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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Stanford International Bank Ltd , Re (Antigua and Barbuda) [2019] UKPC 45 (16 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2019/45.html Cite as: [2019] UKPC 45, [2020] 1 BCLC 446 |
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Michaelmas Term
[2019] UKPC 45
Privy Council Appeal No 0075 of 2018
JUDGMENT
In the matter of Stanford International Bank Ltd (In Liquidation) (Acting by and through its Joint Liquidators Mark McDonald and Hugh Dickson) (Antigua and Barbuda)
From the Court of Appeal of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (Antigua and Barbuda) |
before
Lord Wilson Lord Carnwath Lord Briggs Lady Arden Sir Andrew Longmore
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JUDGMENT GIVEN ON |
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16 December 2019 |
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Heard on 23 and 24 July 2019 |
Appellant |
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Respondent |
Justin Fenwick QC |
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Prof Mark Watson-Gandy |
Nicole Sandells QC |
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Lenworth Johnson |
(Instructed by Gowling WLG (UK) LLP) |
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(Instructed by Edwin Coe LLP) |
LORD BRIGGS: (with whom Lord Wilson and Sir Andrew Longmore agree)
Introduction
1. This appeal is about the rights of creditors, under the laws of Antigua and Barbuda, who have suffered loss by investing, through an Antiguan bank, in what turned out to have been a Ponzi scheme. Giving the advice of the Board in Fairfield Sentry Ltd v Migani [2014] UKPC 9, Lord Sumption said this, at para 3:
“It is inherent in a Ponzi scheme that those who withdraw their funds before the scheme collapses escape without loss, and quite possibly with substantial fictitious profits. The loss falls entirely on those investors whose funds are still invested when the money runs out and the scheme fails.”
3. Central to the analysis of the relevant legal issues is the fact that SIB was incorporated as an Antiguan International Business Corporation (“IBC”) under the Antiguan International Business Corporations Act (“the IBC Act”). As will be explained in more detail below, the IBC Act prescribes a rather unusual insolvency regime for the winding up of an IBC but it also contains, at section 204, a generously worded provision of discretionary remedies which may be sought from the court, both by shareholders and creditors, where there has been oppressive or unfairly prejudicial conduct, in order to rectify the matters complained of. This may conveniently be labelled “section 204 relief”.
5. By way of summary, the Board has concluded:
(a) by a majority, that section 204 relief is not available in relation to an IBC in liquidation, so that this appeal should be dismissed;
(b) unanimously that, if section 204 relief had in principle been available, the judge was right to conclude that claw-back claims should not be pursued;
(c) unanimously, that re-adjustment of creditors’ claims in the liquidation should not have been permitted, even if section 204 relief was in principle available.
The Facts
(a) The pursuit of claims, without limit of time, for disgorgement by depositors of any sums received from SIB in excess of their respective capital deposits. This sought disgorgement of amounts paid out as contractual interest from a class which the liquidators labelled “net winners”. This was said to be justified on the basis that those amounts could only have been taken from other depositors’ capital, since at no time had SIB generated any investment profits sufficient to pay interest. Some US$200m was estimated to have been paid out in this way.
(b) Claims against all depositors who had received payments during the run on the bank from September 2008 until it ceased trading. These payments were estimated to have amounted to US$1.3 billion. The basis upon which a claw-back of these payments was said to be justified was that, if SIB had been placed in liquidation before the run on the bank commenced, then these payments would not have been made, and they ought to be regarded as having amounted to wrongful preferences. The depositors thereby repaid were labelled by the liquidators “preference creditors”.
(c) Re-adjustment of depositors’ claims within the liquidation, so as to disallow the claims of partly paid depositors in favour of depositors who had not been paid at all. This claim did not involve any element of claw-back. Rather, it sought to treat part-payments prior to liquidation as having been wrongful so that the amount of them could be, in effect, set off against what those depositors might otherwise have received from the liquidation proceeds on account of that part of their debts which remained unpaid.
The Legal Framework
17. Speaking generally, most insolvency frameworks establish a form of code or set of rules by which the competing claims of stakeholders in the company are valued as at the onset of the insolvency process (often called the cut-off date) and the then realisable assets of the company are collected in by the liquidators and distributed pari passu among unsecured creditors, subject to the proprietary claims of those with security, with the surplus (in the unlikely event there is any) distributable among shareholders, or any other class of stakeholder whose rights are postponed to those of the unsecured creditors. Transactions following the cut-off date are in general avoided and specific statutory provision is usually made for the avoidance or unwinding of certain pre-cut off date transactions such as, typically, wrongful preferences and transactions at an undervalue. In some jurisdictions, such as England, the insolvency scheme is now almost entirely statutory. In others, such as Antigua (and indeed England before 1986) the scheme consists of a mixture of statutory and judge-made rules. Invariably the insolvency scheme is recognised as serving not merely the private interests of the stakeholders in the company but also the public interest: see the recent judgment of the Board in Scandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB v Conway [2019] UKPC 36, paras 104-117.
“458.(1) Any conveyance, mortgage, delivery of goods, payment, execution, or other act relating to property which would, if made or done by or against an individual, be deemed in his bankruptcy a fraudulent preference, or a fraudulent conveyance, assignment, transfer, sale or disposition, shall, if made or done by or against a company, be deemed in the event of its being wound up, a fraudulent preference of its creditors, or a fraudulent conveyance, assignment, transfer, sale or disposition, as the case may be, and be invalid accordingly.”
That cross-reference to the bankruptcy scheme leads to section 44 of the Bankruptcy Act which provides in subsection (1) as follows:
“Every conveyance or transfer of property, or charge thereon made, every payment made, every obligation incurred, and every judicial proceeding taken or suffered by any person unable to pay his debts as they become due from his own money in favour of any creditor, or any person in trust for any creditor, with a view of giving such creditor a preference over the other creditors, whether the giving of such preference is his sole view, or one view among others, shall, if the person making, taking, paying or suffering the same is adjudged bankrupt on a bankruptcy petition presented within six months after the date of making, taking, paying, or suffering the same, be deemed fraudulent and void as against the trustee in the bankruptcy.”
22. Fraudulent (now generally called wrongful) preference was originally a judge-made principle and therefore a creature of the common law. As is explained in the Scandinaviska case, at paras 61 and 64, it was originally developed in England in the 18th century in response to a perception, best explained by Lord Mansfield in Alderson v Temple (1768) 4 Burr 2235, 2240 that a fraudulent preference “is defeating the equality that is introduced by the Statutes of Bankruptcy”. That originally common law doctrine was almost universally replaced by express statutory provisions in common law countries by the end of the 19th century, first in relation to bankruptcy and then, as in Antigua, by cross-reference, in relation to corporate insolvency.
Oppression and Unfair Prejudice
25. Speaking of section 459, in O’Neill v Phillips [1999] 1 WLR 1092, 1098-1101, Lord Hoffmann said:
“In section 459 Parliament has chosen fairness as the criterion by which the court must decide whether it has jurisdiction to grant relief. It is clear from the legislative history (which I discussed in In re Saul D Harrison & Sons Plc [1995] 1 BCLC 14, 17-20) that it chose this concept to free the court from technical considerations of legal right and to confer a wide power to do what appeared just and equitable. But this does not mean that the court can do whatever the individual judge happens to think fair. The concept of fairness must be applied judicially and the content which it is given by the courts must be based upon rational principles. As Warner J said in In re J E Cade & Son Ltd [1992] BCLC 213, 227: ‘The court … has a very wide discretion, but it does not sit under a palm tree’.
Although fairness is a notion which can be applied to all kinds of activities, its content will depend upon the context in which it is being used. Conduct which is perfectly fair between competing businessmen may not be fair between members of a family. In some sports it may require, at best, observance of the rules, in others (‘it’s not cricket’) it may be unfair in some circumstances to take advantage of them. All is said to be fair in love and war. So the context and background are very important.
In the case of section 459, the background has the following two features. First, a company is an association of persons for an economic purpose, usually entered into with legal advice and some degree of formality. The terms of the association are contained in the articles of association and sometimes in collateral agreements between the shareholders. Thus the manner in which the affairs of the company may be conducted is closely regulated by rules to which the shareholders have agreed. Secondly, company law has developed seamlessly from the law of partnership, which was treated by equity, like the Roman societas, as a contract of good faith. One of the traditional roles of equity, as a separate jurisdiction, was to restrain the exercise of strict legal rights in certain relationships in which it considered that this would be contrary to good faith. These principles have, with appropriate modification, been carried over into company law.
The first of these two features leads to the conclusion that a member of a company will not ordinarily be entitled to complain of unfairness unless there has been some breach of the terms on which he agreed that the affairs of the company should be conducted. But the second leads to the conclusion that there will be cases in which equitable considerations make it unfair for those conducting the affairs of the company to rely upon their strict legal powers. Thus unfairness may consist in a breach of the rules or in using the rules in a manner which equity would regard as contrary to good faith.
This approach to the concept of unfairness in section 459 runs parallel to that which your Lordships’ House, in In re Westbourne Galleries Ltd [1973] AC 360, adopted in giving content to the concept of ‘just and equitable’ as a ground for winding up. After referring to cases on the equitable jurisdiction to require partners to exercise their powers in good faith, Lord Wilberforce said, at p 379:
‘The words [“just and equitable”] are a recognition of the fact that a limited company is more than a mere legal entity, with a personality in law of its own: that there is room in company law for recognition of the fact that behind it, or amongst it, there are individuals, with rights, expectations and obligations inter se which are not necessarily submerged in the company structure. That structure is defined by the Companies Act [1948] and by the articles of association by which shareholders agree to be bound. In most companies and in most contexts, this definition is sufficient and exhaustive, equally so whether the company is large or small. The “just and equitable” provision does not, as the respondents [the company] suggest, entitle one party to disregard the obligation he assumes by entering a company, nor the court to dispense him from it. It does, as equity always does, enable the court to subject the exercise of legal rights to equitable considerations; considerations, that is, of a personal character arising between one individual and another, which may make it unjust, or inequitable, to insist on legal rights, or to exercise them in a particular way.’
I would apply the same reasoning to the concept of unfairness in section 459. The Law Commission, in its Report on Shareholder Remedies (1997) (Law Com No 246, [1997] EWLC 246 ) (Cm 3769), para 4.11, p 43 expresses some concern that defining the content of the unfairness concept in the way I have suggested might unduly limit its scope and that ‘conduct which would appear to be deserving of a remedy may be left unremedied. …’. In my view a balance has to be struck between the breadth of the discretion given to the court and the principle of legal certainty. Petitions under section 459 are often lengthy and expensive. It is highly desirable that lawyers should be able to advise their clients whether or not a petition is likely to succeed. Lord Wilberforce, after the passage which I have quoted, said that it would be impossible ‘and wholly undesirable’ to define the circumstances in which the application of equitable principles might make it unjust, or inequitable (or unfair) for a party to insist on legal rights or to exercise them in a particular way. This of course is right. But that does not mean that there are no principles by which those circumstances may be identified. The way in which such equitable principles operate is tolerably well settled and in my view it would be wrong to abandon them in favour of some wholly indefinite notion of fairness.
I should make it clear that the parallel I have drawn between the notion of ‘just and equitable’ as explained by Lord Wilberforce in In re Westbourne Galleries Ltd and the notion of fairness in section 459 does not mean that conduct will not be unfair unless it would have justified an order to wind up the company. There was such a requirement in section 210 of the Companies Act 1948 but it was not repeated in section 459. As Mummery J observed in In re A Company (No 00314 of 1989), Ex p Estate Acquisition and Development Ltd [1991] BCLC 154, 161, the grant of one remedy will not necessarily require proof of conduct which would have justified a different remedy:
‘Under sections 459 to 461 the court is not … faced with a death sentence decision dependent on establishing just and equitable grounds for such a decision. The court is more in the position of a medical practitioner presented with a patient who is alleged to be suffering from one or more ailments which can be treated by an appropriate remedy applied during the course of the continuing life of the company.’
The parallel is not in the conduct which the court will treat as justifying a particular remedy but in the principles upon which it decides that the conduct is unjust, inequitable or unfair.
An example of such equitable principles in action is Blisset v Daniel (1853) 10 Hare 493 to which Lord Wilberforce referred in In re Westbourne Galleries Ltd [1973] AC 360, 381. Page Wood V-C held that upon the true construction of the articles, two-thirds of the partners could expel a partner by serving a notice upon him without holding any meeting or giving any reason. But he held that the power must be exercised in good faith. He said, 10 Hare 493, 523, that ‘the literal construction of these articles cannot be enforced’ and, after citing from the title ‘De Societate’ in Justinian’s Institutes, went on at pp 523-524:
‘It must be plain that you can neither exercise a power of this description by dissolving the partnership nor do any other act for purposes contrary to the plain general meaning of the deed, which must be this - that this power is inserted, not for the benefit of any particular parties holding two-thirds of the shares but for the benefit of the whole society and partnership …’
In the Australian case of In re Wondoflex Textiles Pty Ltd [1951] VLR 458, 467, Smith J also contrasted the literal meaning of the articles with the true intentions of the parties:
‘It is also true, I think, that, generally speaking, a petition for winding up, based upon the partnership analogy, cannot succeed if what is complained of is merely a valid exercise of powers conferred in terms by the articles. … To hold otherwise would enable a member to be relieved from the consequences of a bargain knowingly entered into by him. … But this, I think, is subject to an important qualification. Acts which, in law, are a valid exercise of powers conferred by the articles may nevertheless be entirely outside what can fairly be regarded as having been in the contemplation of the parties when they became members of the company; and in such cases the fact that what has been done is not in excess of power will not necessarily be an answer to a claim for winding up. Indeed, it may be said that one purpose of [the just and equitable provision] is to enable the court to relieve a party from his bargain in such cases.’
I cite these references to ‘the literal construction of these articles’ contrasted with good faith and ‘the plain general meaning of the deed’ and ‘what the parties can fairly have had in contemplation’ to show that there is more than one theoretical basis upon which a decision like Blisset v Daniel can be explained. 19th century English law, with its division between law and equity, traditionally took the view that while literal meanings might prevail in a court of law, equity could give effect to what it considered to have been the true intentions of the parties by preventing or restraining the exercise of legal rights. So Smith J speaks of the exercise of the power being valid ‘in law’ but its exercise not being just and equitable because contrary to the contemplation of the parties. This way of looking at the matter is a product of English legal history which has survived the amalgamation of the courts of law and equity. But another approach, in a different legal culture, might be simply to take a less literal view of ‘legal’ construction and interpret the articles themselves in accordance with what Page Wood VC called ‘the plain general meaning of the deed’. Or one might, as in Continental systems, achieve the same result by introducing a general requirement of good faith into contractual performance. These are all different ways of doing the same thing. I do not suggest there is any advantage in abandoning the traditional English theory, even though it is derived from arrangements for the administration of justice which were abandoned over a century ago. On the contrary, a new and unfamiliar approach could only cause uncertainty. So I agree with Jonathan Parker J when he said in In re Astec (BSR) Plc [1998] 2 BCLC 556, 588:
‘in order to give rise to an equitable constraint based on “legitimate expectation” what is required is a personal relationship or personal dealings of some kind between the party seeking to exercise the legal right and the party seeking to restrain such exercise, such as will affect the conscience of the former.’
This is putting the matter in very traditional language, reflecting in the word ‘conscience’ the ecclesiastical origins of the long-departed Court of Chancery.”
26. What emerges from this compelling analysis is that the essential basis of the remedy for oppression or unfairly prejudicial conduct, although entirely statutory, is derived from principles of equity, as Wallbank J correctly observed. A provision very similar to section 204, in section 241 of the Canada Business Corporations Act RSC 185, was described by the Supreme Court of Canada as providing an equitable remedy, in BCE Inc v 1976 Debenture holders [2008] SCJ No 37, 301 DLR (4th) 80, para 58.
“RESTRAINING OPPRESSION
204(1) A complainant may apply to the court for an order under this section.
(2) If, upon an application under subsection (1), the court is satisfied that in respect of a corporation or any of its affiliates,
(a) any act or omission of the corporation or any of its affiliates effects a result,
(b) the business or affairs of the corporation or any of its affiliates are or have been carried on or conducted in a manner, or
(c) the powers of the directors of the corporation or any of its affiliates are or have been exercised in a manner,
that is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that unfairly disregards the interests of any shareholder or debenture holder, creditor, director or officer of the corporation, the court may make an order to rectify the matters complained of.
(3) In connection with an application under this section, the court may make any interim or final order it thinks fit, including without limiting the generality of the foregoing,
(a) an order restraining the conduct complained of;
(b) an order appointing a receiver or receiver-manager;
(c) an order to regulate a corporation’s affairs by amending its articles or by-laws or creating or amending a unanimous shareholder agreement;
(d) an order directing an issue or exchange of securities;
(e) an order appointing directors in place of or in addition to all or any of the directors then in office;
(f) an order directing a corporation, subject to subsection (6), or any other person, to purchase shares or debentures of a holder thereof;
(g) an order directing a corporation, subject to subsection (6), or any other person, to pay to a security holder any part of the moneys paid by him for his securities;
(h) an order varying or setting aside a transaction or contract to which a corporation is a party and compensating the corporation or any other party to the transaction or contract;
(i) an order requiring a corporation, within a time specified by the court, to produce to the court or an interested person financial statements in the form required by section 142 or an accounting in such other form as the court may determine;
(j) an order compensating an aggrieved person;
(k) an order directing rectification of the registers or other records of a corporation under section 207;
(l) an order liquidating and dissolving the corporation; or
(m) an order requiring the trial of any issue.
(4) If an order made under this section directs the amendment of the articles or by-laws of a corporation,
(a) the directors must forthwith comply with subsection (4) of section 174; and
(b) no other amendment to the articles or by-laws may be made without the consent of the court, until the court otherwise orders.
(5) A shareholder is not entitled under section 191 to dissent if an amendment to the articles is effected under this section.
(6) A corporation shall not make a payment to a shareholder under paragraph (f) or (g) of subsection (3) if there are reasonable grounds for believing that
(a) the corporation is unable or would, after that payment, be unable to pay its liabilities as they become due, or
(b) the realisable value of the corporation’s assets would thereby be less than the aggregate of its liabilities.
(7) An applicant under this section may apply in the alternative for an order under section 301.”
28. Section 301 of the IBC Act, referred to in section 204(7) provides as follows:
“301(1) The court may order the liquidation and dissolution of a corporation or any of its affiliated corporations upon the application of a shareholder
(a) if the court is satisfied that, in respect of a corporation or any of its affiliates,
(i) any act or omission of the corporation or any of its affiliates,
(ii) the business or affairs of the corporation or any of its affiliates are or have been carried on or conducted in a manner, or
(iii) the powers of the directors of the corporation or any of its affiliates are or have been exercised in a manner,
that is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that unfairly disregards the interest of any security holder, creditor, director or officer; or
(b) if the court is satisfied that
(i) any unanimous shareholder agreement entitles a complaining shareholder to demand dissolution of the corporation after the occurrence of a specified event and that event has occurred; or
(ii) it is just and equitable that the corporation be liquidated and dissolved.
(2) Upon an application under this section, the court may make such order under this section or section 204 as it thinks fit.
(3) Sections 205 and 206 apply to an application under this section.”
“PURPOSES OF ACT
371(1) This Act is to receive such fair, large and liberal construction and interpretation as will best ensure the attainment of its purposes.
(2) The purposes of this Act are
(a) to encourage the development of Antigua and Barbuda as a responsible off-shore financial, trade and business centre;
(b) to provide incentives by way of tax exemptions and benefits for off-shore business carried on from within Antigua and Barbuda; and
(c) to enable the citizens of Antigua and Barbuda to share in the ownership, management and rewards of any business activity resulting therefrom.”
30. The word “complainant” in section 204 is defined in section 200 in the following way:
“200. In this Part,
(a) ‘action’ means an action under this Act;
(b) ‘complainant’ means, in relation to a corporation,
(i) a security holder, or a former holder of a security of the corporation or any of its affiliates;
(ii) a director or an officer or former director or officer of the corporation or any of its affiliates;
(iii) the Director; or
(iv) any other person who, in the discretion of the court, is a proper person to make an application under this Part.”
Finally, “officer” within the meaning of section 200 is defined in section 2(1)(j) in a way which does not include a liquidator. It follows that for a liquidator to be able to bring a complaint under section 204 (if otherwise available) it would be necessary for the court to decide, in the exercise of its discretion, that the liquidator was the proper person to make the application: see section 200(b)(iv).
The First Issue: Does section 204 apply in relation to a company in insolvent liquidation?
(a) There is nothing in the language of section 204 to exclude its application in that context, where the requisite oppressive or unfairly prejudicial conduct is demonstrated.
(b) Section 204 is most closely aligned with its Canadian equivalent and some authority there supports its application during liquidation.
(c) Section 204 relief would help fill the gap left by the failure of the legislator to incorporate the statutory part of the Antiguan insolvency scheme into the provisions applicable to an IBC.
(d) The extension of the remedy to complaining creditors sets it apart from its English predecessor.
(e) As the representative of the interests of creditors, the liquidator is a proper person to act as complainant, within the meaning of section 200(b)(iv).
Pausing there, Wallbank J was impressed by arguments (b) (d) and (e), although the absence of any submission that section 204 was inapplicable in a liquidation context meant that the issue was not a matter of contention before him.
(f) The general thrust of the non-exhaustive list of remedies provided under section 204 is consistent with their being available as an alternative to, rather than during, a liquidation.
(g) The relationship between section 204 and section 301, treating section 204 relief as an alternative to liquidation points in the same direction.
(h) The general thrust of the Canadian jurisprudence about its similar relief for oppression is to the same effect, save only for one case (referred to below) which is distinguishable.
(i) Section 204 cannot, in any event, be used by a liquidator, who represents all the creditors, as a means of obtaining relief for one group of creditors, at the expense of another group of creditors.
(j) It would be an abuse of section 204 to use it to obtain relief for what is alleged to be a preference, where the applicable insolvency scheme would not deliver that result.
36. There is indeed one Canadian authority on its similarly worded oppression jurisdiction which does, in terms, conclude that relief of this statutory kind is available during a liquidation, on the application of the office-holder. It is Olympia and York Developments Ltd (Trustee of) v Olympia & York Realty Corpn [2001] CanLII 28269 (ON SC), a decision of Farley J sitting in the Ontario Superior Court, upon the almost identically worded section 248 of the Ontario Business Corporations Act. But the judge departed, for reasons given, with a decision to the contrary by Houlden JA, also sitting at first instance in Ontario, in Attorney General of Canada v Standard Trust Co 5 OR (3d) 660, [1991] OJ No 1946. It is difficult to treat either decision as affording convincing binding precedent, even in Canada. The Board thinks it better to weigh the opposed reasoning in the two cases for their intrinsic merit.
“A trustee in bankruptcy takes the property of a bankrupt as he finds it. Subject to statutory provisions, such as those dealing with fraudulent preferences and settlements, he only succeeds to the rights of the bankrupt and has no higher or greater rights.”
His second reason was that:
“If the trustee in bankruptcy were permitted to bring the application under section 247, it would be attacking as oppressive a transaction which was unanimously approved by the board of directors of the bankrupt corporation … if Trustco were not insolvent, could it have attacked the transaction as oppressive? Clearly, in my opinion, it could not. The remedy given by section 247 of the Business Corporations Act, 1982 is a personal remedy; it belongs to the person who has been oppressed by the actions of the corporation or its affiliate: … The trustee in bankruptcy, as I have said, has no higher rights than the bankrupt corporation, and consequently, it cannot bring the application under section 247.”
“It seems to me that while the bankrupt’s trustee takes the property of the bankrupt as he finds it and that the trustee stands in the shoes of the bankrupt, the trustee has, as his primary obligation, the protection of the creditors of the estate of the bankrupt … Since it would seem that a creditor could bring such an oppression action, then it would seem to me that the Margaritis characterization of the trustee in bankruptcy as the creditors’ representative should be recognized as allowing the trustee in bankruptcy to bring a ‘representative’ oppression action on behalf of the creditors in a proper case. Certainly the bankruptcy legislation generally encourages such a collective action on the part of the trustee as being the effective and efficient way of proceeding.”
41. It is of course the case that the extension in Canada and then in Antigua of the remedy for oppression to creditors, rather than merely to shareholders, is an important broadening of the jurisdiction beyond the scope of its English predecessor. Again, it is tempting to think that this was done specifically for the benefit of creditors in a liquidation context, but the Board considers that this is not a necessary conclusion to be drawn from their inclusion within the range of stakeholders entitled to complain. Creditors or groups of creditors may commonly find themselves the subject of allegedly oppressive conduct by those responsible for the conduct of the affairs of a company which is by no means in, or even approaching, liquidation. Companies may seek to improve their financial standing by, for example, cramming down the rights of classes of bond holders: see eg Assenagon Asset Management SA v Irish Bank Resolution Corpn Ltd [2012] EWHC 2090 (Ch), where a statutory remedy for oppression may be a useful adjunct to, or replacement of, equitable relief. Accordingly, while the extension of relief for oppression to creditors undoubtedly raises the possibility of its availability in the context of a liquidation, it does not, of itself, demonstrate that an extension of that jurisdiction into the insolvency context was positively intended.
50. The appellant liquidators relied upon Maidment v Attwood [2012] EWCA Civ 998, a decision of the English Court of Appeal. It concerned a petition under section 994 of the Companies Act 2006 by a shareholder in relation to the affairs of a company, Tobian Properties Ltd (“Tobian”) which was in creditors voluntary liquidation by the time that the petition was presented. The judge had decided that the three elements of conduct relied upon by the petitioner were not unfairly prejudicial in the relevant sense, but the Court of Appeal took a different view. Giving the leading judgment Arden LJ (as she then was) recognised that the fact that the petitioner was a shareholder in a company in insolvent liquidation presented a difficulty, unless there was a real prospect that the company might end up solvent as the result of an order that the allegedly delinquent director should compensate the company for his misconduct (which included taking excessive remuneration), so that the petitioner’s shares would then have some value. In addition, (at para 11) Arden LJ noted that prejudice to a petitioner in his capacity as a member might not be limited strictly to a fall in the value of his shares, relying for that purpose upon Gamlestaden Fastigheter AB v Baltic Partners Ltd [2007] 4 All ER 164, a decision of the Board. At para 44 she continued:
“We have seen that the content of fairness is contextual. It is also flexible and open-textured. It is capable of application to a large number of different situations. The courts are also given wide powers to fashion relief to meet the circumstances of a particular case. Parliament clearly intended the courts to adopt a flexible approach to proceedings under section 994, and to be flexible in the exercise of their powers in relation to these proceedings. This is confirmed by the approach that the Privy Council took in Gamlestaden.”
53. The liquidators also relied upon the judgment of the Board in Galantis v Alexiou [2019] UKPC 15. In that case a complaint of oppressive conduct was made against a company’s directors, but the company was dissolved before it came to be heard. The relevant jurisdiction, in section 280 of the Bahamian Companies Act 1992, was also modelled closely on the Canadian remedy. There are pointers both ways about the applicability of that remedy after a company has been dissolved, but they are of little assistance here, because no insolvency process relating to the company preceded, or was triggered by, the dissolution.
Conclusion on Issue One
Issue Two: Claw-Back Claims
67. In the Board’s view those risk warnings did not form part of the bank’s general terms and conditions so as to detract in any way from the clear contractual entitlement to payment of principal and interest stated on the face of the Certificates of Deposit. The result is that the depositors received no more and no less than their contractual entitlement. There can be no claim to recover money paid pursuant to a contractual entitlement on the basis of unjust enrichment: see the Fairfield Sentry case (supra) at para 18 and Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council [1999] 2 AC 349 at 408B per Lord Hope.
69. The Board’s unanimous view is that, even if in principle the court had jurisdiction to do so, it would not be a proper exercise of discretion to grant relief from oppression, both for the reasons given by Wallbank J and for this additional reason. Relief from oppression under section 204 is, as the judge acknowledged, essentially equitable in origin. Depositors who were paid by SIB prior to its ceasing to trade received the money as bona fide purchasers for value without notice. They were bona fide because no suggestion was made that they were aware either of the bank’s insolvency or of the underlying Ponzi scheme. They were purchasers for value because they were paid pursuant to a contractual entitlement: see Snell’s Equity (33rd ed) para 4-022; Thorndike v Hunt (1859) 3 De G & J 563 and Taylor v Blacklock (1886) 32 Ch D 560 at 568, 570. They were purchasers without notice because it is not suggested that any of them knew or ought to have known the facts giving rise to a claim based on section 204.
The Re-Adjustment Claims
Common Misfortune
“When the law adopts a fiction, it is, or at least it should be, for some purpose of justice. To adopt [the fiction of first in, first out] is to apportion a common misfortune through a test which has no relation whatever to the justice of the case.”
76. The common misfortune principle was applied to the distribution of a common investment fund in Barlow Clowes International Ltd (in liquidation) v Vaughan [1992] 4 All ER 22, by the English Court of Appeal. Money paid into the common fund had been misappropriated by the trustee in unauthorised investments, including the purchase of a yacht. At p 46 Leggatt LJ said:
“The court goes by what must be presumed to have been the intention of the investors. If I am right, they contributed to what they thought was a collective investment fund. It matters not, once the contributions had become mixed whether the depredations were committed on a small or large scale, systematically or sporadically, according to a plan or on the spur of the moment: what matters is that the combined fund was depleted. Misconduct by Barlow Clowes is relevant as explaining why the fund was depleted. But it would make no difference if Barlow Clowes was conducting its business in a lawful manner which gave effect to the general intention of its investors. The investors did not expect that their money would be kept in a bank account or used for the purchase of a yacht, or of anything other than gilts. Whatever the reason why losses were suffered by the fund, it accords with what presumably would have been the intention of the contributors that they should share rateably in what remains of it.”
LADY ARDEN: (with whom Lord Carnwath agrees)
80. This judgment is concerned principally with the question whether a liquidator may bring proceedings for unfair prejudice under the laws of Antigua and Barbuda. As part of that question I need to start by explaining how I see the context to these proceedings.
Achieving equal distribution in insolvency among investors past and present
81. Stanford International Bank Ltd (in liquidation) (“SIB”) operated a collective, or pooled, investment scheme (a “CIS”), under which investors bought certificates of deposit. The scheme was also a Ponzi scheme. SIB used a company formed in Antigua and Barbuda under its International Business Corporations Act (“IBC Act”) to operate its scheme, and that company entered insolvent compulsory liquidation in Antigua and Barbuda in 2009. The appellant liquidators are its liquidators.
82. A number of Ponzi schemes have come to light in different jurisdictions since the global financial crisis in 2008. Such schemes usually involve investors and assets located in many different jurisdictions. Faced with a massive insolvency, as in this case, some courts have sought to make, and in some cases have gone on to make, orders to facilitate an equal distribution between private investors, past and present. For example, in the United States courts have made orders that the claims of private investors are admitted to prove in the liquidation, not for the amount that the scheme declared to be the amount of their investment but according to the amount of their cash investment less amounts repaid (“the net investment method”) (see, for example, In re Bernard L Madoff Inc Sec, (2011) 654 F 3d 229). Other methods to achieve equal distribution have also been used. In the United States, at least, this appears to have been achieved under special legislation, the Securities Investor Protection Act (“SIPA”), which requires a trustee to distribute the property of “customers” and otherwise satisfy the net equity claims of investors in a process that operates in combination with a liquidation process but to the exclusion of certain dealers in securities who are creditors in the liquidation.
83. The high level of protection given to private investors in the United States may not be uncontroversial, but it is easy to see that there may be thought to be merit in treating investors, past and present, in a Ponzi scheme consistently. The difficulty, however, is that, unlike the position in the US, there is as I understand it no special legislation in Antigua and Barbuda applying to this liquidation and the liquidators of SIB have therefore sought to find a way within existing legislation applying to IBC liquidations generally. The liquidators are of the view that it is mere happenstance whether an investor made a request for repayment of his investment before the date of the winding up which resulted in his becoming a winner.
84. This appeal concerns whether SIB’s liquidators can under the law of Antigua and Barbuda achieve an equal distribution as between those persons whose investment has not been repaid (known in these proceedings as “the losers”) and those more fortunate persons (known as “winners”) whose investment was repaid before the liquidation and is not repayable, and also received profits or at least were so repaid in part so that they remain creditors of SIB for their outstanding investments.
85. It is of course a cardinal feature of a liquidation in Antigua and Barbuda as in the UK that creditors of the same rank should be treated on the same footing. This is the pari passu principle. Under this principle, dealers and private investors are (unless the law otherwise provides) treated in the same way and without distinction. The principle is not universal because it is subject to major exceptions (for example, set-off). It is different from a principle of equal distribution because not all creditors of the same description, for example private investors, are treated in the same way. On the face of it, investors who have been repaid are entitled to retain their repayments unless the transaction can be impeached under one of the reach-back provisions such as fraudulent preference whereas losers can only prove in the liquidation and may recover only a small dividend on their investment.
86. In this case, the liquidators seek to bring a claim in respect of a liability which has been repaid before the date of the liquidation, and such a claim has been referred to in these proceedings as a “claw-back” claim. Under the law of England and Wales, at least, a claw-back claim cuts across another cardinal principle of liquidation, namely the principle that the line is drawn at the date of the liquidation. It is discussed in In re Lines Bros Ltd (in liquidation) [1983] Ch 1, M S Fashions Ltd v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA (in liquidation) [1993] Ch 425, 432-3 where Hoffmann LJ referred to it as “the retroactivity principle” and Pearson v Primeo Fund [2017] UKPC 19, paras 20-22.
87. There are some exceptions to the “retroactivity principle” (to use Hoffmann LJ’s term) and these apply principally where the law allows the liquidator to make a claim for fraudulent preference or a fraudulent conveyance, but in each case, there is a special law for this purpose. Unless an exception to the principle applies (which is assumed not to be the case for the purposes of this appeal), only the assets as at the date of the liquidation, including intangible assets such as claims, form part of the estate in liquidation. Those, therefore, are the assets, and the only assets, which the liquidators have a statutory duty to collect in.
88. The liquidators can only achieve their particular objective of equal distribution if the applicable law of Antigua and Barbuda, namely the IBC Act, can be used to achieve it. The liquidators have therefore looked to section 204 of the IBC Act, which is concerned with acts which are “oppressive” and “unfairly prejudicial”.
Do the liquidators have standing to bring proceedings under section 204 to achieve equal distribution among investors?
89. I would answer this question: yes. In material part, section 204 provides:
“RESTRAINING OPPRESSION
204(1) A complainant may apply to the court for an order under this section.
(2) If, upon an application under subsection (1), the court is satisfied that in respect of a corporation or any of its affiliates
(a) any act or omission of the corporation or any of its affiliates effects a result,
(b) the business or affairs of the corporation or any of its affiliates are or have been carried on or conducted in a manner, or
(c) the powers of the directors of the corporation or any of its affiliates are or have been exercised in a manner,
that is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that unfairly disregards the interests of any shareholder or debenture holder, creditor, director or officer of the corporation, the court may make an order to rectify the matters complained of.”
90. Section 204(3) provides an unlimited number of orders which the court can make to restrain oppression or unfair prejudice, once found:
“(3) In connection with an application under this section, the court may make any interim or final order it thinks fit, including without limiting the generality of the foregoing,
(a) an order restraining the conduct complained of;
(b) an order appointing a receiver or receiver-manager;
(c) an order to regulate a corporation’s affairs by amending its articles or by-laws or creating or amending a unanimous shareholder agreement;
(d) an order directing an issue or exchange of securities;
(e) an order appointing directors in place of or in addition to all or any of the directors then in office;
(f) an order directing a corporation, subject to subsection (6), or any other person, to purchase shares or debentures of a holder thereof; …
(k) an order directing rectification of the registers or other records of a corporation under section 207; …”
91. Because section 204(3) confers very wide powers to grant relief, a complainant may very well choose to use section 204 even if he has a perfectly good alternative cause of action at law. It is a well-established principle of law that, if a person has more than one cause of action, he is entitled to choose which one to pursue.
92. The required feature of the act or omission under section 204 is that it is
“oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that unfairly disregards the interests of any shareholder or debenture holder, creditor, director or officer of the corporation”
93. The UK was probably the first jurisdiction to adopt a remedy for oppression and unfair prejudice in its companies legislation. It was enacted in the UK in response to the recommendations of the Report of the Committee on Company Law Amendment (the Cohen Committee) (1945, Cmd 6659), para 60, under the chairmanship of the Rt Hon Lord Cohen, and amended in response to the recommendations made in the Report of the Company Law Committee (the Jenkins Committee) (1962, Cmd 1749) paras 199-212 under the chairmanship of the Rt Hon Lord Jenkins. In the UK, the remedy was initially for conduct amounting to oppression, but this was replaced by the concept of unfair prejudice by section 75 of the Companies Act 1980.
94. The oppression/unfair prejudice remedy has been expanded beyond its initial UK concept in other jurisdictions, including that of Antigua and Barbuda. Unlike the UK, where the remedy has only ever applied to members, section 204 of the IBC Act extends beyond members. This can be seen from the definition of the term “complainant” in section 200 of the IBC Act, which is as follows:
“200. In this Part,
…
(b) ‘complainant’ means, in relation to a corporation,
(i) a security holder, or a former holder of a security of the corporation or any of its affiliates;
(ii) a director or an officer or former director or officer of the corporation or any of its affiliates;
(iii) the Director; or
(iv) any other person who, in the discretion of the court, is a proper person to make an application under this Part.”
95. For completeness, under section 2(1)(m), a “security” is defined as:
“a share of any class or series of shares of a corporation or a debt obligation of a corporation and includes a certificate evidencing any such share or debt obligation;”
96. So, in Antigua and Barbuda the remedy for oppression and unfair prejudice extends to a creditor, secured or unsecured. However, notably, no duty has been cast on directors to have fair regard to any set of creditors or class of creditors. Likewise, no such duty has been placed on liquidators. That is a clear indication that it is not the primary purpose of section 204 to create new duties, merely to provide a remedy to redress existing wrongs at law.
97. In my judgment, section 204 was designed in part to provide a statutory basis for the wrong known as fraud on the minority. As is well known, it is a principle of company law that a majority must vote in the interests of the entire class and that if they procure a transaction at the expense of the minority the minority may contend that their actions constituted a fraud on the minority (see generally, Greenhalgh v Arderne Cinemas [1951] Ch 486 and In re Holders Investment Trust Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 583). The same principle applies to meetings of classes of creditors, such as creditors holding debentures of a particular issue (Allen v Gold Reefs of West Africa, Ltd [1900] 1 Ch 656, 671). This would account for the fact that the persons who are complainants under section 200(b)(i) as of right are security holders. Such persons are likely to be holders of a security, such as a loan note, of a series or class.
98. That leads to the next point, which is this: that in origin section 204 was in part not intended to create a new remedy but to provide a statutory basis for the enforcement of an existing right. Of course, the section may have been extended beyond the purpose for which it was originally intended but it remains the case that it is available for a wrong for which some other remedy exists. On the basis that it was designed originally as I have indicated, section 204 provides a remedy in respect of matters actionable by some other proceeding: there is an overlap between section 204 and the general law.
99. If that is so, then, in my judgment, there is no reason why a liquidator should not be able to seek approval to his acting as a complainant within section 200(b)(iv) in order, for example, to obtain a remedy for the benefit of unsecured creditors.
100. Independently of that point, at a purely textual level, there is nothing in the wording of section 204 which disqualifies a liquidator from being a complainant. A complainant does not have to be, or represent, a member of the company. Moreover, there is nothing in section 204 to limit the award of relief to members of SIB. Section 204 does not require the company to be solvent where the claim is brought on behalf of a creditor.
101. Of course, in the normal way of things, unsecured creditors take the risk that a company may be mismanaged and become insolvent. But that does not mean that they will never be able to contend through the liquidator that the actions of the directors have unfairly prejudiced unsecured creditors. Take the case where the directors of a company authorise the payment of a dividend without making proper provision for its actual and foreseeable liabilities and so in breach of duty (see Peter Buchanon v McVey [1955] AC 516), and the company enters liquidation as a result. In that situation, unsecured creditors are prejudiced. The liquidator may be able to bring a misfeasance claim, but there would seem to be no reason why he should not also, if his status as a complainant is approved by the court, bring proceedings under section 204.
102. In the shortly-reported Canadian case of Prime Computer of Canada Ltd v Jeffrey 6 OR (3d) 733, an unpaid judgment creditor brought a claim under the Canadian equivalent to section 204 against director/shareholders who had paid themselves excessive remuneration and the court made an order for the payment of compensation directly to the creditor who had been unfairly prejudiced. The company was insolvent in that case but not in a formal insolvency proceeding. It is difficult to see why if there had been a liquidator a liquidator could not have brought a claim for unfair prejudice on behalf of the unfairly prejudiced unsecured creditors.
103. I accept that when the courts of Antigua and Barbuda come to interpret section 200(b)(iv) they may interpret that provision as one which requires the court to be satisfied at some level as to the liquidator’s prospects of success. But we do not have to decide that point on these appeals. It is enough to say that it appears that the liquidator can proceed under section 200(b)(iv) and leave open that further point.
104. So, in my judgment the liquidators in this case have standing to bring proceedings under section 200(b)(iv).
Can the claw-back claims be brought under section 204 in this case?
105. I have already made the point that the Companies Law of Antigua and Barbuda has not imposed any duty on the company or any officer of the company to have fair regard for the interests of unsecured creditors. The imposition of such a duty would be a radical departure from the normal contract-based approach to the position of unsecured creditors.
106. The expectation of the unsecured creditors of a company is contract-based: their expectation is that the company will perform their contract with it, no less and no more. The position of members is, as Lord Briggs has explained, altogether different because members frequently owe equitable obligations to each other, and thus the notion of unfair prejudice can be applied to disputes between members without any difficulty.
107. There is no indication in the IBC Act that section 204 was intended to alter the normal basis of the relationship between a company and unsecured creditors. The IBC Act imposes a statutory scheme under Part IV of the IBC Act for the distribution of the assets of a company in its winding up. The statutory scheme ring-fences the assets and liabilities of the company in liquidation. The liquidator must collect in those assets (section 307) and subject to the payment of the expenses of the winding up and priority debts, he must pay the debts and the liabilities of the company pari passu (see section 289(3)). If the company is insolvent, he needs the court’s directions: section 307(g).
108. As explained in paras 22 and 23 above, a meaning can be found for section 204 which does not involve any incompatibility with the mandatory statutory scheme under Part IV of the IBC Act for the distribution of the assets of a company on its winding up.
109. That mandatory scheme means, in my judgment, that section 204 cannot be used by the liquidators on behalf of the creditors as the springboard for claw-back claims against the winners in favour of the losers where the creditors have no cause of action for such disgorgement apart from section 204. It follows that, if the legal rights of investors in a winding up are to be adjusted otherwise than voluntarily and without the individual consents of the investors concerned, there must be a scheme of arrangement: see In re Trix Ltd [1970] 1 WLR 1421, where in the absence of a scheme of arrangement Plowman J refused to sanction a compromise with creditors proposed to be made by a liquidator which might not have given creditors their entitlement in a liquidation; and see also In re Calgary and Edmonton Land Co Ltd (in liquidation) [1975] 1 WLR 355, where Megarry J refused to sanction a stay of a liquidation to which not all members had consented. These cases demonstrate the rigour with which the statutory scheme in winding up is required to be followed. In addition, there are safeguards in the statutory provisions relating to schemes of arrangement: there must be meetings convened by the court, a special majority and the sanction of the court. But these provisions cannot be used to bind the winners, who are no longer creditors and against whom SIB has no claim.
110. There have been some specific submissions which I should address. Professor Watson Gandy, for the amicus curiae, argues that the list of forms of relief in section 204(3) which the court may give is to be interpreted eiusdem generis. The list already includes power to order a liquidation and so, submits Professor Watson Gandy, it does not anticipate that the company will already be in winding up. In my judgment, it is clear that Parliament did not intend the list in section 204(3) to limit the forms of relief that might be given. The section expressly uses the words: “without limiting the generality of the foregoing”.
111. Counsel submitted that Parliament deliberately chose not to amend section 204 when it amended the law to include a provision for preferences in relation to banks. In my judgment there could be many reasons why the legislature decided not to amend section 204, including that advanced by Mr Justin Fenwick QC, for the liquidators, namely that the section was already in force and Parliament did not wish to make any amendment which might prejudice existing proceedings, and affect the interpretation of the Act for other purposes without seeing first an authoritative interpretation by the courts.
112. It was also submitted that the liquidators do not control the company. However, there is nothing in section 204 which limits the complainant to a person who actually controls the company. The complainant could be a national agency which decided to bring proceedings within its competence for the purpose of assisting those who were not able to help themselves.
113. Subject to my different conclusion on the status of a liquidator to bring a claim under section 204, on which I agree with Wallbank J, and subject as otherwise appears in this judgment, I agree with the judgment of Lord Briggs and with his proposal as to the humble advice to be given to Her Majesty.
LORD CARNWATH: