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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Anglo Petroleum Ltd & Anor v TFB (Mortgages) Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 456 (16 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/456.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 456 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE PETER SMITH
HC04C00179
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
____________________
ANGLO PETROLEUM LIMITED & PAUL SUTTON |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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TFB (MORTGAGES) LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR MICHAEL TODD QC (instructed by Byrne & Partners) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 15 March 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson:
The Share Purchase transaction
The credit transactions
"For your information, a condition of the acquisition [by Kaluna] was that the £30 million of loans from the parent… was to be paid off as to part and written off as to part, in its entirety, (the final balance to be paid off from the proceeds of the loan to be provided by your company)."
The proceedings
Validity issues
i) Did the payment of £9 million by APL to Repsol (from the TFB loan) in discharge of APL's indebtedness to Repsol constitute the giving of financial assistance within the meaning of s 151, either via Route 1 or via Route 2?
ii) If so, is TFB prevented by the doctrine of illegality from enforcing the credit transactions?
The Statute
"I start with the mischief to which s 151 is directed. Section 151 is derived from s 45 of the Companies Act 1929 which was enacted as a result of the previously common practice of purchasing the shares of a company having a substantial cash balance or easily realisable assets and so arranging matters that the purchase money was lent by the company to the purchaser (see Re: VGM Holdings Limited [1942] 1 All ER 224 at 225-226, [1942] Ch 235 at 239). The prohibition was amended in 1948 and reformulated in 1981. The report of the Company Law Committee (the Jenkins Committee) (Cmnd 1749, 1962) para 180, p 66 expressed the view that it was "unwise" to attempt a precise definition of financial assistance. It is clear from the way in which s 151 and s 152 are drafted that it covers financial assistance in many forms apart from loans (see for example the wide wording of s 152(3)). The general mischief, however, remains the same, namely that the resources of the target company and its subsidiaries should not be used directly or indirectly to assist the purchaser financially to make the acquisition. This may prejudice the interests of the creditors of the target or its group, and the interests of any shareholders who do not accept the offer to acquire their shares or to whom the offer is not made."
"There are two elements in the commission of an offence under s 54 [the section that preceded s 151]. The first is the giving of financial assistance and the second is that it should have been given "for the purpose of or in connection with", in this case, a purchase of shares…There is no definition of giving financial assistance in the section, although some examples are given. The words have no technical meaning and their frame of reference is in my judgment the language of ordinary commerce. One must examine the commercial realities of the transaction and decide whether it can properly be described as the giving of financial assistance by the company, bearing in mind that the section is a penal one and should not be strained to cover transactions which are not fairly within it."
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this Chapter, where a person is acquiring or is proposing to acquire shares in a company, it is not lawful for the company or for any of its subsidiaries to give financial assistance directly or indirectly for the purpose of that acquisition before or at the same time as the acquisition takes place.
(2) Subject to those provisions, where a person has acquired shares in a company and any liability has been incurred (by that or any other person), for the purpose of that acquisition, it is not lawful for the company or any of its subsidiaries to give financial assistance directly or indirectly for the purpose of reducing or discharging the liability so incurred.
(3) If a company acts in contravention of this section, it is liable to a fine, and every officer of it who is in default is liable to imprisonment or a fine, or both."
"A reference to a person incurring a liability includes his changing his financial position by making an agreement or arrangement (whether enforceable or unenforceable, and whether made on his own account or with any other person) or by any other means."
"Section 151(1) does not prohibit a company from giving financial assistance for the purpose of an acquisition of shares in it or its holding company if –
(a) the company's principal purpose in giving that assistance is not to give it for the purpose of any such acquisition, or the giving of the assistance for that purpose is but an incidental part of some larger purpose of the company, and
(b) the assistance is given in good faith in the interests of the company."
Financial assistance – the arguments
1. The commercial reality was that Repsol was only prepared to sell its shares in APL if it would receive £15 million.
2. The sale was structured in such a way that Kaluna would pay only £1 but Repsol would receive £15 million.
3. Kaluna was assisted in buying the shares for £1 by APL undertaking to pay £15 million to Repsol under the Compromise Agreement and entering into the APL/Repsol charge to secure that obligation, and that was the purpose of APL's assistance. There was no reason for the Compromise Agreement other than the sale to Kaluna.
4. The APL/Repsol charge fell within the definition of financial assistance in s 152(1)(a)(ii).
5. APL's liabilities under the Compromise Agreement and the APL/Repsol charge having been incurred for the purpose of Kaluna's acquisition of the shares in APL, the payment by APL of £9 million borrowed from TFB to discharge APL's outstanding indebtedness involved giving financial assistance for the purpose of discharging liabilities incurred for the purpose of the acquisition of the shares contrary to s 151(2).
1. The transactions were far removed from the mischief at which s151 is aimed.
2. The liability of APL under the Compromise Agreement to pay £15 million and the APL/Repsol charge were the cost of release of its liability to Repsol for £30 million. An arrangement reducing the company's liabilities cannot properly be characterised as giving financial assistance to a purchaser.
3. APL's subsequent repayment of its indebtedness to Repsol did not fall within the s 151 concept of financial assistance.
4. The purpose of APL was not the giving of assistance to Kaluna. It gave security to Repsol, as the judge found, as the price for a reduction of its debt. It gave security to TFB in order to discharge its liabilities to Repsol and to raise additional working capital.
5. The arrangement fee agreed between APL and TFB was simply the cost to APL of borrowing. The fact that the borrowing came at a price cannot determine the question whether the use of the funds borrowed amounted to financial assistance within s 151. What mattered was not the terms on which the money was borrowed but what the company did with the money when borrowed: Gradwell at page 425 ("the question whether it was to give financial assistance would depend not on how it obtained the money – by loan, secured or not, by realising assets or otherwise – but on what it was to do with the money when available.").
Financial assistance - conclusions
Illegality and the credit transactions
1. Clause 3 of the Credit Agreement provided:
"PURPOSE
(a) The proceeds of the Loan shall be applied in or towards the refinancing of indebtedness of the Borrower on the date of this Agreement and for the provision of working capital.
(b) Without affecting the obligations of the Borrower in any way, the Lender is not bound to monitor or verify the application of any Loan."
2. TFB knew from APL's fax sent on the day before the conclusion of the Credit Agreement that APL was indebted to its former parent, that a condition of the acquisition by Kaluna was that the indebtedness was to be written off in part and paid off in part, and that APL intended to pay off the final balance from the proceeds of the loan from TFB.
3. TFB also knew that the Credit Agreement entailed a material reduction in APL's net assets.
4. The Credit Agreement and the Security Agreement are unenforceable because the Credit Agreement required that the proceeds of the loan should be used for a purpose which was illegal on the facts known to TFB.
5. Alternatively, the Credit Agreement and the Security Agreement are unenforceable because
(a) the purpose of APL and TFB in entering into the Credit Agreement and the Security Agreement was to effect a transaction which was illegal on the facts known to TFB, or
(b) APL's purpose was to effect an illegal transaction and TFB knew of that purpose and participated in it, or
(c) APL's purpose was to effect an illegal transaction and TFB knew of that purpose.
6. It is any event irrelevant that TFB did not know of the illegality, because ignorance of the law is no defence.
"[Counsel for the plaintiff] argues before us that the parties to this letting were ignorant of its unlawfulness: and that, in these circumstances (as it is a contract which could lawfully be performed) it is not to be regarded as unlawful unless they had a "wicked intention to break the law." He relies on the well-known judgment of Blackburn J in Waugh v Morris (1873) LR 8 QB 202. Now I desire to say that where two people together have the common design to use a subject-matter for an unlawful purpose, so that each participates in the unlawful purpose, then that contract is illegal in its formation: and it is no answer for them to say that they did not know the law on the matter. I would take a comparable case where there is a common design to use a subject matter for an immoral purpose. If a landlord lets a flat to a prostitute at a rent beyond any normal commercial rent, or if he lets her a brougham of a specially intriguing nature [a reference to Pearce v Brooks (1866) LR 1 Exch 213] it may fairly be inferred that it was their common design that it should be used for an immoral purpose. The letting is unlawful and he cannot recover the rent or hire. It is different with the washerwoman who washes the clothes of the prostitute or the butcher who supplies her with meat. They may know of her trade but they charge her normal commercial prices. There is there no common design. There is no participation in the immoral purpose, but merely knowledge of it. And that is no bar to recovering the price. Likewise with an unlawful purpose, active participation debars, but knowledge by itself does not. As I read Waugh v Morris there was there no participation in any unlawful purpose and the plaintiff could recover. In this case, however, there was participation. The common design was that a game should be played which was in fact unlawful."
"We quite agree, that, where a contract is to do a thing which cannot be performed without a violation of the law it is void, whether the parties knew the law or not. But we think, that in order to avoid a contract which can be legally performed, on the ground that there was an intention to perform it in an illegal manner, it is necessary to show that there was the wicked intention to break the law; and, if this be so, the knowledge of what the law is becomes of great importance."
"This would be carrying the law much further than it has ever yet been carried. The merely selling goods, knowing that the buyer will make an illegal use of them, is not sufficient to deprive the vendor of his just right of payment, but to effect that, it is necessary that the vendor should be a sharer in the illegal transaction."
"1. Did the defendant hire the brougham for the purpose of her prostitution?
2. If she did, did the plaintiffs know the purpose for which it was hired?"
"I put it to the jury, that, in some sense, everything which was supplied to a prostitute is supplied to her to enable her to carry on her trade, as, for instance, shoes sold to a street walker; and that the things supplied must be not merely such as would be necessary or useful for ordinary purposes, and might also be applied to an immoral one; but that they must be such as would under the circumstances not be required, except with that view. The jury, by the mode in which they answered the question, showed that they appreciated the distinction."
"Each case has to be considered on its merits. Nor must it be forgotten that the rule by which contracts not expressly forbidden by statute or declared to be void are in proper cases nullified for disobedience to a statute is a rule of public policy only, and public policy understood in a wider sense may at times be better served by refusing to nullify a bargain save on serious and sufficient grounds."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Smith:
Lord Justice Mummery: