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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Edgeworth Capital (Luxembourg) S.A.R.L. & Anor v Maud [2020] EWHC 1469 (Ch) (08 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1469.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1469 (Ch), [2020] WLR(D) 335, [2021] Bus LR 1533 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF GLENN MAUD AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 (1) EDGEWORTH CAPITAL (LUXEMBOURG) S.A.R.L. (2) THE LIBYAN INVESTMENT AUTHORITY |
Petitioners |
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- and - |
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GLENN MAUD |
Debtor |
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Stephen Robins (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for The Libyan Investment Authority
Joseph Wigley (instructed by Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP) for Mr. Maud
Andrew Rose (instructed by Joseph Hage Aaronson LLP) for Navarro Ventures S.A.R.L.
Hearing date: 20 May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN :
The Judgment
"The price of the offered shares shall – unless all parties agree otherwise in joint consultation – be determined by one or more independent experts to be appointed by the offeror and the co-shareholders in joint consultation. If the offeror and the co-shareholders are unable to agree on this within fifteen days … the willing party shall request the local sub-district court at which the company has its corporate seat to appoint three independent experts to determine the price…"
"…it has not been suggested that the bankruptcy would damage the prospects of Mr Maud's other creditors. There is no reason to suppose Mr. Maud's Ramblas shares will be sold under the pre-emption provisions of the Ramblas articles of association at less than their proper price. Those monies will then be available for the general body of Mr. Maud's creditors."
Permission to appeal that judgment was subsequently refused by Gloster LJ.
The Interest Claim
"Thirdly, the Interest Claim is in any event simply a hard legal argument under Spanish law over the destination of a finite sum of money. As an independent office-holder, a trustee in bankruptcy can take an objective view of the claim on the basis of Spanish legal advice (cf. Ebbvale Limited v Hosking [2013] UKPC 1) and if it has any merit, can progress it and factor it into the sale price for Mr. Maud's shares in Ramblas pursuant to the pre-emption provisions in the articles, which if not agreed, is to be determined by three independent experts. As such, pursuit of the Interest Claim is quite unlike the suggestion that Mr. Maud should be allowed more time to "monetise his position of influence" as a shareholder of Ramblas in the more intangible manner which found favour with some of his creditors on previous occasions."
The draft grounds of appeal and/or review of my decision
"in light of the detailed evidence as to the nature, prospects and potential consequences of the Interest Claim, which is now before the Court and which the Court did not have the benefit of at the time of the 2019 hearing or at any time prior to the hand-down judgment".
"Had the Judge taken proper account of [the matters alleged in relation to the Interest Claim and the security held by Edgeworth over Mr. Maud's Ramblas shares] he would and should have concluded that, notwithstanding the fact that the distribution of monies from the insolvency of the Marme Group had been completed, the emergence since the 2019 Hearing of the Interest Claim, which while not yet addressed in evidence the Judge had been informed of in updating correspondence received from Mr Maud's solicitors, at least potentially supported Mr Maud's contention that Edgeworth had a further collateral purpose in pursuing its petition, namely to obtain Mr Maud's Ramblas shares for itself, whether by means of Mr Quinlan's pre-emption rights and the terms of the Deed of Sale or by asserting its security over them and outbidding any third party bidder…"[1]
(a) The law on abuse of process
i) whether a bankruptcy order was objectively likely to be of substantial advantage to the petitioner in its capacity as petitioning creditor; andii) if so, whether securing such advantage was at all times one of the petitioner's purposes.
The draft grounds of appeal contended that if the answer to either question is 'no', the court must conclude that the petitioner does not have a legitimate purpose at all times in presenting and proceeding with the petition.
"(1) a petitioner abuses "the process of the court in seeking a bankruptcy order or a winding-up order for a purpose which is contrary or alien to the nature of the class remedy that he is purporting to invoke" (para 115 of the Appeal Judgment);
(2) a petition will not be an abuse of process, however, if in addition to wishing to receive a dividend on his debt in the bankruptcy together with other creditors, the petitioner has a collateral purpose which is not shared with the other creditors but which will not cause them any detriment if achieved (see para 82 of the June 2018 Judgment);
(3) however, if a creditor has such a collateral purpose which would operate to the detriment of the class, he cannot save his petition by protesting that he would still wish to receive a dividend upon his debt in the bankruptcy, because the effect of his achieving his collateral purpose would be to reduce that dividend for all creditors (see para 83 of the June 2018 Judgment); and
(4) a petition would be an abuse of process if it was being pursued, not to recover the petition debt at all, but solely for an extraneous purpose, even though that did not harm the interests of creditors (see para 84 of the June 2018 Judgment)."
"If the petitioner can show that he and his class stand together and will benefit or suffer rateably, then his ill motive is nothing to the point. But here it is plain that no such even-handedness exists. If the petition is properly brought, then the petitioner stands to get a valuable asset for itself and the rest of the class of creditors are likely to get nothing."
"33. The conclusions of the Board are as follows:
(a) It has no view about where the merits of the English action between Mr Hosking and the company lie.
(b) There is no doubt that Mr Hosking's purposes in presenting the petition for the company to be wound up were intimately related to the English action.
(c) It is indeed probably the case that Mr Hosking regarded a winding-up order as likely to be of advantage to him in his capacity as the claimant in the English action as well as in his capacity as the petitioning creditor. For the company's continued defence of the action was leading him to incur very substantial costs in its continued prosecution and was thus generating a potential increase in its total liability to him and a corresponding increase in the risk that such could not be met. In his capacity as claimant in the action Mr Hosking therefore probably considered it advantageous to secure a winding-up order which might lead to his saving of some such costs.
(d) But a winding-up order was also, objectively, likely to be of substantial advantage to him in his capacity as the petitioning creditor; and to secure such an advantage was the other of his purposes. It is not necessary that it should have been his principal purpose: see In re Millennium Advanced Technology Ltd [2004] EWHC 711 (Ch), [2004] 1 WLR 2177 at para 42 (Michael Briggs QC sitting as a deputy High Court judge).
(e) For Mr Hosking, as trustee, was a large creditor of the company; his debt was contingently unsecured and he was not even in receipt of interest. It was in the interests of the insolvent company, and in particular of himself in that capacity, that, before it proceeded, from some source or other, to incur yet further indebtedness with which to fund the maintenance of its defence at a trial estimated to last for seven or eight days, a professional decision should be taken on its behalf about the further conduct of the defence and, in the light of the latter's apparent strength or otherwise, about the terms of any compromise which it would be commercially sensible for it to propose to Mr Hosking.
(f) In its defence of the winding-up petition the company therefore failed to establish that Mr Hosking's petition represented an abuse of the process of the court and failed to displace his entitlement to an order."
(b) Detriment to Mr. Maud's creditors
"(1) in the event of a sale of Mr Maud's shares being forced by his bankruptcy, the price to be agreed and/or determined for the sale of such shares would be depressed and, in any event, all proceeds from any such sale would accrue to the benefit of Edgeworth not Mr Maud's general body of creditors; and
(2) in the event of no bankruptcy order being made against Mr Maud and accordingly Mr Maud retaining his Ramblas shares, there was at least the possibility of:
(a) the security over Mr Maud's Ramblas shares being discharged in full and, therefore, the proceeds of any sale of such shares accruing for the benefit of Mr Maud's general body of creditors; and
(b) the value of Mr Maud's Ramblas shares increasing and, potentially, increasing very substantially."
(c) Further collateral purpose
(d) The class question on the LIA Petition
"Although a petitioning creditor may, as between himself and the company, be entitled to a winding-up order ex debito justitiae, his remedy is a 'class right', so that, where creditors oppose the making of an order, the court must come to a conclusion in its discretion after considering the arguments of the creditors in support of and opposing the petition: see Re Crigglestone Coal Company Ltd [1906] 2 Ch 327, in particular the statements of principle of Buckley J at first instance, and s. 195 of the Insolvency Act 1986…
It is plain from the well-known authorities on the subject that, where there are some creditors supporting and others opposing a winding-up petition it is for the court to decide as a matter of judicial discretion, what weight to attribute to the voices on each side of the contest…"
"…were a bankruptcy order now to take effect and Mr. Maud's shares in Ramblas to be offered for sale … it appears overwhelmingly likely that creditors would receive no return from the realisation of such shares. In contrast, were no bankruptcy order to take effect and Mr. Maud permitted to retain possession and control of his Ramblas shares there is at least a real possibility that Mr. Maud's creditors may benefit very significantly from his ownership of such shares."
(e) Conclusion
Preserving the status quo pending any appeal
"1. Glenn Maud is made bankrupt on the LIA Petition with effect from 4 p.m. on Monday 29 June 2020, unless by that date Mr. Maud or Navarro Ventures S.A.R.L. has filed an appellant's notice against this paragraph 1 with the Court of Appeal, in which case he will by this order be made bankrupt with effect from the refusal or withdrawal of all applications for permission to appeal so made against this paragraph 1 or, if permission is granted, with effect from the dismissal or withdrawal of all such appeals.
For the avoidance of doubt, any bankruptcy order consequential upon the refusal or withdrawal of an application for permission to appeal or dismissal or withdrawal of an appeal (as applicable), shall take effect on the earliest of the date of any written notice to the Civil Appeals Office withdrawing the application for permission to appeal or the appeal, the date of any written notice from the Civil Appeals Office refusing the application for permission to appeal, or the date of the handing down of any judgment dismissing the appeal.
2. These proceedings will be main proceedings as defined in Article 3 of the EU Regulation.
3. The Official Receiver attached to this Court will be trustee of the bankrupt's estate."
The order on the Edgeworth Petition
Costs
"The expenses of the bankruptcy are payable out of the bankrupt's estate in the following order of priority,
…
(i) the costs of the petitioner, and of any person appearing on the petition whose costs are allowed by the court."
Conclusion
Note 1 Although the draft grounds of appeal sought to support that argument by referring to paragraph 81(1) of Mr Maud’s Skeleton Argument for the 2019 Hearing, that paragraph 81(1) was plainly referring to an earlier stage of proceedings at which it was contended that Edgeworth was seeking,
“To obtain Mr Maud’s Ramblas shares by means of Mr Quinlan’s pre-emption rights and the terms of the Deed of Sale and Adherence and thereby to further their own prospects of acquiring the Santander Asset.” (emphasis added)
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