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 Β£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 High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Business Mortgage Finance 6 Plc v Greencoat Investments Ltd & Ors [2019] EWHC 2128 (Ch) (31 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2128.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2128 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
FINANCIAL LIST (ChD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
BUSINESS MORTGAGE FINANCE 6 PLC |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) GREENCOAT INVESTMENTS LIMITED (2) GREENCOAT HOLDINGS LIMITED (3) PORTFOLIO LOGISITICS LIMITED (4) MR PATRICK FITZSIMONS (5) MR ALFRED OLUTAYO OYEKOYA (6) MS MARIA STOICA |
Defendants |
____________________
Alex Cunliffe (instructed by Singhania & Co Ltd) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 25 July 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ZACAROLI:
Introduction
i) Class A1 Notes: £10 million, representing at most 86.12% of the amount outstanding in respect of all Class A1 Notes as at 15 May 2019 (£11,612,226);
ii) Class A2 Notes: 6.45 million, representing at most 14.69% of the amount outstanding in respect of all Class A2 Notes as at 15 May 2019 (43,896,408);
iii) Class M1 Notes: £14 million, representing 36.84% of the amount outstanding in respect of all Class M1 Notes as at 15 May 2019 (£38,000,000);
iv) Class B2 Notes: 8 million, representing 20.46% of the amount outstanding in respect of all Class B2 Notes as at 15 May 2019 (39,100,000).
GIL's holding of the Class A Notes is described as "at most" the relevant percentage, because the amount outstanding in respect of the Class A Notes held by it is stated as at a date when the total amount outstanding in respect of the Class A Notes was higher. As a result of repayments made since that date, the total amount outstanding has reduced with the likely (but unconfirmed) consequence that the amount outstanding in respect of the Class A Notes blocked and held to the use of GIL has correspondingly reduced.
i) On 20 June 2019, GIL (in its purported capacity as a Noteholder) purported to appoint the second and third defendants, Greencoat Holdings Limited ("GHL") and Portfolio Logistics Limited ("PLL"), as separate and/or co- trustees of the Notes, and purported to appoint PLL as the agent of BNY;
ii) On 24 June 2019, GIL purported to direct BNY as Trustee to certify that an Event of Default had occurred and to issue an Enforcement Notice declaring the Notes were accelerated and the security under the Deed of Charge was enforceable, and to appoint joint administrators of BMF6 under paragraph 14 Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986;
iii) On 27 June 2019 GHL and PLL, as purported note trustees, purported to declare that an Event of Default had occurred, to accelerate the Notes and declare that the security under the Deed of Charge was immediately enforceable;
iv) On 27 June 2019 GHL and PLL, as purported note trustees, purported to appoint the fourth defendant, Mr Fitzsimons, as receiver over BMF6's portfolio of loans and associated security;
v) On 27 June 2019 GIL (again acting in its purported capacity as a Noteholder) purported to direct or resolve that BNY be removed as Trustee;
vi) On 27 June 2019, Mr Fitzsimons, as receiver, purported to exercise a power to terminate BMF6's corporate administration agreement with Sanne Group plc and Sanne Group Corporate Secretaries (UK) Limited;
vii) On 27 June 2019, Mr Fitzsimons, as receiver, purported to exercise a power to remove BMF6's directors;
viii) By letter dated 1 July 2019 (and on other occasions), the fifth defendant, Mr Oyekoya and the sixth defendant, Ms Stoica, held themselves out as directors of BMF6;
ix) On 1 July 2019 GIL purported to give notice to the Special Servicer, Target Servicing Limited ("Target") that BMF6 intended to redeem all of the Class A, M, B2 and C Notes at their Principal Amount Outstanding on 15 August 2019 and requiring Target to give at least 14 days' notice to Noteholders in advance of that intended redemption. This was followed, on 3 July 2019, by GHL and PLL purportedly (as note trustees) terminating the appointment of Target as Special Servicer and Cash/Bond Administrator, with GHL being appointed in its place.
"Any and all acts done or purportedly done (a) by GHL or Portfolio Logistics in their purported capacity as trustees under the Trust Deed, (b) by GHL in its purported capacity as Cash/Bond Administrator or Special Servicer, (c) by Mr Fitzsimons or Mr Oyekoya in their purported capacities as receiver of the Issuer or any of its property and/or (d) by Mr Oyekoya and/or Ms Stoica in their purported capacity as directors of the Issuer, are void and of no effect."
i) Trident Trust Company, which appears to act as administrator for Roundstone in the BVI, forwarded Simmons & Simmons' letter to someone in the Mann Made Group;
ii) The recipient of that email forwarded it to other people in the Mann Made Group, including a Mr David Cathersides;
iii) Mr Cathersides forwarded the email to a number of people including Mr Kalia, Mr Oyekoya, Mr Fitzsimons and a Mr Rizwan Hussain ("Mr Hussain"), saying: "Please refer to the attached document, the covering email below and give [email protected] your instructions regarding the original document."
The issues
GIL's ability to pass a Written Resolution
i) The extended definition of Instrumentholders, so as to deem it to include the holders of a beneficial interest, is intended to address the situation where the Note is held in global form, such that there is in fact only one Noteholder, but where interests in that note are held through the clearing system;
ii) By clause 21.3 of the Trust Deed, so long as the Notes are held in global form (and no definitive Notes have been issued), then "the Issuer, the Trustee and Paying Agents may deem and treat the bearer thereof as the absolute owner of such Instrument and the Issuer, the Trustee and the Paying Agents shall not be affected by any notice to the contrary";
iii) However, by clause 21.4 of the Trust Deed, the Issuer and Trustee may call for, and rely fully on as sufficient evidence of the facts contained therein, a certificate or letter of confirmation from Euroclear or Clearstream, to the effect that at any particular time any particular person is, was or will be shown in its records as entitled to a particular interest in a global note;
iv) Where there is any issue over the entitlement of a person claiming an interest in the Notes, then it is for the Trustee to determine any question arising in that respect, and its determination is binding on the Issuer, the Instrumentholders and all other secured creditors: clause 15.26 of the Trust Deed;
v) Where the Notes are held in global form and a temporary global note is deposited with a Common Depository for the clearing systems then, by clause 11 of the global Note, notice to Noteholders may be given by delivery of the relevant notice to the clearing systems and such notice is deemed to constitute notice to the Noteholders;
vi) Moreover, in those same circumstances, the Trustee, in considering the interests of Noteholders, is entitled by clause 12 of the global note to have regard to such information as may have been made available by or on behalf of the clearing system as to the identity of its accountholders with entitlements in respect of the global note, and to consider such interests on the basis that such accountholders were the holder of the permanent global note;
vii) Accordingly, wherever the Trust Deed, or other Securitisation Documents, envisages going behind the bearer of a global or definitive note, it goes no further than someone recorded as the holder of an account in the books of Euroclear or Clearstream;
viii) There are strong, practical reasons why that is so, given that the ultimate beneficial interest in Notes held through the clearing system could subsist via a chain of intermediaries, such that neither the clearing systems themselves, nor their account holders, would have knowledge of the ultimate beneficiary;
ix) BNY, as Trustee, has indicated that in order to satisfy itself as to the entitlement of someone claiming to hold an interest in the Notes, it would require (per its letter of 24 June 2019) "a current position statement taken from a recognised clearing system record keeping system" or (per the letter from its solicitors, Allen & Overy, of 19 July 2019) in relation to a Written Resolution, that it was signed by "one or more direct participants [i.e. account-holders at the clearing systems] and accompanied by one or more statement(s) showing Notes credited to the account(s) of such direct participant(s)".
"All those notes were by that time held under contracts for sale between the relevant majority noteholders and the bank. Provided only that they were contracts liable to be specifically enforced, then on well settled principles they thereby conferred a beneficial interest in the notes on the bank from the moment of the bank's acceptance of the offered exchange on the day before the meeting. I consider it clear that the contracts for sale by exchange of the 2017 notes which came into existence on the day before the noteholders' meeting were specifically enforceable. Contracts for the sale of shares or securities are specifically enforceable unless damages for breach by the seller would be an adequate remedy. Damages are an adequate remedy if, but only if, there exists a ready market for the securities in question such that the buyer can use his damages to obtain the substance of what he bargained for, namely equivalent securities: see generally Jones & Goodhart, Specific Performance, (1996) 2nd ed, pp 161162."
"It is not an outright beneficial interest which reduces the title of the seller to that of a mere nominee. Generally, it does not even require the seller to vote the shares, pending completion, at the direction of the buyer: see Musselwhite v CH Musselwhite & Son Ltd [1962] Ch 964 and Michaels v Harley House (Marylebone) Ltd [2000] Ch 104, 119."
First step: appointment of additional note trustees and agent of the note trustee
"Notwithstanding the provisions of Clause 23.1, the Trustee may, upon giving prior written notice to the Issuer (but without the consent of the Issuer or the Instrumentholders), appoint any person established or resident in any jurisdiction (whether a Trust Corporation or not) to act either as a separate trustee or as a co-trustee jointly with the Trustee (a) if the Trustee considers such appointment to be in the interest of the Instrumentholders or (b) for the purposes of conforming to any legal requirements, restrictions or conditions in any jurisdictions in which any particular act or acts is or are to be performed or (c) for the purposes of obtaining a judgement in any jurisdiction or the enforcement in any jurisdiction of either a judgement already obtained or any of the provisions of these presents against the Issuer."
"the Trustee shall not be bound to direct or take any such steps or proceedings as are mentioned in Clause 7.1 or any other action or proceedings pursuant to or in connection with these presents, the Notes or the Documents unless directed to do so by an Extraordinary Resolution of the Noteholders (or, as the case may be, the Noteholders of any class) "
Second step: direction to the Trustee to certify that an Event of Default had occurred and to accelerate the notes
Third step: acceleration of Notes
Fourth step: appointment of a receiver
Fifth step: removal of BNY as Trustee
Sixth step: termination of corporate administration agreement
Seventh step: removal of directors
Eighth step: the holding out by the fifth and sixth defendants as directors of BMF6
Ninth step: notice of intended redemption of the Notes and termination of Target as Special Servicer and Cash/Bond Administrator
Declaration 10
Injunctive relief
"GIL (whether acting by their directors, servants, employees or agents, including for the avoidance of doubt Clifden IOM No.1 Limited ("Clifden"), Mr Rizwan Hussain ("Mr Hussain"), Mr Rajnish Kalia ("Mr Kalia") and Mr Oyekoya, or otherwise):
a) shall not hold itself out or act as if it were a holder of the Notes, or as having any beneficial or other interest in or any other right in respect of any of the Notes, including (without limitation) by making any announcement, statement or representation or issuing any communication to any person, unless and until the Note Trustee has first confirmed in writing to GIL that it is satisfied that GIL is or is deemed to be a holder of any Notes; and
b) shall take no further step in relation to the Issuer or any of its property without first obtaining the permission of the Court to do so, unless and until the Note Trustee has confirmed in writing to GIL that it is satisfied that GIL is or is deemed to be a holder of any Notes."
i) Whether the injury to the plaintiff's legal rights is small;
ii) Whether that injury is one which is capable of being estimated in money;
iii) Whether that injury is one which can be adequately compensated by a small money payment; and
iv) Whether the case is one in which it would be oppressive to the defendant to grant an injunction.
"First, the application of the four tests must not be such as 'to be a fetter on the exercise of the court's discretion'. Secondly, it would, in the absence of additional relevant circumstances pointing the other way, normally be right to refuse an injunction if those four tests were satisfied. Thirdly, the fact that those tests are not all satisfied does not mean that an injunction should be granted."
"In some cases, of course, an injunction is necessary - if, for instance the injury cannot fairly be compensated by money - if the defendant has acted in a high-handed manner - if he has endeavoured to steal a march upon the plaintiff or to evade the jurisdiction of the Court. In all these cases an injunction is necessary, in order to do justice to the plaintiff and as a warning to others."
"But in any event the judge was entitled to consider the defendant's conduct in the round, and that included everything that had preceded the commencement of the action "