be satisfied that no reasonable hypothetical creditor would have refused the offer, and that the refusal of the offer was therefore beyond the range of possible reasonable actions in the context.'

So it was Re a Debtor 32 that first formulated it (HMRC v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, paragraph 20), with Lightman J in HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269 adopting and clarifying it (HMRC v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, paragraph 21).

(3) As will be apparent, it would be wrong to:

(a) approach the matter on the basis that there can only be one course (i.e. decision) that can reasonably be taken (910). There is likely to be a range of decisions which a hypothetical reasonable creditor could take; and/or

(b) ask what the petitioner creditor did in fact subjectively consider, and to then only take into account what the petitioning creditor did in fact take into account in reaching his decision. The hypothetical reasonable creditor is not so limited in what he may consider.

Rather, '...what the court has to consider is whether the reasonable creditor would have considered any of these matters and if so whether it would have come to any particular conclusion' (910)

As an aside, to help the deputy High Court Judge determine what the range of responses a hypothetical reasonable creditor might reasonable take to the offer, the deputy High Court Judge found it of assistance, that is, appropriate:

(a) '... to start from the premise that a creditor such as the [petitioning creditor Commercial Union], with extensive dealings with professional men such as the debtor ..., and no doubt with much experience of bad debts such as that on which the petition is based, is relatively unlikely to adopt an attitude which no reasonable creditor would adopt.' (911)

(b) to look for whether there was evidence '...of motives of oppression or other ulterior purpose, which could well arise in the case of a less commercial creditor' (911)

(4) Henderson J in Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HMRC [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch); [2010] BPIR 652, quoted the extract (as part of larger extract) from Lightman J's judgment in HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269, ChD, at 272, and said that it was a 'helpful summary of the relevant legal principles' (paragraphs 44 and 31)

[8] Subsection 271(3) provides (so far as presently material):

'The court may dismiss the petition if it ... is satisfied-
(a) that the debtor has made an offer to secure or compound a debt in respect of which the petition is presented,
(b) that the acceptance of that offer would have required the dismissal of the petition, and
(c) that the offer has been unreasonably refused
;' [bold added]

Consequently, the Court is empowered to dismiss a bankruptcy petition, where there is an offer: (1) to secure the debt; or (2) to compound the debt, if the other 2 conditions ((b) and (c)) in section 271(3) are satisfied. Note:

(1) even where the 3 conditions are satisfied ((a), (b) and (c)), the court still retains a discretion (though the word 'may') whether or not to dismiss the petition. It does not have to dismiss the petition (though it is hard to see what reason there might be for not dismissing the petition, assuming no other creditor sought to be substituted as the petitioning creditor - see point (2)(b) below).

(2) not all offers to compound will come within 'offer to ... compound a debt' within section 271(3)(a). In Re A Debtor (No. 2389 of 1989) [1991] Ch. 326, Vinelott J said, at 333-334:

'In my judgment...a proposed voluntary arrangement is not to be treated as an offer to each creditor capable of being accepted or refused by the petitioning creditor within the meaning of section 271(3).'

However, 'offer to ... compound a debt' within section 271(3)(a) is not narrower than the ordinary language of the section. In Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 ('Re A Debtor 32'), Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge):

(a) rejected the creditor's argument that '...the offer could not be within the section in respect of present debts unless either it reduced the total petition debt to less than £750 or it fell within the case of an offer to each of several creditors' (905)

(b) said, at 905-906:

'Of course if there are several creditors wishing to use the bankruptcy procedure, in practice the debtor has to come to terms with each of them, or another will be substituted as petitioning creditor. But if a debtor has only the one creditor seeking to use the bankruptcy procedure, I see no reason in principle why he should not be able to make an offer to that one creditor which would come within section 271(3). Clearly an actual composition with that creditor results in the dismissal of the petition under section 271(1) in the absence of another supporting creditor who wishes to be substituted.'

(c) said section 271(3) should be construed on the ordinary language of the section (906). That he was (906):

'...unable to accept [counsel for the creditor's] arguments as being sufficient to give the words used in the section a special limited meaning narrower than that which they would bear on the ordinary meaning of the words.'

(4) found (906), that on the facts in Re A Debtor 32, the offer made, was within section 271(3).

[9] The full reasoning of Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge) in Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899, is as follows, at 910-911:

'In that regard, I consider that the petitioning creditor's criticisms of the attitude adopted on behalf of the debtor as being a tale of prevarication and delay, while perhaps over severe, have a good deal of justification. It may be that the debtor was doing his best to reach an accommodation which would be acceptable to his creditors, and that the several changes of professional advisers handling the dealings with the petitioner - one of them at a moment which gave the debtor a tactical advantage by necessitating an adjournment of the hearing of the petition - arose for reasons which cannot fairly be laid at the door of the debtor. However, it seems to me that it is incumbent on a debtor, if he wishes his proposals to be looked at with sympathy, to be full, frank and open with his creditors in respect of his statements of his position, and the record of this debtor is not all that satisfactory. Despite what I have said earlier about the ability of the creditor to investigate and challenge the specific evidence of means and so on in relation to the actual proposal, it seems to me that the hypothetical reasonable creditor, on the facts of this case, might well be influenced, in deciding whether to accept the offer or to press for a bankruptcy order, by the unsatisfactory record of the debtor's past dealings. In that context, it also seems to me that the hypothetical reasonable creditor might well regard it as relevant that, whatever the eventual outcome of the bankruptcy, in financial terms for the creditors, a bankruptcy order would at least result in a full investigation, fuller than could be achieved by inquiries on behalf of the creditor on an ad hoc basis.'

The Court in Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652 ('Ross') made clear that a Court can take into account, as a factor, the history of the matter between the debtor and petitioning creditors. Henderson J in Ross held that the:

'...Registrar in the present case cannot in my judgment be criticised for having had regard to the history of the matter as a factor which a reasonable creditor would have taken into account in deciding whether or not to accept the offer of security.'

Later, Henderson J went through the justifications put forward by HMRC, for why it had not been unreasonable when it refused the debtors' offer to secure the petition debt. HMRC had said, as one of its justifications, that the debtors' had already had plenty of time to raise money on the security of their properties. As to this, Henderson J said, at paragraph 52:

'This..was ...a relevant consideration, and it formed part of the history which, as the deputy judge said in Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1995] 1 All ER 628, [1994] 1 WLR 899, the creditor is entitled to take into account.'

The history of the debtor's actions/statements and his interactions with the creditor, will be scrutinised. There must also be some discernment between different categories (motivation, culpability, seriousness etc) In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, Chief Registrar Baister drew distinctions, when looking at the history (of delay and disorder), between:

(1) prevarication vs error of judgment, around sale of the property (paragraph 29);

(2) signs of incompetence vs fraud (paragraph 30)

[10a] In Hughes v Howell [2021] EWCA Civ 1431; [2022] BPIR 135, Lewison LJ considered the uncertainty in the value of the property over which the debtor offered security (testimentary 20% residual legacy (then limited to the ancillary right to have the deceased's estate administered) in an unadministered estate). At paragraph 19, Lewison LJ said:

'Its value would depend on how much was received from [the debtor's] aunt's house and when.'

Lewison LJ then said, at paragraph 19:

'The uncertainty relating to both the value and timing of the security would undoubtedly be something that the hypothetical creditor would bear in mind.'

In Sahota v Singh [2018] EWHC 2646 (Ch)('Sahota'), 2 debtors were made bankrupt. They appealed to Carr J against their bankruptcy order. There were 3 grounds of appeal, that the first instance judge had wrongly dealt with: (1) unreasonable refusal of offer of security; (2) set off; and (3) oppression.

Focusing on (1) for present purposes; the debtors argued, on the appeal before Carr J, that the first instance judge had been wrong to find that a hypothetical reasonable creditor could have refused the offer of security made by the debtors, to the petitioning creditor (petitioner).

The property offered as the security, was an offer to assign, from one of the debtor's sons, to the petitioner, the benefit (the obligee end) of part of a debt (in the form English Court costs orders (paragraph 10)), owed by a third party (the 'Third Party') to one of the debtor's sons (paragraph 3). Problems with the security included:

(1) the Third Party was the Petitioner's spiritual leader;

(2) the Third Party lived in India; in the event of non-payment, enforcement proceedings would have to be brought in India;

(3) the debtor's son had not himself initiated enforcement proceedings against the Third Party, during the interim c.6 years (c.15.4.11 at the latest (paragraph 10)) since the costs orders were made.

In refusing appeal on this ground, Carr J in Sahota:

(1) firstly, recorded, at paragraph 18, that the first instance judge had reasoned/held as follows:

"What the court has to decide is whether the offer that has been made, namely offering an assignment which would, in order to produce the funds which are being offered, require enforcement proceedings to be brought against the party where the original beneficiary of the order has not sought to do so himself, whether that offer is reasonably or unreasonably refused. I have come to the decision that it is not unreasonably refused, that it would require litigation proceedings to be undertaken by others which have not been commenced by [the proposed equitable assignor/one of the debtor's son] himself. In the circumstances, and I fully understand why he wishes to offer an assignment of the order in his favour to his father and to his uncle, but simply because he wishes to spare them the effect of non-payment of the cost orders against them does not, in my view, constitute an unreasonable refusal on the part of [the Petitioner] to refuse to undertake steps to recover money that [the proposed equitable assignor/one of the debtor's son] himself has not pursued."

(2) secondly, said, at paragraphs 21 to 22:

'In my view, the assessment of the appellant's offer of security was a multi-factorial value judgment....'

And that,

'...In my view, [the first instance judge] was entitled to consider the practicalities of enforcement of a debt in a foreign jurisdiction which the creditor in that jurisdiction himself had chosen not to pursue. She was entitled to consider that a reasonable creditor would have refused that offer of security and the factors to which she referred in her judgment were all relevant to her assessment of the reasonableness of the offer.'

For completeness, it is noted that, at paragraph 23, Carr J said:

'I can well understand a perception on the part of the appellants that it is unfair that on the one hand [the Third Party] should apparently be able to avoid or refuse to pay an order of costs but on the other hand, they are required to pay an order for costs. However, it is important to remember that the debt with which I am concerned is not owed to [the Third Party] The petitioners are separate parties and it is not an answer to say that [the Third Party] has not paid his debt.'

Similarities can be drawn between evaluating the reasonableness of a refusal of an: (1) offer of security; with (2) offer to compound; both face the same test, as prescribed by section 271(3) of the Insolvency Act 1986. Though Allen v Haringey LBC [2017] EWHC 2664 (Ch) is a permission to appeal case (so should not usually be referred to), it can be noted that Norris J refused the bankrupt permission to appeal, including on the ground that the first instance judge fallen into error in relation to her determination that the (then) debtor's offer to compound the remaining petition debt, had been unreasonably refused.

The debtor owed £3,988 to the Petitioner (local authority) by the time of the hearing. This was below the bankruptcy threshold but the Court did still retain jurisdiction to impose a bankruptcy order nothwithstanding (see Lilley v American Express Europe Ltd [2000] BPIR 70). The debtor's offer to compound (which the Petitioner had refused) was that the debtor do pay the Petitioner £500 per month, until the Petition debt was discharged. The first instance judge considered the history of the matter (16), including that: (1) debtor seemed to have an annual salary of £15,500 odd (before deduction of tax)(paragraph 13); (2) the debtor was not paying the current year's council tax; (3) the debtor's mortgage absorbed about two-thirds of the debtor's available income (paragraph 17); (4) after the mortgage instalment and £500 were deducted, the debtor '...would be left with almost nothing on which to live on' (paragraph 17). The first instance judge '...noted also that a petitioning creditor was not obliged to be patient or generous and that these were long outstanding debts in respect of which [the debtor] had given no explanation in evidence as to why they had not been paid.' The first instance judge said that '[the debtor's] difficult financial circumstances, he was not able to pay the debt within a reasonable period, even though he was apparently the owner of two properties which provided a source of funds to which he could have had resort and to which resort could be had in a bankruptcy. In the circumstances, she decided to make a bankruptcy order' (paragraph 18)

As stated, Norris J refused permission to appeal on this ground, finding a challenge to this decision, did not have a real prospect of succeeding (paragraph 20).

In a way, the offer to compound had little value as it could not be performed by the debtor. A similar analysis is conducted in relation to whether property offered to be subject to security, has any true value.

[10b] See the commentary in footnote 10a above on: (1) Hughes v Howell [2021] EWCA Civ 1431; [2022] BPIR 135 (2) Sahota v Singh [2018] EWHC 2646 (Ch)

[10c] This was legally possible. Lewison LJ in Hughes v Howell [2021] EWCA Civ 1431; [2022] BPIR 135 ('Hughes') addressed this.

Firstly, he went through the law on what, exactly, is a right in/to the testimentary residuary gift from an unadministered Will. At paragraph 14, Lewison in Hughes said:

'14. The law on the rights of a residuary beneficiary in an estate in the course of administration is clearly stated by Viscount Radcliffe in Commissioner of Stamp Duties (Queensland) v Livingston [1965] AC 694. First, when property came to an executor by virtue of his office it came to him in full ownership without distinction between legal and equitable interests. The whole property was his. He held it for the purpose of carrying out the functions and duties of administration, not for his own benefit, and those duties would be enforced upon him by the Court of Chancery. Second, equity did not recognise or create for residuary legatees a beneficial interest in the assets in the executor's hands during the course of administration. The principal right of a residuary beneficiary is a right to compel the due administration of the estate. This statement of principle has never been doubted. Thus in Marshall (HM Inspector of Taxes) v Kerr [1995] 1 AC 148 Lord Browne-Wilkinson said:

"In English law the rights of a testamentary legatee in the unadministered estate of a testator are well settled: see Lord Sudeley and Others v The Attorney-General [1897] AC 11 e [1897] AC 11 […] Livingston […]. […] A legatee's right is to have the estate duly administered by the personal representatives in accordance with law. But during the period of administration the legatee has no legal or equitable interest in the assets comprised in the estate."

15. In addition to a right to compel the due administration of the estate a residuary beneficiary also has an immediate entitlement arising from the terms of the will to have transferred to him at the completion of the administration of the estate such assets (if any) as then form the residue of the estate (Dr Barnardo's Homes National Incorporated Association v Commissioners for Special Purposes of the Income Tax Acts [1921] 2 AC 1, Re Leigh's Will Trusts; Handyside v Durbridge [1970] Ch 277).'

Secondly, Lewison LJ in Hughes considered whether such a right could be made subject to a security/be the subject of a security. Lewison LJ said, at paragraph 16:

'...the definition of property in section 435(1) of the Insolvency Act is extremely widely drawn and includes amongst other things choses in action. Thus it has been held that the right to a residuary beneficiary to compel due administration of an estate falls within that definition, with the consequence that that right forms part of a bankrupt's estate (Re Hemming [2008] EWHC 2731 (Ch), [2009] Ch 313). Since the right is a transmissible right it is capable at least in theory of being the subject matter of security.

17. In Roddick v Gandell (1851) 1 GM & G 763 Lord Truro LC considered how a chose in action might be secured; and formulated the principle as follows:

"An agreement between a debtor and a creditor that the debt owing shall be paid out of a specific fund coming to the debtor or an order given by a debtor to his creditor on a person owing money or holding funds belonging to the giver of the order, directing such person to pay such funds to the creditor, will create a valid equitable charge upon such fund, in other words will operate as an equitable assignment of the debts or fund to which the order refers."

18. The Privy Council approved that formulation in Palmer v Carey [1926] AC 703.'

Thirdly and lastly, Lewison LJ said, at paragraphs 18-19:

'18...In the present case [the debtor] agreed with [petitioning creditors] that part of the debt owing would be paid out of a specific fund coming to [the debtor], ie his share in his aunt's residuary estate, and directed the executors to pay those funds to the [petitioning creditors'] solicitors. I am prepared to accept that that amounted to securing that part of the debt for the purposes of the Insolvency Act 1986.'

The result was that the debtor had offered the creditor security over his right to have his aunty's estate administered (and so over, in a sense, the fruits of the testimentary residuary gift (20% of the residuary estate) the debtor was due) (paragraph 19 of Hughes)

The method by which the security was to be granted, was through what the debtor described as 'irrevocable instructions' (paragraph 10):

(1) The debtor have given:

(a) 'irrevocable instructions' to the solicitors for the executors to his aunty's Will, that (paragraphs 10-11) the solicitors for the executors to his aunty's Will should pay all sums that the debtor was due to receive from this aunty's deceased estate, to the petitioning creditors' solicitors;

(b) irrevocable authority to the petitioning creditors' solicitors, to receive the debtor's share of the estate;

(2) that the petitioning creditors were entitled to receive any interim or final payment out of the estate, that would otherwise have been payable to debtor.

[11] In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, Chief Registrar Baister said, at paragraph 28 that he '...must look at the history and position was it is now' - i.e. at the date of the hearing.

There is the earlier case of Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 ('Re a Debtor 32') (a offer to compound case) but this earlier case: (1) did not involve the point being argued; and (2) needs to be seen in light of its facts - that the offer of security was a continuing one (despite being refused), remaining open/on the table up to and during the final hearing. In Re a Debtor 32, Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge) posed for himself the question 'whether the unreasonableness needs to be satisfied in respect of the date of the actual refusal, or at the date of the hearing.' (909). 

Before setting out how the deputy High Court Judge answered this question, it is necessary to briefly consider the facts of Re a Debtor 32: When the offer to compound the debt was first made, the petitioning creditor had known of another creditor 'who might well' (909) attended court and supported the petition. This might have prevented the petitioning creditor from doing a deal with the debtor alone. The petitioning creditor refused the offer.

Subsequently, when the hearing took place: (1) the offer was still on the table/open; and (2) it was known that the potentially supporting creditor had not attended the hearing (and so could not seek to be substituted as substituted petitioner on the petition, in the event the petitioning creditor did not want to continue it). Because the offer was a continuing one, the petitioning creditor was taken to have refused again the offer at that hearing, this refusal being when it was clear there were no other creditors to take into account. In other words, any impediment to a deal (from the inability to know that the court would simply dismiss the petition, when informed of the deal), from the existence of another creditor, fell away.

At 909-910, the deputy High Court Judge in Re a Debtor 32 said:

'No submissions were addressed to me on this point and I am prepared to proceed on the basis that the position has to be reviewed by reference to the position at the date of the hearing, on the basis that at least in this case the offer was kept open until the hearing and it was therefore the creditor's continued opposition, and finally its opposition at the hearing, which amounted to the definitive refusal on which the debtor relied. That being so, although there could have been another creditor to take into account, in fact at the hearing there was not. I therefore do not disagree with the district judge's approach of taking into account only the circumstances of this debtor and this creditor. Looking at the matter in that way, a number of criticisms of the judgment seem to me to fall away, in particular his refusal to consider that an individual voluntary arrangement was the more proper procedure, and any criticism on the basis that the third party money was on loan so as to make no substantial difference to the debtor's overall position.' [bold added]

[12] In Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 ('Re a Debtor 32') (a offer to compound case), Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge) recorded the first instance judge's list of factors he seemed to have taken into account, in coming to the conclusion that the petitioning creditor's refusal of the offer to compound the debt, was unreasonable. One of those reasons was '...the fact that the debtor's solicitors, “a reputable firm experienced in this field,” had expressed their own view of the matter in the letter in which the offer was made.' (908)

The deputy High Court Judge later said in Re a Debtor 32, at 908:

'It seems to me correct that the reference to the statement by the debtor's solicitors was misplaced'

[13] In Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899 ('Re a Debtor 32') (a offer to compound case), Timothy Lloyd QC (sitting as a deputy High Court Judge) said he 'can see some analogy' with a passage from Vinelott J.'s decision In re A Debtor (No. 2389 of 1989) [1991] Ch. 326 ('Re a Debtor 2389'), and said, at 909:

'It is up to the debtor to put his position and its implications fully.'

The relevant passage in Re a Debtor 2389, was from 337:

'it is, in my judgment, essential that a debtor who puts forward a proposed voluntary arrangement should be not only honest but should take care to put all relevant facts before the creditors. It is said by Mr. Hamer that there was a genuine misunderstanding as to the amount of the debt due to the bank. It is said that £45,000 was held in a frozen account of M.I.T., which the debtor thought he was entitled have set off against the total debt. However, even if the debtor did hold that view, his solicitor (in March) had told the petitioning creditor what the bank's claim was and, on any view, the creditors should have been told what the bank claimed to be due and what the debtor's answer to their claim was. If they had been told the amount of the claim, then the nominee, in framing her report, would, I think, plainly have had to draw attention to the fact that if the bank's claims were valid, the total debt due to the petitioning creditor was unsecured. ...'

The deputy High Court actually also quoted a further paragraph, that is, the paragraph that followed the above paragraph, but given he then later said the second paragraph was irrelevant (909), only the first paragraph is quoted above.

Lewison LJ in Hughes v Howell [2021] EWCA Civ 1431; [2022] BPIR 135 said, at paragraph 24:

'In order to be an offer for the purposes of section 271 an offer must be a concrete offer capable of acceptance. It must be a present offer, not the possibility of a future offer.'

[14] As to large organisations/institutional petitioning creditors, Robert Walker J in IRC v Debtor [1995] BCC 971:

(1) doubted (differing on this point from Timothy Lloyd QC in Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899) whether there could be any strong presumption that large and impersonal creditors, such as the insurance company in Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1995] 1 All ER 628, [1994] 1 WLR 899, or the Revenue, are unlikely to act unreasonably;

(2) said, at 974:

'Large and impersonal bodies are much less likely to act unreasonably from motives of personal vindictiveness ... but bureaucratic inflexibility can sometimes produce an impersonal sort of oppression. On the other hand, large organisations constantly have to take decisions affecting large numbers of debtors (whether they are taxpayers, borrowers or trade debtors) and they can sensibly do so only by delegating the decisions to be made in accordance with coherent in-house policies.'

After setting out the factors which weighed both for and against the taking of security, Robert Walker J (at 976) stated his conclusion:

'Having looked at the rival submissions in some detail I remind myself that the crucial question is: am I satisfied that the Revenue has acted unreasonably in rejecting the offer? The Revenue is...under a statutory duty to collect tax (and interest on tax) that is due but unpaid. The officials of the Revenue concerned with collection ought not (and therefore are, on the face of it, unlikely) to refuse an offer which increases the likely net recovery to public funds. But the Revenue is, on the face of it, the best judge of what internal costs and diversion of resources may be involved in accepting security in a case like this. Without going back on what I have said about the possibility of institutional oppression, I see no real evidence of it in this case. At worst some officials have been careless and imprecise in explaining the Revenue’s position.'

Bearing in mind the range of reasonable positions open to the hypothetical reasonable creditor, Robert Walker J held, reversing the decision of Registrar, that the Revenue had not gone outside that range and so had not acted unreasonably in refusing the offer.

As to rigid institutional policy, Henderson J in Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652 ('Ross'), said, at paragraph 50:

'the decision of Lightman J in HM Customs and Excise v Dougall [2001] BPIR 269 is of interest because one of the arguments advanced by the debtor was that the Commissioners operated a rigid institutional policy of conceding nothing to a debtor who had defrauded them. The judge (at 273) said that it was clear to him that the Commissioners did not regard themselves as bound to adhere to any rigid policy, and they viewed the debtor’s proposal on its merits, as they were obliged to do. He then referred to certain aspects of the evidence which supported this conclusion, and continued (at 274):

“I should, however, add, that even if I had held that there was a rigid policy which constrained the [Commissioners] in regard to the proposal made, I would not have regarded that as a matter of any significance for this simple reason: the exercise required, as I have already said, is an objective valuation of the offer and subjective considerations which operated on the mind of the creditor are not matters of any weight.'

If a petitioning creditor institution has a policy in respect to offers of security:

(1) that policy should be 'flexible'; offers of security should not be '...rejected out of hand without any serious consideration.' (paragraph 51)

(1) if there is a flexible policy, the institution needs to take steps to '...ensure that it is known to, and applied by, the enforcement officers who actually deal with debtors.' (paragraph 51)

In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, Chief Registrar Baister said that the offeree's reaction to an offer of security, cannot be 'unthinking' (paragraph 27) - since such a reaction would not be that of the hypothetical reasonable creditor.

In a similar vein, Henderson J in Ross said '...there is in my judgment a real risk of institutional oppression if a rigid policy is unthinkingly applied, and debtors are fobbed off with inadequate or generalised justifications for the policy.' (paragraph 51)

[15] Two points here:

(1) the Petitioner is entitled to have regard to his own interests - so long as they are his interests as a creditor and not in some other capacity, so as to bring in collateral considerations.

(a) In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, where the petitioning creditor was HMRC, Chief Registrar Baister said, at paragraph 33:

'The petitioning creditor’s primary function is, of course, to collect tax, and it is entitled... to have regard to its own interests.'

(b) In IRC v Debtor [1995] BCC 971, at 974, Robert Walker J said that it seemed to him reasonably clear:

'that in considering an offer a creditor is entitled to have regard to his own interests (so long as they are his interests as a creditor, and not in some other capacity so as to bring in collateral considerations). The creditor is not required to balance his interests against those of the debtor, or to take a chance, or to show patience or generosity, even though some creditors might do so. As Lord Phillimore put it in [Viscount Tredegar v Harwood [1929] AC 72 at 82, [1928] All ER Rep 11 at 15), acting reasonably is not the same as acting justly, fairly or kindly. That was a landlord and tenant case but this point at least is of general application.'

(c) an interesting case on this: Petitioner interest qua creditor condition, arose in Sahota v Singh [2018] EWHC 2646 (Ch) ('Sahota'). In Sahota, the debtor offered the Petitioner security in the form of an assignment from one of the debtor's sons,  to the Petitioner, of the benefit of part of a debt (obligee end) owed by a third party (the 'Third Party') to the debtor (the debt being in the form of a costs order against the Third Party). The Petitioner refused this offer and the question was whether this refusal had been section 271(3) unreasonable.

The debtor argued that:

(i) '...the petitioner's evidence was that he would decline to bring any proceeding against [the Third Party] to recover the assigned debt as a matter of principle. [The Third Party] was a spiritual leader and the petitioner would not countenance the suggestion that he is sued to recover the assigned debt.' (paragraph 14)

(ii) '...as such, the petitioner wholly discounted the commercial value of the assigned debt for reasons wholly unconnected with his status as a creditor. That...constituted an unreasonable refusal to consider the offer and a consideration of matters unrelated to his position for a creditor.' (paragraph 14)

(iii) 'the petitioner rejected the offer on grounds relating to his own relationship with [the Third Party'. This was sufficient to amount to an unreasonable rejection, which was akin to a rigid inflexible policy, as discussed by Judge Baister in HMRC v Garwood.' (paragraph 15)

 

(2) Further, the hypothetical reasonable creditor may put his interests first, though by doing so, this may cause greater cost to the debtor (in a sense, greater collateral damage) in the process. The hypothetical reasonable creditor may prefer to press for an immediate bankruptcy order, rather than accept security:

'where...the debtor appears to have ample assets to meet his debts, with the consequence that the making of a bankruptcy order is still likely to lead to full recovery for the creditor'  though this will come '...at a considerably greater cost to the debtor (because of the costs of the bankruptcy, and the forced realisation of assets by the trustee).' (Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652, Henderson J, paragraph 46)

Moreover, the debtor may have other creditors, apart from the petitioning creditor/the offeree, but it is open to the judge, at least sometimes, to take the view that the hypothetical reasonable creditor will consider that what matters is the impact on him '...not on the entire body of creditors.' (Re a Debtor (No 32 of 1993) [1994] 1 WLR 899, 909)

[16] The hypothetical reasonable creditor will consider, for each of the 2 routes towards gaining payment, namely through:

(1) a bankruptcy order; or

(2) security over a debtor's asset (with the prospect of a sale of asset subject to the security), the relative:

both:

(a) likely delay before payment is received; and

(2) likely amount that will be received, after that delay;

In other words, the hypothetical reasonable creditor will undertake a global comparison between:

(1) likely delay before payment is received, from, respectively: (a) the bankrupt estate, following administration; and (2) the security, following sale (if necessary, by an application for an order for sale); and

(2) likely amount that will be received, as between: (a) bankrupt estate administration, following administration; and (2) security, following sale (if necessary, by an application for an order for sale);

In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837 ('Garwood'), Chief Registrar Baister touched on this comparison, at paragraphs 35-36. After dealing with most of the petitioning creditor's justifications for refusing the offer of security, and stating that '...they do not weigh with me particularly heavily in the circumstances of this case and/or are not sufficient to trump all other considerations.' (paragraph 35), the Chief Registrar said that this:

'...leaves the stark opposition between two competing ways in which to collect the tax due: security followed, if necessary, by an application for an order for sale (insofar that might be appropriate in light of the fact that an order has already been made) on the one hand and bankruptcy on the other hand.' (paragraph 35)

He went on, at paragraph 36, to say:

'I have already explored the likely costs and burdens that might arise if an order for sale had to be sought. There are, I accept, possible delays and disadvantages. However, if a bankruptcy order is made:

(a) in all likelihood a trustee in bankruptcy will be appointed, since there will be an asset to realise; his or her fees are likely to be not insignificant if the bankruptcy is kept open for any period of time; we all know that from our experience of even small bankruptcies, where fees in the tens of thousands are not uncommon;

(b) ad valorem fees will also have to be paid;

(c) it is possible that a trustee would not seek an order for sale until one year of the vesting of the estate (see s 335A(3) of the Insolvency Act 1986);

(d) the petitioning creditor would be unsecured (a point that is almost too obvious to need stating).

One can be fairly certain that the bankruptcy costs would be greater than those attendant on the alternative. There is no countervailing benefit to a bankruptcy, since...there is no indication that the petitioning creditor seeks an investigation of the debtor’s affairs, and I was not addressed on any antecedent transactions that the petitioner believes the debtor has entered into and which need to be set aside. There are no other unsecured creditors who have given notice of support. On the current figures the available equity is now only £66,700, leaving just a little more than £8,000 to meet any other costs that might need to be covered. It is likely, indeed certain, that that would be eaten into more in bankruptcy than on a forced sale. It is hard, then, to see how bankruptcy can be said to be an efficient or speedy way of fulfilling the petitioning creditor’s duty to collect tax in the particular circumstances of this case. If anything bankruptcy has become a less rational choice as the available equity has diminished, making full recovery of the tax debt less likely in bankruptcy now than when there was said to be more equity available. I reiterate the obvious advantage of being a secured creditor as opposed to an unsecured creditor in a bankruptcy.'

In Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652 ('Ross'), Henderson J touched on this when he dealt with a petitioning creditor (HMRC's) justifications for refusing the offer of security. Henderson J said, at paragraph 52:

'Firstly it is said that HMRC are not prepared to accept legal charges ‘as there is no guarantee as to when payment will be forthcoming’. That is of course true, but the purpose of security is normally to ensure that payment in full will be made when the security is realised, and it will often be the case that the prospects of obtaining payment in full are far less certain if the offer is refused and a bankruptcy order is made.

Secondly, it is said that immediate settlement of the debt is required “to maintain the flow of funds to the exchequer”. But where enforcement proceedings have reached the stage of an offer of security, the debtor will long since have failed to settle his taxation liabilities when they fell due, and the issue is rather how to maximise the likely net recovery to public funds (as Robert Walker J said at 976).'

Returning to Garwood, Chief Registrar Baister concluded his analysis on the facts in that case, as follows, at paragraph 37:

'Applying, then, the objective test, I conclude, on the position as it now stands, that a reasonable hypothetical creditor having the characteristics of this petitioning creditor could have no basis for refusing the offer of security (again allowing for a possible range of responses) and pressing for a bankruptcy order. A reasonable hypothetical creditor in the position of the petitioning creditor would accept the offer of security because it increases the prospects of recovering the tax and thus fulfilling its statutory function (cf Henderson J at para [52]).'

However, some important points were made on this, in Cooke v Dunbar Assets Plc [2016] EWHC 579 (Ch) ('Cooke'), a decision of Jeremy Cousins QC sitting as a deputy High Court Judge.

(1) The basic facts first. In Cooke, there was a typical tripartite lender/principal debtor/personal guarantor arrangement:

(a) The lender/creditor/petitioner/respondent was Dunbar Assets Plc ('Dunbar');

(b) The principal debtor was a company ('Starcourt'); and

(c) The personal guarantor/debtor/bankrupt/appellant was Mr Cooke.

The personal guarantee (limited to £750,000) was given by Mr Cooke to Dunbar, in respect to Starcourt's debts to Dunbar. For completeness, Mr Cooke's 2 children also gave personal guarantees (limited to £250,000 each).

In the usual way with such cases, Dunbar demanded Starcourt repay a loan (c.£12m); Starcourt failed to pay; Dunbar then demanded Mr Cooke pay (£750,000) because Starcourt had not. Mr Cooke then failed to pay. Subsequently, Dunbar presented bankruptcy proceedings against Mr Cooke (and the other 2 guarantors).

Each of the 3 guarantors made offers to Dunbar. In relation to the 2 children, Dunbar needed more time to consider them, and the bankruptcy petitions in relation to them, was adjourned (paragraph 10).

Details to Mr Cooke's offer were as follows:

(i) Mr Cooke had one asset of note. He held 50% of the beneficial interest in a property (Greenfield), with his (Mrs Cooke) owning the other 50%. Mr Cooke's 50% beneficial interest was valued at £175,000.

(ii) Mr Cooke's made Dunbar a combined offer, in the sense of both an offer '...to secure and compound' (paragraph 21). Mr Cooke offered to secure the debt so far as he was able to, and to compound the remainder (paragraph 6)

(iii) Mr Cooke's offered Dunbar security over Mr Cooke's 50% beneficial interest in Greenfield, and nothing for the rest of the debt. In other words, the offer was £175,000 and that sum be secured against his beneficial interest.

Dunbar rejected Mr Cooke's offer.

At first instance, the district judge:

(i) rejected, amongst other arguments, Mr Cooke's section 271(3) ground of opposition. The district judge said 'I have been unable to reach the conclusion that no reasonable hypothetical creditor would have refused the offer. It is clearly not an offer which is to satisfy the whole of the debt nor even nearly all of the debt and nor is it an offer which is effectively encumbered cash.' (She clearly meant to say unencumbered cash; paragraph 9));

(ii) made a bankruptcy order was made against Mr Cooke.

Mr Cooke appealed the district judge's decisions, and the appeal came before the deputy High Court Judge.

(2) secondly, it is necessay to consider how the court evaluated the arguments on whether Mr Cooke's offer satisfied section 271(3). 

Mr Cooke argued that Dunbar's decision to refuse Mr Cooke's offer was unreasonable because the offer was manifestly in Dunbar's best interests (paragraph 13), because '[Mr Cooke] was offering security over all of his assets that exceed £2,000 in value, that Dunbar would be no better off in Mr Cooke's bankruptcy than if it were to accept his offer, and quite possibly it would be worse off...' (paragraph 13). Reliance was placed on Garwood (paragraphs 14 to 20).

Dunbar submitted in reply that that argument amounted to an argument that if '...a debtor's offer constitutes as much as he can afford...' (paragraph 21), it will be unreasonable for a creditor/offeree to refuse it. Dunbar argued that that 'would amount to a contention that an insolvent person could resist bankruptcy on the very ground of his insolvency, which self-evidently could not be right.' The deputy High Court Judge said that that submission, in his view, had 'much force' (paragraph 21)

Similarly, Dunbar relied (paragraph 22) in its reply on the difference between the debt (£750,000) and the sum offered (£175,000)(paragraph 22). Reliance was placed on Mr Timothy Lloyd QC, sitting as a deputy High Court judge, in Re A Debtor (No 32 of 1993), wherein he had said, amongst other things (911B-E):

'I do not agree that the hypothetical creditor would simply regard the issue as one of comparing the economic outcome of two different propositions, nor that the risk of a nil return for the creditors from the bankruptcy would necessarily lead the creditor to favour the bird in the hand.'

(the 'bird in the hand' was the offer)

(3) As to the difference/relationship between: (a) the quantum of the offer (£175,000); and (b) Mr Cooke's indebtedness to Dunbar (£750,000), he said, at paragraph 41:

(i) that there was no reason to doubt about Mr Cooke's honesty in relation to what assets he had; and that, accordingly,'...his offer extends to everything he has, apart, perhaps, from a very modest sum' (paragraph 41); however,

(ii) 'Even so, his offer to compound his debt extends to less than a quarter of his liability to Dunbar.' (paragraph 41)

(iii) that in such circumstances, he found '...impossible to see...how it can be said that no reasonable hypothetical creditor would have refused that offer.' (paragraph 41)

Speaking more generally, the deputy High Court Judge said, at paragraph 41

'I do not suggest that an offer must always fully satisfy the bankruptcy debt in order for the court to conclude that its rejection by a creditor is unreasonable, but this is not the case upon which to pronounce upon what level of shortfall might lead to such a conclusion; inevitably it will be a fact specific issue.'

(4) The nature of the offer - that in involved a security being offered over co-owned property, was important - and the 2 routes to payment had to be properly scutinized and considered. The deputy High Court Judge said, at paragraphs 42 and 43:

'Mr Cooke's offer is not for a cash sum, nor does it relate to a liquid asset, but to his half-share of the equity in the house which is his and Mrs Cooke's matrimonial home. Unless that home is to be sold, Dunbar will not be able to realise the value of Mr Cooke's half share. There is no basis for supposing that Mrs Cooke will co-operate in achieving an early sale; she cannot be criticised for that. If Dunbar were to take security over Mr Cooke's share, Dunbar would either have to wait for an indefinite time to achieve a realisation, during which time the property might deteriorate and decline in value, or take steps to bring about a sale. Seeking to bring about a sale under s14 of the 1996 Act would enable Mrs Cooke to rely upon the factors set out in s15 of that Act...

'Any creditor could, in my judgment, reasonably fear that Mrs Cooke would, on any application for sale, maintain that the property was bought as a home in which she expected to be able to live for the rest of her life, and that given her advanced age and state of health, any sale ought to be deferred perhaps for a significant period. No doubt a creditor would expect to be able to advance an argument that its interests should trump those of Mrs Cooke, but as the passage cited by [counsel for the creditor Dunbar] from Megarry and Wade demonstrates, it is not certain that a court would approach a s14 application under the 1996 Act in the same way that it would if faced with an application for sale on the part of a trustee in bankruptcy, especially since s15(4) specifically disapplies the other parts of s15 when s335A of the 1986 Act is applicable...

In my judgment, a creditor in the position of Dunbar could well, and reasonably, reach the conclusion that he would be more confident of the prospect of a sooner realisation of Mr Cooke's interest in the property if an application were made by a trustee in bankruptcy, rather than by the creditor under s14 of the 1996 Act. The authorities on the issue of ordering a sale in circumstances such as those in this case cannot be said to point clearly in favour of equating an application for sale by a creditor under the 1996 Act with a sale by a trustee. It would certainly not be unreasonable for a creditor to be apprehensive about the outcome following argument in relation to the factors specified in s15 of the 1996 Act, and to prefer that a sale be pursued by a trustee in bankruptcy. This would especially be the case where there are no other creditors, where the risk of competing with them would be a consideration.' (it could be suggested that 'indefinite' paragraph 42 above could better read 'indeterminate')

Later the deputy High Court Judge noted that the following features were present in the case before him:

'a very large discount being required by way of compounding, and uncertain prospects of even a delayed sale' (paragraph 45)

The deputy High Court Judge concluded by finding that the district judge had been 'plainly right' in her conclusion that Dunbar had not unreasonable refused Mr Cooks offer, such as to entitle the court to exercise a discretion to dismiss the petition (paragraph 47).

[17a] In Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652, Henderson J touched on this when he dealt with a petitioning creditor (HMRC's) justifications for refusing the offer of security. HMRC said, as one of its justifications, that it did not have the resources to act as mortgagees and to administer the sales of mortgaged property. As to this, Henderson J said, at paragraph 52:

'This...appears to me to be a highly material consideration, and in my view debtors cannot reasonably complain if in the general run of cases HMRC decline to incur such responsibilities. Their primary function, after all, is to collect tax, not to act as an institutional lender.'

The court will scrutinize what level of burden accepting the security will place on the hypothetical reasonable creditor (who has the main characteristics of the petitioning creditor and stands in their shoes), in relation, it is submitted, to the resources the hypothetical reasonable creditor has. In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, Chief Registrar Baister, at paragraph 31, when analysing the facts before him, said:

' ...it is hard to see that the petitioning creditor would be put to any or any serious costs or would have to divert resources to act as mortgagee or to administer the sale of the mortgaged property. All the indications are that the debtor will co-operate with a sale in any way he can.'

And in paragraph 32:

'If the petitioning creditor has to put up with the inconvenience of taking security, it is not therefore likely to be for long; and if it appears that any sale is likely to be protracted, the petitioner could exercise its right to seek an order for sale and the costs of so doing, as well as any costs arising from having to administer or oversee any sale (which could, together with interest, if any is due, be provided for in the charge).'

[17b] In Sahota v Singh [2018] EWHC 2646 (Ch), the debtors offered the Petitioner security in the form of an assignment from one of the debtor's sons, to the Petitioner, of the benefit of part of a debt (obligee end) owed by a third party (the 'Third Party') to the debtor's son (in the form of English Court costs order against the Third Party)(paragraph 3). The Petitioner refused this offer and the question was whether this refusal had been section 271(3) unreasonable. The Petitioner put forward a number of reasons why it said it refused the offer, and that this refusal was reasonable. Carr J said, at paragraph 14, that the first reason tendered by the Petitioner was:

'...that because the assignment was made by way of security and was not therefore an absolute assignment, it was an assignment part of a debt only and therefore not a legal assignment. Because the proposed assignment was not a legal assignment it takes effect of equity only. This meant that the assignor, [debtor's son], had to be a party to any enforcement proceedings.'

Carr J rejected that this was a reason a hypothetical reasonable creditor could reasonably refuse the security. Carr J said, at paragraph 14:

'For my part, I would not have considered that to constitute a reason to refuse the offer of an assignment. I do not see why, all else being equal, [the debtor's son] could not have been joined to the enforcement proceedings.'

[18] In Ross & Holmes v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs [2010] EWHC 13 (Ch), [2010] BPIR 652, Henderson J touched on this when he dealt with a petitioning creditor (HMRC's) justifications for refusing the offer of security. HMRC said, as one of its justifications, that 'it would be unfair to other taxpayers who pay their taxes on time if HMRC were to accept legal charges in the present case.' (paragraph 52). As to this, Henderson J said, at paragraph 52:

'This seems to me a bad reason. In general, fairness to other taxpayers will best be achieved by adopting the policy which is best calculated to maximise the net recovery to public funds. It seems to me fanciful to suppose that acceptance of the charges offered by [the debtors], over a substantial portfolio of properties, would somehow have encouraged other taxpayers not to pay their taxes on time, or penalised them for doing so.'

[19] The bankruptcy level is currently £5,000. The law is unclear here, but seemingly, the court's approach to its exercise of discretion, could differ depending on:

(1) whether the offer of security remained open/on the table notwithstanding any initial refusal, such that it was a continuing offer which could be accepted at any point, including up to the date of the hearing;

(2) when the offer of security should have been accepted - whether before or after a bankruptcy petition was presented. Lilley v American Express Europe Ltd [2000] BPIR 70 may be relevant here.

[20a] The legal basis for permitting a debtor to combine:

(a) an offer to secured (part of) the debt; with

(b) the contention that there are reasonable prospects of the (the balance of the) debt being paid off within a reasonable period of time,

is somewhat unclear. It may be that the basis for both parts are found in section 271(3). Not only is there the provision about an offer to secure the debt, but there is also:

'The court may dismiss the petition if it is satified that the debtor is able to pay all his debts...'

Seemingly, this is related, but not the same as, the recognised basis for adjourning a bankruptcy petition, namely that there is a reasonable prospect of the debtor paying off the petition debt sum, within a reasonable period of time - long recognised, but expressly noted in Edginton v Sekon [2015] EWCA Civ 816, [2015] 1 WLR 4435, wherein, Lewison LJ, in a judgment with which Lord Dyson MR and Underhill LJ agreed, said, at paragraph 19, that:

'The court, of course, has the power to adjourn the petition, but the practice is to do only if there is credible evidence that there is a reasonable prospect that the petition debt will be paid within a reasonable time.'

[20b] See footnote 3 for more analysis of Shrimpton v Darbys Solicitors LLP [2011] EWHC 3796 (Ch); [2012] B.P.I.R. 631

[21] In Revenue and Customs Commissioners v Garwood [2012] BPIR 575, [2012] 2 WLUK 837, Chief Registrar Baister said, at paragraph 37:

'Subject to the terms of the charge being agreed and the charge being entered into (for which purposes I would again adjourn for a final time) I would dismiss the petition.'

[22] The law report is not clear about the number of adjourned hearings there were