Insolvency Administration Administration expenses Payment of rent Insolvency Rules 1986 Company in administration holding premises on long leases Administrators occupying part of premises for purposes of administration Whether full rent continuing to be payable to landlord as expense of administration Rule 2.67(1) of 1986 Rules Application of salvage principle
The respondent company held commercial premises on two long leases under which rent was payable to the applicant landlord quarterly in advance. Parts of the property were sublet. After the respondent went into administration, the administrators used part of the premises to carry out the administration and continued to pay rent to the applicant. The right to receive rent from the subtenants was also transferred to the applicant under section 6 of the Law of Distress Amendment Act 1908 and, although the administrators continued to receive some rents, these were passed on to the applicant.
The applicant sought a court ruling that the administrators, having decided to use part of the premises for the beneficial outcome of the administration, were liable to pay the full rent as it fell due as an expense of the administration, pursuant to the Insolvency Rules 1986. The administrators contended that any payments should be tailored to their actual use of the premises, with the proportion of rent payable to be assessed according to the floorspace that they occupied.
Held: The application was allowed. (1) The “salvage” or “liquidation expenses” principle, under which liquidators are held liable to pay rent as a liquidation expense where they make use of or retain possession of leasehold premises for the benefit of the liquidation, also applies to administration. The relevant expenditure falls within r 2.67(1) of the 1986 Rules, either as expenses properly incurred by the administrators in performing their functions, within r 2.67(1)(a), or as necessary disbursements by the administrators in the course of the administration, within r 2.67(1)(f). The word “necessary” in the latter provision extends to a payment that ought to be made in fairness and justice and is not confined to a situation in which a specific threat for redelivery has been made; it is therefore apt to include a case where the salvage principle applies. The relevant rules, when properly construed in accordance with the salvage principle, compelled the administrators to pay the rent and the court should direct them to act in accordance with the mandatory requirements of the rules. (2) The administrators were not entitled to tailor their payments to the use they were making of the premises. Where administrators adopt a contract for conducting the administration in a beneficial manner, all liabilities arising under that contract after the date of adoption are entitled to priority. Administrators who elect to hold leasehold premises may do so only on the terms and conditions contained in the lease, such that any liability incurred while the lease is being enjoyed or retained for the benefit of the administration is payable in full as an administration expense. Accordingly, the administrators were obliged to pay the next quarter’s rent in full when it fell due, as one of the costs and expenses of the administration, and it did not fall to be apportioned in the event that the administrators vacated the premises during that quarter. The rent would continue to be payable as an administration expense quarterly in advance under the terms of the two leases for so long as the administrators retained or used any part of the premises demised under each lease for the benefit of the administration. The court had no discretion as to whether to declare the rent a liquidation expense, although it might have a discretion as to whether to grant a remedy to obtain payment.
The following cases are referred to in this report.
ABC Coupler & Engineering Co (No 3), Re [1970] 1 WLR 702; [1970] 1 All ER 650, Ch
Atlantic Computer Systems plc, Re [1992] Ch 505; [1992] 2 WLR 367; [1992] 1 All ER 476; [1991] BCLC 606, CA
Centre Reinsurance International Co v Curzon Insurance Ltd; Centre Reinsurance International Co v Freakley [2006] UKHL 45; [2006] 1 WLR 2863; [2006] 4 All ER 1153
Davis (S) & Co, Re [1945] Ch 402
Ellis v Rowbotham [1900] 1 QB 740, CA
Exeter City Council v Bairstow; sub nom Trident Fashions plc, Re [2007] EWHC 400 (Ch); [2007] 4 All ER 437; [2007] 2 P&CR 8; [2007] BCC 236; [2007] 2 BCLC 455
Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (in administration), Re; sub nom Lomas v Rab Market Cycles (Master) Fund Ltd [2009] EWHC 2545 (Ch)
Levi & Co Ltd, Re [1919] 1 Ch 416, Ch
Linda Marie Ltd (in liquidation), Re (1988) 4 BCC 463, Ch
Lundy Granite Co, ex parte Heavan, Re (1871) LR 6 Ch App 462
Oak Pits Colliery Co, Re (1882) 21 Ch D 322
Powdrill & Lyle (joint liquidators of Kentish Homes Ltd) v Tower Hamlets London Borough Council [1993] BCLC 1375, Ch
Powdrill v Watson [1995] 2 AC 394; [1995] 2 WLR 312; [1995] 2 All ER 65, HL; [1994] 2 All ER 513, CA
Shackell & Co v Chorlton & Sons [1985] 1 Ch 378, Ch
Spring Valley Properties Ltd v Harris; sub nom Salmet International Ltd (in administration), Re [2001] BCC 796, Ch
Sunberry Properties Ltd v Innovate Logistics Ltd (in administration); sub nom Innovate Logistics Ltd (in administration) v Sunberry Properties Ltd [2008] EWCA Civ 1321; [2009] 1 BCLC 145; [2009] BCC 164
Toshoku Finance UK plc (in liquidation), Re; sub nom Inland Revenue Commissioners v Kahn; Kahn v Inland Revenue Commissioners; Khan v Inland Revenue Commissioners [2002] UKHL 6; [2002] 1 WLR 671; [2002] 3 All ER 961
This was the hearing of a claim by the applicant landlord, Goldacre (Offices) Ltd, against the respondent tenant, Nortel Networks UK Ltd, a company in administration, for a ruling as to the liability of the administrators, under the Insolvency Rules 1986, to pay rent on demised premises used for the purposes of the administration.
Stephen Jourdan QC and Blair Leahy (instructed by Olswang LLP) appeared for the applicant; William Trower QC and David Allison (instructed by Herbert Smith LLP) represented the respondent.
Giving judgment, HH Judge Charles Purle QC said:
[1] In this case, I have to decide whether the rent that is soon to fall due, and future rent thereafter, in respect of property held by the respondent company (now in administration) in Harlow is payable as an expense of the administration. There are two long leases, both predating the date of the administration. The premises in question have, since the date of the administration, been used to an extent by the administrators for the more efficient conduct of the administration and rent has been paid to date, albeit late so far as the last September quarter was concerned. It is accepted on behalf of the administrators that interest in respect of that late payment will be paid. The real issue therefore is a future one, but the problem is a pressing one because the commercial needs of the applicant, which is the landlord of the premises in question, require an immediate decision. Moreover, the administrators wish to know where they stand, since that may inform their future conduct of the administration. I would ideally have wished to take more time to prepare this judgment, but the parties expressed a preference for speed of decision rather than perfection of language. I have nevertheless reached a clear view and have, in approving the transcript, taken the opportunity of refining my reasoning.
[2] Although the administrators are using part of the premises in respect of both of the demises in question, they are using only part and |page:26| it is a relatively small part. There are, in addition, subtenants in respect of other parts. With regard to those subtenants, notices have been served under section 6 of the Law of Distress Amendment Act 1908, having the effect of transferring the company’s right to receive rent to the landlord. As it happens, some rents are still coming in to the administrators, as I understand the position, but they are passing those over to the landlord. In those circumstances, it cannot be said that the company in administration is, in any realistic sense, in receipt of rents and profits, so that possession of the premises in that sense can be ignored. What I am concerned with is the relative minor use that the administrators are making of the properties in question.
[3] Mr Stephen Jourdan QC, for the applicant landlord, submitted that, on established authority, once the administrators decide, as they have done, to continue to use any part of the properties for the beneficial outcome of the administration, they are liable to pay the rent as it falls due in full as an administration expense. He said that this follows nowadays from the insolvency rules that were adopted following the enactment of the Enterprise Act 2002, and that the previous decision of Blackburne J in Spring Valley Properties Ltd v Harris [2001] BCC 796 should not be followed in respect of this administration, which is governed by the Insolvency Rules 1986 as now amended. He prayed in aid the more recent decision of David Richards J in Exeter City Council v Bairstow [2007] EWHC 400 (Ch); [2007] 4 All ER 437; [2007] 2 BCLC 455; [2007] BCC 236. In that case, David Richards J, after a careful analysis both of the rules and of the previous decision of the House of Lords in In Re Toshoku Finance UK plc (in liquidation) [2002] UKHL 6; [2002] 1 WLR 671 (which related to a company in liquidation), held that the expenses regime set out in the rules is mandatory in the case of administrations as well as liquidations. David Richards J was struck in my judgment, rightly so by the closeness of the wording between what is now r 2.67 (applicable to administrations) with the wording in r 4.218, considered by the House of Lords in Toshoku. He held, in accordance with his ruling, that rates in an administration are payable as an administration expense. He also expressed the view that that was so in respect of unoccupied as well as occupied property, although that is no longer so as a result of subsequent delegated legislation that came into effect on 1 April 2008. The House of Lords in Toshoku held that corporation tax was payable in a liquidation as a liquidation expense, since it was made necessary by statutory enactment, notwithstanding that the income that was taxed was only deemed income and not income in fact received by the company in liquidation.
[4] I agree with Mr Jourdan’s submission that the matter is now to be considered exclusively by reference to the rules and that if the rental liability falls within the rules, that is payable as a matter of mandatory obligation not as a matter of discretion, either on the part of the administrators or on the part of the court.
[5] Toshoku, although a case on corporation tax, considered what is referred to sometimes as the salvage principle, sometimes as the Lundy Granite principle and sometimes as the liquidation expenses principle. The main speech in the House of Lords was given by Lord Hoffmann, all other four law lords agreeing, although in Lord Hobhouse’s case with uncharacteristic diffidence. Lord Hoffmann, in a masterly analysis of the previous law, traced the history of the Lundy Granite principle: so named after Re Lundy Granite Co, ex parte Heavan (1871) LR 6 Ch App 462. Under that principle, liquidators are held liable to pay rent as a liquidation expense where the liquidators make use of or retain, for the benefit of the liquidation, possession of leasehold premises. Express reference was made and approval given to the judgment of Lindley LJ (a judge of at least as great eminence in this field as Lord Hoffmann) in Re Oak Pits Colliery Co (1882) 21 Ch D 322. In [26] of his speech, Lord Hoffmann referred to the following citation of Lindley LJ, at p330:
When the liquidator retains the property for the purpose of advantageously disposing of it, or when he continues to use it, the rent of it ought to be regarded as a debt contracted for the purpose of winding up the company, and ought to be paid in full like any other debt or expense properly incurred by the liquidator for the same purpose
[6] Lord Hoffmann continued in [27]:
My Lords, it is important to notice Lindley LJ was not saying that the liability to pay rent had been incurred as an expense of the winding up. It plainly had not. The liability had been incurred by the company before the winding up for the whole term of the lease. Lindley LJ was saying that it would be just and equitable, in the circumstances to which he refers, to treat the rent liability as if it were an expense of the winding up and to accord it the same priority.
[7] That principle (if it applies in administrations at all) plainly applies to the present case and has effectively been acknowledged as applicable by the payment of rent hitherto. As Lord Hoffmann went on to explain, although the rule emerged historically in the context of the exercise of a discretion (whether or not to allow forfeiture proceedings to be brought or distress to be levied), it has evolved into a principle that, as he put it in [38], “does not involve an exercise of discretion any more than the application of any other legal principle to the particular facts of the case”. He held that the rules and in that case he was concerned with r 4.218 applicable to liquidations were to be construed to include debts that, under the Lundy Granite principle, were deemed to be expenses of the liquidation, and concluded that, ordinarily, this meant that debts, such as rent under a lease, would be treated as coming within para (a) of r 4.218(1), but that the principle might possibly enlarge the scope of other paragraphs as well.
[8] Paragraph (a), as it then stood, referred to “expenses properly chargeable or incurred by the official receiver or the liquidator in preserving, realising or getting in any of the assets of the company”. In a liquidation, therefore, on the authority of Lord Hoffmann and the remainder of the House of Lords, rent, where the Lundy Granite principle applies, will ordinarily fall within (a) and will be payable mandatorily.
[9] So far as administration is concerned, the relevant rule, as I have said, is r 2.67(1). Two subparagraphs have been highlighted before me, (a) and (f). Rule 2.67(1) contains a list of expenses payable in the following order of priority: (a) refers to “expenses properly incurred by the administrator in performing his functions in the administration of the company”; (f) refers to “any necessary disbursements by the administrator in the course of the administration (including any expenses incurred by members of the creditors’ committee or their representatives and allowed for by the administrator under r 2.63, but not including any payment of corporation tax in circumstances referred to [in a later subparagraph that I need not consider]”. Given the closeness of the opening words of r 4.218(1)(a) as it stood at the time of Toshoku (and, indeed, as the rule now stands, although the relevant part is now para 4.218(3)(a)(ii) and a number of other words have been added) to the opening words of r 2.67(1)(a), my inclination would be to regard rent as falling within r 2.67(1)(a). It seems to me that that subparagraph, were the matter free from authority, would be apt to refer to all the expenses incurred by the administrator in performing his functions in the administration of the company, making no distinction for this purpose between expenses incurred on his own account, for which he was entitled to be reimbursed, and expenses incurred on behalf of the company.
[10] None the less, that construction did not find favour with David Richards J in Exeter. He relied on the closeness of wording between section 19(4) of the Insolvency Act 1986 (the 1986 Act) and the wording of r 2.67(1)(a). The House of Lords previously, in Centre Reinsurance International Co v Freakley [2006] UKHL 45; [2006] 1 WLR 2863, had ruled that section 19(4) applied only to liabilities incurred personally. Section 19 seems to me to be different, however, since the contrast (in cases where that section still applies) is made between “remuneration and expenses” (to which section 19(4) applies) that are due to the administrator, and “sums payable in respect of debts or liabilities incurred” (to which section 19(5) applies) that are due to outside creditors, and are expressly given priority over sums payable to the administrator under section 19(4), as are sums payable under adopted contracts of employment where section 19(6) applies. There is no similar contrast in r 4.218 or r 2.67. Moreover, as Blackburne J observed in Salmet, section 19(4) is concerned merely with the ranking |page:27| of remuneration and expenses (as a class) as against the claims of floating charge holders.
[11] It is, however, not necessary for me to reach a final view on the point because if the rent does not fall within (a), it falls, in my judgment, within (f) the disbursement is a necessary one because the application of the Lundy Granite principle requires rent to be paid. It is clear from other provisions of the 1986 Act that the administrator has the power to make payments whether or not they are necessary in any ordinary sense of that word. They may, for example, be merely “incidental” to the performance of his functions within para 13 of Schedule 1, without being “necessary” (both words being used in that paragraph), and his powers under para 59(1) of Schedule B1 enable him to do (and therefore to incur liability in respect of) anything “necessary or expedient” for the management of the affairs, business and property of the company. It would be surprising if necessary expenses had a measure of priority, but liabilities incurred merely incidentally or through expediency had no priority whatsoever. That suggests either that (a) should be construed more broadly or “necessary” given an extended meaning, or both.
[12] In construing what is “necessary”, I was referred to the decision of Briggs J in the recent Re Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (in administration) decision [2009] EWHC 2545 (Ch), where Briggs J (although his remarks on this point were clearly obiter) considered that necessity extended to a payment that ought to be made in fairness and justice to in that case a counterparty that, because of administration, had been or would be prejudiced by Lehman Brothers’ retention of securities beyond the date on which they should have been redelivered. He also confirmed that necessity was not confined to a situation in which there had been a specific threat for redelivery. I agree with that observation, which was not, in my judgment, confined to the facts of that particular case. In the present case, there has been no threat by the applicant landlord to bring forfeiture proceedings, although Mr Jourdan said that he would seek permission to do so if that were thought to be necessary. In my judgment, it is not, and the application of the Lundy Granite principle does not require it.
[13] In those circumstances, whatever the precise extent of the meaning of the word “necessary”, it is plainly apt, in my judgment, to extend to a case where the Lundy Granite principle applies. Briggs J, in [98], considered the Lundy Granite principle to apply to administrations. The difficulty in its application to the obiter part of his judgment was that the securities had not been used for the purpose of the administration within the strict confines of the Lundy Granite principle: see [109]. That is not a difficulty facing me.
[14] Mr William Trower QC, for the administrators, said that a disbursement can be regarded as necessary only if the administrators choose to make it or if the court, founding itself on some proper jurisdictional basis, orders it. He said that the court had no jurisdictional basis in the present case for ordering the payment of rent, there being no unfair harm that would trigger the court’s jurisdiction under para 74 of Schedule B1, or no other good and compelling reason for the court to give directions to that effect to the administrators under paras 63 or 68(2) of Schedule B1.
[15] Mr Trower also said that there is a major distinction between r 4.218, as it applies to liquidations, and r 2.67(1), as it applies to administrations, because of the absence in r 2.67(1)(a) of the word “chargeable”, which, he said, meant chargeable to the estate. For my part, I would naturally read “chargeable” in r 4.218(3)(a)(ii) as chargeable by the liquidators in preserving etc, as the rule goes on to say. I do not consider the absence of that word in r 2.67(1)(a) to have any significance in the present context.
[16] I do not accept the reasons that Mr Trower has advanced for not regarding rent as an administration expense in the present case. The Lundy Granite principle seems, in my judgment, clearly to apply, and the court’s jurisdiction to order payment derives from the relevant rules that, properly construed in accordance with the Lundy Granite principle, compel payment. Any failure on the part of the administrators to recognise this unfairly harms the applicant landlord, and there can be no doubting the appropriateness of the court directing the administrators to act in accordance with the mandatory requirements of the rules, properly construed.
[17] I am urged also to construe the rules in accordance with the underlying importance, which I do not dispute for one moment, of the rescue culture on which the 1986 Act is based. Mr Jourdan, however, pointed out that in a number of the older cases in which the Lundy Granite principle was developed, liquidators were in fact carrying on business for the purpose of the winding-up in an endeavour to sell the business as a going concern, which is what administrators now do, certainly in the early stages, very often. That did not prevent the Lundy Granite principle from emerging and is no reason, in my judgment, for excluding it in the present case. Since, moreover, administrators now have the power (with the permission of the court) to make distributions to unsecured creditors under para 65(3) of Schedule B1, administrations may come to resemble liquidations, and it would be surprising were the Lundy Granite principle to apply to the one and not the other.
[18] Mr Trower did not of course say that the administrators should be entitled to occupy or use the premises for nothing. What he said is that payments should be tailored to the use that they are making. Mr Jourdan answered that by reference to Powdrill v Watson [1995] 2 AC 394 and the cases therein referred to. At p450E, Lord Browne-Wilkinson said this in the context of contracts of employment adopted by an administrator and section 19(5) of the 1986 Act, as it then stood:
Although the authorities show that debts incurred before the liquidation do not obtain priority, they indicate that even on the salvage principle all liabilities under a contract incurred after the time of adoption of the contract by a liquidator are entitled to priority.
[19] He then cited Re S Davis & Co [1945] Ch 402, a case on bailment, and Re Levi & Co Ltd [1919] 1 Ch 416, a landlord and tenant case in which the liquidator that retained a lease for the benefit of the liquidation was held liable to pay as a liquidation expense a dilapidations claim under a covenant to deliver up the premises in good repair at the end of the term. He continued, at p450a:
The salvage principle in liquidation indicates that if a liquidator adopts a contract for the purpose of the more beneficial conduct of a liquidation all such liabilities under such contract after the date of adoption are entitled to priority. This principle is therefore of no assistance in seeking to limit the administrator’s liability in this case.
[20] In my judgment, that principle applies here so that, as the rent falling due on the next quarter day is a payment in advance, it is not subject to the Apportionment Act 1870 (see Ellis v Rowbotham [1900] 1 QB 740) from which it follows, as Mr Jourdan submitted and I accept, that the quarter’s rent becomes payable in full from that date as one of the costs and expenses of the administration and would not fall to be apportioned should the administrators vacate the premises during that quarter. It follows also from this that the earlier decision of Shackell & Co v Chorlton & Sons [1985] 1 Ch 378 in the other direction is no longer good law, notwithstanding its application in Re ABC Coupler & Engineering Co (No 3) [1970] 1 WLR 702, where the point was conceded. The fuller citation of authority in Levi, and its approval in Powdrill, establishes that a liquidator electing to hold leasehold premises can do so only on the terms and conditions contained in the lease, and that any liability incurred while the lease is being enjoyed or retained for the benefit of the liquidation is payable in full as a liquidation expense. The same principle in my judgment applies in an administration. As Lord Hoffmann recognised in Toshoku, in [28], the liability to pay rent is not treated as an expense having priority until (and lasts only so long as) the office holder makes use of or decides to retain the property. Subject to that, any such liability accruing during that period is, in my judgment, to be treated as an expense having the requisite priority.
[21] I mention also that in Re Linda Marie Ltd (in liquidation) (1988) 4 BCC 463 rent was accepted to be a necessary disbursement of the liquidator. Since, however, the case proceeded on a concession, it was not a matter of decision and so it remains open to me to |page:28| decide the point. I do decide it in the applicant’s favour and in so far, therefore, as the rent does not fall within r 2.67(1)(a), it does fall within (f). I should mention that Warner J in Linda Marie did not consider that the rent was correctly described as having been incurred in preserving the underlease. It seems to me that that observation is difficult now to square with the observations of the House of Lords in Toshoku, which held that rent will ordinarily fall within para (a) of what was then para 4.218(1).
[22] I should also make reference to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Sunberry Properties Ltd v Innovate Logistics Ltd (in administration) [2008] EWCA Civ 1321; [2009] 1 BCLC 145; [2009] BCC 164. In that case, the Court of Appeal refused permission, after balancing the interests of the applicant landlord against the interests of the administrators, to bring proceedings requiring the administrators to terminate an occupational licence for six months granted by them to a third party in breach of covenants in a lease with a remaining unexpired term of 20 years. That was the main point in the appeal. Under the heading “Consequential matters” starting in [55] and going through to [60], Mummery LJ, after recording that it was accepted that the landlord had no automatic right to be paid the contractual amount during the occupation of the company in administration, limited the amount that the administrators should pay to the sums passing under the licence from the third party. What passed under the licence was a monthly payment equivalent to the rent payable under the lease, whereas under the lease rent was payable quarterly in advance. The Court of Appeal also held that the administrators should pay interest on the passing rent, not at the contractual rate but only to the extent of interest actually received by them.
[23] As a decision of the Court of Appeal, that case might be said to require me to exercise a discretion to consider how much it would be fair for the administrators to pay in this case. If I were required to carry out that exercise, I would conclude that, on the particular facts of this case, it was fair for the administrators to pay the whole of the rent falling due in December because the only evidence of anyone qualified to express an opinion on the matter is that of the applicant’s chartered surveyor, demonstrating that there is no realistic possibility of maximising the return from the property so long as the administrators are using part, as issues of data security intrude, and the prospect of redevelopment is adversely affected. The administrators do not contend that the rent payable by them should be calculated at a rate other than that provided for in the leases. Nor do they pray in aid (as was the case in Sunberry) an inability to pay. Their point is that they should pay only a proportionate amount of the rent attributable to the floorspace that they occupy, and the applicant landlord is free to have the rest. However, as I have said, that is not, on the evidence, a realistic proposal, or fair to the applicant landlord.
[24] Despite the clear indication of the Court of Appeal in Sunberry that the issue of what the administrators should pay should be approached flexibly, that approach was adopted, as I have said, as a result of a concession, and it was accepted on both sides before me that the decision of the Court of Appeal did not strictly bind me to adopt a similar approach. It is not difficult to see why the matter proceeded by way of concession. On the first part of the case, the landlord had argued (see [46] of the judgment) that because it did not have an automatic right to the rent, the balancing exercise should be resolved in its favour by allowing it to bring the proposed proceedings. Consistently with that, the landlord could hardly turn round and say the opposite when considering the terms on which the administrators should be allowed to leave the licence in place. Nor was it in the interests of the administrators to argue that.
[25] The Court of Appeal in Sunberry did not consider Toshoku, the Lundy Granite line of cases or Powdrill. Had it done so, it would have needed to address the application of the salvage principle and the rejection in Toshoku of the approach of Nicholls LJ in Re Atlantic Computers Systems plc [1992] Ch 505, as subsequently applied by him in Powdrill & Lyle (joint liquidators of Kentish Homes Ltd) v Tower Hamlets London Borough Council [1993] BCLC 1375. In Powdrill & Lyle, Nicholls V-C (as he had by then become) considered the issue of whether a post-liquidation liability to community charge on empty flats in the possession not of the liquidator but of an administrative receiver was an expense of the liquidation. He held that it was not, but would rank as such only if the court, as a matter of discretion, directed the liquidators to discharge the obligation out of the assets in their hands. The House of Lords, in agreement in this respect with the Court of Appeal in Toshoku, concluded that this case was wrongly decided because the community charge was clearly a post-liquidation liability of the company, and the Lundy Granite principle was irrelevant to such liabilities.
[26] The House of Lords in Toshoku also disapproved of the proposition that the Lundy Granite principle conferred a discretion, Lord Hoffmann observing, at p682, in [39]:
There is of course no question that section 130(2) of the 1986 Act (the lineal descendant of section 87 of the 1862 Act upon which the Lundy Granite Co principle was originally constructed) confers a statutory discretion. But the discretion is as to the remedy which the creditor should be allowed to exercise; whether he should be able to bring proceedings, levy distress or execution or should have to wait for the distribution of the assets in due course of liquidation. The fact that a debt counts as an expense of the liquidation does not necessarily mean that the creditor should be allowed immediately to bring proceedings or levy execution. The order of priorities under rule 4.218(1) may mean that if he is paid at once, the assets to satisfy prior expense claims may be insufficient. So the question of remedy is entirely a matter of discretion. But the discretion does not determine whether a claim is a liquidation expense or not. It is rather the other way round; the claim must be a liquidation expense before the court can have any discretion to grant a remedy which will enable the creditor to obtain payment in priority to other claims.
[27] In other words, the court might have a discretion as to whether to allow forfeiture proceedings to be brought or to allow distress to issue, but there is no discretion to declare something to be or not to be a liquidation expense. The same principle applies, in my judgment, to administrations.
[28] There is one other point. The treatment of rent as a liquidation or administration expense under the Lundy Granite principle is not necessarily determinative of the point of time at which the rent should be paid. As Lord Hoffmann recognised in Toshoku in the passage that I have just cited, if the sufficiency of the realisable assets is in doubt, the landlord may have to wait and see to what extent the assets will be sufficient to satisfy its claim, even though properly treated as a liquidation or administration expense, since there may be other claims also having priority. There is in that sense no right to immediate payment, although the right for the accruing rent to be treated as an expense having appropriate priority where the liquidator or administrator is making use of the property still remains. None of that is relevant here because the assets are acknowledged to be sufficient to meet the claim of the applicant landlord for rent to be treated as an administration expense, whether under r 2.67(1)(a) or (f), and the administrators are paying administration expenses as they go along, recognising correctly, as is commonly the case, that they have no justification for acting otherwise.
[29] For all those reasons, the application succeeds in respect of the December rent because it is common ground that the premises, even if the administrators now decide to give them up, will not then be vacant, and rent will continue to be payable as an administration expense quarterly in advance under the terms of the two leases so long as the administrators retain or use any part of the premises demised under each such lease for the benefit of the administration. If, of course, they vacate the property demised under one of the leases entirely, the rental liability under that lease, but not under the other, will cease to be payable as an administration expense. If they also vacate the other demised property, the rental liabilities under both leases will cease to be payable as administration expenses.
Application allowed.