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The Supreme Court of New South Wales has recently handed down its decision in proceedings (“Arrium Proceedings”) brought by a number of lenders against former officers and employees of Arrium Limited and its subsidiaries (“Arrium”).
Justice Ball’s landmark decision1 dismissing the lenders’ claims addressed various important issues that often arise when a borrower is facing financial distress in Australia, including:
We analyse some of these issues in further detail below.
The decision will be of particular interest to:
The key takeaways from the decision are that:
Arrium went into voluntary administration in Australia in April 2016 and following that, liquidation, with approximately A$2 billion of debt owing to creditors.
The Arrium Proceedings comprised two separate claims bought by financier groups who had advanced monies to Arrium borrowers under existing syndicated and bilateral facilities agreements, and concerned, in particular, drawdown and rollover notices issued by the relevant Arrium entities in January and February 2016 under the facilities agreement.
The first group of lenders (including a Cayman-registered subsidiary of Anchorage Capital, Deutsche Bank and the Commonwealth Bank of Australia) (“Anchorage Claim”) claimed damages in excess of A$180m. The Anchorage Claim asserted that:
The second group of lenders (Bank of Communications, Westpac and the Hong Kong branch of Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentina) (“BoC Claim”) claimed damages in excess of A$140m. The BoC Claim asserted that:
A separate insolvent trading claim was also brought by Arrium’s liquidators against the former directors, which was settled during the course of the trial, but which raised issues relevant to key issues in the Anchorage Claim and the BoC Claim.
Perhaps the most significant issue examined by the Court, given its critical importance to the day-to-day decision making of company directors and the discharge of their duties to the company, and its relevance to potential clawback remedies under Australian law, was whether Arrium was insolvent in January/February 2016 at the time the relevant drawdown and rollover notices were issued. The BoC Claim and the related insolvent trading claim specifically asserted that Arrium was insolvent at the time the notices were issued (this was a critical component of the BoC Claim, as pleaded, against the CFO and Treasurer).
Under Australian law, a company is solvent if, and only if, it is able to pay all its debts as and when they become due and payable. A company that is not able to make those payments is insolvent.
A claim that a company is insolvent at a given time usually involves an assertion that it is unable to pay its current debts, or its debts that will become due and payable in the short-term.
Atypically, the lenders in the BoC Claim (and Arrium’s liquidators in the insolvent trading claim) asserted that Arrium was insolvent as at January/February 2016 solely on the basis that it was unable to repay approximately A$871 million in debt facilities which were due to mature in July 2017 (that is, some 18 months into the future).
The lenders claim of insolvency was based on an assertion that the only way Arrium would be able to repay the maturing debt was through a sale of its mining consumables business (described as the “jewel in its crown”), and that by 7 January 2016 it was apparent that Arrium could not achieve a price for that business which would be sufficient to both repay the debt and enable Arrium to continue to operate a viable business in the meantime.
The Court adopted well-established principles that the test for solvency is “forward looking” and requires the Court to be “commercially realistic”. Whilst noting that the test involves some uncertainty and speculation, the Court also noted that the question of how far it should look into the future to determine the company’s ability to pay its debts as and when they fall due depends on the circumstances of each case. In this regard, the Court will normally not look too far into the future due to the unknowns and contingencies that exist in trying to predict the future. The Court also emphasised the need to assess solvency by reference to the circumstances as they were known (or ought to have been known) at the relevant time, and not with the use of hindsight.
Justice Ball dismissed the lenders’ assertion that Arrium was insolvent in January/February 2016 because, amongst other reasons:
Whilst every case turns on its own facts, the decision indicates that it will be more difficult to come to a conclusion that a company is insolvent where it is necessary to have regard to debts falling due in a future period measured in years rather than months.
This may give comfort to directors of distressed companies that are able to pay their short-term debts as and when they fall due, but which have impending long-term debts which, in the absence of a sale or capital raising exercise, the company may be unable to pay.
The Court determined that no duty of care was owed to the lenders by any of the Arrium entities, the CFO, the Treasurer, or the other Arrium employees, save in respect of a single telephone conversation between the Treasurer and one lender (where the Court found that no breach of the duty occurred).
In reaching this decision, the Court concluded, among other things, that:
The Court found that the Treasurer did owe a duty of care to one particular lender in making representations during a telephone conversation held at the request of that lender so it could better understand Arrium’s financial position. The Court noted that, in those circumstances, the Treasurer must have understood that the lender required further information and would rely on that information due to the Treasurer’s position of seniority, and further the lender had no other means of finding the information out for itself (thus making it “vulnerable” to a lack of care by the Treasurer in providing the information). However, the Court found that, as a matter of fact, there was no breach of the duty by the Treasurer because there was no evidence that the information provided was inaccurate or that certain alleged representations had been made by the Treasurer.
For lenders, Justice Ball’s decision emphasises that it will, in the absence of something more, be difficult for them to show that they are owed a duty of care in tort by their borrowers (and directors and employees of those borrowers) in relation to representations and warranties given in accordance with the terms of the underlying finance documents. This reinforces the importance of ensuring appropriate remedies are included in the contractual arrangements. In particular, Australian Courts will be hesitant to impose a duty of care on individual employees where to do so may put them in a position of conflict with the duties owed to their employer, and where the relevant conduct concerns purely internal decision-making.
For directors and officers, it is a timely reminder that they may, in certain circumstances, owe a duty of care to the company’s lenders where the lenders make specific requests for information of them based on their seniority, expertise and responsibilities, particularly where those requests are made outside the ambit of the underlying contractual terms.
In each of the Anchorage Claim and the BoC Claim, a key issue was whether a representation made by the Arrium borrowers that there had been no changes in their financial position since certain dates, which had had a “material adverse effect” in their ability to perform their obligations under the facility agreement, was true (“MAE Representation”).
This is a complex example of a material adverse effect (“MAE”) clause, commonly found in loan agreements, share and asset purchase agreements, amongst other documents. The difficulty with MAE and material adverse change (“MAC”) clauses is that they are usually (as was the case in Arrium) expressed in broad, qualitative terms, such that there is almost always the potential for dispute as to their proper construction. For this reason, it is rare in Australia to see a lender rely solely on a breach of a MAE or MAC clause to call a default or allege a breach.
The interpretation of the clause in Arrium turned on (1) whether there had been a change in Arrium’s “financial position” since the relevant dates in each case and (2) if there had, whether that change had a “material adverse effect” on Arrium’s ability to perform its obligations under the loan agreements.
The Court confirmed that interpretation of MAE and MAC clauses are subject to the traditional approaches to contractual interpretation. That is, they are construed by reference to the words used (giving them their ordinary meaning), the context in which they appear, and what a reasonable business person would understand them to mean.
Ultimately, the Court found that certain of the many factors asserted by the lenders did constitute a change in “financial position” (particularly changes in cash flow, debt levels and liquidity, changes in gearing and interest cover ratios and the auditors’ inclusion of a note in Arrium’s accounts regarding uncertainty over Arrium’s ability to continue as a going concern). However, the Court found that only the auditors’ note constituted a “material” change, such that there was a MAE only with effect from the date of the adoption of that note. That date fell after the date on which the relevant drawdown notices and rollover notices were issued, such that the MAE Representation made in those notices was true.
The Anchorage Claim gave rise to a further specific issue regarding the plaintiff’s right to bring the Anchorage Claim in the first place. The issue arose because Anchorage had acquired its interest in the relevant loans on the secondary market after Arrium had entered voluntary administration. The assignment of the loans to Anchorage included an assignment of “ancillary claims” which any original lender had arising out of or related to the assigned loans.
In Australia, the general principle is that, subject to certain exceptions, a bare right to litigate is not assignable. However, it has been held in some circumstances that where the assignee has a “legitimate commercial interest” beyond the cause of action itself, an assignment of the cause of action will be permitted (certain statutory causes of action, such as those for misleading conduct contrary to the Australian Consumer Law, remain absolutely incapable of assignment, and therefore the focus in the Anchorage Claim was on the purported assignment of common law claims in negligence).
When the plaintiffs sought leave to amend their original claim to join the CFO as a defendant in 2019, the CFO opposed that application on the basis that Anchorage was an assignee of a bare cause of action, the assignment of the cause of action was invalid, and the claim against him was therefore “doomed to fail”.
The primary judge in the amendment application (being Ball J) rejected the CFO’s submissions on the basis that it was at least open to argue that Anchorage had a legitimate commercial interest beyond that of the cause of action itself (i.e. because it was an assignee of the underlying debt). The New South Wales Court of Appeal refused the CFO’s application for leave to appeal 2, on the basis that:
In the Arrium Proceedings, Bell J did not need to definitely address the assignment issue because he determined that the causes of action asserted by the lenders did not exist. However, he noted the authorities which confirmed that:
His Honour therefore noted that:
What this highlights for secondary debt traders in Australia is that the law in relation to assignments of a right to litigate continues to develop and evolve. Whilst it remains important to distinguish between an assignment of rights and obligations under debt instruments, and assignments of “ancillary” rights to litigate in respect of causes of action arising out of those instruments, the Arrium case indicates that a Court is more likely to allow an assignee to exercise a bare right to litigate where that right forms part of or is ancillary to a broader acquisition of a debt on the secondary market.
Authored by James Hewer, Scott Harris and Zachary Forrai.