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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Royal Bank of Scotland Plc v Highland Financial Partners LP & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 809 (14 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/809.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 809 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE BURTON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
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Royal Bank of Scotland PLC |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Highland Financial Partners LP & Ors |
Appellant |
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Mr Adam Johnson and Ms Kerry Stares of Herbert Smith LLP for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21 June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thomas :
The agreements
i) The Mandate Letter. This was made between RBS and a Highland company and dated 18 December 2006. It set out an outline of the overall scheme, including the arrangement of financing for the purchase of the portfolio of loans under what was described as a warehouse facility. The financing was provided by RBS through the €400m Variable Funding Note Purchase Agreement described in the next sub-paragraph. The loans would be held in the warehouse until closing which would occur on the issue of the securities. The commercial significance of the Mandate Letter to the points of construction in this appeal was that it appointed RBS to act as "adviser" for the transaction and placement agent for the offering on issue; as placement agent RBS would earn significant fees. The agreement provided that a Highland company would act as the "servicer", in effect the manager of the loans that were to be acquired. The Mandate Letter is central to the dispute as clause 6 not only provided for termination of the agreement contained in the Mandate Letter on closing of the offer of securities with a long stop automatic termination date of 30 September 2007, but gave both RBS and the Highland company the right to terminate the agreement by notice at any time.ii) The €400m Variable Funding Note Purchase Agreement. This was entered into between the Highland SPV (which was to be the Issuer of the securities on closing) and RBS on 5 April 2007 to provide finance during the warehousing period. Under this agreement RBS agreed to provide a facility of up to €400m to the SPV Issuer under a note so the SPV Issuer could buy loans to be warehoused pending the issue. The agreement contained detailed provisions as to the terms of the note which could be sold or transferred by RBS. Clause 5 provided for the SPV's obligation to repay in the ordinary course of anticipated events primarily from the proceeds of the issue; there was a final date for repayment on the day prior to the long stop date of 30 September 2007. Apart from the provisions for repayment in the ordinary course of anticipated events in Clause 5, the significance of this agreement is that RBS (or a note holder to whom the note had been assigned) could only demand repayment earlier if there was a specified "event of default" under Clause 9 of that agreement (which included by Clause 9(n) of that agreement an "Interim Servicer Event of Default" under the agreement referred to in the next sub-paragraph – the Interim Servicing Deed). It is also important to note that the obligation to repay was limited to the assets of the SPV Issuer, RBS having its security by various charges over the assets acquired by the Issuer.
iii) The Interim Servicing Deed. This was also made on 5 April 2007 between various Highland companies and RBS and set out the role of the Interim Servicer. The Interim Servicer was another Highland company appointed by the SPV Issuer to perform a number of duties, but primarily to select the loans to be acquired during the warehouse period. RBS agreed to make advances for the acquisition of loans subject to various conditions, including compliance with eligibility criteria and a veto by RBS over any proposed loan. The importance of this agreement to the points of construction is the provision in Clause 1 (the definition clause) which set out the definition of "Termination Date" and the provisions in Clause 5 as to the obligations of Highland companies consequent upon the occurrence of the Termination Date. If the Termination Date occurred prior to the closing, the clauses of the agreements operated so that (1) RBS could call for the repayment of the advances made under the Variable Funding Note Purchase Agreement, (2) the loans in the warehouse facility were realised and (3) under clause 5.6 the Highland companies were obliged to pay RBS any shortfall between the sums obtained from the realisation of the loans and the outstanding amount of the financing advanced by RBS. The definition of the "Termination Date" provided that the long stop termination date was the same as in the other agreements, namely 30 September 2007 but there were provisions for the Termination Date to occur on other events including:
"(a) the termination of the Mandate Letter pursuant to the terms thereof and which of such termination is provided in writing by the Variable Funding Noteholder [RBS] or the Interim Servicer [Highland], as the case may be, to the Variable Funding Noteholder [RBS] or the Interim Servicer [Highland], as the case may be".As is apparent from this sub-clause of the definition of the Termination Date, there is an error in it as, read literally, it is not grammatical. Other events that could bring about a Termination Date included the service of notice of an Interim Servicer Event of Default and in that category of events was a decline of more than 2.25% in the value of the acquired loans.
i) The First Loss Deposit Facility Deed. This was made between RBS and various Highland companies. The Highland companies agreed to pay RBS €7.5m as cash collateral to secure their obligations under the Interim Servicing Deed and another Highland company agreed to guarantee the liabilities of other Highland companies under clause 5.6 of the Interim Servicing Deed.ii) A First Amendment Deed. This was made between RBS, the SPV Issuer and various Highland companies. It extended the long stop date of the Interim Servicing Deed and the Variable Funding Note Purchase Agreement to 28 February 2008. Among other amendments, it also amended the definition of an Interim Servicer Event of Default to which I referred at sub-paragraph 3.iii) so that in place of an overall decline of 2.25% in market value of the loans that particular event would occur only if the difference between the purchase price of the loans and their market value plus the collateral was greater than €2m, subject to the right of Highland to post additional collateral.
The principles of construction
Point 1: The meaning of clause (a) in the Termination Date definition
"The termination of the Mandate Letter pursuant to the terms thereof by the Interim Servicer [Highland] and notice of such termination is provided in writing by the Variable Funding Noteholder [RBS] or the Interim Servicer [Highland], as the case may be to the Variable Funding Noteholder [RBS] or the Interim Servicer [Highland] as the case may be …"
If such words were inserted, then the whole scheme of the three agreements made commercial sense as RBS would not be entitled to terminate the financing and trigger the obligations to repay by the device of terminating the Mandate Letter. They would be entitled to do so if Highland terminated the Mandate Letter.
Point 2: The effect of the Second Amendment Deed
"If any of the provisions of this Amendment Deed are inconsistent with or in conflict with any of the provisions of the October Amendment Deed, Interim Servicing Deed, the Variable Funding Note Purchase Agreement or the First Loss Deposit Facility Deed then, to the extent of any such inconsistency or conflict, the provisions of this Amendment Deed shall prevail as between the Parties."
It was argued that the Termination Date provision was inconsistent with the Second Amendment Deed and had to be read in the light of the Second Amendment Deed so that the termination of the Mandate Letter did not give rise to a Termination Date.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Richards:
Lord Justice Ward: