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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 >> BV8 Ltd v BV9 Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 3048 (Ch) (06 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/3048.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3048 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF BV9 LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BV8 LIMITED |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) BV9 LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) (2) DAVID SHAMBROOK (3) ANTHONY JOHN WRIGHT (Both in their capacity as Joint Administrators) |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Andrew Mace (instructed by Ellisons Legal LLP) for the Applicant
Mr Christopher Boardman K.C. (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the
Respondents
Hearing dates: 4 and 5 October and 14 November 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
I.C.C. Judge Jones:
A) Introduction - The Appeal and Its Ambit
"… BV8's earned interest margin on assignment of the loan books from BV8 to BV9 on 24/06/20 and 31/08/20 in accordance with Arumdree/Kookmin facilities."
"The Applicant's claim in the administration of BV9 originates from payments made by the Applicant to BV9 on 16 December 2020. On 16 December 2020 the Applicant made three payments to BV9 in the amounts of £688,742.54, £500,000 and £500,000 respectively".
(I wish to make clear that there is no criticism of Mr Mace for this different presentation. The reality is that the change was required to reflect the true nature of BV8's case as pursued on this appeal, as will appear in more detail below.)
B) Background to the Proof of Debt
(as considered to be required for tax avoidance purposes) that BV9's facility would not necessarily be used to enable BV8 to repay its borrowing. That would not occur, for example, if BV8 was able to repay Kookmin from its own or third party funds. Bearing in mind that was an ingredient required for the Tax Scheme and that this judgment is not concerned with its validity as a successful scheme, it is in fact apparent from the evidence that in reality BV8 expected to be superseded by BV9.
Plainly that would not just mean BV9 repaying BV8's loans. It would mean BV9 having to receive BV8's loan book business.
C) The Nature of the Appicant's Debt/Liability Claim C1) As Presented in the 1st Witness Statement of Mr Smith
"28. The way the refinancing was achieved in practice was BV8 executed the Assignments on 24 June 2020 and 26 August 2020 in respect of each of its Borrower Agreements in favour of BV9 …
30. … whilst interest and other charges accrued [under the loans made by BV8 to the developers] payment was not required until the end of the loan period …
32. In order to deal with this [i.e. the sums representing the interest and other charges due to BV8 as at the date of the assignments but not to be paid to BV8 until later] it was agreed the Borrower Agreements would be assigned to BV9 but in consideration of doing this BV9 would be responsible for paying BV8 the interest and charges which had accrued during the term of BV8's facility. There was an intercompany amount owing from BV9 to BV8 calculated in this regard in the amount of £1,074,036.91 which comprised interest payments and other amounts owing to BV8 at the time of the Assignments."
"33. The circumstances of the Assignment [by BV8 to BV9] dated 24 June 2020 ("T1 Assignment") were confirmed in board minutes of BV8 on 24 June 2020 (the "24 June Minutes") (Pages 47 to 49 of Exhibit AS1.) [with equivalent board meeting minutes for the 26 August 2020 Assignment]
34. The 24 June Minutes provided:
'3. PURPOSE OF MEETING
3.1 The Chairman reported that the purpose of the meeting was to consider and if deemed fit, to approve:
3.1.1 the repayment of the loan facility entered into by the Company with Kookmin Bank Co. Ltd, as the trustee of Arumdree UK VAT Private Investment Trust No.1 in the form of collective Investment Trust for UK VAT Bridge Loan (the "Lender").
3.1.2 the repayment to be made by assignment to BV9 Limited, a company (registered in England and Wales with company number 12009247) having its registered office at 6 The Centre, The Crescent, Colchester Business Park, Colchester, Essex, CO4 9QQ of all loans outstanding on 24th June 2020 funded under the facility agreement entered into by the Company with the Lender. The consideration paid by BV9 Limited for the assignment being a sum equal to the aggregate value of the outstanding net loans plus facility fees, interest, default interest and legal fees less loan processing fees received and interest rebates payable on the date of assignment shown in the Assignment Schedule.
3.1.3 the Company transferring to BV9 Limited, on behalf of the Lender, a sum equal to £12,380,000 due to the Lender under the Facility less the consideration due to the Company from BV9 Limited on assignment of the outstanding loans shown in the Assignment Schedule …
35. Thus it was clear that payment was expected from BV9 in respect of the assignment: "being a sum equal to the aggregate value of the outstanding net loans plus facility fees, interest, default interest and legal fees less loan processing fees received and interest rebates payable on the date of assignment shown in the Assignment Schedule".
a) The minute plainly links the assignments to BV8's right to be paid interest and charges accrued by the date of assignment to the Kookmin loans.
b) Kookmin would not be repaid directly. BV8's repayment was to be effected by the assignment of the relevant third party investor/developer loans to BV9. This is a potentially confusing proposition but one which required BV8 to transfer (in the case of T1 with the equivalent applying to T2) £12,380,000 to BV9 less the consideration BV9 had to pay for the assignments.
c) That raises the questions: (i) why would BV9 pay consideration and what would be its effect upon its financial position bearing in mind its liabilities to Kookmin; (ii) was there a professional valuation of the business including goodwill being transferred inherently with the assignments; and (iii) could this agreement ever result in a debt being owed by BV9 to BV8 as claimed in the
Proof of Debt when it appears to envisage BV9 receiving a balancing payment from BV8?
d) The answers as the case is presented in the evidence referred to so far, all concern the claim to the interest margin claimed in the Proof of Debt. There is nothing to suggest the evidence has anything to do with lending on 16 December 2020.
"51. However, the Assignments cannot be viewed in isolation. For each assigned Borrower Agreement, BV8 provided BV9 with a copy of a redemption statement on assignment as evidence of the balance due from BV9. There was agreement from both BV8 and BV9 that the loans were transferring for value. That value being the obligation for BV9 to pay BV8 the net advance plus fees and earned interest and default interest where applicable up to the assignment date.
52. This was reflected in the accounting records of both BV8 and BV9."
54. The schedule I produced for the Joint Administrators (Page 61 of Exhibit AS1.) shows total interest earnings of £2,761,915.87 with interest paid to Arumdree in June 2020 and August 2020 of £987,686.58 for Tranche 1 and £612,270.91 for Tranche 2, giving rise to a net surplus interest margin of £1,161,958.38 due to BV8 Limited. On assignment of the BV8 loan books to BV9 Limited, BV8 could have withdrawn the surplus interest margin from the funds transferred to BV9, but instead chose to transfer the full balance of funds to BV9 with the excess being remitted as a loan to BV9.
55. The agreed intercompany balance in the books of BV8 and BV9 is £1,105,227.08, to which a further £7,740.00 was added reflecting the settlement by BV8 of Wright Hassall invoice 252913 relating to BV9's recovery of one of the debts under the Borrower Agreements.
56. This results in total balance owing to BV8 [by BV9] of £1,112,967.08."
(i) £790,149.64 which represented BV8's funds in BV8's account; and
(ii) £283,887.27 which BV8 was entitled to in respect of interest/fees and other charges earned on its third party, developer loans up to the dates of assignment to B9 which B9 recovered after the assignment.
62. The T1 Assignment and the T2 Assignment required BV8 to transfer the "Notional Cash Balances" to BV9. However, BV8 initially retained the cash balances and dealt with the amounts due to BV9 through intercompany accounting in the books of both BV8 and BV9. Any funds required by BV9 to advance loans were transferred by BV8 on behalf of BV9 and again dealt with through intercompany accounting in the books of both BV8 and BV9.
63. On 2 December the balance on the BV9 account was £17,667.86 and BV9 had committed to advance loans in December totalling £1,549,449.21. To meet these loan advances it was agreed that BV8 would transfer all cash balances to BV9 including BV8's own Surplus Interest Margin. On 16 December BV8 transferred £1,688,742.54 to BV9. The transfers including BV8's Interest Margin were recorded through the intercompany accounting in the books of both BV8 and BV9 (my underlining).
64. With the benefit of hindsight it would have been better had we put in place a written agreement to document the interest free loan, both Mr Funnell and I were in Scotland attending meetings on 16 December and the formal documentation of the loan was overlooked.
C2) The Respondents' Evidence in Answer
"The purpose of an entire agreement clause is to preclude a party to a written agreement from threshing through the undergrowth … The entire agreement clause obviates the occasion for any such search and the peril of the contracting parties … For such a clause constitutes a binding agreement between the parties that the full contractual terms are to be found in the document containing the clause and not elsewhere …" (per Lightman J in The Inntrepreneur Pub Company (GL) v East Crown Limited [2000] 2 Lloyds Rep 611 at [7] approved in MWB Business Exchange Ltd v Rock Advertising Ltd [2018] UKSC 24, [2019] AC 119 at [14].
"This (unparticularised and uncorroborated) statement gives rise to numerous difficulties, not least because (1) the Applicant's obligation to make payment to the Company was not notional, (2) no intercompany accounts were drawn up until after the administration, (3) no evidence has been produced to substantiate the inter-company balances, and (4) this is not the basis of the Interest Margin claim in any event."
C3) The Respondent's Claim as Presented in the Reply Evidence
His second witness statement addresses the background considered above and endorses the fact that the Assignment Deeds were executed on the terms of an agreement between BV8 and BV9 made through their common directors, himself and Mr Funnell, and evidenced by the board meetings. He states (amongst other matters) that:
a) The transfer of loans by assignment, with a payment for a value representing the costs of providing the loan to the assignment date, was a recognised business practice.
b) BV8 and BV9 did not apply the express term of the lending to its third-party investor/developer borrowers that interest and other fees and charges were to be deducted at latest two days after an agreement was signed.
c) The inter-company account was drafted after the administration began to update the Xero accounting records of both BV8 and BV9 and the policies adopted within it are consistent with accounting entries for earlier years.
d) BV8 provided the Administrators with a slide pack of 6 October 2022 analysing and reconciling cash movements, although he acknowledged that board minutes had not been provided.
"The indebtedness of BV8 to BV9 was dealt with by intercompany accounting. Equally, BV8 ultimately 'over transferred' (i.e. lent) £1.1m of BV8 funds BV9 in December 2020 in order to facilitate a loan by BV9 to another borrower. BV8 and BV9 were related companies under common control and we had no reason to consider it inappropriate to operate in this way. The transfer of the additional £1.1m into the BV9 account for ease of administration, was an over-payment or loan to BV9 that it would return to BV8 when needed. Until then, it was effectively lent to BV9 as additional working capital."
true basis for the sum claimed in the Proof of Debt. Nor does it present any intercompany account to justify such a claim. That did not occur until the next statement.
a) Upon assignment of the loans BV8 owed BV9 for T1 £2,956,080 (£4,557,671 - £763,684 representing accrued interest and £837,907 representing accrued fees) plus a "residual balance" of £1,601,591 from which BV8 paid Kookman interest of £987,686 leaving a "residual margin" of £613,905.
b) The £2,956,080 was transferred to BV9 by "various intercompany transfers after accounting entries with the residual margin due to BV8", exhibiting a variety of documentation said to support this. He also states the position he considers would have arisen had Kookmin advanced funds directly to BV9, which it did not, concluding:
"18. The activities of Tranche 1 and Tranche 2 would have collectively resulted in earned profits and a cash balance in BV8 of £1,070,291 of which £790,148 relates to loans advanced and redeemed by BV8, which were never assigned to BV9.
19. Whether the Korean loan to BV9 was advanced by physical movements of funds or intercompany accounting with BV8, the outcome should be the same.
20. BV8 chose to loan this retained margin of £790,148 to BV9 to support its lending and is now being denied the right to claim this amount as an unsecured creditor. Had we retained these funds in BV9, BV9 would have had no claim to them. As such, the creditors of BV9 would be gaining a windfall if the unsecured claim of BV8 was denied."
"On or around 17 June 2021 the Administrators required BV8 to sign a TR4 and Deed of Release in order to transfer security held by BV8 to BV9 in respect of one of the assigned Borrower Agreements. This was at a time when BV8's status as a creditor was clearly still live. BV8 required amendment of the documentation prepared on behalf of the Administrators to reflect the position that BV9 had a liability to BV8 – namely consideration was payable for the Assignments. The Administrators amended the documentation and it was executed by BV8 on 25 June 2021."
C4) The Answers to the Paragraph 25 Issue
a) There can be no doubt that this appeal must be approached from the bas-s that the claim as detailed in the Proof of Debt has been abandoned and superseded by a claim of a loan of £1,074,036.91 made on 16 December 2020. That claim requires an account of inter-company dealings from the date BV8 owed BV9 consideration for the Assignments to ensure BV9 was not entitled to all or part of that sum.
b) The Administrators were entitled to approach this appeal upon the basis that the debt claimed was identified in the Proof of Debt. They are entitled to complain that the reformulation was first identified in Mr Mace's skeleton argument.
c) The Court needs to consider whether this formulation can be determined in those circumstances bearing in mind paragraphs 11-18 of the "Introduction" above.
F) The Hearing – Assessment of Witnesses
G) The Evidence and the Findings of Facts
G1) The Background Facts
D2) The Contractual Documentation
a) The facility agreements entered into with Kookmin.
b) The deeds of assignment between BV8 and BV9 for each investor/developer loan assigned. These are in standard form and it is agreed that the Court should rely upon as a specimen form the deed dated 24 June 2020 ("the Deed of Assignment").
a) There is no contractual term within an entire agreement clause deed requiring BV9 to provide any form of consideration for the assignment. Based on the terms of the Deed of Assignment, the consideration is the execution of the deed.
b) There is nothing to reflect the agreement relied upon by BV8 requiring repayment to it of interest/fees and other charges accrued at the date of the assignment.
its realised assets. In any event this claim, whether as framed in the Proof of Debt or in Mr Mace's skeleton argument, would not arise unless the money BV8 lent on 16 December 2016 would have existed and be lent in the circumstances of the scenario envisaged from the Deed of Assignment alone.
D3) The Board Minutes
However, the Administrators' concerns led to directions from the Court during case management for the metadata to be provided. In the light of the results, as set out in the evidence before me, I conclude on the balance of probability that these minutes are authentic, reasonably contemporaneous and record the resolutions passed by Mr Funnell and Mr Smith in the context recorded within them.
a) The purpose of the meeting was to consider and approve, if appropriate: (i) repayment of the Kookmin T1 facility; (ii) "the repayment … by assignment to BV9 … of all loans outstanding on 24th June 2020 funded under [BV8's Kookmin T1] facility agreement. The consideration paid by BV9 … for the assignment being a sum equal to the aggregate value of the outstanding net loans plus facility fees, interest, default interest and legal fees less loan processing fees received and interest rebates payable on the date of assignment shown in the Assignment Schedule"; and (iii) BV8 transferring "to BV9 … on behalf of [Kookmin, a sum equal to £12,380,000 due to [Kookmin] under the Facility less the consideration due to [BV8] from BV9 … on assignment of the outstanding loans shown in the Assignment Schedule".
b) The purposes were each approved in stated compliance with the requirements of s.172 of the Companies Act 2006 and on the ground that they were for the benefit of the Company.
c) The following resolutions were passed: (i) to approve the assignments to BV9 of all outstanding loans owed to BV8 by the third-party investment/developers as shown in the Assignment Schedule; and (ii) to transfer £12,380,000 to BV9 less "the Consideration" (above) due to BV8 from BV9 for the assignments.
Consideration.
a) BV8 would repay the monies it was lent by Kookmin by assigning to BV9 its book of outstanding loans as at 24 June 2020 and paying to BV9 the resulting sum due from BV8 of £12,380,000 to BV9's Kookmin bank account, less the Consideration for the assigned loans.
b) BV8 would not repay Kookmin directly. BV8 would not transfer any assets or money to BV9 other than the assigned loan book. BV8 would not become a creditor of BV9.
c) The calculation for the Consideration was: "the aggregate value of the outstanding net loans plus facility fees, interest, default interest and legal fees less loan processing fees received and interest rebates payable on the date of assignment shown in the Assignment Schedule".
a) The contrasting content of the Deed of Assignment on its own would leave the £12,380,000 (less the Consideration) in the hands of BV8, which does not easily fit with the concept derived from the Tax Scheme of BV9 superseding BV8 and carrying on its business.
b) The difference between these terms and the Deed of Assignment might be attributable to the Deed being understood to be a mechanism achieving the assignment in the context of this agreement which is, in effect, a sale of BV8's business agreement.
c) However, the retention by BV8 of the Consideration is also inconsistent with the succession concept.
d) There is no evidence from Kookmin to identify what it understood the contractual arrangement to be as between it, BV8 and BV9 including as to whether it also had agreed the terms evidenced by the minutes. The position of Kookmin had to be relevant. Whilst BV8 and BV9 might agree what they wanted between themselves, they had to consider the fact that BV8's loan facility had to be repaid whether by direct payment or by drawing down BV9's facility. For example, if BV8 retained the Consideration, it would have to be used to pay Kookmin direct unless there was agreement that BV9 had the funds to achieve that result using its or any other facility.
D4) The Assignments and Payment of BV8's Debt in Practice
D5) The Inter-Company Account
a) Slides 1, 2, and 6 each appear to produce the case for T1 and T2 that BV8 as at the dates of their respective board minutes (24 June and 30 August 2020) had a
"notional cash balance" from starting facility advances of £12,380,000 and £7,653,386 for T1 and T2 of £4,557,671.55 and £2,103,159.37 (total £6,660,830.92) respectively produced by deducting their respective available Kookmin facilities from the amounts they had drawn down less the sums the investor/developers had borrowed. There is then added the "BV9 Assignment Value" (£9,423,920.31 and £6,618,882.38) to the notional cash balance to produce the "Loan Book Value" from which interest paid is deducted leaving a net loan book value to be deducted from the facilities' redemption figures to produce a "BV8 retained surplus" of £613,905.85 and £456,385.76 totalling £1,070,291.61.
b) Slide 3 is a bank statement of a business account entitled "T1 Funds Drawn by
BV8" showing £186.70 on an unspecified date but also a credit on 26 June
2019 of £12,380.00 with a balance below that of "0" and a comment: "That's all we can find. Try changing your date range?". Slide 8 is a similar document to slide 3 also showing £186.70 as available but in this case showing a 7 February 2020 credit from "BOL, Bridging Vat Limited Assignment Braintree transfer £62,823.10 leaving an account balance of £1,969,977.44. There are other, similar slides.
c) Slide 5 is entitled "T1 Loans Advanced by BV8" and Slide 7 "T1 Loan Redemptions Received by BV8". These set out details of the loans made and (i) interest earnt and redeemed prior to assignment, (ii) earnt to assignment and received post assignment, and (iii) interest earnt to assignment but recoverable post assignment with cumulative interest figures.
d) Those and the other slides would need to be addressed within an account if they are to be taken into consideration.
E) Mr Smith's Evidence and the Inter-Company Account
E1) Submissions
E2) The Need for Caution
"We effectively reversed the position that we'd been operating before where BV8 was holding funds for BV9 and we paid everything across to BV9. And at that point, BV9 was holding funds for BV8 …
they are transfers of the entire balance out of BV8, and part of that balance relates to earned and received interest that rightfully belonged to BV8 …
No I'm not saying there is a loan agreement. I'm saying that between the parties … there was an agreement that we would put the money across and that is a loan because it was intended that it would come back at some point".
E3) Inter-Company Account Concerns
"running balance" and a "gross" column. They record, for example, advances of loans, assignments to BV9 including transfers of interest on assignment and associated payments such as processing fees and legal fees.
2023]. However, the problem with these figures from the Court's perspective is that their accuracy depends upon: the accuracy of the starting balance; the correct identification and application of the terms of the assignment; and the existence of the underlying documentation which has not been produced or vouched. The problem existing within the context, as Mr Boardman K.C. correctly identified, three different approaches within an appeal relying upon a Proof of Debt only claiming interest margin.
F) Estoppel – The Evidence
G) Closing Submissions
H) Decisions
a) The appeal based upon the Proof of Debt which asserts a claim by reference to an unpaid interest margin of £1,074,036.91 must be dismissed as framed. It has been superseded by a claim which relies upon an unpaid loan made on 16 December 2020 and then by a claim for monies due upon the taking of an account of a running, inter-company balance.
b) Neither of the superseding claims can be read into the proof of debt or the evidence so that it can be reasonably argued that either of those claims were apparent from the evidence. The first of those claims only became apparent within the skeleton argument of Mr Mace. The second only emerging from it during submissions.
c) The case based on estoppel fails. As a finding of fact, there was no representation to be relied upon as asserted. It is a finding which is also made in the context of the directors of BV9, who were also the directors of BV8, having an obligation under the Insolvency Act 1986, the Companies Act 2006 and at common law to present to BV9 the correct statement of account between it and BV9 with supporting accounting records. If the figures they presented in the emails were inaccurate, which is yet to be determined but is the issue, whether in the context of vouching or in the absence of fulfilment of the obligation to account, they cannot rely upon the above-mentioned facts to found an estoppel.
I can determine if BV8 is a creditor of BV9 based upon the superseding claims and
the evidence as a whole and, if so, quantify the debt. I refer to paragraphs 11-18 of the "Introduction" above. I have considerable sympathy for that approach appreciating the intention to avoid further costs and delays in the conduct of the administration but I cannot do so.
a) The Court only reaches decisions upon the matter before it and there has been no application to amend the Proof of Debt. It is incorrectly framed and a different cause of action (an outstanding loan or monies due upon the taking of an account) is now relied upon.
b) Whilst that could in principle be resolved, it cannot be in practice. That is because (as appears from "the Evidence and the Findings of Facts" above) there is insufficient evidence and there are too many investigatory matters, questions or issues which have not been addressed. This will be particularised in paragraph 125 below subject to paragraph 124.
c) Normally an absence of information and evidence or the existence of outstanding issues would not alter the fact that a Court must make a decision upon the case as presented to it. However, in this case the reason for that position is that the Administrators have not addressed the appeal from the perspective of the superseding claims. Their statutory role is to investigate, determine and on an appeal raise matters relevant to the interests of the creditors of the whole. That role would be overridden should a decision be made upon the material before this appeal.
d) Although the Court has an overall supervisory role and control of all insolvencies, it is not possible in this case to give directions to the Administrators simply because there are too many uncertainties (i.e. insufficient evidence) and there are too many investigatory matters, questions or issues which have not been addressed. Those uncertainties either need a decision from the Administrators that they are not of concern or require investigation by the Administrators and a decision from them as to the relevant outcome.
a) Once the Court has decided that the appeal as framed should be dismissed and in the absence of any application to amend, it is necessary to consider the consequences of the judgment concerning the ability of BV8 to now amend the Proof of Debt or to be able to lodge a new proof of debt. Such matters are for the parties and the Court has not heard argument and been asked to address them.
b) If a decision was to be made upon the superseding claims, the Court would be faced with an inter-company account which has not been addressed by the Administrators. Assuming they were able waive that obligation, the Court will be left (as it is now) with an account which needs to be vouched. Even ignoring the concerns as to reliability previously expressed, the Court cannot simply look at the figures, see if they are mathematically correct and then decide the account. The underlying bases for the figures needs to be addressed but has not and cannot be.
c) For that purpose, a starting point from the Court's perspective would be to understand the opening balance and then to address the terms of the assignment to ensure these are applied to the running account. A problem that presents the Court is that it would be doing so without the full picture potentially to the detriment of creditors of BV9. That is because (as "the Evidence and the Findings of Facts" draw attention to) not only are there significant divergences between the Deed of Assignment, the contents of the board meeting minutes relied upon and what occurred in practice but also because there is an absence of apparent consideration (at the time and on the appeal) of the contractual obligations owed to Kookmin and/or of their contractual consequences.
d) For example, within the context of the Tax Scheme background and/or of dealings with Kookmin at or around the time of repayment of BV8's facility, questions arise as to whether:
(i) there was a requirement for BV8 to transfer all of its assets and liabilities to BV9 to enable BV9 to supersede it as the owner of its business;
(ii) there was a breach of contract with BV9 and Kookmin if/because BV8 retained all payments accrued but not falling due for payment as at the date of an assigned loan instead of paying them to BV9 to support its borrowing from Kookmin;
(iii) there were requirements for assets subject to the floating charge granted by BV8 to remain secured for the purposes of the debt owed to Kookmin by BV9; and/or
(iv) consideration was given by the directors of BV9 to any adverse consequences resulting for BV9 when deciding to enter into the agreement with BV8 evidenced by the minutes or by factual performance, such as interest to be paid should BV8 not transfer funds to BV9 and BV9's facility would be debited by Kookmin as a result.
e) Kookmin, who has not provided evidence, should be a party to the appeal based upon the superseding claims. As matters stand now, the Court would want the Administrators (subject to any submissions) to seek the views of Kookmin as to whether they wish such matters to be investigated and determined (bearing in mind the costs may reduce the dividend otherwise to be distributed to them) or whether, for example, they would wish to negotiate with BV8 or simply allow the proof of debt in the sum claimed (bearing in mind that in practice any dispute is between them and BV8 affecting the amount to be paid as the "prescribed part" to the "detriment" of Kookmin as crystallised, floating charge holders - see paragraph 18 above).
I) Conclusion
Order Accordingly