Friday 25 January 2013

New Year and a new start - going bankrupt in the UK


A New Year has dawned and for many it will herald a chance for a new start. In Ireland I know that many families will be facing up to another year of debt and depreciation and for lots they will be seeking to move across to the UK to set up a new life.
For those who come to the UK and establish themselves, they may in time turn their thoughts to getting rid of their debts and declare bankruptcy. Indeed I know of many who have decided to move to England simply for the purpose of going bankrupt, which is what they are entitled to do.
If you have reached the New Year and decided that a new start is for you then you need to be absolutely certain that the steps you take will enable you to declare bankruptcy in due course. You will have to establish the UK as your centre of interest. That means that you will if possible be expected to get a job and support yourself as benefits will not be available.
As well as getting a job and a residence you should also establish a bank account. That account will need to be used on a regular basis as the Official Receiver will expect to see transactions taking place as evidence of constant living in the UK.
When you have been in the UK for up to six months you will be able if you wish to apply to the local county court that has jurisdiction for bankruptcy. Each county court has a different way of approaching bankruptcy. It is best to speak to the court and ask them their procedure. They may send you a pack for bankruptcy, which will include a petition and a statement of affairs which you will need to complete.
When this is done you will need to attend court with three copies of each document. You will also need a fee of £700 which is part court fee and part official receiver’s deposit. The court staff will process the papers and then you will be taken to see the Judge. If the Judge is satisfied that you are entitled to bankruptcy, and he will check that you have established your centre of main interest here, he will grant the bankruptcy order.
Once the order is made the affairs will be handled by the Official Receiver. His job will be to contact the creditors and realise any assets for the benefit of creditors. The Official Receiver will contact you within 24 hours to establish contact. In as little as three weeks he will conduct an interview with you and discuss the statement of affairs.
If no issues arise then the bankruptcy will automatically come to an end in just 12 months.
   

What to expect when you go to court for a bankruptcy hearing


If you are one of the millions who have been struggling ith debt over the last three years then you may have considered a number of debt solutions.
Perhaps you have tried something as simple as a debt management plan, either set up yourself or through a debt management company. For others, it may have been an IVA put in place for you by one of the numerous providers who you can see advertising on TV and in the papers and across the web. In have helped out many people who have tried an IVA but found that they cannot meet the monthly contributions.
If you have tried these solutions and found they didn’t work, or if you have realised that your debt problems need a quick but effective solution, then bankruptcy may be the appropriate solution for you.
The bankruptcy experience can be daunting if you have never been involved in producing official paperwork, or been at the county court before.
You can get help with the bankruptcy process from organisations such as the CAB or ourselves. You can get your bankruptcy pack from me, the CAB or the court.
The court clerks are very knowledgeable and do their best to put you at ease.
When you begin the bankruptcy process you need to have all your information to hand. This would be details of your income and expenditure and your assets and liabilities. This will make the process of completing your statement of affairs. Which is 28 pages long, an easier process.
If you can complete your paperwork yourself, you need to take the statement  of affairs and the petition in triplicate to your court. You will also need a fee of £700 (unless you qualify for a remission). That fee needs to be in cash.
The court clerk will process your papers and check, (a) that you at the correct court, (b) your paperwork is in order and (c) that you have taken appropriate advice. If the clerk is satisfied that all is in order, then they will process your papers and give you a court number. They will take your payment, and advise you where to wait to see the District Judge.
That part of the process should take no more than 30 minutes.
It may be some time before you can get to see the Judge. It mainly depends on when he can fit you in between all his other scheduled work. In some courts the process is structured to enable the Judge to see you before he starts any of the rest of his days work.
The Judge will be concerned primarily in ascertaining that you have taken proper advice and you appreciate what the effects of bankruptcy are. He will check to see that your debts levels are appropriate for bankruptcy. He will make an order with a specific time quoted. This will mean that at that moment 12 months hence you will be automatically discharged.
You will be free to leave they court after the order has been made.

What expenditure can be put down in a statement of affairs


I am often asked what expenditure can be included in a statements of affairs. Quite rightly someone going bankrupt wants to be able to include in their list of outgoings everything that they spend each month. Actually this is also very important because the Official Receiver is entitled to take any money that is deemed as surplus to an individual’s requirement for the benefit of creditors.
The Official Receiver has the power to agree an income payments agreement or ask the court to make an income payments order.
The Insolvency Services guidance to its own staff in its technical manual states that  when making an assessment of the outgoings claimed as essential by the bankrupt, the official receiver should always consider each case on its own merits. An assessment should be made as to whether the outgoings are realistic, relevant and appropriate to the bankrupt’s circumstances and whether outgoings included are sufficient to provide for the reasonable domestic needs of the bankrupt and his/her family.
It goes on to say that any expenditure included in the bankrupt’s statement which appears to be non-essential or included simply to prevent any surplus becoming available should be closely questioned,  e.g. weekly launderette costs are included but the bankrupt has use of a washing machine at home.  Particular care should be taken where the bankrupt has been assisted in preparing his/her statement by a commercial organisation, as a set of pro-forma outgoings may have been included which are not expenses actually incurred by the bankrupt on a day-to-day basis.
This is why when I help a client complete their statement of affairs, I dig down into what is really spent in the family home each week. The completion of this form is very important and it could be the difference between making no payments or thousands of pounds in contribution over 36 months.
As the bankrupt you are entitled to argue that the continued payment of certain expenditure items is required, above that considered reasonable by the official receiver to meet the reasonable domestic needs of you and your family.  If you persist in your argument, the official receiver should ask for further information detailing the extenuating circumstances justifying why you consider this an essential expenditure.  The Official receiver then has access to a manual and case law which helps him decide of your expenditure is reasonable for your needs and those of your family.
I have often found that with a good argument and a no back down attitude it is often possible to get the Official Receiver to back down. Getting advice on the expenditure that can be claimed on a statement of affairs can be the best advice you take in relation to going bankrupt.  

Here is a post I made a year ago on 23rd Jan - what has changed

As I prepare to fly to Dublin yet again to talk to people who want to go bankrupt in the UK, I was prompted to look back and see what I was writing about a year ago. Here is what I wrote on 23rd January 2012


I have just returned from a trip to Dublin to meet with my partners irishbankruptcyuk.ie . It was a sobering experience as they introduced me to clients they had signed up for the bankruptcy process, solicitors who were trying to deal with ever increasing hard handed approaches from lenders and just ordinary people who are trying desperately to work out what they should do.I had a round of meetings with people who were in differing degrees of financial meltdown, from a couple who had negative equity in excess of €500,000 on their matrimonial home and an investment. With the husband on short time and the wife not working, making mortgage payments is proving impossible. They do not want to carry the burden of this debt around with them for the rest of their lives. Their decision is to take their family and move to Northern Ireland and try to start again. In a few months time once they are settled they will look to go bankrupt and close a chapter on their property venture.
I met another client who had done very well in the property construction sector. He had made his money but like many others was encouraged by his bankers to take on more and more debt to buy more land to develop. When the credit crunch hit after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, he fund he couldn’t sell the properties he had constructed. He couldn’t make repayments on his loans and he defaulted. He has sat down with his bank, but they have simply said that he has to make payments. He owes many millions. How is he supposed to do that? There is no magic pot of money he can go to. He is leaving Ireland and coming to live in England. He is getting out of construction and seeking a new job. In due course he will take measures to go bankrupt. He doesn’t like to do it but how else is he going to get rid of millions of Euro of debt.
I met a solicitor who now advises her clients on how they can go bankrupt in the UK, whilst at the same time trying to do deals with banks to write of debt that will never be repaid. She says that there may be loopholes in some agreements, if this is accepted by the banks in individual cases there may be a chance to get the loans wiped. If not, her clients will have been living in the UK long enough to go bankrupt if they so wish.
With bankruptcy in Ireland not being a realistic option, many are looking to move to Northern Ireland and mainland England, establish their lives here and then avail themselves of the friendlier UK bankruptcy regime. With over 1000 people a week in the UK going bankrupt and that many again also doing an IVA or a debt relief order, compared to just 29 people in a whole of a year going bankrupt in Ireland, you can see where the solution lies.

So nothing has changed. Despite the changes made to Irish Bankruptcy laws, which will be implemented shortly, there will still be hundreds if not thousands of people who will seek to move across here to England to go bankrupt rather than go bankrupt in Ireland for three years and risk the probability of a five year income payments order at the end of that. Who wants to potentially make payments to creditors for up to eight years. No one if what I am hearing from my Irish clients is anything to go by.
In November I did an article with others in which I highlighted the numbers of business people who were quitting the Republic to start new lives in then UK and in the process go bankrupt and rid themselves of irish debt.

The link to that article is below

http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/hundreds-of-bust-business-figures-flock-to-uk-for-soft-bankruptcies-3296418.html

Irish Bankruptcy - not just for the rich and famous

I recently did an opinion piece for the Irish Independent, entitled Irish Bankruptcy - not just for the rich and famous. The point of the article was to highlight that despite Ireland having signed off on new Insolvency Legislation, there would be no change in the number of people coming over from Ireland to the Uk to go bankrupt.

Whereas in the past that might have been multi-million pound property developers, it is now more likely to be normal people with normal jobs, who lost spectacularly when investing in the property market.

Here is a link to my piece.

http://www.independent.ie/opinion/analysis/ronald-quinlan-bankruptcy-in-uk-not-just-for-rich-and-famous-3343320.html

Article in the Sunday Business Post

This is a piece that I did for the Sunday Business Post on the bankruptcy regime in the UK as opposed to Ireland.
The case study below was from one of my clients who went through the process very early and is now back living with her husband and children in Dublin.

This is a piece that I did with the Daily Star in Ireland commenting on the bankruptcy of Shane Filan, ex of West Life.
This is one of the very high profile Irish Bankruptcies.
Shane has recently had a meeting of his creditors, where the extent of his liabilities came to a head at €24m.
It has also been reported in the press that he has been allowed to keep his £30,000 wedding ring.

Wednesday 23 January 2013

Steve in conversation with Marian Finucane on RTERadio1 radio

In an interview that went out in May 2012, Steve and Marian discussed the exodus of Irish to the UK seeking relief from debt, how the Irish Government had yet to provide a solution to the problems and where it might all end up.

Steve in conversation with Kildare FM on bankruptcy


This is a further interview that Steve did with Kildare FM. The interviewer again wanted to focus on how people could go to the UK to go bankrupt. How common this was and the pro's and con's of doing so.

Steve Thatcher in interview with Dublin South Business Eye programme

Here Steve is in conversation with the specialist business programme, Business Eye which is broadcast by Dublin South. Here he again explains how it is possible for someone from Ireland to go bankrupt in England.

The interview is about 7-8 minutes long only. There is s short introduction before we get to the interview with Steve.

Steve Thatcher and his interview on Drive Time Dublin on Irish Bankruptcy


I have done a number of radio interviews in my effort to spread the word about how the Irish can go bankrupt in the UK
This is an interview that I did regarding Sean Quinn with Drive Time and the wider implications of bankruptcy in the UK.
It highlights how anyone from any EU country can go bankrupt in any other EU country.

Saturday 12 January 2013

Irish Bankruptcy in the UK is still an option

Much has been written in the UK national and Irish press over the past few weeks, about how difficult it is for the Irish debtor to go bankrupt in the UK.
My interview with Mark Hennessy of the Irish Times, explodes that myth.
A very few high profile individuals have had their bankruptcies overturned by the UK courts. Each of these cases were ob very specific reasons, and none as a result of any change in the law which suggests that it is not possible for anyone with Irish debt to go bankrupt here in England.
Indeed anybody with any level of debt can go bankrupt here in England, as long as they are prepared to move their Centre of Main Interest here and become habitually resident.
This is not a short term fix, it requires huge commitment, but at the end of the process, as least you have the certainty that you can go bankrupt and be released from your debt burden in just 12 months.

Here is the link to the piece that I did with Mark

 http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/finance/2013/0111/1224328667327.html

Monday 7 January 2013

My opinions in the Irish Independent

Over the weekend my views on Irish Bankruptcy in the UK and the effect that the new Irish bankruptcy legislation will have on the numbers of people travelling to the UK for bankruptcy, was published.

The interest following this was quite widespread, and as I result I was interviewed on Newstalks breakfast programme in Dublin and also spoke to a journalist who is pitching a documentary about this subject.

The link to the newspaper piece is here for anyone interested.

http://www.independent.ie/opinion/analysis/ronald-quinlan-bankruptcy-in-uk-not-just-for-rich-and-famous-3343320.html

Friday 4 January 2013

Step by Step process for filing bankruptcy

Filing for bankruptcy is an option that is now being taken more often by those in debt here in the UK and also as an option by those in the EU who move to the UK and establish there centre of main interest here.


The latest figures released by the Insolvency Service show that over 30,000 in the last quarter declared bankruptcy in England and Wales. This is a slight increase on the previous quarter, and I see this as a worrying development, as the economy has been pretty stable for the last couple of years. I suspect that the numbers of people still coming through the system and actually increasing is a result if two factors.

Firstly I suspect that people have been trying to manage their debts via debt management schemes and have actually realised that they are just treading water and not making a dent into their liabilities, and : secondly I suspect that there has been a slight increase in EU citizens who have now established their COMI here, actually going through the process.

Step 1

Bankruptcy is undertaken by firstly establishing the court in which you need to start the bankruptcy process. You can do this by checking online or in your Yellow pages for the nearest court to where you live. This is most often in your nearest big town. A call to that County Court will clarify if that is the correct court. If not they will tell you which is. You need to ascertain from the court whether you need to book in your bankruptcy appointment and if so when, or if you can simply turn up when you wish. This is very important as each court maintains its own procedure.

Step 2

You need to obtain a bankruptcy pack. This can be from that local court or you can download them from the Insolvency Service website. I can also provide you with them.

Step 3

You must complete the Petition, which is three pages long and the Statement of Affairs, which is 28 pages long. The statement requires you to provide details of your income and expenditure, and your assets, such as a home, a vehicle and pension, and liabilities.

It is important that you complete the statement in as much detail as possible. The Official Receiver bases any income payments agreement with you, upon this statement. The statement of affairs also sets out your creditors addresses, which the OR uses as correspondence points, so the creditors can be informed and updated on the progress of the bankruptcy.

You will be expected to set out in full your responses. It will also be expected that those responses are truthful.

Step 4

You must attend at court at the time of your appointment, or if no appointment at a time of your choosing. You need to bring with you 3 copies of both the Petition and the Statement of Affairs. Copy this yourself as the court will charge you heavily if they have to do it for you.

You will also need £700 in cash, if you do not qualify for a reduced fee. There are certain circumstances in which you need pay a fee of £525, and these are set out on Court form EX160.

The court clerks process your papers, take your fee and then you wait to see the Judge.

Step 5

You are taken to see the District Judge. He will read your papers and check that you are certain you are taking the right decision. He will want to be assured that you have taken proper advice. He may also check that you have a right to apply for bankruptcy, by establishing that your centre of main interest is in England.

If he is satisfied he will make the Bankruptcy Order.

At that moment you will be bankrupt for 12 months, unless released earlier.

Step 6

Your case will be transferred to the Official Receiver, who will contact you and conduct an interview. This interview is based upon your statement which is why it is so important to get it right first time. If you need help completing your 28 page statement contact an insolvency professional such as myself.

If the Official Receiver is satisfied that there is no investigation to be carried out, or any distribution to be made he will often seek authority from the creditors to release you from bankruptcy early.



I have being taking people through the bankruptcy process here in England and Wales for nearly 20 years. The process is now very streamlined and I have relationships across the country with court clerks that helps make the whole experience as painless as it can be for the individual going bankrupt.


I have also for three years now been helping those from Eire follow the same route. It is clear even from cursory reading that going bankrupt to get rid of your debt is simply not an option. It is a 3 year process, but with a sting in the tail in that you could be asked to pay income into an arrangement for up to five years after your discharge.
Here in England a person is generally automatically discharged from bankruptcy after 12 months. Additionally it is also the right of any EU citizen to apply for bankruptcy in any other EU member state. In order to do that there is a test which is applied. A person must show that their centre of main interest is within the state where they are declaring bankruptcy even if their debts may be incurred elsewhere in Europe.

I have written before about establishing this centre of main interest (COMI). Senior UK Judges have made it clear that it doesn’t matter that you settle here for the reason of going bankrupt. It only matters that at the time your petition is filed your centre of interest is genuinely here.

Essentially that means that you have somewhere genuine to live, and that you either are working here or are looking for work, and hence you will also need a National Insurance number. To work or get benefits you will need a bank account. All this takes time and commitment. Consider the alternatives. A few months living in another country to wipe of all your debt, or a lifetime with that debt.

I am now in an arrangement with a company that helps relocate those seeking to establish their COMI in England.

Establishing your COMI is not as hard as you may have read on the internet. If you are determined to wipe off your debt and start again, you must take appropriate advice. Why not start today. I look forward to taking your free call.

Wednesday 2 January 2013

Free Debt Advice From Help With Debt

How we can help a nurse to go bankrupt

Bankrupcy and a Trustee's Interest in the Matrimonial Home

One of the criticisms of the old insolvency regime was that a Trustee in Bankruptcy (“the Trustee”), who had failed to immediately realise his or her interest in a Bankrupt’s family home, was able to recover this interest several years after the date of discharge of the Bankruptcy Order. In most cases, this interest would have increased substantially in value due to recent spiralling property prices. Amendments introduced by the Enterprise Act 2002 seemed to address the balance more in favour of the Bankrupt. Section 261 of the Enterprise Act 2002 amended the Insolvency Act 1986 (“the Act”) by adding a new Section 283A, which came into force on 1 April 2004. Under this new provision where a Bankrupt, who at the time of his Bankruptcy, had an interest in a dwelling house that is a sole or principal residence of the Bankrupt, or the Bankrupt’s spouse or former spouse, then his or her Trustee must have taken specified steps to realise the Bankrupt’s former interest in this property within three years of the date of the Bankruptcy Order. If the Bankrupt fails to disclose to his Trustee or the Official Receiver his interest in property within three months commencing from the date of the Bankruptcy Order, then the three year time period shall not run until the Trustee or Official Receiver is notified of the Bankrupt’s interest.
The specified steps that the Trustee must take are as follows:-
1. realise the Bankrupt’s former interest in the family home; or
2. apply for an Order for possession and/or sale of the family home; or
3. apply for an Order under Section 313 of the Act for a charge on the family home for the benefit of the Bankrupt’s estate; or
4. reach an agreement with the Bankrupt that the Bankrupt shall incur a specified liability to his estate in consideration that the family home shall cease to form part of the estate.
If the Trustee fails to take any of the above steps within the stipulated time period, then the Bankrupt’s former interest will automatically re-vest in the Bankrupt on the expiry of that time limit. Section 283A(6) of the Act does allow a Trustee to apply to Court to extend the three year period in such circumstances as the Court thinks appropriate. Consequently, it is essential that the Trustee does not delay in obtaining the necessary information to ascertain whether he or she has an interest in the Bankrupt’s family home.
ASCERTAINING WHETHER THE TRUSTEE HAS A BENEFICIAL INTEREST IN THE BANKRUPT’S FAMILY HOME

(i) Property held in the sole name of the Bankrupt
If the legal title to the family home is held in the sole name of the Bankrupt, then there is the presumption that the entire beneficial interest in the property was owned solely by the Bankrupt. Upon the Trustee’s appointment, the Bankrupt’s legal and beneficial interest in the property vests in the Trustee. However, the above presumption is rebuttable and not withstanding the fact that the property was purchased in the full name of the Bankrupt, it may in reality be held on trust for other beneficial owners. Often in the case of the family home, the Bankrupt’s spouse or partner (“Non-Bankrupt Party”) will have beneficial interest in the family home on the basis of his or her contributions to the purchase of the home. The nature and extent of the Bankrupt’s beneficial interest in the property will depend upon whether the Bankrupt and Non-Bankrupt Party had a common intention before or at the time the property was purchased to share the beneficial interest in the home. This common intention or agreement may be expressed in writing, such as a declaration of trust, orally or in some circumstances will exist by implication. Provided that the Non-Bankrupt Party claiming an interest in the property is able to show that he or she acted to their detriment in reliance on this agreement, then a beneficial interest under a constructive trust arises. However, even if a common intention is not established, provided that the Non-Bankrupt Party claiming an interest in the family home is able to prove a contribution to the purchase price, a resulting trust may be imposed. (see Lloyds Bank Plc –v- Rosset [1991] 1 AC 107).
(ii) Express Constructive Trust
When faced with a Non-Bankrupt Party seeking to assert his or her interest against the family home, the Trustee firstly needs to establish whether there is an expressed declaration of trust confirming that the beneficial ownership of the property is to be shared. The declaration of trust may be set out in the transfer, such as the Land Registry transfer form “TR1”, which is filed at the Land Registry or a formal declaration of trust may have been drawn up at the time the family home was purchased. A written declaration of trust is generally considered to provide conclusive evidence of the parties intention. More often than not, the co-owning parties claim that the common intention to share the beneficial interest was expressed orally but they must show that the Non-Bankrupt Party acted to his/her detriment relying upon this oral agreement.
(iii) Implied Constructive Trust
If there was no express agreement, the Courts may infer that the Non-Bankrupt Party was intended to have a beneficial interest deriving from the conduct of the Non-Bankrupt Party, such as a direct or indirect contribution to the purchase price of the property or payments towards the mortgage, provided always that this express or implied intention was coupled with the Non-Bankrupt Party acting to his/her detriment in reliance on the common intention. Examples of both direct and indirect contributions and detrimental reliance which have been held by the Court gives rise to a beneficial interest include:
1. payments towards the deposit on a property;
2. mortgage repayments;
3. expenditure incurred in improving the property which is not limited to mere maintenance;
4. substantial contributions to the parties household expenses, allowing the legal owner of the property to make the mortgage payments (see Grant –v- Edwards [1986] 1 Ch 638);
5. payments made into a joint account used to fund the mortgage and household expenses;
Even undertaking physical labour on substantial renovation works may be treated as giving rise to an interest (see Eves –v- Eves [1975] 1 WLR 1338).
(iv) Resulting Trust
Even if there were no express or implied agreements as to the sharing of the beneficial ownership of the property, the Non-Bankrupt Party may be able to establish that he/she has a beneficial interest in the family home held under a resulting trust in the absence of any evidence to the contrary. For a resulting trust to be imposed, there must have been a direct contribution to the purchase price of the property by the Non-Bankrupt Party, such as a payment towards the deposit, or the legal or conveyancing expenses incurred in purchasing the property or a contribution towards the mortgage repayments. In some cases, it may be possible to argue that a resulting trust does not arise, if there is evidence indicating that the direct contribution to the purchase price was in reality a gift or a loan. This is referred to as a “Presumption of Advancement” (see Gissing –v- Gissing [1971] AC 886) but this presumption does not apply as between unmarried parties or to transfers by a wife to her husband.
(v) Property in sole name of Non-Bankrupt Party
The above principles apply even if the family home is registered in the sole name of the Non-Bankrupt Party. The Trustee may be able to establish that the Bankrupt had a beneficial interest in the family home based on direct or indirect contribution to the purchase price of the property by the Bankrupt. The Trustee will also need to consider whether the Bankrupt has transferred any interest that he may have had in the property to the Non-Bankrupt Party or a third party at an undervalue, contravening Section 339 and/or 423 of the Insolvency Act 1986. Often it is the case that the Trustee has an uphill struggle in establishing a resulting or constructive trust in such cases since the parties are unlikely to assist him or her in establishing a common intention to share the beneficial ownership.
(vi) Property held in joint names
Nowadays it is more common for properties to be jointly owned by spouses or co-habiting parties. Where the legal title to a property is held in joint names, then in the absence of evidence to the contrary, there is a presumption that the beneficial interest in the property is shared equally between the parties.
EQUITABLE ACCOUNTING
Once the Trustee has ascertained the extent of the Bankrupt’s former interest in the family home, he may then need to take an equitable account between the beneficial owners. Equitable accounting principles allow the Court to take an account of expenditure incurred on the property to establish whether one co-owner has contributed more than his/her fair share towards the value of the property. This account does not alter the extent of the beneficial shares but determines the amount for which a co-owner should give credit to another co-owner in respect of expenditure incurred on the property. As confirmed in the case of Re Pavlou [1993] WLR 1046, the guiding principle is that a co-owner cannot take the benefit of an increase in the value of a property without making an allowance for what has been spent on the property by the other co-owner to obtain this increase.
(i) Mortgage Capital Repayments
In the case of Re Pavlou, the family home was in the joint names of the husband and wife. The marriage broke down and the husband left the home. The wife met all the mortgage payments thereafter and the husband was subsequently adjudicated Bankrupt. The wife sought credit for the mortgage capital and interest repayments. The Court held that the wife was entitled to credit for one half of the capital repayments made by the wife since she became solely responsible for the mortgage payments and not merely from the date of the Bankruptcy Order.
(ii) Mortgage Interest Repayments
With regard to mortgage interest payments, in the cases of Re Gorman [1991] ALL ER 717 and Re Pavlou, the Court directed that a separate account should (if required) be taken of mortgage interest payments by the Non-Bankrupt Party and the occupation rent owed by the Non-Bankrupt Party to the Trustee in consideration of the Non-Bankrupt Party’s sole occupation of the property or use of the Bankrupt’s/Trustee’s share of the home. In both cases it was conceded that the mortgage interest payments could be set off against an occupation rent for the period following the Bankruptcy Order. In both cases, the husband had left the home. The decisions were upheld in the case of Byford –v- Butler [2003] EWHC 1267(Ch) where the Court confirmed that where a Non-Bankrupt co-owner seeks to recover mortgage interest repayments, even where the Bankrupt has not been excluded and is still living at the property, the Trustee is entitled to set off for occupational rent against those mortgage interest payments.
(iii) Improvements
In the case of Re Pavlou, it was held that the Non-Bankrupt spouse was entitled to receive credit in respect of the costs of the improvements to the property that actually enhanced the value of the property. She was either entitled to be credited for one half of the costs of the improvement works paid by her before and after the Bankruptcy Order, that increased the value of the property or for half the increase in the value of the property which arose as a direct result of such works, which ever was the lesser.
(iv) Operation of equitable accounting
In the case of Clarke –v- Harlowe [2005] EWCH 3062 (ch) it held that equitable accounting commences at the date of separation of the co-owners. By way of background, Ms Clarke and Mr Harlowe purchased a property that was declared on the transfer to be held on trust as joint tenants. Mr Harlowe being the higher wage earner paid all the mortgage instalments and refurbishment costs to the property. Following the breakdown of the relationship the property was sold and Mr Harlowe relying on principles of equitable accounting sought a greater than 50% share of the net proceeds of sale in respect of the improvement costs paid by him.
In this particular case the arrangement between the parties was that the mortgage payments and the improvement costs were to be met by Mr Harlowe and there was no suggestion that Ms Clarke was under any obligation to reimburse Mr Harlowe for any part of these payments. The payments were in accordance with the arrangements between the parties and common purpose of the implied trust. Consequently, there was no breach or failure to comply with those arrangements on Ms Clarke’s part and equitable accounting did not operate such as to require Ms Clarke to contribute to the improvement costs from her share of the sale proceeds.
It appears from the case of Clarke –v- Harlowe that where a Bankrupt and Non-Bankrupt Party separate, resulting in one of the parties failing to discharge his or her agreed share of the property related liabilities, as a general rule equitable accounting would operate from the date of separation. However, this is not a hard and fast rule and each case would depend on the facts.
(v) Practical Steps
To avoid delay, if it is suggested that the Non-Bankrupt Party has made contributions to the mortgage, mortgage statements should be obtained from the mortgage company setting out all the capital and interest repayments from the date of the Bankruptcy Order or since the Non-Bankrupt spouse became solely responsible for the mortgage. If the mortgage is in the name of the Non-Bankrupt Party, a letter of authority should be requested from the Non-Bankrupt Party allowing the Trustee to be provided with the mortgage statements. The Trustee should also watch out for other mortgages and further advances on the family home.
When instructing a valuer in relation to improvements, the Trustee should also ask the valuer to provide an opinion as to whether the alleged renovation works improve the value of the property and, if so, by how much. The Trustee will also need to seek documentary evidence of the payments made towards the mortgage and/or renovations. It would also be sensible to check the Bankrupt’s bank account statements and PAYE slips/tax returns even if the Non-Bankrupt Party was paying all or the bulk of the mortgage, it is possible that some or all the Bankrupt’s funds were paid into the Non-Bankrupt Party’s sole account or the Bankrupt made payments to the household expenses enabling the Non-Bankrupt Party to meet the mortgage repayments.
EQUITY OF EXONERATION
In Re Pittortou (a Bankrupt) [1985] ALL ER 285, Mr Justice Scott discussed this principle by relying on the definition in Halsbury’s Laws of England, Volume 22 (4th Edition) paragraph 1071 that:-
“If the property of a married woman is mortgaged or charged in order to raise money for payment of her husband’s debts, or otherwise for his benefit, it is presumed, in the absence of evidence showing intention to the contrary, that she meant to charge her property merely by way of security, and in such case she is in the position of surety and is entitled to be indemnified by the husband, and to throw the debt primarily on his estate to the exoneration of her own.”
If the presumption is proved, then the charge will only be discharged from the Bankrupt’s share of the equity in the property. The presumption is most likely to arise in cases where the Bankrupt raises a first or second charge against the family home in order to settle his or her business debts. In Re Pittortou it was held that the equity of exoneration should apply to payments made purely for business purposes and for the Bankrupt’s sole benefit. In that case, the Bankrupt husband and Non-Bankrupt wife executed a legal charge over the property to secure the husband’s bank account which was used both in regard to his business and for payment of expenses relating to the matrimonial home. The Judge held that the payments for the joint benefit of the household should be discharged out of the net proceeds of sale from the house before division, but the equity of exoneration should apply to payments made purely for business purposes and for the husband’s sole benefit.
However, the presumption is rebuttable, particularly if it can be shown that the Bankrupt’s business borrowings were used to finance a business from which he derived an income for the benefit of his family as a whole and there is evidence that the parties did not intend that the security should fall wholly on one party’s beneficial interest to the exoneration of the other party. Nowadays it would be harder to establish the equity of exoneration where a further charge is taken out to support the Bankrupt’s business as generally the business would be for the benefit of the Bankrupt’s family and particularly where the Non-Bankrupt spouse has obtained independent legal advice before agreeing to this further charge.
THIRD PARTIES
It is often the case that third parties, i.e. the Bankrupt’s adult son or daughter claim an interest in the property for contributions that they have made to the mortgage or improvements. It is arguable that they may have acquired an interest in the property on constructive/resulting trust principles. For example, the Bankrupt may have agreed with his child that if the child pays the mortgage then he or she would acquire a beneficial interest in the property. As long as any child has made direct or indirect contribution to the purchase price of the property and acted to his or her detriment, then there appears to be no reason why that child could not argue that he or she has an interest in the property arising from a resulting trust. Conversely, the Trustee may be able to argue that these payments were effectively contribution to the child’s living expenses, which would not give rise to a proprietary interest in the property.
MATRIMONIAL PROCEEDINGS
Occasionally the Bankrupt and Non-Bankrupt Party are involved in matrimonial proceedings at the time the Bankruptcy Order is made. More often than not the Bankrupt’s financial problems are the cause or catalyst for these matrimonial proceedings. In such a situation, it is important that the Trustee obtains as much information as possible at the first available opportunity as to the state of play of the matrimonial proceedings and notify the matrimonial solicitors acting for the Bankrupt and Non-Bankrupt Party of his appointment immediately. The Trustee will need to ascertain whether the matrimonial financial relief proceedings have been commenced, and if so, whether an Order has been made for a property adjustment, lump sum, costs and/or maintenance.
If the Trustee discovers that the financial relief proceedings are ongoing but a final Order has not been made, the Trustee could apply for a stay of these proceedings pursuant to Section 285 of the Act. The Family Court may require the Trustee to be made a party to the proceedings and will require any application in relation to the family home issued by the Trustee be heard at the same time as the application for financial relief.
If the financial proceedings are ongoing, the Trustee should ask for copies of the Bankrupt’s and Non-Bankrupt’s form E, which set out in detail their financial position and for copies of any responses to questionnaires. Such documentation may prove very useful as they often reveal assets and/or income that the Bankrupt has failed to previously disclose to the Trustee, which may form part of the Bankruptcy estate.
Once a final Order has been made within the matrimonial proceedings prior to the onset of the bankruptcy proceedings then that Order cannot be challenged by a Trustee in Bankruptcy even if the Order states that the matrimonial home is to be transferred from the Bankrupt to the Non-Bankrupt (see the case Hill v Haines [2007] BRIR 1280).
Final Steps
The Trustee will need to apply for sanction from the Insolvency Service prior to commencing any legal proceedings. If no agreement is reached between the Trustee and the Bankrupt then the Trustee will have no alternative but to apply for an order for possession and sale of the family home or for an order under Section 313 of the Act, prior to the expiry of the three year time limit.

Ten months since last post

I can't believe it has been ten months since my last post.

I see that that post was anticipating new Irish Insolvency Legislation. We at last now, the Personal Insolvency Bill has now been signed off by both houses of parliament in Ireland and wil be legislation very soon.

There has been a head of Insolvency recruited and other staff are coming on board.

It is likely that I will be able to apply to be a Personal Insolvency Practitioner in Ireland by April or May.

I have been extraordinarily busy in the last ten months taking dozens of people through bankruptcy, and January and February are already very well booked up.

I am now in a partnership in Dublin with Anthony Joyce Solictors and we have a new Business call Debt Options 

That business is going very well and the point of getting together with Anthony was so that we could offer the Irish a debt solution based at home using their own new legislation and here in the UK using our legislation.

For those interested in chatting to me about my services you can of course follow up by linking to my site.