![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Rock (Nominees) Ltd. v RCO Holdings Ltd.& Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 118 (17 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/118.html Cite as: [2004] BCC 466, [2004] 1 BCLC 439, [2004] EWCA Civ 118 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION (Mr Justice Peter Smith)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
SIR SWINTON THOMAS
____________________
Rock (Nominees) Ltd |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
RCO Holdings Ltd (in members voluntary winding up) and Ors |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Andreas Gledhill (instructed by Messrs CMS Cameron McKenna) for the first-named respondent
Mr Alan Steinfeld QC and Miss Elizabeth Weaver (instructed by Messrs Travers Smith Braithwaite) for the remaining respondents
Hearing date : 29-1-2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
THE BACKGROUND FACTS
"Congratulations on RCO. As you know I've now given you a clear run. You needn't actually have paid up. We were also talking to the company but would not pay 280p – neither need you! But thanks for a small profit!! See you soon. Michael."
"…. The letter is somewhat surreal, because everybody knew what was happening and the board meeting that took place was a largely illusory affair having been attended apparently by Mr Cox and Mr Ahmed [two of the Respondent Directors] and lasted a matter of minutes. The minutes of the meeting approving things had already been prepared in advance by [Travers Smith Braithwaite] and I do not accept for one minute that any discussion of quorum nor in fact any discussion at all took place. The exercise was purely to rubber stamp the done deal."
THE RELEVANT STATUTORY PROVISIONS
"(1) A member of a company may apply to the court by petition for an order under this Part on the ground that the company's affairs are being or have been conducted in a manner which is unfairly prejudicial to the interests of its members generally or some part of its members (including at least himself) …."
"(1) If the court is satisfied that a petition under this Part is well founded, it may make such order as it thinks fit for giving relief in respect of the matters complained of.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (1), the court's order may –
….
(d) provide for the purchase of the shares of any members of the company by other members or by the company itself and, in the case of a purchase by the company itself, the reduction of the company's capital accordingly.
…."
THE PETITION
THE EVIDENCE BEFORE THE JUDGE
"It was nothing of the kind. It was a document which assessed possibilities which might accrue to ISS if the bid process was successful and 100 per cent of the shares acquired."
THE JUDGE'S JUDGMENT
"Mr Ahmed and Mr Cox were in a position of hopeless conflict, because wearing their garments as directors of [the Company] they had to exploit ISS who wanted the synergies. Wearing their garments as directors of ISS they wanted to pay as little as possible."
"[a]ll the evidence in the case demonstrated that ISS were not prepared to pay more than £2.80 per share to acquire [Rock's] minority interest …. because ISS believed that that price represented a fair price over and above the assets and thus by inference included a premium element representing the value of the synergies which could not otherwise be released."
"All the contemporary evidence therefore shows that £2.80 reflects a fair value for the shares and that figure includes a premium element for the synergies. I am asked by [Rock] to disregard that evidence as being irrelevant. I do not think it is irrelevant; it is valuable, useful, contemporary material to cross check any other evidence that is before the court."
"133. I have already observed that Mr Tolkien did not address the asset value question at all. Mr Potts QC then sought to rely upon the Respondents' evidence as a basis for the Petitioner's case.
134. His main reliance is on the February Report. He, in his submissions to me, repeated on a number of occasions that this was a valuation. It was nothing of the kind. It was a document which assessed possibilities that might accrue to ISS if the bid process was successful and 100% of the shares acquired. It was self evidently not a valuation. Its maker (Mr Olesen) did not have any access to the financial information of RCO. Any synergy realisations were prospective and speculative. Even then, it valued the shares at between 247 – 266 pence per share. ISS of course paid £2.80 when (principally) Lord Ashcroft intervened in May 2000 and secured for himself the small profit already referred to.
135. There is no question of ISS paying pound for pound for the synergies. That would have meant that the price to be paid reflecting those synergies would be £53,647,526.00 (fifty-three million, six hundred and forty-seven thousand, five hundred and twenty six pounds). Mr Potts QC's submissions are simply that that figure should be divided between the shareholders. ISS pay the bulk of it (and then have it returned of course) and the minority are paid out at the same rate. This ignores the fact that ISS plainly had paid a premium at £2.80. To require them to pay again requires in effect to pay twice over. It also requires them in effect, notionally to pay for the full value of the synergies. There is no realistic possibility of ISS ever agreeing to such an arrangement. As I have already observed, there were no other players in the market, and I do not see why ISS should be treated in such an unfair way.
136. I have already identified the other contemporary assessments to the value of RCO, which bear no relation to this figure. I cannot believe all the other people got it so wrong.
137. Finally, in this context, there is the report of the Respondents' expert, Mr Burton. I found him to be a credible witness. He was plainly (unlike Mr Tolkien) experienced in these kind of synergy purchases. His report came up with a value of the assets at £2.05 per share (including a value for synergies). This he arrived at, not (as he frankly admitted in his report) revaluing all the assets, but on starting with the synergy valuations and reconsidering those figures in the light of further matters that he discovered. I accept (although reluctantly as I have already said) that the true figure for annual synergies was £1.8 M. Starting with that figure he reduced the synergy valuations to take into account management charges which would be applied when the assets were brought within the umbrella of the ISS Group. These were, he accepted, not scientifically calculated costs. The reason for that is that he considered it an impossible exercise and one which companies operating in groups like this would not do so. He drew comfort (and this was not challenged) from the fact that where inter company management charges like this are levied, where the holding company is outside the UK, and not subject to UK corporation tax, the Inland Revenue checks the basis of the management charge to ensure that a proper level of tax is levied within the UK to reflect the true profits. I found this compelling.
138. Taking those into account, he reduced the values of the synergies to £420,000.00 per annum. Mr Potts QC attacked this vigorously in his closing submissions. He also challenged it in cross examination. However, Mr Burton withstood the cross examination and remained unshaken. I accept that a valuation of the assets or even the management charges would not have been a realistic possibility at this stage. I accept Mr Burton's evidence therefore. If there was some evidence countering it or if it was contradicted by other contemporary valuations (or even an expert report from the Petitioner) there might have been some basis for challenging it.
139. However, as I have said the contemporary values, valued the shares at £2.80 per share and the actual valuation that Lord Ashcroft put on it somewhat ironically was about the same figure £2.02. Mr Tolkien did not address the issue. The only matter which is out of line with all of these is the February Report. However, as I have said, this is not a valuation and I do not think that it is right to treat is as such, and say as Mr Potts QC did that the company has lost £30 million in value between February and November. It is not evidence of a sale at an undervalue in November 2000. There is no basis for me rejecting Mr Burton's independent expert opinion, which shows that £2.80 per share reflects a premium for the shares including any reasonable figure that could be extracted from ISS for its synergies."
"89. In the absence of an explanation (and none has been given beyond Mr Potts QC's submission that his evidence is not relevant, which I reject) Lord Ashcroft's absence is significant. I conclude from his absence that (1) he believed £2.80 is a very full price representing the value of the shares in Rock, (2) that he misled ISS and RCO in May 2000 as to his intentions, (3) that he deliberately acquired Rapid Reef shares on 28th June to block the squeeze out by ISS and (4) the reason why he did not talk and the reason why he acquired the shares was to force ISS into paying him a large unmeritorious amount of money to enable it to achieve its legitimate commercial expectations, when it spent the large amount of money it did in acquiring RCO's shareholding. To my mind this is unacceptable conduct. It is particularly galling that such conduct is then used as a platform to present a Section 459 Petition alleging that his interests as a minority shareholder have been unfairly prejudiced. As Peter Gibson LJ said in Re Ring Tower (no. 2) [1989] BCLC 427 at 437 A, the jurisdiction should be carefully controlled to prevent it from becoming an instrument of oppression. It is difficult to see how this Petition can be described as anything other than an instrument of oppression, designed to unlock for Lord Ashcroft monies, which bear no relation to the value of the shares and bear no relation to any commercial or legitimate interest he would have in the shares in RCO. Euphemistically this practice (which I understand is a not unheard of practice in the City) is described as "green mail". The proper word to my mind is blackmail. It is the kind of thing, which brings the City into disrepute, to my mind. The purpose of the City is to raise finance to enable companies to develop businesses for their own and the country's well being. Where matters are dealt with in speculation and profits are made, which are then gathered off shore, when there is no merit and no exposure to the kind of risks associated with companies, that to my mind is not legitimate.
90. These are the reasons why Lord Ashcroft will not present himself to this court for cross examination. He was not content with a small £250,000.00 (two hundred and fifty thousand pound) profit, earned in a matter of weeks. He now seeks to extract millions from the Respondents. He does not stop there however. I have no doubt that if the Petition was successful he would then seek to extract further millions through the Rapid Reef shareholding. All of this extraction is sought merely as a device to block the legitimate expectations of the overwhelming majority of the shareholders in the company and against the belief of all shareholders that £2.80 represented a good price for the shares, and his own belief that it represented such a fair price and against the backcloth of him giving a clearly misleading impression that he was out of the race and giving ISS a legitimate expectation that he was no longer opposed to them acquiring 100% shares in RCO."
ROCK'S GROUNDS OF APPEAL
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
CONCLUSIONS
RESULT
Sir Swinton Thomas:
Lord Justice Potter: