BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Videology Ltd, Re Cross-Border Insolvency Regulations 2006 [2018] EWHC 2186 (Ch) (16 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/2186.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2186 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY & COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF VIDEOLOGY LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE CROSS-BORDER INSOLVENCY REGULATIONS 2006
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF VIDEOLOGY LIMITED |
||
- and - |
||
IN THE MATTER OF THE CROSS-BORDER INSOLVENCY REGULATIONS 2006 |
____________________
Hearing dates: 11 May, 7 June and 13 June 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN:
Introduction
Background
The Videology Group
Events Leading to the Chapter 11 Proceedings
i) Secured Liabilitiesa) In July 2017 the companies in the Group had entered into or become parties to three loan and security agreements ("the Finance Agreements") with Fast Pay Partners LLC ("Fast Pay") as agent for various lenders, conveniently referred to as the UK Loan Agreement, the US Loan Agreement and the Receivables Financing Agreement. The UK Loan Agreement and the US Loan Agreement were governed by Californian law; the Receivables Financing Agreement was governed by English law. At the commencement of the Chapter 11 process, about US$11.3 million was outstanding from the Company under the UK Loan Agreement.b) In connection with the Finance Agreements, the Company had also entered into a number of debentures and charges, all of which were subject to English law and some of which included a qualifying floating charge.ii) Unsecured Liabilities At the commencement of the Chapter 11 process, the Company had unsecured (trade) creditors of about US$57.5 million, of which about 90% are overdue. As a result, the Company had been the subject of a number of county court proceedings and threats of insolvency proceedings from various trade creditors in the UK.
iii) Tax The Company had a liability to HMRC of about US$950,000 and penalties (which are disputed) had been levied for late filing of returns.
The Applications for Recognition
i) recognition of the Chapter 11 proceedings in relation to both Inc. and the Company as foreign main proceedings under Article 17 of the Model Law; andii) discretionary relief pursuant to Article 20(6) and/or Article 21(1) of the Model Law, substantially in the form of the administration moratorium under paragraph 43 of Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act.
"97. Where a foreign liquidation is recognised by the English court as a foreign main proceeding under the CBIR, the debtor benefits from an automatic stay in England: see art. 20(1) of Sch. 1. The stay is imposed in the same terms as if the debtor had entered into an analogous insolvency proceeding in England, namely a winding-up under the 1986 Act (the relevant provision under the 1986 Act is s.130(2), which stays all proceedings against the company (unless the court grants leave)). The scope of the stay imposed by art. 20(1) is set out in art 20(2). The automatic stay can be modified under art. 20(6). The automatic stay under art. 20 is primarily designed for foreign liquidations.
98. This is to be contrasted with a foreign restructuring which does not involve liquidation. In such a foreign restructuring (particularly where the debtor continues to trade), the automatic stay is normally replaced with an administration moratorium in the terms of para. 43 of Sch. B1 to the 1986 Act: see Re 19 Entertainment Ltd [2017] BCC 347 at [20]–[22]."
Recognition, COMI and an establishment
The legal framework
"a collective judicial or administrative proceeding in a foreign State, including an interim proceeding, pursuant to a law relating to insolvency in which proceeding the assets and affairs of the debtor are subject to control or supervision by a foreign court, for the purpose of reorganisation or liquidation."
That plainly includes proceedings in the US under Chapter 11.
"(a) as a foreign main proceeding if it is taking place in the State where the debtor has the centre of its main interests; or
(b) as a foreign non-main proceeding if the debtor has an establishment within the meaning of sub-paragraph (e) of article 2 in the foreign State."
"The 'centre of main interests' should correspond to the place where the debtor conducts the administration of his interests on a regular basis and is therefore ascertainable by third parties."
"shall be the place where the debtor conducts the administration of its interests on a regular basis and which is ascertainable by third parties."
"(28) When determining whether the centre of the debtor's main interests is ascertainable by third parties, special consideration should be given to the creditors and to their perception as to where a debtor conducts the administration of its interests. This may require, in the event of a shift of centre of main interests, informing creditors of the new location from which the debtor is carrying out its activities in due course, for example by drawing attention to the change of address in commercial correspondence, or by making the new location public through other appropriate means.
(29) This Regulation should contain a number of safeguards aimed at preventing fraudulent or abusive forum shopping.
(30) Accordingly, the presumptions that the registered office, the principal place of business and the habitual residence are the centre of main interests should be rebuttable, and the relevant court of a Member State should carefully assess whether the centre of the debtor's main interests is genuinely located in that Member State. In the case of a company, it should be possible to rebut this presumption where the company's central administration is located in a Member State other than that of its registered office, and where a comprehensive assessment of all the relevant factors establishes, in a manner that is ascertainable by third parties, that the company's actual centre of management and supervision and of the management of its interests is located in that other Member State…."
"37. In those circumstances, the answer to the fourth question must be that, where a debtor is a subsidiary company whose registered office and that of its parent company are situated in two different Member States, the presumption laid down in the second sentence of Article 3(1) of the Regulation, whereby the centre of main interests of that subsidiary is situated in the Member State where its registered office is situated, can be rebutted only if factors which are both objective and ascertainable by third parties enable it to be established that an actual situation exists which is different from that which locating it at that registered office is deemed to reflect. That could be so in particular in the case of a company not carrying out any business in the territory of the Member State in which its registered office is situated. By contrast, where a company carries on its business in the territory of the Member State where its registered office is situated, the mere fact that its economic choices are or can be controlled by a parent company in another Member State is not enough to rebut the presumption laid down by the Regulation."
"49. … the Court also stated, at paragraph 33 of Eurofood, that the centre of a debtor's main interests must be identified by reference to criteria that are both objective and ascertainable by third parties, in order to ensure legal certainty and foreseeability concerning the determination of the court with jurisdiction to open the main insolvency proceedings. That requirement for objectivity and that possibility of ascertainment by third parties may be considered to be met where the material factors taken into account for the purpose of establishing the place in which the debtor company conducts the administration of its interests on a regular basis have been made public or, at the very least, made sufficiently accessible to enable third parties, that is to say in particular the company's creditors, to be aware of them.
50. It follows that, where the bodies responsible for the management and supervision of a company are in the same place as its registered office and the management decisions of the company are taken, in a manner that is ascertainable by third parties, in that place, the presumption in the second sentence of Article 3(1) of the Regulation that the centre of the company's main interests is located in that place is wholly applicable. In such a case, as the Advocate General observed at point 69 of her Opinion, it is not possible that the centre of the debtor company's main interests is located elsewhere.
51. The presumption in the second sentence of Article 3(1) of the Regulation may be rebutted, however, where, from the viewpoint of third parties, the place in which a company's central administration is located is not the same as that of its registered office. As the Court held at paragraph 34 of Eurofood, the simple presumption laid down by the European Union legislature in favour of the registered office of that company can be rebutted if factors which are both objective and ascertainable by third parties enable it to be established that an actual situation exists which is different from that which locating it at that registered office is deemed to reflect.
52. The factors to be taken into account include, in particular, all the places in which the debtor company pursues economic activities and all those in which it holds assets, in so far as those places are ascertainable by third parties. As the Advocate General observed at point 70 of her Opinion, those factors must be assessed in a comprehensive manner, account being taken of the individual circumstances of each particular case.
53. In that context, the location, in a Member State other than that in which the registered office is situated, of immovable property owned by the debtor company, in respect of which the company has concluded lease agreements, and the existence in that Member State of a contract concluded with a financial institution - circumstances referred to by the referring court - may be regarded as objective factors and, in the light of the fact that they are likely to be matters in the public domain, as factors that are ascertainable by third parties. The fact nevertheless remains that the presence of company assets and the existence of contracts for the financial exploitation of those assets in a Member State other than that in which the registered office is situated cannot be regarded as sufficient factors to rebut the presumption laid down by the European Union legislature unless a comprehensive assessment of all the relevant factors makes it possible to establish, in a manner that is ascertainable by third parties, that the company's actual centre of management and supervision and of the management of its interests is located in that other Member State."
"The concept of "centre of main interests" must be interpreted as the place where the debtor conducts the administration of his interests on a regular basis and is therefore ascertainable by third parties.
The rationale of this rule is not difficult to explain. Insolvency is a foreseeable risk. It is therefore important that international jurisdiction (which, as we will see, entails the application of the insolvency laws of that Contracting State) be based on a place known to the debtor's potential creditors. This enables the legal risks which would have to be assumed in the case of insolvency to be calculated…"
"118. Although that definition makes no reference to the elements which constitute 'administration', important in the present case where control of policy has been argued to constitute 'administration', it has been suggested that the choice of 'centre of main interests' as the principal connecting factor determining the Member State with jurisdiction over an insolvent company is intended to provide a test in which the attributes of transparency and objective ascertainability are dominant. [Virgós-Schmit report, paragraph 75]. Those concepts seem to me to be wholly appropriate elements for determining jurisdiction in the context of insolvency, where it is clearly essential that potential creditors should be able to ascertain in advance the legal system which would resolve any insolvency affecting their interests. It is particularly important, it seems to me, in cross-border debt transactions (such as those involved in the main proceedings) that the relevant jurisdiction for determining the rights and remedies of creditors is clear to investors at the time they make their investment."
"…. That objectivity and that possibility of ascertainment by third parties are necessary in order to ensure legal certainty and foreseeability concerning the determination of the court with jurisdiction to open main insolvency proceedings. That legal certainty and that foreseeability are all the more important in that, in accordance with Article 4(1) of the Regulation, determination of the court with jurisdiction entails determination of the law which is to apply."
The relevant factors
"Ultimately, however, it is the 'company's actual centre of management and supervision' which is the critical criterion."
"8.103 The ECJ in Eurofood emphasized that in the case of groups of companies it is necessary to examine the location of each company's COMI individually and that there can be no automatic assumption that the location of a subsidiary's COMI will be the same as that of its parent. Nevertheless, it may well be the case that this inquiry leads to the conclusion that the location of each company's COMI is in fact in the same place, by virtue of the head office functions test in Interedil. In many corporate structures, the head office functions for the entire group, consisting of the parent company and its subsidiaries, may be carried out from a single group head office. Applying Interedil, the COMI of each of the group companies may well be located at that head office…"
The Company's dealings with customers and trade creditors
The Company's senior management
"The Company's strategic direction and leadership is almost all located in the United States and third parties are well aware of this. The Company's management team, which executes the board's directions and plans formulated and created in the United States is also based in the United States."
"Pursuant to your request [Group M/Spot X] can confirm that it is aware that Videology UK's board of directors and senior management team are based in the United States. As such, [Group M/Spot X]'s business interactions with Videology UK's senior management, particularly with regard to high-level contractual issues and disputes, have routinely occurred in the United States."
"The Oath Creditors are informed that the director and senior management team (collectively "Videology Senior Management") of Videology (including without limitation Videology Ltd) are based in the United States. Further, even though some day-to-day, in-market issues with Videology Ltd have involved its office in the UK, the Oath Creditors have conducted business with Videology Senior Management in the United States with respect to significant contractual matters."
That letter does not suggest that the Oath Creditors draw any clear distinction between the management of the Company and that of Inc. or the other Group companies, and at most it suggests that the creditors believe that a particular category of high-level matters concerning the Company are dealt with by the senior management of "Videology" in the US.
Corporate branding and intellectual property
The arrangements and dealings with finance creditors
"9.1.28 Centre of Main Interests For the purposes of the Council of the European Union Regulation No. 1346/2000 on Insolvency Proceedings ("the Regulation") Videology UK's centre of main interest (as that term is used in Article 3(1) of the Regulation) is situated in England and it has no "establishment" (as that term is used in Article 2(h) of the Regulation) in any other jurisdiction."
"I now understand that these clauses were 'boilerplate' representations which I did not give any particular thought to at the time. I believe that they were given in order to provide certainty as to applicable law and jurisdiction of any insolvency proceedings. I do not believe that any COMI analysis was conducted at the time."
The restructuring discussions and sales process
Conclusion on COMI
Recognition as a foreign non-main proceeding
"Place of operations means a place from which economic activities are exercised on the market (i.e. externally), whether the said activities are commercial, industrial or professional.
The emphasis on an economic activity having to be carried out using human resources shows the need for a minimum level of organization. A purely occasional place of operations cannot be classified as an 'establishment'. A certain stability is required. The negative formula ('non-transitory') aims to avoid minimum time requirements. The decisive factor is how the activity appears externally, and not the intention of the debtor."
"The definition in article 2(h) must be read as a whole, not broken down into discrete elements, for each element colours the others. The relevant activities must be (i) "economic", (ii) "non-transitory", (iii) carried on from a "place of operations", and (iv) using the debtor's assets and human agents. This suggests that what is envisaged is a fixed place of business. The requirement that the activities should be carried on with the debtor's assets and human agents suggests a business activity consisting in dealings with third parties, and not pure acts of internal administration. As the Virgós-Schmit report suggests, the activities must be "exercised on the market (i.e. externally)". I am inclined to think that the same point was being made by the Court of Justice when it observed in the Interedil case [2012] Bus LR 1582, para 49, that the activities must be "sufficiently accessible to enable third parties, that is to say in particular the company's creditors, to be aware of them". I do not think that this can sensibly be read as requiring that the debtor should simply be locatable or identifiable by a brass plate on a door. It refers to the character of the economic activities. They must be activities which by their nature involve business dealings with third parties."
The grant of discretionary relief
"1. Upon recognition of a foreign proceeding, whether main or non-main, where necessary to protect the assets of the debtor or the interests of the creditors, the court may, at the request of the foreign representative, grant any appropriate relief, including -
(a) staying the commencement or continuation of individual actions or individual proceedings concerning the debtor's assets, rights, obligations or liabilities, to the extent they have not been stayed under paragraph 1(a) of article 20;
(b) staying execution against the debtor's assets to the extent it has not been stayed under paragraph 1(b) of article 20;
….
(e) entrusting the administration or realisation of all or part of the debtor's assets located in Great Britain to the foreign representative or another person designated by the court;
(f) extending relief granted under paragraph 1 of article 19 [interim relief], and
(g) granting any additional relief that may be available to a British insolvency officeholder under the law of Great Britain, including any relief provided under paragraph 43 of Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986."
"2. Upon recognition of a foreign proceeding, whether main or non-main, the court may, at the request of the foreign representative, entrust the distribution of all or part of the debtor's assets located in Great Britain to the foreign representative or another person designated by the court, provided that the court is satisfied that the interests of creditors in Great Britain are adequately protected."
"After the closing on the sale, it is expected that the net proceeds will be placed in an account pending further order of the [US] Court and distribution under the terms of a Chapter 11 plan. [The DIP Lender], as secured creditor, will be paid in full, along with administrative expenses and other priority claims ahead of unsecured creditors. Once the funds available to unsecured creditors are identified, the next step in a typical case, and the one expected here, would be for the creditors' committee and debtors to negotiate the terms of a Chapter 11 plan. That plan must account separately for the unsecured creditors of each entity, including [the Company] and the parties will attempt to agree on a proper allocation between US and UK creditors for purposes of distribution. Absent such agreement, the US Court would be asked to make a specific ruling that the allocation proposed under a Chapter 11 plan is fair, and as part of that ruling, the court would have to consider the interests of US and UK creditors alike….
The debtors intend to provide in any Chapter 11 plan for the payment of the general unsecured creditors of [the Company] based on the net proceeds of sale attributable to [the Company's] assets, with the payment of general unsecured creditors of the US debtors to be based on the net proceeds of sale attributable to the assets of the US debtors. The determination of such allocation should not be controversial … because the stalking horse purchase price is broken up into two cash components (the business assets in the US and accounts receivable base located in the UK)…. If it turns out that the allocation negotiation is controversial, however, the US court would be asked to rule whether the proposed allocation is fair to creditors, including [the Company's] creditors."
"3. The court may, at the request of the foreign representative or a person affected by relief granted under article 19 or 21, or of its own motion, modify or terminate such relief."
"3. In granting relief under this article to a representative of a foreign non-main proceeding, the court must be satisfied that the relief relates to assets that, under the law of Great Britain, should be administered in the foreign non-main proceeding or concerns information required in that proceeding."
"193. One salient factor to be taken into account in tailoring the relief is whether it is for a foreign main or non-main proceeding. The interests and the authority of a representative of a foreign non-main proceeding are typically narrower than the interests and the authority of a representative of a foreign main proceeding, who normally seeks to gain control over all assets of the insolvent debtor. [Article 21(3)] reflects that idea by providing (a) that relief granted to a foreign non-main proceeding should be limited to assets that are to be administered in that non-main proceeding, and (b) that, if the foreign representative seeks information concerning the debtor's assets or affairs, the relief must concern information required in that non-main proceeding. The objective is to advise the court that relief in favour of a foreign non-main proceeding should not give unnecessarily broad powers to the foreign representative and that such relief should not interfere with the administration of another insolvency proceeding, in particular the main proceeding.
194. The proviso "under the law of [Great Britain]" reflects the principle underlying the Model law that recognition of a foreign proceeding does not mean extending the effects of the foreign proceeding as they may be prescribed by the law of the foreign State. Instead, recognition of a foreign proceeding entails attaching to the foreign proceedings consequences envisaged by the law of the enacting State."
Conclusion