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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 >> Indah Kiat International Finance Company B.V., Re The Companies Act 2006 [2016] EWHC 246 (Ch) (12 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/246.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 246 (Ch), [2016] BCC 418 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF INDAH KIAT INTERNATIONAL FINANCE COMPANY B.V. | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006 |
____________________
for Indah Kiat International Finance Company B.V.
Felicity Toube QC and Ryan Perkins (instructed by Dechert LLP)
for APP Investment Opportunity LLC
Hearing dates: 21 and 22 January 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN:
Background
"The objectives of the Scheme are to provide finality and certainty as regards the past problems concerning the Notes and the Debt; to provide for a better overall outcome for the general body of the Scheme Creditors than the likely alternatives; to create an environment where no Scheme Creditor is through its own actions able to "steal a march" on other Scheme Creditors and engineer a situation where their own interests are benefited at the expense of those of others; and to allow the Parent (and the Group) to continue to carry on business as a going concern, which the Scheme Company and the Parent believe is the best way to maximise potential returns to the Scheme Creditors. "
The Scheme in outline
The COMI notice and Practice Statement letter
The Application and evidence in support
" those who cast votes at the Scheme Meeting should be those with the underlying economic and beneficial interest in the Notes, i.e. the true commercial owners of the Notes."
" my knowledge of the facts and matters I set out in this witness statement is derived primarily from discussions with my colleagues and professional advisers for the Scheme Company and from relevant documents of or relating to the Scheme Company and its affairs. Where facts and matters I set out are not within my own knowledge, they are true to the best of my information and belief."
Adjournment
Other reasons for an adjournment
The role of the court at the convening hearing
Classes
"The [Scheme Company] and the Parent have, in consultation with, and based on discussions and negotiations with our client, considered various options for implementation of the restructuring and have concluded that the Restructuring promoted by the [Scheme Company] would be most effectively implemented for the benefit of all stakeholders via a scheme of arrangement in England. The key for this conclusion is that the laws of the other possible jurisdictions do not provide a mechanism whereby the Parent's indebtedness in respect of the Notes could be effectively restructured and for dissenting minority creditors to be bound by the terms of the Restructuring. If the Restructuring was implemented through any other means it is possible that any dissenting minority creditors could attempt to steal a march of [sic] other holders of the Notes .
The Supporting Creditor notes that, if the Scheme is not implemented, the Parent's going-concern business is likely to be significantly interrupted which would adversely impact all stakeholders of the Parent, including our client as a substantial holder of the Notes."
"The Supporting Creditor holds around 28.6% by value of the Notes. The Scheme terms and proposals have been proposed after consultation with the Supporting Creditor in an endeavour to obtain Noteholder input on the terms of the compromise proposal. The Supporting Creditor is not an affiliate of the Group or connected with the Group and is an independent arms-length creditor under the Notes. No consent fee is being paid to the Supporting Creditor, although its legal fees are being paid by the Parent "
"None of the Notes are held or financed by the Scheme Company, the Parent or their affiliates or beneficial owners."
"The APP Controlling Shareholders are not affiliated to or otherwise connected with any of the creditors, including the Supporting Noteholders, who voted in favour of the Scheme, other than BII, whose connection to the APP Controlling Shareholders is disclosed in the Scheme Document. The APP Controlling Shareholders have not directly and/or indirectly, purchased any of the Existing Notes."
" my fundamental factual finding is that I am satisfied, to the standard proof that the law requires for allegations of fraud and dishonesty, that Mr. Widjaja perjured himself by deliberately and falsely stating that that the APP Controlling Shareholders are not affiliated to or otherwise connected with any of the creditors "
" should not in [any] way be seen as seeking to diminish the gravity, in public justice terms, of the serious fraud which has been perpetrated on this Court. This Court on a regular basis implements schemes of arrangement based on a company's representations that the voting process has been fair and that material conflicts of interest have been disclosed. Where the directing minds of exempted companies and the voting creditors and/or shareholders are located in distant parts, far beyond the jurisdiction of this Court, the risk of fraud is no doubt greater than when all relevant parties are within the convenient reach of this Court. There is an obvious public interest in protecting the integrity of Bermuda as a financial centre, by deterring persons in distant parts from harming other persons in distant parts, and utilising this Court as an unwitting instrument of fraud."
"Persons whose rights are so dissimilar that they cannot sensibly consult together with a view to their common interest must be given separate meetings. Persons whose rights are sufficiently similar that they can consult together with a view to their common interest should be summoned to a single meeting".
" in determining whether the constituent creditors' rights in relation to the company are so dissimilar as to make it impossible for them to consult together with a view to their common interest the court must focus, and focus exclusively, on rights as distinct from interests. The essential requirement is that the class should be comprised only of persons whose rights in terms of their existing and the rights offered in the replacement, in each case against the company, are sufficiently similar to enable them to properly consult and identify their true interests together."
" In Re Hellenic & General Trust Ltd a Scheme of Arrangement was used as a means of effecting a take-over. The Scheme provided that all the shares in the company should be cancelled and that fully paid shares should be issued to H, which would pay 48 pence per share to the former shareholders for the loss of their shares. M, a wholly owned subsidiary of H, already owned more than 50% of the shares. A single meeting of members was called, at which the Scheme was approved by the requisite majority with the help of M's votes. Templeman J refused to sanction the Scheme, holding that M's interests as a wholly owned subsidiary of the purchaser were different from those of the other shareholders who were vendors. He did not merely exercise his discretion to withhold the Court's sanction; he held that the Court had no jurisdiction to sanction the Scheme because a separate meeting of the minority shareholders should have been summoned.
The key to the decision is that M was effectively identified with H. It would plainly have been inappropriate to include M in the same class as the other shareholders if it had been buying their shares; it should not make a difference that the purchaser was its parent company.
But this was not because M and the other shareholders had conflicting interests, nor because they had different rights to start with. M's legal rights at the outset were the same as those of the other shareholders. What put M into a different category from the other shareholders was the different treatment it was to receive under the Scheme. The other shareholders were being bought out. In commercial terms M was transferring its shares to its own parent company and obtaining for its parent company the right to acquire the remainder of the shares from the other shareholders. The rights proposed to be conferred by the Scheme on M and the other shareholders were commercially so dissimilar as to make it impossible for M and the other shareholders to consult together with a view to their common interest, for they had none."
The deficiencies in the Explanatory Statement and other Scheme documentation
"I would, however, indicate for the future that companies that seek the consent of their creditors and the sanction of the court to a scheme of arrangement that is put forward as a more advantageous outcome for creditors than formal insolvency proceedings may be well advised to ensure that greater detail is provided, both in the explanatory statement and in the evidence before the court, as to the possible alternatives to the scheme and the basis for the predicted outcomes. The provision of such information is likely to be essential if there is a challenge to the scheme."
"Having considered the potential alternative strategies, the Scheme Company, the Board and the board of directors of the Parent have concluded that commencing Insolvency Proceedings in respect of the Scheme Company and/or the Parent would not be in the best interests of the Scheme Company, the Scheme Creditors, the Parent, the APP Group as whole, or any creditors and shareholders of the Parent. Rather, the Scheme Company, the Board and the board of directors of the Parent believe the implementation of the Scheme offers the best prospects for the Scheme Company and the Parent and their group companies in the light of prevailing circumstances. Ultimately, the Scheme Company, the Board and the board of directors of the Parent believe that the Scheme offers holders of the Notes the best prospects of allowing the Scheme Company, the Parent and the APP Group to continue to carry on its business as a going concern and of Scheme Creditors obtaining any enhanced recovery of the debt outstanding under the Notes."
"In our view, it is in the interests of the holders of the existing Notes, [the Parent], the APP Group and their respective stakeholders to proceed with the restructuring based on the proposed restructuring terms contained in the term sheet."
Other matters
Order