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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Balmenach-Glenlivet Distillery Co., Ltd, Petitioners [1916] ScotLR 456_1 (17 March 1916)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1916/53SLR0456_1.html
Cite as: [1916] SLR 456_1, [1916] ScotLR 456_1

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 456

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

(Single Bills.)

Friday, March 17. 1916.

53 SLR 456_1

Balmenach-Glenlivet Distillery Company, Limited, Petitioners.

Subject_1Company
Subject_2Preference Shares
Subject_3Scheme of Arrangement
Subject_4Cancellation of Arrears of Dividends on Cumulative Preference Shares — Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908 (8 Edw. VII, cap. 69), sec. 120.
Facts:

On the petition of a company, whose memorandum of association and articles of association gave it no power to cancel arrears of dividends on cumulative preference shares, a scheme of arrangement whereby the arrears of dividend were cancelled was sanctioned by the Court under section 120 of the Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908.

In re Schweppes, Limited, [1914] 1 Ch 322, followed.

Headnote:

The Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908 (8 Edw. VII, cap. 69, sec. 120, enacts—“ Power to Compromise with Creditors and Members.—(1) Where a compromise or arrangement is proposed between a company and its creditors or any class of them, or between the

Page: 457

company and its members or any class of them, the Court may, on the application in a summary way of the company or of any creditor or member of the company, or, in the case of a company being wound up, of the liquidator, order a meeting of the creditors or class of creditors, or of the members of the company, or class of members, as the case may be, to be summoned in such manner as the Court directs. (2) If a majority in number representing three—fourths in value of the creditors or class of creditors, or members or class of members, as the case may be, present either in person or by proxy at the meeting, agree to any compromise or arrangement, the compromise or arrangement shall, if sanctioned by the Court, be binding on all the creditors or the class of creditors, or on the members or class of members, as the case may be, and also on the company or, in the case of a company in the course of being wound up, on the liquidator and contributories of the company. …”

The Balmenach-Glenlivet Distillery, Limited, Balmenach, Cromdale, Strathspey, petitioners, presented a petition to the Court craving the Court to order meetings to be summoned ( a) of the holders of the preference shares and ( b) of the holders of the ordinary shares of the company for the purpose of taking into consideration, and if so resolved, of approving of a scheme of arrangement, which, inter alia, proposed to cancel arrears of dividends on the preference shares, and on resuming consideration of the petition with the reports of the chairmen of the said meetings to sanction the said scheme of arrangement.

On 18th February 1916 the Court remitted to W. M. Whitelaw, Esq., S.S.C., to inquire into and report upon the facts and circumstances set forth in the petition, the scheme of arrangement proposed by the petitioners, and as to the regularity of the present proceedings.

Mr Whitelaw reported, inter alia—“… While it appears to the reporter that the compromise or arrangement embodied in the scheme has been duly proposed between the company and its two classes of shareholders as required by the Companies Act of 1908, and that the members present at the meetings of 2nd February 1916 have agreed to the proposed scheme, there is one point to which the reporter thinks that it is necessary that your Lordships' attention should be directed.

The scheme of arrangement proposes the cancellation of arrears of dividend on the preference shares. The rights of preference shareholders are contained in article 5 of the memorandum, which provides that ‘the capital of the company is £120,000 (reduced to £39,000) sterling, divided into 6000 preference shares of £10 (reduced to £5, 10s.) each which shall be entitled to receive out of profits a cumulative preferential dividend of five per centum per annum (in the manner after stated) and 6000 ordinary shares of £10 (reduced to £1) each, held as fully paid up, with power to increase and reduce the capital and (without prejudice to existing rights) to divide the shares for the time being into several classes, and to attach thereto respectively such preferential, deferred, or special rights, privileges, or conditions with regard to repayment of capital or payment of dividends, or both, or voting, as may be determined by or be in accordance with the regulations of the company; provided always that no shares having rights, privileges, or conditions of any kind, preferential to or pari passu with those of the said preference shares, shall be created or issued unless said creation and issue shall have been previously agreed to by an extraordinary resolution of the holders of said preference shares, passed in terms of the articles of association. The preference shares shall rank on the net profits of the company (including any balance at the credit of profit and loss account brought forward from previous years, and any sum at the credit of reserve applicable for equalisation of dividend) for a dividend of five per centum per annum, in preference to any dividend on the ordinary shares; and in the event of the net profits in any year not being sufficient to pay such dividend in full for that period, the shortcoming shall be made good out of the net profits of the subsequent year or years, such arrears of dividend being also paid in preference to any dividend on the ordinary shares. In the event of a winding-up of the company being followed by a distribution of its surplus assets among its members, such distribution shall be regulated as follows, viz.— First, in repaying to the holders of the preference shares mentioned in this memorandum pari passu and to the holders of any other issue of stock or shares having priority to the ordinary shares, pari passu according to their respective priorities and privileges, the amount paid up thereon, and any arrears of dividend thereon; thereafter in repaying to the holders of the ordinary shares pari passu the amount paid thereon; and the residue (if any) shall be paid to the holders of ordinary shares.’

The only right conferred by article 5 of the memorandum whereby any of the rights of the preference shareholders to a cumulative preferential dividend of 5 per cent. can in any way be altered is (without prejudice to existing rights) the division of the shares into several classes, and the attaching to such classes of divided shares the rights, preferential, deferred, or otherwise enumerated in that article.

There is no power in the articles of association to modify the rights of preference shareholders to the cumulative preferential dividend of 5 per cent.

In the case of Ashbury v. Watson (1885, 30 Ch. Div. 376) it was decided that if conditions with reference to dividends are inserted in a memorandum they were, by virtue of section 12 of the Joint Stock Companies Act 1862, unalterable. Section 7 of the Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908 is in the same terms as section 12 of the 1862 Act.

In the case of Welsbach Incandescent Gas Light Company, Limited, [1904] 1 Ch. Div. 87, the rights conferred by the memorandum on preference shareholders were

Page: 458

modified, but that was done in respect of the power to do so contained in the memorandum itself and in the articles.

Again, in the case of the Oban and Ault—more Glenlivet Distilleries, Limited ( 1902–3, 5 F. 1140, 40 S.L.R. 817) arrears of dividends due to preference shareholders were cancelled, but no doubt was cast by the decision on the case Ashbury v. Watson, the Court granting the power on the special ground that there was power in the articles of association to modify the memorandum.

The present company, by resolution passed 16th June 1905 and confirmed 13th July 1905, cancelled the dividend on the preference shares for the year to 31st August 1905, and the resolution to do so was embodied in the petition (already referred to) presented to their Lordships of the First Division on 28th October 1905 (v. report 1906, 8 F. 1135, 43 S.L.R. 820).

The prayer of that petition only asked for confirmation of the reduction of capital, and the interlocutor pronounced in the petition was confined, as your Lordships have seen, to confirming the reduction.

The Lord President in his opinion nowhere refers in terms at least to the cancellation of the dividend, although Mr Paul in his report raised the question of whether the cancellation was not ultra vires. The Lord President refers to the scheme then before the Court as just and equitable, but it is by no means clear that the scheme which his Lordship had in view was not the scheme only in so far as it involved reduction of capital, seeing that in an earlier part of his opinion he does refer to the scheme as one for reduction of capital, and that when referring to the case of Ashbury v. Watson he distinguished it on the ground that the scheme then under consideration was one involving reduction of capital.

Subsequent to the above decisions two cases have been decided in England where the rights of preference shareholders in regard to dividends were modified without power to that effect having been contained in the memorandum or articles of association.

In the case of in re Palace Hotel, Limited ( [1912] 2 Ch. Div. 438) the Court confirmed a scheme of arrangement involving the cancellation of arrears of dividend on preference shares under section 120 of the Companies Act of 1908, and that decision was approved of in re Schweppes Limited ( [1914] 1 Ch. Div. 322).

Stated shortly, it is proposed by the scheme of arrangement before your Lordships ( a) to give increased control to the preference shareholders as a class in the administration and management of the company by giving them eleven-thirteenths instead of one-half as at present of the total votes of the whole members of the company, and by providing that two out of the proposed three directors shall be qualified by holding preference shares; ( b) to cancel arrears of dividends on the preference shares for the period to 31st August 1913, and to build up and maintain a reserve fund of £6500 for the benefit of the preference shareholders out of a third-part of any surplus profits which would be otherwise available to the ordinary shareholders; ( c) to increase the rate of future dividends on the preference shares from 5 to 6 per cent., the increase being about equal to the income to be expected from the proposed investment of the £6500 reserve fund as and when same may be built up; and ( d) to make the necessary alterations corresponding to these changes in the regulations of the company for the distribution of the surplus assets on a dissolution.

The reporter does not consider it to be his duty to criticise the merits of the scheme seeing that it has been unanimously approved of, and that if the cancellation of arrears of dividends on the preference shares is not ultra vires, the scheme generally appears to the reporter to be intra vires of the company and in its interest and for its benefit.

In the event of your Lordships being of opinion that it is intra vires of the company to cancel arrears of dividends on the preference shares, the reporter is of opinion on the whole matter that your Lordships, if satisfied as to its expediency, may be pleased to pronounce an order sanctioning the scheme of arrangement.”

When the case appeared in the Single Bills counsel for the petitioners moved the Court to grant the prayer of the petition, and argued—The proposal in the scheme of division for the cancellation of arrears of dividend on the preference shares was within the powers conferred by section 120 of the Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908 (8 Edw. VII, cap. 69). Section 120, not section 45, applied to the circumstances of the case— in re Schweppes Limited, [1914] 1 Ch 322, approving in re Palace Hotel, Limited, [1912] 2 Ch 438.

Judgment:

The Court (consisting of the Lord Justice-Clerk, Lords Dundas, Salvesen, and Guthrie) approved of the report and sanctioned the scheme of arrangement.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Petitioners— Chree, K.C.— A. M. Mackay. Agents— Baillie & Gifford, W.S.

1916


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