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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 >> Bulb Energy Ltd, Re [2023] EWHC 1647 (Ch) (09 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/1647.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1647 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF: BULB ENERGY LIMITED (IN ENERGY SUPPLY COMPANY ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF: THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
AND IN THE MATTER OF: THE ENERGY ACT 2011
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF: BULB ENERGY LIMITED | ||
(IN ENERGY SUPPLY COMPANY ADMINISTRATION) |
____________________
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MICHAEL GREEN:
1) The Remuneration Application the administrators seek the approval of the court to their remuneration for the 9-month period from their appointment on 24 November 2021 to 2 September 2022 in the sum of £24,969,221 plus VAT.
2) The Pre-Appointment Costs Application the administrators seek the approval of the court for certain pre-appointment costs in the sum of £3,181,920.67 plus VAT.
These are very substantial amounts.
1) The funding agreement is repayable as an expense of the administration in priority to other creditor claims;
2) In the light of the significant sums already drawn under the funding agreement it is unlikely that the Company would be able to repay the funding agreement in full, irrespective of the amount of the remuneration and pre-appointment costs;
3) On that basis, the amount of the approved remuneration and costs therefore directly affects the amount of the recoveries that BEIS will receive from the Company. It does not affect the amount that other creditors will receive because they are already out of the money, as it is said;
4) While the Secretary of State has a power to modify the conditions of energy supply licences in order to seek to mutualise any shortfall in recoveries under the funding agreement among other licence holders under s.168 to 169 of the Energy Act 2004, whether or not that power is exercised and on what terms is ultimately a matter for the Secretary of State to determine in accordance with his public law duties. The immediate paying party remains BEIS and BEIS is logically economically motivated to minimise the amount of the remuneration and pre-appointment costs so as to maximise its recoveries from the Company.
1) act as an independent assessor and prepare a report containing his independent opinion as to whether the remuneration and pre-appointment costs were fair, reasonable and commensurate with the work properly undertaken by the Energy Administrators;
2) base the report on his professional judgment and experience of comparable matters, having regard to the objective of the ESC administration, the factors set out in r.76(5) of the Energy Supply Company Administration Rules, the principles set out in para.21.2 of the Practice Direction: Insolvency Proceedings and the information and evidence provided by the administrators in support of the applications;
3) consider if any part of the relevant remuneration was unfair, unreasonable or not commensurate with the nature and extent of the work undertaken and whether there were any factors weighing against its approval;
4) have regard to a number of specific factors, including:
a) the type of work undertaken;
b) the efficiency with which it was undertaken;
c) the appropriateness of the deployment of resources as between the Company, the administrators' team and their MNA advisors;
d) the appropriateness of allocation of task by reference to seniority;
e) the appropriateness of the discounted hourly rates; and
f) the level of pre-administration costs incurred by the administrators before their appointment in respect of the legal fees of solicitors and counsel.
Mr Downs circulated the report containing his findings on 22 May 2023. His overall professional view was that:
"The remuneration request made is fair, reasonable and commensurate with the nature and extent of the work properly undertaken by the officeholders."
"(1) The objective of an energy supply company administration is to secure
(a) that energy supplies are continued at the lowest cost which it is reasonably practicable to incur; and
(b) that it becomes unnecessary, by one or both of the following means, for the ESC administration order to remain in force for that purpose."
1) "The Energy Administrator is entitled to receive remuneration for the Energy Administrator's services;
2) the remuneration shall be fixed by reference to the time properly given by the Energy Administrator and the Energy Administrator's staff in attending to matters arising in the energy supply company administration;
3) the remuneration of the Energy Administrator shall be fixed by the court and the Energy Administrator must make an application to the court accordingly."
Accordingly, the administrators are entitled to receive remuneration and, as Mr Fisher said in his skeleton argument, that is an important starting point.
a) the complexity or otherwise of the case;
b) the respects in which in connection with the energy supply company's affairs there falls on the Energy Administrator any responsibility of an exceptional kind or degree;
c) the effectiveness with which the Energy Administrator appears to be carrying out or to have carried out the Energy Administrator's duties, as such; and
d) the value and nature of the property with which the Energy Administrator has to deal.
As Mr Fisher submitted, these factors inform the court's assessment of whether the time spent by the administrators has been properly given to the matters arising in the ESC administration. They provide a yardstick against which the court can assess whether and to what extent the time spent by Energy Administrators has been proportionate to the requirements of the particular ESC administration. The requirements of r.76(5) were reflected in the terms of reference for Mr Downs' appointment.
a) fees charged and
b) expenses incurred by the administrator or another person qualified to act as an insolvency practitioner before the energy supply company entered energy supply company administration but with a view to its doing so.
Rule 20(2)(k) requires the administrators' proposals to contain a statement of any pre-energy supply company administration costs charged or incurred by the Energy Administrator. A statement complying with the requirements of rr.22(2)(k) and 20(3) was included in the administrator's statement of proposals filed on 19 January 2022.
"Where the Energy Administrator has made a statement of pre-energy supply company administration costs under r.20(2)(k) the Energy Administrator must, before paying such costs, apply to the court for a determination of whether and to what extent the unpaid pre-energy supply company administration costs are approved for payment."
The 2013 Rules do not provide any indication of the approach that the court should adopt to approval of the pre-appointment costs. However, by analogy with the position in relation to the Remuneration Application, Mr Fisher suggested that the court should be satisfied that such pre-appointment costs had been properly incurred and, again, I think that that must be right.
1) Watson, Farley and Williams, who were acting on behalf of Sequoia by email on 26 May 2023 to which was attached a copy of Mr Downs' report;
2) the company's creditors by a notice on the administration website hosted by the administrators on 31 May 2023 - the administrators did not post a copy of Mr Downs' report on the website, but invited creditors to contact them if they had any questions or concerns or required further information in relation to the applications;
3) GEMA and BEIS by letters dated 1 June 2023; and
4) the FCA, by an email dated 2 June 2023.
Save in respect of Sequoia, the administrators have received only one response or query, other than to acknowledge the receipt of the notices. On 3 June 2023, one creditor responded to the notice posted on the administration website to ask if the "forthcoming hearing for Bulb is to determine if anyone is getting paid". On 7 June 2023, the administrators responded, to explain that the hearing is in relation to the Energy Administrator's remuneration.
(1) first, shortly before the February hearing the administrators had shared a draft estimated outcome statement ("EOS") with Sequoia. That February EOS showed a marked improvement in the anticipated outcome for the company, primarily driven by the movements in wholesale energy prices which, in turn, resulted in significant post-completion adjustment payments to the company under the terms of the sale agreement with Octopus Energy.
(2) the cumulative effect of those improvements was illustrated by graphs exhibited to Mr Cowlishaw's 8th witness statement. In short, there remained a material estimated deficiency of assets to enable repayment of the funding provided by BEIS under the funding agreement. However, the estimated deficiency had improved from around £2.6 billion in October 2022 to around £246 million in February 2023.
(3) the trajectory of that improvement prompted Watson, Farley and Williams to write to the administrators on 21 February 2023 and I have already quoted from that letter earlier in this judgment.
(4) at the time of the request on 1 June 2023, the administrators were in the process of preparing an updated version, both for the purposes of this adjourned hearing and because they had separately agreed to provide an updated version to Sequoia in June and this was shared with Sequoia as soon as it was available on 6 June 2023.
(5) as explained in Mr Cowlishaw's recent 9th witness statement, the June EOS shows a relatively modest improvement in outcomes as compared to the February EOS. If Sequoia is subordinated to all Schedule 2 liabilities, and these are explained in Mr Cowlishaw's 8th witness statement, the June EOS estimates a shortfall of around £220 million to BEIS, which can be compared with the £240 million in the February EOS. If Sequoia has priority over all the Schedule 2 liabilities the June EOS estimates a shortfall of around £47.5 million to BEIS, which can be compared to around £74 million in the February EOS. Moreover, there is at least a possibility that a material charge to tax will be incurred and payable as an administration expense and in priority to floating charge realisations.
(6) accordingly, as was the case at the last hearing, the Energy Administrator's current best estimate is that BEIS remains the party with the immediate economic interest in the amount of the remuneration and pre-appointment costs.
(7) finally, I was told that having received the June EOS on 7 June 2023 Sequoia confirmed that it did not intend to attend the hearing of the adjourned applications today. I take it from that that it does not object to the remuneration that is being sought.
The general methodology applied by Mr Downs to assess whether the remuneration sought is fair and reasonable and commensurate with the nature and extent of the work properly undertaken is explained at paras.8.7 to 8.8 of his report. In broad terms, it involved a two-stage process.
1) Mr Downs considered the materials and concluded that he had been provided with sufficient and adequate material to draw the conclusions reached (see para.4.7). He also considered that the materials "certainly meet the requirements of the IPD" [that is Insolvency Practice Direction at para.4.4] and that the specific disclosures required by para.21.4 of the Insolvency Practice Direction were present and provided "a strong positive justification supporting the claim for remuneration";
2) Mr Downs considered the statutory objective of the company's administration and concluded that, "The work of the office holders under the review period has enabled the administration objectives to be met. Supply has continued and activity to secure a rescue or sale has been undertaken, which ultimately closed after the review period in question." (Paragraph 4.11);
3) Mr Downs considered the various factors set out in r.76(5) of the 2013 Rules at para.4.12 and readily concluded that, "This falls into the framework of a significant insolvency carrying a high profile attendant risk, a multitude of stakeholders and an extended period of activity post-appointment." (Paragraph 4.13);
4) Mr Downs considered the approach to resourcing and formed the preliminary view, subject to the second stage of his assessment, that the approach was "wholly reasonable , given the results and progress achieved";
5) Mr Downs considered the administrators' charge-out rates. He concluded that they were reasonable and noted that they were 16 per cent lower than the rates charged by the administrators of Simple Energy Limited, the Company's parent (Paragraph 4.16).
1) The five criteria identified by Mr Downs were:
a) Objective which is the extent to which a workstream aligned with meeting the objective of the Energy Administration;
b) value add/lowest cost which is the outcomes produced by each workstream;
c) delegation to company staff which is the extent to which company staff were utilised in each workstream;
d) team mix which is the appropriateness of the seniority of staff used; and
e) risk.
2) Mr Downs then, by reference to all of the evidence, including that specifically presented in Mr Cowlishaw's witness statements, scored each workstream against each of the criteria, with 1 being the best score and 4 being the worst. The results for four of the criteria excluding risk were aggregated to provide a relative scale. Mr Downs then revisited the results for those workstreams and activities which he considered posed a higher level of operational or other risk. Mr Downs took that approach because he has "the strong opinion that where a practitioner believes they face specific risk then as part of the measures to mitigate that they must be reasonably entitled to deploy their own specialists to manage those concerns" (see para.5.6 of the report);
3) Applying that methodology Mr Downs was able to conduct a focused review on those workstreams which scored less favourably and could then be updated if further evidence was identified. Having done so, including a number of discussions with the officeholders, Mr Downs concluded that the second stage review "did not highlight any workstream where I had concerns it was not sufficiently aligned to an objective, yielded questionable benefit or was managed from a resource perspective in a suboptimal way" (para.5.9). The conclusions were summarised in tables set out at para.5.10 and Appendix D of the report and it should be noted that the work undertaken in connection with the lowest performing workstream, which was the restructuring plan workstream, was work that the Energy Administrators were obliged to undertake under the terms of the funding agreement.
4) Mr Downs then performed a further cross-check in s.6 of the report to see if there was an obvious alternative strategy available to the administrators which might have reduced the time spent attending to the matters arising in the ESC administration. Mr Downs could not identify any alternative strategy (see para.6.2 and 6.3);
5) following that process Mr Downs' overall assessment was that: "The preliminary conclusion remained valid for all workstreams and I had no concerns that any of the workstreams contained remuneration that was unfair, unreasonable or not commensurate with the nature of the work properly undertaken. (Paragraph 8.11)."
"Against a backdrop of the Company being the first ESC administration there was a preliminary phase of activity for the officeholders designate to familiarise themselves with the situation. In addition, the prospective appointees identified the "business as usual" trading strategy and the funding agreement was put in place on that basis. The proposed approach was consistent with the policy objectives of BEIS and Ofgem and thereby gave the best and arguably the only chance of meeting the statutory objectives. Linklaters were also heavily involved in this phase. As we all know well, the move to appoint the officeholders did proceed and their decision to adopt the usual model of leading a significant day one team to take control of the business immediately and transition to a different or modified operating procedure within the business was entirely appropriate and reasonable."
1) that pre-appointment planning was "essential and critical" and it "would be unthinkable to assume the objectives could be met if this work had not taken place the strategy would have fallen apart, given the uncertainty created" (para.7.6);
2) that it was "reasonable that significant teams from Teneo, Linklaters and counsel were working over this period as a precursor to the appointment going ahead" (para.7.8);
3) that considering the pre-appointment fees of Teneo, Linklaters and counsel and certain disbursements in the round he had no concerns that any of the fees charged were unfair, unreasonable or not commensurate with the nature of the work properly undertaken (see para.8.11 to 8.12);
4) while a minor amount of work done in the pre-appointment period was not necessary to undertake during that time it "would have otherwise been done after the appointment and, in any event, I did not identify any duplication of tasks" (para.8.12).