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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 >> Steinhoff International Holdings N.V., Re [2021] EWHC 184 (Ch) (05 February 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/184.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 184 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST
Fetter Lane London EC 4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF STEINHOFF INTERNATIONAL HOLDINGS N.V. AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006 |
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Tom Smith QC and Henry Phillips (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP) for Conservatorium Holdings LLC
Hearing dates: 26 27 January 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Adam Johnson:
Introduction
Background
a) An agreement to amend the SEAG CPU ("the SEAG CPU Amendment Agreement"), and
b) An agreement to amend the SEAG Intercreditor Agreement (the "SEAG ICA Amendment Agreement").
Conservatorium
The Steinhoff Global Settlement
"(1) [The Steinhoff NV Security] is to comprise, with effect from the Settlement Effective Date, first ranking security granted by the Company over (i) its shares in SIHL, which is a holding company of the South African sub-group and (ii) any loan payable by SIHL to the Company and outstanding immediately following the Settlement Effective Date.
(2) [The Steinhoff NV Security] will rank and secure the Company's obligations under the contingent payment undertakings executed by the Company (including the SEAG CPU) and the Company's obligations in respect of intragroup indebtedness pari passu and without any preference between them.
(3) The security will be vested in a security agent on behalf of the secured creditors."
" what the Steinhoff Parties propose to do is to implement any Global Settlement in the interests of all stakeholders, reserving from any associated distributions amounts in respect of claims the ownership of which is in dispute."
"Insofar as ownership disputes continue to exist in relation to these claims in the meantime, this will mean that distributions in respect of these claims (c.f. voting on the compromise or plan itself) will be delayed pending the determination of those disputes."
"Steinhoff plainly cannot make payment to a party in respect of an alleged claim, in circumstances where there remains live litigation as to whether or not that party is the owner of the claim."
"SIHPL will consider paying any compensation attributable to a claim in which the ownership is disputed into escrow ".
" SIHPL will pay to the Titan entities the respective settlement amounts notwithstanding any continuing ownership dispute."
"Notwithstanding and as a courtesy, Steinhoff is afforded until the 30th November 2020 (on condition of payment of an additional Euro 20m) to effect binding written settlements which will allow a global Steinhoff settlement to be implemented and these settlements must specifically include all matters involving Conservatorium, Thibault, Titan and Upington and the Wiese family and entities and will compel payment to my clients (whether in a s. 155 or otherwise) free of contesting, withholding and/or deduction. Failing same, my clients will not pursue the current proposal and will insist on their pro rata share in respect of all claims (it being accepted that SIHPL and NV will end up in liquidation, having to pay a pro rata distribution to concurrent creditors)."
Scheme Meetings
The Application for Sanction & the Objection
"(1) If a majority in number representing 75% in value of the creditors or class of creditors or members or class of members ( ) present and voting either in person or by proxy at the meeting summoned under section 896, agree a compromise or arrangement, the court may, on an application under this section, sanction the compromise or arrangement.
(2) An application under this section may be made by - (a) the company
(3) A compromise or arrangement sanctioned by the court is binding on (a) all creditors or the class of creditors or on the members or a class of members..., and (b) the company."
"The classic formulation of the principles which guide the court in considering whether to sanction a scheme was set out by Plowman J in Re National Bank Ltd [1966] 1 All ER 1006 at 1012, [1966] 1 WLR 819 at 829 by reference to a passage in Buckley on the Companies Acts (13th edn, 1957) p 409, which has been approved and applied by the courts on many subsequent occasions:
'In exercising its power of sanction the court will see, first, that the provisions of the statute have been complied with; secondly, that the class was fairly represented by those who attended the meeting and that the statutory majority are acting bona fide and are not coercing the minority in order to promote interests adverse to those of the class whom they purport to represent; and thirdly, that the arrangement is such as an intelligent and honest man, a member of the class concerned and acting in respect of his interest, might reasonably approve.
The court does not sit merely to see that the majority are acting bona fide and thereupon to register the decision of the meeting; but at the same time the court will be slow to differ from the meeting, unless either the class has not been properly consulted, or the meeting has not considered the matter with a view to the interests of the class which it is empowered to bind, or some blot is found in the scheme.'
This formulation in particular recognises and balances two important factors. First, in deciding to sanction a scheme under s 425, which has the effect of binding members or creditors who have voted against the scheme or abstained as well as those who voted in its favour, the court must be satisfied that it is a fair scheme. It must be a scheme that 'an intelligent and honest man, a member of the class concerned and acting in respect of his interest, might reasonably approve'. That test also makes clear that the scheme proposed need not be the only fair scheme or even, in the court's view, the best scheme. Necessarily there may be reasonable differences of view on these issues.
The second factor recognised by the above-cited passage is that in commercial matters members or creditors are much better judges of their own interests than the courts. Subject to the qualifications set out in the second paragraph, the court 'will be slow to differ from the meeting'."
Discussion and Conclusions
Statutory Requirements and Other Matters
Factors in Play
The Scheme and the Steinhoff Group Settlement
"The Scheme is a vital 'stepping-stone' for the Scheme Company in its efforts to implement the Steinhoff Group Settlement. This is because the Scheme Company requires the consent of its financial creditors to proceed with such efforts. In other words, it is a key gating item, without the achievement of which there is no prospect of implementing the Steinhoff Group Settlement."
"The Scheme Company believes that these factors will in combination operate to the benefit of the Scheme Creditors relative to a situation in which the Steinhoff Group Settlement fails. Specifically, the Scheme Company believes that a successfully completed settlement will bring substantial finality to the significant contingent litigation liabilities and related uncertainty to which the Group is currently subject and will remove the overhang of the legacy events from the Group and its underlying businesses for the benefit of the continuing creditors of the Scheme Company, including the Scheme Creditors."
The Scheme a Stepping Stone only
"The question has arisen in the context of whether the court should grant sanction where the scheme is a part of an overall restructuring which involves a CVA where the CVA is under challenge. The point was before Zacaroli J in Re New Look Financing plc, [2020] EWHC 2793 (Ch) and before me in Re PizzaExpress Financing 2 plc [2020] EWHC 2873 (Ch), both sanction hearings. Zacaroli J and I shared the view that the desirable position was to put the pieces of the jigsaw on the table and then to see whether in the events it was possible to slot them together. The test to apply is to assess whether acceptance of the CVA in that case or acceptance of the group settlement agreement in this case is a fanciful prospect. At this stage it is certainly not fanciful, and uncertainty is not an obstruction in the way of convening meetings."
Further proceedings
"(i) in the context of any of the implementation processes chosen by Steinhoff in the Netherlands (the "Dutch Implementation Process"), I understand that:
(a) as a non-acknowledged creditor whose alleged rights will be directly impacted by the Dutch Implementation Process, Conservatorium will be entitled to be heard by the Dutch court prior to any decision to confirm the Steinhoff Group Settlement;
(b) in particular, in either a Suspension of Payments Procedure or a WHOA procedure Conservatorium will be entitled (as of right) to be heard by the court (as to any issue going to voting entitlements) ahead of any confirmation hearings;
(c) Conservatorium will also be entitled (as of right) to be heard by the court at the confirmation hearing and would be allowed to rase any grounds it wishes with a view to persuading the court not to confirm the plan, unless implementation occurs by way of WHOA proceedings and it has by that stage been determined by the Dutch court that Conservatorium is not entitled to vote on the WHOA Composition Plan
(ii) in the context of the Section 155 process in South Africa, I understand that:
(a) as a creditor whose alleged rights will be directly impacted by the proposal, Conservatorium will be entitled to be heard by the South African court prior to any decision to sanction the proposal;
(b) Conservatorium may seek to persuade the court that Steinhoff should not be permitted to implement the Steinhoff Group Settlement, on the basis that it is inconsistent with Conservatorium's (alleged) rights or otherwise unfair ".
Uncertainty as to Ownership of the Thibault Claim
No Determination of the Ownership Question
The Second Term Sheet
"As I explained at paragraph 128 of my First Witness Statement, having initially proposed that the proceeds of the Thibault Claim be paid into escrow, it became clear to Steinhoff that the Steinhoff Group Settlement would not stand a realistic prospect of success if it were proposed on that basis. Important considerations in this respect are that:
i) the Thibault Claim is by far the largest claim in the SIHPL estate, comprising approximately 87% by value of the 'Contractual Claims' asserted against SIHPL (which comprise a separate class for the purposes of the proposed Section 155 compromise);
ii) there is no basis therefore on which SIHPL's proposed Section 155 compromise, and therefore the Steinhoff Group Settlement as a whole, can succeed without voting support in respect of the Thibault Claim;
iii) as Steinhoff has indicated to Conservatorium several times in correspondence (including by means of Linklaters letter dated 8 June 2020 [ ]) , although it will ultimately be a matter for the chairperson of the relevant Section 155 meeting, Steinhoff's clear view, for all of the reasons set out above and in correspondence, is that a properly advised chairperson would admit Thibault rather than Conservatorium to vote in respect of the Thibault Claim;
(iv) for reasons explained below, Steinhoff (as well as other key creditors of the Scheme Company and SIHPL) have very material doubts as to whether Thibault would vote in favour of a Section 155 compromise that did not provide for the proceeds of the Thibault Claim to be paid to it or its nominee; and
v) if Thibault did not vote in favour, SIHPL's proposed Section 155 compromise, and therefore the Steinhoff Group Settlement as a whole, would fail to the detriment of the Scheme Company, SIHPL and their respective creditors and contingent creditors (including the Scheme Creditors and Conservatorium)."
"It is important to make clear that Steinhoff's reformulation of the proposal in this respect is wholly consistent with its understanding of the legal position. Having carefully considered the evidence put forward to date by each of the relevant parties, Steinhoff's assessment of the matter is that there is no credible basis for Conservatorium's contention that the Thibault Claim transferred to Upington pursuant to the Exchange Agreement and that Upington never otherwise became entitled to assert it or any equivalent claim. Steinhoff takes that view, among other things, on the basis of: (i) a plain reading of the Exchange Agreement, which contains no express language purporting to transfer claims in the nature of the Thibault Claim; and (ii) the absence of any evidence to suggest that the Exchange Agreement should for these purposes be read otherwise than in accordance with its plain language."
Conclusions
Standing
"There is nothing in s.425(2) which indicates that the power of the court is to be fettered as to whom it can hear and what it must take into account. Given that the circumstances in which a company and its members may wish to come up with a scheme are multifarious, it seems to me scarcely surprising that the legislature did not consider it appropriate to lay down any limitations as to the procedure which the court should adopt or the factors it should take into account, when considering whether to sanction a scheme"
"To my mind the fact that the objectors object to a consequence of the scheme does not prevent them from being heard and does not, at any rate without more, prevent them from having their interests taken into account. First, it appears to me that in light of the way in which s.425(2) is framed, and indeed as discussed in the passage which I have cited from Buckley, there is no reason why the court should be required take such a blinkered, narrow and uncommercial approach as to ignore the fact that the scheme which is sought to be sanctioned is the first and necessary stage of a larger process
However, if it is permissible in an appropriate case to take into account third party concerns when considering whether to sanction a scheme, it seems to me unduly artificial if one can take them into account if they are affected by the scheme itself but not if they are affected by a subsequent step which is clearly dependent on, and consequent on, the sanctioning and implementation of, the scheme.
when a court is asked to sanction the scheme, it is right, as in this case, for the court to be told, and to take into account, the whole context of the scheme including the process of which the scheme forms part. That must be right: the court can scarcely be expected to sanction the scheme unless it appreciates its full commercial and factual context. If that is correct then it seems to me to follow that one can take into account subsequent steps also for the purpose of considering third party objections. Accordingly, it does appear to me that, as a matter of principle, the court can take into account the concerns of the objectors even though they are not the company, or members of the company, and one can take them into account even though their concerns arise not from the scheme itself but from a step which will inevitably follow if and when the scheme is implemented."
"The English Courts remain bound by statute to give their own consideration to the fairness of the CVAs or schemes of arrangement, and notwithstanding the strong cross-border element and the desirability of concerted action, have no right or power to cede or qualify that jurisdiction"
Fairness/Blot in the Scheme
Overall Conclusion