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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 >> Doughty Hanson & Co Ltd v Roe [2007] EWHC 2212 (Ch) (04 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/2212.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2212 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DOUGHTY HANSON & CO LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BRUCE PATRICK ROE |
Defendant |
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BRUCE PATRICK ROE |
Claimant |
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And |
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DOUGHTY HANSON & CO LIMITED NIGEL EDWARD DOUGHTY RICHARD PETER HANSON |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr. C. Graham Q.C. and Mr. M. Cook (instructed by Messrs. Olswang) for the Defendant.
Hearing dates: 16th, 17th & 18th May 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
Factual background
"(c) The holders of the Participating Shares shall be entitled to receive the whole of the profits of the Company available for distribution and from time to time determined to be distributed by way of dividend, in proportion to the number of Participating Shares held by them respectively."
Any surplus in the winding up is payable to the holders of the Participating Shares. The Participating Shares are owned by Mr Roe, Mr Doughty and Mr Hanson. Mr Roe holds 12,240 Participating Shares, amounting to 10.34% of those shares.
"11.2 The provisions of this Article to apply [sic] in respect of any transfer of Participating Shares.
(a) A member or a person entitled by transmission or otherwise, who intends to transfer shares (the "Vendor") shall give to the Company notice in writing of his intention (the "Transfer Notice"), specifying the shares which he intends to transfer (the "Shares for Sale") and the price per share (the "Sale Price") at which he is prepared to sell the Shares for Sale, or where appropriate, that he wishes to sell at the fair value to be determined in accordance with Article 11.2(f)."
Thus two sorts of offer are contemplated - one at a fixed price, and the other at a price to be determined by a valuer. The reference to a determination in accordance with 11.2(f) is a reference to a valuation by an investment bank or accountants.
(i) Paragraph (b) provides that a Transfer Notice is irrevocable save as set out in paragraph (g), and for the Company to act as agent of the seller.
(ii) Paragraph (c) provides for the Company to offer the shares to the other shareholders and for them (if they wish) to accept the whole or part of the shares offered, and to take up shares not accepted by others.
(iii) Paragraph (e) provides for the Company to notify shareholders of the acceptances and allocations and provides for each member to be bound in accordance with his acceptance.
(iv) Paragraph (f) allows any shareholder who receives a fixed price offer to require a valuation instead, in order to determine the "fair value" of a share. The valuer is to be an accountant or investment banker. The valuation is to be on the footing that there is no discount for a minority holding, and the valuer acts as expert and not as arbitrator.
(v) Paragraph (g) is an important provision on which the second major point of this judgment turns. It states what the price of the shares is to be and gives a right of withdrawal which has been relied on by Mr Roe. It will be useful to set it out in full here (with italics emphasising the important phrases):
"(g) Any sale of shares effected pursuant to this Article to a purchasing member who has stated that he is prepared to accept the Sale Price shall be at the Sale Price and any sale of shares effected pursuant to this Article to a purchasing member who has required a fair value to be fixed pursuant to Article 11.2(f) shall be at the fair value so fixed save that the Vendor may, within 14 days of the issue of the certificate by the Valuer, indicate in writing that he is not prepared to sell at the fair value in which case the Transfer Notice shall be deemed to be withdrawn."
(vi) Paragraph (i) binds the vendor to sell on payment of the price and for the Company to act in the sale in default of the Vendor doing so.
(vii) Paragraph (k) allows the Company to elect to allocate the shares to employees, directors, an employees' or directors' trust or a suitable nominee company, in lieu of the offer to all the shareholders.
"As outlined in our letter of 21 July, we do not consider that the requirement for Mr Roe to serve a Transfer Notice under Article 12.2 of the Company's Articles of Association has yet been triggered, as Mr Roe remains a director of a number of Doughty Hanson companies. Mr Roe will however be forwarding his resignations to you in respect of these companies shortly."
It was pointed out on behalf of the Company that it was assumed that a notice would be given under Article 12.2. No reference is made to the possibility of giving a separate notice under Article 11.2 (essentially a voluntary notice). The next day Mr Roe resigned his directorships. That started the six week clock in Article 12.2 running. On 7th September 2006 Olswang wrote to Skaddens and pointed out that "Mr Roe's obligation to serve a transfer notice under the Articles of Association" had a deadline for service of 26th September. The letter went on to say:
"Mr Roe therefore intends shortly to serve a transfer notice in accordance with the Articles of Association."
The letter asked for financial information so that he could assess the value of his shareholding in the value of the company more accurately. It was said that Mr Roe would wish to make representations to the valuer "once appointed".
"In terms of consultation, we expressly assert that there is no duty under the Articles of Association for Mr Roe to consult with, or to express views to, the valuer, nor should such rights be otherwise implied. Nonetheless, in the interests of establishing a process which can be seen to be fair in an attempt to resolve the matter, we would expect the valuer to be prepared to receive any submissions Mr Roe made, provided they were made promptly, and to provide him with a copy of the valuation report setting out the factual material on which they are relying, but omitting their conclusions, and allowing him to make representations on that material (again, without any delay)."
"Dear Sirs,
Transfer of shareholding in Doughty Hanson & Co Limited ('the Company')
In accordance with the company's Articles of Association ('the Articles'), I hereby give notice of my intention to transfer my holding of 12,240 Participating Shares in the Company (the 'Roe Shares') at a price of £8,618 per share or, if required by the existing shareholders under Article 11.2(c), to have the fair value of the shares determined in accordance with Article 11.2(f) of the Articles.
For the avoidance of doubt, I reserve my right to make representations to any independent valuer appointed under the Articles in relation to the determination of a fair value for the Roe Shares."
It will be noted that that notice specifies a price which the existing shareholders can accept. That is an ingredient of a voluntary transfer notice given under Article 11.2, but is not an ingredient of a compulsory transfer notice which has to be given under Article 12.2. That has given rise to a question in these proceedings, first as to whether this is a voluntary notice under Article 11 or a compulsory notice under Article 12, and second, if it falls to be treated as an attempt to serve the former, whether or not it is open to Mr Roe to serve a voluntary notice in these circumstances. On 28th September 2006 the Company formally passed on the offer contained in the Transfer Notice to Mr Hanson and Mr Doughty in terms of the offer to sell at fair value and not in terms of the other limb of the offer to sell at a fixed price. On the same date both of those shareholders accepted the offer to sell at fair value, and signed a further notice specifying that, as holders of more than 51% of the Ordinary Shares of the Company, they approved the appointment of PwC as valuers for the purposes of Article 11.2(f).
"3. We understand that the Engagement will be for us to provide an opinion of the Fair Value (as defined below) of the shares. Such valuation will be carried out as at a date to be advised by the Directors of the Company (the "Valuation Date") and pursuant to the requirements of articles 11.2(f) and 12.2 of the Articles of Association."
Paragraph 4 sets out the specific matters to which regard must and must not be had in Article 11.2(f) and paragraphs 6 and 7 say:
"6. The output of our work will take the form of:
(i) a valuation memorandum ("Memorandum") explaining our understanding of the business, assumptions, analysis and conclusion; and
(ii) a one page letter ("Opinion Letter") certifying our opinion of the Fair Value.
7. We propose to provide a copy of our Memorandum (excluding the valuation conclusion section) to the Parties three working days prior to the proposed finalisation of both the Memorandum and Opinion Letter. This will provide an opportunity for the parties to check the factual accuracy of the information we have relied upon when forming our value opinion of the Fair Value. We will ask for representations from the Directors of the Company confirming such factual accuracy and that there are no additional matters that we should have taken into account when forming our conclusion."
"We will consider the appropriateness of the following approaches when estimating the Fair Value:
?? The Income Approach indicates the value of the Shares based on the value of the cashflows that the Company can be expected to generate in the future;
?? The Market Approach indicates the value of the Shares based on a comparison of the valuation subject to comparable publicly traded companies and an analysis of statistics derived from transactions in its industry as well as prior transactions involving the subject of the valuation;
?? The Net Assets Approach indicates the value of the Shares by adjusting the asset and liability balances on the Company's balance sheet to their market value equivalent. The approach is based on the summation of the individual market values of the underlying assets less the market value of the liabilities.
12. After consideration of the above approaches we will make any adjustments we consider reasonable to reflect the rights and interests in the Shares that we are valuing. In arriving at our opinion of the Fair Value we shall consider the result of any of the above approaches that we have regarded as appropriate."
"I am in agreement that the valuation process should be fair. It is on this basis that I have provided Mr Roe with additional rights beyond those explicitly set out in the Articles of Association, namely:
?? An opportunity to submit information in respect of such matters that you would like us to consider when forming our view on the Fair Value of the shares;
?? An opportunity to comment on the facts on which our valuation will be based (in the form of a memorandum) prior to our issuance of a final report; and
?? Based on the memorandum, a further opportunity to supply us with any additional relevant information.
I suggest the following:
……
?? Prior to our determination of the final value, we will provide all parties with a copy of our memorandum outlining the facts on which we have relied when forming our view on value. The parties will be given 10 working days to review this memorandum and provide relevant comments or additional information in writing…."
"1.5 In ensuring that the valuation process is as fair as possible, we are providing Mr Roe with additional rights beyond those explicitly set out in the Articles of Association, namely
- An opportunity to submit information in respect of such matters that he wanted us to consider when forming our view on the fair value of a single share comprised in the Shares for Sales; and
- An opportunity to comment on the facts on which our valuation is based (in the form of this memorandum) prior to our issuance of a final report."
Paragraph 1.7 repeats that they have considered the appropriateness of the approaches referred to in their letter of engagement. Paragraph 1.10 records the receipt of Mr Roe's submissions and paragraph 2.6 refers to the basis on which a minority holding can be valued as set out in CVC/Opportunity Equity Partners Limited v Almeida [2002] UK PC15 at paragraphs 37 and 38. Paragraph 2.10 sets out "our view":
"2.10 Having taken into consideration the Articles and submissions from Mr Roe and the Company, it is our view that in order to arrive at a fair value pursuant to the requirement of the Articles, we do not consider it appropriate to value the company on a liquidation or break up basis. Rather, the total value of the Company will need to be arrived at, based on a hypothetical sale of Doughty Hanson at the valuation date. A pro rata value is then ascribed to a single share comprised in the Shares for Sale, subject to the provisions of the Articles in relation to minority discount, there being no public market in the Company shares and the distributable reserves of the Company, as discussed below."
Paragraph 2.20 records the view that it would be appropriate to ascertain the total value of the company, and then ascribe a pro rata value to a single share comprised in the Shares for Sale.
"2.33 We conclude that in order to determine fair value in accordance with the Company's Articles, the following approach needs to be adopted:
(i) a fair value for the whole business needs to be determined, based on a hypothetical sale of Doughty Hanson as at the valuation date, recognising that it is a private company, and having regard to the level distributable reserves [sic] (mechanically they operate as a floor).
(ii) The value is then divided by the number of Participating Preference Shares to arrive at a fair value per share, without the application of a minority discount."
"In deciding on the most appropriate valuation methodology to use in determining the fair value of a single share comprised in the shares for sale, we have taken into account what a sale of Doughty Hanson would generate as at the valuation date. We have had to consider under what terms and conditions a transaction between a hypothetical willing purchaser and Messrs Doughty and Hanson as willing sellers would take place, taking into account what is fair to the parties. In determining a set of assumptions which would underline such a transaction, it is our view that in order to be fair we need to consider what a third party would pay for the business, assuming that the partnership of Messrs Doughty, Hanson and Roe has run its course, and that Messrs Doughty and Hanson have no ongoing obligation to work within the business."
The last sentence of that paragraph is of particular importance. As will become apparent, it is said by Mr Roe that it contains such an element and quality of falsity in its hypothesis so as to mean that the accountants actually valued something different. I shall elaborate that argument in due course. Paragraph 3.21 summarises the valuation methodology and reads:
"3.21 Therefore, it is our view that the fair value of a single share comprised in the Shares for Sale should be determined as follows:
(iii) The Net Assets as at 22 September 2006 per the balance sheet;
(iv) Adjusted to reflect the market value of investments (which are currently held on the balance sheet at book value);
(v) Adjusted to reflect the timing of the Transaction fees received;
(vi) A degree of option value to reflect the possibility that the business has a greater value than that derived from steps (a), (b) and (c) above; and
(vii) The value of a single share comprised in the Shares for Sale is then calculated as a direct pro rata of the total value derived from steps (a) to (d)."
"Rather than valuing a share in the Company, you have indicated that you intend to value a share in an entirely different (and fictional) entity, i.e. one in which Messrs Doughty and Hanson are no longer shareholders and are no longer participating in the business. This fictional entity bears no resemblance to the company itself as at 22 September 2006. As at that date (and at all times subsequently) Messrs Doughty and Hanson were both shareholders in the company and were both participating fully in its business. Moreover, there was no reason to believe as at 22 September 2006 that this would not remain the case for the foreseeable future – certainly nothing has happened since that date to suggest that Messrs Doughty and Hanson will cease their continued involvement and participation in the company. Consequently, if you pursue the approach set out in the memorandum, you will not be valuing a share in the company as required by the Articles, put another
way, you will not be performing the task allocated to the Valuer by the Articles but a different task altogether."
Other observations are made.
"In accordance with your instructions, we set out below our opinion as to the fair value of a single share comprised in the Shares for Sale as at 22 September 2006:
Value of a single share comprised in the Shares for Sale: £760."
That would give Mr Roe's entire shareholding a value of £9.3m. He considers that his shareholding is worth something in the region of £100m, particularly bearing in mind what he says is its future profitability. He disputes the validity of the certificate for reasons which I deal with below, but on the footing and assumption that it is or may be valid, on 15th February 2007 he gave or purported to give a withdrawal of his Transfer Notice under Article 11.2(g).
The issues arising out of that background
(i) Is the certificate a valid certificate or can it be challenged by Mr Roe?
(ii) If the certificate is valid, does Mr Roe have a right of withdrawal under Article 11.2(g)?
(iii) Under what provision does Mr Roe's notice fall to be treated – Article 11.2 or Article 12.2?
The challenge to the certificate
"On principle, the first step must be to see what the parties have agreed to remit to the expert, this being, as Lord Denning MR said in Campbell v Edwards…a matter of contract. The next step must be to see what the nature of the mistake was, if there is evidence to show that. If the mistake made was that the expert departed from his instructions in a material respect – e.g. if he valued the wrong number of shares or valued shares in the wrong company, or if, as in Jones v Jones… the expert had valued machinery himself whereas his instructions were to employ an expert valuer of his choice to do that – either party would be able to say that the certificate was not binding because the expert had not done what he was appointed to do."
In Veba Oil itself, Simon Brown LJ went on to say:
"26…(i) A mistake is one thing; a departure from instructions quite another. A mistake is made when an expert goes wrong in the course of carrying out his instructions. The difference between that and an expert not carrying out his instructions is obvious.
….
(vi) Once a material departure from instructions is established, the court is not concerned with its effect on the result. The position is accurately stated in paragraph 98 of Mr Justice Lloyd's judgment in Shell UK v Enterprise Oil: the determination in those circumstances is simply not binding on the parties…. I would hold any departure to be material unless it can truly be characterised as trivial or de minimis in the sense of it being obvious that it could make no possible difference to either party."
"Both Campbell v Edwards and Baber v Kenwood Manufacturing Co Limited…. Were cases of non-speaking valuations and it is convenient to say a little at this juncture about the distinction between speaking and non-speaking valuations or certificates, which to my mind is not a relevant distinction. Even speaking valuations may say much or little; they may be voluble or taciturn if not wholly dumb. The real question is whether it is possible to say from all the evidence which is properly before the court, and not only from the valuation or certificate itself, what the valuer or certifier has done and why he has done it. The less evidence there is available, the more difficult it will be for a party to mount a challenge to the certificate.
….
On principle, the first step must be to see what the parties have agreed to remit to the expert this being, as Lord Denning said in Campbell v Edwards….a matter of contract. The next step must be to see what the nature of the mistake was, if there is evidence to show that. If the mistake made was that the expert departed from his instructions in a material respect – e.g. if he valued the wrong number of shares, or valued shares in the wrong company… either party would be able to say that the
certificate was not binding because the expert had not done what he was appointed to do."
Having set up those tests, Robert Walker LJ then went on to consider how they were applied in that case, and in particular "to see what the parties agreed to ask the expert to do in this case". He noted that the option price was an open market value price (see page 92F) and noted that the valuation was a non-speaking valuation. Leading counsel seeking to challenge the valuation sought to demonstrate that the valuer "must have assumed…that it was a 'ransom strip' situation, and so failed to carry out his instructions to make an open market valuation" (see page 92L). Robert Walker LJ rejected the attempt to peep behind the curtain of the valuation in that case. At page 92M he said:
"However, the fundamental objection to this part of Mr Burton's case, which was not put forward before the judge, is that it is seeking, by a process of inference, to turn a non-speaking valuation into a reasoned valuation and then to attack the reasons. On the facts of this case, the materials on which the inference is to be based are very tenuous. Indeed, were it not for Mr Burton's skilful advocacy, I would have said that the point was quite unarguable. Even if the materials had been more substantial and the process of inference less speculative, the court should, in my view, turn its face against that sort of argument, except in wholly exceptional circumstances. The whole point of instructing a valuer to act as an expert (and not as an arbitrator) is to achieve certainty by a quick and reasonably inexpensive process. Such a valuation is almost invariably a non-speaking valuation, with the expert's reasoning and calculations concealed behind the curtain. The court should give no encouragement to any attempt to infer, from ambiguous shadows and murmurs, what is happening behind the curtain."
"98. I think that when arriving at a 'fair value' in the absence of a market it is necessary to assume that the notional sale is taking place between the actual participants in the transaction, since the whole purpose of the valuation is to be fair as between the parties. There is no market to provide an objective external criterion. The actual parties must be taken to participate in the sale as willing participants. In my judgment, an answer to the problem of lock-in, notice periods and non-competition clauses lies in this proposition. One can expect that there will be a turnover in the directors, but it will be relatively slow. Thus while there is a risk of losing one in a year, the risk is not unduly high. It cannot be said that there is a substantial risk of all leaving the day after the sale, which would necessarily depress the share price to near nothing. The reason that it cannot be said that they will all leave is that the business belongs to them, and they wish to work in it. I consider, therefore, that the assumption of a third party purchaser is essentially inappropriate in this case."
Mr Graham relied on that in support of his proposition that what the valuer had done in this case was not to achieve a fair value within the meaning of the Articles and his instructions because he was wrong to take into account the possibility of Mr Doughty and Mr Hanson leaving. I do not think that that passage assists him. The passage occurred in the context of a petition under s.459 of the Companies Act 1985 and what the judge was considering in that paragraph was what the basis of the valuation should be for a compulsory purchase by the respondents of the petitioner's shares. He was setting out the principles on which a valuation exercise, which he also conducted, should be carried out. He was not making general propositions about what does and does not amount to a "fair value" in other circumstances, and in particular is not saying anything which would support the proposition that PwC have departed from their instructions in the present case and failed to give their opinion of a fair value, which is what their instructions were.
"Before the judge, counsel then appearing for Morgan Sindall argued that the roadway subject to an unlimited right of way already enjoyed by Morgan Sindall was something different from the roadway subject to a limited right, and that [the valuer] had therefore valued the wrong subject matter. The judge rejected this argument. Echoing Dillon LJ in Jones v Sherwood Computer Services…he asked himself what the parties had agreed to remit to the expert for valuation. That was the roadway, "the property" as defined in the schedule to the option agreement. He accepted the submissions of counsel for Farms that:
'… there is no evidence before the court to suggest that that is not precisely what the valuer did. Any mistake that may have been made was as to the attributes of the land that was being valued and not the identity of the land. Indeed, it is perfectly plain that there was no evidence to suggest that the valuer himself made any mistake at all. So far as the evidence goes, he valued the land in accordance with his instructions. Any mistake that may have been made was not in the valuation but in the formulation by the option agreement of the task which was to be undertaken by the valuer.'
In my judgment, the judge was entirely correct in accepting those submissions and dismissing the originating summons…."
It therefore appears that the judge at first instance drew a distinction between the identity of the land being valued and the attributes of the land that was being valued. The same, or at least a similar, distinction can be drawn in the present case. There is no doubt that the valuer in this case valued the correct shares in the correct company. The mistake relied on by Mr Roe in this case is not as to the identity of either of those things. It is as to the attributes which the valuer gave to the company for the purposes of his valuation hypotheses. There is a difference between identity and other attributes. Morgan Sindall demonstrates that only a mistake as to the former (identity) will found an attack on the certificate. In this case, on the hypothesis on which I am working for this part of the judgment, there was only a mistake as to the latter.
The purported withdrawal of the notice
(i) There are two types of offer that an intending transferor can make under Article 11.2(a). The first is one which actually specifies the price. I shall call this a "fixed price offer", and the offeror a "fixed price offeror". The second is one which does not ask for a fixed price but which offers the shares at a price to be fixed by the valuers. I shall call this a "valuation price offer" and its offeror a "valuation price offeror".
(ii) Where a fixed price offer has been made a shareholder can require a valuation by the valuer. Where such a requirement is made I shall call the elements of the resulting situation a "hybrid" offer, offeror or position (or similar), as the case may be.
(iii) Henceforth all references to paragraphs are to paragraphs in Article 11.2. As in the schedule to this judgment, I shall from time to time provide a stress to relevant wording by italicisation which in all cases is mine and which does not appear in the original.
terms is required. This is demonstrated by looking at the main purpose of the paragraph, and then going into the wider context of the Articles.
"shall … give a Transfer Notice in respect of all the relevant shares. If the transferee company fails so to transfer the shares registered in its name, it shall be deemed to have given a Transfer Notice pursuant to clause 11.2 with a Sale Price as shall be determined by the Valuer in accordance with 11.2(f)."
Three things should be noted about that. First, the mechanism referred to here does not make total sense. It requires a Transfer Notice to be given, and then deems a Transfer Notice to have been given. The second step is pointless, because by then the deeming provisions of Article 34 will have taken over. Second, it deems a transfer notice to be given in the absence of a transfer, not in the absence of a transfer notice. If one has a transfer notice which is then not followed up with a transfer, a fresh transfer notice is deemed to have been given. That is an odd procedure. These are part of a pattern of inadequate wording in these Articles. However third, and most significantly for present purposes, it uses the term of art "Sale Price" to mean a valuation-determined price, and not an expressly indicated (fixed) price as per Article 11(2)(a). This is the only instance where the expression "Sale Price" is quite clearly used to mean, or include, a valuation price offer price, but it does give substance to the proposition advanced by Mr Bompas that there may be other occasions where the draftsman's attention wandered similarly.
Commercial considerations
Does paragraph (g) give a right of withdrawal in valuation price offer cases?
What is the nature of Mr Roe's notice?
Conclusions on the right of withdrawal
(In what follows any emboldening is in the original. Any italics are not in the original; they are included to draw attention to relevant phrases which are referred to in the judgment.)
- Pre-emption rights and process on transfer of shares
11.1 This Article is subject to the provisions of Article 16.
11.2 The provisions of this Article to apply [sic] in respect of any transfer of Participating Shares;
(a) A member or a person entitled by transmission or otherwise, who intends to transfer shares ("the Vendor") shall give to the Company notice in writing of his intention (the "Transfer Notice") specifying the shares which he intends to transfer (the "Shares for Sale") and the price per share (the "Sale Price") at which he is prepared to sell the Shares for Sale, or where appropriate, that he wishes to sell at the fair value to be determined in accordance with Article 11.2(f).
(b) The Transfer Notice once given may not be withdrawn save as set out in Article 11.2(g). On receipt of the Transfer Notice by the Company the Transfer Notice shall constitute the Company the Vendor's agent for the sale in accordance with the following provisions of this Article.
(c) Within seven days of the date of the giving of a Transfer Notice (the "Relevant Date") the Company shall offer the Shares for Sale to all other Participating Shareholders of the relevant class on the register at the Relevant Date. The offer will invite them to apply for such number of the Shares for Sale as they are respectively prepared to purchase. Every such offer shall be made in writing and shall specify the number of Shares for Sale offered to each such Shareholder. Each such Shareholder shall be entitled to shares as nearly as may be in proportion to the number of the existing issued shares of such class held by him at the date of the offer (the "Proportionate Entitlement") and shall be accompanied by forms of application for use by such Shareholder in accepting his Proportionate Entitlement and in applying for any shares in excess of his Proportionate Entitlement (the "Excess Shares"). Every such offer shall be open for acceptance in whole or in part within 21 days from the date of its despatch. Every form of application completed by a purchasing Shareholder pursuant to any such offer shall state whether, in respect of all (but not some) of the shares applied for, the Shareholder is prepared to accept the Sale Price or requires a fair value to be fixed in accordance with this Article.
(d) At the expiration of such 21 days, the directors shall allocate the Shares for Sale, in the following manner:
(i) To each purchasing Shareholder there shall be allocated his Proportionate Entitlement or such lesser number of the Shares for Sale for which he may have applied;(ii) If the number of any Shares for Sale which remains unallocated is less than the aggregate number of Excess Shares for which applications have been made, the unallocated shares shall be allocated (as nearly as may be) in the proportions which the Excess Share applications bear to one another;
(iii) If the number of the Shares for Sale which remains unallocated equals or is greater than the aggregate number of shares for which Excess Share applications have been made, each purchasing Shareholder who has applied for Excess Shares shall be allocated the number of Excess Shares for which he applied.
(e) Within seven days of the expiry of the period in which applications from purchasing members can be made in accordance with this Article, the Company shall notify the Vendor and all purchasing members of the details of the acceptance and applications which have been made and of the allocations made as between purchasing members under this Article. Each purchasing member shall be bound by the terms of any acceptance and applications made by him to purchase in accordance with this Article such number of shares as are specified therein at the Sale Price or, where such purchasing member has specified that he is not prepared to accept the Sale Price, the fair value per share.
(f) If any purchasing member states in his form of acceptance and application that he is not prepared to accept the Sale Price, the directors shall arrange that an investment bank in London or firm of chartered accountants approved by instrument in writing signed by the holders of 51% or more so [sic] the Ordinary Shares (the "Valuer") shall certify in writing the sum which, in his opinion, is the fair value of a share comprised in the Shares for Sale and such sum shall be deemed to be the fair value thereof unless the Vendor with his Transfer Notice shall have notified the Company that a third party, acting in good faith, is willing to purchase the Shares for Sale at a particular price per share and can demonstrate, to the reasonable satisfaction of the Valuer (such satisfaction to be notified to the Company in writing by the Valuer), the existence of such an offer, when such price shall be deemed to be the fair value. In certifying such sum the Valuer shall regard as appropriate for the purpose, the value shall not be discounted because of the fact (if it be the case) that the Shares for Sale to be transferred are a minority holding and do not confer control of the Company on any person whilst having regard to the fact (if it be the case) that there is no public market in the Company's shares and also to the reserves of the Company then available for distribution in respect of such Shares for Sale. In so certifying, the Valuer shall be considered to be acting as an expert and not as an arbitrator and, accordingly, the Arbitration Act 1979 or any statutory re-enactment or modification thereof for the time being in force shall not apply. The cost of obtaining such Valuer's certificate shall be borne by those purchasing members who have required a fair value to be fixed, in proportion to the number of shares allocated to each such purchasing member.
(g) Any sale of shares effected pursuant to this Article to a purchasing member who has stated that he is prepared to accept the Sale Price shall be at the Sale Price and any sale of shares effected pursuant to this Article to a purchasing member who has required a fair value to be fixed pursuant to Article 11.2(f) shall be at the fair value so fixed save that the Vendor may, within 14 days of the issue of the certificate by the Valuer, indicate in writing that he is not prepared to sell at the fair value in which case the Transfer Notice shall be deemed to be withdrawn.
(h) Within seven days of the certificate of the Valuer being received by the Company, the Company shall send a copy thereof to the Vendor and to all purchasing members.
(i) The Vendor shall be bound, upon payment of the Sale Price or (subject to Article 11.2(g) the fair value (as the case may be)), to transfer the Shares for Sale which have been allocated pursuant to this Article to the purchasing members. If, after becoming so bound, the Vendor makes default in transferring any of the Shares for Sale, the Company may receive the purchase money and the Vendor shall be deemed to have appointed any one director or the secretary of the Company as his agent to execute a transfer of Shares for Sale to the purchasing members, and upon execution of such transfer, the Company shall hold the purchase money in trust for the Vendor. The receipt of the Company for the purchase money shall be a good discharge to each purchasing member and, after his name has been entered in the register of members of the Company, the validity of the proceedings shall not be questioned by any person.
(j) If all or any of the Shares for Sale are not accepted by a purchasing member or purchasing members, the Vendor may within six months of the date on which he receives notification of the details of the acceptances and applications by purchasing members under this Article or, when any such purchasing member has required a fair value to be fixed, within six months after the receipt by the Vendor of a copy of the certificate of the Valuer under Article 11.2(h), transfer all of the Shares for Sale which have not been accepted, to any person or persons approved by the directors (such approval not to be unreasonably withheld) on a bona fide sale at a price per share not less than whichever is the higher of the Sale Price or the fair value (after deduction, where appropriate, of any dividend or other distribution to be retained by the Vendor).
(k) On receipt by the Company of a Transfer Notice the directors shall be entitled to determine, subject to the prior written approval of the holders of 51% of the Ordinary Shares (the "Ordinary Majority") to allocate the Shares for Sale at the fair value determined in accordance with Article 11.2(f):
(iv) to a person or persons replacing (directly or indirectly) the Vendor as an employee or director of the Company PROVIDED THAT such replacement is found within six months of the date of the Transfer Notice (or 12 months if the Ordinary Majority so approves);
(v) to a trust for the benefit of employees or directors; or
(vi) a suitable nominee company (pending nomination of a person pursuant to Article 11.2(k)(i).
Such determination shall be made within 14 days of the date of the Transfer Notice and shall be communicated in writing to the Vendor. If no such determination is made within this period, or if a determination is made and no replacement is found within the period specified in Article 11.2(k)(i), the Shares for Sale shall be offered in accordance with the remaining provisions of this Article.
11.3 The provisions of this Article 11.3 relate only to the transfer of Ordinary Shares:
(a) subject as set out in this Article 11.3, the provisions of Article 11.2 shall apply mutatis mutandis to the transfer of Ordinary Shares; and
(b) the Sale Price for each Ordinary Share shall be [£]1 and there shall be no right to require a fair value.
11.4 The provisions of this Article 11 shall apply mutatis mutandis to the sale or other disposal of any shares allotted to a member by means of a renounceable letter of allotment or other renounceable document of title. No member shall transfer or agree to transfer the legal or beneficial ownership of any share registered in his name or allotted to him except by means of a transfer and subject to the provisions of this Article.
11.5 [not material]
- Compulsory Transfer of Shares
12.1 Any member of the Company who (being an individual) shall have made in respect of him a petition for a bankruptcy order or an application for a Voluntary Arrangement or (being a body corporate) shall have any action, application or proceeding taken in respect of it for a Voluntary Arrangement or composition or reconstruction of its debts, the presentation of an administration petition, its winding up or dissolution or the appointment of a receiver, liquidator, trustee or administrative receiver or similar officer shall be deemed to have given a Transfer Notice at the fair value (and without the right of withdrawal contained in Article 11.2(g)) in respect of all of his or its shares in the capital of the Company immediately before the happening of such event unless any person entitled to a share in consequence of any of such events shall within 30 days of becoming so entitled transfer such shares to a person to whom shares may be transferred pursuant to Article 16. Regulations 29-31 of Table A shall be construed accordingly.
12.2 If any director or employee of the Company or any of its subsidiaries ceases from any cause to be such a director or employee or ceases to provide services to the Company or any of its subsidiaries without remaining or becoming a director or employee of the Company or any other of its subsidiaries or without continuing to provide services to the Company or any other of its subsidiaries (as the case may be) such director, employee or person (and any Connected Person of such director, employee or person within the meaning of Article 16 hereof) shall not later than six weeks following the date on which he so ceased to be a director or employee be bound to give a Transfer Notice at the amount equal to fair value determined under Article 11 for each Participating Share and at an amount of £1 for each Ordinary Share. In any such case as aforesaid the provisions of Article 11.2 or, as the case may be, Article 11.3 shall take effect.
……
16.1 This Article applies to all classes of shares in the Company.
16.2 Except in the cases set out in Article 16 no shares in the Company shall be transferred and no interest in any shares shall be transferred or (except by the Company) created unless and until the rights of pre-emption conferred by Article 11 have been exhausted …
16.3 The following are the exceptions to Article 16.2:
…..
(c) a transfer of any share in the Company held beneficially by an individual (the "Settlor") [in favour of various persons described as "Connected Persons"] PROVIDED THAT:
(i) if and whenever any shares cease to be held for Connected Persons the Connected Persons shall forthwith give a Transfer Notice pursuant to Article 11.2 in respect of the shares in question and shall, if and when called upon so to do by notice in writing given by the directors be bound to give a Transfer Notice in respect of such shares and such shares may not otherwise be transferred; and
(ii) the Connected Persons shall be bound to give a Transfer Notice in the circumstances set out in Article 12.2.
…
16.4 Where a member being a body corporate (the "transferor company") has transferred any shares to a member of the same group (the "transferee company") pursuant to the exception contained in Article 16.3(b)(iii) … and thereafter at any time the transferee company ceases to be a member of the same group and no other exception under these Articles excludes the pre-emption rights, the transferee company shall promptly give notice thereof to the Company and shall unless all other members shall have agreed otherwise give a Transfer Notice in respect of all the relevant shares. If the transferee company fails so to transfer the shares registered in its name, it shall be deemed to have given a Transfer Notice pursuant to Article 11.2 with a Sale Price as shall be determined by the Valuer in accordance with Article 11.2(f).
- If, in any case where in accordance with the provisions of these Articles:
…
(b) a person has become bound to give a Transfer Notice in respect of any shares and such a Transfer Notice is not duly given within a period of two weeks of demand being made or within the period allowed thereafter respectively, a Transfer Notice shall be deemed to have been given at the expiration of the said period..."