IN RE PAN ATLANTIC INSURANCE CO LTD (2003)
[2003] EWHC 1696 (Ch)
Ch.D Companies Court (Lloyd J) 22/7/2003
INSURANCE - COMPANY - INSOLVENCY AND BANKRUPTCY - HUMAN RIGHTS
SCHEMES OF ARRANGEMENT : INSOLVENT INSURANCE COMPANY : RUN OFF :
PROVISIONAL LIQUIDATORS : MEETING OF CREDITORS : CLAIM FORMS : BAR DATE :
DIVIDENDS : AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATES : VALUATION : INDEPENDENT ADJUDICATION OF
DISPUTED CLAIMS : COURT'S SANCTION : DISCRETION : ACCESS TO COURTS : EUROPEAN
CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS 1950 :
EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS : ECHR : ART.6 : RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL :
S.425 COMPANIES ACT 1985 : INSURERS (REORGANISATION AND WINDING UP) REGULATIONS
2003 SI 2003/1102
The court sanctioned a scheme of arrangement of an insolvent
insurance company under s.425 Companies Act 1985.
Petition for the court to sanction a scheme of arrangement under
s.425 Companies
Act 1985 regarding an insurance company that had been in run off since
1991 and in provisional liquidation since 1996. The provisional liquidators
concluded that the best exit route for the creditors of the company would be a
scheme of arrangement rather than a compulsory winding up. The court made an
order convening a meeting of creditors and 98 per cent in number and 99 per
cent by value of the creditors voting at that meeting voted in favour of the
scheme. The proposed scheme required the company to send known creditors a
claim and certificate form which had to be returned within two months. The
scheme officers, who would be the provisional liquidators, had an absolute
discretion to allow the late submission of a form but otherwise a creditor who
failed to claim by the bar date would be deemed to have waived its right to a
dividend. The dividend was expected to be very modest. The scheme provided for
valuation of claims and adjudication of disputed claims. The independent
adjudicator's decision was to be final and binding in so far as the law
allowed. Claims were to be submitted with an auditor's certificate but the
scheme officers had a discretion to accept some other documentary means
evidencing the amount of a claim. The company sought the court's sanction for
the scheme.
HELD: (1) The steps necessary and required by the court order
convening the meeting of creditors had been followed correctly and only one
class of creditors existed. The result of the meeting was very substantially in
favour of the scheme. In circumstances in which the company had not been
underwriting since 1991 and had been in provisional liquidation since 1996
there was only a theoretical possibility of unknown creditors coming forward.
(2) As a matter of discretion the court would sanction the scheme as an entirely
proper scheme, one of whose objectives was to ensure that the limited funds
available for distribution were not wasted in further costs of litigation to
establish the precise amount of creditors' claims. (3) The imposition of a bar
date only two months in the future was reasonable and appropriate in the
circumstances. (4) The fact that scheme creditors were bound by the provisions
of the scheme and by the determination of the independent adjudicator did not
infringe Art.6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Limited access to the
courts that was inherent in the scheme was not a reason for refusing to approve
it. (5) The Insurers (Reorganisation and Winding Up) Regulations 2003 SI 2003/1102
would not apply to the company since the provisional liquidators were appointed
before 20 April 2003 and it was extremely unlikely that their appointment would
be discharged before a winding-up order was made.
Scheme sanctioned.
Gabriel Moss QC for the applicant.
LTL 25/9/2003 (Unreported elsewhere)
Judgment Official
Document No. AC0105787