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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Blue Co International LLP, Re [2020] EWHC 2385 (Ch) (07 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/2385.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2385 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTERS OF BLUE CO LONDON LLP (formerly known as Ince & Co LLP) (in administration)
IN THE MATTER OF BLUE CO INTERNATIONAL LLP (formerly known as Ince & Co International LLP) (in administration)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
7 The Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) ANDREW LAWRENCE HOSKING (2) SEAN BUCKNALL (as joint administrators of Blue Co London LLP) (3) ANDREW LAWRENCE HOSKING (4) SEAN BUCKNALL (5) CARL JACKSON (as joint administrators of Blue Co International LLP) (6) QUANTUMA LLP |
Applicants |
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- and – |
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(1) ALEXANDRE BESNARD (2) MATHIEU VINCENT GUILLAUME CROIX (3) FREDDY PATRICK JACQUES DESPLANQUES (4) OH AINLIGHE LABHRAS IOSEF (5) VY-LOAN HUYNH OLIVIERI (6) JEROME LAFONT DE SENTENAC |
Respondents |
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The Respondents did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 1 September 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
ICC Judge Barber:
(1) for an order that they be at liberty to apply to the Judicial Court of Nanterre for a stay or dismissal of certain claims brought against them in that court by the Respondents on the ground that the Judicial Court of Nanterre has no jurisdiction to hear or determine the claims or alternatively should decline any such jurisdiction (the 'Stay Application'); and
(2) for an order that they be indemnified out of the estate of Blue Co London LLP in respect of all costs and expenses incurred in the Stay Application up to the sum of £100,000 (exclusive of VAT), with liberty to apply to increase the same upon the filing of evidence explaining the need for such increase.
Background
Proceedings in France
(1) GD organised the transfer of the partners and staff of London LLP to itself for its own benefit, by means of the powers given to it by each of the partners for the sole purpose of finalising the envisaged merger; and that
(2) GD struck a deal with RBS to pay off only the PPLs of those LLP partners joining GD.
(1) that GD first approached Quantuma for advice on 10 December 2018 and that Messrs Hosking and Bucknall assessed the overall value of the business of the LLPs on or about 11 December 2018 : Notice of Summons ('NoS'), p11;
(2) that GD had 'included in the purchase offer' made to Messrs Hosking and Bucknall the repayment of the PPLs, but was allowed instead to pay off selected PPLs outside of the administrations and then prove in the administrations for the sums so paid (NoS, p11);
(3) that prior to their appointment as administrators, Messrs Hosking and Bucknall met with RBS 'to discuss the fate of the [PPLs]' and 'to negotiate… agreements allowing the payment by [GD] of part of the acquisition price of the assets of the [LLPs] by repayment to [RBS] of the [PPLs] subscribed by certain associates … without any insolvency proceedings..' (NoS, p10, p12);
(4) that Messrs Hosking and Bucknall allowed GD to pay off selected PPLs outside of the administrations because it was GD who had initially approached them for the placement into administration of the LLPs 'and … they were therefore indebted to them for this appointment' (NoS, p11);
(5) that GD and the management of London LLP 'implemented a pseudo merger-acquisition project with the sole aim of obtaining powers of attorney from each of the partners of [London LLP] and [International LLP], with the complicity of [RBS], giving the wherewithal to the management team of [London LLP] to cause the partners to resign from their firm en bloc and move their business to [GD], leaving the latter to purchase the remaining assets for a pittance in a pre-packaged sale, ensuring that the interests of [RBS], the main creditor of the entities placed into administration, [were] preserved to the detriment of the small creditors – such as the partners of the SCP'; and that Messrs Hosking and Bucknall and Quantuma LLP were 'complicit' in those arrangements (NoS p13);
(6) As part of (5): that in negotiating the pre-packs, Messrs Hosking and Bucknall 'made no attempt to counter the fraud of [GD]' by including the LLPs' poached commercial activity in its 'overall value' when fixing a price, instead disposing of only 'simple residual assets (intellectual property rights, computer equipment)' via the pre-packs (NoS pp11-12), with 'not a word being said about the value of the assets transferred including the value of the clients transferred' (NoS pp12-13);
(7) again, essentially as part of (5): that on the date of their appointment, Messrs Hosking and Bucknall 'did not in any way try to understand why the law firm, whose value they had necessarily estimated as early as December 11th, had become an empty shell by the date of their appointment, leaving them with nothing to sell other than the residual assets, namely the computer equipment and the trademark' (NoS p13);
(8) that the terms of pre-pack sale were in other respects 'very advantageous' for GD but 'very unfavourable' to the LLPs, such terms including, by way of example, a term providing for recovery of London LLP's 'accounts receivable', which were valued at just under £14 million, to be contracted to GD in consideration of a fee of 60% of the sums recovered (NoS, p10).
(1) an indemnity in respect of any judgment entered against the Respondents on the principal claim of Mrs Ribes;
(2) damages for the loss and damage suffered by the Respondents 'owing to the fraud', the damages comprising sums equivalent to the PPLs for which each Respondent is liable;
(3) an order for production of copies of 'the exchanges held, and agreements reached, in December 2018' between Messrs Hosking and Bucknall, Quantuma, London LLP and GD; and
(4) an order for production of copies of 'the agreements for the transfer of assets entered into under the administration proceedings (not limited to the 'Sale and Purchase Agreements' of 31 December 2018 referred to in SIP16)'.
The Respondents' position
Governing principles
'The administrator of a company may apply to the court for directions in connection with his functions'
'I had the advantage of having available to me a judgment of Robert Walker J (as he then was) given in Chambers in 1995. Since it was given in Chambers, it is inappropriate for me to say more about it, save that it concerned the question whether the court in authorising trustees to pursue litigation was necessarily exercising its own discretion or was simply protecting the trustees in an exercise of their own. The relevant passage in the judgment is in the following terms:
'At the risk of covering a lot of familiar ground and stating the obvious, it seems to me that, when the court has to adjudicate on a course of action proposed or actually taken by trustees, there are at least four distinct situations (and there are no doubt numerous variations of those as well).
(1) The first category is where the issue is whether some proposed action is within the trustees' powers. That is ultimately a question of construction of the trust instrument or a statute or both. The practice of the Chancery Division is that a question of that sort must be decided in open court and only after hearing argument from both sides. It is not always easy to distinguish that situation from the second situation that I am coming to …. [He then gave an example]
(2) The second category is where the issue is whether the proposed course of action is a proper exercise of the trustees' powers where there is no real doubt as to the nature of the trustees' powers and the trustees have decided how they want to exercise them but, because the decision is particularly momentous, the trustees wish to obtain the blessing of the court for the action on which they have resolved and which is within their powers. Obvious examples of that, which are very familiar in the Chancery Division, are a decision by trustees to sell a controlling share in a family company. In such circumstances there is no doubt at all as to the trustees' powers nor is there any doubt as to what the trustees want to do but they think it prudent, and the court will give them their costs of doing so, to obtain the court's blessing on a momentous decision. In a case like that, there is no question of surrender of discretion and indeed it is most unlikely that the courts will be persuaded in the absence of special circumstances to accept the surrender of discretion on a question of that sort, where the trustees are prima facie in a much better position than the court to know what is in the best interests of the beneficiaries.
(3) The third category is that of surrender of discretion properly so-called. There the court will only accept a surrender of discretion for a good reason, the most obvious good reasons being either that the trustees are deadlocked (but honestly deadlocked, so that the question cannot be resolved by removing one trustee rather than another) or because the trustees are disabled as a result of a conflict of interest. Cases within categories (2) and (3) are similar in that they are both domestic proceedings traditionally heard in chambers in which adversarial argument is not essential though it sometimes occurs. It may be that ultimately all will agree on some particular course of action or, at any rate, will not violently oppose some particular course of action. The difference between category (2) and category (3) is simply as to whether the court is (under category (2)) approving the exercise of discretion by trustees or (under category (3)) exercising its own discretion.
(4) The fourth category is where the trustees have actually taken action, and that action is attacked as being either outside their powers or an improper exercise of their powers. Cases of that sort of hostile litigation to be heard and decided in open court. I mentioned that fourth category, obvious though it is, for a reason which will appear in a moment.'
Is this a category 2 case?
'A provision of this Schedule which expressly permits the administrator to do a specified thing is without prejudice to the generality of sub-paragraph (1)'.
(1) Power to appoint a solicitor or accountant or other professionally qualified person to assist him in the performance of his functions: paragraph 4.
(2) Power to bring or defend any action or other legal proceedings in the name of and on behalf of the company: paragraph 5.
(3) Power to do all other things incidental to the exercise of the foregoing powers: paragraph 23.
'Mrs Ribes' claim concerns alleged breaches of duty on the part of the Respondents as former equity partners of International LLP. The Respondents' claim against the Applicants arises out of the same events leading up to the administration of the LLPs and is based upon the Respondents also being victims of the same dealings of which Mrs Ribes complains.'
Should the Court grant the relief sought?
Conclusions
ICC Judge Barber
7 September 2020