Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly
“ROMALPA” CLAUSES: FURTHER DEVELOPMENTS
By I. R. Davies*
A feature of English insolvency law is the low ranking of unsecured creditors on the liquidation of their debtors.1 In an attempt to circumvent this problem, trade creditors have sought greater security, and absolute title financing is an aspect of this trend.2 Commercial instruments providing for this are different from security instruments simpliciter, as the latter involve the grant or transfer by the debtor of a “security interest” such as a pledge, mortgage, lien or charge which may require registration under s. 95 of the Companies Act 1948. Absolute title financing, on the other hand, envisages either a retention of title or the transfer of absolute property to the creditor as distinct from the grant of a jus in re aliena.
Over the last 10 years there has been a series of reported decisions, beginning with Aluminium Industrie Vaassen N.V. v. Romalpa Aluminium Ltd.,3 which considered a “proprietary solution” to credit and security problems involving retention of title clauses, the intent of which was to ensure a proprietary claim enforceable against the assets of the buyer/debtor on insolvency. These cases were considered in an earlier article.4 The efficacy or otherwise of such clauses have been the source of great debate and the discovery of a valid form elusive. Indeed, this area of law was described by Staughton, J., in Hendy Lennox (Industrial Engines) Ltd. v. Grahame Puttick Ltd.,5 the most recent case in point, as being a “maze if not a minefield”. It may be that the case-law dealing with retention of title clauses is symptomatic of 20th century developments in commercial law generally, which have been characterized by Professor Goode6 as being:
“… a constant battle between opposing policies, action being followed by reaction, innovation by consolidation, departure from precedent by return to precedent. Twentieth century jurisprudence has enriched commercial law; whether it has made it more rational is another matter”.
In the light of this observation it is appropriate to consider two further recent decisions dealing with retention of title clauses: Clough Mill Ltd. v. Martin,7 which prima facie appears to have left little of the Romalpa principles still subsisting; and Hendy Lennox (Industrial Engines) Ltd. v. Grahame Puttick Ltd.8
* University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (UWIST).
1 See generally the Report of the Review Committee of Insolvency Law and Practice (1982) Cmnd. 8558 commonly referred to as “the Cork Report”, after the committee’s chairman, Sir Kenneth Cork.
2 Thus deficiencies in the floating charge have meant that debenture holders increasingly come to rely upon the skill of the contract draughtsmen in formulating automatic crystallization and negative pledge clauses in an attempt to improve the security generally envisaged by the Companies Act 1948.
3 [1976] 1 W.L.R. 676. The Romalpa line of cases include: Re Bond Worth [1980] Ch. 228; Borden. v. Scottish Timber Products Ltd. [1981] Ch. 25; Re Peachdart Ltd. [1983] 3 W.L.R. 878.
4 [1984] 1 LMCLQ 49.
5 [1984] 1 W.L.R. 485.
6 (1983) 3 Legal Studies 283.
7 [1984] All E.R. 721.
8 Supra, fn. 5.
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