Before : MR JUSTICE FANCOURT Between :

Similar documents
Before : LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE LORD JUSTICE PATTEN and MR JUSTICE ROTH Between :

The Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016

Before: LORD JUSTICE LLOYD LORD JUSTICE LEWISON and LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER Between: - and -

Before: MR JUSTICE MORGAN Between: - and -

Before : LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS And LORD JUSTICE IRWIN Between :

Before: SIR TERENCE ETHERTON, MR LADY JUSTICE RAFFERTY and LADY JUSTICE SHARP Between:

ALBON ENGINEERING AND MANUFACTURING LIMITED. - and - Sitting in public at the Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London WC2A 2LL on 16 June 2017

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) HU/06395/2016 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

MH (pending family proceedings-discretionary leave) Morocco [2010] UKUT 439 (IAC) THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before SENIOR IMMIGRATION JUDGE JARVIS

In the first of a two-part series, Emma Chamberlain considers the capital gains tax issues arising on divorce

Rent in advance not a deposit: Court of Appeal latest

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE GRUBB. Between. THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Appellant and

Before : MRS JUSTICE PATTERSON Between :

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) IA/42299/2013 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 10 February 2016 On 29 February 2016.

Before : LORD JUSTICE GOLDRING LORD JUSTICE AIKENS and LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE Between :

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND CHANCERY DIVISION (BANKRUPTCY) RE: RICHARD ANDREW McVEIGH (BANKRUPT)

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 6 January 2015 On 15 January Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE I A LEWIS. Between

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND CHANCERY DIVISION (BANKRUPTCY)

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. On 14 March 2006 On 18 April 2006 Prepared. Before

JUDGMENT. Cotter (Respondent) v Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs (Appellant)

ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE MOULDEN. Between. MR NSIKANABASI UMOH ESSIEN (No Anonymity Direction Made) and

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. On 17 December 2015 On 5 January Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE DOYLE. Between

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) PA/02086/2017 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

THE IMMIGRATION ACT. Heard at Field House Decision & Reasons Promulgated On 8 th February 2018 On 23 rd February Before

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) IA/35017/2015 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. On 10 January 2018 On 11 January Before

Before: HIS HONOUR JUDGE BIDDER QC Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge Between: - and -

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 3 January 2007 On 23 April Before. Senior Immigration Judge Storey Immigration Judge Dawson. Between.

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE WARR. Between. THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Appellant and

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) EA/07000/2016 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Heard at Field House Decision & Reasons Promulgated On 26 May 2017

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 11 July 2018 On 22 August Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE I A M MURRAY. Between

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 20 October 2015 On 28 October Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE DOYLE. Between. Mr RISHI KALIA.

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE D N HARRIS. Between. and THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT

Rawofi (age assessment standard of proof) [2012] UKUT 00197(IAC) THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE WARR. Between SAIFULLAH RAWOFI.

The leaflet will also explain the meaning of some of the terms and expressions used in this guidance.

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 30 June 2014 On 11 August Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE CLIVE LANE. Between. and

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE REEDS. Between. and. THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Respondent DECISION AND REASONS

James Thom QC. Practice Overview. Company. Offshore. Property. Called: 1974 Silk Date: (0)

B E F O R E: LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY LORD JUSTICE LATHAM LORD JUSTICE WALL JOVAN SHKEMBI. -v-

Jaff (s.120 notice; statement of additional grounds ) [2012] UKUT 00396(IAC) THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE GRUBB.

PROCEDURE application for stay in proceedings - refused. - and - TRIBUNAL: JUDGE HARRIET MORGAN

Before : MR JUSTICE MORGAN Between : - and - THE ROYAL LONDON MUTUAL INSURANCE SOCIETY LIMITED

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 25 July 2014 On 11 August 2014 Oral determination given following hearing. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE CRAIG

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) IA/44412/2014 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE DOYLE. Between.

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Heard at Birmingham Decision & Reasons Promulgated On 15 th July 2016 On 26 th July Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE HEMINGWAY

WESLEY BORK JR. And THE TAMARIND CLUB II LIMITED

Professional privilege. Pension Drawdown

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 19 May 2015 On 17 June Before DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL MURRAY. Between

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Heard at Birmingham Sheldon Court Decision & Reasons Promulgated On 21 st April 2016 On 14 th June 2016.

November 13, 2001, Decided

Heard at Field House ST (Corroboration Kasolo) Ethiopia [2004] UKIAT On 20 April 2004 Prepared 20 April 2004 IMMIGRATION APPEAL TRIBUNAL

Before: LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN and - THE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER

- and - TRIBUNAL: JUDGE JOHN BROOKS. Sitting in public at the Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London on 11 November 2016

UPDATE September 2016

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 17 March 2015 On 20 April 2015 Delivered orally. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE GOLDSTEIN.

HEARING DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE OF THE ASSOCIATION OF CHARTERED CERTIFIED ACCOUNTANTS

THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS. -and- Tribunal: JUDGE HOWARD M. NOWLAN

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Heard at Field House Decision & Reasons Promulgated On 23 November 2017 On 01 December Before

1. The English Court s power to vary a settlement is found in section 24(1)(c) Matrimonial Causes Act 1973:

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 17 th March 2015 On 23 rd March 2015 Prepared on 17 th March Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE WOODCRAFT

PROCEDURE Costs of interlocutory proceedings Application for Further and Better Particulars. - and - TRIBUNAL: JUDGE JOHN BROOKS

INSOLVENCY PRACTITIONERS ASSOCIATION CERTIFICATE OF PROFICIENCY IN PERSONAL INSOLVENCY SCOTTISH PAPER. Examination 15 June 2012

Court of Appeal rules that a lender can re-register a charge it had previously cancelled in error to bring the Land Register up to date

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. On 13 June 2013 On 24 June 2013 Prepared: 14 June Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE O CONNOR. Between

TC04296 [2015] UKFTT 0091 (TC) Appeal number: TC/2014/01373

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE MONSON. Between MR MUNIR AHMED (ANONYMITY DIRECTION NOT MADE) and

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) Appeal Number: AA/04305/2013 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 16 June 2015 On 7 July 2015.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND CHRISTCHURCH REGISTRY CIV [2016] NZHC 562. IN THE MATTER OF the Insolvency Act 2006

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Decision and Reasons Promulgated on 29 th October 2015 On 4 th January Before DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL FARRELLY

Syed (curtailment of leave notice) [2013] UKUT IAC) THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE SPENCER. Between. and

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) HU/08382/2015 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE CHAMBERLAIN. Between AASTHA JOSHI SWADHIN BATAJOO (ANONYMITY DIRECTION NOT MADE) and

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE GLEESON. Between M I M. and. THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Respondent

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE WOODCRAFT. Between

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE KOPIECZEK. Between AH (ANONYMITY DIRECTION MADE) and THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT

DEFENDING CLAIMS THAT YOU REMOVED COMPANY ASSETS PRE-INSOLVENCY

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE D N HARRIS. Between. and. THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Respondent

Before: LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE and LORD JUSTICE LLOYD Between: The QUEEN on the Application of RS.

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 3 rd September 2015 On 14 th September Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE KELLY.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Melvin R. Hughes, Jr., Judge. This appeal is from an order removing George B.

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE I A M MURRAY. Between MR NEEAJ KUMAR (ANONYMITY HAS NOT BEEN DIRECTED) and

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE PATTERSON DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE J G MACDONALD. Between. and

RK (OFM membership of household dependency) India [2010] UKUT 421 (IAC) THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. On 17 June 2015 On 15 July Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE CLIVE LANE. Between ENTRY CLEARANCE OFFICER - ISTANBUL.

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Heard at Field House Decision & Reasons Promulgated On 6 February 2018 On 7 March Before

ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) PA/06808/2016 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

Supreme Court refuses to grant HM Revenue and Customs relief from sanctions for failing to comply with order of first tier tax tribunal

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE LINDSLEY. Between THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Appellant and

Appellant s notice (All appeals except small claims track appeals and appeals to the Family Division of the High Court)

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT July Term 2006

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) DC/00014/2016 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Promulgated On 9 July 2014 On 9 July Before. Deputy Upper Tribunal Judge Pickup Between

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE CRAIG. Between MR ABDUL KADIR SAID. and. THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT Respondent

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) HU/13862/2016 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. On 3 February 2016 On 24 February Before DEPUTY UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE RAMSHAW. Between

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) PA/03707/2016 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

Upper Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) PA/08153/2017 THE IMMIGRATION ACTS

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. On 18 January 2016 On 18 February Before UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE STOREY. Between MR ZULFIQAR ALI KHAN MRS SYEDA MASOOMA ZAIDI

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG

Transcription:

Neutral Citation Number: [2018] EWHC 48 (Ch) Case No: CH-2017-000105 IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE BUSINESS AND PROPERY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD) ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT CAMBRIDGE Before : MR JUSTICE FANCOURT - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Between : Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Date: 18 th January 2018 LOUISE GENDROT - and - (1) MATTHEW CHADWICK (2) SUSAN BERRY (Joint trustees in bankruptcy of Edward Hagan) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Appellant Respondents Mr Cameron Maxwell Lewis (instructed by direct access) for the Appellant Mr Graham Sellers (instructed by Freeths LLP) for the Respondents Hearing date: 6 th December 2017 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Judgment Page 1

Mr Justice Fancourt: 1. Mrs Gendrot appeals, with permission from Morgan J, against the Order of District Judge Capon, sitting in Bankruptcy, made on 4th April 2017 in the County Court at Cambridge. In the county court Mrs Gendrot was the second respondent to the application of the Respondents, the trustees in bankruptcy of Edward Hagan, Mrs Gendrot s husband. The application was for a declaration that any transfer of Mr Hagan s beneficial ownership or interest in two residential properties, including a transfer effected by a Deed of Trust made on 10th September 2011, was a transaction at an undervalue, within the meaning of section 339 of the Insolvency Act 1986, and for consequential relief. 2. The Deed of Trust recites, among other things, that Mr Hagan seeks to make financial provision for his wife and their son Michael; to secure, as far as possible, financial security for them, and that Mr Hagan will pay or cause to be paid the monthly amounts due on the mortgages secured on the two properties, 7 Hill Close, London NW2 (their matrimonial home) and Flat 1, 269A West End Lane, London NW6. The Deed of Trust then provides: 1. The husband declares that he holds on trust for the wife absolutely all his interest in the properties known as and situate at 7 Hill Close, London NW2 6RE, Basement Premises, 269 West End Lane, London NW6 1QS and Flat 1, 269A West End Lane, London NW6 1QS; 2. The Husband will be solely responsible for the payment of the charges registered on the above properties and will keep the wife indemnified in respect thereof. 3. The Basement Premises there referred to are commercial premises of which Mr Hagan was the tenant, under a rack-rented lease. No relief was sought by the Respondents in relation to that property. 4. The hearing before District Judge Capon proceeded as a trial of the Respondent s claim to set aside the Deed of Trust. All parties were represented by Counsel. 5. In a careful and clear judgment the District Judge held that: i) There was no consideration given by Mrs Gendrot for the declaration of trust, and if there was any consideration it was substantially less in value than the financial value of the property transferred to Mrs Gendrot by Mr Hagan under the Deed of Trust. ii) On the date of the Deed of Trust, Mr Hagan was insolvent, or alternatively he became insolvent as a consequence of the transfer effected by the Deed of Trust. Page 2

iii) There was no valid reason why the Deed of Trust should stand, and a restorative order should be made setting aside the Deed. 6. There was no issue raised at the trial in the county court about the following matters: i) Whether the transfer of the beneficial interest in the three properties was effected at any earlier date than the date on the Deed of Trust; ii) iii) iv) Whether the transfer of the beneficial interests should be treated for the purposes of section 339 as three separate transactions, one for each of the three properties; Whether the equity in Mr Hagan s share of 7 Hill Close was either nil or very small in monetary value; Whether in aggregate the value of his interests in the three properties was nil or very small in monetary value; v) Whether the District Judge should exercise his discretion under section 339(2) not to make a restorative order, or vi) Whether, having made such an order, the Court should refuse to order the immediate sale of 7 Hill Close and Flat 1. 7. The main live issues at the trial were whether Mrs Gendrot had given consideration for the transfer, the value of which in money or money s worth was not significantly less than the value transferred to her; and whether, at the date of the Deed, or as a result of the transaction, Mr Hagan was insolvent. 8. On appeal, Mrs Gendrot seeks to advance the following arguments and grounds of appeal: i) The declaration of trust in relation to Mr Hagan s share of 7 Hill Close has to be considered separately from the declarations of trust of Flat 1 and the commercial premises; ii) iii) Considered in that way, the only evidence (which the District Judge should have accepted) was that Mr Hagan s equity in 7 Hill Close was at most 12,000, and possibly less than that; The District Judge was wrong to hold that there was no consideration in money or money s worth, and the value of the consideration given by Mrs Gendrot was not significantly less than the value of Mr Hagan s equity in 7 Hill Close; iv) The District Judge failed to exercise his discretion under Section 339 (2) and should have exercised it in favour of not setting aside the Deed of Trust as regards 7 Hill Close, and v) The District Judge should alternatively have deferred making, or stayed, any order for sale of 7 Hill Close. Page 3

9. There was, in the end, no challenge to the District Judge s finding that Mr Hagan was insolvent on the relevant date. 10. Section 339 of the Insolvency Act 1986 provides; (1) Subject as follows in this section and section 341 and 342, where an individual is adjudged bankrupt and he has at a relevant time (defined in section 341) entered into a transaction with any person at an undervalue, the trustee of the bankrupt s estate may apply to the Court for an order under this section. (2) The Court shall, on such an application, make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the position to what it would have been if that individual had not entered into that transaction. (3) For the purposes of this section and sections 341 and 342, an individual enters into a transaction with a person at an undervalue if a) he makes a gift to that person or he otherwise enters into a transaction with that person on terms that provide for him to receive no consideration, b) he enters into a transaction with that person in consideration of marriage or the formation of a civil partnership, or c) he enters into a transaction with that person for a consideration the value of which, in money or money s worth, is significantly less that the value, in money or money s worth, of the consideration provided by the individual. 11. It is not in dispute that the Deed of Trust was made at a relevant time in relation to Mr Hagan s bankruptcy. 12. The first difficulty that Mrs Gendrot faces is that the arguments or grounds numbered (i), (ii), (iv) and (v) above were not advanced at the trial. Ground (iii) was advanced, though only in relation to the value transferred under the Deed of Trust in aggregate, rather than by comparison with the value of Mr Hagan s equity in 7 Hill Close alone. 13. I remind myself that the Court of Appeal has repeatedly stated that new arguments should not be permitted on appeal if they were not deployed in the lower court and if their being deployed might have caused the Respondent to conduct its case differently, as regards the evidence adduced or otherwise: see Jones v. MBNA International Bank [2000] EWCA Civ 514 at paras [38] & [52]; Crane v. Sky In-Home Limited [2008] EWCA Civ 978 at para [21]. 14. In my judgment had arguments (i) & (ii) been advanced at trial, it is quite likely that the Respondents would have sought (without prejudice to their case that there was no consideration provided) to adduce evidence of the open market value of and the debt secured on 7 Hill Close at the date of the Deed of Trust. The oblique reference to those matters in a statement of case of Mrs Page 4

Gendrot in other proceedings in the First-tier Tribunal, which was in the bundles at trial though not specifically referred to, was not agreed as evidence. The matter appears to have proceeded before the District Judge on the basis of a tacit agreement and understanding that the aggregate value of the three properties subject to the Deed of Trust was substantial, and that the real issue was whether any valuable consideration was given by Mrs Gendrot in return for the transfer of the beneficial interest. Mr Hagan accepted in crossexamination that in monetary terms he got absolutely nothing in return for the Deed of Trust, but that by keeping Mrs Gendrot sweet, as he put it, as a consequence of the transfer he got to see her once a week and his son twice a week. 15. In any event, in my judgment Mrs Gendrot faces insuperable difficulties in sustaining the argument that she seeks to advance. First, I cannot see any basis on which the Deed of Trust could properly be interpreted as effecting three separate transactions, for the purposes of Section 339 or otherwise. By the Deed of Trust Mr Hagan transferred to Mrs Gendrot his beneficial interest in the real property that he owned other than a flat in Suffolk. Section 436(1) of the 1986 Act defines transaction as including a gift, agreement or arrangement ; but Mr Hagan did not enter into three separate agreements or dispositions, nor did he make three separate gifts. He declared a trust of his beneficial interest in three properties. In my judgment, there was only one transaction effected by the Deed of Trust. 16. Even if it were possible to chop up the Deed of Trust into three separate transactions for these purposes, the Respondents appear to me to have a clear answer in that no consideration in money or money s worth was given by Mrs Gendrot for the transfer. Mr Hagan retained the mortgage liability and Mrs Gendrot assumed none. Mrs Gendrot made no enforceable promise in the Deed or in any collateral agreement at that time. Mr Hagan s hope that Mrs Gendrot might not proceed to petition for a Decree of Judicial Separation came to nothing when, in November 2011, she did so. But even that is not the point: the consideration must arise as part of the transaction. Mrs Gendrot took on no liability or obligation and she made no agreement to desist from presenting such a petition in consideration of the transfer effected by the Deed of Trust. 17. Mrs Gendrot seeks to argue, as she did in the county court, that there was valuable consideration moving from her, in that Mr Hagan did, in fact, obtain some reassurance that he could continue to see his wife and his son on regular occasions. Although the hope and expectation that this might happen could have been seen by Mr Hagan as being worth something, it was of no value in law because no right to it was conferred. There was no evidence that Mrs Gendrot had entered into a binding agreement to submit to future access or not to pursue her rights for a judicial settlement of the matrimonial difficulties. 18. As a matter of law, giving up a right to pursue a claim can be valuable consideration: see Re Abbott [1983] Ch 45 and Haines v Hill [2008] Ch 412. But there is no valuable consideration unless the right is given up in an enforceable way, as distinct from the giving of an unenforceable assurance given, or the right in question in the event simply being not exercised Page 5

subsequently: see Re Kumar (a bankrupt) [1993] 1 WLR 224 and Trustee in Bankruptcy of Gordon Robin Claridge v Claridge [2011] EWHC 2047 (Ch), particularly at paras [33] to [40]. 19. In this case, there is no evidence of any binding agreement, oral or written, or of even any request from Mr Hagan that in return Mrs Gendrot would not exercise her rights if he executed the Deed of Trust. Mr Hagan merely hoped that in return for his generosity Mrs Gendrot would allow him to continue to have access. Mrs Gendrot s evidence at trial was that she was going to pursue the petition for judicial separation. She had not bound herself to accept twiceweekly access to her son or weekly access to herself. Whether or not Mr Hagan enjoyed those advantages depended entirely on her will and actions after the Deed of Trust was executed. 20. The District Judge was therefore right to find that no consideration was given by Mrs Gendrot for the property that was transferred under the Deed of Trust. The transfer therefore falls within Section 339 (3) (a). That being so, the true value of the assets transferred to Mrs Gendrot becomes irrelevant. Even if Mrs Gendrot had been able to argue and had succeeded on grounds (i) and (ii) that were argued before me, the transfer of Mr Hagan s share of 7 Hill Close would still be a transaction at an undervalue. 21. Mrs Gendrot s next ground of appeal is that the District Judge did not validly exercise the discretion that Section 339(2) gave him ( such order as it thinks fit ). The Court of Appeal in Re Paramount Airways Limited (No.2) [1993] Ch 223 confirmed that this wording gives the Court discretion not to make a restorative order if justice so requires. 22. The District Judge was aware that the section gave him a discretion. The discretion was adverted to in the Respondents skeleton in the county court. Further, paragraph 46 of his Judgment indicates that he was aware of it. However he did not evaluate whether or not to exercise his discretion against setting aside the Deed of Trust because no argument that he should do so was addressed to him. 23. Mrs Gendrot now seeks to argue that such a discretion should have been exercised in relation to 7 Hill Close, for two reasons. First, that the property was the matrimonial home still occupied by Mrs Gendrot and her 18-year old son (who was still in full-time education). Second, although that property now has very substantial equity, the equity at the time of the transaction at an undervalue was only very small, and Mr Hagan s share of it no more that 12,000. 24. I cannot see how the first reason can amount to circumstances in which justice requires the court to decline to make a restorative order. If that were so, every husband, wife or civil partner who was nearing insolvency would be incentivised to gift his or her beneficial interest to their spouse or partner, thereby putting it effectively beyond the reach of their creditors. It might, in exceptional circumstances, amount to a good reason to stay an order for immediate sale of the property. Page 6

25. The difficulty that Mrs Gendrot has with the second reason is that the Respondents have had no opportunity to seek to establish the extent of the equity in 7 Hill Close at the date of the Deed of Trust. The point was not taken below and the trial was conducted on the assumption that the properties together had substantial value. Mrs Gendrot can hardly be heard to argue, on appeal, that the District Judge should have exercised a discretion that he was not invited to exercise on the basis of evidence of value that he did not hear. At all events she cannot do so if the Respondents might reasonably have relied on other evidence to deal with the argument. In any event, I am not persuaded that, as a factor in the exercise of discretion, it is right to focus narrowly on the value of the equity at the date of the transaction if the property (or the amount of equity) is of a kind that is capable of appreciating in value with the passage of time. 26. What might be material, on the exercise of the discretion under section 339(2), is whether all creditors and the fees and costs of the bankruptcy would be paid in full if the transaction were set aside only in relation to the other properties. This point was not taken at trial either, and so the District Judge had no evidence of the value of the equity in Flat 1 or of the value (if any) of the commercial lease. I was told, on instructions only, that had the matter been gone into at trial, the debts, fees and costs would substantially have exceeded the estimated equity in Flat 1, and that at the date of the appeal the position was much worse. The sale of 7 Hill Close would therefore have been regarded as necessary to realise sufficient assets to repay Mr Hagan s creditors and discharge the fees and costs of his bankruptcy. In those circumstances, it is impossible to conceive that had the District Judge addressed the question he could have concluded that it would be just to exercise his discretion by not making a restorative order. 27. Finally, Mrs Gendrot argued that the District Judge should have exercised his discretion to postpone or stay the sale of 7 Hill Close. That was not a point that was argued before the District Judge. It is clear from a note subsequently prepared by Mrs Gendrot s trial Counsel (who did not appear before me), which was disclosed and included in the appeal bundle, that he considered that there were no factors that could result in Mrs Gendrot s interest in maintaining her home being given priority over the interests of Mr Hagan s creditors. Now that it is clear that there is very substantial equity in 7 Hill Close and that a sale of the other properties will not realise sufficient funds, that conclusion seems to me to be inescapable. Although the sale of the home of Mrs Gendrot and her son, which was the family home, is a serious and wretched outcome for them, these circumstances are regrettably commonplace in cases of bankruptcy. Without substantially more, these consequences do not amount to exceptional circumstances, which is what is required to be shown before a sale will be postponed or stayed: Re Citro (a bankrupt) [1991] Ch 142. There is no evidence of anything more in this case that would justify refusing an order for immediate sale of 7 Hill Close and Flat 1. 28. For these reasons, in my judgment the District Judge came to the right conclusion for the reasons that he gave. The new legal arguments that Mrs Page 7

Gendrot sought to raise on appeal, even if permitted, would not result in a different outcome. Accordingly, I dismiss the appeal. Page 8