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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 >> Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Ltd v Fougera Sweden Holding 2 AB [2017] EWHC 1995 (Ch) (10 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/1995.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1995 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
TAKEDA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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FOUGERA SWEDEN HOLDING 2 AB |
Defendant |
____________________
Daniel Toledano QC and Conall Patton (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Derringer LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 18-21 and 24 July 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Topic | Paras |
Introduction | 1-6 |
The witnesses | 7-13 |
Factual witnesses | 7-10 |
Expert witnesses | 11-13 |
Factual background | 14-59 |
The loan arrangements | 14-21 |
The Danish WHT regime | 22-29 |
The First Assessment | 30-34 |
The "black box" information | 35-37 |
Nycomed's appeal | 38-39 |
Discussions between the parties concerning the WHT issue prior to the SPA | 40-46 |
Further progress of Nycomed's appeal | 47-50 |
The Second Assessment | 51 |
The Letter Agreement | 52 |
The transfer of the black box information | 53-54 |
The present dispute | 55-60 |
Issues as to the factual matrix | 61-117 |
Necessary? | 63-108 |
As at 19 May 2011 | 67-90 |
As at 28 January 2015 | 91-108 |
Control? | 109-117 |
As at 19 May 2011 | 111-114 |
As at 28 January 2015 | 115-117 |
The SPA | 118-125 |
Interpretation of the SPA | 126-146 |
Clause 16.1 | 127-136 |
An implied duty to cooperate | 137-141 |
An implied duty not to obstruct | 142-145 |
Non-derogation from grant | 146 |
The Letter Agreement | 147-149 |
Interpretation of the Letter Agreement | 150-151 |
Conclusion | 152 |
Introduction
i) Is Fougera (as contended by Takeda) obliged under the express and/or implied terms of the SPA and/or the Letter Agreement to provide Takeda with information within its control about its own investors and the entities lying behind them at Takeda's request as soon as is reasonably practicable?ii) Is Fougera (as contended by Takeda) obliged under the express and/or implied terms of the SPA and/or the Letter Agreement not wrongfully to interfere with, impede, hinder or obstruct Takeda's efforts to obtain or procure such information or obliged not wilfully to delay the provision of such information?
The witnesses
Factual witnesses
i) Scott Dessing is Takeda's Vice President, Head of Global Tax. He has been employed by the Takeda group since 1999. As Takeda's most senior tax specialist, Mr Dessing had overall responsibility for the tax aspects of Takeda's acquisition of Nycomed. He was involved in the meetings with representatives from Fougera in December 2010 and in March, April and May 2011 in respect of the SPA.ii) Anders Endicott Pedersen is a tax partner in a leading Danish law firm, Plesner. He has the conduct of Nycomed's defence of the DTA's claim, and he has also been involved in a number of similar cases proceeding through the Danish tribunals and courts.
iii) Andre Mueller is a US Certified Public Accountant and former German Certified Tax Advisor. He worked for KPMG from 2002 to 2010 and was a tax adviser to the Nycomed Group from 2006 to 2010. In that capacity, he was involved in implementing the new financing and holding structure for the Nycomed Group in December 2006 in connection with its acquisition of Altana. Mr Mueller was Nycomed Group's Director of Corporate Tax from 1 November 2010 until after the SPA. Mr Mueller was therefore on the seller's side of the discussions between the parties which led to the SPA.
iv) Kyle Woitel has been a partner in the merger and acquisitions transaction services practice of Deloitte Tax LLP ("Deloitte") since 2006. Mr Woitel was involved in discussions between the parties relating to the WHT liability in March, April and May 2011, and he oversaw the production of due diligence reports by Deloitte for Takeda. Mr Woitel was therefore on the buyer's side of the discussions between the parties which led to the SPA.
i) Kristoffer Melinder, a director of Fougera nominated by NC Advisory AB, an advisor to the Nordic Capital Funds, which hold the largest stake in the SICAR. Mr Melinder signed the SPA and the Letter Agreement on behalf of Fougera. Counsel for Takeda accepted that Mr Melinder was both a truthful and a reliable witness.ii) Maximilian Hofert, a partner and Managing Director of aPriori Capital Partners, the manager of the DLJ Funds, which hold the second largest stake in the SICAR ("aPriori"). Counsel for Takeda submitted that some of Mr Hofert's evidence was unreliable. I do not accept this, although it is fair to say that Mr Hofert was more guarded in his answers than Mr Melinder.
Expert witnesses
Factual background
The loan arrangements
i) Nycomed borrowed €501 million from Fougera at a rate of Euribor + 8%, accruing annually. This money was used to help Nycomed acquire Altana.ii) Fougera did not borrow money from Fougera 1. However, it seems to have been envisaged that, each year, Fougera would pay group contributions (effectively a dividend) to Fougera 1, in approximately the same amount as the interest due to Fougera from Nycomed that year.
iii) Fougera 1 borrowed €498.5 million from the SICAR at a rate of Euribor + 7.9%, accruing annually.
iv) The SICAR obtained the funds needed to make this loan by way of an equity subscription from its shareholders (and thence from the ultimate investors) rather than by way of a loan.
i) Because of the favourable Luxembourg regime for SICARs, the SICAR would not have to pay any tax on the interest it received from Fougera 1.ii) Although Fougera would be earning interest from Nycomed, it would be able, under Swedish group relief rules, to set this off against the interest payable by Fougera 1 to the SICAR.
iii) Nycomed would be able to obtain a tax deduction against its liability for Danish corporation tax for the interest it paid to Fougera, but (in KPMG Germany's view) Nycomed would have no liability for Danish WHT.
The Danish WHT regime
"Any payment or crediting to a company etc which is liable to tax according to section 2(1)(d) of the Danish Corporation Tax Act implies that the company at whose expense the payment or crediting is made is obliged to withhold [30%/25%/22%] of the total interest amount. The amount withheld is denoted 'withholding tax on interest'. The obligation to withhold tax on interest lies with companies, funds and organisations resident in this country …"
The percentage in square brackets varied over the relevant period.
"(1) The tax liability in relation to this Act further lies with companies and organisations, etc. as laid down in section 1(1) which are resident abroad, as far as they …
(d) [1] receive interest from sources in this country pertaining to debt which a company or an organisation, etc. subject to section 1 or section 2(a) owed to foreign separate legal entities as stated in section 3B (controlled debt) of the Danish Tax Control Act. [2] The tax liability does not include interest if taxation of interest is to be waived or reduced [2a] according to EC Directive 2003/49 on the joint scheme on taxation of interest and royalties paid between associated companies in different Member States, or [2b] according to a double tax agreement with the Faroe Islands, Greenland or the state in which the receiving company, etc. is resident. [3a] However, this only applies if the contributing company and the receiving company are associated as stated in this Directive in a consecutive period of at least 1 year within which period the time of payment should be. [3b] The tax liability no longer applies if a Danish parent company, etc. directly or indirectly has a controlling interest of the receiving company, etc., cf. section 31 C, in a consecutive period of at least 1 year within which the time of payment should be. [3c] Furthermore, the tax liability no longer applies if the receiving company, etc. is subject to controlling interest of a parent company, etc. which is resident in the Faroe Islands, Greenland or a state which has entered into a double tax agreement with Denmark, if the said company, etc. according to the rules of the Faroe Islands, Greenland or the said state is subject to CFC tax on the interest provided that the conditions under these rules are met. [3d] Moreover, the tax liability no longer applies if the receiving company, etc. can substantiate that the foreign corporation tax on the interest totals at least ¾ of the Danish corporation tax and that the company does not repay the interest to another foreign company, etc. which is subject to corporation tax on the interest amounting to less than ¾ of the Danish corporation tax …."
i) As already mentioned, it is common ground between Nycomed and the DTA that, in relation to the interest paid by Nycomed, Fougera was the receiving company and rightful owner, and thus the party liable in Danish law to be taxed.ii) Fougera is resident in Sweden, and there is a double tax treaty between Denmark and Sweden called the Nordic Tax Treaty. The Nordic Tax Treaty provides a waiver or exemption from tax where the "beneficial owner" of the interest is resident in Sweden. It is therefore necessary to consider whether Fougera was the beneficial owner of the interest payable by Nycomed.
iii) If Fougera was the beneficial owner of the interest, then the Nordic Tax Treaty would apply, and no charge to tax would arise (and no WHT would be payable by Nycomed).
iv) If Fougera was not the beneficial owner of the interest, then an exemption would arise only to the extent that the beneficial owners were also resident in Sweden or perhaps in other countries which have double tax treaties with Denmark (as to which, see below).
The First Assessment
"As the owners of Nycomed SCA SICAR are considered the beneficial owners of the interest income it may be considered to grant a proportionate reduction in the withholding tax on the interest if the owners are to be exempted from tax or are granted a tax relief subject to the double tax treaty or the Interest/Royalty Directive.
Provided that this can be documented, the Danish tax authority will of course grant such a reduction."
The "black box" information
Nycomed's appeal
i) The primary argument was that Fougera was the beneficial owner of the interest for the purposes of the Nordic Tax Treaty, alternatively the SICAR was the beneficial owner for the purposes of the Directive, and hence no WHT was payable by Nycomed ("the Primary Argument").ii) The secondary argument was that a large proportion of the ultimate investors in the SICAR were resident in countries which had concluded double tax treaties with Denmark and/or in other Member states, and hence the WHT payable by Nycomed should be substantially reduced ("the Secondary Argument").
"Concerning those owners who allegedly are resident in a country that is a member of EU or a country, with which Denmark has entered into a double taxation treaty, Nycomed A/S shall furthermore at least provide information which enables an unambiguous identification of the owners, just as Nycomed A/S at least shall substantiate that the interest according to Danish law and to the legal system of the country where the owner is alleged to be resident, is to be attributed to the owner for tax purposes."
Discussions between the parties concerning the WHT issue prior to the SPA
"The argument about rightful owner of the income but beneficial owner would also eliminate the potential for using the treaties between Denmark and the ultimate owners about Luxembourg [i.e. the SICAR] as potential second line of reasoning. The Danish tax authorities have not accepted the argument that no withholding taxes should be levied on investors above Luxembourg covered by a double taxation [treaty] with Denmark. The tax authorities have required detailed access to the tax return of the ultimate … investors to ensure that the interest income has been included in tax returns of the applicable investor in the correct year and with [the] same classification. In other similar structures it has been impossible to meet these information requirements."
The SPA
Further progress of Nycomed's appeal
The Second Assessment
The Letter Agreement
The transfer of the black box information
The present dispute
Issues as to the factual matrix
"(c) The parties understood that it was necessary for the DTA to have access to the Relevant Information as a means of ascertaining the Danish withholding tax liability or otherwise compromising liability and/or giving effect to the indemnity and/or mitigating Nycomed's liability for withholding tax.
(d) That access to the Relevant Information lay outside of Takeda's control and within the control of Fougera."
Necessary?
i) Decisions of the DTA are not published, and thus are not generally sources of practice.ii) There is a different body known as the Danish Tax Board (or Danish Tax Council) ("the DTB"). A taxpayer may invite the DTB to give a prospective ruling about its tax position. Rulings of the DTB are published in anonymised form and form an important part of the tax practice. Decisions of the DTB are denoted by the letters "SR" in the case identifier.
iii) Decisions of the DTA may be appealed to the DNTT. Rulings of the DNTT are also published in anonymised form and also form an important part of the tax practice. Decisions of the DNTT are denoted by the letters "LSR".
iv) An appeal to the Tribunal may be removed to the High Court, which has two branches, Eastern and Western. The respondent in the High Court is the DMT rather than the DTA. Decisions of the High Court are not technically binding on lower bodies, but are highly likely to be followed. Regard would be had to such decisions by any competent tax adviser in Denmark. Decisions of the Eastern High Court are denoted by the letters "ØSR".
v) Cases in the High Court, and some cases in the DNTT, are handled by the Counsellor to the Danish government. This is a private law firm which has a special status and is highly regarded by the Danish Courts.
vi) Above the High Court sits the Supreme Court, whose decisions are binding on all lower courts and tribunals.
"It was clear from this ruling [i.e. Case 2011.441] that these conditions could hardly be met in any of the pending beneficial owner cases and almost certainly never in the ones – like the one at issue – concerning payments of interest from Danish companies owned by private equity funds. The deemed beneficial owners generally never provided any loans and therefore did not earn any interest income."
"The Ministry bases its assessment on the fact that the purpose of the requirement to the effect that the formal recipient of the dividends must be the beneficial owner of the dividends is to prevent tax evasion and abusive practise. An abusive practice is generally not considered to exist if the dividends immediately flow through to a company in a country party to a double taxation convention or an EU country, provided that the underlying beneficial owner has received an amount that
1. is identical to the amount that flowed through in the first step,
2. has the same nature as the amount paid from Denmark, i.e. the nature of the amount must not have changed in such a way that it is not subject to taxation in the country of domicile under the same regulatory framework as the one that would have applied had the amount been paid directly from Denmark to the beneficial owner in question,
3. the amount must be received and taxed in the same income period and in the same way as if it had been disbursed directly from Denmark to the underlying beneficial owner."
"The question is, as a result of the Double Taxation Convention that covers the investors, whether they should possibly be exempt from tax on the interest. As the case is presented, there is no basis for taking a position on this, because with the existing lists there isn't evidentiary documentation that there is a case of double taxation."
It is clear from this that evidence had not been produced of double taxation, i.e. WHT being levied on the Danish company and the same interest being taxed in the hands of the investors.
"The Danish Ministry of Taxation has stated to the National Tax Tribunal that regardless of whether the Court finds for the Danish Ministry of Taxation in the claims submitted –which both parties agree are the correct calculation of taxes due – the final withholding tax should be reduced to the extent H1 S.à.r.l. documents that the investors involved reside in EU countries and/or countries with which Denmark has reached a double taxation agreement."
"On the basis of the specific cases described above in section 5.1, it is our assessment that the Danish Ministry of Taxation will make strict requirements for comprehensive documentation to be provided if the consequences of the right for the Ultimate Investors to claim beneficial ownership should result in these Ultimate Investors being allowed to invoke tax exemption and treaty protection. These requirements would, in our assessment, be the same for corporate and individual investors.
We would expect the Danish courts to allow the Danish Ministry of Taxation to make such strict requirements.
As mentioned above, we would expect an Ultimate Investor to be required to prove:
1. identity between the funds paid out by the Danish company; and
2. that taxes were paid similarly to what would have been paid, had the funds been received directly from the Danish company and not through intermediaries.
Accordingly, in our assessment, the Ultimate Investors … will be requested to provide documentation for both their specific share of the interest paid or accrued by Nycomed A/S and documentation for the payment of income tax on interest in the relevant jurisdiction.
With regard to documentation for the share of the interest, it is most likely necessary to be able to trace the interest accrued in every year, possibly by reviewing annual accounts, notifications to investors etc. made by the private equity funds through which the investment was made.
With regard to documentation for the taxation having taken place, we would expect the Danish Tax Authorities to require, inter alia, that tax returns reflecting the income be produced and submitted in connection with claiming tax exemption or treaty protection.
Control?
The SPA
"Danish withholding tax undertakings
10.5 Subject to clauses 10.6 and 10.7 below, the Seller covenants to pay to the Purchaser an amount equal to any liability of Nycomed to make an actual payment of Tax to the Danish Tax Authority after Closing as a result of a failure by Nycomed to account to the Danish Tax Authorities for Tax in respect of interest accruing to the Seller prior to Closing under the Seller/Company Loan (a DK WHT Tax Liability), provided that the Seller shall cease to have any liability under this clause 10.5 after the sixth anniversary of Closing, save in respect of payments that have become due from the Seller prior to that date in accordance with clause 10.6(b) below.
10.6 The Seller shall not be liable under clause 10.5 to the extent that:
…
(b) the DK WHT Tax Liability would not have arisen (or would have been less) but for (i) the failure of the Purchaser to comply with its obligations under clauses 10.15 and 10.16 below …
10.7 The Seller shall not be liable under clause 10.5 for such amount of any DK WHT Tax Liability as exceeds the lesser of (i) € 75,000,000 and …
10.8 Any payment under clause 10.5 shall be made on the latest of:
(a) the date 10 Business Days after written demand is made by the Purchaser;
(b) the date 10 Business Days after the Tax in question becomes finally recoverable by the Danish Tax Authority; and
…
10.10 The Purchaser acknowledges that the ultimate owners of the Seller (the Owners) have provided certain information to KPMG which KPMG is holding on a strictly confidential basis in accordance with the terms of confidentiality agreements entered into between the Owners and KPMG. The Purchaser acknowledges and agrees that KPMG are not permitted to disclose such information to any person (including the Seller, the Purchaser and/or any Target Company) other than the Danish Tax Authorities. The Purchaser agrees that it shall not, and will procure that its Affiliates shall not, take any action to undermine or question the confidentiality of the information held by KPMG or seek to obtain such information.
…
Notification and conduct of claims
…
10.16 The Purchaser shall, and shall procure that each Target Company and each member of the Purchaser's Group shall:
(a) ensure that no … DK WHT Tax Liability is settled or otherwise compromised, and that no material actions are taken in relation to a … DK WHT Tax Liability, without the Seller's prior written consent (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed);
(b) ensure that the Seller and its representatives are kept fully informed of any actual or proposed developments (including any meetings) and that they are promptly provided with copies of all correspondence and documentation relating to … a DK WHT Tax Liability …, and (at the Seller's cost) such other information, assistance and access to records and personnel as the Seller reasonably requires in connection with … a DK WHT Tax Liability … (subject to the deletion of information confidential to the Purchaser);
(c) ensure that no correspondence or other communication is made to any third party (including any Tax Authority) other than the Purchaser's professional advisors in respect of … a DK WHT Tax Liability without the Seller having had reasonable opportunity to comment on such correspondence or communication in advance and that (without prejudice to paragraph (d) below) any reasonable comments of the Seller or its representatives in respect of such correspondence or communication are taken into account;
(d) take such action as the Seller may reasonably request (having regard to any reasonable comments from the Purchaser) to avoid, dispute, resist, appeal, compromise, settle or defend a … DK WHT Tax Liability, including in relation to the conduct of negotiations and correspondence with the third party (including any relevant Tax Authority) and the reaching of agreement with such third party with respect to such … DK WHT Tax Liability;
…"
"for the purposes of clause 10, an amount is finally recoverable by a third party (including a Tax Authority), or is finally determined, when it is the subject of a binding agreement as to its amount with that third party or is the subject of a decision of a Tax Authority, court or tribunal from which either no appeal lies or in respect of which no appeal is made within the prescribed time limit."
"Confidential Information means:
(i) (in relation to the obligations of the Purchaser) any information received or held by the Purchaser (or any of its Representatives) relating to the Seller or its parent companies and, prior to Closing, to include any of the Target Companies; or
(ii) (in relation to the obligations of the Seller) any information received or held by the Seller (or any of its Representatives) relating to the Purchaser Group and, following Closing, to include any of the Target Companies; and
(iii) information relating to the provisions of, and negotiations leading to, this Agreement, the Proposed Transaction and the other Transaction Documents,
and includes written information and information transferred or obtained orally, visually, electronically or by any other means".
"Each of the parties shall from time to time, on being required to do so by the others, as soon as practicable following written request and at the sole cost and expense of the party requesting it, do or procure the doing of all such acts and/or execute or use reasonable endeavours to procure the execution of all such documents as are reasonably necessary for giving full effect to this Agreement, including the sale of the Shares."
"The Purchaser shall not … seek to recover any amount from the Seller … in respect of a … DK WHT Liability … otherwise than pursuant to clause 10 (including under any statutory right to recover or any other provision of this Agreement)."
"This Agreement and the other Transaction Documents together set out the whole agreement between the parties in respect of the sale and purchase of the Shares and supersede any prior agreement (whether oral or written) relating to the Proposed Transaction. It is agreed that:
(a) no party shall have any claim or remedy in respect of any statement, representation, warranty or undertaking made by or on behalf of the other party (or any of its Affiliates or Connected Persons) in relation to the Proposed Transaction which is not expressly set out in this Agreement or any other Transaction Document;
(b) any terms or conditions implied by law in any jurisdiction in relation to the Proposed Transaction are excluded to the fullest extent permitted by law or, if incapable of exclusion, any right, or remedies in relation to them are irrevocably waived;
…
provided that this clause 22 shall not exclude any liability for (or remedy in respect of) fraudulent misrepresentation. …"
Interpretation of the SPA
Clause 16.1
"35. …. By cl 7 the parties agreed to take such actions as were reasonably required to '… give effect to this Agreement'. To give effect to an agreement requires one to know what the parties have agreed that the agreement shall do. A clause such as cl 7 does not assist in that exercise.
36. The case of Brady v Brady [1989] 1 AC 755 … does not, I think, take the matter any further. In that case the underlying contractual obligation, to which the covenant for further assurance was prayed in aid, was not in doubt. In this case, the identification of the obligation, the performance of which clause 7 is to assist, is the essence of the dispute; clause 7 cannot help in determining what that obligation is."
i) Clause 3.9 obliges Fougera to provide Takeda "with any necessary assistance, information and documents reasonably required" for submissions, notifications and filings to governmental entities in respect of competition clearance.ii) Clause 9.1 is an obligation on the part of Takeda to allow Fougera to "inspect, review and make copies of such records" of Nycomed "as are reasonably necessary or required from time to time solely for its tax, accounting or regulatory compliance purposes".
iii) A further obligation for the parties to "cooperate (including in relation to the provision of information)" is to be found in clause 10.19 (dealing with management warrants).
iv) Clause 11.8 requires each party, in relation to possible claims resulting from a corporate reorganisation of the Nycomed Group, to give a Queen's Counsel appointed to determine certain types of dispute with access and the right to take copies of the relevant books, records and computer files in their possession or control.
An implied duty to cooperate
"I think I may safely say, as a general rule, that where in a written contract it appears that both parties have agreed that something shall be done, which cannot effectually be done unless both concur in doing it, the construction of the contract is that each agrees to do all that is necessary to be done on his part for the carrying out of that thing, though there may be no express words to that effect."
An implied duty not to obstruct
"I look on the law to be that, if a party enters into an arrangement which can only take effect by the continuance of a certain existing state of circumstances, there is an implied engagement on his part that he shall do nothing of his own motion to put an end to that state of circumstances, under which alone the arrangement can be operative."
Non-derogation from grant
The Letter Agreement
"Notwithstanding clause 10.10 of the SPA, the parties agree that the Purchaser may seek to obtain, use and disclose (including for the avoidance of doubt to the Danish tax counsel of Nycomed) such information as may be held by Ernst & Young Denmark (previously KPMG Denmark) as is described in clause 10.10 of the SPA, in each case solely for the purpose of (i) progressing the Dispute or (ii) any audit and provisioning requirements of any member of the Purchaser Group; provided that the Seller is informed in advance of any such request made by the Purchaser Group (or its advisors) to Ernst & Young and is promptly supplied with copies of all reports, analysis and other information that Ernst & Young provides to the Purchaser Group and the terms on which such information is provided."
"Clauses 14, 15, 20, 24, 27 and 29.2 to 29.4 of the SPA shall apply as though set out in full in this letter agreement with references to 'the Agreement' substituted for this letter agreement."
Interpretation of the Letter Agreement
Conclusion