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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Astor Management AG & Anor v Atalaya Mining PLC & Ors [2022] EWHC 628 (Comm) (21 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2022/628.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 628 (Comm) |
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Neutral Citation Number: [2022] EWHC 628 (Comm)
Case No: CL-2015-000790
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Date: 21/03/2022
Before :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE CALVER
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Between :
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(1) Astor Management AG (2) Astor Resources AG |
Claimants |
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- and –
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(1) Atalaya Mining PLC (2) Atalaya Riotinto Minera SL (3) EMED Holdings (UK) Limited (4) EMED Marketing Limited |
Defendants |
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Anna Boase QC and Veena Srirangam (instructed by Hogan Lovells) for the Claimants
Stephen Moriarty QC and Alexander Milner (instructed by Fieldfisher) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 21-24, 28 February and 1 March 2022
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JUDGMENT
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties’ representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Monday 21 March 2022 at 10:00 am.
(A) Introduction
(B) Parties
(C) Background to the Master Agreement
(i) Astor’s involvement with the Project
(D) Master Agreement
(ii) Amendments (E) Events following the conclusion of the Master Agreement
(F)Litigation between the parties (i) Trial before Leggatt J and the appeal (ii) Summary judgment application (G) The Claims
(H) Legal principles (I) Evidence (J) Proper construction of the Master Agreement
(ii) The Master Agreement as concluded on 30 September 2008 (iii) Amendment and restatement of 31 March 2009 (iv) Amendment and Restatement of 10 November 2009 (A) Introduction (B) Parties i) The First Defendant (Atalaya Plc) was formerly known as EMED Mining Public Ltd; it is a Cypriot company listed on AIM (the sub-market of the London Stock Exchange). Atalaya Plc is the ultimate owner of the Second, Third and Fourth Defendants. ii) The Second Defendant (ARM) was formerly known as EMED Tartessus; it is a Spanish company which was set up as a special purpose vehicle to own and operate the Project. Astor held 49% of the shares in ARM before selling them to the Third Defendant who now owns 100% of ARM. iii) The Third Defendant (Atalaya UK) was formerly known as EMED Holdings (UK) Limited; [1] it is an English company which owns ARM and which was a source of Intra-Group Funding (as described below). Atalaya UK is 100% owned by the First Defendant. iv) The Fourth Defendant (EMED Marketing) was formerly known as Curvico Holdings Limited; it is a Cypriot company whose role was to buy from ARM the entirety of the copper produced by the Project and to sell it on (including through offtake agreements). EMED Marketing is 100% owned by Atalaya Plc. (i) Astor’s involvement with the Project Year 2008 2009 2010 2011 to 2017 2018 Estimated Production 0.8Mtpa 5.3Mtpa 6.0Mtpa 7.5Mtpa 4.1Mtpa “The capital investment required to restart and upgrade the plant, mobilise and commence contract mining services and establish other facilities necessary to achieve and sustain a production rate of 7.5 Mtpa is estimated at £23.2M( €33.3M or US$46.6M).” (emphasis added) “The ore is drawn through slots into a tunnel underneath the fine ore stockpile and discharged by feeders onto a belt running to the concentrator building where milling and flotation sections are located. With a throughput of 4.8 Mtpa, two milling trains need be employed… To achieve a throughput of 7.5 Mtpa, additional milling capacity will be required… With a throughput of 4.8 Mtpa, three banks of rougher flotation cells will be employed. Each bank contains eleven 500 cubic foot Wemco cells… When operating at a throughput of 4.8 Mtpa not all of the existing flotation cells are required but all will be brought into service to achieve a throughput of 7.5 Mtpa... The scavenger cleaner bank contains ten 500 cubic foot Wemco cells but only seven are required for 4.8 Mtpa. For 7.5 Mtpa, all ten will be used… [6] 5.9 Summary Two levels of annual throughput have been considered for the Rio Tinto Project namely 4.8 million tonnes and 7.5 million tonnes, the plant has proven capacity to achieve these production rates; annual throughputs of 5.2 and 7.1 Million tonnes having been achieved in 1996 and 1997 respectively. Therefore there is little doubt that, after refurbishment of the equipment, these production levels can be achieved once more and the Restart Plan successfully implemented… Assuming that an EPCM management team is appointed for the start-up phase and the necessary permits are obtained, it is estimated that about 24 weeks (see Schedule, Appendix 5.4) will be required to bring the plant up to point of mechanical completion to allow it to be operated a rate of 4.8 Mt. The cost of this exercise is estimated to be €9.4M including EPCM and first fill but excluding contingency. Expansion to a rate of 7.5M will require a further 20 weeks and will require an estimated additional expenditure of € 5.1M on the same basis. Following the base case mining schedule, the plant operating cost when the plant operates at 4.8 Mtpa will be €3.48/t milled and €3.12/t milled at 7.5 Mtpa [7].” “Given that demand for copper metal is predicted to continue in the near term there is also a compelling business case to increase mill throughput to 9.6 Mtpa and to consider plant expansion following exploration success.” [8] “Euro 26.35 [9] (twenty six point three five) million shall be paid by EMED Mining to Shorthorn upon mining permits granted by the Andalusian government and availability of the senior debt facility. Euro 13.175 (thirteen point one seven five) million shall be paid by EMED Mining to Shorthorn on the 12th month following mine restart. Euro 13.175 (thirteen point one seven five) million shall be paid by EMED Mining to Shorthorn on the 24th month following mine restart. Mine restart is defined once 3 months of continuous 400,000 mt/month of ore processing has been reached [10]. Any excess cash after paying approved project needs (operating expenses and sustaining capex), project debt service and USD 10 million/year in non Spain expenses) shall be used to repay Shorthorn debt earlier than above. No dividends can be paid by EMED Mining until the above mentioned amounts are fully repaid to MRI.” (emphasis added) (D) Master Agreement i) Clause 1.1 defined “Consideration” as: “the Consideration Shares, the Deferred Consideration and the consideration payable under the Share Purchase Agreement and the Loan Assignment, as described more fully in Clause 6” and “Deferred Consideration” as: “up to €43,883,382.70 payable by [ARM] to [Astor] in accordance with Schedule 2”. ii) Clause 6(a) provided “the Consideration shall be up to €63,300,000 consisting of the following: a) €3,430,000 payable under the Share Purchase Agreement; b) €9,116,617.30 payable under the Loan Assignment; c) €6,870,000 to be satisfied by the allotment of the Consideration shares; and d) the Deferred Consideration of €43,883,382.70.” i) “Each of [Atalaya], EMED Holdings and [ARM] undertakes to use all reasonable endeavours to obtain the Senior Debt Facility with [ARM] as borrower and to procure the restart of mining activities in the Project on or before 31 December 2009…” (emphasis added) i) “As security for, inter alia, the obligations of [ARM] to pay the Deferred Consideration: … (ii) subject to Completion, [ARM] undertakes that it will not create or permit to arise any encumbrance over any of the Assets without the prior written consent of [Astor] (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed) other than as required by the provider of the Senior Debt Facility…” (iii) subject to Completion, each of [Atalaya Plc], EMED Holdings, and [ARM] undertakes to procure that the documentation for the Senior Debt Facility shall: (A) permit the payment of any amounts outstanding under the Loan Assignment and the Deferred Consideration when due in accordance with the terms of this Agreement (including Clause 6(g)(iv)(B)), with the first €17,533,382.70 of the Deferred Consideration to be paid directly out of the Senior Debt Facility upon first draw-down of funds pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility by the provider of the relevant finance to MRI or at its request (iv) subject to Completion, [ARM] undertakes: (A) not to make, declare, or pay any dividend or distribution (other than as required for up to USD 10 million per annum of EMED Group Expenses (excluding dividends or other distributions to shareholders of EMED) related to matters other than the Project (“EMED Group Expenses”), nor borrow or agree to borrow any amount other than pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility without the prior written consent of [Astor] (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed), until the Consideration has been paid in full to [Astor] in accordance with the terms of the Transaction Documents; and (B) to apply any excess cash (after payment of operating expenses and sustaining capital expenditure for the Project, debt service requirements under the Senior Debt Facility and USD 10 million per annum of EMED Group Expenses (without double counting EMED Group Expenses taken into account under paragraph (A) above) to pay outstanding amounts of the Consideration due to [Astor] (including to [Astor] under the Loan Assignment) early. (emphasis added) “If any sum due for payment under this Agreement is not paid on the due date, the party in default shall, forthwith on demand at any time, pay interest on such sum from the due date until the date of actual payment (whether before or after the judgment) at the rate of 4% per annum above the base rate of Lloyds TSB Bank plc from time to time, such interest to accrue on a day to day basis and to be compounded monthly”. “The Deferred Consideration shall be payable by [ARM] to [Astor] as follows: When (A) the authorisations from the Junta de Andalucia to restart mining activities in the Project are granted to [Atalaya] or any other member of the [Atalaya group] (“Permit Approval”) and (B) [Atalaya] or another company in the [Atalaya group] secures senior debt finance and related guarantee facilities for a sum sufficient for the re-start of mining operations at the Project (hereinafter the “Senior Debt Facility”), [ARM] shall pay to [Astor] the amount of … €17,533,382.70 in cash within the maximum term of thirty (30) Business Days from when the relevant company in the [Atalaya group] can effectively draw down on the Senior Debt Facility: and The following amounts to be paid when mining activities are restarted in the Project: (A) [ARM] shall pay to [Astor] the sum of …€13,175,000 in cash within twenty (20) Business Days following the first anniversary of the restart of mining activities; and (B) [ARM] shall pay to [Astor] the sum of …€13,175,000 in cash within twenty (20) Business Days following the second anniversary of the restart of mining activities, and the Parties agree that the date of restart of mining activities for these purposes shall be such date on which the mining facilities at the Project meet continuous 400,000 mt/month production of ore processing. EMED and EMED TARTESSUS shall keep MRI (on behalf of the MRI Parties) regularly (as well as upon request by MRI on behalf of the MRI Parties) informed in writing as to progress of the Project towards, and the date of, the restart of mining activities as aforesaid, MRI (on behalf of the MRI Parties) shall, following reasonable notice in writing to EMED, be provided with such information regarding and access to the Project by EMED and EMED TARTESSUS as may reasonably be required to enable it to assess such progress and/or the actual or likely date of such restart. (ii) Amendments to the Master Agreement (a) Amendment on 31 March 2009 (i) Clause 6(f): The Project restart date was pushed back by one year to 31 December 2010. (ii) Schedule 2: There were substantial amendments to Schedule 2. The dual triggers for the first payment remained the same (i.e. the grant of Permit Approval and securing a Senior Debt Facility) but the first instalment payment was reduced to €7,313,897.11 and payment dates for 17 further tranches of the Deferred Consideration were referrable to that first payment date and were to be made over a 6 year period, rather than there being two further tranches of the Deferred Consideration due on two annual anniversaries of the mine reaching the specified level of production (i.e. a continuous 400,000 mt/month production of ore processing) [14]. (iii) Clause 6(g) remained unamended, save that the first payment of Deferred Consideration to be paid directly out of the Senior Debt Facility was reduced from €17.533m to €7.313m (in clause 6(g)(iii)(A)). (b) Amendment on 10 November 2009 “[Astor] consents, for the purposes of Clause 6(g)(iv)(A) and (B) of the Master Agreement (as hereby amended) to: a) the issue by [ARM] of loan notes to EMED Holdings (the “Loan Notes”); b) the borrowing of monies by [ARM] from EMED Holdings pursuant to the Loan Notes; and c) the repayment by [ARM], from the proceeds of the borrowing under the Loan Notes, of loans of £7,671,598 outstanding by it to EMED as at the date of this Deed.” (iv) subject to Completion, [ARM] undertakes: (A) not to make, declare, or pay any dividend or distribution or make any repayment of or any other payment in respect of loans from members of the EMED Group (“EMED Group Loans”) (other than as required for up to USD 10 million per annum in aggregate for EMED Group Expenses… nor to borrow any amount other than pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility or EMED Group Loans without the prior written consent of [Astor] (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed) until the Consideration has been paid in full to [Astor] in accordance with the terms of the Transaction Documents; and (B) [quoted in unchanged terms]” “The amendment to clause 6(g)(iv)(A) is of critical significance as it has enabled substantial funds raised in 2015 by issuing new shares in [Atalaya] to be channelled to [ARM] through intra-group loans without the need for Astor’s consent and used to fund the restart of mining operations. The defendants say that this funding has obviated the need to obtain a Senior Debt Facility.” [17] i) An intra-group loan to ARM of €94,566,725, financed from the proceeds of the share issue in June 2015. [20] ii) A further intra-group loan of €3,180,417 to ARM in 2016. [21] iii) A series of further intra-group loans made by EMED Holdings to ARM between 2017 and 2019, amounting to a total of €38,438,711. [22] i) The Senior Debt Facility was specified as being finance “for a sum sufficient for the restart of mining operations at the Project”. [23] Restart of mining operations was defined (at Schedule 2 of the Master Agreement) as being when the Project met continuous production of ore processing of 400,000 mt/month (i.e. when the mine reached 4.8 Mtpa level of production). ii) The Senior Debt Facility was intended to be a facility under which ARM would have drawn down (up to a maximum limit) in accordance with its needs from time to time for the restarting of mining operations at the Project. ARM would therefore have drawn down on this source of funding to meet its needs as they arose and would have been unlikely to draw down more than it required as this would have resulted in it paying interest on sums of money which it was not utilising. (iii) In contrast, the Intra-Group Funding provided ARM with lump sums of funding in very large tranches (rather than a facility) which was far in excess of its immediate needs (a “sum sufficient”) for restarting mining operations in order to reach a capacity of 4.8 Mtpa. “It’s very unusual to find a company saying under budget and ahead of schedule. Usually the maximum you can hear is ‘on budget’ or ‘on schedule’, which usually is not right, but anyway, here we are. More unusual is to have the money, especially in this market. We are very lucky now. People said, “You diluted a lot in June”. Well, I think now we are very clever. We don’t have any debt. We raised $95 million from the market and some key shareholders and we are fully financed to get to 7.5 million tonnes. What’s 7.5 million tonnes? It’s 50 per cent higher than what originally had been planned for the original plans for EMED. We have a 15 years' life ahead of us, and we’ve brought new shareholders.” (i) avoiding debt under the Senior Debt Facility and (it believed) in avoiding payment of the Deferred Consideration to Astor; (ii) significantly increasing the shareholdings of the four investing shareholders at the expense of the other shareholders: they “diluted a lot in June”. They were able to put in large sums of money not merely to restart the Project (as a bank would have done under the Senior Debt Facility) but also to massively expand the Project; (iii) thereby fully financing the mine in one go in order to get to 7.5Mtpa which Mr. Lavandeira confirmed was 50% higher than had originally been planned for ARM, namely 5Mtpa. In other words, ARM received funding for the mine in excess of the originally planned needs of the Project. (i) by November 2015 the mine was producing 529 TPH (tonnes per hour) or ore; (ii) by December 2015 the mine was producing 532 TPH [28] and (iii) by January 2016 the mine was producing 549 TPH.
Chart, line chart
Description automatically generated i) Work to expand to a production capacity of 7.5Mtpa began as early as September 2015. As reported by Ore Reserves Engineering in September 2016, “The Rio Tinto mine has been in continuous ramp up since August 2015 with the goal of achieving 5.0Mtpa. Ramp up of phase 1 [31] and construction activities for phase 2 started to overlap in September 2015 when the phase 2 engineering and construction started.” ii) In December 2016, the Project achieved a production capacity of 9.5 Mtpa. [32] iii) The decision to expand the Project to 15 Mtpa was approved by Atalaya’s board in Q4 2017. [33] iv) In January 2020, the Project achieved a production capacity of 15 Mtpa. [34] (F) Litigation between the parties (i) Trial before Leggatt J and the appeal i) The conditions for the payment of the Deferred Consideration had not been triggered because no Senior Debt Facility had been obtained. [35] ii) The Excess Cash Clause requires that any excess cash be applied towards payment of the Deferred Consideration to Astor. [36] (ii) Summary judgment application (G) The Claims i) declare that all of the Deferred Consideration was payable under the Excess Cash Clause by 31 December 2015, and order Atalaya to pay Astor interest of €15,157,560 (plus contractual interest which accrues until the date of payment); or ii) alternatively, to make a declaration as to when excess cash in the sum of €53m was available and should have been paid to Astor, and to order Atalaya to pay contractual, alternatively statutory interest from such date until payment. i) When interpreting a contract, the Court is concerned to identify the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties at the time of contracting. [41] ii) Events subsequent to the making of a contract are not relevant to construing the contract [42]. iii) Where a contract has been “negotiated and prepared with the assistance of skilled professionals” the Court will interpret the agreement “principally by textual analysis”. [43] iv) However, where a document contains technical terms which the Court does not understand, “the court may discover the meaning of such terms through the use of an appropriate dictionary, unless the meaning of the terms is in dispute, in which case it seems the court can only proceed upon the evidence”. [44] In this regard, “the court may consider extrinsic evidence from a witness experienced in the field. Such evidence is admissible as part of the relevant background, and it is admissible even if the meaning falls short of a trade custom.” [45] There may, of course, be difficulties in “making any sharp distinctions between ordinary and technical terms”; what is technical and what is ordinary may vary from judge to judge depending on their experience. [46] v) Although expert evidence may be employed to explain technical terms to the Court, it is, of course, not the function of an expert to interpret the contract. That remains wholly the prerogative of the Court. [47] vi) Generally speaking, “a clause must not be considered in isolation but must be considered in the context of the whole of the document.” [48] vii) Where there is ambiguity or rival meanings, the Court can consider which construction is more consistent with business common sense or the commercial purpose of the document. However, commercial common sense: a) Should not be invoked to undervalue the importance of the language of the provision which is to be construed; [49] and b) Should not be invoked retrospectively: “The mere fact that a contractual arrangement, if interpreted according to its natural language, has worked out badly, or even disastrously, for one of the parties is not a reason for departing from the natural language. Commercial common sense is only relevant to the extent of how matters would or could have been perceived by the parties, or by reasonable people in the position of the parties, as at the date the contract was made.” [50] i) Factual evidence: The sixth witness statement (dated 29 October 2020) and the seventh witness statement (dated 9 April 2021) of Mr. Ashwath Mehra, the Chief Executive Officer of the Astor Group (“Mehra 6” and “Mehra 7”). ii) Expert evidence: The first and second reports, dated 15 October 2021 and 17 December 2021 respectively of Mr. Andrew Webb, an expert in mine finance, who has 25 years’ experience of advising on debt and equity financing in the mine sector (Webb 1 and Webb 2). He also produced a joint statement together with Mr. Dearman, the accounting expert witness relied upon by Atalaya. i) Factual evidence: The sixth witness statement dated 29 January 2021 of Mr. Alberto Lavandeira Adan, who is the Chief Executive Officer of Atalaya Plc (since December 2014) and ARM (since March 2014) (“Lavandeira 6”). ii) The second witness statement dated 15 October 2021 of Mr. César Sánchez Fernández, who is the Chief Financial Officer of Atalaya Plc (“Sánchez 2”). iii) Expert evidence: Two expert accountancy reports of Mr. David Dearman, namely “Dearman 1” dated 29 January 2021, and “Dearman 2” dated 17 December 2021. i) go back in time to the period September 2008 - November 2009 when the Master Agreement was made and amended, and consider what, with the knowledge available to the parties at that time, they intended by this clause; and ii) consider what these parties, being business people who were experienced participants in the mining industry and who were doing a “buy now, pay later” deal in relation to the mine, are likely to have intended. “Since it would fall to the parties’ accountants in the first instance to perform and verify any excess cash calculations, it would be reasonable to assume (in the absence of any indication to the contrary) that “excess cash” was intended to have the meaning which it would ordinarily have in an accounting context.” “Amongst other things, Atalaya now contends that, as part of its calculations of 'excess cash', it is entitled to make an 'operating cash headroom’ deduction, equivalent to the trade creditors due in the first three months of the following financial year, and a deduction for 'sustaining capital expenditure headroom', equivalent to one quarter of the sustaining capital expenditure budgeted for the next financial year. Notwithstanding the fact that Atalaya provided their calculations of 'excess cash' in August 2019 - in purported compliance with a consent order requiring them to do so, and having spent over 7 months with the benefit of external accountants to produce them - those calculations did not include these 'headroom' deductions.” “Until the Consideration has been paid to Astor in full: (1) Does clause 6(g)(iv)(B) of the Master Agreement limit (until payment to Astor of the Consideration in full) ARM’s entitlement to spend available cash to payment of those items of expenditure identified in parentheses and oblige ARM to apply the balance as excess cash to pay Astor (as Astor contends)? [54] (2) Or does clause 6(g)(iv)(B) refer to the cash balance held by ARM at the end of the financial year, less allowances for anticipated payments of operating expenses incurred but not yet paid for, sustaining capital expenditure and EMED Group Expenses (as Atalaya contends)? [55]”
Table
Description automatically generated (ii) The Master Agreement as concluded on 30 September 2008 What constitutes “excess cash”? i) Tranche 2 (€13.175m) was due within 20 Business Days following the first anniversary of the restart of mining activities; and ii) Tranche 3 (€13.175m) was due within 20 Business Days following the second anniversary of the restart of mining activities. “… mining operations commenced [60] at the Mine once it reached ‘commercial production’ (i.e. in February 2016), when the copper produced by the Mine could be sold to the market and the Mine started to produce revenue from mining operations (as opposed to relying solely on external or intragroup funding). This is consistent with the Memorandum of Understanding dated 11 June 2008, which defined ‘mine restart’ as ‘3 months of continuous 400,000 mt/month of ore processing” (broadly equivalent to 5 Mtpa), and the original definition of ‘restart of mining activities’ in the “now superseded 2008 Master Agreement at Schedule 2, namely “the date on which the mining facilities at the project meet continuous 400,000 tonnes/month production of ore processing”. [61] i) “not to make, declare or pay any dividend or distribution (other than as required for up to USD 10 million per annum for EMED Group expenses (excluding dividends or other distributions to shareholders of EMED) related to matters other than the Project ("EMED Group Expenses")), nor borrow or agree to borrow any amount other than pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility without the prior written consent of MRI (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed), until the Consideration has been paid in full to the MRI Parties in accordance with the terms of the Transaction Documents; and ii) to apply any excess cash (after payment of operating expenses and sustaining capital expenditure for the Project, debt service requirements under the Senior Debt Facility and USD 10 million per annum for the EMED Group Expenses […] to pay any outstanding amounts of the Consideration due to [Astor] […] early.” [62] Sustaining capital expenditure “Sustaining capital expenditure” is the capital expenditure required for a company to sustain its current level of operations through the repair and replacement of capital assets used in a company’s business. It is to be contrasted with what is referred to as “expansion”, “growth” or “investment” capital expenditure, which is capital expenditure for the purposes of growing the business of a company.” i) Cash sweep clauses (such as the Excess Cash Clause) sometimes permit headroom and sometimes they do not [74] and he has “relatively frequently seen an agreed and specified quantum of cash (typically either a numerical amount or something like one month’s operating expenses defined by reference to the financial model for the Project as of a specific date) deducted in the calculation of “excess cash” to allow the retention by the borrower of a “cash cushion”.” [75] ii) Where such headroom is not expressly provided for (as here), he explains, it is usually because the Project is cash generative and has the ability to manage its creditors and debtors. He emphasised that parties negotiating a cash sweep clause would be “fairly relaxed” about headroom where the expectation was that the Project would be cash-generative, as was the case here. [76] When is excess cash first assessed? i) Should excess cash have been first assessed on 31 December 2015, since excess cash fell to be assessed from what Astor contends to have been the restart of the Project in 2015? [81] ii) Or should excess cash have been first assessed on 31 December 2016, since excess cash fell to be assessed from the restart of commercial production in February 2016 (as Atalaya contends)? [82] “77. The effect of delaying the operation of the Excess Cash Clause until 1 February 2016 (as Atalaya contends) is radical. (1) First, it excludes from consideration all of the cash available to ARM in 2015, including some of the €103m intragroup borrowing some of which Mr. Dearman accepted (if ARM was not permitted to expand without paying Astor) was “surplus to ARM’s needs in 2015”. [86] (2) Secondly, it means that the first assessment date is not until 11 months later (on 31 December 2016) by which time ARM had moved far beyond mere restart of the Project, having achieved not only Phase I expansion to 7.5 Mtpa, but also Phase II expansion to 9.5 Mtpa. 78. In circumstances where the Excess Cash Clause has no start date and there are a range of possible events which might naturally prompt the first assessment of excess cash, it is reasonable to adopt the earliest and not the latest of those events. The Court may well wish to be guided by the only person to have given evidence who actually knows how these things work in practice: Mr. Webb. In his experience, a reasonable point at which to start assessing cash would have been 31 December 2015.” Do the amendments to the Master Agreement affect the construction above? (iii) Amendment and restatement of 31 March 2009 “For the purposes of this Schedule, the "First Payment Date" shall be the date on which (i) the authorisations from the Junta de Andalucia to restart mining activities in the Project are granted to EMED or any other member of the EMED Group ("Permit Approval") and (ii) EMED or any other member in the EMED Group secures senior debt finance and related guarantee facilities for a sum sufficient to restart mining operations at the Project (hereinafter the "Senior Debt Facility") and the relevant member of the EMED Group is entitled to draw down funds pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility.” (iv) Amendment and Restatement of 10 November 2009 Decision of the Deputy Judge “[T]he wording is “cash” not “income” or “receipts”. The reference to “cash” must refer to available liquid assets. There is nothing in the wording which indicates the parties had in mind that this should refer to the company’s income or receipts.” [94] “Assume the company has 95 in cash on 31 December, does not expect any income on 1 January but has a bill of 100 to pay on 1 January. Does it have any excess cash? It can hardly have excess cash if the foreseeable result of paying out the excess cash on 31 December is that it is unable to pay its bills.” [96] “If the company has excess cash at the year end, then why does it need to consider and deduct expenses at all? Past expenses will already have been paid. It follows that the subclause must contemplate foreseeable future expenses”. “Atalaya submit that the appropriate “headroom” to be taken into account is the specified USD10 million plus three months operating expenses and “sustaining capital expenditure”…. It is a matter of debate whether three months is an appropriate period. It seems to me that the subclause probably had in mind deducting foreseeable expenses which should properly be taken into account in determining whether the cash was “excess” but I do not need to form a final view as to the precise meaning. I accept for the purposes of this summary judgment application the principle that in determining “excess cash” it is permissible to deduct expenses within the categories bracketed in the clause which can be foreseen to occur over the forthcoming period, and a three month period may well be broadly appropriate”. (emphasis added) Deferred mining costs Quantum of interest payable
[1] The Third Defendant changed its name to “Atalaya Minasderiotinto Project (UK) Limited” on 30 June 2017 (as shown on the Companies House website). It has not yet taken steps to replace its old name with its new name in these proceedings.
[2] EMED Mining Public Ltd Technical Report of 18 October 2010, p. 13.
[3] It is in fact common ground that peak production was 9.2Mtpa and that the Project had never operated at a capacity in excess of this: Astor SoC ¶9.2; Atalaya Reply ¶3.1.
[4] AMC Report p. 234.
[5] ibid p. 235.
[6] ibid p. 290-291.
[7] Ibid, p. 300.
[8] AMC Report, p. 953.
[9] Under Schedule 2 to the Master Agreement this was reduced to Euro 17.53m.
[10] Which equates to 4.8Mtpa.
[11] See Astor’s RRFI ¶1.3.
[12] Mehra7 ¶59.
[13] Mehra7 ¶42.
[14] In return, it was agreed that Astor would receive additional “Up-tick Payments” which would be payable if the price of copper went over a specified level. As a result, the definition of Deferred Consideration was increased to “up to €59,783,382.70.”
[15] Mehra7 ¶43.
[16] [2017] EWHC 425 (Comm) [21]-[31] and [82]-[96]
[17] [2017] EWHC 425 (Comm) [20].
[18] [2017] EWHC 425 (Comm) [29] and [85].
[19] [2017] EWHC 425 (Comm) [86].
[20] Astor Statement of Case ¶10.2; Atalaya Reply ¶11.1(6).
[21] Astor Statement of Case ¶11.2; Atalaya Reply ¶12.1(4).
[22] Astor Statement of Case ¶12.1 and Atalaya Reply ¶13.1(1) and (2).
[23] Master Agreement, Schedule 2(a)(i).
[24] Agreed List of Issues ¶10.
[25] [2017] EWHC 425 (Comm) [21].
[26] Lavandeira 6 ¶11.1 (whose evidence was unchallenged).
[27] See Atalaya’s tabular summary dated February 2016, p. 10, reproduced below paragraph 45 herein.
[28] For 2015 a modest €4.4m in revenue from the sale of copper was achieved, jumping sharply to €90.15m in 2016.
[29] Agreed List of Issues ¶10.
[30] Lavandeira 6 ¶11.2.
[31] Phase 1 being to 5Mtpa, achieved on 1 February 2016; the Phase 2 target being to 9.5Mtpa.
[32] Atalaya Reply ¶12.1(2).
[33] Agreed List of issues ¶12.
[34] Agreed List of issues ¶ 11 and 12.
[35] [2017] EWHC 425 Comm [41]-[58].
[36] [2017] EWHC 425 Comm [100]-[109].
[38] Fieldfisher letter dated 11 March 2021.
[39] Announcement dated 15 March 2021.
[40] [2021] EWHC 1919 (Comm), [61].
[41] Investors Compensation Scheme v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896.
[42] James Miller & Partners Ltd v Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd [1970] AC 583 at 603.
[43] Wood v Capita [2017] AC 1173, [13]; Chitty on Contracts (33rd ed), §15-082.
[44] Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, [5.55] (7th edn. Sweet & Maxwell). This proposition has been cited with approval in Kellogg Brown & Root Inc v Concordia Maritime AG [2006] EWHC 3358 (Comm) and Encia Remediation Ltd v Canopius Managing Agents Ltd [2007] 1 CLC 818.
[45] Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, [5.55].
[46] Sussex Investments Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1998] PLCR 172 (per Walker LJ).
[47] Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, [5.61]; Kingscroft Insurance Co Ltd v Nissan Fire and Marine Insurance Co Ltd [2000] 1 All ER (Comm) 272; JP Morgan Chase Bank v Springwell Navigation Corp [2007] All ER (Comm) 549.
[48] Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, [7.07]
[49] ABC Electrification Limited v Network Rail Infrastructure Limited [2020] EWCA Civ 1645; Arnold v Britton [2015] UKSC 36.
[50] [2015] UKSC 36 (per Lord Neuberger).
[51] Atalaya’s Opening, ¶35, although it is fair to say that the way in which it presented its case was that the way an accountant would approach this clause is consistent with its ordinary meaning.
[52] [2017] EWHC 425 Comm [51].
[53] Dearman, ¶ 4.2.1. He goes on to assert that excess cash is “generally understood” by accountants as referring to cash that is held by an entity over and above what it needs to continue to operate, as part of its working capital, to pay its creditors and to meet future expenditure to which it has committed.
[54] Astor SoC ¶5.1, 34 {A/18/157, 169}; Astor Skeleton Argument ¶76-80.
[55] Atalaya SoC ¶6(3), 9-10 {A/18/128-129}; Atalaya Reply ¶6 {A/19/187}; Atalaya Skeleton Argument ¶29-31.
[56] Claimants’ Written Opening [75].
[57] Claimants’ Written Opening [79].
[58] Defendants’ Written Opening [21(2)].
[59] Lavandeira 6, ¶11.2
[60] In the sense of “re-started”
[61] Lavandira 6 [12].
[62] I quote the Excess Cash Clause in full so as not to paraphrase it and risk altering its meaning.
[63] It is common ground that the financial position of both ARM and EMED Marketing are to be taken into account for this purpose, but I refer in this judgment to ARM for simplicity.
[64] Because drawdown of Tranche 1 under the Senior Debt Facility has by now taken place.
[65] This was an annual expenses allowance which the parties must have considered was needed by the Group as a whole.
[66] The parties’ Issue 2
[67] Joint Statement, ¶5.1.8.
[68] As Leggatt J stated [2017] EWHC 425 (Comm) [8]: “until mining restarted, no revenue was being generated from which payments could be made to Astor”, as was obviously the parties’ intention.
[69] ¶25, Atalaya’s closing.
[70] ¶48, Atalaya’s closing.
[71] Dearman1 ¶4.2.6.
[72] {Day2/119/6-7, 120/2-9}.
[73] {Day2/119/25-120/15}.
[74] Such as in the Çöpler Agreement, relied upon by Atalaya, but that was a very different agreement to the one in the present case. I do not consider that it is helpful to reason in this case by reference to other, differently drafted agreements reached in entirely different factual contexts.
[75] Webb1 ¶3.1.28.
[76] {Day2/36/21-37/12}.
[77] Webb1 ¶3.1.32
[78] I am not dissuaded from this construction by reason of the views of the respective experts. Indeed, I note that, consistently with this construction, the Çöpler Agreement which was before the court, tax was expressly included in that category: “Operating Costs means all costs and expenses incurred by the Borrower in operating, maintaining, protecting and implementing the Project and the Project Assets including mining, milling … or marketing activities in relation to the Project, including: … Taxes and Royalties…”. This suggests that it is not necessarily inapposite to refer to tax as an operating cost or expense.
[79] Webb 1, ¶4.1.4
[80] The parties called this Issue 4.
[81] Astor SoC ¶45.3 {A/18/174}; Astor Skeleton Argument ¶89-92.
[82] Atalaya SoC ¶7(3) {A/17/128}; Atalaya Reply ¶14.2 {A/19/190}; Atalaya Skeleton Argument ¶49-55.
[83] As described above, (i) by November 2015 the mine was producing 529 TPH of ore; (ii) by December 2015 the mine was producing 532 TPH and (iii) by January 2016 the mine was producing 549 TPH.
[84] The parties have proceeded on the basis that this amounts to commercial production despite being slightly higher than 4.8Mtpa and I have done the same.
[85] as Astor seek to do
[86] {Day2/114/10-116/16}.
[87] {Day 4/62/3-16}
[91] Webb 1, §3.1.20
[92] Clause 3.1 and 3.2. I note that the actual wording of clause 3.2 is less than clear: “Except as otherwise amended by the foregoing, the provisions of this Master Agreement shall be and continue in full force and effect and are hereby confirmed”.
[93] The parties refer to this aspect of the dispute as Issue 3.
[95] It is fair to say that the Deputy Judge only had an expert report of Mr. Dearman before him.
[97] once the mine has re-started commercial production
[98] Joint Statement, ¶ 6.2(1); Day 2, p. 42-44 (Mr. Webb) and Day 3, p. 40/11 (Mr. Dearman).
[99] In his Schedules 2 and 3 to his expert report (which produce calculations of excess cash) Mr. Dearman does not distinguish between in-production and expansion (i.e. beyond 5Mtpa) deferred mining costs in the way that Mr. Webb does (see ¶6.2 (1) of the Joint Statement). It follows that Mr. Dearman’s calculations in this respect do not assist.