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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Essar Steel Ltd v The Argo Fund Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 241 (14 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/241.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 241 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE AIKENS
2003 Folio 582
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
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ESSAR STEEL LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE ARGO FUND LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Mark Howard QC & Mr Jonathan Nash (instructed by Eversheds) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Auld :
Introduction
The facts
The Agreement
"a bank or other financial institution to which [a Syndicate member] seeks to transfer all or part of such [member's] rights and obligations hereunder in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement." [my emphasis]
"27.1 This Agreement shall be binding upon, and inure to the benefit of each party hereto and their respective successors, Transferees and assignees. … Any Bank may, subject to the execution and completion of such documents as the [Syndicate members'] Agent may specify and with notice to the Borrower, assign all or any of its rights and benefits hereunder or, subject to the payment to the Agent of a transfer fee of $250, transfer in accordance with Clause 27.2 all or any of its rights, benefits and obligations hereunder.
27.2 If any Bank wishes to transfer all or any of its rights, benefits and/or obligations hereunder, then such transfer may be effected by the delivery to the Agent of a duly completed and duly executed Transfer Certificate in which event …:
(i) to the extent that in such Transfer Certificate the Bank party thereto seeks to transfer its rights and obligations hereunder, the Borrower and such Bank shall be released from further obligations towards one another hereunder and their respective rights against one another shall be cancelled (such rights and obligations being referred to in this Clause 27.2 as 'discharged rights and obligations');
(ii) the Borrower and the Transferee party thereto shall assume obligations towards one another and/or acquire rights against one another which differ from the discharged rights and obligations only insofar as the Borrower and the Transferee have assumed and/or acquired the same in place of the Borrower and such Bank; and
(iii) … the Transferee and the other Banks shall acquire the same rights and assume the same obligations between themselves as they would have acquired and assumed had the Transferee been an original party hereto as a Bank with the rights and/or obligations acquired or assumed by it as a result of such transfer"
The judgment of David Steel J on Argo's application for summary judgment and Essar's application to set aside service or stay the proceedings in the Commercial Court
The Judgment of Aikens J
"28. … it makes commercial sense to restrict the class of potential transferees in some way. … if … there was no restriction, then a transfer could be made to any institution, however unsuitable it might be. The transferee undertakes obligations as well as obtaining rights. The right to transfer can be exercised at any time. This could mean that one of the original Syndicate members could transfer its rights and obligations to another institution before a drawdown by the Borrower. But the Borrower would wish to ensure that the transferee institution would be able to provide its tranche of the funds required at drawdown. Therefore the Borrower would wish to ensure that any transferee was the type of institution that could produce the necessary funds. Such an entity would naturally fall within the phrase 'a bank or other financial institution'.
29 I also note that the two experts instructed by the parties on the secondary market in debt agreed that restrictions on the ability to transfer syndicated loan agreement were not uncommon in 1997. They agreed that the reasons why a borrower might wish to restrict transferability were to safeguard the relationship between the borrower and the lenders, the possibility of increased costs and concerns to ensure that lenders would abide by legal and regulatory provisions."
The issues in the appeal
1) the meaning of "a bank or other financial institution";
2) whether Argo is an "other financial institution";
3) if not, whether the purported transfers were effective as assignments under clause 27.1 or as notices of an assignment later effected by the Syndicate's pleading of its reliance upon them in Essar's proceedings against them in Singapore.
(i) the meaning of "a bank or other financial institution"
"36. It is clear that the parties intended that the class of potential transferees should be wider than bodies that fit the definition of 'banks'. In my view, 'banks' and 'other financial institutions' were intended by the parties to denote two different types of entity; otherwise the expression 'banks or other financial institutions' would be a tautology. …
37. It is possible to argue that 'other financial institutions' must share many common characteristics with banks or only a few characteristics with banks. Is there any indication in the Agreement that points to an intention of the parties that the key common characteristic is that of providing finance in the primary lending market and being regulated and accountable? In my view, there is not and … [counsel for Essar] could not point to anything specifically in support of his preferred construction."
1) be a lender of money, though not necessarily in the primary lending market, since "institutions who buy debt in the secondary market thereby become lenders by definition";
2) have a lending office, though the Agreement did not specify any particular form for it;
3) maintain accounts of money lent to, and of amounts, in capital and interest due from, borrowers, which, by clause 20.5 of the Agreement, were to be "in accordance with its usual practice";
4) have the "capabilities, financial, technical and capacity of lending money during the draw-down period, as 'quasi-primary lenders' in accordance with the terms of the Agreement"; and
5) be a "financial institution" in the sense of having "a legally recognised form or being, which carries on its business in accordance with the laws of its place of creation and whose business concerns commercial finance".
"Provided the 'other financial institutions' have these characteristics, which they would share with the banks, that is, in my view, sufficient to bring them within the definition. The original parties … were well aware that debt could be traded; indeed that must be the underlying rationale for permitting a transfer of rights and obligations. The parties knew of the existence of a secondary debt market in which entities specialised in the purchase of distressed debt. The parties must have contemplated that if a potential transferee was an 'other financial institution' that had the characteristics I have identified, then it could legitimately take a transfer, even though it did not engage substantially in the business of providing finance in the primary lending market."
As I have said, on the Judge's approach, critical among those characteristics was the first and the fourth, namely that the institution should not only be a lender of money but one with an ability to advance the agreed loan during the drawdown period, as 'quasi-primary lenders'.
2) whether Argo is an "other financial institution"
"I have concluded that Argo is and was, at the time the transfers were made, an 'other financial institution' within the meaning of the phrase that I have held the parties intended to give to it. Thus:
(i) Argo is a lender of money. It lends money principally by buying debt on the secondary debt market, but in stepping into the shoes of the primary lenders it always thereby becomes a lender itself. At the same time, Argo does (and did, albeit as a minor part of its business in 2002/3), engage in some primary lending.
(ii) [Counsel for Essar] did not suggest, nor could he, that Argo would be unable to identify a "Lending Office" or produce accounts as evidence of money lent to the Borrower and so forth.
(iii) Argo is and was, financially, technically and legally capable of lending money on the scale required to be a participant in this syndicated loan.
(iv) Argo is an entity that is properly constituted in accordance with the laws of the Cayman Islands and it carries on its business there under the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority. Its manager and investment adviser are both properly constituted and carry on business in accordance with the regulatory authorities in, respectively, Cyprus and the UK."
3) whether, if Argo is not an "other financial institution", the purported transfers could operate as assignments
.. "… I find difficulty with the notion that the banks could assert, by their pleadings in the Singapore proceedings, that they had changed their intentions retrospectively; so that whereas they had intended to make a transfer of rights and obligations by the Transfer Certificates, now they had a new intention, but only if it were held that the Transfer Certificates were not effective as transfers. The new intention would be (it seems) that the certificates should act as assignments if they are held to be ineffective as novations. I cannot accept that there could be an effective retrospective and also contingent change of intention in relation to the effect of existing documents."
The Judge's conclusion, therefore, was that Argo would have failed on its alternative case of assignment.
Lord Justice Rix:
Lady Justice Hallett: