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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 >> Vodafone Group Plc, Re Companies Act 2006 [2014] EWHC 1357 (Ch) (01 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/1357.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1357 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF VODAFONE GROUP PLC |
Claimant |
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and |
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IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006 |
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Mr Martin Moore QC (instructed by Macfarlanes LLP ) for Verizon Communications Inc.
(on 21 February 2014)
Hearing dates: 9 December 2013 and 5 and 21 February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction
The Scheme: an overview
(a) US $58.9 billion in cash, to be paid by Verizon to V4L;(b) US $60.15 billion in Verizon common stock, to be issued by Verizon directly to the Company's shareholders ("the Verizon Consideration Shares");
(c) US $5.0 billion as the principal amount of loan notes to be issued by Verizon to V4L;
(d) US $3.5 billion in the form of Verizon's 23.1% minority interest in Vodafone Italy; and
(e) US $2.5 billion through the assumption by Verizon of certain net liabilities.
(a) following delivery to the Registrar of Companies of the order sanctioning the Scheme, the Company would undertake a one-for-one bonus issue of new B Shares (for shareholders seeking capital treatment in respect of the Return of Value) or C Shares (for shareholders seeking income treatment), such bonus shares to be paid up out of the Company's share premium account;(b) following the issue of the B Shares and the C Shares, the Company would seek confirmation of:
(i) the cancellation of the Company's capital redemption reserve (approximately £10.4 billion);(ii) the reduction of the Company's share premium account to approximately £16.1 billion; and(iii) the cancellation of the B Shares and repayment of the capital paid up on them;(c) once the order confirming the above reductions of capital ("the Reduction Order") had been made, the VZW Transaction would be completed in accordance with Sections 2.3 and 2.4 of the VZW SPA, as a result of which the Company or V4L would receive from Verizon all of the consideration due from Verizon in respect of the VZW Transaction, other than the Verizon Consideration Shares; and
(d) the Reduction Order would then be delivered to the Registrar of Companies.
The reductions of capital
"645 Application to court for order of confirmation
(1) Where a company has passed a resolution for reducing share capital, it may apply to the court for an order confirming the reduction.
(2) If the proposed reduction of capital involves either –
…
(b) the payment to a shareholder of any paid-up share capital,
section 646 (creditors entitled to object to reduction) applies unless the court directs otherwise.
(3) The court may, if having regard to any special circumstances of the case it thinks proper to do so, direct that section 646 is not to apply as regards any class or classes of creditors.
…
646 Creditors entitled to object to reduction
(1) Where this section applies …, every creditor of the company who –
(a) at the date fixed by the court is entitled to any debt or claim that, if that date were the commencement of the winding up of the company would be admissible in proof against the company, and
(b) can show that there is a real likelihood that the reduction would result in the company being unable to discharge his debt or claim when it fell due,
is entitled to object to the reduction of capital.
(2) The court shall settle a list of creditors entitled to object.
(3) For that purpose the court –
(a) shall ascertain, as far as possible without requiring an application from any creditor, the names of those creditors and the nature and amount of their debts or claims, and
(b) may publish notices fixing a day or days within which creditors not entered on the list are to claim to be so entered or are to be excluded from the right of objecting to the reduction of capital.
…
648 Court order confirming reduction
(1) The court may make an order confirming the reduction of capital on such terms and conditions as it thinks fit.
(2) The court must not confirm the reduction unless it is satisfied, with respect to every creditor of the company who is entitled to object to the reduction of capital that either –
(a) his consent to the reduction has been obtained, or
(b) his debt or claim has been discharged, or has determined or has been secured.
…"
"16. The test imposed by the statute is "a real likelihood", and it is undesirable to put any gloss upon those words. But equally it is unhelpful simply to say that I share the view of Mr Registrar Nicholls that, having regard to the terms of the intended demerger in the instant case, no creditor could satisfy that test and accordingly a list of creditors was properly dispensed with.
17. Where the section calls upon a creditor to show "a real likelihood" that the reduction "would" result in an inability to discharge the debt when it becomes due, it is calling upon the creditor to demonstrate a particular present assessment about a future state of affairs. In considering the evidence I identified three elements: what follows is descriptive of the course I followed, not prescriptive as a course to be adopted by others.
18. First, I looked at the factual: whatever assessment is made has to be well grounded in the facts as they are now known. Although one is looking to the future one has to avoid the purely speculative.
19. Second, there is a temporal element. One is looking forward for a period in relation to which it is sensible to make predictions. That period will, of course, be affected by the nature and duration of the liability in question. So a continuing direct liability under a lease may indicate that a correspondingly long term view must be taken. But in general the more remote in time the contemplated event that will make payment fall due the more difficult it must be to establish the reality of the likelihood that the return of capital will itself result in inability to discharge the debt. For private companies directors are required to look forward for 12 months. I do not suggest that implicitly the same period applies where the sanction of the court is necessary: but I do consider that in any given case there will be a natural temporal boundary beyond which sensible assessment of likelihood is not possible.
20. Third, the section obviously does not require a creditor to prove that a future event will happen: it is concerned to evaluate the chance of the event (the company's inability to discharge the debt because it has returned capital). It describes the chance as "real likelihood", thereby requiring the objecting creditor to go some way up the probability scale, beyond the merely possible, but short of the probable. That is the "degree of persuasion" (as it was put by Hoffmann J in Re Harris Simons Construction Ltd [1989] BCLC 202 at 204) for which I have looked in assessing the evidence."
"According to this model (which of course can only predict and cannot guarantee future outcomes) the company should have at least £90m of available working capital at the end of each quarter up until the fourth quarter of 2011, and presently forecast net assets of £1.845bn for the calendar year ending 2011. There is thus a credible foundation in the evidence to support a current assessment that the company has sufficient working capital for its present requirements and for at least 18 months following the date of the proposed demerger."
(a) obtaining the consent of creditors and, where only some of them consent, subordinating the claims of consenting creditors to those of non-consenting creditors;(b) setting aside enough cash in a blocked account to discharge the claims of non-consenting creditors;
(c) the provision by a bank or other third party with a sound credit covenant of a guarantee in a sufficient amount; and
(d) the giving of an appropriately worded undertaking.
"While recognising the disclaimer of any intent to be prescriptive, I consider that this judgment provides a helpful approach which is likely to be applicable in the majority of cases. I agree with the emphasis of the need to avoid the purely speculative. I also agree that s.646(1)(b) is concerned to evaluate the chance ("beyond the merely possible, but short of the probable") of the company's inability to discharge the debt because of the reduction of capital. I stress those words, because it is the causative link between the reduction of capital and the company's perceived future inability to discharge the debt which is crucial. An objecting creditor, i.e. a creditor who seeks to show that he is entitled to object, must establish a "real likelihood" (i) that the company will be unable to pay his claim when it falls due for payment at some time in the future and (ii) that that inability to pay his claim at that time in the future will result from the reduction of capital now. Of particular relevance in this context is what Norris J calls … the "temporal element" …"
"In all the circumstances, and having regard to the company's financial position as shown in its accounts, to the regulatory regime imposed by the FSA and to the fact that the company appears to satisfy the requirements of that regime by a significant margin, and having regard also to the view of the reporter that the FSA regulatory regime is likely to provide a more sophisticated and reliable test of a company's ability to meet its debts as and when they fall due than the realisable assets test often used in the past, I can see no realistic possibility that any creditor would be able to persuade the court that there was a "real likelihood" that, if the reduction of capital was confirmed and a distribution made as proposed, that return of capital would result in the company being unable to discharge its debts … My conclusions mean that there are no creditors "entitled to object" and there is therefore nothing to be gained by settling a list of creditors entitled to object."
The working capital statement in the Scheme Document
The Company's creditor profile
"116. … the cash flow forecasts to 31 March 2017 … assume that the Company is able to refinance its bonds and bank facilities as they mature. The terms on which the Company will be able to do so will depend, among other things, on the expected trading performance of the Group's underlying business, the Group's financial position and credit market sentiment at that time.
117. However, mature telecommunications companies with investment grade credit ratings, such as the Company, have historically been able to raise debt finance even in adverse (and sometimes unprecedentedly adverse) conditions.
118. For example, during the global financial crisis from 2008 to 2013, which was a period of unprecedented turmoil in financial markets and crippling uncertainty in the global economic outlook, the Company was, in aggregate, able to issue $17,665 million of bonds, refinance nearly $10,000 million of syndicated revolving credit facilities, and secure bilateral bank loans of just over $7,500 million. This demonstrates that the Company has had, and expects that it will continue to have, excellent access to credit of all kinds, at a range of maturities and in testing conditions."
Projections
"essentially cash flows from operations net of capital expenditure, changes in working capital, dividends paid to/from minorities, tax and interest paid and received. It generally represents cash flow available for investment in spectrum, mergers and acquisitions and returns to shareholders."
The reference to "spectrum" is to the cost of Government operating licences. The headline figures which I have mentioned are supported by an analysis and commentary.
Potential claims
(a) After completion, the Company does not expect to have any continuing liability in connection with the VZW Transaction. Estimated tax liabilities of some £3,015 million, for which the Company is responsible in accordance with the VZW stock purchase agreement of 2 September 2013, have already been deducted from the opening cash balance shown in the long-term cash flow forecasts.(b) The Company has contingent liabilities in respect of pension schemes operated within the Vodafone group, but provision is made in the cash flow forecasts for cash payments to the under-funded schemes of £400 million in the years ended 31 March 2014 and 2015. Furthermore, the trustees of the pension schemes have not raised, or indicated that they intend to raise, any objection to the reduction of capital and Return of Value.
(c) The Company does not itself carry on any operating activities, and therefore has no material trade creditors. It also has only four employees, all of whom are senior executives.
(d) Members of the Vodafone group, but not the Company, are subject to various legal proceedings in different jurisdictions, including a well-publicised dispute between Vodafone International Holding B.V. ("VIH BV"), an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, and the Government of the Republic of India, concerning an alleged failure by VIH BV to deduct withholding tax from consideration paid to the Hutchison Telecommunications International Limited Group in connection with the purchase of a business. The Supreme Court of India ruled in favour of VIH BV in January 2012, but in May 2012 the Indian Government enacted retroactive legislation to reverse the Supreme Court's decision. The amount claimed against VIH BV is approximately £1,600 million. It remains possible that the dispute will be settled by negotiation, but VIH BV might be ordered to pay a deposit to stay the enforcement of the tax demand pending resolution of its own claim against the Indian Government (under the bilateral investment treaty between The Netherlands and the Republic of India) arising from the enactment of the retroactive legislation. The Company is not a party to those proceedings, but the possible cash flow implications of the dispute have been recognised and taken into account.
Other evidence
Conclusion