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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 >> Euro Accessories Ltd, Re [2021] EWHC 47 (Ch) (13 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/47.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 47 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST
IN THE MATTER OF EURO ACCESSORIES LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006
Bridge Street Manchester |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-Chancellor of the County Palatine of Lancaster
____________________
AIDAN MONAGHAN |
Petitioner |
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- and – |
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GERARD GILSENAN EURO ACCESSORIES LIMITED |
Respondents |
____________________
Neil Berragan (instructed by Slater Heelis) for the First Respondent
The Company was not represented
Hearing date: 20 October 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN :
Introduction
Background
"6A The B Shareholder may at anytime be required to transfer all their shares ("Sale Shares") to the A Shareholders ("Sale Option").
6A 1 The A Shareholder may only have the right to acquire the Sale Shares by giving written notice to the B Shareholder ("Option Notice") at any time before the transfer of the Sale Shares to the A Shareholder. The Option Notice shall specify
(a) that the B Shareholder is required to transfer all his Shares pursuant to this Article 6A,
(b) the consideration payable for the Sale Shares which shall be for fair value, and
(c) the proposed date of transfer ("Transfer Date") which shall be such date as the A Shareholder may specify.
6A 2 On the Transfer Date the B Shareholder shall deliver a stock transfer form for the Sale Shares, together with the relevant Share Certificates (or a suitable indemnity for any lost Share Certificates) to the A Shareholder against payment of the amounts that are due for the Sale Shares pursuant to Article 6A 1(b).
6A 3 If any B Shareholder does not on the Transfer Date execute the stock transfer form in respect of the Sale Shares held by it, the defaulting B Shareholder shall be deemed to have irrevocably appointed any Director to be his agent and attorney to execute all necessary transfer(s) on his behalf, against receipt by the Company (on trust for such B Shareholder) of the consideration payable for the Sale Shares, to deliver such transfer(s) to the A Shareholder (or as they may direct) as the holder thereof. After the A Shareholder (or its nominee) has been registered as the holder, the validity of such proceedings shall not be questioned by any such person. Failure to produce a share certificate shall not impede the registration of the Sale Shares under this Article."
The Petition
"30. The amendments to the Articles gave [Mr. Gilsenan] the right to require [Mr. Monaghan] (by notice) to transfer all his shares to [Mr. Gilsenan] for "fair value" on a "transfer date" to be specified in the notice and which appointed [Mr. Gilsenan] as director to be [Mr. Monaghan]'s agent and attorney to execute all necessary transfers on his behalf.
31. The resolution was duly passed and on 26 April 2016 [Mr. Gilsenan] gave notice to [Mr. Monaghan] requiring him to transfer all his shares to [Mr. Gilsenan] on 4 May 2016 ("the transfer date") for £175,000 expressed to be the fair value on the transfer date.
32. [Mr. Gilsenan] as director executed the transfer form on 30 August 2016 and thereby enforced the transfer of [Mr. Monaghan]'s shareholding in the Company to himself.
33. [Mr. Monaghan] contends that the expropriation of his shares was at less than fair value such that the affairs of the Company have been conducted in a manner which is unfairly prejudicial to his interests.
34. For the avoidance of doubt, [Mr. Monaghan] does not challenge the right of the majority to approve the special resolution requiring him to transfer his shares for their fair value at the transfer date and the relief claimed is limited to the fair value of his shares at the transfer date."
"Alternatively and insofar as "fair value" in this context is to be interpreted as connoting the application of any discount for a minority holding -
(3) It is (without more) unfair that [Mr. Monaghan] as an unwilling seller should be bought out on a fictional basis applicable to a free election to sell his shares in accordance with the Articles.
(4) It is also (without more) unfair that the majority [Mr. Gilsenan] which has expropriated [Mr. Monaghan's] shares … should immediately secure a windfall or reward in the form of the pro rata value of the shares at a discounted price.
(5) Accordingly and insofar as "fair value" in this context is to be interpreted as connoting the application of a discount for a minority holding, the amendments to the Articles and the expropriation of [Mr. Monaghan's] shares is (without more) unfairly prejudicial to his interests."
"39. …. [Mr. Monaghan]'s entitlement to be paid "fair value" for his shares only arose following the alteration of the Articles, and the service of a Transfer Notice. He was not entitled to any payment prior to 4 May 2016, the transfer date. It is admitted that offers were made voluntarily to purchase his shares, but they were refused by [Mr. Monaghan].
40. …. The Company was never a quasi-partnership. There was no relevant relationship of trust and confidence. [Mr. Monaghan] only became a shareholder on 22 February 2008, and he resigned from the Company in January 2010, terminating all relations with it, and subsequently competing against it. There were no relevant agreements or understandings which were capable of imposing any equitable constraints upon the legal rights of the respective parties.
41. In those circumstances, it is admitted and averred that [Mr. Monaghan] is entitled to be paid the "fair value" of his shareholding as at the transfer date of 4 May 2016 pursuant to the Articles. The only determination required from the Court (in the absence of agreement) is to establish the "fair value" in accordance with the Articles."
"3.1 The court will be asked to determine the meaning of "fair value" in the Articles (as amended by the Special Resolution passed by the majority). For the avoidance of doubt, [Mr. Monaghan]'s primary contention is that the context requires an interpretation of "fair value" as meaning a value representing an equivalent proportion of the total shareholding.
3.2 That being [Mr. Monaghan]'s primary contention, [Mr. Monaghan] has elected not to join issue with the right of the majority to expropriate his shares.
3.3 lf the meaning of "fair value" is determined against [Mr. Monaghan], the court will be asked to determine whether the expropriation of the Petitioner's shares at a value which does not represent an equivalent proportion of the total shareholding is (without more) conduct unfairly prejudicial to his interests as a member.
3.4 Further or alternatively, and if the meaning of "fair value" is determined against [Mr. Monaghan], the court will be asked to determine whether the expropriation of [Mr. Monaghan]'s shares at a value which does not represent an equivalent proportion of the total shareholding is conduct unfairly prejudicial to his interests as a member. That is, upon the grounds of his constructive exclusion from an association which was based on mutual trust and confidence."
The rival arguments
"the estimated price for the transfer of an asset or liability between identified knowledgeable and willing parties that reflects the respective interests of those parties"
(the "2013 IVS Definition")
The Law
"19. … The articles are a statutory contract between the members, and between each member and the company. They must therefore be construed in accordance with the ordinary principles that apply to the interpretation of any written contract. Those principles have been discussed and refined in many cases at the highest level, to which it is unnecessary to make detailed reference.
20. Like the judge, I find it helpful to refer to the approach endorsed by Lord Neuberger PSC in Arnold v Britton [2015] AC 1619 at [15] (omitting citations):
"When interpreting a written contract, the court is concerned to identify the intention of the parties by reference to "what a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would have been available to the parties would have understood them to be using the language in the contract to mean", … And it does so by focusing on the meaning of the relevant words … in their documentary, factual and commercial context. That meaning has to be assessed in the light of (i) the natural and ordinary meaning of the clause, (ii) any other relevant provision of [the contract], (iii) the overall purpose of the clause and the [contract], (iv) the facts and circumstances known or assumed by the parties at the time that the document was executed, and (v) commercial common sense, but (vi) disregarding subjective evidence of any party's intentions.""
"Because the articles are required to be registered, addressed to anyone who wishes to inspect them, the admissible background for the purposes of construction must be limited to what any reader would reasonably be supposed to know. It cannot include extrinsic facts which were known only to some of the people involved in the formation of the company."
"The implication as to the composition of the board is not based upon extrinsic evidence of which only a limited number of people would have known but upon the scheme of the articles themselves and, to a very limited extent, such background as was apparent from the memorandum of association and everyone in Belize would have known, namely that telecommunications had been a state monopoly and that the company was part of a scheme of privatisation."
Analysis
Admissible background
The wording of Article 6A
"the consideration payable for the Sale Shares which shall be for fair value."
"In the opinion of the Board, it is a general principle of share valuation that (unless there is some indication to the contrary) the court should value the actual shareholding which the shareholder has to sell and not some hypothetical share. This is because in a merger, the offeror does not acquire control from any individual minority shareholder. Accordingly, in the absence of some indication to the contrary, or special circumstances, the minority shareholder's shares should be valued as a minority shareholding and not on a pro rata basis."
"Shareholders are not, in the eye of the law, part owners of the undertaking. The undertaking is something different from the totality of the share-holdings. The claimants recognized this difficulty, and in this court their main argument was, we think, addressed to an alternative statement of their case, that is, that the value of their shares must be calculated on the basis of an apportionment of the value of the totality of the shares in one hand, so as to comprehend the value of the complete control thereby conferred…."
Prima facie, as it seems to us, and apart from any special words in the regulation, each shareholder is entitled to get, and to get only, the value of what he possesses; for that is all that he has to sell or transfer…. The claim of each [claimant] is to have added to the value appropriate to his individual parcel of shares, if being sold separately, a rateable proportion of the added or " control " value belonging to the totality of the shares—an item of value which he, as an individual, does not in fact possess … The difference represents his share of the extra value which a purchaser, it is said, is prepared to give if he can get hold of all the shares. We can ourselves see no reason in principle why the first claimant should receive more than the value of what he has. We observe that, if some third shareholder in fact held a controlling interest in the company's capital, the effect of the claimants' contention would appear to be to appropriate to their own holdings some part of the "control " value which the third shareholder might well allege was an item of value belonging to him. In any case the argument would, as it seems to us, involve necessarily the view that the claimants would be entitled, on the construction of the regulation, to be paid for something more than, and added to, the particular item of property which immediately before the appropriate date they in fact severally enjoyed."
"[Short] is relevant even though it stems from very different legislation because it establishes a general principle. That general principle is that where it is necessary to determine the amount that should be paid when a shareholding is compulsorily acquired pursuant to some statutory provision, the shareholder is only entitled to be paid for the share with which he is parting, namely a minority shareholding, and not for a proportionate part of the controlling stake which the acquirer thereby builds up, still less a pro rata part of the value of the company's net assets or business undertaking."
Mr. Monaghan's primary argument
Mr. Monaghan's alternative argument
"the estimated price for the transfer of an asset or liability between identified knowledgeable and willing parties that reflects the respective interests of those parties"
"… the estimated amount for which an asset or liability should exchange on the valuation date between a willing buyer and a willing seller in an arm's length transaction, after proper marketing and where the parties had each acted knowledgeably, prudently and without compulsion."
"Fair value requires the assessment of the price that is fair between two identified parties taking into account the respective advantages or disadvantages that each will gain from the transaction. It is commonly applied in judicial contexts. In contrast, market value requires any advantages that would not be available to market participants generally to be disregarded.
Fair value is a broader concept than market value. Although in many cases the price that is fair between two parties will equate to that obtainable in the market, there will be cases where the assessment of fair value will involve taking into account matters that have to be disregarded in the assessment of market value, such as any element of special value arising because of the combination of the interests."
"to avoid confusion between IFRS 13 and other definitions of "fair value" currently used in the market place."
The "just and equitable" argument
Conclusion