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 Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Citibank NA & Anor v QVT Financial LP [2007] EWCA Civ 11 (22 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/11.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 11 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
MANN J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
(1) CITIBANK NA (2) MBIA ASSURANCE SA |
First Respondent Second Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
QVT FINANCIAL LP |
Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
(1) Mr Richard Adkins QC (instructed by Denton Wilde Sapte LLP) for the First Respondent
(2) Mr Mark Barnes QC and Mr Andrew Lenon QC (instructed by Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP) for the Second Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
Introduction
Background to this appeal
The critical provisions of the trust deed and deed of charge
" 4.1 As continuing security for the payment and discharge of the Secured Obligations but always subject to clause 9, the Issuer with full title guarantee, in favour of the Trustee for the Trustee itself and on trust for the Issuer Secured Creditors, hereby assigns by way of security all of its right, title, interest and benefit present and future under or in respect of:
4.1.1 The Participation Documents… (including… any shares, bonds or other debt obligations of securities issued in exchange, conversion or substitution therefore…) all proceeds thereof…
including… all rights to vote and exercise any other decision -- making rights pursuant to the Participation Documents… "
"8. PERFECTION OF THE TRUSTEE'S SECURITY
8.1 The Issuer will from time to time at the request of the Trustee (at the direction of MBIA, if it is the Note Controlling Party) execute and deliver all such supplements and amendments hereto and all such legal assignments, transfers, mortgages, legal or other charges or securities or do all such other acts or things or execute any other documents as may in the opinion of the Trustee or MBIA be necessary or advisable to:
8.1.1 effectively provide security or to perfect any security provided to the Trustee, on behalf of itself and on behalf of the Issuer Secured Creditors, over the Issuer's estate or interest in any property or assets of whatsoever nature or tenure and wheresoever situate for the payment or discharge of the Secured Obligations;
8.1.2 take all such actions as are necessary to perfect or protect the validity of any security made or to be made by or pursuant to this Deed;
8.1.3 enforce any rights under any of the Transaction Documents or Participation Documents to which the Issuer is a party or under which the Issuer has any rights …"
"The Issuer… will not at any time… without the prior written consent of the trustee and MBIA (for so long as it is the Note Controlling Party):
….
19.4.2 sell, convey, transfer, lease or lend otherwise dispose of (or attempt to sell, convey, transfer or lease, lend otherwise dispose of), whether by means of one or a number of transactions related or not and whether at one time or over a period of time, the whole or any part of the Issuer's undertaking, property or assets, or enter into any agreement (otherwise than an agreement conditional upon the consent or agreement of the Trustee) for any such sale, conveyance, transfer, lease, loan or other disposal."
"So long as any of the Notes … remain outstanding, the Issuer shall not, without the prior written consent of the Trustee and MBIA …(for so long as it is the Note Controlling Party)…
4.1.1 create or permit to subsist any security interest whatsoever over any of its assets or sell, lend, part with or otherwise dispose of all or any part of its assets, including any uncalled capital or its undertaking present or future."
"12.2 Proceedings relating to the Financing Agreements
Subject to Clause 14.1.7, all the Issuer's rights in respect of the Financing Agreements (including, without limitation, its rights to vote as a Lender (as defined in the Financing Agreements)) which have been assigned to the Trustee pursuant to the Deed of Charge shall, unless and until the Secured Obligations have been discharged in full, be exercised by the Trustee in accordance with Part 1, Schedule 4."
"Provisions for Meetings of Noteholders and Provisions relating to the Financing Agreements
Part 1
Provisions for votes in relation to the Financing Agreements
If MBIA is the Note Controlling Party
So long as MBIA is the Note Controlling Party, all the Issuer's rights in respect of the Financing Agreements (including, without limitation, its right to vote as a Lender (as defined in the Financing Agreements)) which have been assigned to the Trustee pursuant to the Deed of Charge shall be exercised by the Trustee acting solely and in all circumstances, in accordance with the prior written instructions of MBIA (subject as aforesaid)."
" The Trustee shall, only if directed by MBIA (while MBIA is the Note Controlling Party) and otherwise may…authorise or waive, on such terms and conditions (if any) as shall seem expedient to it or MBIA (whilst the Note Controlling Party), any proposed breach or breach of any of the covenants or provisions contained in these presents, the Notes or any of the other Transaction Documents…; any such authorisation, waiver … shall be binding on the Noteholders… provided that (i) the Trustee shall not exercise any powers conferred upon it by this clause 8.1… so as to authorise or waive any such proposed breach or breach relating to any of the matters the subject of the Basic Terms Modifications…"
"any proposal
(a) to change any date fixed for payment of principal or interest in respect of the Notes, to reduce the amount of principal or interest payable on any date in respect of the Notes or to alter the method of calculating the amount of any payment in respect of the Notes on redemption or maturity or the date of such payment…
(b) to effect the exchange, conversion or substitution of the Notes for, or the conversion of the Notes into, shares, bonds or other obligations or securities of the Issuer, MBIA or any other person or body corporate formed or to be formed…"
"Any waiver and any consent by the Trustee and MBIA under this Deed must be in writing and may be given subject to any conditions thought fit by the Trustee (acting on the instructions of MBIA for as long as it is the Note Controlling Party)."
The material provisions of the SP (Safeguard Plan)
"2.2.3.2 Tier 3 Debt
2.2.3.2.1 The following provisions relate to the Tier 3 Debt:
(a) the holders of the Tier 3 Debt shall assign the debt corresponding to the Tier 3 Debt to GET SA or to a subsidiary designated by GET SA, in exchange of [sic] the consideration described in paragraph 2.2.3.2.1(b);
(b) each of the assignors of the Tier 3 Debt shall be offered a pro rata share:
(i) of 75.69% of the nominal amount of the NRS (being an aggregate amount of £965 million divided into a nominal amount of £430,523,751 (being 631,298,502 euros) and of 783,729,248 euros (being £534,476,249)) (the Tier 3 Consideration) allocated as follows:….
(ii) a cash payment in the amount of £66,920,790 (being 98,129,300 euros) and of 121,823,199 euros (being £83,079,210).
……
(c) the terms of the Tier 3 Debt will be amended so that it is payable upon first demand by the creditor;
……
2.2.3.2.2 During a period of 15 calendar days from the date of the court decision approving the Safeguard Plan, each holder of the Tier 3 Debt other than the Tier 3 Cash Option Arrangers (as defined in Annex 4 – paragraph 1 to this Proposal) will have an option to receive cash rather than all or part of the NRS constituting the Tier 3 Consideration referred to in (i) of paragraph 2.2.3.2.1(b) above (the Tier 3 Cash Option). Once exercised, this election shall be irrevocable. For the avoidance of doubt, if a holder of Tier 3 Debt does not notify its election to receive cash consideration within the 15 calendar day period referred to above, it will be deemed to have elected to receive NRS.
Certain holders of the Tier 3 Debt have indicated to Eurotunnel their intention to exercise the Tier 3 Cash Option for an overall principal amount of Tier 3 Debt of approximately 570 million pounds sterling (being approximately 835.8 million euros) if this Proposal is approved.
….
2.2.8 The approval of this Proposal by the creditors of the Companies and the decision of the Commercial Court of Paris to approve the Safeguard Plan will prevent any creditor of any of the Companies from relying on any terms in any contracts binding the Companies permitting it to require the early repayment of any debt payable, each creditor of the Eurotunnel group being obliged to abide by the provisions of the Safeguard Plan relating to the treatment of the Debt.
….
In addition, the provisions of the Safeguard Plan will apply to and will be enforceable against all creditors of the Eurotunnel group including those who have not complied with the formalities to declare their debt within the relevant time limits..."
The judge's judgment
"40. Since it is clear that the security rights give such extensive rights to Citibank, and that those rights cover the right to exercise the Tier 3 Option if it can exercise those rights itself, then in my view it follows that Citibank has the right to direct FLF to exercise it if necessary. That must at the very least be implicit in the security provisions. There is no commercial reason to distinguish between cases in which Citibank can technically vote or elect itself from those where, for technical reasons, it cannot do so but FLF could. Through that route, therefore, Citibank has the power to direct FLF as to how they should be exercised. The right to exercise the Tier 3 Option would fall within that."
"43. Mr Popplewell's main point on this related to timing and the purpose of the exercise. He sought to say that exercising the option was an act of disposal which was not the sort of thing that a mortgagee was entitled to do under a mortgage before the time for enforcement has arisen. His case depends on an analysis of mortgages and the nature of a mortgagee's rights; I have outlined his arguments above. I find that this argument fails. Assuming for present purposes that the exercise of the option could be characterised as a disposal, it does not follow that the mortgagee cannot exercise it. Just what a mortgagee is entitled to do before a default will depend on the terms of the mortgage, not on the label that one chooses to apply to the act. There are few hard and fast rules. Mr Popplewell submitted that it is trite law that a mortgagee has no power to dispose of mortgaged property while the mortgagor is performing its obligation. That does not seem to me to be right - there are many cases in which there is technically a power to dispose of mortgaged property from the outset because the statutory power is made exercisable from the date of the mortgage. But in any event that does not help in the present case. The real question is whether, on the true construction of the deed of charge, Citibank can exercise this right. An exercise by a mortgagee of his rights at any time might be regarded as "enforcing" his mortgage, but the real question is whether the act can be done at that time in question. Acts to preserve the security can be done without the further "enforcement" of the obligation to repay. There is no express bar in the deed of charge itself which would prevent the exercise of the Tier 3 Option, and no reason for implying one either. There are all sorts of good reasons why it might be desirable to do it pre-enforcement (in the sense of enforcing payment of the bonds), not the least of which is the fact that it only lasts 15 days. Whether or not it can be done depends on the terms of the mortgage, not on some entrenched principle of the law of mortgages. This mortgage, in my view, entitles Citibank to give directions as to FLF to execute the option, for the reasons given above. Since there is no express or implied limitation confining such a direction to circumstances of enforcement (in the sense of enforcing the primary payment obligations) or even default, the right can be exercised by Citibank if and when the Tier 3 Option comes into existence.
44. Mr Popplewell also submitted that to exercise the option would destroy the commercial nature of the bond. It turned it from a securitisation of Channel Tunnel investments into a cash investment. The words of the document are plain. I have seen nothing in the documentation which requires Citibank and FLF in all circumstances to maintain something which amounts to an investment in the Eurotunnel financing. On the other hand there is wording which, in my view, plainly covers the right to exercise, or direct the exercise of, the option. This argument therefore also fails."
"48. It is not clear to me whether Mr Popplewell utilises the "irreducible core" principle as a principle of construction (so as to cut down what the words might otherwise mean) or as a principle of validity. Millett LJ was probably using it in the latter way, though it is no doubt capable of operating in the former. But however it is sought to be deployed, the principle does not assist in the present case. There is no doubt that while MBIA is the Note Controlling Party it is given a very large degree of control over the subject matter of the trust. It can give directions as to the taking or non-taking of enforcement action; it can direct the substitution of another debtor on the Notes; it can direct certain modifications of the Notes; and it can do a lot of other things, some of which one would expect that a trustee might decide to do, and others which would be more in the realm of matters for the beneficiaries to decide. However, even taken together, they do not contravene Millett LJ's principle. The trust regime as a regime remains intact. The trust property is still held on identifiable trusts; Citibank still has functions as trustee; if MBIA does not give directions when entitled to, or when MBIA ceases to be the Note Controlling Party, Citibank will have even more functions. What has happened is that various powers have been surrendered to MBIA for the time being, but that was done as a matter of commerce. The position would look less unusual if the directions were to come from the G Noteholders (who are likely to have similar interests to MBIA), but would still be in substance the same. The Noteholders all take their commercial interests on terms that, and knowing that, MBIA wields the power that it wields. Whether or not this is good business, it is certainly not inimical to a trust structure. It is what the Noteholders have agreed should be the case. Clause 10.4 of the trust deed and Condition 15 of the Notes make the position clear. I do not think that there is anything in this point of Mr Popplewell."
"52. I do not consider that it would be such a disposal. The option does not come into existence until the Safeguard Plan comes into effect. At that point the Eurotunnel debt formerly vested in FLF goes. The plan is equivocal as to whether it is assigned to GET SA or whether it is extinguished by a deemed repayment, but that probably does not matter. In its place is a new bundle of rights – rights to cash and to the hybrid notes, with a cash option for the latter. If that state of affairs had arisen consensually there would almost certainly have been a disposal at that point (but no-one has suggested that there was one). What is left is the consideration. The Option gives the right to take the consideration in an alternative form. At the point of election the property rights in respect of the Plan rights are a bundle of rights to take certain property. They should in my view be viewed as a bundle. There is no proposal that FLF should dispose of those rights in the sense of parting with them in favour of another. The proposal is that FLF should exercise one of the rights in a certain way so as to receive its consideration in form B (cash) when otherwise it would have received it in form A (notes). While the right to notes disappears on the election to receive cash, there is not, in my view, a disposal for the purposes of clause 19.4. The notes will never have been received, so it cannot be they that have been disposed of. It seems to me to be artificial or unduly formalistic to regard that as a disposal of the right to the notes. It is more realistic to regard what has happened as an exercise of rights, and no more. No property passes from FLF; nothing is destroyed; there is no transferor or transferee. All those are possible badges of a disposal. None occurs. There is therefore no disposal for the purposes of clause 19.4.
53. If it be thought that that is a strange conclusion because it might leave FLF with an uncontrolled right to make an election in which Citibank could be interested, I would add (although the point was not argued before me) that that is not the inevitable consequence of my decision. I have identified above Citibank's formal interest in the exercise of the option and its rights in respect of it. Its proprietary rights in the benefits of the Safeguard Plan carry with them the right to vote or direct the voting, and it must follow that it could restrain FLF from making an election that it did not wish to have made. That would be a necessary adjunct to its own rights as mortgagee (by assignment) of the benefits of the plan. This produces a commercially sensible regime in relation to the exercise of such rights in a case like this."
The issues on this appeal
Issue 1: Does the trustee have power to cause the exercise by FLF of the tier 3 cash option?
" Right to preserve the mortgaged property
16.4 In order to preserve the sufficiency of his security, the mortgagee is entitled, from the time of the mortgage, to have the mortgaged property preserved from deterioration or diminution in value, either at the hands of the mortgagor, or of any other person whose interest is inferior to that of the mortgagee. That applies whether he is in or out of possession. When in possession, the mortgagor may also, in some circumstances, be liable as tenant of the mortgagee. However, the mortgagee is under no duty to preserve his security unless and until he takes possession of it. "
"The option was part of the security and it was clearly contemplated by the parties that the mortgagee might exercise the option during the currency of the mortgage and so improve the security…"
"Any such result is one which necessarily flows from a mortgage of such a peculiar piece of property as an option, and, if a mortgagor mortgages an option to a mortgagee and the option is only exercisable on payment of a sum of money, the mortgagor enters into the transaction on the footing that, if the mortgagee chooses to do so, he is entitled to improve or perfect his security by making that expenditure, and he knows from the beginning that, if the mortgagee does so, he, the mortgagor, will only be entitled to redeem if he reimburses the mortgagee what he has spent."
"The answer clearly is that, if a mortgagor gives to a mortgagee a security of that character, he must abide by the consequences. It may be unfortunate for him to find that the mortgagee has exercised the option at what may turn out to be an extravagant price and that he can only get back his mortgaged property, on payment of the price in addition to the mortgage money, but that is a necessary result of the security which he has chosen to give."
"In the case of a commercial contract, the factual matrix includes the commercial context in which the contract was made. Moreover, as Lord Steyn said in Mannai Investment Co Ltd v Eagle Star Life Assurance Co Ltd [1997] AC 749 at 771: "in determining the meaning of the language of a commercial contract, and unilateral contractual notices, the law therefore generally favours a commercially sensible approach. The reason for this is that a commercial construction is more likely to give effect to the intention of the parties." The language must of course be capable of bearing that meaning."
Issue 2: if the trustee has the power to cause the exercise of the tier 3 cash option, is it obliged to exercise that power at the direction of MBIA or must it exercise its own independent judgment in the performance of its duties as a trustee?
"I accept the submission made on behalf of Paula that there is an irreducible core of obligations owed by the trustees to the beneficiaries and enforceable by them which is fundamental to the concept of a trust. If the beneficiaries have no rights enforceable against the trustees there are no trusts. But I do not accept the further submission that these core obligations include the duties of skill and care, prudence and diligence. The duty of the trustees to perform the trusts honestly and in good faith for the benefit of the beneficiaries is the minimum necessary to give substance to the trusts, but in my opinion it is sufficient."
"While the right to notes disappears on the election to receive cash, there is not, in my view, a disposal for the purposes of clause 19.4. The notes will never have been received, so it cannot be they that have been disposed of. It seems to me to be artificial or unduly formalistic to regard that as a disposal of the right to the notes. It is more realistic to regard what has happened as an exercise of rights, and no more. No property passes from FLF; nothing is destroyed; there is no transferor or transferee. All those are possible badges of a disposal. None occurs. There is therefore no disposal for the purposes of clause 19.4."
Disposition
Lord Justice Dyson:
Issue 1: does Citibank ("Citi") have the power to instruct FLF to exercise the Tier 3 cash option under the Safeguard Plan?
Issue 2: is Citi obliged, at the direction of MBIA, to instruct FLF to exercise the cash option or must it exercise its own independent judgment in deciding whether to give such an instruction?
The Master of the Rolls: