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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 >> Grupo Hotelero Urvasco SA v Carey Value Added SL & Anor [2013] EWHC 1039 (Comm) (26 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2013/1039.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1039 (Comm), [2013] Bus LR D45 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GRUPO HOTELERO URVASCO S.A. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) CAREY VALUE ADDED S.L. (Formerly Losan Hotels World Value Added I S.L.) (2) LONDON VALUE ADDED I LIMITED |
Defendants |
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And |
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CAREY VALUE ADDED S.L. (Formerly Losan Hotels World Value Added I S.L.) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GRUPO URVASCO S.A. |
Defendant |
____________________
Lord Grabiner QC, Mr Manus McMullan QC, Mr Andrew De Mestre and Mr Douglas Paine (instructed by Mayer Brown LLP) for the Defendants in Folio 931 and the Claimant in Folio 1692.
Hearing dates: 29-31 October 2012; 2, 5-9, 12-16, 19-23, 26, and 30 November 2012; 3-6, 10-13, and 17-18 December 2012; February 6-8 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Paragraph Numbers | |
What the case is about | 2 |
The proceedings | 11 |
The parties | 30 |
The project starts | 42 |
The worsening economic climate | 72 |
Carey comes on the scene | 94 |
The agreements are entered into between GHU and Carey | 111 |
The first part of 2008 | 126 |
Carey suspends payment | 215 |
Events following suspension of the advances | 242 |
Issues of Spanish law | 286 |
Material adverse change (MAC) | 321 |
Alleged default in beginning negotiations for rescheduling | 559 |
Further alleged BBVA defaults | 599 |
Carey's case as to alleged "development defaults" | 613 |
1: failure to pay contractors and failure to notify G&T/Carey | 626 |
2. failure to provide information/provision of inaccurate information | 673 |
3. failure to notify claims | 738 |
4. inability to reach the Long Stop Date | 741 |
5. use of Subsequent Tranches | 811 |
GHU's relief from liability to repay in case of Carey's breach | 826 |
Carey's claim: quantum | 831 |
GHU's damages claim | 841 |
Overall conclusion | 957 |
Annex – Letter agreements of 21 October 2008 and 21 November 2008 | Annex |
Mr Justice Blair:
What the case is about
The proceedings
The trial
The Urvasco group of companies
The Urvasco group's relationship with the banks
Carey Value Added S.L.
THE PROJECT STARTS
The role of IDOM
Budgets
Estimated completion date
The apartments
The construction work begins
THE WORSENING ECONOMIC CLIMATE
The funding needs of the London development
Growing problems in making payments due to contractors
"P.S.: Please, the same Monday talk to BBVA to find out how we can expedite the matter of certifications. We owe 2.4 million pounds of due invoices (1.7 million of two certifications to Rowen, metallic structure). We have a high risk of the work being stopped, attachment proceedings being started and Urvasco Limited closing."
The Knight Frank valuation and report
Credit issues with the banks in the second half of 2007
CAREY COMES ON THE SCENE
BBVA allows further drawdowns
Carey's due diligence
THE AGREEMENTS ARE ENTERED INTO BETWEEN GHU AND CAREY
The meeting in Bilbao
(1) GHU (or its nominated company) and Urvasco Ltd (which at that point would have been owned by Carey or its nominee, LVA) were to enter into a lease of the property in favour of GHU for a period of 10 years with an option to renew for a further period of 10 years;
(2) GHU and Carey were to enter into a Call Option Agreement under which GHU would have the right after seven years to acquire either the shares in LVA or the property, in either case for the price paid under the SPA as increased by 4.6% per annum.
The payment of the advance
Carey's press release
"The investment company Losan Hotels World, founded and run by Rioja businessman Cesar Losada (Haro 1971) has just invested €155m, to acquire the Silken Hotel in London, which will open its doors in late 2008 in the heart of the City at 366 Strand (near Covent Garden and Waterloo Bridge).
It is a luxury 5-star hotel, which is currently being built according to the design of the prestigious architect Norman Foster. According to Losada, it is a 'very emblematic project', which is being erected on the site of the former Marconi House (home to the first ever radio transmission and subsequently Citibank's London headquarters), respecting its original façade.
Losada expects the Silken to 'become one of the five best hotels in London' …"
THE FIRST PART OF 2008
Introduction
January 2008
February 2008
"Pablo,
It's difficult to get hold of you these days so I'm writing an email to notify you of the situation regarding the work payments and I hope you read it when you get a moment. We'd like to be able to establish a real plan of action that would allow us to handle the work in a manner causing the least legal problems for Urvasco Limited. At this moment we're a bit in the dark about how we should be acting regarding the works to be done and what to promise the contractors. It's important to all of us not to lose any days' work on the project but we also have to consider that it can be less problematic to cope with a problem of temporary suspension of work than default on payments which could lead to a possible termination of contract, suspension and closure of Urvasco limited, etc….
The situation has been dragging on over the past few months and gives little confidence to the contractor[s]. It's going to be impossible for us to be able to continue working beyond this week due to all these elements. The first to stop will be the cranes and the rest will either stop soon after or stop when the cranes do as they can no longer continue with the work.
For the past few weeks we have been promising that the outstanding payments would be made promptly. We thought that the BBVA payment would arrive and we gave last Friday as the realistic date of payment. However, this was not the case and no other explanation we give will be credible either, at least for the English [contractors]. During October we had already promised that the situation was the consequence of the renewal of the BBVA credit agreement and purely a temporary problem. There is now going to be a similar temporary problem and I don't see the contractors having the same patience considering the recent late payments we have been making over the past few months. With the Spanish companies we have more power of persuasion and there is less urgency but for smaller companies which we have still not paid, the situation is much more serious."
March 2008: suspension of works
Carey requests financial information
Certification for the February works and payment of the first Subsequent Tranche
Work restarts
Certification for the March works and payment of the second Subsequent Tranche
The target date moves
Carey continues to seek to finance its obligations to GHU
"The project is moving forward very positively and the pending construction risk is decreasing. From Losan's experience in similar projects, once the structure is completed (which it now is) in the case of having to finish the Losan-BBVA work there will be no problem."
"Well, we were looking for financing in the market with different banks, and I was concerned, like in every single deal that we did, there is a concern, the markets were getting a little bit complicated by then, so I was concerned, but I don't think I was genuinely concerned. We had conversations with many banks open, I don't know if at that time or a prior time we got offers for financing this. We were just starting here with the financing actively, okay."
"I have spoken with Pablo Couto about this matter and the relationship between Urvasco and Losan is very healthy meaning that when you need to tell us anything you speak to us in a direct way. Given this, I can guarantee that this type of news, although not released by Urvasco itself and not official, can raise all sorts of doubts amongst financial institutions and the best way to resolve this is to provide the information required.
We hope to receive the documentation as soon as possible."
Mr Garcia-Tapia said in his oral evidence that he spoke frequently to Mr Couto at this time. In fact, further accounts were sent by Mr Iraculis on 2 June 2008.
"Losan Hotels World is building a five star hotel in the Marconi building located at Strand 336.
Considering its location and innovative design (by Norman Foster & Partners) we think it will become one of the three or four best hotels in the City once we open it by the end of the first quarter or spring 2009 ...
We're looking for a bridge loan during construction period (until Q2-09) and a 7 year senior loan with first rank mortgage."
An opening "by the end of the first quarter or spring 2009" as this email contemplates would be within the contractual Long Stop Date agreed with GHU of 30 April 2009.
Certification for the April works
"… the project is behind programme and IDOM have verbally accepted that they are not on target for completion by 24th December 2008. In-line with this the valuation has dropped below their forecast cash flow."
The closing of the Urvasco Energia sale and the Numerus Clausus transaction
CAREY SUSPENDS PAYMENT
The days before the decision
"Much noise is being made by the economic journalists from the Basque Country about a supposedly delicate financial situation of Urvasco: articles in El Correo and Deja, investigations of El Pais, and worse than that, all the supposed data that Cinco Dias have.
In this context, the transaction involving Urvasco Energia can be easily interpreted as a confirmation of the existence of financial problems, understood as a sale to get cash to allow payment of the tranches of your debt."
Although Mr Couto did not accept this, the group was clearly concerned to avoid the sale being interpreted as economic weakness.
The decision to suspend
"Based on the financial information on Urvasco in our possession and on all the rumours going around, it seems highly unlikely that the latter will be able to pay the final 30 million pounds necessary to finish the works once Losan has paid out the 70 million pounds to the parties to which it has obligations under the terms of the contract".
"César Losada and I discussed the position in light of the financial information which the Urvasco group had belatedly provided, the press reports, the worsening real estate market position in Spain and the report from Gardiner & Theobald, all of which left us very concerned about the Urvasco group's deteriorating financial health and its ability to complete the Development on time, if at all. It looked to us from the information which we had available as though it was highly probable that a default had arisen under the contracts we signed in December 2007 and that if Carey continued to pay monies to GHU, the fund would increase its exposure and there was no comfort that those monies would be used for the purposes of the Development. As it was, the Carey fund already had about €50 million at risk. Rather than risk more of the fund's monies, we decided on about 4 June 2008 not to pay the April tranche at this stage until GHU had satisfied us in respect of the issues raised by the accounts, the press and Gardiner & Theobald. We informed the LHW Board of the position and that decision, which they supported."
The letter of 9 June 2008
"(a) GHU may be in breach of one or more of the representations set out in clause 8 of the Loan Agreement and deemed repeated on each Subsequent Advance Date;
(b) a BBVA Default may have arisen; and
(b) Practical Completion of the Development is not realistically achievable by the Long Stop Date."
We have therefore concluded that Losan:
(i) is entitled, pursuant to clause 3(c)(i) of the Loan Agreement, not to make available the Subsequent Tranche to which the most recent Project Certificate relates (or any further Subsequent Tranches) unless and until it can be satisfied that no Default is continuing (although we can confirm that these funds are ready for immediate transmission if we can be so satisfied), and
(ii) may now be entitled (if it so wishes) to exercise its rights under clause 4.5(b) of the SPA to rescind the SPA, terminate the Loan Agreement, and demand immediate repayment of the outstanding balance of the Loan advanced by Losan, together with all accrued but unpaid interest."
EVENTS FOLLOWING SUSPENSION OF THE ADVANCES
Q. If you had been in any doubt before, this left you in no doubt, did it not, that your decision not to pay the certification would have a direct effect on the progress of works? You knew that, didn't you?
A. Yes. I mean, to the extent that you were counting on our money. I mean that Urvasco was counting only on our money.
Q. It was obvious that if you didn't pay for the previous month's works then it was going to jeopardise progress on the development. It was obvious wasn't it?
A. Yeah.
"In this scenario there were no buyers for the plots, and this considering that my assets were all first class assets, and I was the first company in which we forced and we put pressure on the banks for them to buy the assets, because there were no other buyers of assets in Spain at the time. And the only way to do this was to force them to do it by going into "mora", or non-payment -- default, sorry in these three months."
"The refinance was to start in September. I had an order of Pablo Couto of not paying the banks."
July 2008
"I find it difficult to talk to Pablo [Couto], so I think that the most convenient thing is to send you the last budget Losan saw, even though we know it isn't up to date. I think it's best to keep it as it is, since submitting a higher budget would give Losan a reason to inquire in even more depth into the issue; they are already insisting quite a bit in their letters, like how Urvasco will finish the project once the 40 million available by certification is used up. I've already spoken about this with Emilio…"
(1) "[A]t the time of writing, we remain confident about the prospects of all three companies in the foreseeable future to the extent such prospects are determined by factors within our control". A financial plan for GU was attached as Appendix G, "which reflects our confidence in this respect".
(2) "We remain as confident today as we did on 21 December 2007 in our ability) to complete the Development by the Long Stop Date and we continue to use our reasonable endeavours to meet that deadline despite Losan's continued failure to advance the Subsequent Tranches in breach of its obligations under the Loan Agreement."
(3) GHU denied that GU was or had been in discussions with creditors concerning rescheduling of its indebtedness. It referred to "discussions with various funders regarding obtaining financing to re-purchase the shares of a shareholder", which was a reference to the funding of the purchase of Ms Hernandez's shares in GU, but said that "neither these discussions nor any discussions [GU] may have had with other creditors (of which there have been none that are not in the ordinary course of business) have been in the context of "rescheduling of its indebtedness"".
August 2008
September 2008: work on the development stops
The end of the relationship between the parties
The accusations against Mr Losada
The receiver sells the hotel
ISSUES OF SPANISH LAW
Actos propios
"The said doctrine means that nobody is entitled to exercise a claim based on a right or legal entitlement in contradiction of his or her own prior behaviour, when it had an unequivocal significance from which legal consequences arise that are incompatible with the current claim"
(1) There must be previous conduct (the "actos propios") of the party now altering his behaviour or bringing a claim or seeking to enforce an existing or alleged right;
(2) There must be inconsistency between the present and the previous conduct, in circumstances that contradict the requirements of good faith;
(3) The identity of the parties involved must be the same; and
(4) There must be reliance by the other party.
(1) The behaviour must be voluntary and spontaneous, the product of a free decision;
(2) The behaviour must be conclusive and unambiguous, with full and unequivocal meaning;
(3) The behaviour must express the intention to affect or shape a legal relationship or situation, with effects towards other parties; and
(4) The behaviour must be legally valid, that is, it may not consist of legal acts that are void or without legal effect.
The parties' cases
Discussion and conclusion
"GHU undertakes not to exercise any judicial actions which it may be entitled to by virtue of the Agreements up until 1 April 2009."
The "Agreements" are defined at the beginning of the letter as being the Loan Agreement and the SPA.
The materiality point
MATERIAL ADVERSE CHANGE (MAC)
Introduction
The contractual provisions
"There has been no material adverse change in its financial condition (consolidated if applicable) since the date of this Loan Agreement [21 December 2007]"
By the final sentence of clause 8, this representation was deemed to be repeated on each Subsequent Advance Date by reference to the circumstances existing at that time. The representation was therefore made at the time of the agreement (21 December 2007), and repeated on the contractual date of drawdowns. There is no dispute between the parties that one such date was 6 June 2008.
"In the case of the Guarantor only, there has been no material adverse change in its financial condition (consolidated if applicable) since the date on which the Original Financial Statements were drawn up."
This form of words made it clear that the representation was not made by GHU or Urvasco Ltd which were also parties to the agreement. Unlike in the case of those companies, in the case of GU there is a dispute as to whether a representation was made on 6 June 2008.
"An event of default occurs if:
…
(iii) Any representation, warranty or statement by the Seller [GHU] under or pursuant to the Loan Agreement is or proves to have been untrue when made in any material respect, unless the underlying circumstances are remedied within ten Business Days of a notice from the Purchaser [Carey] requiring such remedy; or
(iv) any BBVA Default occurs."
The parties' cases on this issue
The interpretation of the "material adverse change" clauses
Carey's case as to representation in respect of GU
(1) Carey's amended case as to timing
(ii) The parties' cases
(iii) Discussion and conclusion on the date of representation issue
The expert evidence
Alleged MAC (GU)
The parties' cases
(1) He determined the relevant financial information as at 30 June 2008 which is the closest date to 6 June 2008 for which he was able to determine information;
(2) Although there were some limitations to this information and certain adjustments had to be made to ensure that the information is comparable on a like for like basis with that of 31 December 2007, he concluded that it was sufficiently reliable to show the financial condition of GU at 30 June 2008. In any event, he considered it more reliable than using the financial statements at 31 December 2008 to show the financial condition at 30 June 2008;
(3) He concluded that the key financial metrics showed an improvement in financial condition at 30 June 2008 over 31 December 2007;
(4) In particular, current assets, net assets and net profit were all higher at 30 June 2008 compared with 31 December 2007;
(5) He therefore concluded that there had not been a significant change in GU's ability to meet its financial obligations, in particular, its obligations under its Guarantee of the Loan Agreement and under the BBVA Credit Agreement.
GU's 2008 accounts
KPMG's qualified opinion to the 2008 accounts
"…these circumstances reveal uncertainty as to the Group's capacity to continue its business so as to realise its assets and settle its liabilities for the amounts and according to the classification by which they are recorded on the accompanying consolidated annual accounts, which have been prepared assuming that the business will continue."
Further points made by Carey
Mr MacGregor's analysis of the figures
(1) For GHU, he has analysed the financial position of GHU both on an unconsolidated and consolidated basis:
a) As to the unconsolidated position, he has used the 30 June 2008 interim accounts which he considers are a reasonable proxy for the position as at 6 June 2008. He makes a comparison of the position between 31 December 2007 and 6 June 2008.
b) As to the consolidated position, he has used the aggregated 30 June 2008 accounts which were included in the reports prepared by IREA in October and November 2008. Again, he considers that 30 June 2008 is a reasonable proxy for the position at 6 June 2008. He makes a comparison of the position between 31 December 2007 and 6 June 2008.
(2) For Urvasco Ltd, Mr MacGregor has used the 31 May 2008 management accounts (which were prepared by KPMG) and which he considers are a reasonable proxy for the position as at 6 June 2008. A summary of this information, adjusted to allow for proper comparison, is compared with the position as at 31 December 2007.
(3) For GU, Mr MacGregor has again used the 30 June 2008 information included in the reports prepared by IREA to prepare aggregated accounts. Again, he makes a comparison of the position between 31 December 2007 and 6 June 2008.
(1) Net current assets of €1,534,411,047 at 30 June 2008 had increased from net current assets of €1,073,431,002 at 31 December 2007.
(2) Total net assets of €203,251,319 at 30 June 2008 had increased from total net assets of €196,156,673 at 31 December 2007.
(3) When adjustments are made to allow proper comparison between the positions at 31 December 2007, 30 June 2008 and 31 December 2008, there is a reduction from adjusted total net assets of €197,892,337 at 31 December 2007 to €186,252,690 at 30 June 2008. This is not, however, a significant reduction.
(4) Adjusted net profit of €125,852,894 at 30 June 2008 compares with a loss of €22,899,353 at 31 December 2007.
Urvasco Energia
Derivatives liabilities
Discussion and conclusions on alleged MAC (GU)
(i) The "speculative business model" point
(ii) Carey's state of knowledge when it entered into the Loan Agreement with GHU
"The real estate sector had started to decelerate in Spain, we had had some news already about some companies having some trouble, so we were discussing the possibility of assuming this construction risk, and Grupo Urvasco was one of the main real estate developers in Spain at the moment, obviously we all had in mind how things were developing in the real estate sector at that moment."
(iii) Carey's knowledge of difficulty in paying contractors
"A. (Interpreted): This is what I said to Cesar Losada: if I don't have the money to finance the hotel, it may be assumed that it's because I don't have money to pay. This involves people cannot be paid and that's why I am looking for finance. And I don't want to put money from my company in the project. If you ask me whether I gave him a complete itemised list of everything that I had pending for payment, no, I did not, because nobody requested that."
(iv) Press reports
(v) The directors' reports
"In view of the serious economic situation mid-year, the companies in the development and construction group decided to restructure the group companies, selling most of our inventories to financial institutions as a way of reducing our bank debt and paying our debts to suppliers. The aim was to avoid any procedures that could prolong the situation, entail high costs and jeopardise recovery by our creditors of their debts,
The decision was based on the quality of our inventories, in both land and units of finished work and work in progress.
The financial situation had been gradually deteriorating since the last quarter of 2007, such that in the spring of 2008 we decided to sell our wind power division to ease the pressure and meet our liabilities then outstanding and those falling due within a 12-month horizon, for which we had the amounts left over from the operation, the handovers of dwellings and what the new sales could bring in. But the economic situation showed no signs of improving, rather quite the opposite, the capital gains on the wind farm division were watered down, handover of housing became extremely complicated owing to the lack of confidence in the sector, numerous buyers pulled out, delivery times were delayed and no sales whatsoever were obtained for developments in progress. With a financial charge [debt] of 1,834 million Euro, with scarcely any funds coming in, in September 2008 we began the restructuring process explained in the first paragraph."
"In the light of the graveness of the economic situation midway through the financial year, the group of promotion and construction companies decided to implement a restructuring process for the group companies, proceeding to sell the majority of our portfolio of inventories to financial entities, as a way of reducing our bank debt and enable [sic] us to pay our debts with suppliers. The objective was to avoid processes which would entail lengthy resolution periods, elevated costs and an end result in which our creditors would be severely damaged regarding the reparation of their debt. [...]"
(vi) The suspension of bank repayments
(vii) Conclusion as regards the GU MAC
Alleged MAC (GHU)
A. My approach, and the reason why I say there was a MAC, is because although EBITDA covered financial expenses in the past years -- and I am saying this because, for instance, in 2007 if you see the figure of financial expenses, that includes some financial expenses to the group, which in any case GHU was not paying, so in my view it would not affect the position of GHU --
Q. To summarise --
A. -- and that change in 2008. But the main reason is I have a new liability compared to last year of €49 million, plus €33 million, which is also an actual liability, due to the loan with BBVA that was -- that they had to pay a larger amount at maturity because of the depreciation of the sterling against the euro.
(1) GHU's net equity position was in fact improved at 31 December 2008 compared with 31 December 2007. This was largely the result of the capitalisation of the €150m debt due to GU in June 2008. The relevant facts are described in the factual narrative where I deal with the sale of Urvasco Energia.
(2) In relation to profits, there was a loss before tax of €127.014m in 2008 compared with a loss of €36.404m a year earlier. Mr Beltrán accepted in cross examination that the main components of that loss were changes in the fair value of derivatives of €49.575m and exchange differences of €33.057m. I deal with derivatives and exchange losses below.
(3) GHU's operating income at 31 December 2008 was slightly higher than at 31 December 2007. There was a decline in operating profit in the region of 20% which Mr Beltrán accepted was not significant.
(4) The impairment of €6,789,769 on a future right to take a lease purchased by GHU is said by GHU to have accrued after 6 June 2008. Carey has not shown (as it asserts) that it resulted from a failure by GHU to comply with its contractual obligations earlier in 2008 (assuming that would make any difference).
(5) The write-down in the value of GHU's hotel subsidiaries in 2008 does not demonstrate an adverse change, because the auditors considered that the write-down should have been made in 2007.
(6) In any event, a comparison between the 2007 accounts and the 2008 accounts has to take into account the change in the basis of preparation following the change in GAAP.
Exchange losses
The parties' cases on derivative contracts
The derivatives contracts
Relevance of changes in the fair value of the derivatives
(1) In the case of instruments such as the sterling/euro contracts and the share options, the liability of GHU was either to some extent or entirely fixed from the outset (as the strike price was fixed). In these cases, the fair value provision represents the (notional) loss which GHU would suffer by having to purchase currency/shares on the maturity date at a price which is worse than the market price. A change in fair value does not mean that GHU's liability under the transaction has changed.
(2) In the case of instruments such as swaps, GHU/GU had an ongoing right and obligation to receive and make payments. In these cases, the fair value of the swaps represents the hypothetical disposal value of the contracts in the event that the contracts were sold before their expiry date. Again, a change in fair value does not mean that GHU's underlying rights and obligations had changed.
Evidence as to fair value as at 6 June 2008
"The valuations of the Transactions described in this Agreement are representative and are not binding for any of the Parties. They are provided for merely informational purposes. BBVA does not assume responsibility for any error that it may have committed in the calculation of said valuations. In the event that the Parties mutually decide to terminate any of these Transactions in advance in the future, the value of each one of said Transactions may be lower or greater than what is indicated, according to the market variables at said time. BBVA does not make any declaration about the future evolution of the market variables that affect the Transactions."
Changes in fair value over 2008
(1) €15.9291 on 2 January;
(2) €12.9123 on 6 June;
(3) €11.6922 on 30 June;
(4) €11.3559 on 26 September;
(5) €8.32 on 30 December.
(1) £1/€1.3611 or €1/£0.7347 on 1 January;
(2) £1/€1.2515 or €1/£0.7990 on 6 June;
(3) £1/€1.2651 or €1/£0.7905 on 30 June;
(4) £1/€1.2584 or €1/£0.7947 on 26 September;
(5) £1/€1.178 or €1/£0.849 on 13 November;
(6) £1/€1.0442 or €1/£0.9577 on 31 December.
(1) EURIBOR rose in the first half of 2008 and then fell substantially in the second half of 2008 to 3.45% at 31 December 2008.
(2) The effect of that would have been that as EURIBOR rose in the first half of the year, GU/GHU would be entitled to receive payments under the swaps.
(3) But as EURIBOR then fell in the second half of the year that position would be reversed and GU/GHU would be liable to make payments.
"… the plummeting share prices and nose-diving of EURIBOR at the end of the year led us to record a charge in the fair value of financial instruments, which may be adjusted following an upturn on the prices of some shares rise and depending on the evolution of EURIBOR. On the other hand, the depreciation of the pound against the euro has affected the profit and loss account to a considerable consent, owing to exchange hedging acquired."
GHU relies on this as showing that the problem arose primarily at the end of the year.
Q. On the subject of derivatives, is it right that you have not yourself obtained any valuations of the derivatives as at 6 June 2008?
A. I have done, as it can be seen in my report, some estimates and roughly I know -- I know, I mean, this is very difficult because, as I said, there isn't a valuation at 6 June and it's not that simple, for instance, in the baskets of shares, that you just estimate or extrapolate, as I think I understood counsel suggests, that proportionally to the share price, we should estimate the fair values. It's not that simple. You need to include factors such as volatility of the share in the previous days, periods, et cetera. But –
Q. So I think the answer to my question is: no, you have not obtained a valuation of the derivatives as at 6 June 2008; is that right?
A. It was not available and I was not in a position, I was not able to –
Q. The answer is no?
A. With the information, with the information I had, I was not able to perform that analysis and that fair value.
Q. So it follows that under this transaction, no loss would crystallise before 29 March 2012; do you accept that?
A. Here I have to be very clear. As counsel said, this a very complex agreement. I tried to gain an understanding, as far as I could, and my understanding in this specific agreement is that there was a derivative with a mix of interest rates and a basket of shares, and -- and this is I am placing and relying on experts that have told me, but really it is not something that I am placing much importance in my report, is that the impact really mainly is in the basket of shares, and that there is a strike price that –
Q. I'm about to move on to that in a minute.
A. This is what I can tell you. Really, I am not an expert in derivatives, I am not in a position to go deeper than I am explaining.
Discussion on the derivatives issue
Conclusion on derivatives and the GHU MAC
Alleged MAC (Urvasco Ltd)
Overall conclusion on MAC
EVENT OF DEFAULT: BEGINNING NEGOTIATIONS FOR RESCHEDULING
"Any of the following occurs in respect of a Material Company:
(a) it is, or is deemed for the purposes of any law to be, unable to pay its debts as they fall due or insolvent;
(b) it admits its inability to pay debts as they fall due;
(c) it suspends making payments on any of its debts or announces an intention to do so;
(d) by reason of actual or anticipated financial difficulties, it begins negotiations with any creditor for the rescheduling of any of its indebtedness; or
(e) a moratorium is declared in respect of any of its indebtedness."
The construction of the sub-clause
(1) The company in question must begin negotiations with any creditor;
(2) The negotiations must be for the rescheduling of any of the company's indebtedness.
(3) The negotiations must have begun by reason of actual or anticipated financial difficulties.
8.10 Rescheduling refers to the formal deferment of debt-service payments and the application of new and extended maturities to the deferred amount. This may be conducted: (1) through the exchange of an existing debt instrument for a new one, as in refinancing or debt exchanges; or (2) through a change of the terms and conditions of the existing contracts (this is often simply referred to as rescheduling, as opposed to refinancing). Rescheduling may or may not result in a reduction in the present value of debt, as calculated by discounting the old and new payment schedule by a common interest rate.
Earlier the chapter refers to debt rescheduling as, "A change in the terms and conditions of the amount owed, which may result, or not, in a reduction in burden in present-value terms".
"altering the terms and conditions of existing loan agreements because of the inability of the borrower to meet the established interest and/or principal repayments."
Caja Rioja
"42. The negotiations with Caja Rioja in March and April 2008 related to a mortgage on some land in Vitoria. The principal was due on 21 April 2008 and so we wanted to renew the mortgage on new terms. As the original loan had been provided without any security, Caja Rioja was keen to obtain security and this was given in the form of the amortisation of the principal being drawn from the sale proceeds of Urvasco Energía and a mortgage on another plot of land in Vitoria. The email correspondence referred to in paragraphs 6.1 to 6.3 [of Schedule 2 to the Defence], and particularly my email dated 18 April 2008, merely reflected my strategy for ensuring that we obtained the renewal of the loan."
"Dear Manuel: In light of the upcoming expiration of the loan that we have with your bank, I already informed you that, for that date, I do not have the means to resolve this and that is why I requested the renewal. Caja Rioja, as you informed me, is going to treat it as payable and wait until we cancel it with the income from the wind farms; income that will come about in mid-May. On that day we will want another loan of the same amount in which we will include collaterals that we will release from bridge funding that will be in place up to the sale of the wind farms. There are sites in Castro that will remain with very small mortgages, some tertiary sites in Vitoria and other kinds of guarantees, not only personal.
In the end, as I told you, given the actual crisis situation in the sector, we will sacrifice our most valuable present assets, with the goal of meeting our service cost of the debt while this storm lasts; an avalanche of loan amortizations will rather modify our financial strategy."
Ibercaja
"As I have already told you, we are currently unable to mortgage so much as a single square metre of Chamartin; any entry in the Property Register could lead to a tax cost of 30.35 million euros for us. In addition, it is very hard to give real guarantees in respect of staff who are connected to Madrid properties, especially mortgage guarantees in respect of buildings or land> That is because certain entities that supported us in land investments, but with no particular interest in taking part in the project, saw themselves forced - due to the crisis - to renew that finance with mortgage guarantees or mortgage pledges. That is why we include offices, some land, and even part of our art collection."
A request was made to extend any claim for repayment for a period of one month, by which was meant a legal claim brought in the courts.
Unicaja
"Julio, the debt on the credit account matured on 20/02, that is longer than what would be reasonable considering all the efforts made to pay it.
We sent a policy for you to sign and you have not signed it yet. Could you please pay the debt due or at least urgently sign the policy in order to avoid judicial debt collection that could be imminent.
I tried informing you of this situation weeks ago, I know you are willing to solve this problem, but it has not been settled."
Conclusion
Q. What was happening here was that creditors were being asked, and they were agreeing, to hold off on the basis that they would, in due course, be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of Energia; that's what was happening in all of these conversations you were having with the banks? Is that fair?
A. Yes, I spoke to them about this, yes.
Q. Throughout the first half of 2008, you were delaying payments by agreement with lenders and other creditors?
A. Yes.
FURTHER BBVA DEFAULTS
(1) The use by Urvasco Ltd of sums it borrowed from BBVA under the BBVA Credit Agreement for purposes other than the Development.
(2) The late payment by Urvasco Ltd of interest and fees due to BBVA under the BBVA Credit Agreement.
(3) The failure by Urvasco Ltd to maintain sufficient funds in an account designated as the Debt Service Account under the BBVA Credit Agreement.
(4) Breaches by Urvasco Ltd of Building Contracts and Professional Appointments which took place prior to 21 December 2007. These breaches take the form of non-payment by Urvasco Ltd of sums due to the contractors and Professionals engaged on the Development.
(5) The failure by Urvasco Ltd to inform BBVA of the various breaches of the BBVA Credit Agreement identified in the sub-paragraphs above.
"… as BBVA was aware, the way that we operated was that we would have funds transferred into the Debt Service Account as and when payments were required from it … I was never told by any representative of BBVA that there were insufficient funds in the Debt Service Account and that funds needed to be transferred in. Furthermore, at no point did any representative of BBVA ever inform me that Urvasco might be in breach of the BBVA Credit Agreement on account of this."
"When one looks at a clause of this kind, however, the position is this. This clause, along with any other clause, can be the subject of waiver, and the requirement for a waiver to be in any particular form is one which can itself be waived. These clauses, inevitably, give rise to little more than an evidential requirement to establish that there truly has been a waiver in the case in question."
See also to the same effect RGI International v Synergy Classic Ltd [2011] EWHC 3417 (Comm) at [51], Hamblen J.
CAREY'S CASE OF ALLEGED "DEVELOPMENT DEFAULTS"
Introduction
(1) Urvasco Ltd did not pay contractors monies as and when they fell due. Carey was not informed. As such, GHU failed to procure that Urvasco Ltd promptly informed G&T of breaches of Development Documents by Urvasco Ltd. This was a breach of the SPA, Schedule 3, clause 1.3(c)(i) and clause 9(a) of Loan Agreement, each of which was a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement. The existence of breaches of the Development Documents by Urvasco Ltd also falsified the representation made by GHU under clause 8(e) which is a default under clause 10(b)(iii) of the Loan Agreement.
(2) The Employers Agent Report (EARs) in respect of the April, May and June works failed to provide the information required by paragraphs 1.3(a) and 1.4(a) of Schedule 3 to the SPA. The obligations in relation to the EARs were imposed on GHU by the SPA, Schedule 3, paragraph 1.3(a) under which GHU was obliged to procure that Urvasco Ltd would provide (or would procure IDOM to provide) the required information. A breach of clause 1.3(a) of the SPA is a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement.
(3) The EARs in respect of the April, May and June works contained information relating to the development which was false or failed to contain information which rendered false other information which was provided. This falsified the representations made by GHU under clause 8(k) of the Loan Agreement which is a default under clause 10(b)(iii) of the Loan Agreement.
(4) GHU failed to procure that Urvasco Ltd provided documents to which G&T was entitled pursuant to the SPA, Schedule 3, clause 1.4 of the SPA. This was a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement.
(5) GHU failed to procure that Urvasco Ltd used reasonable endeavours to procure that the development was completed by the Long Stop Date (30 April 2009) by complying with its obligations under the Development Documents. This was a breach of the SPA, Schedule 3, clause 1.1 and clause 9(a) of Loan Agreement, each of which was a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement.
(6) GHU failed to notify Carey that the Long Stop Date had become incapable of satisfaction or that completion was or was likely to be delayed beyond the LSD. This was a breach of clause 4.4 of the SPA which was a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement.
(7) GHU failed to procure that Urvasco Ltd notified Carey about claims made against Urvasco Ltd. This was a breach of the SPA, schedule 3, clause 1.3(c)(i) and clause 9(a) of Loan Agreement, each of which was a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement. One such claim, the service of a statutory demand, also rendered false the representation made in clause 8(w) of the Loan Agreement which was a default under clause 10(b)(iii) of the Loan Agreement.
(8) GHU failed to advance the Subsequent Tranches paid by Carey to Urvasco Ltd for the purposes of the Development. This was a breach of clause 8 of the Intercreditor Letter which was a default under clauses 10(b)(ii) and (iv) of the Loan Agreement.
(9) The representation made by GHU in clause 4 of the Intercreditor Agreement (that, as at 21 December 2007, there had been no breaches of the BBVA Credit Agreement) was false by reason of earlier breaches of the BBVA Credit Agreement. This was a breach of clause 4 of the Intercreditor Letter which in turn was a default under clause 21.4 of the BBVA Credit Agreement which was a default under clause 10(b)(iv) of the Loan Agreement.
(10) GHU was in breach of the BBVA Credit Agreement after 21 December 2007 in a number of specific respects. These were defaults under clause 21.3 of the BBVA Credit Agreement and were therefore defaults within clause 10(b)(iv) of the Loan Agreement.
The "disarray" point
Q. Had you ever been on a site that was so difficult to manage?
A. No.
Q. Had you ever been on a site where there were so many payment problems?
A. With threaten of suspension and these kinds of things, I have not like this.
Alleged development breach (1): failure to pay contractors and failure to notify the same to G&T/Carey
Carey's case
(1) GHU agreed, in clause 1.1(a) of Part 2 of Schedule 3 to the SPA to procure that Urvasco Ltd used its reasonable endeavours to procure that the development was carried out by the Long Stop Date by, amongst other things, complying with its obligations under each Building Contract and each Professional Appointment in a proper and timely manner. This did not happen. This was a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement.
(2) GHU represented on each Subsequent Advance Date that there was no outstanding breach of any Development Document (Loan Agreement, clause 8(e)). The breaches of the Development Documents pleaded by Carey falsify this representation. This was a default under clause 10(b)(iii) of the Loan Agreement.
(3) GHU agreed, in clause 1.3(a) of Part 2 of Schedule 3 to the SPA, to procure that Urvasco Ltd supplied (or procured IDOM to supply) an Employer's Agent Report which reported on the status of the development and contained at least the information identified in paragraphs 1.3(a)(i) to (vi). Carey says that the compliance by Urvasco Ltd with its contractual obligations was an integral part of the status of the development. The failure to include information about breaches of the Development Documents was a breach by GHU of its obligation under clause 1.3(a). This was a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement.
(4) GHU undertook, in clause 9(a) of the Loan Agreement, to comply with Schedule 3 of the SPA. By clause 1.3(c) of Part 2 to that Schedule GHU was obliged to procure that Urvasco Ltd promptly informed G&T of any breach or alleged breach under any Development Document. Contrary to the requirement of clause 1.3(c), Carey was not notified of the breaches. GHU was therefore in breach of both the SPA and the Loan Agreement, each of which is a default under clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement.
GHU's case
(1) Carey has not proved that Urvasco Ltd was in breach of its payment obligations to a range of contractors and professionals on the development on 6 June 2008 and thereafter.
(2) A breach of the obligation in paragraph 1.1(a) of Schedule 3, Part 2 to the SPA may only occur after the Long Stop Date had passed. This provision is therefore of no application in the present circumstances.
(3) Carey has not proved, for the purposes of paragraph 1.1(a) of Schedule 3, Part 2 to the SPA, any causal link between the payment failures alleged and an inability to complete the development by the Long Stop Date.
(4) Paragraph 1.1(a) of Schedule 3, Part 2 to the SPA has an express materiality threshold; that threshold was not met by the matters alleged by Carey.
(5) Clause 8(e)(ii) of the Loan Agreement is subject to an implied materiality threshold; that threshold was not met by the matters alleged by Carey.
(6) Paragraph 1.3(a) of Part 2 to Schedule 3 to the SPA did not impose an obligation on GHU/Urvasco to report the non- or late-payment of contractors or professionals.
(7) Alternatively, on its proper construction or as an implied term, paragraph 1.3(a) of Part 2 to Schedule 3 to the SPA is subject to an implied materiality threshold; that threshold was not met by the matters alleged by Carey.
(8) On its proper construction or as an implied term, paragraph 1.3(c)(i) of Part 2 to Schedule 3 to the SPA did not require Urvasco and any "Approved Contractor" to identify breaches of Development Documents other than those which were likely to have a material effect on the completion of the Development by the Long Stop Date; that threshold was not met by the matters alleged by Carey.
(9) Clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement is subject to an implied materiality threshold; that threshold was not met by the matters alleged by Carey.
(10) Clause 10(b)(iii) of the Loan Agreement is subject to an express materiality threshold; that threshold was not met by the matters alleged by Carey.
The contractual terms
(1) A "Building Contract", being any contract for the design and/or construction of the Development between Urvasco Ltd and any "Approved Contractor". The term "Approved Contractor" is defined as any one of the contractors engaged by Urvasco Ltd in connection with the Development.
(2) A "Professional Appointment" being an agreement for the appointment of a "Professional" by Urvasco Ltd. "Professional" means any one of the Professional Team being the Architect (Foster & Partners), the Employer's Agent (IDOM), the Engineering Consultant (BDSP) and the Structural Engineer (Buro Happold).
(1) Paragraph 1.1(a), Schedule 3, SPA, and clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement
"The Seller [i.e. GHU] will procure that the Company [i.e. Urvasco Ltd] uses reasonable endeavours to procure that the Development is carried out so that the Date of Practical Completion shall have occurred by the Long Stop Date by:
(a) Exercising its rights and complying with its obligations under each Building Contract and each Professional Appointment;
... in a proper and timely manner and in each case, in all material respects".
"(ii) the Seller breaches or fails to observe any other provision of the Loan Agreement or any other document to which the Seller or the Nominee [i.e. LVA] are both parties and fails to remedy such breach or failure within five Business Days or a notice from the Purchaser requiring such remedy;"
(ii) Clauses 8(e) and 10(b)(iii) of the Loan Agreement
"There is no outstanding breach of any term of any Development Document and no person has disputed, repudiated or disclaimed liability under any Development Document or has evinced an intention to do so".
"An event of default occurs if: …
(iii) Any representation, warranty or statement made by the Seller under or pursuant to the Loan Agreement is or proves to have been untrue when made in any material respect, unless the underlying circumstances are remedied within ten Business Days of a notice from the Purchaser requiring such remedy …"
(iii) Paragraph 1.3(a), Schedule 3, SPA and clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement
"The Seller shall procure that the Company shall (or shall procure that the Employer's Agent shall) supply to the Monitoring Surveyors within 10 Business Days after the start of each calendar month, a report (each an "Employer's Agent Report") by the Employer's Agent (with such inputs by other members of the Professional Team as may be appropriate) on the status of the Development".
Paragraph 1.3(a) lists in sub-paragraphs (i) to (vi) matters which must be included in the Employer's Agent Reports.
(iv) Paragraph 1.3(c)(i), Schedule 3, SPA, and clause 10(b)(ii) of the Loan Agreement
"The Seller shall procure that the Company promptly informs the Monitoring Surveyor upon becoming aware of:
(i) any breach or alleged breach under any Development Document …"
GHU's construction points
GHU's non-admission as to breach
The materiality threshold: the parties' cases
(1) The mere fact of late payment is not capable, absent other factors, of affecting the timetable for the Development.
(2) A factor which could, in theory, be capable of affecting the timetable for the Development, would be suspension of work by contractors. It is therefore relevant to examine the extent to which late payments resulted in contractors or professionals suspending their works, and the effect that this had on the timetable for the works.
(3) In this respect, the baseline programme for the Development allowed for 19 weeks of spare time, or "float". Mr Saulsbury's 'baseline' analysis (he is GHU's expert witness in programming matters) takes into account all critical delays, including the effect of all suspensions of work, which had occurred as at 6 June 2008. Taking all those matters into account, as at 6 June 2008 critical delay was between 4 and 11.6 weeks (depending on the extent to which resequencing is taken into account). This meant that there remained a period of between 7.5 and 15 weeks of float (i.e. spare time) in the programme for the outstanding works (less 2 weeks if there was to be a Christmas stoppage). The programme for the follow-on activities after 6 June 2008 was therefore able to accommodate further critical delays of between 7.5 and 15 weeks before Practical Completion of the Development would have been delayed beyond the Long Stop Date. (I should add here that in fact Mr Saulsbury did accept that 2 weeks should be allowed for in respect of a Christmas stoppage.)
(4) GHU/Urvasco's ability to achieve completion by the Long Stop Date was therefore unaffected by all matters (including any consequences of late payment) that had occurred as at 6 June 2008. It follows that late of payments of contractors and professionals, even if they constituted breaches of Building Contracts or Professional Appointments, were not material.
Conclusion on materiality
"I have attached a breakdown of invoices that are necessary to be paid during this month of June. Payments will need to be made of up to 8 million euros in total. Throughout these last few months we have promised all contractors that the financial problems would be solved permanently. If we cannot cope with these volumes of payments, which include the certification retained by Losan as well as late payments we can predict that the continuous progress of work will be seriously jeopardized.
In addition to this amount we have forzado the certification and another 4 million euros are pending which need to be remedied within 3 months. The difference between what has been certified and what has been paid has been growing from what you communicated in February of this year, where the difference was 5.5 million euros + tax + invoices Baker Mckenzie."
Alleged development breach (2): failure to provide information/provision of inaccurate information
The contractual provisions
"1.3 Monthly Reports on Development
(a) The Seller [GHU] shall procure that the Company [Urvasco Ltd] shall (or shall procure that the Employer's Agent [IDOM] shall) supply to the Monitoring Surveyors [G&T] within 10 Business Days after the start of each calendar month, a report (each an "Employer's Agent Report") by the Employer's Agent (with such inputs by other members of the Professional Team as may be appropriate) on the status of the Development. The Employer's Agent Report shall include at least:
(i) a summary of the Development Works undertaken to date and a comparison of that to the Development Timetable, identifying any delays;
(ii) reports on extensions of time notified, or applied for, by any Approved Contractor with recommendations as to any extension of time to which the relevant Approved Contractor may be entitled and details showing the impact of such extension of time on the Long Stop Date and the Development Timetable;
(iii) a report on progress of each item set out in the Budgeted Costs;
(iv) a breakdown of the costs and expenses incurred by the Company in connection with the Development to date;
(v) a comparison of actual costs and expenses incurred for the period which the report covers as against the anticipated cost or expense for that period and any resulting Cost Overruns; and
(vi) a forecast of costs and expenses to be incurred during the next month and any Costs Overruns anticipated as a result."
"1.4 Issue of Project Certificate
(a) Each Employer's Agent Report shall include details of such Development Costs which the Company shall have incurred in the calendar month immediately preceding the issue of the relevant Employer's Agent Report and in respect of which the Seller is requesting an advance under the Loan, by way of a Subsequent Tranche (as defined in the Loan). The Seller shall procure that the Company shall (or shall procure that the Employer's Agent shall) produce in support of any request for an advance under the Loan by way of a Subsequent Tranche, copies of all supporting information and receipts reasonably required to verify such Development Costs have been incurred including, without limitation, copies of the interim certificate and Approved Contractors' invoices under the Building Contracts relating to such of the Development as shall have been properly executed down to the date of the certificate together with copies of the Building Contractors' requests for such payment and any other corroboratory information as the Monitoring Surveyors and/or the Purchaser may reasonably require."
"(i) All information supplied by it or on its behalf pursuant to the terms of the Agreement [the SPA] was true and accurate in all material respects as at its date or (if appropriate) as at the date (if any) at which it is stated to be given.
(ii) It has not omitted to supply any information which would make any other information referred to in sub clause (k)(i) above untrue or misleading in any material respect".
GHU/Urvasco Ltd were deemed to repeat these representations on each Subsequent Advance Date by reference to the circumstances existing at that time. Subject to various points not presently relevant, the parties agree that "Subsequent Advance Date" would include 6 June 2008.
The issues summarised
The facts as to the forzado issue
"At the moment the last January certification is still pending, which was issued on 4 February and relates to a part of the work done in January and also carries over some works done in December of last year. As we discussed last Saturday we would need that certification + 1 million euros plus the previous obligations to be able to solve the crisis at this moment, i.e. 3.5 million Euros. One must bear in mind that within this sum we have the payment we owe Cantillon after the resolution of the court case and that we would have to pay urgently during the course of this week. If we don't they will go back to court and start to take what there is in the offices or whatever.
The following certification that we issue will include certain works carried over from the month of January and if Losan [Carey] does not deal with this, the situation will become worse. In any case we will try to transfer the certification already issued during the months before February and at least not aggravate the situation. The Spanish contractors would say that we have certified an invoiced amount which is higher than what was really done, so we can now reduce this to get back to a situation more in accordance with the reality.
[…]
In addition to all this and as we've stated on previous occasions, we continue to have a gap of approximately another 5.5 million euros (without VAT) of work certified and not paid.
Also pending are the invoices of Baker [& McKenzie] for the Losan contract and some other invoice for Mayer Brown translations. All this adds up to a little more than another half million pounds."
"With regard to the Losan [i.e. Carey] certification, we'll issue this on Monday with reference to the February work. The same Monday we've a meeting with the Project Manager of Losan to check the certification and how to issue it. We're going to move some of the previous payments with the Spaniards to February with the aim of these already going on account of Losan and trying to reduce the shortfall we have. I hope there's no opposition to this small adjustment. I estimate that the certification will be for a sum of some 3 million pounds."
£7500 gross as at 30/12/07
£20,953.05 as at 31/1/08, due 7 March 2008
£46,301.31 as at 31/4/08, due 1 May 2008
£79,202.38 as at 31/3/08, due 12 May 2008
The April 2008 certification
GHU's response based on the reasonableness of estimates and a running account
Q.... What I want to know is what you must have understood at the time. Plainly there is a degree of estimation or a degree of something which is not actual about those figures; do you agree with that?
A. Yes.
Q. And you would have known that at the time?
A. Yes
Q. So in other words, you have effectively signed off in your project certificate on those round figures which you have accepted in some way plainly involved a degree of estimation; yes?"
A. Yes
Q .You have not chosen to take objection to that; correct?
A. Correct.
What happened after 6 June 2008
"Apart from this there is a gap of another 4 million euros (taxes included) between the certificate with Losan and the payments, part of it is because some of the payments are of 90 days and we have forzado the certification more than we should have during recent months." [GHU's translation]
"Apart from this, there is another imbalance of a further 4 million EUR (VAT included) between what was certified with Losan and what was paid, part of which is due to the fact that some payments are 90-day, having distorted the certification too much in the last months." [Carey's translation]
"I've checked over the figures for the certification of May. The reality is that the certification for April is already a bit "forzada"' and there are contractors where I'm going to find it difficult to complete a certification above that of the previous month, so that I'm going to opt to certify zero in some chapters. Under these conditions I'II end up with a certification of around 1.5 million pounds. I'll try to finalise this tomorrow. To justify this reduction over the previous month, one should argue that given the low level of certainty of the payment by Losan we've already negotiated with some contractors to postpone the certification one more month, also bearing in mind that we'd let them certify materials off-site It would be important they don't make us present the contractor certifications of May backwards and that the focus from June is on the payment guarantee scheme that you agree with and that you talked about yesterday." [GHU's translation]
"I've checked over the figures for the certification of May. The reality is that the certification for April is already a bit forced and there are contractors where I'm going to find it difficult to complete a certification above that of the previous month, so that I'm going to opt to certify zero in some chapters. Under these conditions I'll end up with a certification of around 1.5 million pounds. I'll try to finalise this tomorrow. To justify this reduction over the previous month, one should argue that given the low level of certainty of the payment by Losan we've already negotiated with some contractors to postpone the certification one more month, also bearing in mind that we'd let them certify stocks. It would be important they don't make us present the contractor certifications of May backwards and that the focus from June is on the payment guarantee scheme that you agree with and that you talked about yesterday." [Carey's translation]
Conclusions on the forzado issue
Carey's other complaints
Alleged development breach (3): failure to notify claims
"(ii) any claim or demand made against the Company by any person in connection with the Development, including any claim that is reasonably likely to impact either the Budgeted Costs, the Long Stop Date or the Development Timetable."
(1) A summons for non-payment of rates served by Westminster City Council on 14 January 2008. I am satisfied that this had been paid by Urvasco Ltd in November 2007.
(2) A statutory demand served by Cantillon on 20 March 2008. I am satisfied that the outstanding sum was paid a couple of days later.
(3) A claim by New Haden Pumps Ltd for £5,904. The claim made by solicitor's letter on 7 May 2008 was paid on 19 May 2008.
(4) An adjudication commenced by Cantillon on 17 June 2008. I am satisfied that G&T was told about this during a site visit, which is supported by the fact that the Employer's Agent Reports for June and July 2008 included fees for legal services incurred in relation to this claim.
Alleged development breach (4): inability to reach the Long Stop Date
The contractual provisions relied on by Carey
4.4 Notification of the Purchaser
Upon either the Seller [GHU] or the Purchaser [Carey] becoming aware that any of the conditions in Schedule 2 (Conditions):
…
(b) will or is likely to be delayed in satisfaction beyond the Long Stop Date; or
(c) has become incapable of satisfaction by the Long Stop Date,
that party shall immediately notify the other party of that fact and shall supply to the that other party written evidence (if available) of the satisfaction of that condition or (as the case may be) a written explanation for the delay in satisfaction or for that condition having become incapable of satisfaction.
"Certificate of Practical Completion" means the written statement issued by the Architect under each of the Building Contracts (as defined in Schedule 3 {Development Control and Other Conduct before Completion)) indicating that the Development, as a whole, has reached Practical Completion;
"Long Stop Date" means 30 April 2009 as it may be extended in accordance with Schedule 3, Part 2, Paragraph 1.5 {Development control and other conduct before Completion), but notwithstanding the provisions of Schedule 3, Part 2, Paragraph 1.5, subject to an overall longstop date of 31 December 2009;
"Practical Completion" means the stage at which the Development as a whole is complete except for omissions and minor defects: (a) which in the opinion of the Architect the Approved Contractors have reasonable grounds for not promptly correcting; (b) which do not contravene any Necessary Consents; (c) which do not prevent the Development or any part of the Development from being used for its intended purpose; (d) which do not prevent or disrupt other works within the Development from being progressed; and (e) rectification of which will not prejudice the convenient use of the Development.
Was there an extension?
By 6 June 2008, had GHU become aware that Practical Completion was likely to be delayed beyond the Long Stop Date?
Q. A hard copy of a short-term programme shows the progress that has been made in the last two weeks, doesn't it?
A. It does.
Q. Armed with that hard copy programme, they would know what work had been done in the last two weeks, wouldn't they?
A. They would.
Q. Armed with that and with a site visit, their eyes and their expertise, they could see what work had been done at a given date, couldn't they?
A. They could equate the work done or shown in the short-term programme to their observations, I agree.
Q. I think that's a very long way of saying yes, is it?
A. Yes.
Q. So they know at a given date what work has been done, you have agreed with me that they knew the scope of works or, to put it another way, all the work that had to be done to finish the job; yes? You have agreed with that.
A. Yes.
Q. Subtracting one from the other, absent any other information, they would know at any given date what work still had to be done and the time available to do it, wouldn't they?
A. With regard to the information, yes.
Q. We are going to assume a level of programming expertise on the part of G&T. Do you have any reason to doubt that?
A. No, I don't. I believe their observations show that. I agree.
Q. Absent any other information, at any given date when they make a site visit, G&T were able to form a view, were they not, about whether the long stop date was realistically achievable or not?
A. Yes, they could.
Q. Admittedly based on different information for each of them, but with those three opinions ranged against yours, and also given that G&T and Mr Utrilla had access to the works, site visits and so forth, can I ask whether you at least agree with these propositions. The first is this: the question of whether the long stop date could have been achieved as at 6 June 2008 is at least open to a range of reasonable viewpoints?
A. I agree.
Would Practical Completion have been, or would be likely to have been, delayed beyond the Long Stop Date as at 6 June 2008?
(i) The mansard roof
(ii) Knight Build
(ii) West core
(iii) Electrical work and vaults
(iv) Mechanical works
(v) The lifts
(vi) Other issues
Conclusion
Alleged development breach (5): use of Subsequent Tranches
"8.2 The Shareholder [GHU] undertakes to the Secured Parties to advance an amount equal to the Subsequent Tranches to the Borrower [Urvasco Ltd] (whether by way of share capital subscription or loan) to enable the Borrower to apply such amounts in carrying out the Development (as defined in the BBVA Facility Agreement).
8.3 The Borrower [Urvasco Ltd] undertakes to the Secured Parties to apply the amounts received by it in respect of the Subsequent Tranches as provided for in paragraph 8.2."
The term "Secured Parties" as used in this paragraph is a reference to BBVA and Carey.
(1) Of the €4,106,798.62 advanced by Carey to GHU on 2 April 2008, GHU transferred a total of €2,311,625 to Urvasco Ltd between 3 and 8 April 2008. GHU retained for its own benefit and use some €1,795,173 of the First Subsequent Tranche.
(2) Of the €3,441,880.59 advanced by Carey to GHU on 5 May 2008, GHU transferred a total of €3,008,000 to Urvasco Ltd on 6 and 7 May 2008. GHU retained for its own benefit and use some €433,880 of the Second Subsequent Tranche.
GHU'S RELIEF FROM LIABILITY TO REPAY IN CASE OF CAREY'S BREACH
"If the Purchaser fails to advance any Tranche due to be advanced under and in accordance with the Loan and fails to remedy such breach within a period of 30 days of notice from the Seller requiring such remedy, the Seller shall be entitled to rescind this Agreement by written [sic] to the Purchaser without liability of any kind on the Seller's part under this Agreement. Upon such rescission the Seller shall not be obliged to repay the Loan."
CAREY'S CLAIM: QUANTUM
GHU'S DAMAGES CLAIM
The factual steps on which GHU's claim is based
(1) Completion would have taken place under the Agreement for Lease with LPS (this was for 999 years at an agreed premium—see above in the factual narrative);
(2) Completion would have taken place under the SPA with Carey under which GHU would have sold the entire share capital of Urvasco Ltd (owner of the hotel) to LVA, which was Carey's nominee;
(3) GHU and Carey would have entered into the lease under which GHU would have leased the hotel from Urvasco Ltd for a period of 10 years (with an option to renew for a further 10 years).
(4) GHU and Carey would also have entered into the Call Option Agreement, under which GHU would have the right to reacquire Urvasco Ltd (or the hotel) after seven years.
(1) The agreement to commence from on or about 1 June 2009.
(2) Management fees of 1.5% of total revenue and 3% of gross operating profit for the hotel to be payable by GHU to Silken.
(3) Silken to be responsible for the salary of the General Manager of the hotel and for providing management, administrative and marketing services.
(1) GHU says that Mr Smith (Carey's expert on the hotel issues) accepted that the disagreement between the parties reflected the differing views of Mr Smith and Mr Bailey and Mr MacGregor (GHU's experts on these issues) as to the value of the net cashflows which would have been generated.
(2) Mr Couto's evidence was that it was always GHU's intention to repurchase the hotel at the first available opportunity.
(3) He said that the repurchase price under the call option would have been funded by a combination of equity from the Urvasco group (and, if necessary, its shareholders) and debt funding from financial institutions.
(4) GHU says that the views of Mr Bailey and Mr MacGregor on the value of the cashflows are to be preferred over those of Mr Smith, and on this basis, the court is invited to conclude that the option would have been exercised by GHU.
(1) Mr Bailey's evidence is that it would have been possible for GHU to recruit and plan off-site for the opening and, accordingly, an opening date of 1 June 2009 following Practical Completion on 30 March 2009 would have been possible.
(2) Mr Smith's position in his report was that the hotel would not have opened until 1 January 2010. However, this was based on what GHU says was the unrealistic assessment that GHU would have taken six months to prepare the hotel for opening and then would have waited a further two months before opening the hotel.
(3) GHU says that an opening date of 1 June 2009 would have been possible, and would have happened as GHU would have wished to open the hotel as quickly as possible in order to begin generating revenue.
The funding issue
(1) The issue of the Certificate of Practical Completion.
(2) All existing security be discharged by Urvasco Ltd and the BBVA loan repaid.
(3) The provision of evidence satisfactory to Carey that Urvasco Ltd had net assets at Completion. (This was because Carey was acquiring the company, and was a reason why inter-company loans would likely be capitalised or otherwise written down at completion.)
Costs and funding
(1) The April 2008 Budget shows a total figure (representing the total budgeted figure in sterling both for work already done up to this date and work to be done) of £112.45m.
(2) The figure in the June 2008 Budget is £118.67m.
(3) Mr Brooker's (GHU's expert) overall sterling total is £114.43m.
(4) Mr Boultwood's (Carey's expert) equivalent is £126.65m.
April 2008 Budget |
June 2008 Budget |
Mr Brooker (GHU's expert) | Mr Boultwood (Carey's expert) | |
Sterling contracts euro contracts |
£60,548,617 €66,497,504 |
£65,355,855.97 €71,300,968.45 |
£60,912,531.01 €68,930,283.70 |
£64,142,703.07 €76,377,047.44 |
The parties' contentions
The June 2008 Budget
The April 2008 Budget
Conclusion as between the April and June 2008 Budgets
The evidence of the expert quantity surveyors
The funding gap
GHU's calculation
(1) To add in a figure of €774,571.25 in respect of package 4015;
(2) To adjust for exchange rate movements resulting in a deduction of €2,411,327;
(3) To add certain additional costs not included in the April 2008 Budget;
(4) To add the costs which as at 30 April 2008 had been certified but not paid (these were the ones accepted in opening). These costs are €12,034,443 including VAT, and €10,242,079 excluding VAT.
The effect of this, as GHU put it in oral closing, is to produce a budget of €105,925,810 for the cost of construction and fees for completing the development as at 6 June 2008. I am unclear whether based on the April 2008 Budget these numbers are in dispute as numbers, but in any event see no reason not to accept them.
How would the development been funded?
(i) The position prior to completion
(1) Mr Esparza (who was the head of accounting and of the finance department at GU) says that he would have invested €2m and that these funds were available from June 2008 until July 2011.
(2) Mr Rodolfo Di-Pietro Elizaran, who had been General Manager Urvasco Energia said that he would have been prepared to invest a further €15m.
(ii) The default related to the restructuring
(iii) The position at completion
(1) As described under the factual narrative, Urvasco Ltd had entered into the Agreement for Lease with LPS. Under this agreement, LPS agreed to pay £70m (subsequently increased to £71m) to acquire a 999 year lease for the 79 apartments included in the development. LPS was required to, and did, pay a deposit of £7m to Urvasco. Accordingly, on completion a further £64m would have been received from LPS.
(2) In addition, on completion the euro equivalent of a further £35m would have been received from Carey under the SPA, representing the difference between the purchase price due under the SPA (£105 million) and the amount of the loan advanced to GHU (£70 million) (see clause 3 of the SPA). At the fixed exchange rate, this would have amounted to €48,510,000.
(1) The maximum amount available for drawdown under the BBVA Credit Agreement was the euro equivalent of £87,670,000. On the assumption that this had been fully drawn down, then this amount would have required repayment.
(2) Under clause 30.8(a) of the BBVA Credit Agreement any repayment was to be in euros. The exact sum in euros which would have required repayment depended on the exchange rates which under the terms of the agreement were to be fixed shortly after each loan was drawn down: see the definitions of "Euro Equivalent" and "Rate Fixing Date". In fact, GHU drew down the funds in euros and to the extent it was necessary to convert the monies to sterling it did so under hedging arrangements entered into with BBVA. The average exchange rate applied by BBVA according to Ms Santamaria was £0.70: €1. Assuming that exchange rate, GHU says that the sum of €125,242,857 would have required repayment.
(3) In addition, it would have been necessary to discharge the gap of €28,961,112 on the funding of the works either by discharging any further loan from BBVA in this amount or by making the deferred payments to the contractors. I refer to my findings above in this respect. On the basis of the June 2008 Budget, this figure is considerably higher, and near €40m.
(4) It is a hypothetical question, GHU says, as to whether such sum would have been required to be repaid in sterling or in euros or in a combination of both. This would have depended on the currency of any further loan from BBVA and on the currency of the relevant contractor payments which were deferred. In practice, GHU says, Urvasco Ltd would not have had to convert the sterling received from LPS into euros in order to repay BBVA, because GHU and Urvasco would have allocated sterling receipts to meet sterling liabilities and euro receipts to meet euro liabilities.
(1) The €48,510,000 received from Carey would have discharged the €28,961,112 gap on funding and €19,548,888 of the loan to BBVA leaving €105,693,969 due to BBVA.
(2) Conversion of the £64 million from LPS into euros at the applicable exchange rate (the euro-sterling exchange rate at 30 April 2009 was approximately €1.12 to £1), would have amounted to €71,680,000.
(3) Accordingly, there would have been a remaining amount of about €34,013,969 due to BBVA.
(iv) Conclusion on the funding issue
Quantum
(1) Loss of profit on hotel operations
(2) Development loss
OVERALL CONCLUSION
October 21, 2008
Mr César Losada Santamaria
Losan Hotels World Value Added 1, S.L.
Serrano, 26, 4°
28001 Madrid
Dear Mr. Losada:
I refer to you letter dated October 6, 2008, whereby you informed us of the termination of the loan agreement entered into on December 2007, by and between Grupo Hotelero Urvasco, S.A. ("GHU") and Losan Hotels World Value Added I, Ltd ("Losan"), pursuant to clause 10(a)ii thereof and the reservation of rights in your favour as regards said loan agreement and the sale and purchase agreement of the same date by and between GHU, Losan and London Value Added I Limited (hereinafter jointly, the "Agreements").
Further to our conversations with you, Losan would be prepared to accept, on the terms and subject to the conditions below, the surrender of its position under the Agreements in exchange for a payment by GHU to include (i) THIRTY FIVE MILLION FOUR HUNDRED AND FORTY SIX THOUSAND, THREE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY SEVEN POUNDS STERLING AND FORTY NINE PENCE (£35,446,377.49) by way of return of amounts handed over by Losan to GHU under the Agreements; (ii) EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND POUNDS STERLING (£800,000.00) by way of compensation for the opportunity cost incurred by Losan; (iii) interest accrued and pending payment (including late payment interest, where applicable) up to the date on which the above payment is made pursuant to the loan agreement; and (iv) any and all expenses actually incurred by Losan within the framework of the sale and purchase and leaseback transaction, to include, inter alia, legal fees, technical due diligence costs, financial advisors fees, technical advisors fees, travel expenses, management fees paid by Losan, etc., all of which shall be duly documented, and shall not in aggregate exceed the amount of ONE AND A HALF MILLION POUNDS STERLING (£1,500,000.00). The amounts under paragraphs (1) and (iii) above mentioned shall be payable by GHU in Euros on the terms provided under the Agreements, whereas the amounts under (ii) and (iv) shall be payable in pounds sterling. All the above amounts shall be paid within a maximum of two (2) months as from the moment when GHU is duly notified of Losan's acceptance of this letter, on the terms and conditions hereunder, by receiving a duly signed copy of this letter.
During the first month of said period, Losan undertakes to refrain from taking any legal action to which it may be entitled under the Agreements. After said one month period, Losan shall be entitled to avail itself of any and all rights it may have under the Agreements.
Following the end of the two (2) month period above-mentioned, Losan may either request compliance by GHU with its obligations hereunder, or leave without effect the agreements arising hereunder, or extend the contents of this letter for the period it deems fit.
By agreeing to this notice, Losan expressly authorises GHU to undertake such contacts and negotiations with third parties as may be necessary to carry out their substitution in Losan's stead under the Agreements, as well as the execution with such third parties of any documents, whether binding or otherwise, as may be necessary for such purposes, with the only limitation that said documents shall in no event entail that payment to Losan of any of the amounts referred to under paragraph Second of this letter is not made within the above mentioned two-month period. GHU represents and warrants that it is aware that said two-month deadline for the payments is of the
essence, and an essential condition for Losan's acceptance of the terms of this letter.
Upon receipt of the amounts above mentioned, Losan and GHU shall execute any such documents, whether of a private or public character, as may be necessary to effectively terminate the Agreements, together with any outstanding contractual relationships between Losan and GHU arising from or in relation to the Agreements Said documents shall include the relevant representations and warranties by Losan and GHU in the sense that payment of the above mentioned amounts is in full and final settlement of any and all amounts howsoever due under or in relation to the Agreements, and fully extinguishes any outstanding contractual relationship between Losan and GHU thereunder arising, and that both GHU and Losan expressly waive any right or action to claim against each other, whether in court or out of court, on any facts or circumstances howsoever, whether past, present or future, arising from their
contractual relationships.
Acceptance by Losan of this letter is only for the purposes of confirming (i) the amount for which it is prepared to surrender its position under the Agreements, provided always that payment is made within the agreed deadline, whereby GHU acknowledges that the above mentioned amounts and deadline for payment are of the essence for Losan, and that Losan would, in the absence thereof, not have entered into this letter agreement; (ii) GHU's authorisation to proceed on the terms indicated under paragraph fifth hereof, (at) Losan's commitment to refrain from taking any legal action against GHU for a period of one (1) month as from acceptance of this letter agreement, and (iv) Losan's willingness to execute the documents mentioned under paragraph six above immediately upon receipt of the amounts above mentioned.
Acceptance by Losan of this letter agreement shall in no event entail, during any period, any waiver of rights assisting Losan (other than purely judicial rights) under the Agreements, including the right to terminate the sale and purchase agreement and the loan agreement, and to claim reimbursement of any amounts lent to GHU under the loan agreement, as and when it may deem fit.
For the event that Losan actually brings legal action, which shall in no event occur prior to expiry of one (1) month as from receipt of acceptance by GHU of this letter agreement, GHU may pay the above mentioned amounts within the established deadline, and Losan undertakes to immediately thereafter withdraw from any such action, provided that payment by GHU is final and irrevocable. For a period of one (1) month as from acceptance of this letter agreement, GHU undertakes not to bring any legal action under the Agreements.
I look forward to your reply at your earliest convenience.
Yours faithfully,
Antonio Iraculis Miguel
In witness of acceptance and agreement
César Losada Santarnaria
Losan Hotels World Value Added 1, S.L..
26 November 2008
Mr César Losada Santamaria
Losan Hotels World Value Added I, S.L.
Serrando, 26, 4
28001 Madrid
Dear Mr. Losada:
I refer to your letter of 6 October 2007, by virtue of which you informed us of termination of the loan agreement entered into on 21 December 2007, between Grupo Hotelero Urvasco, S.A. ("GHU") and Losan Hotels World Value Added I, Ltd ("Losan") pursuant to the provisions set down under clause 10(a)ii of said agreement and the reservation of rights related to loan agreement per se and the purchase agreement entered into on the same date between GHU, Losan and London Value Added I. Limited (hereinafter referred to jointly as the Agreements).
According to the conversation held with you, Losan is able, under the terms and subject to the following, to accept abandoning its position in the Agreements in exchange for a payment on the part of GHU to include (i) THIRTY FIVE MILLION FOUR HUNDRED AND FORTY SIX THOUSAND THREE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY SEVEN POUNDS STERLING AND FORTY NINE PENCE (£35,446,377.49) as return of sums provided by Losan to GHU by virtue of the aforementioned Agreements, (ii) EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND POUNDS STERLING (£800,000.00) as compensation for loss of profit by Losan, (iii) interest accrued and payable (including default interest, if appropriate) up until 21 December 2008, as set down in the loan agreement and (iv) all costs effectively incurred by Losan under the scope of the purchase operation and subsequent lease and to include, among others, costs for legal advice, including any which may be incurred up until 30 April 2009, technical due diligence, financial advisers, technical advisers, travel costs, management commissions paid by Losan, etc. and for which proper receipts must be provided and limited to a maximum of ONE MILLION FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND POUNDS STERLING (£1,500,000.00).
GHU must furthermore pay interest at a rate of 7.5 annual interest, settled on a monthly basis, calculated on the overall total amount of sums payable by GNU by virtue of paragraphs (i), (ii), and (iv) above, calculated as from 21 December 2008 up to the date of payment. Thus, neither interest amounts agreed in the loan agreement nor any default payments are deemed payable from 21 December 2008 up until the payment date.
The amounts referred to under paragraphs (i) and (iii) above must be paid over by GHU in Euros and under the conditions provided for in the Agreements, whereas the amount set out under paragraphs (ii) and (iv) are to be paid in pounds sterling. All said amounts must be paid prior to 30 April 2009, under the terms and conditions set out herein.
Losan undertakes not to instigate any legal actions it may be entitled to bring by virtue of the Agreements up until 31 March 2009. From 1 April 2009 onwards, Losan may, without any limitation, exercise any of the rights to which they are entitled to according to the provisions set down in said Agreements.
From 30 April 2009 onwards, Losan may either require compliance with the obligation taken on by GHU by virtue of this letter, or render the agreements arising out of this communication without effect or extend the content of this letter by whatever time period it deems appropriate.
By accepting this communication, Losan expressly authorises GHU to enter into as many contacts, relationships or negotiations with third parties as necessary in order to achieve a replacement for the Losan position in the Agreements and also to sign as many documents, whether binding or not, with said third parties as necessary to that end, with the following limitations:
• That the aforesaid documents may not imply that payment shall not be made to Losan of the amounts referred to under paragraph two of this letter as a whole prior to 30 April 2009. GHU states in this sense that it is aware of the importance Losan of the payment being carried out within the time period set down, i.e. prior to 30 April 2009 and that this is deemed to be a basic condition for the purposes of acceptance of this letter on the part of Losan.
• That in the event that, as at 31 March 2009, GHU has not confirmed an agreement with any third party to take the position of Losan in the Agreements, then it must accept any offer it has received prior to 30 April 2009 as long as the offer concerned at least covers the debt GHU owned to Losan by virtue of the aforesaid agreement dated 21 December 2007 as well as the debt owed by Urvasco Limited, company wholly owned by GHU, to the financial institution BBVA, pursuant to the loan agreement originally entered into between the two companies as at 22 December 2004 and amended on 20 November and 21 December 2007.
Upon paying the aforesaid amounts, Losan and GHU will sign as many public or private documents as legally necessary for the purpose of rendering the Agreements duly terminated, as well as all other contractual relationships in force between Losan and GHU arising therefrom. Those documents must include the corresponding statements on the part of Losan and GHU to confirm, upon payment of the total sum of the aforementioned amounts, that any amounts which may be owed with regard to any item or legal relation having to do with said Agreements and all the remaining contractual relationships in force between Losan and GHU arising therefrom have been fully met, settled and finally paid off and that GHU and Losan reciprocally waive any right to legal action or claim either in or out of court due to any events or circumstances that may occur, either in the present or the future, arising out of their contractual relationships.
Acceptance on the part of Losan of this letter is deemed to refer exclusively for the purposes of confirming: (i) the amount in exchange for which the former is willing to give up its position in the Agreement for as long as said payment is paid over within the agreed time period, and GHU acknowledges to that end, that the aforesaid amount and payment periods are deemed to comprise basic factors for Losan, without which it would not have signed this documents, (ii) the authorisation on the part of GHU to proceed in the terms set out under paragraph seven herein, (iii) it Losan waives its right to take legal action against GHU up until 1 April 2009 and (iv) Losan willingness to sign the documents referred to under paragraph eight herein at one and the same time as paying over the aforesaid amount.
Acceptance by Losan of this letter shall not in any event be deemed to imply for any period of time whatsoever that it waives any rights to which Losan may be entitled (other than strictly judicial rights) as provided under the Agreements, including the right to terminate the purchase agreement or the loan agreement and to request return of the amounts provided to GHU by virtue of the loan agreement whenever it deems it
appropriate to do so.
In the event that Losan effectively does instigate judicial proceedings, which cannot in any event occur prior to 1 April 2009, GHU may hand over the aforesaid amount within the period provided, i.e. prior to 30 April 2009, and Losan undertakes to withdraw from any legal action it may have instigated provided that such payment on the part of GHU is final and irrevocable. GHU undertakes not to exercise any judicial actions which it may be entitled to by virtue of the Agreements up until 1 April 2009.
With nothing further to add, I await your prompt response and remain,
Yours faithfully
SIGNATURE
Antonio lraculis Miguel
As evidence of acceptance and in agreement
SIGNATURE
César Losada Santamaria
Losan Hotels World Value Added I, S.L.
For the purposes of guaranteeing compliance with the obligation of Grupo Hotelero Urvasco, S.A. (GHU) to accept any offer made by a third party to take over the position of Losan Hotels World Added I, S.L. (LHWVAI) in the loan agreements and purchase agreements entered into by the two parties (the Agreements), GHU undertakes to keep LHWVAI informed of any third party offers it receives. GHU particularly undertakes to forward to LHWVAI any final offer received to replace LHWVAI in the Agreements within a time period of three days from the date on which GHU receives such an offer.
Equally, GHU undertakes to forward a fortnightly report to LHWVAI listing all contacts made with third parties with a view to replacing LHWVAI in the Agreements and all non-binding offers received to the same end.
And for the record for appropriate purposes, this document is signed on 26 November
2008:
For Grupo Hotelero Urvasco, S.A.
Mr. Emilio Iraculis
For Losan Hotels World Value Added I. S.L.
Mr. César Losada