How are Official Receiver’s fees calculated? An interpretation of “realisation of assets” by the court
Introduction
The
Companies (Fees and Percentages) Order (Cap 32C) (the “CFPO”) provides that ad valorem fees are payable to the Official
Receiver on compulsory liquidation of a company. The amount of such fees, as provided in
section 7(2) and Item I of Table B of Schedule 3 to the CFPO, depends, by
reference to a sliding scale, on the “aggregate amount of assets realised and
brought to credit by a liquidator”.
In the recent case of STX Pan Ocean (Hong Kong) Co. Limited (In Liquidation) HCCW
324/2013, the court has shed light on the interpretation of the word “realised”
and has ruled in favour of the Official Receiver with respect to the
calculation of fees payable to the Official Receiver’s Office.
Background
STX Pan Ocean (Hong Kong) Company Limited (the “Company”) went into creditors’
voluntary liquidation pursuant to section 228(1)(c) of the Companies (Winding
Up and Miscellaneous Provisions) Ordinance (Cap 32) (the “Ordinance”) on 26 August 2013 and two voluntary liquidators (the “CVL Liquidators”) were appointed. More than HKD$160,000,000 had been realised until
the court made an order on the petition that the Company be wound up whereupon
the Official Receiver became provisional liquidator for the Company on 26
September 2014, who had realised around HK$13,000,000 until the joint and
several liquidators of the Company (the “Liquidators”)
were appointed by the court on 24 April 2015.
The Liquidators further realised around HK$8,500,000 from the company’s
assets.
The issue arises as to whether the ad valorem fees
are payable in respect of the funds transferred by former voluntary liquidators
to the Companies Liquidation Account or by the court-appointed liquidators
after the compulsory winding up order was made.
The Court’s Decision
1. An
ordinary meaning of realisation
It was
argued by the Liquidators that the word “realised” should be given an ordinary
dictionary meaning, i.e., to convert into cash or money. Since the amount of
around $160,000,000 realised by the CVL Liquidator predated the winding up
order, such amount was not relevant in considering the ad valorem fees charged
by the Official Receiver. The Liquidators also put forward two cases, namely Lewis v Metropolitan Properties
Realisations Ltd [2010] Ch 148 and Board
of Trade v Block (1888) 13 App Cas
570 to assist the court in interpreting the meaning of the word “realised”. The
court, however, found that these cases were decided in very different contexts
and suggested that Re a Debtor
(No 29 of 1986) [1997] BPIR 183 would be a more relevant case in such relation
where the case concerned the question of the remuneration of a trustee in
bankruptcy. Vinelott J in the case, by referring to section 82(1) of the Bankruptcy Act, suggested that the word “realised”
simply means “got in or reduced into cash” and it is “immaterial whether the
trustee has got to do something in the course of reducing the assets to a form
in which they can be distributed”.
The court
also noted that the relevant phrase in Item I of Table B of Schedule 3 of the
CFPO is not just “assets realised” but “assets realised and brought to credit”
and sometimes in an alternative form “realised or brought to credit”. By making reference to the legislative
history of the Companies Ordinance 1911, which were modelled on the (UK)
Statutory Rules and Orders 1903, the court acknowledged that the Official
Receiver’s ad valorem fees were payable upon “the total assets realised or
brought to credit by the Official Receiver”.
Such wordings also appeared in Item IV of the Companies (Fees) Order
1936 until 1987 when the scale fee became payable “on the aggregate amount of
assets realised and bought to credit by a liquidator”. The
court expressed its doubt in understanding why there was change in the language
of the law but found no Explanatory Note to the amendment of such
language. Therefore, having regard to
the legislative history, the court found the alteration inconsequential and the
words “realised” and “brought to credit” should be used interchangeably.
The fees, therefore, are charged on the amount of
$144,383,785.66 paid over by the CVL Liquidators into the Companies Liquidation
Account which constitutes assets realised and brought to credit from the point
of view of the compulsory
liquidation.
2. Irrelevant
as to the amount of work done by the Official Receiver
Counsel representing the Liquidators
submitted that such interpretation of the word “realised” would lead to a large
amount of fees payable to the Official Receiver for very little work done.
The court did not find it to be a
weighty consideration in construing the statute as section 296(4) of the
Ordinance expressly provides that the amount of fees prescribed shall not be
limited by reference to the amount of administration costs incurred or likely
to be incurred by the Official Receiver.
The charge itself is not to remunerate the Official Receiver for work
done as a liquidator.
The court
again cited Re a Debtor (No 29 of
1986) which stated that the scale fee “must take the rough with the smooth”,
meaning that such system produces swings and roundabouts when spread over a
large number of cases with fees consistently charged in the same way. The court also acknowledged that it is not fundamentally wrong with the fees
being fixed in a way that cases with larger assets subsidise the smaller. The court therefore did not consider that the
Official Receiver’s interpretation was so inequitable as to be incompatible with
the purposes of the statute.
Conclusion
STX Pan Ocean (Hong Kong) Co. Limited (In
Liquidation) clearly illustrates that the
ad valorem fees payable to the Official Receiver should be calculated on amount
realised or brought to credit by the Official Receiver. Liquidators may have to take into account
such interpretation in estimating the fees payable to the Official Receiver.
For enquiries, please contact our Litigation
& Dispute Resolution Department: |
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Important: The law and
procedure on this subject are very specialised and complicated. This article is just a very general outline for
reference and cannot be relied upon as legal advice in any individual case.
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Published by ONC Lawyers © 2018 |