BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Deutsche Trustee Company Ltd v Duchess VI CLO B.V. & Ors [2019] EWHC 778 (Ch) (28 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/778.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 778 (Ch), [2019] 2 All ER (Comm) 530 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
FINANCIAL LIST
The Royal Courts of Justice 7 Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
DEUTSCHE TRUSTEE COMPANY LIMITED | Claimant | |
and | ||
DUCHESS VI CLO B.V. | ||
BARINGS (U.K.) LIMITED | ||
NAPIER PARK EUROPEAN CREDIT OPPORTUNITIES FUND LIMITED | Defendants |
____________________
The first Defendant did not appear, but agreed to be bound by the final decision of the court
Mr Jeremy Goldring QC (instructed by Dentons UK and Middle East LLP) appeared for the second Defendant
Mr David Wolfson QC and Mr Andrew de Mestre QC (instructed by Collyer Bristow LLP) appeared for the third Defendant
Hearing dates: 12-13th March 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Geoffrey Vos, the Chancellor of the High Court:
Introduction
i) Issue A: Is the Collateral Manager entitled to an ICMF under clause 14.1 of the Collateral Management Agreement (the "CMA") when an option to redeem the Class F Notes under Condition 7(b)(i)(A) is exercised?ii) Issue B: If so, is the ICMF limited to that which is "accrued and unpaid" immediately prior to the Redemption Date?
iii) Issue C: If so, in determining whether the Class F Secured Income Threshold (the "SIT") has been reached, should any principal payable to the Class F Noteholders on the Redemption Date be excluded from the calculation?
iv) Issue D: If so, should the amounts constituting the Cumulative Subordinated Income ("CSI") in respect of the ICMF include the priority of payments set out in Condition 11(b) (even though that is not referred to in the definition of CSI), and deduct the amounts payable under Condition 11(b)(A)-(T) from the amounts distributed?
v) Issue E: If the ICMF payable in respect of the Redemption Date is limited by reference to the amounts distributed earlier to the Class F Noteholders, should an ICMF be calculated when further distributions are made to take into account distributions to the Class F Noteholders made in respect of the Redemption Date?
"14.1 Fees
The Collateral Manager shall be paid the following amounts on each Payment Date, subject to Condition 4(d) (Limited Recourse) of the Conditions and in accordance with the Priorities of Payment:
(a) … the portion of the Base Collateral Management Fee which is payable on such Payment Date …; and
(b) the Incentive Collateral Management Fee [ICMF]".
"lncentive Collateral Management Fee means the fee payable to the Collateral Manager on each Payment Date in accordance with paragraph (II) of Condition 3(c)(i) (Application of Interest Proceeds on Payment Dates) and paragraph (BB) of Condition 3(c)(ii) (Application of Principal Proceeds on Payment Dates) and pursuant to the Collateral Management Agreement, which in total is equal to 20 per cent. of the Cumulative Subordinated Income in excess of the principal amount of the Class F Secured Income Notes issued on the Closing Date provided that (after taking account of the interest to be paid to the Class F Secured Income Noteholders on that Payment Date) the Class F Secured Income Threshold shall have been reached".
i) As regards the language, Clause 14.1 simply engages the ICMF definition. The ICMF definition defines an ICMF as the "fee payable on each Payment Date in accordance with [the Condition 3 waterfalls]". It does not mention any fee payable where the Condition 11 waterfall applies. That is reinforced by the definition of CSI, which is also referred to in the ICMF definition. The CSI is the aggregate cumulative interest and principal proceeds available for the Class F Notes after taking account of all sums due to the holders of the senior Notes (the "senior Noteholders"). It cannot apply to a Condition 11 distribution, because, if it did, there would be no equivalent deduction of the sums due to the senior Noteholders and others (which are set out in Condition 11(b)(A)-(T)). The CSI would accordingly be calculated on all distributions including those to senior Noteholders. The references to "accrued and unpaid [ICMF]" in the waterfalls do not tell you when it was accrued. It cannot accrue under the Condition 11 waterfall because of the ICMF definition, which refers only to the Condition 3 waterfalls.ii) An Optional Redemption under Condition 7 cannot work if ICMF is paid out under the Condition 11 waterfall for two reasons. First, Condition 7(b)(ii) requires the Collateral Administrator to calculate the "Redemption Threshold Amount" 14 days before the Redemption Date, because there can be no Optional Redemption unless 5 days before the scheduled Redemption Date, the Collateral Manager has provided the Trustee with evidence that it has a binding agreement with a rated financial institution to sell Collateral Debt Securities in sufficient amounts to raise that Redemption Threshold Amount in cash. In other words, there must be cash available at the Redemption Date to pay off the senior Noteholders and the ICMF, if the Class F Noteholders are to be allowed their Optional Redemption. Napier's point is not only that there is no evidence that this was done in this case, but, more importantly, it could not have been done without calculating the ICMF before the Redemption Date which was not itself possible if a further amount of ICMF fell due on the Redemption Date. Secondly, Napier draws attention to the difference between the priorities in the Condition 3 waterfalls and the Condition 11 waterfall. The Condition 3 waterfalls pay interest up to the SIT to the Class F noteholders in priority to the ICMF, whilst the Condition 11 waterfall pays the Class F Noteholders nothing before payment of the ICMF. Here, the Collateral Manager says that an ICMF is due because the SIT is reached as a result of the payments of interest and principal due on redemption. The IRR was only at 7.54% before the Redemption Date, and exceeded 10% only when the redemption payments were taken into account. Since the Condition 11 waterfall pays the ICMF before the Class F Noteholders get anything, the SIT cannot be reached when the ICMF is calculated and paid under Condition 11(b)(U). These points demonstrate, according to Napier, that it was always intended that there should be no new ICMF payable on the running of the Condition 11 waterfall.
iii) Finally, Napier submits that the whole commercial substratum of the Transaction was for the Class F Noteholders to make a risky investment and to recover an ongoing IRR greater than 10%. Had the financial crisis not occurred, that is what would probably have happened, and ICMF would have been payable every Payment Date from the 5th year (or thereabouts) of the Transaction when the CSI would have exceeded the Class F principal amount. It was only because of the financial crisis and the consequent need to use income to pay the senior Noteholders for some years that the SIT was not reached before the Optional Redemption occurred. It was never intended that ICMF would be paid on Enforcement or Optional Redemption. The ICMF was an ongoing incentive payment intended to reflect the achievement of the performance target of an IRR exceeding 10% over the life of the Class F Notes.
Factual background
The relevant evidence
"The [ICMF] is a share of the profit made by the [collateralised loan obligation] after making payments due on the "debt" notes and only payable to the collateral manager after a defined level of profit in the transaction has been obtained by the "equity" notes. The [ICMF] incentivises the collateral manager to manage the portfolio so that it optimises returns on the portfolio for the benefit of the subordinated or "equity" notes".
"11. … the Class F Notes are the riskiest of the various Notes and effectively form the equity tranche of the debt issued by the [Issuer]. The F Notes reflect an approximately 10x leveraged position on a portfolio of loans each of which was rated as below investment grade. The expectation in the market (which [Napier] shared) when the [Issuer] issued the Notes was that, because of the structure of the Transaction and the nature of the assets to be included within the [Issuer's] portfolio, the Class F Noteholders would receive the majority of the funds payable to them by way of interest over the life of the Transaction rather than by way of principal repayment when the Notes were redeemed. Indeed, it was expected that the 10% IRR threshold for the Class F Noteholders would be reached earlier in the life of the deal through payments made in the quarterly application of the interest proceeds waterfall.
12. In fact, in this case, the 10% IRR threshold was not reached through the regular quarterly payments and, by the time the Class F Noteholders exercised their contractual right to call for the redemption of the Notes in January 2018, the IRR was only 7.58%. This equates to the Class F Noteholders being some €16 million short of the total sum received necessary to amount to an IRR of 10%.
13. The principal reason why the l0% IRR threshold was not reached during the life of the deal was that between February 2009 and February 2014 some or all of the amounts which would ordinarily have been paid to the Class F Noteholders was diverted to the repayment of principal of the Class A Notes or the purchase of additional portfolio securities. This happened because the deal failed various of the Coverage Tests contained in the [Conditions].
…
31. … the return to the Class F Noteholders was still well short of 10% after nearly 12 years of the Transaction when they chose to call for an early redemption – Mr Faulkner's complaint is really that the Class F Noteholders have a contractual right which they can exercise at a time when the Collateral Manager would prefer the deal to continue, because the Collateral Manager might be able to earn an [ICMF] if the deal continues but will not be able to earn that Fee if the deal is brought to an end. This right is however, an integral part of the [Conditions] and there are no restrictions on when the right can be exercised. Moreover, I do not understand it to be said that the Class F Noteholders are obliged to have regard to the interests of [the Collateral Manager] (as opposed to their own commercial interests) when exercising their right.
32. Further, it appears to me that a similar point might be made on [the Collateral manager's] interpretation under which the Class F Noteholders would be able to monitor their returns and call for an early redemption where, even taking into account the amount of principal that they would receive on that final date, no [ICMF] would be payable. This decision might be made at a time when the Collateral Manager was hoping for the deal to continue in order that the IRR obtained by the Class F Noteholders might exceed the 10% threshold. The fact that a decision made by the Class F Noteholders might mean that no [ICMF] is payable is the result of the [Conditions] providing for different results depending on whether the IRR threshold of 10% has been reached at particular points.
33. Equally, if the deal is performing well and the 10% IRR threshold is reached early (for example as was anticipated here), then the Class F Noteholder is very likely to be happy to allow the deal to run anticipating further returns even if an [ICMF] is also payable. This can be seen from [Exhibits MM1/2] which show what would have happened here if the excess interest income had not been diverted but had been paid to the Class F Noteholders and to [the Collateral Manager] as [an ICMF]. In this case, after an IRR of 10% is reached in August 2013, thereafter over the course of the regular quarterly distributions, the Class F Noteholders would have received further distributions totalling €36.6 million even after some €13 million had been paid by way of [ICMF] to the Collateral Manager".
"11. At paragraph 11 of his statement, Mr Micko suggests that the "expectation in the market (which Napier Park shared)" when the [Issuer] issued the Notes was that the [Class F Noteholders] would receive the majority of the funds payable to them by way of interest rather than by way of principal repayment on redemption.
12. I was not involved in the transaction at the issue date (nor indeed was [Napier]), and Mr Micko does not confirm the source of this statement. However, in my experience, at the outset of a transaction such as this one a range of different possibilities is contemplated by the transaction parties, one always being that a significant return to "equity" investors may be of principal. This is naturally dependent on the assets and their ultimate performance, as well as prevailing market conditions, which over the course of a long transaction can fluctuate significantly. In any event, the market expectation at the time of the transaction is unlikely to have factored in the global financial crisis that followed, and the effect that would have on asset performance and resulting cash flows".
The applicable law on interpretation of contracts
"15. When interpreting a written contract, the court is concerned to identify the intention of the parties by reference to "what a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would have been available to the parties would have understood them to be using the language in the contract to mean", to quote Lord Hoffmann [at paragraph 14 in Chartbrook Ltd v. Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] 1 AC 1101]. And it does so by focussing on the meaning of the relevant words … in their documentary, factual and commercial context. That meaning has to be assessed in the light of (i) the natural and ordinary meaning of the clause, (ii) any other relevant provisions of the lease, (iii) the overall purpose of the clause and the lease, (iv) the facts and circumstances known or assumed by the parties at the time that the document was executed, and (v) commercial common sense, but (vi) disregarding subjective evidence of any party's intentions.
19. The third point I should mention is that commercial common sense is not to be invoked retrospectively. The mere fact that a contractual arrangement, if interpreted according to its natural language, has worked out badly, or even disastrously, for one of the parties is not a reason for departing from the natural language. Commercial common sense is only relevant to the extent of how matters would or could have been perceived by the parties, or by reasonable people in the position of the parties, as at the date that the contract was made. …
20. Fourthly, while commercial common sense is a very important factor to take into account when interpreting a contract, a court should be very slow to reject the natural meaning of a provision as correct simply because it appears to be a very imprudent term for one of the parties to have agreed, even ignoring the benefit of wisdom of hindsight. The purpose of interpretation is to identify what the parties have agreed, not what the court thinks that they should have agreed. … Accordingly, when interpreting a contract a judge should avoid re-writing it in an attempt to assist an unwise party or to penalise an astute party.
Issue A, B and C
Issue D
Issue E
Conclusions
Issue A: Whether, on the proper construction of Clause 14.1 of the Collateral Management Agreement, the Collateral Manager is entitled to the Incentive Collateral Management Fee (as defined in Condition 1) in the event that the option to redeem the Notes under Condition 7(b)(i)(A) is exercised.
Issue B: If the Collateral Manager is entitled to the Incentive Collateral Management Fee upon exercise of the option under Condition 7(b)(i)(A) whether on the proper construction of Condition 11(b): (i) the Incentive Collateral Management Fee payable is to be calculated by reference to amounts to be distributed on the Redemption Date (as defined in Condition 1); or (ii) the Incentive Collateral Management Fee payable is limited to that which is accrued and unpaid immediately prior to the Redemption Date.
Issue C: If the Collateral Manager is entitled to the Incentive Collateral Management Fee upon exercise of the option under Condition 7(b)(i)(A) whether, on the proper construction of the relevant Conditions, the determination of whether the Class F Secured Income Threshold (as defined in Condition 1) has been reached excludes any principal payable to the Class F Secured Income Noteholders (as defined in Condition 1) on the Redemption Date.
Issue D: If the Collateral Manager is entitled to the Incentive Collateral Management Fee upon exercise of the option under Condition 7(b)(i)(A) whether the determination of the amounts constituting the Cumulative Subordinated Income (as defined in Condition 1) in respect of the Incentive Collateral Management Fee should be made: (i) including by reference to the priority of payments set out in Condition 11(b) notwithstanding the absence of an express reference to Condition 11(b) in the definition of Cumulative Subordinated Income; and (ii) assuming [Issue D(i)] above is answered in the affirmative, by deducting the amounts payable under Condition 11(b)(A)-(T) from the amounts to be distributed on the Redemption Date.
Issue E: If the Collateral Manager is entitled to the Incentive Collateral Management Fee upon exercise of the option under Condition 7(b)(i)(A), but the fee payable in respect of the Redemption Date is limited by reference to the amounts distributed to the Class F Secured Income Notes immediately prior to that date, is the calculation of the Incentive Collateral Management Fee on any subsequent date on which further distributions are made to take into account distributions to the Class F Secured Income Noteholders made in respect of the Redemption Date?
Note 1 There are also intermediate Class J Notes, which do not affect the dispute that I have to determine. [Back]