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[2017] NSWSC 636
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In the matter of Dominion Insurance Company of Australia Limited (subject to scheme of arrangement) [2017] NSWSC 636 (16 February 2017)
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In the matter of Dominion Insurance Company of Australia Limited (subject to scheme of arrangement) [2017] NSWSC 636 (16 February
2017)
Last Updated: 24 May 2017
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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In the matter of Dominion Insurance Company of Australia Limited (subject
to scheme of arrangement)
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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16 February 2017
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Decision Date:
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16 February 2017
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity - Corporations List
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Before:
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Black J
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Decision:
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Subject to notice of the application to the Australian Prudential
Regulation Authority, the Court would order that the Plaintiff convene
a meeting
of creditors for the purposes of considering and, if thought fit, agreeing to a
proposed scheme of arrangement between
the Plaintiff and its creditors, and make
ancillary orders.
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Catchwords:
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CORPORATIONS – Arrangements and reconstructions – Schemes of
arrangement or compromise – Application under s 411 of the
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) for orders convening a meeting of members
to consider and if thought fit to agree to a proposed scheme of arrangement
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where scheme proposed to replace current scheme – where current
scheme difficult to administer
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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The Dominion Insurance Company of Australia Limited (Subject to scheme of
arrangement) (Plaintiff/Applicant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: R Glasson
(Plaintiff/Applicant) Solicitors: O’Neill Partners
(Plaintiff/Applicant)
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File Number(s):
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2013/143047
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JUDGMENT – EX TEMPORE
- By
its Third Further Amended Interlocutory Process filed on 24 November 2016 the
Plaintiff, The Dominion Insurance Company of Australia
Limited (Subject to
Scheme of Arrangement) (“Company”) seeks orders convening a meeting
of creditors of the Company to
approve a modified scheme of arrangement between
the Company and its creditors, orders providing for the dispatch of information
to those creditors, and orders in a common form providing for the conduct of the
meeting.
- The
background to the application reflects a scheme of arrangement which has
continued, now, over many years, involving significant
complexities. The present
scheme administrator, Mr Weston, took up his position after the death of the
earlier scheme administrator.
The history of the matter is set out in the
affidavits of Mr Weston dated 30 April 2013, 18 November 2016 and 15 February
2017 which
are relied on in this application. The history of the Company’s
administration has also been reviewed and the terms of the
existing scheme in
respect of the Company set out, in considerable detail, in the judgment of
Brereton J in Re Dominion Insurance Company of Australia Limited (Subject to
Scheme of Arrangement) [2013] NSWSC 898; (2013) 276 FLR 338. I will not
repeat the observations his Honour has already made in respect to the history of
the matter or the terms of the scheme
as it presently subsists.
- Difficulties
have emerged in respect of the administration of the scheme, in its present
form, which are summarised in Mr Weston's
evidence in support of the
application, and in the terms of a proposed explanatory statement which is
proposed to be sent to creditors
in respect of the meeting to approve a further
scheme. Those difficulties reflect the complexity of the original scheme; the
passage
of time; and the fact that Mr Weston, when appointed as scheme
administrator, was provided with relatively limited material as to
matters
arising in the complex steps involved in the administration of the scheme. The
particular difficulties which now exist, as
identified in the proposed
explanatory statement, include the fact that the present scheme provides for
creditors identified as Class
B creditors (who are broadly speaking creditors
with insurance arrangements with the Company) to receive the full amount of
their
admitted claims against the Company, and does not contain any mechanism to
provide for the position where such creditors cannot be
identified or located.
Not surprisingly, given the time for which the scheme has been in place, there
are now many creditors falling
within that category which no longer exist,
because, for example, they have been deregistered, or which are no longer
identifiable,
and there are also persons who, in the past, have been provided
with payments under the scheme and have not deposited those payments,
creating
an inference that they were not at the address to which those payments were
sent. The draft explanatory statement rightly
points to the difficulties which
Mr Weston will face in concluding the scheme where dividends cannot be paid to
persons who are Class
B creditors, where Mr Weston is unable to locate a current
address for them, and where the present scheme does not provide a power
to
exclude them when they cannot be identified or located. The potential difficulty
is obvious, that the scheme simply cannot be
brought to completion if persons
cannot either be paid or excluded from it when they cannot be paid.
- The
draft explanatory statement also points to the difficulty which arises so far as
the current scheme is a relatively complex structure
involving a combined fund
and two separate funds, from which payments are to be made, but Mr Weston was
not provided with information
from which it can be determined which parts of the
funds he holds are held in the particular funds, or to allocate payments in
respect
of the scheme between those funds. A third difficulty is that, for
reasons which are presently unclear, the scheme was structured
so as to be of
indefinite duration, and it is difficult to see the utility of the continuance
of the scheme, once all payments contemplated
by it have been made.
- Mr
Weston has formed the view, which seems to me to be plainly reasonable, that the
preferable course is for the Company to enter
into a new scheme of arrangement
which is capable of being implemented, given the information presently available
to him, and which
will provide for the scheme to terminate after it has been
implemented. The new scheme also makes other changes, including a change
as to
priority between Class A and Class B creditors, which appears to be directed to
addressing developments in the time that has
passed. The change in priority is,
as Mr Glasson, who appears for the Company, points out, likely to be of limited
practical significance,
where Mr Weston's present anticipation is that all
creditors in both classes will be paid in full. That change may well be
justified,
as a practical matter, because the existing scheme contemplated a top
up by reinsurers, in respect of Class B creditors who ranked
in priority first
but were to be paid second, and such an arrangement is likely to be very
difficult to implement, in respect of
the reinsurers, given the number of years
that have now passed since the arrangement was implemented. In any event, as I
have noted,
that change may well be of limited practical significance, where
questions of priority have lesser weight where the amounts available
are likely
to be sufficient to meet the claims of both classes of creditors. The other
significant change to be made is to introduce,
in respect of Class B creditors,
a provision for exclusion of creditors, particularly where they cannot be
located, which did not
exist in the earlier scheme, but which is now likely to
be practically necessary, given the matters to which I have referred above.
- The
approach which Mr Weston proposes to adopt, of convening a new scheme meeting to
consider the new scheme, reflects a recognition
that the Court lacks the power,
once a scheme has been approved, to implement variations of the kind that are
now sought to be made.
That limitation to the Court’s power was
recognised, for example, In Re Forklift Sales (SA) Pty Ltd (1972) 3 SASR
21, to which Brereton J in turn referred, with approval, in Re Dominion
Insurance Company of Australia Limited (Subject to Scheme of Arrangement)
above at [20]. The proper course, where a scheme needs to be amended after it
has been voted on by members and approved by the Court
is, as Brereton J noted
in that case, that which Mr Weston proposes to adopt, to submit a new scheme
containing the relevant amendments,
initially to the Court so that a meeting of
creditors can be approved, then to creditors for their approval, and then to
have that
scheme placed before the Court for final approval at a second court
hearing in the usual way.
- The
task which the Court faces in this application is to determine whether the new
scheme, which is sought to be introduced in replacement
for the existing scheme,
is one that can properly be submitted to creditors for their approval. Mr
Glasson draws attention to the
helpful decision of Lindgren J in Re NRG
London Reinsurance Company Ltd and NRG Victory Australia Limited and the
Corporations Act 2001 [2006] FCA 872; (2006) 58 ACSR 674, where his Honour
set out the matters which would be relevant in such an application. The first is
that all reasonable steps have
been taken or will be taken to identify scheme
creditors and bring the proposed schemes to their attention. Mr Weston sets out,
at
some length, the steps which have been taken, at least since his appointment,
to identify scheme creditors. It is plain that a significant
amount of the
necessary work would also have been undertaken prior to Mr Weston's appointment,
although he has incomplete records
in that regard. Mr Glasson fairly points out
that the extent of “reasonable steps” is a question of judgment, and
it
is possible that additional steps could be taken to identify, or possibly
identify, additional creditors. As Mr Glasson points out,
it is possible that
steps could be taken to determine whether a creditor who has not responded to
correspondence has died, and seek
to identify his or her executors and, given
the time that has passed, possibly the beneficiaries, of that creditor. It seems
to me,
however, that creditors considering the new scheme might well take the
view that, given the time that has passed, and the efforts
that have been taken
to identify creditors to date, the likely return from such inquiries would not
be supported by the costs and
delay that would be incurred in making them. It is
relevant that the continuance of a scheme over an extended period will itself
cause erosion of the value to be distributed. In those circumstances, it seems
to me that creditors might well take the view, acting
fairly and reasonably at a
scheme meeting, that the steps which have been taken to date are sufficient, and
that no further steps
could sensibly be taken in the relevant circumstances. I
am satisfied of that matter, so far as the Court needs to form that view
to
order that the meeting be convened.
- Second,
the Court will consider whether the explanatory statement for the proposed
scheme provides an adequate description of its
effect and otherwise complies
with s 412 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). The explanatory statement
that is proposed to be delivered to creditors seems to me to provide a clear
explanation of the
difficulties which presently exist in the implementation of
the scheme, and the changes which are proposed to be made between the
existing
scheme and the new scheme, and complies with that requirement.
- Third,
the Court should be satisfied that the manner in which the proposed new scheme
will operate is not so clearly unfair and unreasonable
that it should not be
allowed to go forward for consideration. It seems to me that that requirement is
satisfied, where the changes
sought to be made to the existing scheme reflect
the difficulties of implementation of the scheme in its present form. In
particular,
so far as the new scheme would introduce a provision for exclusion
of creditors in Class B who could not be located, that is an extension
of a
provision in the existing scheme in respect of Class A creditors, and it seems
to me that there is nothing clearly unfair or
unreasonable about it,
particularly given the time for which the existing scheme has been on foot.
- Fourth,
the Court will give consideration to whether there can be a single meeting of
all of the scheme creditors of the scheme company,
as distinct from meetings of
classes of scheme creditors. In NRG London Reinsurance Company Ltd,
Lindgren J gave a typically lucid explanation of the circumstances in which the
Court would order separate classes of creditors
and pointed to the fact that
courts have historically been reluctant to order separate classes of creditors,
and would generally
only do so where there is no community of interest, such
that the creditors can consult with each other so as to determine whether
the
scheme should be approved: see also, for example, Re Hills Motorway Ltd
[2002] NSWSC 897; (2002) 43 ACSR 101; Re HIH Casualty and General Insurance
Ltd [2006] NSWSC 485; (2006) 57 ACSR 791 at [63]. It seems to me that it is
appropriate to convene a meeting of one class of creditors in this case,
notwithstanding that Class A
creditors are trade creditors and Class B creditors
are insurance creditors, where the whole of the relevant arrangements of the
companies are subject to the present scheme, the scheme has already been in
place for a considerable period, creditors have already
received significant
distributions under the scheme, and it is contemplated that creditors in both
classes are likely to be paid
in full. It does not seem to me that there is
anything disclosed by the present evidence to suggest that scheme creditors
could not
consult with each other, in order to determine whether to approve the
scheme, or that any issues arising from different views of
classes of creditors
could not be addressed by the usual and desirable practice of maintaining
records of the voting of each class
of creditor, so that any issues as to
different views taken by those classes of creditors, or different percentages of
creditors
in those classes approving the relevant scheme, may be drawn to the
Court’s attention at the second scheme meeting.
- As
Lindgren J noted in Re NRG London Reinsurance Company Ltd above, the
Court will also have regard to the way in which the value of scheme
creditors’ claims are determined for the purposes
of voting, and whether
that is fair and reasonable. It does not seem to me that any issue arises in
respect to this scheme causing
difficulty in that respect.
- The
Court will consider whether the proposed scheme complies with the requirements
of other provisions of the Corporations Act, including the requirement
under s 411(2) of the Act that fourteen days’ notice of the hearing
of the application has been given to the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission
(“ASIC”) and that it has had a reasonable opportunity to
examine the proposed schemes and explanatory memorandum and
to make submissions
to the Court in respect of it. The Company has provided the relevant materials,
including the proposed explanatory
statement, to ASIC which has confirmed that
it has had a reasonable opportunity to examine them and does not seek to be
heard in
respect of the application today. ASIC has consistent with its usual
practice, reserved its position in respect of the second hearing.
- Finally,
Lindgren J drew attention to the desirability of the Australian Prudential
Regulation Authority (“APRA”) having
had a reasonable opportunity to
examine the documents. In this case, the relevant documents have not yet been
provided to APRA, although
that is perhaps not surprising where the existing
scheme has been in place for many years, the changes that are sought to be made
are directed to the practical implementation of the existing arrangements, and
the insurer has not been conducting an insurance business
for many years. Having
said that, Mr Weston fairly recognises that it is likely to be desirable that
APRA have an opportunity to
review these documents, even if it is unlikely that
it will take a different view from the view that ASIC has taken in this respect,
where it is not apparent that the changes proposed would have any prudential or
other regulatory implications. In those circumstances,
the Court should deliver
judgment, as I have done, addressing the issues of principle which arise in
respect of the application,
but the making of orders will be deferred until APRA
has had an opportunity to review the relevant material and consider its
position.
- I
am satisfied, having regard to the evidence that has been led in this
application, that the new scheme is one which can properly
be put to creditors
for their approval. I am satisfied that the Court could, on the material before
it, properly approve the sending
of an explanatory statement, together with the
material which is proposed to be sent with it, in or substantially in the form
of
the documents which have been put before the Court. The process which is
proposed to be adopted for sending material to creditors
reflects the provision
in s 412(2) of the Corporations Act, for dealing with creditors who have
admitted claims in amounts of greater than $200, who will be sent a copy of the
explanatory
statement, or less than $200, who will be provided with information
as to how to obtain the copy of the explanatory statement if
they wish to do so.
That course is both contemplated by s 412 of the Corporations Act, and is
sensible in avoiding waste of costs of dispatching material to creditors with
claims in modest amounts, who may be less likely
to wish to read that material
in full.
- An
order is also properly sought under s 411(7) of the Corporations Act
which would permit Mr Weston to be appointed to administer the new scheme, if it
is approved by members and approved by the Court
at the second Court hearing.
That order is necessary, since Mr Weston may have existing claims against the
Company, by way of remuneration,
such that he would not be entitled to be
appointed, without leave of the Court, as scheme administrator of the new
scheme. The Courts
have, in many cases involving, for example, the retirement of
liquidators, recognised the advantage to be gained by familiarity in
matters of
this kind, and that advantage is substantial in this case where this scheme has
a long history and substantial complexities.
Accordingly, I would grant leave
under s 411(7) of the Act for Mr Weston to be appointed to administer the
new scheme, if it is ultimately approved and entered into, to avoid the waste of
costs which arise if a new scheme administrator were to be appointed to that
scheme.
- In
these circumstances, I can indicate that, absent any developments of substance
between now and any relisting of the matter, the
Court would order the proposed
meeting of the creditors of the Company, approve the explanatory statement for
dispatch to creditors,
and make the other orders in the form sought by the
Company. However, I will defer making those orders until relevant information
has been provided to APRA and it has had an opportunity to indicate its
position. The only orders which I need make at this stage
are
therefore:
1. Grant leave to the Plaintiff to
approach the Associate to Black J in chambers, advising of the outcome of any
communications
with the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, and
submitting orders to be made in Chambers.
2. List the matter for further directions at 9.30am, 22
March 2017 before Black J.
3. The exhibits may be returned, on condition that they be
retained by Mr Weston or his legal representatives pending the completion
of the
present scheme or any new scheme which may be approved.
**********
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