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United Kingdom Supreme Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Farstad Supply AS v Enviroco Ltd [2011] UKSC 16 (6 April 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2011/16.html Cite as: [2011] UKSC 16, [2011] WLR 921, [2011] 1 WLR 921, [2011] Bus LR 1108 |
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Hilary Term
[2011] UKSC 16
On appeal from: [2009] EWCA Civ 1399
JUDGMENT
Farstad Supply A/S (Respondent) v Enviroco Limited (Appellant)
before
Lord Hope, Deputy President
Lord Rodger
Lord Mance
Lord Collins
Lord Clarke
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
6 April 2011
Heard on 19 and 20 January 2011
Appellant George Bompas QC Poonam Melwani Saira Paruk (Instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) |
Respondent Ceri Bryant Ben Griffiths (Instructed by HBJ Gateley Wareing) |
LORD COLLINS
Introduction
"In this Charter Agreement the following words and expressions shall have the meanings hereby assigned to them except where the context otherwise requires:-
a) 'Affiliate' means any subsidiary of the Charterer … or a company of which the Charterer … [is] a Subsidiary or a company which is another Subsidiary of a company of which the Charterer … is a Subsidiary. For the purposes of this definition 'Subsidiary' shall have the meaning assigned to it in Section 736 of the Companies Act 1985."
The facts
The proceedings
"Subsidiaries": the statutory definitions
Greene Committee and the Companies Acts 1928 and 1929
Cohen Committee in 1945 and the Companies Acts 1947/1948
"if, but only if, –
(a) that other either –
(i) is a member of it and controls the composition of its board of directors, or
(ii) holds more than half in nominal value of its equity share capital …"
The Jenkins Committee, the Companies Act 1967, and the Companies Act 1985 as originally enacted
The European Community's Seventh Council Directive on consolidated accounts and the changes to the 1985 Act
"(b) if any shares in that other undertaking are held by a person acting on behalf of the undertaking or any of its subsidiary undertakings."
"736 'Subsidiary', 'holding company' and 'wholly-owned subsidiary'
(1) A company is a 'subsidiary' of another company, its 'holding company', if that other company—
(a) holds a majority of the voting rights in it, or
(b) is a member of it and has the right to appoint or remove a majority of its board of directors, or
(c) is a member of it and controls alone, pursuant to an agreement with other shareholders or members, a majority of the voting rights in it,
(3) In this section 'company' includes any body corporate.
736A Provisions supplementing s. 736
(1) The provisions of this section explain expressions used in section 736 and otherwise supplement that section.
(2) In section 736(1)(a) and (c) the references to the voting rights in a company are to the rights conferred on shareholders in respect of their shares … to vote at general meetings of the company on all, or substantially all, matters.
(3) In section 736(1)(b) the reference to the right to appoint or remove a majority of the board of directors is to the right to appoint or remove directors holding a majority of the voting rights at meetings of the board on all, or substantially all, matters; and for the purposes of that provision—
(a) a company shall be treated as having the right to appoint to a directorship if—
(i) a person's appointment to it follows necessarily from his appointment as director of the company, or
(ii) the directorship is held by the company itself; and
(b) a right to appoint or remove which is exercisable only with the consent or concurrence of another person shall be left out of account unless no other person has a right to appoint or, as the case may be, remove in relation to that directorship.
…
(5) Rights held by a person in a fiduciary capacity shall be treated as not held by him.
(6) Rights held by a person as nominee for another shall be treated as held by the other; and rights shall be regarded as held as nominee for another if they are exercisable only on his instructions or with his consent or concurrence.
(7) Rights attached to shares held by way of security shall be treated as held by the person providing the security—
(a) where apart from the right to exercise them for the purpose of preserving the value of the security, or of realising it, the rights are exercisable only in accordance with his instructions;
(b) where the shares are held in connection with the granting of loans as part of normal business activities and apart from the right to exercise them for the purpose of preserving the value of the security, or of realising it, the rights are exercisable only in his interests.
(12) In this section "company" includes any body corporate."
The decisions below and the appeal
The meaning of "member" and the attribution provisions
Members
"Definition of 'member'
(1) The subscribers of a company's memorandum are deemed to have agreed to become members of the company, and on its registration shall be entered as such in its register of members.
(2) Every other person who agrees to become a member of a company, and whose name is entered in its register of members, is a member of the company."
The attribution provisions
The argument from history
Contractual construction
LORD HOPE
"The matter is one in which it is most undesirable to have different interpretations, north and south of the Border, of an expression in common use in the articles of companies whose affairs are regulated by a legislative system which is intended to apply, generally, to both countries; and, whatever view might have been taken – had the matter arisen rebus integris – I think it is too late to open a question which (in England) authority and practice, and (in Scotland) practice conform to that authority, has closed."
LORD RODGER
"Persons becoming partners of a joint stock company, such as the Western Bank, and being registered as such, cannot escape from the full liabilities of partners either in a question with creditors of the company or in the way of relief to their copartners, by reason of the fact that they hold their stock of the company in trust for others, and are described as trustees in the register of partners and the other books and papers of the company."
(At that time, under Scots law it was permissible in certain cases for entries on the register to describe members as trustees.) The decision of the First Division holding the trustees fully liable as contributories was upheld by the House of Lords: (1879) 6 R (HL) 21. Mr Irvine rightly saw that the same reasoning must apply to a security-holder who is entered on the register of members of a company in respect of the shares transferred to him.
LORD MANCE
LORD CLARKE