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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Deutsche Trustee Company Ltd v Cheyne Capital (Management) UK (LLP) & Anor [2015] EWHC 2282 (Ch) (31 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/2282.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2282 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NLL |
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B e f o r e :
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DEUTSCHE TRUSTEE COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CHEYNE CAPITAL (MANAGEMENT) UK (LLP) DECO 15 – PAN EUROPE 6 LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Gabriel Moss QC (instructed by Sidley Austin LLP) for the First Defendant
Jeremy Goldring QC (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 28 July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Introduction
The facts
Commercial mortgage-backed securities
The role of a special servicer
The Transaction Documents
i) a note trust deed made between the Issuer and the Trustee ("the Trust Deed");ii) a deed of charge and assignment made between, amongst others, the Issuer and the Trustee ("the Deed of Charge");
iii) a servicing agreement made between, amongst others, the Issuer, the Trustee, the Originator (as defined below) and Hatfield Philips International Ltd ("HPI" or "the Issuer Special Servicer") ("the Issuer Servicing Agreement"); and
iv) a master definitions and construction schedule ("the Master Definitions Schedule").
The Transaction
The Notes
Class | Initial Principal Amount | Rating Fitch/Moody's/S&P |
A1 | €698,500,000 | AAA/Aaa/AAA |
X | €50,000 | AAA/NR/AAA |
A2 | €299,300,000 | AAA/Aaa/AAA |
A3 | €149,650,000 | AAA/NR/AAA |
B | €87,800,000 | AA/NR/AA |
C | €89,300,000 | A/NR/A |
D | €57,550,000 | BBB+/NR/BBB+ |
E | €21,750,000 | BBB/NR/BBB |
F | €21,950,000 | NR/NR/BBB- |
G | €19,492,232 | NR/NR/BB |
i) Clause 6 of the Deed of Charge deals with the Pre-enforcement and Post-enforcement Priority of Payments. It provides for payments of interest and principal to be made to the Noteholders in accordance with the priority set out in certain payment "waterfalls".ii) Clause 8.1 of the Trust Deed deals with directions to the Note Trustee. It provides that the Note Trustee is not bound to take any proceedings, actions or steps or to exercise any discretion, unless directed to do so by resolutions of the various classes of Noteholders, provided that, in short, for so long as a more senior class of Notes is outstanding, the Note Trustee is not bound to act at the direction of a more junior class of Noteholders unless such action would not be materially prejudicial to the more senior class of Noteholders or has been sanctioned by a resolution of the more senior class of Noteholders.
iii) Clause 16.25 of the Trust Deed deals with the exercise by the Note Trustee of its discretion. It provides, in short, that the Note Trustee shall have regard to the interests of the Noteholders, save that, where there is a conflict of interest between them, it will have regard only to the interests of the more senior class of Notes.
The Controlling Class
The Operating Advisor
The Issuer Servicing Agreement
i) Issuer Servicer Event of Default. Clause 26.1 provides that the Security Trustee may terminate the appointment of an Issuer Servicer or Issuer Special Servicer in the event of an "Issuer Servicer Event of Default". These include failing to make payments due (clause 26.1 (b)), failure in relation to the "performance or observance of other covenants and obligations" (clause 26.1(c)), a winding up order or resolution (clause 26.1(d)), ceasing to own the business (clause 26.1(e)), becoming insolvent (clause 26.1(f)), administration (clause 26.1(g)), moratorium (clause 26.1(h)), illegality (clause 26.1(i)) and a Rating Agency notice that continuation is likely to lead to an Adverse Rating Event (clause 26.1(j)).ii) Voluntary termination. Clause 26.2 provides that the Issuer Servicer or Issuer Special Servicer may terminate its own appointment on not less than three months' written notice.
iii) Issuer Special Servicer. Clause 26.3 relates specifically to the termination or replacement of the Issuer Special Servicer.
"Subject to the requirements of Clause 26.4, the appointment of the person then acting as Issuer Special Servicer in relation to a particular Loan and, if applicable, a Senior Loan and its related Subordinated Loan may also be terminated (a) upon the relevant Operating Advisor notifying the Issuer that it requires a replacement Issuer Special Servicer to be appointed or (b) ... or (c)... , provided always that any such termination or replacement does not cause the then current rating of the Notes to be downgraded, withdrawn or qualified. …"
"No termination of the appointment of the Issuer Servicer or the Issuer Special Servicer under Clauses 26.1, 26.2 or 26.3 will take effect unless:
…
(b) the Issuer Servicer or, as the case may be, the Issuer Special Servicer will have notified each of the Rating Agencies in writing of the identity of the successor Issuer Servicer or successor Issuer Special Servicer and the Rating Agencies have confirmed to the Issuer Security Trustee and the Note Trustee that the appointment of the successor Issuer Servicer or Issuer Special Servicer will not result in an Adverse Rating Event, unless each class of Noteholders have approved the successor Issuer Servicer or successor Issuer Special Servicer, as applicable, by Extraordinary Resolution;
…"
"If this Agreement requires Rating Agency confirmation to be obtained in relation to a particular matter, the Issuer Servicer (or, in the case of matters pertaining to a Specially Serviced Loan, the Issuer Special Servicer) will, as soon as is practicable following a request therefor, provide each Rating Agency with all information as is reasonably necessary and available to it to enable such Rating Agency to determine whether, and on what basis, confirmation should be given. In the event that Moody's fails to respond to such request for confirmation within 30 days (or such earlier date as the Issuer Servicer or the Issuer Special Servicer, as applicable, has determined is appropriate under the circumstances in accordance with the Servicing Standard), the Issuer Servicer or the Issuer Special Servicer will not be required to obtain such confirmation from Moody's."
The Rating Agencies
i) Clause 9.7 of the Issuer Servicing Agreement provides, in short, that the Issuer Servicer or Issuer Special Servicer can grant an extension of the maturity date of a Loan, but may not grant an extension to a date later than two years before the Final Maturity Date, unless this would not give rise to an Adverse Rating Event (save that, in the case of Moody's, no such determination will be made, although the granting of any extension would be notified to Moody's). Clause 9.11 of the Servicing Agreement contains a similar carve out in relation to Moody's in relation to hedging agreements.ii) Various provisions of the Trust Deed make the exercise by the Note Trustee of its powers, authorities or discretions conditional on it being of the opinion that the interests of the Noteholders will not be materially prejudiced (see for example, the proviso to clause 16.25). In this respect, clause 26.2 of the Trust Deed provides that the Note Trustee is entitled to determine that any exercise of power will not be materially prejudicial to the interests of Noteholders or any class of Noteholders and in making such determination shall be entitled to take into account any confirmation by a Rating Agency (if available) that the current rating of the Notes, or the relevant class of Notes, will not be downgraded, withdrawn or qualified as a result. Clause 16.28 of the Trust Deed further provides that the Note Trustee may rely on a written Rating Agency confirmation from each of the Rating Agencies confirming that there will be no downgrade to any class of Notes as proof that any action or inaction will not be materially prejudicial to the interests of the holders of that class of Notes.
iii) Condition 12 of the Notes deals with meetings of Noteholders, modifications, waivers and substitutions. Conditions 12(a) to (l) are all subject to a provision that resolutions involving certain Basic Terms Modifications will be subject to receipt of written confirmation from each Rating Agency then rating the Notes (other than Moody's) that the current ratings of each class of Notes will not be qualified, downgraded or withdrawn (and that written notice of such modifications shall be provided to Moody's). Condition 12(p) provides that the Note Trustee may agree to the substitution of another entity as principal debtor in place of the Issuer provided that it receives a Rating Agency Confirmation in respect of such substitution from at least two of the Rating Agencies then rating the Notes and Moody's has confirmed in writing to the Note Trustee that such substitution would not adversely affect the ratings of the Notes, and provided that such substitution would not in the opinion of the Note Trustee be materially prejudicial to the interests of the Noteholders.
Confirmations by the Rating Agencies
"In EMEA CMBS, Fitch is periodically asked to confirm that the appointment of a special servicer would not, in itself, cause the downgrade of any notes. As outlined more fully below, Fitch will not provide such ratings confirmations in EMEA CMBS. This stance formalises concerns previously expressed by Fitch regarding proposals originating from individual creditor classes whose interests may not be aligned with those of other affected noteholders.
Replacing a special servicer is one source of influence over rating-sensitive outcomes that may or may not be in the wider interests of holders of all rated notes. In general terms, there is potential for conflicts of interests to arise from, inter alia:
- a connection between the controlling class (or its representative) and the prospective special servicer;
- conflicting preferences between the controlling class (or its representative) and other (in particular senior) noteholders.
… Fitch expects to continue to receive notification of all changes in transaction parties, including those governed by the servicing agreement. If warranted by such a change, Fitch will take rating action as appropriate."
The Operating Advisor's request to replace the Issuer Special Servicer
The issue
The law on interpretation of documents
"i) The interpretation of a contract is an objective exercise in which the court's task is to ascertain the meaning that the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract.
ii) This exercise of interpretation was described by Lord Clarke in Rainy Sky as a 'unitary' process. The starting point of that process must be the ordinary, natural and grammatical sense of the language used by the parties. The court should not, however, confine itself to a consideration of such language in isolation, but should carry out an iterative process, checking each of the rival meanings of the provision in question against the other provisions of the document and its overall scheme, and investigating their commercial consequences.
iii) If as a consequence of this exercise the court concludes that the language used is unambiguous, then the court must apply it, even though some other result might be thought more commercially reasonable, and even if it gives a result that is commercially disadvantageous to one of the parties. The court's function is to interpret the contract, not to rewrite it.
iv) In cases where the language used is ambiguous, in the sense that it is capable of bearing more than one ordinary and natural meaning, the court is entitled to prefer the interpretation that is most consistent with business common sense having regard to the commercial purpose of the transaction.
v) There may be cases where, even though the language used is unambiguous, it is clear that something must have gone wrong, because the resultant meaning is one that would require the court to attribute to the parties an intention that they plainly could not have had. In such a case, if it is clear both that a mistake has been made in the language used and what a reasonable person would have understood the parties to have meant, the contractual provision must be interpreted in accordance with that meaning."
Assessment
The right to replace the Issuer Special Servicer
The first limb of clause 26.4(b)
The second limb of clause 26.4(b)
"An Extraordinary Resolution of the Class Al Noteholders shall be binding on all the Class A2 Noteholders, the Class A3 Noteholders, the Class B Noteholders, the Class C Noteholders, the Class D Noteholders, the Class E Noteholders, the Class F Noteholders and the Class G Noteholders irrespective of the effect upon them, except that no Extraordinary Resolution to sanction a modification (including a Basic Terms Modification) of, or a waiver or authorisation of any breach or proposed breach of any of the provisions of, the Note Trust Deed, the Conditions or any of the other Transaction Documents passed at any meeting of the Class Al Noteholders shall not take effect unless such modification, waiver or authorisation shall have been sanctioned by an Extraordinary Resolution of each of the Class A2 Noteholders, the Class A3 Noteholders, the Class B Noteholders, the Class C Noteholders, the Class D Noteholders, the Class E Noteholders, the Class F Noteholders and the Class C Noteholders or it shall not, in the opinion of the Note Trustee, in its sole discretion, be materially prejudicial to the respective interests of the Class A2 Noteholders, the Class A3 Noteholders, Class B Noteholders, the Class C Noteholders, the Class D Noteholders, the Class E Noteholders, the Class F Noteholders and the Class G Noteholders."
Clause 29.10
Clause 29.13
The proviso to clause 26.3
Clause 26.2
Other provisions
Commercial absurdity
Overall
US Bank v Titan
Conclusion