BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Lehman Brothers International (Europe), Re Insolvency Act 1986 [2009] EWCA Civ 1161 (06 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1161.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1161, [2010] Bus LR 489, [2010] BCC 272, [2010] 1 BCLC 496 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, CHANCERY DIVISION, COMPANIES COURT
BLACKBURNE J
CASE NO: 7942 of 2008 and CASE NO: 16389 of 2009
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF LEHMAN BROTHERS INTERNATIONAL (EUROPE) (in administration) | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006 |
____________________
Richard Snowden QC and Andrew Thornton (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) for the London Investment Banking Association
Anthony Zacaroli QC (instructed by Allen & Overy LLP) for GLG Partners LP
Hearing date : 26th October 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
Introduction
"As set out in my First Statement, made in relation to the application for the Trust Property Order, a redacted version of which has been placed on the Court file and is available on the section of the PwC website dedicated to the administration of LBIE, the Administrators wished to adopt a system for dealing with all property of, or held in the name of, or otherwise to the order of, LBIE which is subject to trust or proprietary claims, whether comprising monies under the FSA's Client Money Rules ("Client Money") or other monies or assets ("Trust Assets") (together with "Trust Property") in an orderly and efficient manner and one which balanced the importance of dealing with the potential proprietary claims and the achievement of the statutory purpose for which we have been appointed."
The contractual arrangements
(1) International Prime Brokerage Agreement ("IPBA")
"5.2 The parties acknowledge and agree that any cash held by us for you is received by us as collateral with full ownership under a collateral arrangement and is subject to the security interest contained in the Agreement. Accordingly, such cash will not be client money pursuant to the Rules (or any successor provisions thereto) and will not be subject to the protections conferred by the Rules. Such cash held by the Prime Broker will not be segregated from the money of the Prime Broker or any other counterparty of the Prime Broker and will be held free and clear of all trusts. The parties further agree that the Prime Broker will use such cash in the course of its business and the Counterparty will, therefore, rank as a general creditor of the Prime Broker in respect of such cash."
"With the exception of any assets transferred to the Prime Broker pursuant to Clause 11, any securities debited to the Securities Accounts shall be held by the Prime Broker as custodian, and the Counterparty hereby appoints the Prime Broker, and the Prime Broker agrees to act, as its custodian, in accordance with the terms of Schedule 2."
(2) Master Custody Agreement ("MCA")
The Scheme
22. The scheme is intended to deal with persons who are described as "Scheme Creditors". These are persons who have claims against LBIE at the time it was placed in administration (the "Time of Administration") for or in respect of what are described as "Segregated Assets". The claims must be capable of being satisfied by the delivery, in whole or in part, of the Segregated Assets. Segregated Assets are defined as "any Security which at the Time of Administration was held on a segregated basis" meaning that the asset "was recorded as being held separately from LBIE's own Securities in both the Books and Records of LBIE and also at LBIE's custodian or depository (the Intermediary)…" "Security" is defined as any financial instrument, including any share, instrument creating or acknowledging indebtedness, instrument creating or acknowledging entitlements to investments, warrant and unit in a collective investment scheme…" It excludes money. I was told that there are approximately 28,000 different categories of security to be dealt with.
23. A Scheme Creditor is expressly described as excluding anyone whose claims "are not proprietary but are only unsecured". Equally, as Mr Trower explained in the course of argument, a Scheme Creditor will not include anyone who has no kind of pecuniary claim, however contingent, against LBIE. Thus, a client with a claim to a particular security but who renounces any pecuniary claim (for example, for damages for late delivery of the security) and confines his claim to its return will not be included. In short, a person is only a Scheme Creditor if that person (1) has a pecuniary claim against LBIE and (2) has a proprietary claim to a security which was held on a segregated basis at the Time of Administration.
24. The scheme explains, in what is described as "Key Concept 2", that "the subject matter of the Scheme is Trust Property". Trust Property is wider than "Segregated Assets" because it includes assets, referred to as "Derived Assets", which are derived from Segregated Assets, and "Recovered Assets". Recovered Assets are assets received by LBIE from a source which has an obligation to redeliver to LBIE a security which had been delivered by LBIE to that source after the Time of Administration but prior to the date ("the Effective Date") when a copy of the court's order sanctioning the scheme under Part 26 (assuming such an order is made) is delivered to the Registrar of Companies.
25. The scheme is intended to deal with all of a Scheme Creditor's proprietary claims against LBIE for the return of Trust Property. It extends to property which LBIE should have held even if in fact it does not. This is subject only to the requirement that LBIE must hold some property of the Scheme Creditor and means therefore that if the claim is confined to an unsecured pecuniary claim against LBIE, the claim will not be dealt with under the scheme.
26. The key provision of the scheme, set out in Part 2 of Section 4 of the proposal, is that Scheme Creditors release all claims (save for certain "Excluded Claims") against LBIE, the scheme supervisors, the administrators and other Scheme Creditors, including all claims for or in respect of (1) any "Asset Claim" (meaning, put shortly, a claim against LBIE in respect of any Trust Property), (2) any payment for or on account of any asset which is or was at any time the subject of an Asset Claim, (3) damages, indemnity or contribution in respect of any loss, cost or expense in connection with any asset which is or was at any time the subject of an Asset Claim, (4) all liabilities for breach of contract, loss or damage, indemnity or contribution of any nature, (5) all rights to seek or enforce judgment, exercise any remedy or apply any set-off, netting, withholding, combination of accounts or retention or similar rights against LBIE in respect of any claim or liability, and (6) all rights in respect of any financial contract. These are defined as "Released Claims".
27. In exchange for their Released Claims, Scheme Creditors are given what are described as "New Claims". Broadly stated, these are (1) the right of each creditor to have its net contractual position (as earlier summarised) and what are described as "Allocations and Distributions" determined on the basis set out in the Scheme, (2) the right to have such part of the Trust Property as is available for distribution under the scheme allocated to and then delivered to the creditor, alternatively appropriated by LBIE in or towards discharge of the creditor's liabilities to LBIE (or certain affiliates or other third parties), (3) the right to claim against LBIE in accordance with the scheme for the amount of that creditor's net contractual position (assuming that the position has resulted in an amount owing by LBIE to that creditor) as a new obligation of LBIE and (4) the right to claim in LBIE's winding-up or any other distribution of LBIE's assets for such amount as is determined under the scheme. The New Claims are subject to an overriding proviso that no Scheme Creditor is entitled to recover more than once in respect of the same asset or claim.
28. The reference to "Allocations" is, shortly stated, to the right of LBIE to allocate Trust Property available for distribution under the scheme to a Scheme Creditor by reference to individual stock lines (for example the quantity of a particular quoted security) held as Trust Property. Paragraph 10.7 of "Key Concept 6" (concerned with "Allocations and shortfalls") provides in terms that "a Scheme Creditor's entitlement to participate in an Allocation will be based on its Asset Claim". This in turn is to be determined by LBIE based on certain information available to it. The Scheme Creditor has the opportunity to challenge the determination through a dispute resolution mechanism. Paragraph 10.8 requires the Scheme Creditor when receiving anything in respect of its Asset Claim to account for any assets received from an Intermediary (rather than from LBIE direct) and paragraph 10.10 provides, in effect, that if the allocations made to a Scheme Creditor result in a shortfall then the value of that shortfall is to rank as an unsecured claim against LBIE.
29. The broad effect, although the drafting of the scheme is a little dense at this point, is that, subject to certain exceptions, LBIE will match a Scheme Creditor to a particular stock line where LBIE can be satisfied on the information available to it that the creditor has a proprietary claim (the so-called "Asset Claim") to assets answering the description of that stock line. This is on the basis that the creditor's claim will be satisfied (by means of the "Distribution") out of that stock line so far as is possible having regard (1) to the overall quantity of the stock line available for distribution and (2) to the competing claims of other creditors to the same stock line.
30. But there is an important qualification to this which is set out in Part 3 of Section 4. This is the provision of a cut-off date (the "Bar Date") for the submission of claims under the scheme. The date envisaged is either 31 December 2009 or, if later, the last business day of the second full calendar month following the Effective Date. Paragraph 21.1 provides that "[a]ny claim submitted after the Bar Date can be disregarded by LBIE". But this is subject to an exception: if by the Bar Date a Scheme Creditor has failed to submit a claim (by completing a pro forma claim form) LBIE will calculate that Scheme Creditor's entitlement under the scheme using "Relevant Information". This is information capable of ascertainment from LBIE's books and records, information contained in the Scheme Creditor's claim form (if one has been submitted) and also, shortly stated, information from various notices delivered under the scheme as well as information made available by intermediaries, affiliates and any relevant exchange. Once the Bar Date has passed LBIE will start allocating, appropriating and distributing on the basis of pre-Bar Date claim forms and other Relevant Information. This means that if a Secured Creditor fails to submit a claim form by the Bar Date and, by that date, LBIE is without any Relevant Information in relation to that Scheme Creditor's claim, the claim may be disregarded.
31. However, as Mr Trower explained in the course of argument, the imposition of a Bar Date is not intended to have the consequence that the late claim is altogether barred. If the Scheme Creditor can substantiate its claim, then, notwithstanding that this is after the Bar Date, it may share in the particular stock line, but it may only do so if and to the extent that there is any surplus in that stock line. Thus, if there are no other claimants to a particular stock line (or the claims of those other claimants have been fully satisfied), the late claimant is unaffected by the Bar Date. Conversely, if there is insufficient in the stock line to satisfy the accepted claims of pre-Bar Date claimants, the later claimant will be left to claim as an unsecured creditor. In short, there is no "catch-up" concept for late claimants as regards any distribution: they must await the full satisfaction of the accepted claims of pre-Bar Date established claims.
32. For present purposes, the scheme may be summarised by saying that a client of LBIE who qualifies as a Scheme Creditor - in that the client has, or potentially has, a pecuniary claim against LBIE and is the owner of a particular asset held or controlled by LBIE (for example a quantity of a particular quoted security) - will have that asset claim satisfied on a pooled basis, ranking alongside (and in competition with) others who can establish ownership claims to the same asset, to the extent that the securities comprising that asset are available to meet the claims. The unrecovered value of the client's Asset Claims and any balance due to the client on computing the client's net contractual position with LBIE resulting from the closing out of all financial contracts between the client and LBIE are to rank as unsecured claims against LBIE. All other pecuniary claims of the client against LBIE are foregone."
Jurisdiction
"… the word "creditor" is used in the Act of 1870 in the widest sense, and that it includes all persons having any pecuniary claims against the company. Any other construction would render the Act practically useless."
"[40] In my judgment, "creditors" in s 425 is not limited to those persons who would have a provable claim in the winding-up of the company, although it clearly includes all those who would have such a claim. As was submitted by Mr Snowden and other counsel, one of the recognised purposes of s 425 is to encourage arrangements with creditors which avoid liquidation and facilitate the financial rehabilitation of the company: see, for example, Sea Assets Ltd v PT Garuda Indonesia [2001] EWCA Civ 1696 at para 2. This suggests that as wide a meaning as possible should be given to "creditors" in the section. Having said that, it is important to bear in mind that s 425 is designed as a mechanism whereby an arrangement may be imposed on dissenting or non-participating members of the class and such a power is not to be construed as extending so as to bind persons who cannot properly be described as "creditors"."
"The Act gives the Court power to bind "creditors," and debenture-holders are creditors. The word "creditor" in the Act is general. No distinction is made between different kinds of creditors; there is nothing to except any particular class of creditors from the jurisdiction of the Court."
"But again, what kind of compromise or arrangement is the most common? Surely the most common kind of compromise or arrangement is one in which secured creditors diminish or alter the amount of their security. I repeat, that the Legislature having used the largest language, such as "any compromise or any arrangement between a company and any class of its creditors", I think, if we were to exclude from that class of creditors the secured creditors, or if we were to exclude from the arrangements or compromises to be made an arrangement or compromise which affected the security, we should be putting a most unwarrantable restriction on the generality of the language used in the Act, and therefore I have no hesitation in saying that in my judgment the court has jurisdiction in this matter."
"It has been suggested that there was a proposition which could be maintained, as to which I confess I entertain grave doubts whether any decision goes to that extent, namely, that the relation between a cestui que trust and a trustee who has misappropriated the trust fund is not that of debtor and creditor. That it may be something more than that is true, but that it is that of debtor and creditor I can entertain no doubt. As that question has been mooted and brought before your Lordships' House as one question for decision here, I certainly have no hesitation in saying that in my opinion no such proposition can properly be maintained, and that although there are other and peculiar elements in the relation between a cestui que trust and a trustee, undoubtedly the relation of debtor and creditor can and does exist."
"45. The first and obvious point to make is that, whatever the precise meaning of a compromise or arrangement, it must be proposed with creditors or members of a company. It is implicit that it must be made with them in their capacity as creditors or members and that it must at least concern their position as creditors or members of the company. For the reasons already given, even those EL Claimants to whom T&N's rights against the EL Insurers have been transferred by operation of the 1930 Act remain creditors of T&N. The extent to which certain other persons with EL Claims are creditors for the purposes of section 425 is considered later in this judgment.
…..
52. The settlement of the litigation is therefore in substance and form a tripartite matter, involving T&N, insurers and claimants. That is reflected in the proposed scheme, with T&N and the claimants as parties and with the EL Insurers appearing before the court to consent to the scheme and to undertake to be bound by its terms. It is true that the scheme has no effect on the present rights of EL Claimants against T&N. The right of claimants to assert their claims against T&N, and the right of T&N to defend those claims, are unaffected, and claimants are not obliged to proceed first against the trust to be established by the scheme. However, if a claimant establishes a claim under the trust distribution procedures and receives a payment, it will diminish the amount which T&N would otherwise be required to pay in respect of the claim, if the EL Insurers succeeded in avoiding the policies or in limiting the cover. Although not immediately affecting rights against T&N, the scheme is likely therefore to have an impact on those rights. Mr Chivers objected that these effects resulted not from the scheme but from the settlement agreement and arrangements constituted by the trust deed and trust distribution procedures which took effect outside the scheme. In my view, it is not possible to divorce the arrangements in this way. The scheme of arrangement is an integral part of a single proposal affecting all the parties, which includes also the trust and the trust distribution procedures to be established pursuant to the scheme.
53. In my judgment it is not a necessary element of an arrangement for the purposes of section 425 that it should alter the rights existing between the company and the creditors or members with whom it is made. No doubt in most cases it will alter those rights. But, provided that the context and content of the scheme are such as properly to constitute an arrangement between the company and the members or creditors concerned, it will fall within section 425. It is, as Nourse J observed, neither necessary nor desirable to attempt a definition of arrangement. The legislature has not done so. To insist on an alteration of rights, or a termination of rights as in the case of schemes to effect takeovers or mergers, is to impose a restriction which is neither warranted by the statutory language nor justified by the courts' approach over many years to give the term its widest meaning. Nor is an arrangement necessarily outside the section, because its effect is to alter the rights of creditors against another party or because such alteration could be achieved by a scheme of arrangement with that other party."
"66 Doubtless there are limitations on the extent to which a scheme of arrangement purporting to be between a company and its creditors or a class of its creditors can purport to affect property of the creditor that has no connection with the company or the relationship of creditor and debtor between the creditor and the company. The mere fact that a person or entity is a creditor of a company would not, of itself, justify an arrangement between that person or entity on the one hand and the company on the other whereby property of the person or entity were confiscated without any benefit to the person or entity. Such an arrangement would not be approved by the Court pursuant to s 411(4)(b).
67 A purported scheme of arrangement must involve some arrangement in a sense that is to be construed liberally. No narrow interpretation should be given to the expressions "compromise" or "arrangement". An arrangement within the meaning of s 411 connotes some element of give and take. A proposal that conferred no benefit on creditors and constituted the mere confiscation of interests would not be an arrangement within the meaning of s 411. An arrangement must involve some bargain giving benefit to both sides. However, there is no reason to construe the term in s 411 as restricting in any way the nature of the bargain that might be made between company and creditors (Re Sonodyne International Ltd (1994) 15 ASCR 494 at 497-8), subject only to the additional requirement that the arrangement must be within the power of the company and not in contravention of the Corporations Act.
68 A scheme of arrangement between a company and its creditors or a class of creditors is no more than a proposal to vary or modify the company's obligations in relation to its debts and liabilities owed to the creditors or class of creditors. There is nothing to prevent the company from posing, as part of the arrangement, a term to the effect that, in consideration of what the company has provided under the scheme, the creditors will discharge not only the debts and liabilities of the company, but also the liabilities of, for example, sureties for the same debts and liabilities of the company.
69 It is permissible to incorporate in a scheme of arrangement an involvement or participation by an outsider, being a person or entity who is not a party to the scheme as a company or creditor (see Re Glendale Land Development Ltd (In liquidation) (1982) 1 ACLA 540. Such arrangements are commonplace in relation to schemes involving takeovers. A scheme of arrangement made between a company and its creditors under s 411 binds only the company and the creditors. Nevertheless, there is no reason why a bargain might not be struck between a company and creditors whereby the creditors are bound to enter into an arrangement with third parties. So long as there is some element of give and take, such that the creditors receive something in return for the benefit conferred on a third party, there is no reason in principle why that term could not be part of a scheme of arrangement as contemplated by s 411"
"(1) a deed of company arrangement binds all creditors of the company, so far as concerns claims arising on or before the day specified in the deed under paragraph 444A(4)(i)".
Conclusions
Lord Justice Longmore :
The Master of the Rolls: