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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 >> Barings Plc and Related Companies, Re [2001] EWHC Ch 466 (13th December, 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2001/466.html Cite as: [2001] EWHC Ch 466 |
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
01056 of 1998 01057 of 1998 Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF BARINGS PLC (IN LIQUIDATION) AND RELATED COMPANIES
Mr. John Brisby QC and Mr. Richard Hill (instructed by Messrs Theodore Goddard for the 1986 Trustee )
Ms Sandra Bristoll (instructed by Messrs Allen & Overy for the Perpetual Trustee)
Mr. Robin Hollington QC (instructed by Messrs Hewitson Becke and Shaw for the Representative Preference Shareholders)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Vice-Chancellor:
a) Coopers & Lybrand pay £65m. to the liquidators of PLC in settlement of the claim made against them in the Auditors Action. When added to the other available cash resources within the Barings Group (£23.189m.) and the Buffer Fund (£17.674m.) to be contributed by ING there will be a fund of £105.863m.
b) £83.387m from that fund is to be distributed to the 1986 Trustee from which £32.5m will be put into an Escrow Account to fund the costs of the continuing proceedings against Deloitte & Touche, Singapore, leaving £50.887m for immediate distribution to the 1986 Noteholders;
c) £7.515m (£4.71m after costs) is to be distributed to the Perpetual Trustee, with a further £3.8m if the outcome of the action against D&T Singapore justifies it;
d) £5.35m is repaid to ING.
"The proposition that the liquidators can proceed to decide whether or not to recommend the compromise to the court without regard to the interests of shareholders seems to me to be prima facie wrong. They must have regard to the interest of everybody but they can decide that on balance, the compromise should be supported, notwithstanding that it does not provide anything for shareholders.
The shareholders do not have a veto. The veto notion, I think, derived from the Section 425 point. The shareholders simply have a right that their interests should be taken into account with the possible consequence - but by no means the inevitable and some might say not even the likely consequence - that the compromise cannot go ahead, or should not receive sanction, because it provides them with nothing but they are entitled to have their interests taken into account on the application for sanction."
“The court may, and usually will, take into account the views of someone claiming to be a creditor or contributory, but it is not bound by those views. If the claim appears thin, or the claimant can be seen to have no real interest in the assets having regard to prior claims, his views may carry little weight. I would think it inappropriate for the court to embark, in the context of an application under s 167(1)(a) of the Act, on a detailed examination of the question whether a person wishing to be heard is indeed a creditor or a contributory. The circumstances in the present case demonstrate that such examination is likely to prove inconclusive. I think it is sufficient that the court should be satisfied that the claim is made bona fide and it is not plainly misconceived. If the claimant satisfies that test, then he should be heard. It remains a matter for the court what weight should be given to his wishes.”
At page 643 Chadwick LJ continued
“In deciding whether or not to sanction a proposed compromise the court must consider whether the interests of those, whether creditors or contributories, who have a real interest in the assets of a company in liquidation are likely to be best served (i) by permitting the company to enter into that compromise with all the terms that it contains; or (ii) by not permitting the company to enter into that compromise. It is not for the court to speculate whether the terms of the proposed compromise were the best that could have been obtained; or whether the proposed compromise would have been better if it did not contain all the terms that it does contain. Unless it is satisfied that, if the company is not permitted to enter into the compromise on the terms which the liquidator has negotiated, there will then be better terms or some other compromise on offer, the decision is between the proposed compromise and no compromise at all.
In reaching that decision, the court may have to weigh the different interests of creditors and contributories and, perhaps, the different interests of preferential and non-preferential creditors. It will not give weight to the wishes of those who will be unaffected whichever way the decision goes; for example, the interest of contributories who have no realistic prospect of receiving a distribution in any foreseeable circumstances, or the wishes of preferential or secure creditors who will be paid in full in any event. Subject to that, the court will give weight to the wishes of creditors and contributories whose interests it has to consider, for the reason that creditors and contributories, if uninfluenced by extraneous considerations, are likely to be good judges of where their own best interests lie. For the same reason the court will give weight to the views of the liquidator, who may, and normally will, be in the best position to take an informed and objective view. But, as I have said, at the end of the day it is for the court to decide whether or not to sanction the compromise.”
“Everybody will agree that a compromise or agreement which has to be sanctioned by the Court must be reasonable, and that no arrangement or compromise can be said to be reasonable in which you can get nothing and give up everything. A reasonable compromise must be a compromise which can, by reasonable people conversant with the subject, be regarded as beneficial to those on both sides who are making it. Now, I have no doubt at all that it would be improper for the Court to allow an arrangement to be forced on any class of creditors, if the arrangement cannot reasonably be supposed by sensible business people to be for the benefit of that class as such, otherwise the sanction of the Court would be a sanction to what would be a scheme of confiscation. The object of this section is not confiscation. It is not that one person should be a victim, and that the rest of the body should feast on his rights. Its object is to enable compromises to be made which are for the common benefit of the creditors as creditors, or for the common benefit of some class of creditors as such.”
To the like effect is the comment of Bramwell JA in Re Austin (1876) 4 Ch.D 13, 15 that a compromise involves give and take between the parties. I accept as the overall test to be applied that which was summarised by Giles J in Re Spedley Securities Ltd (1992) 9 ACSR 83, 85 namely whether the proposed compromise “is in the interests of those concerned in the winding up” and “is for the benefit of all concerned”.
“There are formidable arguments on both sides and it would be wrong, it seems to me, for me to arrive at any conclusion on this application by reference to the strength of the parties’ rival cases.”