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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Alvona Developments Ltd. v The Manhattan Loft Corporation (AC) Ltd. & Anor [2005] EWHC 1567 (Ch) (19 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1567.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1567 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Alvona Developments Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) The Manhattan Loft Corporation (AC) Limited (2) Powis Assets Limited |
Defendant |
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D W Mayall (instructed by Baskin Ross & Co) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 6th July 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Peter Smith J :
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
THE COMPANY
ORIGINAL AGREEMENT AS TO COMPOSITION OF BOARD
POWIS EVIDENCE
BASIS OF APPLICATION
"371 Power of court to order meeting
(1) if for any reason it is impracticable to call a meeting of a company in any manner in which meetings of that company may be called, or to conduct the meeting in manner prescribed by the articles or this Act, the court may, either of its own motion or on the application –
(a) of any director of the company, or
(b) of any member of the company who would be entitled to vote at the meeting,
order a meeting to be called, held and conducted in any manner the court thinks fit.
(2) Where such an order is made, the court may give such ancillary or consequential directions as it thinks expedient; and these may include a direction that one member of the company present in person or by proxy be deemed to constitute a meeting.
(3) A meeting called, held and conducted in accordance with an order under subsection (1) is deemed for all purposes a meeting of the company duly called, held and conducted."
"For present purposes I do not regard it as the function of the court to intervene in these sort of proceedings by requiring various cross undertakings to achieve the conduct of the business of the company on sensible terms. That is for the parties' advisers to achieve. It is not for the court to make a new shareholders' agreement between the parties and impose it on them. Beyond that, however, I am of the view that the judge has not given sufficient weight to the situation of the section 459 petition and the allegations there. He has misdirected himself. Much more, it is not right, in my view, to invoke section 371 to override class rights attached to a class of shares which have been deliberately – in this case by the shareholders' agreement – imposed for the protection of the holders of those shares, although they are a minority. It is not the case that the overriding position is that the majority shareholders must prevail on everything. Class rights have to be respected and I regard the right of Mr Blumenthal, as the holder of the B shares, to be present in the quorum as a class right for his protection which is not to be overridden by this machinery. I would therefore allow this appeal."
"The primary effect of the order made by the judge in this case was to regulate the affairs of PLB by authorising a representative of Mr Ross's solicitors to be appointed to represent that company at a general meeting of Linkside. Such an appointment would normally be made at a board meeting of PLB, but whether it was made there or in general meeting the effect of the order was to break the deadlock in PLB. Mr Lander, for Mrs Telford, does not base any procedural objection on the fact that PLB is not a party to these proceedings but he does object to the order as a matter of substance. He says that s 371 does not empower the court to break a deadlock at either a board or general meeting of a company. Indeed, it has nothing to do with board meetings. As for general meetings, he says that the two decisions relied on by Mr Sterling go no further than to show that the court can make orders so as to prevent a minority shareholder from using quorum tactics to stop a majority shareholder from exercising the voting rights attached to his shares. It does not at all follow that the court can make an order so as to permit a 50% shareholder to override the wishes of the other 50% shareholder.
In support of his submissions Mr Lander has relied on what he would call the principle of the thing, which is that s 371 is a procedural section not designed to affect substantive voting rights or to shift the balance of power between shareholders in a case where the potential deadlock is something which must be taken to have been agreed on with the consent and for the protection of each of them. Mr Lander also relies on the decision of this court in Harman v BML Group Ltd [1994] 2 BCLC 674, [1994] 1 WLR 893. In that case the leading judgment was given by Dillon LJ, with whom Leggatt and Henry LJJ agreed. There some shareholders were seeking to obtain an order under s 371 which would have had the effect of overriding the class rights of another shareholder. Dillon LJ pointed out ([1994] 2 BCLC 674 at 678, [1994] 1 WLR 893 at 896) that it was entirely novel to seek to use the machinery of convening a meeting under the section to override class rights. In the decisive passage at the end of the judgment, he said ([1994] 2 BCLC 674 at 679, [1994] 1 WLR 893 at 898) that it was not right to invoke the section to override class rights attached to a class of shares which had been deliberately imposed for the protection of the holders of those shares although they were a minority."
"There is little dispute as to the relevant law in this case. The parties are in essence agreed as to the principles to be applied. The main principles are as follows:
(a) Section 371 gives the court a discretion. An applicant for an order is not entitled to an order as of right; nor is the respondent entitled to resist the order as of right. Re El Sombrero Ltd [1958] 3 All ER 1, [1958] Ch 900; Re H R Paul & Son Ltd (1973) 118 Sol Jo 166.
(b) The effect of s 303 of the Companies Act 1985 is to give a majority shareholder a right to remove and appoint directors. That has to be borne in mind in considering the exercise of the discretion in this case. Re Opera Photographic Ltd [1989] BCLC 763,[1989] 1 WLR 634.
(c) The quorum provisions in the articles cannot be regarded as conferring on a member some form of veto in relation to company business. Re Opera Photographic Ltd [1989] BCLC 763 at 765, [1989] 1 WLR 634 at 637.
(d) The existence of a concurrent s 459 petition is not necessarily a bar to the grant of an order under s 371 (Re Whitchurch Insurance Consultants Ltd [1993] BCLC 1359); nor is the fact that the results of the proposed meeting would be likely to generate further such litigation (Re Opera Photographic Ltd).
(e) If there is an arrangement which effectively gives a right in the nature of a class right to the respondent shareholder, then the court will not make an order if the result of that order would be to infringe that class right. Harman v BML Group Ltd [1994] 2 BCLC 674, [1994] 1 WLR 893."
"[the following is prohibited without the prior written consent of both shareholders] holding any meeting of shareholders or purport to transact any business at any such meeting unless there shall be present duly authorised representatives or proxies for each of the shareholders. "
" [32] I venture to make a few preliminary observations about s 371. It is a procedural section plainly intended to enable company business which needs to be conducted at a general meeting of the company to be so conducted. No doubt the thinking behind it is that a company should be allowed to get on with managing its affairs, and that should not be frustrated by the impracticability of calling or conducting a general meeting in the manner prescribed by the articles and the Act.
[33] One situation Parliament envisaged where s 371 might be utilised can be seen from s 371(2), allowing the court to direct that a meeting attended by only one member should suffice. That suggests that Parliament had in mind a situation where there was a quorum provision requiring the attendance of more than one member, such as is contained in reg 40 of Table A. Save for the condition of impracticability, no other express conditions are imposed on the ability of a director or member to call for a meeting, or on the ability of the court to exercise its power. But the power confers on the court a discretion and, like all discretions, it must be exercised properly having regard to the relevant circumstances. The authorities provide examples of cases where the power has been exercised and where it has not. The fact that there are quorum provisions in Table A requiring two members' attendance will not in itself be sufficient to prevent the court making an order under s 371, where the applicant is seeking a proper order such as the appointment of a director, something which a majority shareholder would have the right to procure in ordinary circumstances.
[34] In this context it is to be borne in mind that by s 14(1) of the Act, the memorandum and articles bind the company and its members to the same extent as if they respectively had been signed and sealed by each member, and contained covenants on the part of each member to observe all the provisions of the memorandum and articles. For my part, I have difficulty in seeing how an agreement constituted by the statutory deeming provision is to be treated in any way differently from an express agreement, such as a shareholders' agreement, containing a quorum provision. Both have effect as contractual agreements as between the shareholders.
[35] The first case, Re El Sombrero Ltd [1958] 3 All ER 1, [1958] Ch 900, like Re Opera Photographic Ltd [1989] BCLC 763, [1989] 1 WLR 634, establishes that the contract between the members of a company as created by the articles can be overridden by the court ordering a meeting under s 371, and that a right in a member to choose whether or not to attend a meeting does not amount to a right of veto, or to a right to frustrate the wishes of the majority. In Re Opera Photographic Ltd [1989] BCLC 763 at 764, [1989] 1 WLR 634 at 636 Morritt J referred to the decision of Brightman J in Re H R Paul & Son Ltd (1974) 118 Sol Jo 166. Brightman J is reported as saying:
'The jurisdiction conferred by the section was discretionary and his Lordship was therefore not bound to make an order but to refuse B. Ltd's application would deprive the majority shareholder of the right to alter the articles of association, and confer on the minority a right of veto not commensurate with their shareholding. His Lordship did not accept that the quorum provisions should be regarded as a right vested in the minority to frustrate the wishes of the majority and he would therefore grant the relief sought.'
[36] Morritt J continued ([1989] BCLC 763 at 765, [1989] 1 WLR 634 at 636):
'The plain fact of this matter is that deadlock exists between the two individuals which has to be resolved one way or another. It is either capable of being resolved by ordering a meeting, at which no doubt Mr Martin [a minority holder and director] will be removed, and which will then no doubt result either in him exercising the pre-emption rights under the articles of selling his shares, or presenting a petition for the winding up of the company, or presenting a petition under s 459 [of the 1985 Act] based on unfair prejudice to him. If no order is made the deadlock will continue because no meetings can be conducted which are going effectively to manage or procure the management of this company, and if that persists for any length of time then no doubt one or other of the individuals will again be presenting a petition based on that deadlock in order to provide some form of resolution. In the circumstances I do not think that the distinction which counsel for the second respondent seeks to draw is a valid one. The point still remains that the applicant, as the 51% shareholder, has the statutory right under the Companies Act 1985 to remove Mr Martin as a director. As Brightman J's decision in Re H R Paul & Son Ltd shows, the quorum provisions cannot be regarded as conferring upon the second respondent some form of veto as being his entitlement. If he is, as no doubt he will be, removed if I make the order sought it may then well be that further proceedings will have to be undertaken by one side or another to procure the purchase of the other's shares, but that seems to me to be inevitable in any event. It would be in those proceedings that the wrongfulness or otherwise of the conduct of either of the individuals would have to be determined in order to decide what order to make and what form the relief should be. In those circumstances I see no reason not to exercise the discretion which it is accepted exists in this case and I will accordingly make the order sought.'
[37] Harman v BML Group Ltd [1994] 2 BCLC 674, [1994] 1 WLR 893 turned on the fact that there was a class right attached to a class of shares, which the convening of a general meeting was designed to override. That, this court held, could not be done. I add the comment that that is hardly surprising in view of the elaborate provisions in Ch II of Pt V of the Act prescribing the procedures and conditions for varying any class rights. The company in question had a share capital consisting of 290,000 A shares and 210,000 B shares. There were four A shareholders but only one B shareholder, a Mr Blumenthal. A shareholders' agreement provided that Mr Blumenthal should be entitled to remain in office as director so long as he, or any family company of his, should be the owner of the B shares, and that a general meeting should be inquorate unless the B shareholder, or his proxy or representative, attended.
[38] Dillon LJ, giving a judgment with which Leggatt and Henry LJJ agreed, said that the provision requiring the B shareholder to be present was essential to entrench Mr Blumenthal's right to remain a director and was a special provision to secure his directorship. Dillon LJ also said ([1994] 2 BCLC 674 at 680, [1994] 1 WLR 893 at 898):
'Class rights have to be respected and I regard the right of Mr Blumenthal, as the holder of the B shares, to be present in the quorum as a class right for his protection which is not to be overridden by this [the s 371] machinery.'
He made it clear that it was not for the court to make a new shareholders' agreement and impose it on the parties.
[39] The present case is not one with entrenched or any class rights, as it seems to me. There is nothing in the agreement or in the memorandum and articles of Arias which confers any right on Mr Watson as shareholder which is not also conferred on Union as shareholder. There are simply no classes of shares: there is but a single class. I would add at this point that we were taken by Mr Freedman to Cumbrian Newspapers Group Ltd v Cumberland & Westmorland Herald Newspaper & Printing Co Ltd [1986] BCLC 286, [1987] Ch 1 for the proposition that a class right could exist even though there was only one type of share in issue and the rights of the shareholders were the same. In my judgment, nothing that was said by Scott J in the Cumbrian case supports so broad, and indeed astonishing, a proposition. There is, in my view, no assistance from the Cumbrian case towards resolving the dispute in the present case.
[40] Ross v Telford [1998] 1 BCLC 82 was a case where a husband and wife were the only two directors of each of two companies. They were equal shareholders of one of the companies. The shareholders of the second company were the husband and the first company. In an acrimonious divorce the district judge had directed that the net proceeds arising out of the liquidation or sale of either company should be divided equally. An action had been brought by the second company against a bank, alleging that the wife had forged the husband's signature on cheques. The husband wanted a meeting to be called under s 371 to ratify the second company's action, with a nominee chosen by him representing the first company shareholder. Thus, the deadlock would have been broken if the order had been made. Judge Howarth, at first instance, made an order under s 371, but on appeal this court reversed his decision. Nourse LJ, with whom Roch and Phillips LJJ agreed, said that neither the El Sombrero case nor the Opera Photographic case was authority for the proposition that s 371 enabled the court to break a deadlock between two equal shareholders, and that that was confirmed by the Harman decision. In so holding, this court accepted submissions from the wife that the court cannot make an order under the section so as to permit a 50% shareholder to override the wishes of the other 50% shareholder, that s 371 was a procedural section not designed to affect substantive voting rights or to shift the balance of power between shareholders in a case where they had agreed that power should be shared equally, and where the potential deadlock is something which must be taken to have been agreed for the protection of each shareholder.
[41] In the present case the shareholdings were not equal. The agreement was not designed to ensure that power should be shared equally. Initially, as I have noted, Mr and Mrs Watson, who might be expected to have been in one camp, were the majority on the board, with the majority shareholder left as the minority on the board. The deadlock happens to have been caused by Mrs Watson ceasing to be a director. Union, as the majority shareholder, could be expected to be able to remove or appoint a director. I do not agree with the judge's suggestion that the parties had contracted for a situation of deadlock. What the parties had contracted for, I accept, was that if Mr Watson chose not to attend or be represented at a general meeting, then there could be no general meeting.
[42] Clause 6.1.18, however, seems to me more in the nature of a quorum provision than a provision for a class right, which it plainly was not, or a substantive right. Thus, the present case, as it seems to me, is one which is distinguishable from both the Harman and the Ross cases. The position is similar to that in the Opera Photographic case.
[43] For completeness I should also mention that we were taken by Mr Freedman to a further case, Re Woven Rugs Ltd [2002] 1 BCLC 324, a decision of Mr Anthony Mann QC on 3 December 2001. In that case there was little dispute as to the relevant law, and the parties were agreed as to the principles to be applied (see [2002] 1 BCLC 324 at 328–329). Those principles included:
'(e) If there is an arrangement which effectively gives a right in the nature of a class right to the respondent shareholder, then the court will not make an order if the result of that order would be to infringe that class right.'
Harman is given as the authority for that.
[44] Mr Freedman also referred us to the fact that the majority shareholder in that case accepted that if, as had been contended by one side, there was an agreement in the nature of a shareholders' agreement between the parties to the effect that each side should have one director on the board, and that if such an agreement was established, it would be wrong to order a shareholders' meeting at which it was intended to propose a resolution which contravened that agreement. Thus, the points for which that case was cited to us were conceded and, as I have noted, it related to rights in the nature of a class right. For the reasons I have already given, I cannot see that any right in the nature of a class right is involved in the present case.
[45] I conclude that the judge was wrong in thinking, as he appears to have done, that Harman and Ross constrained him not to exercise the power under s 371 in this case. The judge also treated the agreement as containing a provision which would be contravened if the judge were to order a meeting to be held in accordance with s 371. There would be, of course, no contravention if the meeting were called and Mr Watson chose to attend the meeting. However, realistically, I acknowledge that it may well be that Mr Watson would choose to abstain from attending the meeting, as indicated in his solicitor's witness statement. The judge felt that he could not in the circumstances exercise his discretion to cause not only a meeting to be held, but business to be conducted.
46] There is no doubt that if, as one would expect, Union exercises its voting rights at a meeting not attended by Mr Watson or his proxy, it would be doing so in contravention of cl 6.1.18. For the reasons which I have already given, I do not see that as being an insuperable obstacle in the way of the court making an order under s 371. The court should consider whether the company is in a position to manage its affairs properly. It ought also to take into account the ordinary right of a majority shareholder to remove or appoint a director in exercise of his majority voting [power. A meeting would be limited to the single act of enabling the appointment of a new director to be considered and voted on. Taking the view that I do that cl 6.1.18 is in the nature of a quorum provision rather than a provision confirming a substantive right, it seems to me that the judge was wrong to rely on that provision to refuse to order the meeting."
" [clause 6.1.18] [is not a class right] or a substantive right ".
Thus he distinguished the Harman and Ross cases. Accordingly it seems to me that he is suggesting that section 371 cannot be used to overturn class rights or "substantive rights" (whatever that might mean).