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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Citco Banking Corporation N.V. v. Pusser's Ltd & Anor (British Virgin Islands) [2007] UKPC 13 (28 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2007/13.html Cite as: [2007] UKPC 13, [2007] Bus LR 960, [2007] 2 BCLC 483, [2007] BCC 205 |
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Citco Banking Corporation N.V. v. Pusser's Ltd & Anor (Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (British Virgin Islands)) [2007] UKPC 13 (28 February 2007)
Privy Council Appeal No 55 of 2005
Citco Banking Corporation N.V. Appellant
v.
(1) Pusser's Limited
(2) Charles S Tobias Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE
EASTERN CARIBBEAN SUPREME COURT
(BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS)
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JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL
Delivered the 28th February 2007
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Present at the hearing:-
Lord Hoffmann
Lord Scott of Foscote
Lord Rodger of Earlsferry
Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe
Lord Mance
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[Delivered by Lord Hoffmann]
30 June 1992 but the year to 30 June 1993 had shown a profit of $56,000. The current year was also expected to yield a modest profit. But Mr Tobias said that the company's future lay in an expansion of its activities into the United States, starting with a retail enterprise in Annapolis. This would require both equity and loan finance. He was trying to raise equity finance by a private placement of shares with potential investors (known as an offer under Regulation D of the relevant US securities regulations) and to raise loan finance from banks.
"1. He stated that the company was in the middle of a private placement of shares. He pointed out that he had been in contact with certain investors whom he believed would purchase shares in the company resulting in proceeds of two million dollars to the company. He pointed out that certain of the key investors in this group had stated to him that their reason for investing in the company was that they were betting on him and his strategy to make the company a significant success. They told him that they would only invest in the company if he had unquestioned control over the company.
2. He stated that the bankers to the company had told him that they had seen a marked improvement in the overall performance of the company since he had taken back responsibility for the day to day operations of the company. The bankers had told him that they would consider advancing a significant line of credit to the company provided that he remained in tight control of the company and would personally guarantee repayment of all or some of the advances by the company to the bank. The chairman stated that he was willing to personally guarantee repayment of the advances provided that he had assurance that he would remain in control of the company.
3. He stated that he and his family had more than one half million dollars loaned to the company which was due and payable. He was not willing to continue to leave the funds in the company unless he had absolute control over the company to assure that the direction of the company was one that he believed would eventually allow for the repayment of these loans. He stated that he believed that it was in the best interest of the company not to have these loans called at this time.
The chairman stated that he believed that it would be in the best interests of the company and all of its shareholders for the sale of securities in the United States under a Regulation D offering to be completed, a significant line of credit established with the bankers to the company and for his loans not to be called at the present time. He said that if the resolution was approved, he would not call the loans and would personally guarantee the repayment of moneys drawn under the significant line of credit proposed by the bankers to the company as required by the bank."
"may in general meeting, from time to time, by passing a special resolution in manner hereinafter mentioned, alter all or any of the regulations of the company contained in the articles of association..."
"a resolution has been passed by a majority of not less than three- fourths of such members of the company, for the time being entitled according to the regulations of the company to vote, as may be present in person or by proxy.. .at any general meeting of which notice specifying the intention to propose such a resolution has been duly given."
"RESOLVED that the Memorandum of Association of Pusser's Ltd be and is hereby amended by deleting paragraph 5(a) as amended and substituting therefor the following:
5(a) The capital of the company is US$4,400,000 divided into 4,200,000 Class A ordinary shares of $1.00 each and 200,000 Class B ordinary shares of $1.00 each.
RESOLVED that the Articles of Association of Pusser's Ltd be and are hereby amended as follows:
(1) By deleting paragraph 4 as amended and substituting therefor the following:
4(a) The Capital of the Company is US$4,400,000 divided into 4,200,000 Class A ordinary shares of $1.00 each and 200,000 Class B ordinary shares of £1.00 each.
4(b) The Class B ordinary shares of the Company shall automatically convert into Class A ordinary shares upon the death or permanent disability of Mr Charles Tobias.
(2) by deleting Article 7 and substituting therefor the following:
7. At any General Meeting of the Company on a show of hands every Member present in person shall have one vote and on a poll every holder of Class A ordinary shares shall have one vote for every share owned by that member and every holder of Class B ordinary shares shall have fifty votes for every share owned by that member.
"200,000 shares of the Class A ordinary shares of the Company owned or controlled by the Chairman of the Company, Mr Charles S Tobias, be converted into 200,000 of the new Class B ordinary shares of the Company."
"The power.. . conferred on companies [by the equivalent of section 89 of the BVI Companies Act] to alter the regulations contained in their articles is limited only by the provisions contained in the statute and the conditions contained in the company memorandum of association. Wide, however, as the language of s. [89] is, the power conferred by it must, like all other powers, be exercised subject to those general principles of law and equity which are applicable to all powers conferred on majorities and enabling them to bind minorities. It must be exercised, not only in the manner required by law, but also bona fide for the benefit of the company as a whole, and it must not be exceeded. These conditions are always implied, and are seldom, if ever, expressed. But if they are complied with I can discover no ground for judicially putting any other restrictions on the power conferred by the section than those contained in it."
"It appears to me the shareholders were acting in the truest and best interests of the company in exercising the legal right to alter the articles so that the company might as one result obtain payment of the debt due from Mr. Zuccani. The shareholders were only bound to look to the interests of the company. They were not bound to consult or consider Mr. Zuccani's separate or private interests."
"Now when persons, honestly endeavouring to decide what will be for the benefit of the company and to act accordingly, decide upon a particular course, then, provided there are grounds on which reasonable men could come to the same decision, it does not matter whether the Court would or would not come to the same decision or a different decision. It is not the business of the Court to manage the affairs of the company. That is for the shareholders and directors. The absence of any reasonable ground for deciding that a certain course of action is conducive to the benefit of the company may be a ground for finding lack of good faith or for finding that the shareholders, with the best motives, have not considered the matters which they ought to have considered. On either of these findings their decision might be set aside. But I should be sorry to see the Court go beyond this and take upon itself the management of concerns which others may understand far better than the Court does."
"[T]he test is whether the alteration of the articles was in the opinion of the shareholders for the benefit of the company. By what criterion is the Court to ascertain the opinion of the shareholders upon this question? The alteration may be so oppressive as to cast suspicion on the honesty of the persons responsible for it, or so extravagant that no reasonable men could really consider it for the benefit of the company. In such cases the Court is, I think, entitled to treat the conduct of shareholders as it does the verdict of a jury, and to say that the alteration of a company's articles shall not stand if it is such that no reasonable men could consider it for the benefit of the company."
"What has happened is that the members of this company, other than the holders of the management shares, have come to the conclusion that it is for the benefit of this company that the present basis of control through the management shares should continue to subsist notwithstanding that the management shares will henceforward represent a smaller proportion of the issued capital than heretofore. That, it seems to me, is a decision on a matter of business policy to which they could properly come and it does not seem to me a matter in which the court can interfere. So far as I am aware there is no principle under which the members of a company acting in accordance with the Companies Act and the constitution of the particular company and subject to any necessary consent on the part of a class affected, cannot, if they are so minded, alter the relative voting powers attached to various classes of shares. Of course, any resolution for the alteration of voting rights must be passed in good faith for the benefit of the company as a whole, but, where it is so, I know of no ground on which such an alteration would be objectionable and no authority has been cited to that effect. So here this alteration in voting powers has been resolved upon by a great majority of those members of the company who have themselves nothing to gain by it so far as their personal interest is concerned and who, so far as one knows, are actuated only by consideration of what is for the benefit of the company as a whole."
"Notwithstanding that a shareholder's membership of a company is subject to alterations of the articles which may affect the rights attaching to the shareholder's shares and the value of those shares, we do not consider that, in the case of an alteration to the articles authorizing the expropriation of shares, it is a sufficient justification of an expropriation that the expropriation, being fair, will advance the interests of the company as a legal and commercial entity or those of the majority, albeit the great majority, of corporators. This approach does not attach sufficient weight to the proprietary nature of a share and, to the extent that English authority might appear to support such an approach, we do not agree with it."
"[I]t was not in the company's interests to have control relinquished to a single shareholder permanently for the duration of his life, such shareholder not being removable should the remainder of the shareholders no longer have confidence in his management. It was said that it hardly be legitimately expected by Pusser's bankers and prospective investors that excessive voting power be placed in the hands of Mr Tobias. I do accept this reasoning especially in the absence of satisfactory proof that there was such a requirement."
"I find it impossible to say that what was effected by the resolution is for the benefit of Citco and the remaining shareholders. The reasons proffered at the meeting were all largely subjective to Mr Tobias. While it is understandable that it may be desirable that superior voting power be conferred to preserve confidence in management in my view the measure went too far to the extent of being extravagant. It is not within my purview to speculate upon what formula would fall short of oppression suffice it to say that the resolution fails to pass the test of being bona fide for the benefit of the company as a whole."
"It is...not necessary to require that persons voting for a special resolution should, so to speak, dissociate themselves altogether from their own prospects..."
"Unless otherwise provided by the regulations of the company, a shareholder is not debarred from voting or using his voting power to carry a resolution by the circumstance of his having a particular interest in the subject-matter of the vote."