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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 >> International Game Technology Plc & Ors, Re [2015] EWHC 717 (Ch) (19 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/717.html Cite as: [2015] BUS LR 844, [2015] Bus LR 844, [2015] 2 BCLC 45, [2015] EWHC 717 (Ch), [2015] WLR(D) 148 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF INTERNATIONAL GAME TECHNOLOGY PLC (Formerly Georgia Worldwide plc) |
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-and- |
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IN THE MATTER OF GTECH S.P.A. |
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-and- |
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IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES (CROSS-BORDER MERGERS) REGULATIONS 2007 |
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Hearing dates: 16th March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Birss:
i) First IGT Plc is to implement the cross-border merger the subject of this application whereupon shareholders in GTECH will exchange on a one for one basis their shares in GTECH for shares in IGT Plc, save to the extent that withdrawal rights have been exercised.
ii) Second, as soon as the respective systems of law and time zones allow, IGT Inc. will merge under the merger provisions of Nevada law with a subsidiary of IGT Plc on terms that IGT Inc. is the surviving company. The former shareholders of IGT Inc. will receive shares in IGT Plc and a cash payment, possibly of the order of $3.19 billion from IGT Plc.
Steps up to today
Conditions in the order
IT IS ORDERED pursuant to Regulation 16 of the Companies (Cross-Border Mergers) Regulations 2007 that the completion of the proposed cross-border merger between the Claimants as set out in Schedule 1 hereto be approved for the purposes of Article 11 of Directive 2005/56/EC on cross-border mergers of limited liability companies
AND IT IS ORDERED that the consequences of the merger will take effect as of 12.01 a.m. on 7 April 2015, subject to satisfaction or waiver by that time and date of all conditions set out in Article VI of the merger agreement dated 15 July 2014 entered into between, among others, the Claimants, as amended on 23 September 2014 (the "Merger Agreement") and subject to the Merger Agreement not having been terminated by GTECH S.p.A. or International Game Technology under the terms of the Merger Agreement. Article VI of the Merger Agreement is set out in Schedule 2 hereto
LIBERTY TO APPLY
Does the court have jurisdiction under Regulation 16 to make an order subject to conditions?
Court approval of cross-border merger
16.—(1) The court may, on the joint application of all the merging companies, make an order approving the completion of the cross-border merger for the purposes of Article 11 of the Directive (scrutiny of completion of merger) if—
(a) the transferee company is a UK company;
(b) an order has been made under regulation 6 (court approval of pre-merger requirements) in relation to each UK merging company;
(c) an order has been made by a competent authority of another EEA State for the purposes of Article 10.2 of the Directive (issue of pre-merger certificate) in relation to each merging company which is an EEA company;
(d) the application is made to the court on a date not more than 6 months after the making of any order referred to in sub-paragraph (b) or (c);
(e) the draft terms of merger approved by every order referred to in sub-paragraphs (b) and (c) are the same; and
(f) where appropriate, any arrangements for employee participation in the transferee company have been determined in accordance with Part 4 of these Regulations (employee participation).
(2) Where the court makes such an order—
(a) it must in the order fix a date on which the consequences of the cross-border merger (see regulation 17) are to have effect; and
(b) that date must be not less than 21 days after the date on which the order is made.
(3) After the consequences of the cross-border merger have taken effect (see regulation 17), an order made under this regulation is conclusive evidence that—
(a) the conditions set out in paragraph (1) have been satisfied; and
(b) the requirements of regulations 7 to 10 and 12 to 15 (pre-merger requirements) have been complied with.
(3) After the consequences of the cross-border merger have taken effect (see regulation 17)—
(a) an order made under this regulation is conclusive evidence that—
(i) the conditions set out in paragraph (1) have been satisfied; and
(ii) the requirements of regulations 7 to 10 and 12 to 15 (pre-merger requirements) have been complied with; and
(b) the cross-border merger may not be declared null and void.
How should the court's jurisdiction under Regulation 16 to make an order subject to conditions be exercised?
"Counsel wholly accepted that the Court will not do anything in vain and that, if a reduction was applied for, approved by the shareholders but on the evidence was not for any discernible purpose at all but simply an act in vacuum, the court might well say that it would not in its discretion sanction it. …..as a matter of discretion: the court will not act in vain; the matter had not been shown to have any real purpose; if it never was more than a hollow act, of no merit or purpose, and should not be troubling the court or wasting everybody's time; and for that reason the court might exercise its discretion against sanctioning the proposed reduction."
"I can see no objection in principle to the Court sanctioning a scheme which is conditional on one or more respects, provided always that the court considers it appropriate to do so in the exercise of its discretion. Examples of the kind of condition which the Court may be willing to sanction, even if they are unsatisfied at the date of the hearing, are outstanding requirements for foreign regulatory approval which there is no reason to suppose will not be granted. Further, the terms of the scheme itself may provide that it will cease to have effect in certain circumstances, for example if the steps contemplated are not taken before a specified long-stop date. By contrast, the court would be most unlikely to sanction a scheme if the outstanding condition was one which in effect conferred on a third party the right to decide whether, or when, the scheme should come into operation, or which enabled the terms of the scheme to be varied in some material respect. The objection then would be that the court was not truly in a position to consider the merits of the scheme, so it could not properly exercise the jurisdiction conferred on it by Parliament to approve the scheme on behalf of all members of the relevant class or classes of shareholders."
The court's discretion in this case
Form of the order
?AND IT IS ORDERED that the consequences of the merger will take effect as of 12.01 a.m. on 7 April 2015, subject to it being agreed by that time and date that all conditions set out in Article VI of the merger agreement dated 15 July 2014 entered into between, among others, the Claimants, as amended on 23 September 2014 (the "Merger Agreement") have been satisfied or waived and subject to the Merger Agreement not having been terminated by GTECH S.p.A. or International Game Technology under the terms of the Merger Agreement. Articles VI and VII of the Merger Agreement are set out in Schedule 2 hereto
Conclusion