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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 >> Barnett Waddington Trustees (1980) Ltd & Anor v The Royal Bank of Scotland Plc [2015] EWHC 2435 (Ch) (14 August 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/2435.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2435 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) BARNETT WADDINGTON TRUSTEES (1980) LIMITED (2) DAVID SULLIVAN (BEING THE TRUSTEES OF THE SULLIVAN TRUST) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Defendant |
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for the Claimants
Laura John (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13th May 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren:
Introduction
The Agreement
i) "Advance": the aggregate principal amount of the drawings by the Borrowers under clause 4.1 (Drawdown) or the amount outstanding for the time being.ii) "Facility": the term loan facility of up to £9,237,500.
iii) "Interest Payment Date": each date on which interest is payable under clause 5.
iv) "Loss": this is an important definition and I set it out in full:
"losses, claims, demands, actions, Proceedings, damages, or other payments, costs, expenses and other liabilities of any kind including, without prejudice to the foregoing generality any costs to the Bank incurred in the unwinding of funding transactions undertaken in connection with the Facility and including inter alia costs incurred when there has been a reduction in the market level of interest rate underlying the Facility, such costs to be equivalent to the loss of interest income to the Bank as a result of re-deploying funds at a lower interest rate than that which prevailed when the Facility was made available, such costs to be determined by the Bank in its sole discretion;"v) "Mandatory Costs": such costs (in relation to the Term Loan) as the Bank determines are necessary to compensate the Bank for complying with certain regulatory requirements.
vi) "Margin": a margin of 1.125% per annum.
vii) "Project": the acquisition of the Property and its development and letting.
viii) "Term Loan": the aggregate principal amount of the Facility from time to time outstanding and owing to the Bank.
i) Clause 2 which provides for the Commitment. The Bank agreed to make available a sterling loan facility of £9,237,500 "available to be drawn on the terms and subject to the conditions of" the Agreement.ii) Clause 4 which provides for the drawing of the Facility. Nothing turns on this provision other than to note that the entire sum was in fact drawn down.
iii) Clause 5 provides for the payment of interest on the Advance. Interest accrues from the date of drawdown to the date of repayment at the rate determined by the Bank to be the aggregate of
a) the Margin;b) 5.1% (or such alternative rate as the Bank may certify as applicable); andc) the Mandatory Costs.iv) Clause 6 deals with Repayment, Prepayment and Cancellation. Subject to clause 6.2 (which deals with Voluntary Prepayment) and clause 6.3 (which deals with Mandatory Prepayment) the Borrowers are to apply all rental income (with certain exceptions) to repayment of the Term Loan and interest.
v) Clause 6.2 deals with voluntary prepayment and permits the Borrowers to give notice to "prepay the Term Loan or part thereof" together with a repayment fee. That fee was on a reducing sliding scale over 5 years: after 5 years, there was no prepayment fee. Voluntary prepayments were to be for multiples of £100,000. Clause 6.3 provides that the Borrowers must prepay the Term Loan in whole or in part on a disposal (such as a sale) of the Property.
vi) Clause 7 deals with payments. In particular clause 7.3 provides that all payments to be made by the Borrowers are to be made without any set-off, deduction or counterclaim.
vii) Clause 9 provides for the provision by the Borrowers of certain undertakings. All that it is necessary to note is that this clause has nothing express to say about internal hedging arrangements: the Borrowers do not give any undertaking in relation to such arrangements.
viii) The critical provision is found in clause 12, headed "Indemnities". So far as material, the clause provides as follows:
"12.1 IndemnityThe Borrowers shall indemnify the Bank on demand against any Loss (including any Loss on account of funds borrowed, contracted for or utilised to fund any amount payable under this Agreement, any amount repaid or prepaid under this Agreement or any Advance and any loss of Margin) which the Bank has sustained or incurred as a consequence of:.....(d) any prepayment or repayment of the Advance otherwise than on an Interest Payment Date relative to that Advance;......(f) any cost to the Bank incurred in the unwinding of funding transactions undertaken in connection with the Facility, including inter alia costs incurred when there has been a reduction in the market level of interest rate underlying the Loan. Such costs will be equivalent to the loss of interest income to the Bank as a result of re-deploying funds at a lower interest rate than that which prevailed when the Facility was made available, such costs to be determined by the Bank in their sole discretion.12.6 GeneralEach indemnity in this Clause 12 (Indemnities) shall constitute a separate and independent obligation from the other obligations contained in the Financing Documents, shall give rise to separate and independent cause of action, shall apply irrespective of any indulgence granted from time to time and shall continue in full force and effect notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order or a liquidated sum or sums in respect of amounts due under the Financing Documents or under any such judgment or order."ix) Clause 21.2 provides that any certification or determination by the Bank is prima facie evidence of the matters to which it relates.
x) Clause 22.5 is a limited recourse provision. Notwithstanding any Event of Default, the Bank is to have recourse only to the extent of the Property or any other asset secured by any of the Financing Documents.
The dispute in a nutshell
The correspondence concerning the dispute
i) the claim was not seeking the determination of the Court of a specific question but rather asked the Court to order an inquiry into whether the Borrowers were liable to pay any costs arising from the termination of the Internal Swap and, if liable, how these costs were to be determined;ii) the request for an inquiry was made without any attempt on the part of the Borrowers to put forward a basis upon which they would not be liable; and
iii) no attempt was made by the Borrowers to set out why the Bank's explanation relating to their contingent liability (on the termination of an Internal Swap) was not accepted.
The internal interest rate swap
"You mention that the Bank has previously stated that no interest rate hedging affects this case. This is not accurate. The Bank has maintained the position, and still does, that the Merchant Place Property Syndicate was not sold an interest rate hedging product and that this was not a condition of the finance.
The position is that on 1 April 2001, Merchant Place Syndicate 35 entered into a Loan Agreement with the Bank. .....
In order for the Bank to be able to provide this loan at a fixed (rather than floating) rate of interest, the Bank itself had to enter into an interest-rate swap in connection with the facility in order to fund the transaction and hedge the risk of changing interest rates.
As set out in the Loan Agreement, your client remains liable and agreed to indemnify the Bank for any loss incurred if this funding transaction has to be unwound i.e. break costs for terminating this swap early to match any earlier repayment of the loan itself.
It is for this reason that your client has, on a number of occasions, been provided with figures from RBS employees in respect of both the principal loan balance (plus interest) and the prevailing Mark-to-Market or MTM on the swap."
"Given this, it is implicit that there are no other funding transactions aside from the interest rate swap set out in the redemption figures.
......
We consider we have responded to your query: there are no other funding transactions in connection with the Syndicate's loan facility, aside from the internal interest rate swap which has been the subject of our ongoing correspondence."
"As is common with fixed rate loans (particularly long term fixed rate loans), the Bank itself entered into an interest rate swap to fund the interest on the Loan and to hedge the risk the Bank faced on the possible fluctuation in interest rates in providing the (fixed rate) Loan (Internal Swap). The Internal Swap is between RBS Corporate Banking division and RBS Markets, the interest rates desk which is responsible for hedging all of the Bank's interest rate risk (including the Bank's risk in funding the Loan) with market counterparties on a portfolio basis."
"(a) The Bank's Corporate Banking business (which is not a separate legal entity from the Bank) agreed to lend money to MP35, under the Loan Agreement, at a fixed rate of interest.
(b) Prior to the date set for drawdown of the Loan, Corporate Banking obtained the money it had agreed to lend to MP35 by borrowing it from the Bank's Group Treasury (also not a separate legal entity from the Bank) at a floating rate. The floating rate reflected the cost incurred by Group Treasury in making the funds available.
(c) The floating rate cost of obtaining the money from Group Treasury is funded by the interest rate payments received from MP35 under the Loan Agreement. In this case, those interest rate payments are fixed.
(d) Receiving a fixed rate of interest under the Loan Agreement therefore exposed (and exposes) the Bank to the risk that, if interest rates went above the fixed rate, it would have insufficient incoming payments under the Loan Agreement to pay the floating rate at which it had funded the Loan (that exposure will be particularly acute under a long term loan, as here).
(e) In order to fund any future shortfall between the fixed rate of interest received under the Loan Agreement and the floating rate of interest being paid to Group Treasury, and as part of funding the Loan, Corporate Banking entered into the Internal Swap with the relevant Markets desk (in this case, the sterling rates Markets desk) for the relevant tenor, rate and notional amount, essentially mirroring the characteristics of the Loan. The Markets desk sits within the Bank, and is not a separate legal entity.
(f) The Markets desk will, in turn, fund the Internal Swap by entering into an interest rate swap with an external market counterparty. As set out in my first witness statement, the Markets desk manages the Bank's sterling interest rate risk on a portfolio basis by aggregating that interest rate risk. This means that each sterling swap booked internally is not necessarily funded externally on a "back to back" basis.
(g) The Internal Swap is, therefore, a funding transaction without which the Bank would not be able to offer the (fixed rate) Loan, the costs of unwinding of which is a cost of the "unwinding of funding transactions undertaken in connection with the Facility" (clause 12.1 (f) of the Loan Agreement)."
The Prospectus
i) On page 7, headed "Lease and Minimum Lease Payments" it was stated that WCC would take a 30 year lease. However, it was stated that WCC had the right to buy back the Property at the end of 15 years at open market value (although it was considered unlikely that WCC would in fact exercise the option)ii) On page 8, under the heading "Interest Rate" it was stated that interest would be fixed for 30 years at cost of funds plus 1.125% over long-term interest rates. One then finds this: "It is intended to fix the cost of funds by entering into suitable hedging contracts".
iii) On page 9, headed "Financial Analysis" it was noted that the Partnership (ie the investors) could decide to dispose of the Property at any time. Two examples were given of disposals after 5 and 15 years. A table was included showing the outstanding debt figures at an assumed interest rate of 6.2%. Under the table appeared the following:
"Please note, the figures above do not take account of selling costs, taxes or any cost or benefit of unwinding interest rate hedging."
Principles of construction
"21. The language used by the parties will often have more than one potential meaning. I would accept the submission made on behalf of the appellants that the exercise of construction is essentially one unitary exercise in which the court must consider the language used and ascertain what a reasonable person, that is a person who has all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract, would have understood the parties to have meant. In doing so, the court must have regard to all the relevant surrounding circumstances. If there are two possible constructions, the court is entitled to prefer the construction which is consistent with business common sense and to reject the other."
The relevant matrix
Construction
i) It is not a funding transaction. A funding transaction is a transaction entered into by the Bank in order to provide the £9,237,500 facility to the Borrowers. It does not refer to an associated hedging transaction which the Bank has chosen to undertake alongside a funding transaction.ii) It is not a funding transaction. A transaction (in both the definition of Loss and in clause 12.1(f)) is something which takes place between two parties. The Bank cannot transact with itself. The Internal Swap is an arrangement between different departments of the Bank and is not a transaction for these purposes. Contrary to Mr Barnett's explanation (on instructions from the Bank), Corporate Banking cannot borrow from, or pay interest to, Group Treasury.
iii) There is a related point (which has been referred to as the evidential point). It is that the Bank has produced no evidence of any relevant transaction. However, Ms John handed up during the hearing a letter dated 1 April 2004 which comprises the Internal Swap. Interestingly, the "parties" are "The Royal Bank of Scotland plc" and "The Royal Bank of Scotland plc Re Merchant Place Worcester" that letter being on the Bank's letterhead with its Financial Markets address in Bishopsgate and being addressed to the Bank's Glasgow premises marked "Attn: Swaps Department". There is no mention of Corporate Banking (although it may, I surmise, be based at Bishopsgate) so that the letter appears to envisage the Bank (rather than a department of the Bank) dealing with the Swaps Department.
iv) The Bank does not sustain or incur any loss (within the opening words of clause 12.1) and there is no cost (within clause 12.1(f)) to the Bank when the Internal Swap is unwound. The Bank's financial position remains precisely the same whether or not the Internal Swap is unwound. Internally, the result of unwinding the Internal Swap may be that one department of the Bank needs to account to another department for a sum of money, but that does not give rise to a cost within clause 12.1(f) which expressly refers to "any cost to the Bank". The Bank's financial position may be affected as a result of any consequential change to the external interest rate swaps which it has entered into in relation to the Internal Swap, but that is an entirely different issue.
v) Paragraphs (d) and (f) of clause 12.1 are to be read together. In the case of prepayment other than on an Interest Payment Date, the Bank is entitled under paragraph (d) to an indemnity in respect of any Loss incurred in consequence of that pre-payment. The Agreement does not, therefore, envisage the indemnity biting where the prepayment is in fact made on an Interest Payment Date. Paragraph (f) should not be read as permitting any Loss to be recovered, nonetheless, where the event giving rise to the alleged Loss is prepayment on an Interest Payment Date.
vi) The construction for which the Bank contends would be unfair and uncommercial. The Borrowers would suffer the downside of unwinding the Internal Swap in the event of early repayment of the loan when interest rates had moved against Corporate Banking but would not obtain the upside when interest rates had moved in its favour.
vii) If, contrary to those submissions, there is thought to be an ambiguity, it should be resolved in favour of the Borrowers applying Rainy Sky principles. As to that:
a) first it is to be noted that the parties did not enter into any hedging contract, including one which would expose the Borrowers to the costs of unwinding such a contract;b) secondly, clauses 6.1 and 6.2 provide a carefully constructed mechanism for repayment of the loan. Clause 12.1(f) should not be construed so as to give rise to an indemnity in the event of the application of those clauses. In particular, it is to be noted that clause 6.2 would operate if there were a sale of the Property. As was apparent from the Prospectus, WCC would have the right to buy back the Property after 15 years. It would be surprising if as result of such buy-back, the Borrowers could become liable for a potential large cost of unwinding an Internal Swap about which they knew nothing. Those clauses refer to "Prepayment fees" and yet make no mention of hedging fees; andc) thirdly, clause 5 has specific provisions for the payment of interest at a fixed rate. Unless the parties had agreed that the Borrowers should bear any adverse consequences to the Bank of moving interest rates, there is no commercial reason why these adverse consequences should be borne by the Borrowers. The Borrowers were entitled to assume that the interest rate (whether it was chosen by the Bank or resulted from a hard-fought negotiation) was set at a rate and in a manner with which the Bank was content without a hidden risk resting on them.viii) Clause 12.1(f) is uncertain. It is not suggested that the Agreement is uncertain but it is submitted that the Court can say this particular provision is too vague to be given any meaning. Reliance is placed on Lewison The Interpretation of Contracts (5th ed) at 8.15 including example 5 on p 450. Mr Warwick also referred to Financial Institutions Services Ltd v Negril Holdings Ltd [2004] UKPC 40 ("FISL").
Discussion and conclusions
i) if an external hedge (whether a back-to-back arrangement or part of risk management on a portfolio basis) is a "funding transaction" then it does not matter whether or not the Internal Swap can be taken together with the external hedge as a single "funding transaction". It adds nothing to the indemnity which will bite without need to refer to the Internal Swap at all.ii) if an external hedge cannot be a "funding transaction" (or at least if the particular external hedge in question, in the present case on a portfolio basis, cannot be a "funding transaction") then, in my view, it cannot be maintained that taking the Internal Swap and the external hedge together produces a "funding transaction". If neither component qualifies as a "funding transaction", the composite does not do so either.
iii) Although Mr Warwick accepts that a back-to-back hedge is a "funding transaction", he does not accept that that is the case in relation to the actual arrangements in the present case. For reasons already given, that is not an issue on the Claim Form and I do not have the material to decide it.
iv) I can therefore neither accept nor reject Ms John's secondary submission. Whether the point can be raised in the future is a matter I have touched on at paragraph 32 above.
Disposition