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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 >> Link Fund Solutions Ltd, Re [2023] EWHC 2641 (Ch) (12 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2641.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2641 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF LINK FUND SOLUTIONS LIMITEDIN
THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF LINK FUND SOLUTIONS LIMITED |
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Tom Smith KC and Marcus Haywood for the Financial Conduct Authority)
Charlotte Cooke for the Investor Advocate
George Bompas KC and Edward Crossley (instructed by Leigh Day and Harcus Parker Ltd) for the Claiming Investors
Alan Pyatt, Graham Dickenson, Mark Bishop and Andy Agathangelou, investors/ representatives of investors in person
Hearing dates: 10 and 12 October 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE BACON:
Introduction
Background
The suspension of the Fund
The FCA investigation
i) investors who left the Fund from 1 November 2018 onwards benefitted disproportionately from the sale of the most liquid assets in the Fund, compared to those who remained invested in the Fund on the suspension date (the Suspension Date Investors).
ii) The Suspension Date Investors were treated unfairly because they were left with a disproportionate share of less liquid assets.
iii) LFSL had consequently failed to comply with Principle 2 (requiring skill, care and diligence) and Principle 6 (requiring due regard to be paid to customers' interests) of the FCA's Principles for Businesses, from 31 July 2018 until the suspension date.
Litigation claims
Sale of LFSL's business
The Scheme
The alternative to the Scheme
Class analysis
Relevant principles
"As former employees with preferential claims in respect of unpaid wages and other employee-related claims, the appellants do have a special interest in opposing the schemes not shared by other creditors, including other preferential creditors (if any) who are not such employees. If the company which employed them were put into liquidation, they could expect to receive ex gratia payments out of the Protection of Wages on Insolvency Fund established under the Protection of Wages on Insolvency Ordinance (Cap 180). Such payment entitles the Board by way of subrogation to payments by the liquidator. Thus the Board bears the burden of any delay in payment in place of the employee.
…
This is, however, exactly the kind of private interest, not deriving from any legal right against the company, which may properly influence a creditor to vote against the Scheme, but which does not entitle him to demand a separate meeting of himself and others in a similar position. Were he able to do so, former employees would be able to veto a scheme which enjoyed the overwhelming support of creditors, and which did not affect their status as preferential creditors at all."
Application in the present case
"98. Although Mr Trower acknowledged that there would be greater uncertainty of outcome for some of the Other Scheme Creditors than the Finance Creditors from being required to undergo the process in the Scheme to establish their Scheme Claims, I accept his submission that this is a potential difference that does not constitute a difference of existing rights against the Company, or rights conferred under the Scheme. As he observed in a winding up, all provable claims against the insolvent company are subject to the same proof of debt process, no matter how they have arisen, ie whether they sound in contract, tort or equity, and whatever differences might exist in the potential outcome of that process.
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100. Accordingly, in my judgment, this is not a case in which the two groups of Scheme Creditors have any relevantly different rights against the Company, and nor are any different rights being offered to them under the Scheme, in respect of the making, determination and adjudication of their Scheme Claims. Any differences in the way in which the process bears upon some of the Other Scheme Creditors as opposed to the Finance Creditors, and any prejudice that they might claim to suffer as a consequence, is a matter that can be raised as a matter of fairness at the sanction hearing."
"It is not unusual in a straightforward English scheme or restructuring plan for creditors with disputed and undisputed unsecured claims all governed by English law to be put in the same class where a formal English insolvency is the appropriate comparator. In that situation, all creditors, whether their claims are disputed or undisputed, will normally have the same essential decision to make at the scheme or plan meetings. The difference between them is simply the complexity of the proving process, which will be greater for the disputed claims, but that will not normally cause an inability to consult together if the proving mechanism under the scheme or plan replaces the formal insolvency proving mechanism in a manner which affects them in the same way."
Conclusion