Court bans mobility equipment boss for 6 years

5 Feb 2019 11:02 AM

Boss of a mobility equipment company has been banned by the courts after continuing to accept payments despite knowing the business was insolvent.

Incorporated in October 2013, Churchills Homecare supplied and installed mobility equipment in domestic properties.

Trading from offices in Macclesfield, Craig James Paterson (53), from Alderley Edge, Cheshire, was appointed the Managing Director in October 2013. He was later joined by Belinda Johanne Rogers (52), also from Alderley Edge, after she was appointed a director of the company in October 2014.

However, Churchills Homecare began to incur losses as a result of higher costs in the business and by December 2015, the company had ceased trading before entering into Creditor’s Voluntary Liquidation in the same month.

Independent liquidators were appointed to wind-up the company before reporting to the Insolvency Service that Churchills Homecare had continued to accept advanced payments from customers after the point it was in trouble.

After further enquiries, investigators found that between 4 and 23 December 2015, the time when Churchills Homecare stopped trading before entering into liquidation, Craig Paterson secured close to £66,000 from 13 new customers even though he ought to have known that the company was insolvent.

At the same time, Craig Paterson caused the company to repay a loan worth £125,000 that he had previously made to the company.

The repayment of the loan back to Craig Paterson was part funded by the £66,000 secured from the new customers that had no reasonable likelihood of receiving the goods and services they paid for.

On 9 January 2019 in the High Court in Manchester, HHJ Hodge QC made a Disqualification Order against Craig Paterson for a period of 6 years on the grounds that he accepted payments during a time he ought to have known the company was insolvent and caused Churchills Homecare to repay a loan back to him, funded through customers’ advance payments.

Effective from 30 January 2019, Craig Paterson is banned from directly or indirectly becoming involved, without the permission of the court, in the promotion, formation or management of a company.

And Belinda Rogers previously provided a disqualification undertaking to the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy on 11 May 2018 after she did not dispute that she had failed in her duties as a director to prevent Craig Paterson accepting customers’ payments in a time when he would have known the company was insolvent.

Belinda Rogers’ ban lasts for two years and was effective from 1 June 2018.

Rob Clarke, Chief Investigator for the Insolvency Service, said:

Directors who favour themselves over the interests of their creditors when their company is in financial difficulty, as well as removing company funds for their own personal benefit leaving customers high and dry, are in clear breach of their directorship responsibilities.

This ban should serve as a warning to other directors tempted to help themselves before others that we have the necessary powers to investigate what has happened and seek to stop you from running a company for a significant amount of time.

Notes to editors

Mr Paterson resides in Alderley Edge, Cheshire, and his date of birth is August 1965.

Ms Rogers resides in Alderley Edge, Cheshire, and her date of birth is June 1966.

Churchills Homecare Limited (Company Reg no. 08716791).

A Disqualification Order or a Disqualification Undertaking has the effect that without specific permission of a Court, a person with a disqualification cannot:

Disqualification Undertakings are the administrative equivalent of Disqualification Orders but do not involve court proceedings.

Persons subject to a disqualification are bound by a range of other restrictions.

The Insolvency Service administers the insolvency regime, investigating all compulsory liquidations and individual insolvencies (bankruptcies) through the Official Receiver to establish why they became insolvent. It may also use powers under the Companies Act 1985 to conduct confidential fact-finding investigations into the activities of live limited companies in the UK. In addition, the agency deals with disqualification of directors in corporate failures, assesses and pays statutory entitlement to redundancy payments when an employer cannot or will not pay employees, provides banking and investment services for bankruptcy and liquidation estate funds and advises ministers and other government departments on insolvency law and practice.

Further information about the work of the Insolvency Service, and how to complain about financial misconduct, is available.