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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> India Infrastructure Finance Company (UK) Ltd v Reliance Naval & Engineering Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 1612 (KB) (04 July 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/1612.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1612 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Heard on 4th April 2023 |
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B e f o r e :
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INDIA INFRASTRUCTURE FINANCE COMPANY (UK) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) RELIANCE NAVAL & ENGINEERING LIMITED (previously known as Pipavav Defence & Offshore Engineering Company Limited) (2) SKIL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED (3) MR. NIKHIL PRATAPRAI GANDHI (4) MR. BHAVESH PRATAPRAI GANDHI |
Defendants |
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For the Claimant: Mr. Vivek Kapoor, of counsel, instructed by Field Fisher LLP
For the Second, Third and Fourth Defendants: The Fourth Defendant, in person.
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Crown Copyright ©
The Background
(C) The operations of the Borrower have come under strain due to various reasons and the Borrower has requested the CDR Lenders for restructuring of its corporate debt.
(D) At the request of the Borrower and in consideration of the Borrower's commitment to improve its operations, the Borrower has been admitted to the Corporate Debt Restructuring Forum, a non-statutory voluntary mechanism set up under the aegis of the Reserve Bank of India (hereinafter referred to as the "CDR"), for the efficient restructuring of its corporate debt.
(The emphasis is mine).
[2] By letter dated 9th September 2016, the First Defendant asked the Claimant to approve a refinancing plan as it was crucial for the First Defendant's revival.
[3] On the 7th March 2017, the Claimant wrote to Reliance Defence in relation to the approval of modification of sanction terms.
[4] By letter dated 6th October 2017 to all lenders the First Defendant requested all lenders to accept modifications in the terms of lending to correspond with changes in its business plan. However, the request from the First Defendant did not relate to any modification in the terms or nature of the security available to lenders at that time.
The parties' contentions
[2] The Defendants make the point that if the corporate and personal guarantees given in 2014 remained in force there would be no need for this proposed additional security. Put another way, the request for the said additional security shows that the 2014 guarantees were no longer in force. The Defendants submitted that the use of the words "shall furnish" highlight this point.
[3] The Defendants did not provide the requested additional security. However, they state that the re-financing proceeded and the First Defendant exited the Corporate Debt Restructuring as the letter of the 7th March 2017 envisaged. Also that rights issues envisaged by 7th March 2017 letter took place.
Conclusions
"… erstwhile promoters [the Defendants] are now seeking the release of pledge and personal guarantee (PG) & corporate guarantee (CG) furnished by them. As such, new promoters shall have to pledge their shareholding and furnish PG and CG…Shri Bansal [of IDBI] advised company official to take immediate steps to pledge shareholding of new promoters with lenders."
"It is however clarified that pursuant to this letter the ECB facility and other financing documents would be required to be amended / freshly executed and such documents once executed by (the Claimant), such documents would supersede the existing ECB facility agreement."
" … As you are aware, the ECB exposure of USD 68 mn is kept outside the restructuring scheme. There is no change in the repayment terms and there is no interest rate sacrifice. Once CDR is implemented, it will be our endeavour to service the ECB exposure regularly. …"[9]
Note 1 In fact, the Claimant does not seek any relief against the First Defendant in the claim. According to paragraph 2.3 of the Particulars of Claim, the First Defendant has been added as a party to the proceedings “due to its relevance to this claim.” [Back] Note 2 The ICA is at pages 2-87 of the additional bundle. [Back] Note 3 As is apparently usual with multi-lender facilities, the security trustee was appointed to create and hold security on behalf of various lenders, including the Claimant. [Back] Note 4 Furthermore, the Claimant was not listed as an “Existing Lender” in Schedule 2 of the MRA. [Back] Note 6 The letter and annexure are detailed. The annexure sets out a number of other conditions before further funds would be released. I do not need to set these out. [Back] Note 7 See Reliance Infrastructure’s letter to the First Defendant’s lenders dated 7th March 2015 requesting the lenders to approve the Corporate Debt Restructuring [CDR] package. Bundle p.597. [Back] Note 8 Para 4.3.2 of the CDR Guidelines states that: “The lenders in foreign currency outside the country are not part of CDR system”. [Back] Note 9 Bundle p.1,000. The First Defendant’s letter dated 8th May 2015 to the Claimant likewise states that the Claimant has been kept outside the restructuring agreement so as to allow repayment of the $68m as per the original schedule; Bundle p.1,007. [Back]