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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Sino-Ocean Group Holding Ltd, Re [2025] EWHC 205 (Ch) (03 February 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2025/205.html Cite as: [2025] EWHC 205 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMPANIES LIST
IN THE MATTER OF SINO-OCEAN GROUP HOLDING LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SINO-OCEAN GROUP HOLDING LIMITED |
Mr David Allison KC (instructed by Allen Overy Sterling LLP) for the Co-ordination Committee of creditors of the Plan Company
Mr Mark Arnold KC and Mr Henry Phillips (instructed by Linklaters LLP) for Long Corridor Asset Management Limited
Hearing dates: 16,17 and 20 January 2025
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Thompsell:
1. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
i) The Plan Company is incorporated in Hong Kong, and its shares are listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
ii) The Plan Company has defaulted on its debt and faces enforcement action by numerous groups of financial creditors. A winding-up petition (the "Petition") was presented against the Plan Company in Hong Kong on 27 June 2024 in respect of an undisputed debt exceeding US$13 million. The Petition has been adjourned three times to allow the Plan Company to promulgate the Plan and for its subsidiary, Sino-Ocean Land (Hong Kong) Limited, to promulgate a linked Hong Kong scheme of arrangement (referred to further below). Unless there is another adjournment, the Petition is due to be heard on 17 February 2025.
iii) The Plan constitutes one part of an overall cross-jurisdictional arrangement (the "Reorganisation"). The Plan Liabilities under the scope of the Plan are governed by Hong Kong law (in the case of Class A) and English law (in the case of Classes B, C and D).
iv) To ensure that the compromise of the Class A Debt is regarded as fully effective in Hong Kong, as well as in the United Kingdom, Sino-Ocean Land (Hong Kong) Limited has also proposed a parallel scheme of arrangement in Hong Kong (the "Hong Kong Scheme"). The Hong Kong Scheme relates only to the debt governed by Hong Kong law which is the same debt that forms the Class A Debt. The Plan and the Hong Kong Scheme are inter-conditional.
v) It is intended that the Plan will achieve its objective by restructuring the four key classes of the Group's unsecured financial indebtedness (labelled "Class A" to "Class D") and providing for the release of those liabilities in return for the issue of a package of new secured debt instruments convertible securities and perpetual Securities termed the "Plan Consideration".
vi) The Plan Consideration falls into two basic categories:
a) New debt claims in the form of either a new loan obligation (relevant to the proposed Class A creditors), or new notes. The new notes are relevant for the other proposed classes of creditor, and are an option offered to the proposed Class A creditors as an alternative to the proposed new loan obligations. It is understood that the commercial terms of the new loan obligations and of the new notes are broadly equivalent, so that the difference between them is principally one of form.
b) New securities in the form of either new mandatory convertible bonds ("MCBs") (which convert, subject to the terms of the MCB's, on (i) a voluntary basis or (ii) on a mandatory basis into shares in the Plan Company 24 months after issuance or upon an event of default) or new perpetual securities which appear to be the equivalent of a type of preference share, though ranking as debt rather than share capital.
vii) The Plan proposes the issuance of these different types of Plan Consideration in different proportions in respect of different classes, and in some cases, with some elections being available to members of particular classes between these different types of security. For this purpose the Plan Company has categorised the Plan Creditors into the four classes, Classes A to D, reflecting among other things, the different rights that the Plan Company proposes to offer for these different classes of creditor, if the Plan succeeds. This in turn has been influenced by the Plan Company's assessment of what each of these classes of creditor would be likely to receive in the event of the Company entering into formal liquidation proceedings which, the Plan Company considers, will trigger severe distress worldwide across the Group, including a combination of enforcements, insolvency filings and distressed sales. The Plan Company argues that this is the "relevant alternative" against which the Plan should be judged. Whilst each class (other than Class D, which is subordinated to the other classes) ranks pari passu as regards the obligations of the Plan Company, it is forecast that each class would receive substantially different returns in the relevant alternative. This is because the different classes have in addition recourse to other co-obligors within the Plan Company's group which would have available different assets to satisfy (in part) the obligations to creditors in the different classes.
i) A total of 938 Plan Creditors voted at the Plan Meetings. This figure excludes multi-class positions where Plan Creditors hold positions across more than one class and does not double count Plan Creditors with multiple positions in a single class.
ii) The Plan was approved by over 75% in value of those voting at the meetings of the Class A creditors and the Class C creditors. However, the Plan was not approved by the requisite statutory majorities of the Class B creditors and the Class D creditors.
iii) In more detail, the voting outcomes were as follows:
a) in Class A, the Plan was supported by 100% in value of those voting (with a turnout of 86.2% in value);
b) in Class B, the Plan was supported by 47.7% in value of those voting, (with a turnout of 73.9% in value): of those voting: a majority voted against;
c) in Class C, the Plan was supported by 81.5% in value of those voting (with a turnout of 84.5% in value); and
d) in Class D, the Plan was supported by 34.9% in value of those voting (with a turnout of 61.9% in value), of those voting, a majority voted against.
iv) In total, the Plan was approved by over 74% in value of those voting across all four classes.
i) within Class A, Long Corridor does not hold any debt;
ii) within Class B, Long Corridor holds about US$53.7 million of the debt (representing about 3% by value);
iii) within Class C, Long Corridor holds about US$8.8 million of the debt (representing less than 1% by value); and
iv) within Class D, Long Corridor holds about US$22.8 million of the debt (representing about 4% by value).
2. THE ORDER SOUGHT
"(1) If a number representing 75% in value of the creditors or class of creditors or members or class of members (as the case may be), present and voting either in person or by proxy at the meeting summoned under section 901C, agree a compromise or arrangement, the court may, on an application under this section, sanction the compromise or arrangement.
(2) Subsection (1) is subject to … section 901G …"
3. THE CONDITIONS FOR A CROSS-CLASS CRAM DOWN
"(1) This section applies if the compromise or arrangement is not agreed by a number representing at least 75% in value of a class of creditors or (as the case may be) of members of the company ("the dissenting class"), present and voting either in person or by proxy at the meeting summoned under section 901C.
(2) If conditions A and B are met, the fact that the dissenting class has not agreed the compromise or arrangement does not prevent the court from sanctioning it under section 901F.
(3) Condition A is that the court is satisfied that, if the compromise or arrangement were to be sanctioned under section 901F, none of the members of the dissenting class would be any worse off than they would be in the event of the relevant alternative (see subsection (4)).
(4) For the purposes of this section "the relevant alternative" is whatever the court considers would be most likely to occur in relation to the company if the compromise or arrangement were not sanctioned under section 901F.
(5) Condition B is that the compromise or arrangement has been agreed by a number representing 75% in value of a class of creditors or (as the case may be) of members, present and voting either in person or by proxy at the meeting summoned under section 901C, who would receive a payment, or have a genuine economic interest in the company, in the event of the relevant alternative."
Condition A
i) In my view the definition requires a particular alternative to be identified. Long Corridor has identified no such alternative – whilst it did at a late stage put forward a plan referred to as the "Alternative Plan", it is not now suggesting that this is the relative alternative, and given commercial defects identified in the Alternative Plan, I think Long Corridor is being realistic in not continuing to suggest that the Alternative Plan should be regarded as the relevant alternative. Instead, Long Corridor is now promoting a vague idea that Plan Creditors and shareholders might agree another plan, but that is not sufficiently choate an idea to amount to a relative alternative. Unless a putative alternative plan is specified in detail it is impossible for the court to judge the effect on creditors of that plan.
ii) The undisputed evidence of Mr Sum is that the Plan Company can stave off its creditors for only another month, whereas agreeing and implementing another plan would take many weeks longer. A relevant alternative must be something where there is at least some prospect of implementing the alternative, and on the evidence before the court there is no prospect that the Plan Company could hang on to do anything other than to go into liquidation.
iii) There is evidence that the Class A creditors would not support an alternative plan of the type advocated by Long Corridor and also there may be little reason for shareholders to provide the necessary votes for it.
iv) Long Corridor's suggestion that a better plan could emerge out of a liquidation is not realistic given the complex nature of the Plan Company's Group; liquidation of the Plan Company is likely to lead to severe reputational and financial damage (for example through acceleration of loans and the drying up of credit lines through-out the Group) and there would be insufficient resources to pay a liquidator to put in place and meet the necessary professional fees in developing and implementing such a plan.
Condition B
"there may be some cross-class cram down cases in which there is artificiality in the creation of classes to ensure that the requirements of the section 901G Condition B are satisfied…"
and clearly considered that the creation of such a class would be inappropriate.
"in the context of a plan under Part 26A, the artificiality of the structure is undoubtedly an issue of direct relevance to the discretion to sanction the plan".
"Clearly, attempts artificially to create an in-the-money class for the purposes of providing an anchor to activate the cross-class cram down power should be resisted, particularly where such a claim is not impaired by the plan".
Condition B in relation to Class A
"The Class A debt, which is governed by Hong Kong law, is being compromised pursuant to the Hong Kong scheme. That compromise will be recognised in this jurisdiction in accordance with the ordinary principles of private international law. In those circumstances, Long Corridor will contend that the inclusion of the Class A creditors in the RP is unnecessary, unjustified and its sole purpose is to create an artificial "cramming class" of creditors such that it would not be fair or appropriate in the circumstances for the Court to exercise its "cross-class cram down" powers under s.901G of the Act based on votes in favour of the RP by the Class A creditors."
i) Whilst a company is, in principle, able to select which of its creditors to include and which to exclude from a scheme of arrangement or restructuring plan, "the exclusion or inclusion of creditors from a restructuring plan" is not "a simple or unqualified choice for the company" as was said by Miles J at [126] in UK Commercial Finance Holding Ltd v Cine UK Ltd [2024] EWHC 2475 (Ch). Instead, as Snowden J put it in Re Co-operative Bank Plc [2017] EWHC 2269 (Ch) at [38]:
"it ought to have a rational commercial justification other than simply a desire to arrange matters so as to achieve the required statutory majorities of those who are included".
ii) The Class A Debt is governed by Hong Kong law. As a consequence, Long Corridor argues, it cannot be effectively compromised under the Plan - Hong Kong is a jurisdiction which applies the rule in Anthony Gibbs & Sons v La Societe Industrielle et Commerciale des Metaux (1890) 25 QBD 399 ("Gibbs"), that is that the question of whether an obligation has been discharged is governed by its proper law so that a compromise of Hong Kong law debt under English law will not be given effect outside of the jurisdiction – except to the extent that creditors have submitted to the jurisdiction of the English court.
iii) As a result of the rule in Gibbs a compromise of the Class A Debt pursuant to the Hong Kong Scheme will be effective both in Hong Kong and elsewhere (including in the United Kingdom). These features of the Class A Debt mean that its inclusion in the Plan as a separate class is unnecessary. There is no need for Class A to be included in the Plan given the Class A Debt is being compromised through the Hong Kong Scheme.
iv) It is also (Long Corridor alleges) entirely unprecedented that the compromise of a debt with such features would be used as a cramming class in a Plan. Long Corridor alleges that the Plan Company (with the support of the committee of creditors supporting the Plan ("CoCom") has included the Class A Debt purely to ensure that there is a cramming class.
v) To rely on that class as the basis to cram down dissenting creditors would be wholly unprecedented, manifestly unfair, and contrary to principle, irrespective of the general merits, or otherwise, of the Plan.
The matter needs to be considered first in relation to the plain words of Part 26A. The Class A creditors are "creditors" who are parties to the "arrangement" with the Plan Company constituted by the Plan and, I consider, whose rights are affected by the Plan. As such, they are entitled to be convened to a meeting to consider and, if thought fit, approve the Plan. Moreover, the Class A creditors constitute an assenting class for the purpose of section 901G(5) since they would receive a payment, or have a genuine economic interest, in the Plan Company in the event of the relevant alternative.
"[T]here is an exception to the [Gibbs] rule if the relevant creditor submits to the foreign insolvency proceeding. In that situation, the creditor is taken to have accepted that his contractual rights will be governed by the law of the foreign insolvency proceeding".
"I note that in Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd [2020] EWHC 2376 (Ch), at [49]-[50], Snowden J left open the question whether the power to cram down a dissenting class under section 901G can be activated by including within a plan a class of creditors who would otherwise all have been prepared to enter into consensual arrangements to give effect to the restructuring of their rights. I sought submissions from Counsel on this point following the hearing, and I am grateful to Mr Haywood for his speedy response to that request.
Clearly, attempts artificially to create an in-the-money class for the purposes of providing the anchor to activate the cross-class cram down power should be resisted, particularly where such a class is not impaired by the plan. Where, as here, however, the in-the-money class of creditors is undoubtedly adversely affected by the Company's insolvency and is substantially impaired under the plan, then I do not think that the mere fact that 100% of that class is prepared to support the plan is a reason to prevent the cross-class cram-down power being exercised. I do not think there is a relevant distinction between a case where all but a small minority of the class are in favour, and one where the merits of the plan have persuaded the whole of the class to support the plan. Nor do I think it makes a difference, as a matter of jurisdiction to exercise the cross-class cram-down power, that there is only one creditor within the class.
"… the plan cannot of itself achieve a compromise in relation to any liability governed by Hong Kong law, because Hong Kong is a jurisdiction which applies The Rule in Gibbs (Anthony Gibbs & Sons v La Societe Industrielle et Commerciale des Metaux (1890) 25 QBD 399). There is therefore a parallel scheme of arrangement under the Hong Kong Companies (Winding Up and Miscellaneous Provisions) Ordinance in the same terms (save that it does not deal with the English law debt, principally the PNs) as the proposed plan."
Condition B in relation to Class C
i) Turnout by value: 42.5% (excluding China Life Franklin), 84.5% (including China Franklin).
ii) The percentage voting for (by value) was 63.1% (excluding China Life Franklin), 81.5% (including China Life Franklin).
"the class was fairly represented by those who attended the meeting and that the statutory majority are acting bona fide and are not coercing the minority in order to promote interests adverse to those of the class whom they purport to represent, and thirdly, that the arrangement is such as an intelligent and honest man, a member of the class concerned and acting in respect of his interest, might reasonably approve.
The court does not sit merely to see that the majority are acting bona fide and thereupon to register the decision of the meeting; but at the same time the court will be slow to differ from the meeting, unless either the class has not been properly consulted, or the meeting has not considered the matter with a view to the interests of the class which it is empowered to bind, or some blot is found in the scheme".
"see that the minority is not being overridden by a majority having interests of its own clashing with those of the minority whom they seek to coerce": Re Alabama, New Orleans, Texas and Pacific Junction Railway Co [1891] 1 Ch 213 per Lindley LJ at p.239.
"which is adverse to, or clashes with, the interests of the class as a whole" at [89].
A special interest which simply provides an additional reason for supporting the scheme (without clashing or conflicting with the interests of the class as a whole) will not undermine the representative nature of a vote.
"a strong and direct causative link between the creditor's decision to support the scheme and the creditor's adverse interest such that it is the adverse interest which drives the creditor's voting decision".
i) first, as has been argued by the Plan Company and illustrated by the financial projections made in reports by FTI Consulting, and as I discuss further below, because allowing shareholders to retain shares such that there were two shareholders owned by the PRC state each with at least a 15% interest would benefit the Plan Company as it would reduce the perceived risks in the Plan Company, which should be reflected in a lower discount rate affecting the value of the securities that they would hold under the Plan; and
ii) secondly, even if the Plan was unfair, it was better than the alternative of a liquidation.
Conclusion in relation to Condition B
4. THE OBJECTION THAT SHAREHOLDERS WERE NOT INCLUDED AS A CLASS
"First, it may be asked why the shareholders of the Company, who are affected by these arrangements are not parties. I have already explained above why the Company does not consider this to be necessary. I note that under paragraph 2 of the Practice Statement, it is the responsibility of the applicant (in this case the Plan Company) to determine whether more than one meeting of creditors and/or members is required by a scheme and if so to ensure that those meetings are properly constituted. If the Company has decided that it does not need to bind its shareholders into the Plan, I do not think it is for the court to decide that they should be so bound, unless their not being so bound poses a threat to the viability of the Plan. In this case I am content to follow the Company's assessment that it does not."
"First their pre-emption rights and rights relating to approval of allotments by directors (under the Articles and sections 549(1) and 561(1) CA 2006) are overridden by the Plan".
The judge was here referring to the effect of section 566A CA 2006, which disapplies shareholders' pre-emption rights in the context of a restructuring plan. He went on to explain a second way in which shareholders' rights were being affected:
"Second, their shareholding will, as a result of the Plan, be diluted to 5% of its current value".
""Affected by" is a phrase of broad ambit. It is far broader, for example, than "amended by" or "altered by"
and (at [34]) that the better view was:
"that the rights of shareholders (who are taken to have an economic interest in the company) to participate in the capital and profits of a company are "affected by" a Plan that would dilute such participation".
i) shareholders' rights "are affected" by the Plan, which involves issuing instruments to creditors in a manner which will significantly dilute shareholders' interests: in which case, the requirements of Part 26A have not been met; or
ii) shareholders' rights are not so affected, by reason of the fact that they have approved the issuance of those instruments at an EGM.
5. SHOULD THE PLAN BE SANCTIONED?
"the mere fact that one or more classes of creditors might have acted in their own separate interests in voting in favour of the plan said nothing about the commercial merits of the plan for a dissenting class or the fairness of imposing the plan on them."
"…a key issue for the court in exercising its discretion to impose a plan upon a dissenting class is to identify whether the plan provides for di?erences in treatment of the di?erent classes of creditors inter se and, if so, whether those di?erences can be justi?ed. I also agree with Zacaroli J that an obvious reference point for this exercise must be the position of the creditors in the relevant alternative."
and at [160]
"…In my judgment, that exercise of a judicial discretion to alter the rights of a dissenting class for the perceived bene?t of the assenting classes necessarily requires the court to inquire how the value sought to be preserved or generated by the restructuring plan, over and above the relevant alternative, is to be allocated between those di?erent creditor groups.
"In my judgment, it is neither possible nor advisable to attempt to prescribe an exhaustive list of the criteria that might qualify".
6. CONCLUSION