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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> NEF Telecom Co BV, Re [2012] EWHC 2944 (Comm) (06 September 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/2944.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2944 (Comm) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
____________________
Official Shorthand Writers and Tape Transcribers
Quality House, Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
[email protected]
MR. T. TOTH (an employee of KDB Bank (Hungary) Ltd.) appeared on behalf of a Creditor.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE VOS:
Introduction
The loan agreements
(i) Facility B in which Opco is the borrower of a sum of €384 million;
(ii) Facility C in which Holdco is the borrower of a sum of €493 million;
(iii) Facility E in which Opco is the borrower of a sum of €85 million;
(iv) A revolving credit facility in which Opco is the borrower of a sum of €23 million;
(v) A second lien facility in which Holdco is the borrower of a sum of €187 million.
"The courts of England have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute arising out of or in connection with this agreement including a dispute regarding the existence, validity or termination of this agreement."
(i) first priority to senior liabilities, excluding the second lien facility liabilities;
(ii) the second lien facilities liabilities;
(iii) the mezzanine facility liabilities.
The restructuring
(i) Controlled acceleration and enforcement of the Opco share pledge and the transfer of the shares which OOP holds in Opco to a new special purpose vehicle, Bidco, an indirect subsidiary of another new special purpose vehicle (Equityco).
(ii) Second, VTB and CCB will each provide €65 million (making a total of €130 million) in exchange for shares ("the shares") in Equityco.
(iii) VTB and CCB will be allotted 73% of the shares.
(iv) Promotion by the scheme companies of the schemes to effect a restructuring of the debt under the existing facilities and the transfer of the remaining shares in Equityco to the scheme creditors.
(i) the first priority is senior scheme creditors, except those under the second lien facilities;
(ii) second, the second lien scheme creditors;
(iii) third, the mezzanine scheme creditors;
(i) pro rata first entitlement to the €130million paid by VTB and CCB; and
(ii) allotment of 27% of the shares;
(iii) allocation of reinstated indebtedness of €588 million (i.e. following the reduction from the current level of priority senior liabilities by approximately €399 million);
(iv) allocation of options to sell in aggregate €78.7 million of reinstated indebtedness and up to 3.6% of the shares to VTB and CCB for €70 million, i.e. at €0.89 cents in the euro;
(v) allocation of options to sell in aggregate €519.3 million of reinstated indebtedness to VTB for €381.9 million;
(vi) allocation of options to sell up to 27% of the shares to CCB for up to €40.5million;
(vii) seventh, allocation of options to acquire 20% of the shares from VTB and CCB.
(i) Options to acquire from VTB and CCB up to 12% of the shares in aggregate equal to the sum of the price paid for such shares by VTB and CCB pursuant to the options and the payment of a re-investment fee ("the purchase consideration").
(ii) Second, the options will be granted in a ratio of 20:1 in favour of the second lien facility liabilities in order to reflect the fact that they are senior to the mezzanine facility liabilities under the intercreditor agreement.
(iii) Third, options to sell to CCB, for a period of 12 months from the date of the VTB/CCB restructuring, the shares acquired pursuant to the above options for an amount equal to 85% of the purchase consideration.
The benefit of the schemes
(i) The maximisation of returns for scheme creditors and other stakeholders by avoiding formal insolvency proceedings.
(ii) An improvement in the capital structure of the group by reducing its indebtedness to a sustainable level. The scheme will result in a settlement of over €1 billion of debt.
(iii) An extension of the maturity dates in respect of the subsisting debt.
(iv) Reduction in the risk of a future default by the group in the short to medium term.
(v) Cash savings from reducing interest payments and an improved liquidity position for the group.
(vi) An increase in the sums available for capital expenditure on the group's business to compete in the telecommunications market.
(vii) An increased prospect of generating long term value for the scheme creditors and other stakeholders in the scheme companies.
The scheme meetings
The law
"In this Part… 'company'… (a) in s.900 (powers of court to facilitate reconstruction or amalgamation) means a company within the meaning of this Act; and (b) elsewhere in this Part means any company liable to be wound up under the Insolvency Act 1986…"
"The classic formulation of the principles which guide the court in considering whether to sanction a scheme was set out by Plowman J in Re National Bank Limited [1966] 1 WLR 819 by reference to a passage in Buckley on the Companies Acts (13th edition, 1957), p.409, which has been approved and applied by the courts on many subsequent occasions:
'In exercising its power of sanction the court will see, first, that the provisions of the statute have been complied with, second, that 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.'
"This formulation in particular recognises and balances two important factors. First, in deciding to sanction a scheme under s.425, which has the effect of binding members or creditors who have voted against the scheme or abstained as well as those who voted in its favour, the court must be satisfied that it is a fair scheme. It must be a scheme that 'an intelligent and honest man, a member of the class concerned and acting in respect of his interest, might reasonably approve'. That test also makes clear that the scheme proposed need not be the only fair scheme or even, in the court's view, the best scheme. Necessarily there may be reasonable differences of view on these issues.
"The second factor recognised by the above-cited passage is that in commercial matters members or creditors are much better judges of their own interests than the courts. Subject to the qualifications set out in the second paragraph, the court 'will be slow to differ from the meeting'."
"Article 2
"1. Subject to this Regulation, persons domiciled in a Member State shall, whatever their nationality, be sued in the courts of that Member State…"
"Article 4
"1. If the defendant is not domiciled in a Member State, the jurisdiction of the courts of each Member State shall, subject to Arts.22 and 23, be determined by the law of that Member State…"
"Article 6
"A person domiciled in a Member State may also be sued:
"1. Where he is one of a number of defendants, in the courts for the place where any one of them is domiciled, provided the claims are so closely connected that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings…"
"Article 23
"1. If the parties, one or more of whom is domiciled in a Member State, have agreed that a court or the courts of a Member State are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which have arisen or which may arise in connection with a particular legal relationship, that court or those courts shall have jurisdiction. Such jurisdiction shall be exclusive unless the parties have agreed otherwise. Such an agreement conferring jurisdiction shall be either:
"(a) in writing or evidenced in writing…"
"Article 24
"Apart from jurisdiction derived from other provisions of this Regulation, a court of a Member State before which a defendant enters an appearance shall have jurisdiction. This rule shall not apply where appearance was entered to contest the jurisdiction, or where another court has exclusive jurisdiction by virtue of Article 22."
Opposition
(i) Mr. Toth submits that the court does not have jurisdiction to sanction the schemes as the scheme companies do not constitute companies "liable to be wound up under the Insolvency Act 1986, as required by s.895(2)(b) of the Companies Act 2006" and the claim does not satisfy the provisions of the Judgments Regulation, to which I have already referred.
(ii) The second ground of opposition is that the jurisdiction clauses contained in the facility agreements to which I have already referred are not effective to confer jurisdiction on the English courts in respect of the schemes.
(iii) The third ground of opposition is that the schemes would not be recognised in the Netherlands and in Bulgaria because some of the security is governed by the laws of the Netherlands and Bulgaria. Mr. Toth has not been able to adduce any expert evidence in support of this ground of opposition.
(iv) The fourth ground of opposition is that the compromise would, in the absence of the schemes, require the consent of all the lenders to the scheme companies and the scheme cannot – or at least should not – be used to reduce the consent requirements contained in Art.41.2.7 of the relevant agreement, to which I have already referred.
(v) The fifth ground of opposition is that the court should not sanction the schemes as a matter of fairness and discretion, on the basis that they fail to protect the rights of minority creditors in the same way as the facilities do, i.e. by requiring 100% consent to any changes; and that there has been a failure to consult with creditors who are not scheme creditors; and that the schemes effectively force KDB to become a shareholder and to accept a new obligor in the shape of a Bulgarian company (Bidco) instead of a Netherlands company (Holdco).
Cases on jurisdiction
"51. In my judgment, proceedings seeking the court's sanction of a scheme in relation to a solvent company do fall within the scope of the Judgments Regulation. They are plainly 'civil and commercial matters' within Art.1 and it was no part of the purpose of the bankruptcy exclusion in Art.1.2(b), construed having regard for example to the Schlosser Report, to exclude any civil or commercial matter which was not to fall within the scope of the Insolvency Regulation or, more generally, which was not connected with bankruptcy or insolvency…
"52. Nonetheless there is nothing in Chapter II of the Judgments Regulation (relating to jurisdiction) which, on its face, purports to restrict or exclude the English court's traditional jurisdiction in relation to the sanctioning of such schemes. In particular, I do not consider that such proceedings fall within the exclusive jurisdiction conferred by Art.22.2.
"53. That leaves unresolved the question whether, because Art.22.2 does deprive the English court of jurisdiction to wind up any solvent company which has its seat in a Member State other than the UK, that restriction impacts adversely on the meaning of 'liable to be wound up' as the touchstone for the court's scheme jurisdiction. It might be said that Lewison J's test based upon the transience of circumstances such as a company's COMI or the location of its establishments is less easily applied to the identification of a company's seat.
"54. There is nonetheless a broader reason why I consider that neither the Judgments Regulation nor the Insolvency Regulation has narrowed the court's jurisdiction in relation to schemes, by impacting restrictively on the circumstances when a company is liable to be wound up. My conclusion derives from a direct answer to the question posed, but not answered, by Warren J in Re Sovereign Marine. Given that neither of the two Regulations appear on their face to have been directed at restricting the English court's international jurisdiction in relation to solvent schemes, and given that all company law consolidation since either of them was introduced as part of English law has re-enacted the 'liable to be wound up' touchstone for jurisdiction in an unaltered form, it seems to me improbable on a purposive interpretation of those Regulations as part of English law that any such narrowing of the English court's jurisdiction was intended.
"55. In Re Sovereign Marine at para.37 Warren J said (obiter) that, in relation to the phrase 'liable to be wound up':
'I would have thought that the provision was inserted simply to provide a definition of 'company' for the purposes of schemes which went beyond the ordinary meaning of 'company' as defined in the legislation and did so in a shorthand, referential, way.'
"56. I agree. It was a convenient phrase designed to broaden rather than restrict the scope of the court's jurisdiction in relation to schemes. It was designed simply to identify the types of company and association to which the jurisdiction applies. At least so far as concerns solvent companies, nothing in either the Judgments Regulation or the Insolvency Regulation was intended to impact restrictively upon the scope of that jurisdiction. Subject only to one final reservation, it seems to me therefore that the English court's scheme jurisdiction has continued unimpaired, and extends to a scheme relating to the Germany company Rodenstock GmbH.
"57. My final reservation arises from a perception that Chapter II of the Judgments Regulation may have been intended to provide a comprehensive code regulating the international jurisdiction of each of the Member States in relation to all civil and commercial matters within the scope of the Regulation. That code may have been the quid pro quo for the obligation on each Member State to recognise and enforce, subject only to limited exceptions, every other Member State's judgments, without (subject again to limited exceptions) its own examination of the originating court's jurisdiction: see Art.35.3…
"61. The solution to this conundrum may be that, where there appears a lacuna in Chapter II in relation to proceedings within the scope of the Judgments Regulation, then each Member State may continue to apply its own private international law, by analogy with Art.4. Alternatively it may be necessary to shoehorn proceedings which do not in form involve suing anybody into the structure of Chapter II, by identifying the place or places of domicile of persons with a right to appear and oppose the relief sought, so as, for example, to apply Art.6.1 in a case where one or more members or creditors of a company affected by a proposed scheme is domiciled in the UK, as if such persons were all quasi defendants.
"62. It is unnecessary to resolve that conundrum in the present case, because more than 50% (by value) of the scheme creditors are indeed domiciled in England, so that the English court would have jurisdiction whichever solution to the conundrum were to be adopted. I shall leave to another day a case in which a scheme is sought to be sanctioned in England where all the affected members or creditors are domiciled in Member States other than the UK.
"63. In conclusion therefore, I consider that jurisdiction to sanction the present Scheme is established. Rodenstock GmbH is a company 'liable to be wound up' under the Insolvency Act, in accordance with the meaning which that phrase, purposively construed, has in s.895(2)(b) of the Companies Act 2006, and nothing in either the Judgments Regulation or the Insolvency Regulation has narrowed the scope of the meaning of that phrase, or, therefore, the definition of 'company' which it provides."
"8. The only reason that I feel that I must revisit the matter, as I shall do shortly, is that on re-reading the extremely helpful and illuminating judgment of Briggs J in the matter of Rodenstock GmbH, another Germany company… he identified one residual concern that he had, though he disposed of it on the facts of the case. The residual concern did not relate to whether the English court would have jurisdiction in respect of a foreign company under its domestic rules and in particular under the definition in the Companies Act 2006. Rather, it arose because of the possible uncertainty arising under Council Regulation (EC) No.44/2001 of 20th December 2000 on Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial matters, which I shall call the 'Judgment Regulation'. The primary rule in the Judgment Regulation is that the appropriate forum for the adjudication of a dispute is, in the ordinary course, the forum of the domicile of the defendant and the question which troubled Briggs J was whether he therefore had to be satisfied that there were defendants who were domiciled in the United Kingdom…
"10. Upon raising this issue shortly before the hearing with counsel for the scheme company, Mr. Allison put forward before me four alternative ways of resolving the conundrum. The first and, as I understood it his preferred way, was to take the view that Art.2 of the Judgment Regulation simply has no application in the context of a scheme at all, put shortly, because in such a scheme no one is being sued…
"12. In my view this is yet again a case on which the exact choice between those routes need not finally be made and I can, as it were, leave some element of the conundrum still in place, though for rather different reasons than appeared before Briggs J.
"13. I do not have, as I have explained, the factual comfort that the majority of the creditors or members were domiciled in England. But it does seem to me that each of the ways in which Mr. Allison urged me to look at the matter is an available analysis… I must say for my own part that I tend to the view that a scheme of arrangement such as this is simply not within the purview of Art.2 and that it is a stretch to consider any of the parties, though they are of course, integral to the process and have the right as creditors to attend, to be defendants within the intended meaning of that Article. I would therefore tend to the first solution offered by Mr. Allison. But if I am wrong in that provisional view I would also accept the alternative analysis offered by him. That is to say that Art.2 is subject to Arts.23 and 24 and on the facts of this case, as it seems to me, both are satisfied.
"14. Dealing first with Art.23, it is an important feature for these purposes of this case that every one of the loan agreements and also the umbrella agreement is expressly governed by English law and expressly nominates the English forum as the exclusive forum for the adjudication of their disputes. That is a peculiarity of this case, though it will not necessarily be an unfamiliar circumstance. I note in passing that the exclusive selection of law and forum enables me to proceed without concern as to any issues which arise where a jurisdiction clause is non-exclusive. That might complicate the matter: but the concern simply does not arise on the facts.
"15. Secondly, and again on the facts with regard to Art.24, I do accept that before me on the previous occasion there were, at least as I understood it, before me by counsel, a majority of creditors, especially in the first tier, who by their participation in that proceeding, which was of substance in that it related to the jurisdictional issue as to the proper constitution of classes, had consented or submitted to the jurisdiction of this court. Therefore, the factual circumstances posited by Art.24 seem also applicable.
"16. The fourth possibility was that canvassed by Briggs J in the Rodenstock case, that by analogy with Art.4 the English court should accept jurisdiction. My own preference is to adopt one or other of the other three solutions, but of course, that may well indicate no more than that I have not properly grasped the full extent of the analogy which Art.4 offers.
"17. On that basis it does not appear to me that the Judgments Regulation poses any obstacle to my accepting that the English court has jurisdiction in the matter. That being so the other considerations, which I have dealt with previously, still apply and I consider this to be an appropriate scheme to approve notwithstanding the foreign domicile of the scheme company…"
Discussion on jurisdiction
(i) First, he relies on the same argument that succeeded effectively before Hildyard J, namely that there is no defendant under Art.2 of the Judgment Regulation and therefore Art.2 does not apply. For that reason, he says, there is no need to find an exclusion applicable to this case.
(ii) If he is wrong about that, he relies in the following order on Art.23 (English law), Art.6 (another defendant domiciled in the UK), Art.4 (English private international law applies) and Art.24 (submission to the jurisdiction).
KDB's other points
The applications of the tests for the sanctioning of the schemes