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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (No 2), Re [2009] EWHC 2141 (Ch) (21 August 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/2141.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2141 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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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 | ||
NUMBER 2 |
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Richard Snowden QC and Andrew Thornton (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer) for the London Investment Banking Association
Anthony Zacaroli QC (instructed by Allen & Overy LLP) for the GLG Partners LP
Hearing dates: 29th and 30th July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blackburne :
The background
"…the most fundamental of the obstacles which they [the administrators] face is the fact that, as matters currently stand, they cannot be certain who is entitled to the Trust Property. Distributing assets in such circumstances potentially gives rise to claims against LBIE for breach of trust and to related claims against the Administrators. Likewise clients to whom Trust Property is distributed cannot be certain that they will not face proprietary claims from other clients in respect of such Trust Property …"
The expression "Trust Property" has a particular meaning under the scheme. For present purposes it refers to assets held in trust for the client. The problems faced by the administrators, and the reason why they seek to overcome them by means of a scheme of arrangement containing a "bar date" for claims (as it is described) is, in summary, because (1) they have not received responses from all clients to the enquiries that have been made, (2) they cannot rely upon the accuracy of LBIE's books and records and (3) they have likewise not received all the information requested of custodians, depositories and affiliates as regards assets held on behalf of LBIE.
The proposed scheme
The effect of the scheme
Counsels' submissions
(a) The administrators
"It is in those cases the Legislature has thought fit to enlarge the power of making compromises or arrangements, and the language of the section [section 2] is wide enough to include all creditors, whether they hold securities or whether they do not hold securities - they are still creditors; and they can come in if they like and prove. If they are amply secured they need not come - they can hold their securities; but still they are creditors."
In the same case Fry LJ referred to the jurisdiction conferred by the 1870 Act as being "of the largest description" and stated that "to exclude from the arrangements or compromises to be made an arrangement or compromise which affected the security … [would] be putting a most unwarrantable restriction on the generality of the language used in the Act…"
"A scheme of arrangement which did no more than expropriate the interest of a member or creditor would not be a compromise or arrangement within s425 (see Re NFU Development Trust Ltd [1973] 1AER 135, [1972] 1 WLR 1548). Brightman J observed that a compromise implies some element of accommodation on each side and that an arrangement implies some element of give and take. Total surrender or confiscation was not within either of them. in commenting on this decision in Re Savoy Hotel Ltd Nourse J said ([1981] 3 AER 646 at 652, [1981] Ch 351 at 359) that the word 'arrangement' in s425 and its predecessors is one of very wide import, a proposition which was by no means diminished by Brightman J's judgment: 'all that that case shows is that there must be some element of give and take. Beyond that it is neither necessary nor desirable to attempt a definition of "arrangement".' As members' schemes such as that in Re Savoy Hotel Ltd show, the give and take need not be between the members and the company, but may be between the members and a third party purchaser, with the company's only function being to register the transfer of shares and thereby terminate the existing members' status as members."
"…it is not a necessary element of an arrangement for the purposes of s425 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 these 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 s425. 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."
(b) GLG Partners LLP
(3) LIBA
"[i]t 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."
David Richards J plainly did not consider that the requirement in Part 26 that a compromise or arrangement be between a company and its creditors should serve as no more than a gateway, enabling the court to sanction a substantive interference with the rights of persons who happen to be creditors but where the rights in question were held in a different capacity.
Conclusions
"...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."
He concluded that even those claimants to whom T & N's rights against the EL insurers had been transferred by operation of the 1930 Act remained creditors of T & N. He considered that the word "arrangement" had a very broad meaning. He accepted that a scheme of arrangement which did no more than expropriate the interest of a member or creditor would not be a compromise or arrangement within section 425 and proceeded to make the comments which I have already set out at paragraph 43 above. He observed (at para [51]) that the rights of the EL claimants against the EL insurers compromised by the EL scheme were in no sense "unconnected" with T & N or the EL claimants' rights against T & N. He considered that the claims of the EL insurers to exclude asbestos-related disease from cover and to avoid the policies affected the position of both T & N and the EL claimants. He stated that if the EL claimants were unable to enforce their claims against the EL insurers, those claims would still lie against T & N, and that its assets (including any other available insurance cover) would be diminished accordingly. He considered that the litigation affecting the EL polices and its compromise therefore impacted directly on the EL insurers, T & N and the EL claimants alike.
"[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... 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 s425 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 would fall within s425 ... 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 alterations would be achieved by a scheme of arrangement with that other party."
A precedent?
Result
A way forward?