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 >> Banca Generali SPA v CFE (Suisse) SA & Anor [2023] EWHC 323 (Ch) (16 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/323.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 323 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
BANCA GENERALI S.P.A. | Claimant/Applicant | |
- and - | ||
(1) CFE (SUISSE) SA | ||
(2) SOVEREIGN CREDIT OPPORTUNITIES SA | Defendants/Respondents |
____________________
Unit 1 Blenheim Court, Beaufort Business Park, Bristol, BS32 4NE
Web: www.epiqglobal.com/en-gb/ Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR J GOLDRING KC and MR H PHILLIPS (instructed by Macfarlanes LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendants/Respondents
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"As soon as is practicable and in any event by no later than 4pm on 17 June 2022 the Defendants shall provide to the Claimant the following documentation in respect of each of the Receivables specified in Schedule 1 of this Order: a copy of each of the transactional documents which constitute those Receivables including (insofar as may be applicable to each Receivable) loan agreements and any amendments thereof, guarantees including from any Export Credit Agency or insurer, indemnities, promissory notes, any security documents, and letters of credit."
Proceedings leading up to the Order
"Each Party shall, within ten Business Days of a written request by another Party, supply to that other Party such forms, documentation and other information relating to it, its operations, or the Notes as that other Party reasonably requests for the purposes of that other Party's compliance with Applicable Law…"
Events subsequent to the Order
a. Interests in Receivables are first acquired by CFE in one of two ways: by direct acquisition or by sub-participation.
b. In the case of direct acquisition, CFE acquires a direct interest in a Receivable from a third party. How those interests are acquired by and transferred to CFE depends on the nature and the type of the Receivable concerned. It may involve a Loan Market Association ("LMA") trade confirmation, a deed or a contract of assignment, or an endorsement on a promissory note. Other documents may also be generated as part of the transfer process, such as transfer certificates and SWIFT confirmations.
c. In the case of a sub-participation, an intermediary acquires a direct interest in a Receivable. That intermediary is typically Silverton Invest Limited and so I will use the expression "Silverton" to refer to that intermediary. In such cases, CFE does not itself have any direct interest in the underlying Receivable. However, under a sub-participation agreement Silverton, which holds the actual Receivable, provides CFE with an indirect exposure to the performance of the underlying Receivable. In such a case CFE has contractual rights against Silverton, Silverton has contractual rights against the issuer of the Receivable, but CFE has no direct contractual rights against the issuer of the Receivable.
d. CFE transfers such rights as, it has (whether those rights were acquired by way of direct acquisition or sub-participation) to SCO under the terms of a Master Transfer Agreement or Supplemental Transfer Agreement for SCO to hold in one of the four Trade Finance compartments.
a. Stage 1 - This is the initial transaction constituting an underlying Receivable (whether a loan, a letter of credit, sovereign debt or otherwise). This stage involves transaction documents which set out the terms of relevant loans or trade finance instruments (including any related security or collateral), the economics of which are ultimately reflected in the Notes;
b. Stage 2 - This stage is relevant only where CFE holds a sub-participated interest. Where relevant, it involves Silverton obtaining an interest in the underlying Receivable that was constituted at Stage 1;
c. Stage 3 - This is the transaction by which CFE acquires economic exposure to the Receivable. If there is no Stage 2, then CFE acquires its interest directly, by acquiring the Receivable itself. If there is a Stage 2, then it involves CFE entering into a sub-participation arrangement with Silverton; and
d. Stage 4 - This is the transaction by which such interest as CFE had following Stage 3 (whether that be a direct interest in a Receivable, or its rights under a sub-participation arrangement with Silverton) is transferred to SCO and allocated to the relevant compartment.
The proper approach to construction of the Order
"1. The sole question for the Court is what the Order means, so that issues as to whether it should have been granted and if so in what terms are not relevant to construction (see [16] of the judgment).
2. In considering the meaning of an Order granting an injunction, the terms in which it was made are to be restrictively construed. Such are the penal consequences of breach that the Order must be clear and unequivocal and strictly construed before a party will be found to have broken the terms of the Order and thus to be in contempt of Court (see [19] of the judgment, approving inter alia the statements of principle to that effect in the Court of Appeal by Mummery and Nourse LJJ in Federal Bank of the Middle East v Hadkinson [2000] 1 WLR 1695).
3. The words of the Order are to be given their natural and ordinary meaning and are to be construed in their context, including their historical context and with regard to the object of the Order (see [21]-[26] of the judgment, again citing with approval what Mummery LJ said in Hadkinson)."
"The reasons for making the order which are given by the court in its judgment are an overt and authoritative statement of the circumstances which it regarded as relevant. They are therefore always admissible to construe the order."
"Engaging in an excavation and analysis of the parties' submissions to discover their motives for seeking particular orders seems to me to be a difficult and dubious exercise, with parallels to admitting evidence of negotiations in construing a contract. As far as I am aware, such an approach finds no support (even if not expressly forbidden) in the authorities"
Analysis
The language of the Order
" 'Receivables' means any existing and future monetary rights and receivables and the ancillary rights of the Issuer assigned … pursuant to the Master Transfer Agreement."
The focus of this definition, argues the Claimant, is on the rights held by SCO, whatever they may be, and is consistent with an intention that the "transactional documents which constitute those Receivables" (the phrase used in the Order), includes any document produced at any of Stages 1 to 4 that results in SCO having its interest.
" all of the monetary rights and claims of CFE vis-à-vis the debtors arising under (i) Payment Instruments… (ii) the Financing Instruments granted by the Originators, and … (iii) the Insurance Policies."
"loan agreements and any amendments thereof, guarantees including from any Export Credit Agency or insurer, indemnities, promissory notes, any security documents, and letters of credit."
Considerations of context
"13. In particular, the Bank is concerned about discrepancies concerning the characteristics of the receivables, and in particular the types of financial instrument involved and whether they are supported by Export Credit Agency ("ECA") guarantees."
Documents relating to Stages after Stage 1 would be incapable of benefiting from Export Credit Agency guarantees. The Judge's articulation of the concern involves a focus on a problem with the nature of the information the Defendants were providing on (what are now understood to be) Stage 1 matters that could be cured by the provision of underlying Stage 1 documents.
"…material changes in the description of the nature of the instruments and the available security, referred to above, in the context of actual or expected failures to redeem Senior Notes in full and what appear to be an increasing pattern of receivables in arrears."
"The Bank is not seeking to verify all the individual pieces of information that have been provided. The order sought would require the provision of "transactional documents" constituting the receivables such as loan agreements, guarantees and security documents. This is a proportionate response to the specific concerns raised about the nature of the instruments and the security available, being issues which on any basis must be fundamental to valuation."
"The documents themselves will not tell us why they made the error, but the point about the error is we need to understand, for valuation purposes, the, the underlying nature of the receivable and what security is available. Those are fundamental aspects, and where they have been misdescribed. The point is those errors mean we just do not know what receivable we are dealing with. If we get the transaction documents, we can see for ourselves what the, the receivable is, and when, when Dentons reviewed the documents for TF1, one can see by reference to receivables, you know, they describe what the underlying documents are, things like funded participation agreements, trade confirmations. So they are underlying transactional documents from which we will be able to see what, what the receivable is, what the security position is and, for example, if it is, if there, if we know severally there are arrears, what the enforcement processes are and what the, you know, what, what remedies are available. Those are going to be important things, we say, for valuation, where what has been told historically is not reliable"
Disposition