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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Hough & Ors v Hardcastle & Ors [2005] EWHC 1415 (Comm) (22 April 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/1415.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1415 (Comm) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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JOHN LEONARD HOUGH & OTHERS | RESPONDENTS | |
-v- | ||
A HARDCASTLE & OTHERS | APPELLANTS |
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190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR F TREGEAR QC (instructed by Marriott Harrison) appeared on behalf of the FIRST to THIRD RESPONDENTS.
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Crown Copyright ©
"Until Class C Stock has been redeemed, whenever, in the discretion of the Board of Directors, it is determined that the Company has sufficient reserves available, 90% of such cash shall be committed to the redemption of shares of Class C Stock at the redemption price, pro rata among Class C Stockholders as a dividend. When all shares of Class C Stock have been redeemed, all cash dividends and other distributions shall be distributed in the proportion of 50% of the Class A Stockholders and 50% to the Class B Stockholders. For the purposes of this agreement the redemption price per share of Class C Stock shall be the Pounds Sterling amount of the original subscription price paid per share of Class C Stock. All distribution from the Company by way of dividend or otherwise shall be included in determining when the redemption price per share of Class C Stock has been paid in full."
"The licensing company will be owned proportionately as the operating company is owned, i.e. each investor will own the same percentage interest in the licensing company as the investor owns in the operating company. The investors will share dividends exactly as they share in the operating company. It is contemplated that the licensing company will receive a royalty equal to two percent of the gross sales of the operating company, but the final royalty will be determined by regulatory and tax considerations."
"(1) By Article 15, the Class A Shares are 'ordinary voting shares';
(2) By Articles 16 and 17, the Class B Shares are non-voting shares (subject to the provisions of Articles 11 and 28) and are to 'rank pari passu with the Class A Shares regarding repayment of capital on a liquidation'; by Article 7, the Company cannot issue any Class B Shares while there are any Class C Shares in issue.
(3) There are the following provisions relating to the Class C Shares:
(a) By Article 19, subject to the provisions of Articles 11 and 28, the Class C Shares are 'non-voting redeemable cumulative preference shares';
(b) by Article 20, the Class C Shares carry the right to a cumulative fixed dividend of 3% per annum, to be paid in preference to all other dividends on any other shares;
(c) by Article 21, the Class C Shares are to be redeemed out of 'Surplus Funds at the Redemption Price, at such time or times as the directors may resolve and in any event, but subject to the availability of Surplus Funds, all issued Class C Shares shall be redeemed on or before 31st December 2003'; ('Surplus Funds' means the Company's net profits after deducting taxation, certain other adjustments and any preferential dividend) (Article 1);
(d) by Article 22, Surplus Funds in excess of 10% of the nominal value of the issued Class C Shares have to be used by the directors to procure the redemption of 10% of the outstanding Class C Shares;
(e) by Article 27, the holders of the Class C Shares are entitled to be repaid the capital paid up on such Class C Shares together with any arrears of dividends and to be paid in priority to the Class A and Class B Shares."
"4. Subject to any direction to the contrary which may be given by the Company in general meeting, but subject as hereinafter provided, the directors are unconditionally authorised to allot, make offers or agreements to allot, create, deal with, grant options over or otherwise dispose of relevant securities within the meaning of section 80(2) of the Act to such persons, including any director, on such terms and at such times as they think fit, but no shares will be issued at a discount.
5. The maximum nominal amount of share capital which the directors may allot or otherwise dispose of in accordance with Article 4 is the nominal amount of unissued shares at the date of adoption of these articles of association, as the articles of association of the Company or such other amount as is authorised by the Company in general meeting."
Article 11 provides, so far as material:
"Whenever the capital of the Company is divided into different classes of shares, the special rights attached to any class may be varied or abrogated only with the consent in writing of the holders of 75% in nominal value of the issued shares of that class, or by a special resolution passed at a separate general meeting of the holders of that class. Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, the following shall be deemed to be variation or abrogation of class rights:
11.2 In relation to Class B shares and Class C shares, the creation or issue of any new shares not being Class A shares having rights ranking pari passu or above Class C shares or Class B shares."
"Finally, several of you have indicated your desires regarding taking or not taking your pro-rata part of any additional monies we may raise. However, some of you have not indicated any inclination, one way or the other, and it would be helpful to us to have some general idea from you. Obviously we don't expect a commitment at this time. We won't know for a little while whether this will be necessary or exactly how much, but as we do we'll keep everyone posted."
"I told you in December that our four family involvements would accept the dilution if the investment capital was increased to $1,700,000, but I would ask you to ignore that advice. If you now decide to pull in more cash, we would almost certainly like to participate to ensure that we at least hold our percentage stake. Not to do so, once everything is moving, would be absurd. I would suggest, however, that, while I appreciate your expressed view with regard to not wishing to borrow, the cash flow pattern in respect of set-up costs as at opening and income time could enable you to avoid raising further cash. It seems pointless to pull in more than necessary."
"All of this brings me to the myriad of topics I now need to discuss with you. To begin with, we are trying to make a distribution out of both Grandactual and Injebreck to you, the Class C shareholders. In fact, I have been working on this with my partners for many months. We have the money to distribute for 1998. The problem has been a wide variety of legal nits here and there, of which I have sorted out several, but have a few remaining. One of the problems is that the Articles of Association for Grandactual are incorrect and do not conform to the Shareholders Agreement. I have to get this corrected before I can go to the next step in making a distribution. The problem with the Articles is that they only address the Nominal Value of the Class C shares as being the basis for redemption, but in fact you are entitled to the Nominal Value and the Paid in Share Premium. The nominal value per share is one pence, but the Paid in Share Premium is approximately 65 pence. So I have to amend the Articles. To do that I have to call an Extraordinary General Meeting ('EGM') of the shareholders to vote this in. You can help me to speed up this process in two ways.
First, you can agree to consent to a short notice period for the EGM and secondly, you can give me your proxy. WE HAVE TO GET 95% TO AGREE TO SHORT NOTICE AND 75% TO AGREE TO CHANGE THE ARTICLES. Since I can't imagine any of you seriously wishing to redeem for 1 pence what you are entitled to get 65 pence for, my only concern is that you please FAX to me [number given] the Consent Form and the Proxy which are enclosed herein just as soon as possible, so that we may get on to the next step. For your convenience, I am including the Special Resolution to reflect this change in the Articles so you can see what we are talking about. If there are any questions, please feel free to telephone or e-mail me."
"…prejudicial to the interests of the Petitioners, in that, if there had been a separate Class C shareholders' meeting, the Hough family would have voted against the proposal unless there was a corresponding adjustment and/or dilution to the percentage share of the Company's profits available to the Class A shareholders."
"We are not therefore dealing with a case of a company which is simply running its own affairs in a manner which is harmful to the interests of shareholders and its subsidiary. It seems to me that Electronics, when it withheld payments from the company to the subsidiary company, was doing so as part of general control of the financial affairs of the company. It exercised that general control by deciding how much the company should receive (by withholding sums due to the company) and restricting the company's ability to spend money (by the signature requirements on cheques drawn by the company). In my view, Electronics, when it withheld from the company payments which were due to the company, was conducting the affairs of the company."
"On the question whether there was relevant conduct of the business of the company by Electronics, I must refer to some aspects of the facts. Before doing so, it is necessary to complete the passage from Lord President Cooper's judgment which Viscount Simmons expressly adopted as defining his view. The first sentence of the passage was [1959] AC 324 at 343:
'In my view the section warrants the court in looking at the business realities of a situation and does not confine them to a narrow legalistic view.'
The court in the Scottish Cooperative Society case was considering section 210 of the Companies Act 1948. With reference to section 75 of the 1980 Act Slade J in Re Bovey Hotel Ventures Limited (31st July 1981, unreported) said:
'Without prejudice to the generality of the wording of the section which may cover many other situations, a member of a company will be able to bring himself within the section if he can show that the value of his shareholding in the company has been seriously diminished or at least seriously jeopardised by reason of a course on the part of those persons who have had de facto control of the company which has been unfair to the member concerned.'
That statement was cited with approval by Nourse J in Re RA Noble & Sons Clothing Limited [1983] BCLC 273. It is in accordance with the view expressed by Lord President Cooper that the section warrants the court in looking at the business realties of a situation, and does not confine them to a narrow, legalistic view. Those statements apply, in my judgment, to the current provision of the Companies Act 1985, which Fox LJ has set out in his judgment."
"I now come to the main question. Does the court have power to make an order under section 459 in relation to a holding company where, first, it is the affairs of its wholly owned subsidiary that are being or have been conducted in an unfairly prejudicial manner and, secondly, the directors of the holding company are also directors of the subsidiary? I emphasise that here Mr Gross and Mr Rackind are the only directors of the company and of Blaneland and are also directors of Citybranch, of which Mr Gerald Gross is an additional director.
There is no English authority which directly answers this question. The nearest case appears to be Nicholas v Soundcraft Electronics Limited [1993] BCLC 360, where the company in respect of which the section 459 petition was presented was a 75 per cent subsidiary of Soundcraft Electronics Limited ("Electronics"), the remaining 25 per cent of the shares being held equally by the plaintiff, Mr Nicholas, and another. It was agreed that Electronics would support the company until it was financially viable, though the extent of the support was not discussed or defined. In any event, Electronics withheld support which it ought to have given to the company. It was held that, since Electronics exercised detailed control over the affairs of the company and since, when it withheld payments to the company, it was doing so as part of its general control over the company's affairs, the non-payment of what it owed did relate to the manner in which the affairs of the company were conducted."
"That case was the converse of the present in that the holding company was held to have been conducting the affairs of the subsidiary. However, I agree with Judge Weeks that it shows that conduct of the affairs of one company can also be conduct of the affairs of another. Mr Oliver submits that the circumstances there were very unusual in that the holding company was actually carrying on the subsidiary's business. He adds that it is only in such exceptional circumstances that the rationale of that decision can apply. It cannot be said, he submits, that Blaneland or Citybranch carried on the company's business here.
25. The observations of Ralph Gibson LJ in Nicholas v Soundcraft Electronics Limited may have been an echo of those made in the Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench Division presided over by Lord Parker CJ, in R v Board of Trade ex p St Martins Preserving Company Limited [1965] 1 QB 603. In that case a company sought an order of mandamus against the Board of Trade for the appointment of an inspector to investigate the affairs of the company under what is now section 431 of the 1985 Act. The question was whether the affairs of the company ceased to be its affairs on the appointment of a receiver and manager. It was held that they did not. At page 613, Phillimore J, who gave the leading judgment, said:
'In speaking of 'its affairs' in connection with a company the natural meaning of the words connotes 'its business affairs'.
What are 'its affairs' when the company is in full control? They must surely include its goodwill, its profits or losses, its contracts and assets including its shareholding in and ability to control the affairs of a subsidiary, or perhaps in the latter regard a sub-subsidiary such as Atholl Houses Ltd. In ordinary parlance the affairs of the applicant company must surely have included its shareholding in TG Tickler Ltd, and its power in virtue of that shareholding to control the board of that subsidiary and the disposition of Atholl Houses Ltd, the wholly owned sub-subsidiary - see [1965] 1QB 603 at 613.'
TG Tickler Limited was a 98 per cent subsidiary of the company and Atholl Houses Limited was a wholly owned subsidiary of TG Tickler Limited.
26. The observations of Phillimore J demonstrate that the expression 'the affairs of the company' is one of the widest import which can include the affairs of a subsidiary. Equally, I would hold that the affairs of a subsidiary can also be the affairs of its holding company, especially where, as here, the directors of the holding company, which necessarily controls the affairs of the subsidiary, also represent a majority of the directors of the subsidiary. (In the case of Blaneland they are identical).
27. In support of the contrary view, Mr Oliver and Miss Nicholson have referred us to a number of other authorities which do not take the matter significantly further. I need only refer to Re A Company No 001761 of 1986 [1987] BCLC 141, a decision of Harman J, where he said at page 144:
'All these cases together, in my judgment, lead one clearly to the understanding that the conduct to be complained of must be in the affairs of the very company in respect of which the petition is presented.'
Mr Oliver relies on the words 'in the affairs of the very company in respect of which the petition is presented.' However, I agree with the observations of Judge Weeks, who said:
'Those words must be read in context. Harman J was not considering a group structure in that case and did not have to deal with the proposition that the conduct of one company's affairs may also be the conduct of another company's affairs.'"
"For these reasons, I would decide the main question, like the subsidiary questions, in favour of the Gross family. In conclusion I refer to the decisive passage in Judge Weeks's judgment:
'In my judgment, there is no authority which forces me to hold that conduct of a subsidiary's affairs can never also be conduct of the parent company's affairs, and in the circumstances of the present case I think it not beyond the bounds of possibility that the court may reach the conclusion that the acts complained of were also acts in the conduct of the parent company's affairs. This is a strike out application, and I should not strike out the petition if it has any realistic prospect of success. In my judgment, those paragraphs do have a realistic prospect of success.'
That was an entirely correct approach to the main question."
"As a result of the purported redemption of the Class C shares in Injebreck and alteration of its profit-sharing ratio to 50/50, the respondents have been and are moving available cash in the company to Injebreck to be distributed principally to themselves as the holders of the Class A shares rather than using such cash to redeem the Company's Class C shares.
38. Between 1998 and 2002 a total of US$369,477 was transferred by the Company to Injebreck in respect of 'licensing fees'. Most of this has been distributed to Injebreck shareholders whether by way of redemptions or dividend.
39. The Company has paid no dividends and has made no redemptions of its Class C shares. The first to third respondents have used Injebreck to channel available cash in the Company to themselves."