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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Bailey & Anor (As Foreign Representatives of Sturgeon Central Asia Balanced Fund Ltd), Re [2019] EWHC 1215 (Ch) (17 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/1215.html Cite as: [2019] Bus LR 1809, [2019] EWHC 1215 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF THE CROSS-BORDER INSOLVENCY REGULATIONS 2006
AND IN THE MATTER OF STURGEON CENTRAL ASIA BALANCED FUND LTD (IN LIQUIDATION)
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Roy Bailey and Keiran Hutchison (as foreign representatives of Sturgeon Central Asia Balanced Fund Ltd) |
Applicants |
____________________
Hearing date: 8th May 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Falk:
The factual background
"What has happened here is that in 2014 the Participating Shareholder had its fundamental right to procure the winding up of the company by a Special Resolution at the 2014 AGM wrongly taken away from it and, in the absence of relief from the court, irretrievably lost…I would regard the fact that the Board and the Company both denied the Participating Shareholder the right and, at the same time, by amendment to the Bye-Laws, removed it as giving rise to 'a justifiable lack of confidence in the conduct and the management of the company's affairs'."
"Circumstances in which company may be wound up by the Court
161. In addition to any other provision in this or any other Act prescribing for the winding up of a company a company may be wound up by the Court if–
…
(e) the company is unable to pay its debts;
…
(g) the Court is of the opinion that it is just and equitable that the company should be wound up."
The CBIR and the Model Law
"Without prejudice to any practice of the courts as to the matters which may be considered apart from this paragraph, the following documents may be considered in ascertaining the meaning or effect of any provision of the UNCITRAL Model Law as set out in Schedule 1 to these Regulations—
(a) the UNCITRAL Model Law;
(b) any documents of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law and its working group relating to the preparation of the UNCITRAL Model Law; and
(c) the Guide to Enactment of the UNCITRAL Model Law (UNCITRAL document A/CN.9/442) prepared at the request of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law made in May 1997."
"In the interpretation of this Law, regard is to be had to its international origin and to the need to promote uniformity in its application and the observance of good faith."
"The purpose of this Law is to provide effective mechanisms for dealing with cases of cross-border insolvency so as to promote the objectives of:
(a) Cooperation between the courts and other competent authorities of this State and foreign States involved in cases of cross-border insolvency;
(b) Greater legal certainty for trade and investment;
(c) Fair and efficient administration of cross-border insolvencies that protects the interests of all creditors and other interested persons, including the debtor;
(d) Protection and maximization of the value of the debtor's assets; and
(e) Facilitation of the rescue of financially troubled businesses, thereby protecting investment and preserving employment."
The issue
"'foreign proceeding' means a collective judicial or administrative proceeding in a foreign State, including an interim proceeding, pursuant to a law relating to insolvency in which proceeding the assets and affairs of the debtor are subject to control or supervision by a foreign court, for the purpose of reorganisation or liquidation."
The same definition appears in almost exactly the same terms in the UNCITRAL version of the Model Law at Article 2(a).
"48. Acknowledging that different jurisdictions might have different notions of what falls within the term "insolvency proceedings", the Model Law does not define the term "insolvency". However, as used in the Model Law, the word "insolvency" refers to various types of collective proceedings commenced with respect to debtors that are in severe financial distress or insolvent. The reason is that the Model Law…covers proceedings concerning different types of debtors and, among those proceedings, deals with proceedings aimed at liquidating or reorganizing the debtor as a commercial entity. A judicial or administrative proceeding to wind up a solvent entity where the goal is to dissolve the entity and other foreign proceedings not falling within article 2 subparagraph (a) are not insolvency proceedings within the scope of the Model Law. Where a proceeding serves several purposes, including the winding up of a solvent entity, it falls under article 2, subparagraph (a) of the Model Law only if the debtor is insolvent or in severe financial distress." (Emphasis supplied.)
"65. The definitions of proceedings or persons emanating from foreign jurisdictions avoid the use of expressions that may have different technical meaning in different legal systems and instead describe their purpose or function. This technique is used to avoid inadvertently narrowing the range of possible foreign proceedings that might obtain recognition and to avoid unnecessary conflict with terminology used in the laws of the enacting State. As noted…above the expression "insolvency proceedings" may have a technical meaning in some legal systems, but is intended in subparagraph (a) to refer broadly to proceedings involving debtors that are in severe financial distress or insolvent." (Emphasis supplied.)
As Mr Curl points out, the wording is somewhat loose because there is in fact no reference to "insolvency proceedings" in the definition. The Guide goes on to state the following:
"66. The attributes required for a foreign proceeding to fall within the scope of the Model Law include the following: basis in insolvency-related law of the originating State; involvement of creditors collectively; control or supervision of the assets and affairs of the debtor by a court or another official body; and reorganization or liquidation of the debtor as the purpose of the proceeding (article 2, subparagraph (a)). Whether a foreign proceeding possesses or possessed those elements would be determined at the time the application for recognition is considered.
67. As noted in subparagraph (e) of the preamble, the focus of the Model Law is upon severely financially distressed and insolvent debtors and the laws that prevent or address the financial distress of those debtors. As noted above…, these are debtors that would generally fall within the commencement criteria discussed in the Legislative Guide, being debtors that are or will be generally unable to pay their debts as they mature or whose liabilities exceed the value of their assets…"
"This formulation is used in the Model Law to acknowledge the fact that liquidation and reorganization might be conducted under law that is not labelled as insolvency law (e.g. company law), but which nevertheless deals with or addresses insolvency or severe financial distress. The purpose was to find a description that was sufficiently broad to encompass a range of insolvency rules irrespective of the type of statute or law in which they might be contained and irrespective of whether the law that contained the rules related exclusively to insolvency. A simple proceeding for a solvent legal entity that does not seek to restructure the financial affairs of the entity, but rather to dissolve its legal status, is likely not one pursuant to a law relating to insolvency or severe financial distress." (Emphasis supplied.)
The Liquidator's case
"In the absence of evidence to the contrary, recognition of a foreign main proceeding is, for the purpose of commencing a proceeding under British insolvency law, proof that the debtor is unable to pay its debts..."
Other UNCITRAL documents
"'Foreign proceeding' means a collective judicial or administrative proceeding pursuant to a law relating to insolvency in a foreign country in which the debtor is subject to control or supervision by a competent person, body or authority, for the purpose of: (a) the reorganization of a debtor's affairs, or (b) liquidating the assets of a debtor."
The original Guide to Enactment
The case law
"15. In my view Lewison J was right to conclude that the Antiguan liquidation was a foreign proceeding as defined. Part IV of the relevant Act provided for the winding up of corporations incorporated in Antigua for the purpose of carrying on an international trade or business on just and equitable grounds, which include insolvency, as well as infringements of regulatory requirements. The combination of that part of the Act and the order of the court made provision for the collection of all the assets of SIB and their application in satisfaction of all its obligations in the order of priority for which the law provided. That process was expressly subject to the supervision of the High Court of Antigua and Barbuda. Creditors and others were obliged to seek their remedy in the liquidation because individual proceedings were stayed or prohibited. The ultimate purpose of the process was the liquidation, in the sense of dissolution of SIB. Such a process satisfies all the conditions for the application of the definition because it is collective, judicial and pursuant to a law relating to insolvency."
I agree with Mr Curl that this is expressed in a way that does not refer to the actual insolvency of SIB as being a determining factor, and to that extent it differs from the manner in which Lewison J expressed his conclusion.
"24. I would start with the phrase 'pursuant to a law relating to insolvency' for this governs all the other factors. It is contended that such law does not have to be statutory. I agree. It is submitted that it does not have to relate exclusively to insolvency. I agree with that submission in broad terms too. But the first step must be to identify the relevant law. The law of England and Wales relates to insolvency in the sense that it includes the Insolvency Act but unless the proceeding in question is taken under that Act (or some similar jurisdiction) it cannot sensibly be described as 'pursuant to a law relating to insolvency'. So it is necessary, in my view, to start by identifying the law, whether statutory or not, under or pursuant to which the relevant proceeding was brought and is being pursued. Having done so it is then necessary to consider whether that law relates to insolvency and whether the other factors to which the definition refers can be regarded as being brought about 'pursuant' to that law."
"47. The ground for winding up [in Stanford] was thus confined to regulatory misbehaviour. Insolvency was, in the particular case, a factor relevant to the court's discretion to make a winding up order. As the English Court of Appeal observed, however, the law allowing winding up on the regulatory ground was a law comprehending several grounds, including insolvency, so that it was correct to characterise it as a law relating to insolvency.
48. This approach to characterisation is consistent with that taken by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada in Re Betcorp Ltd …. It was there held that the members' voluntary winding up of an Australian company under the Corporations Act (Cth) was a 'foreign proceeding' for the purposes of the UNCITRAL Model Law as enacted in the United States…The situation was…one of positive determination by the directors that the company was not insolvent.
49. The United States court placed emphasis on the nature of the relevant legislation as a whole in deciding whether the administration was under 'a law relating to insolvency'…
[He then refers to another US decision.]
51. These English and American decisions point to a clear basis on which the whole of the Singapore Companies Act or, at the least, the whole of its winding up provisions might be classified as 'a law relating to insolvency', even though the particular winding up was ordered on the just and equitable ground alone and, so far as this court has been told, without any finding (express or implied) of insolvency."
Vienna Convention
Other texts
The EC Regulation
Discussion
COMI and other requirements
"In the absence of proof to the contrary, the debtor's registered office…is presumed to be the centre of the debtor's main interests."
Conclusion and citation