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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 >> Lomas & Ors v Burlington Loan Management Ltd & Ors [2018] EWHC 924 (Ch) (24 April 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/924.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 924 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF LEHMAN BROTHERS INTERNATIONAL (EUROPE) (IN ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
7 Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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ANTHONY VICTOR LOMAS STEVENS ANTHONY PEARSON PAUL DAVID COPLEY RUSSELL DOWNS JULIAN GUY PARR (THE JOINT ADMINSTRATORS OF LEHAMAN BROTHERS INTERNATIONAL (EUROPE) (IN ADMINSTRATION)) |
Applicants |
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-and- |
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BURLINGTON LOAN MANAGEMENT LIMITED CVI GVF (LUX) MASTER S.A.R.L HUTCHINSON INVESTORS,LLC WENTWORTH SONS SUB-DEBT S.A.R.L YORK GLOBAL FINANCE BDH,LLC GOLDMAN SACHS INTERNATIONAL |
Respondents |
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Robin Dicker QC and Henry Phillips (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) for the Respondents (1)-(3)
Antony Zacaroli QC, David Allison QC and Adam Al-Attar (instructed by Kirkland & Ellis International LLP) for Respondent (4)
Robert Amey (instructed by Michelmores LLP) for Respondents (5)
David Foxton QC, and Craig Morrison (instructed by Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP) for Respondent (6)
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hildyard :
Subject matter of this judgment
Summary of the positions of the parties
Overall view
"…the courts are increasingly alert to the dangers of encouraging litigation, and discouraging settlement of doubtful claims at an early stage, if costs are allowed out of the estate to the unsuccessful party."
"…although there are features of insolvency litigation which, by analogy with litigation about deceased's estates, may justify a departure from the general rule, the court should nonetheless approach any particular case for a departure with real caution, and litigants ought to expect to have to justify such a departure by reference to the facts about their alleged predicament, rather than merely by recourse to some supposed general principle."
Proper characterisation of the Waterfall IIC proceedings: competing contentions
Form of the proceedings and the genesis and formulation of the contested issues
"most of the arguments identified by the Administrators are being pursued by one or more of the Respondents and, in those circumstances, the Administrators are not currently intending to advance adversarial arguments from the stand point of any particular constituency".
The SCG's conduct and contentions
(1) The Waterfall II proceedings were divided into three parts (A, B and C) solely for convenience and efficiency of determination. It has never been suggested by any of the parties that the decision on whether, or how, to divide the application reflected the fact that the different parts were of a different nature or deserved different treatment from the point of view of costs.(2) The court has determined, in the context of the hearings of Waterfall II A and B, and in the context of the supplemental issues arising out of those tranches, that the appropriate order was for the Respondents' costs to be paid as an expense of the administration.
(3) The parties were embarking on essentially the same exercise in Waterfall IIC. In this regard, at the consequentials hearing for Parts A and B, Wentworth emphasised that Part C was part of "this single application" in order to support its failed application for costs.
GSI's conduct and contentions
Wentworth's conduct and contentions
"This was, in my judgment, litigation in which these respondents unsuccessfully advanced an adversarial case in the pursuit of a very large commercial objective, namely the obtaining of a proprietary interest in securities of enormous value."
(1) The case concerns the construction of pre-administration contracts between the SCG/GSI and LBIE: it has nothing to do with the interpretation of the statutory scheme and, in this respect, it differs from Waterfall IIA, in which the questions primarily concerned the interpretation of the statutory scheme relating to interest and non-provable claims.
(2) The SCG/GSI asserted claims that are hostile to the interests of the LBIE estate, and all those interested in it apart from creditors in the position of the SCG/GSI. If they had succeeded, then the administration estate would have been diminished by the increased amount of their claims. Thus, for example, the claim that Default Rate (as defined in the relevant ISDA Master Agreements) should be construed by reference to the relevant payee's cost of equity, thus giving rise to excessive interest rates, and the claim that the relevant payee is the assignee of rights under the ISDA Master Agreements, were claims which could have been made as much before, as after, LBIE's administration, illustrating that they had nothing to do with the proper administration of the insolvent estate.
(3) Third, it is irrelevant both that the SCG holds claims in a substantial aggregate amount, and that others might have a similar claim under the ISDA Master Agreement, if the SCG were to succeed: the existence of others in a similar position may have justified the SCG reaching an arrangement with others as to the sharing of the costs burden between them, but it does not provide any reason to depart from the basic principle that they advanced a case hostile to the interests of the estate and lost. Likewise, efficiency of representation does not carry an entitlement to costs. It merely raises the question of contribution as between the members of that class.
(4) Fourth, it is irrelevant that the Joint Administrators could not distribute the surplus without the issues being resolved. That will always be the case where a creditor asserts a claim so large that it would make a fundamental difference to distributions to other creditors. If it was otherwise appropriate to apply the usual costs rule, the fact that the distribution of the surplus is held up until the issue is resolved provides no reason for departing from it.
(5) Fifth, and similarly, it is irrelevant that – the hostile claim having been asserted – the Joint Administrators say that they need to have an answer to the point. This on analysis adds nothing to the contention that the surplus cannot be distributed without the question being answered. Accordingly, the SCG's characterisation of the proceedings as "giving assistance to the administrators" is a hollow assertion of form over substance. The questions resolved in Part C needed to be resolved only because the SCG, GSI and possibly other creditors chose to assert that on the true construction of the ISDA Master Agreement they could claim interest at rates in excess of 8%. It was not for the Joint Administrators to go to court to prove a negative – i.e. that creditors do not have such an entitlement.
(6) Sixth, the novelty and complexity of the arguments is irrelevant. Otherwise, the more outlandish and correspondingly difficult the assertion, the greater the chance of having costs paid from the estate when the argument fails. The reverse should be true.
(7) Seventh, both the SCG and GSI have throughout acted, quite properly, in pursuit of their own very substantial commercial objectives. The arguments advanced by the SCG and GSI were intended to produce double digit and in some cases over 20% rates of interest. Further in the case of GSI this is not just its interest in maximising recovery from the LBIE estate, but also its interest in maximising its claim to interest in the many ISDA Master Agreements it has entered into with countless other counterparties in the market. Wentworth depicted as "absurd" the suggestion that GSI could recover from the LBIE estate (to the detriment of those interested in it, including Wentworth) its costs of failing to establish the right to claim interest based on its cost of equity, under its countless agreements with other counterparties in the market.
My assessment and adjudication
Adjudication of costs in relation to the ISDA Master Agreement issues
"The mere fact someone or a group of people assert a claim so enormous that it holds up distribution is absolutely no reason to depart from the usual costs order."
"…it's for people who want to claim a high rate of interest to make that assertion. If they don't the Administrators, as my Lord put in argument, can perfectly well say, "We'll pay you 8 per cent because that's what you're entitled to, if you want more it's for you to do the running." So had the SCG not been here it would have been for somebody else, if they wanted to, to come to court and argue the point, knowing that in doing so they faced a costs risk…Everyone who wants to run a case like that needs to consider whether it is worth the costs risk of doing so."
Adjudication of costs in relation to the GMA issues