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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 >> Telewest Communications Plc , Re [2004] EWHC 924 (Ch) (26 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/924.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 924 (Ch), [2004] BCC 342, [2005] 1 BCLC 752 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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In the Matter of Telewest Communications Plc |
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In the Matter of Companies Act 1985 |
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Richard Sheldon QC (instructed by Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP) for the Bondholder Committee
Martin Moore QC and Sir Thomas Stockdale (instructed by Sherman & Sterling (London) LLP) for Opposing Bondholders
Hearing dates: 22 and 23 April 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Richards :
"I therefore believe that all rational creditors of Telewest will do their utmost to ensure that an agreement is reached to restructure the company. I do not believe and have never believed that a winding up is an attractive scenario, and I am sure that holders of Notes would be better served by a restructuring. "
"What is the proper construction of that statute? It makes the majority of the creditors or of a class of creditors bind the minority: it exercises a most formidable compulsion upon dissentient, or would-be dissentient, creditors; and it therefore requires to be construed with care, so as not to place in the hands of some of the creditors the means and opportunity of forcing dissentients to do that which it is unreasonable to require them to do, or of making a mere jest of the interests of the minority. "
However, the class issue has been raised and, as it goes to jurisdiction, the court must deal with it. Although the holders of a significant majority of the sterling bonds are represented at this hearing, there remain the holders of approximately 25 per cent of the sterling bonds who are not represented and are in fact largely unknown to Telewest or to either of the informal committees of bondholders. It is also the case that the Opposing Bondholders have said and done nothing which would prevent them from voting against the Telewest scheme.
"(2) Persons whose rights are so dissimilar that they cannot sensibly consult together with a view to their common interest must be given separate meetings. Persons whose rights are sufficiently similar that they can consult together with a view to their common interest should be summoned to a single meeting.(3) The test is based on similarity or dissimilarity of legal rights against the company, not on similarity or dissimilarity of interests not derived from such legal rights. The fact that individuals may hold divergent views based on their private interests not derived from their legal rights against the company is not a ground for calling separate meetings.
(4) The question is whether the rights which are to be released or varied under the scheme or the new rights which the scheme gives in their place are so different that the scheme must be treated as a compromise or arrangement with more than one class. "
"The word "class" is vague, and to find out what is meant by it we must look at the scope of the section, which is a section enabling the court to order a meeting of a class of creditors to be called. It seems plain that we must give such a meaning to the term "class" as will prevent the section being so worked as to result in confiscation and injustice, that it must be confined to those persons whose rights are not so dissimilar as to make it impossible for them to consult together with a view to their common interest. "
The significance of this passage is two-fold. First, it makes clear that it is rights, not interests, which are the governing factor in the composition of classes. Secondly, and it is this aspect which is central to the present case, it is the extent to which the relevant rights are dissimilar which will determine the composition of classes in any particular case.
"When applying Bowen LJ's test to the question "are the rights of those who are to be affected by the scheme proposed such that the scheme can be seen as single arrangement; or ought it to be regarded, on a true analysis, as a number of linked arrangements?" it is necessary to ensure not only that those whose rights really are so dissimilar that they cannot consult together with a view to a common interest should be treated as parties to distinct arrangements – so that they should have their own separate meetings – but also that those whose rights are sufficiently similar to the rights of others that they can properly consult together should be required to do so; lest by ordering separate meetings the court gives a veto to a minority group. The safeguard against majority oppression, as I sought to point out in the BTR case ([2001] 1 BCLC 740 at 747) is that the court is not bound by the decision of the meeting. It is important Bowen LJ's test should not be applied in such a way that it becomes an instrument of oppression by a minority. "
"In my view, scrutiny of the facts is essential to the decision on jurisdiction. Having said that, I agree that given the statutory procedure, the protection given to creditors by the discretion available to the court and the practical considerations already mentioned, a broad view should be taken of the meaning of "class" in s 425(1), as that word is defined by Bowen LJ. "
See also re Anglo American Insurance Ltd [2001] BCLC 755 at 765, per Neuberger J.
i. do bondholders have a right to a particular exchange rate formula, and
ii. if so, does the choice of formula in the proposed scheme create overall a sufficient disparity of result for the sterling bondholders that they should be constituted as a separate class.
"(a) Where a scheme of arrangement is put forward as an alternative to insolvency, the rights to be compared, in order to see whether the scheme involves one arrangement or more than one, are the rights to which creditors are entitled under the scheme and the rights to which they would be entitled in an insolvent winding up.(b) The comparison to be made is with an insolvent winding up which would take place if the Scheme did not become effective.
(c) If Telewest were to be wound up there would be one currency only in the liquidation which would be pounds sterling.
(d) Claims would be converted into pounds sterling as at the date on which Telewest went into liquidation, which in the case of a winding up by the court would be the date of the winding up order: see Rule 4.91 of the Insolvency Rules 1986 ("Rule 4.91") when read together with the Insolvency Act 1986, section 247(2);
(e) If rights under the Scheme are to correspond with rights in an insolvent winding up to which the Scheme is the alternative the correct provision for currency conversion is conversion at the date as at which claims are to be ascertained for the purposes of distribution under the Scheme i.e. the Correct Conversion Provision;
(f) The Proposed Conversion Provision treats holders of Dollar Notes in a manner which is materially more favourable, and treats the holders of Sterling Notes in a manner which is materially less favourable, than if the Correct Conversion Provision were used, and thus discriminates in favour of the former at the expense of the latter; and
(g) Discrimination in this manner would result in unequal distribution as between two groups of creditors who would rank equally in a winding up, and therefore would infringe the pari passu rule which exists to promote fairness. "
"23. Mr Lowe, on the other hand, relied on the principle that the claims of creditors are valued at the date of the winding-up order. As Selwyn LJ said in In re Humber Ironworks and Shipbuilding Co (1869) LR 4 Ch App 643, 646-647, the assets held on the statutory trusts should be distributed as if they had all been collected and distributed on the date of the winding up order:"I think the tree must lie as it falls; that it must be ascertained what are the debts as they exist at the date of the winding up, and that all dividends in the case of an insolvent estate must be declared in respect of the debts so ascertained. "
"It is only in this way that a rateable, or pari passu, distribution of the available property can be achieved, and it is, as I see it, axiomatic that the claims of creditors amongst whom the division is to be effected must all be crystallised at the same date….for otherwise one is not comparing like with like… "
"There is no particular reason, in the field of abstract justice, why the currency risk should be borne by one description of creditor rather than by another description of creditor when they are all directed to rank pari passu. They do not rank pari passu if the sterling creditors are required to underwrite the exchange rate of the pound for the benefit of the foreign currency creditors. The just course, as it seems to me, is to value the foreign debt once and for all at an appropriate date, and to keep that rate of conversion throughout the liquidation until all debts have been paid in full.I have quoted at length from authorities on a proposition which is accepted as axiomatic, in order to underline the point that the winding up date is the date of valuation of liabilities. As an account can only be struck in a single currency, it must follow that the scheme of company liquidation requires that a foreign debt shall be converted into sterling (if sterling is the currency of the liquidation) as at the date of liquidation and at no other date. "