B e f o r e :
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES COURT JUDGE MULLEN ____________________
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Mr Andrew Shaw (instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP) for the Applicants The Respondents did not appear and were not represented Hearing date: 25th June 2020 ____________________
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ICC JUDGE MULLEN :
Introduction
On 2nd August 2019 the Applicants, as joint administrators of London Oil & Gas Limited ("the Company" or "LOG"), issued an application notice seeking:
The application is supported by the statement of Mr Lane Bednash, one of the joint administrators of the Company, dated 2nd August 2019. He sets out the Company's circumstances and the background to its administration as follows. LOG is the single largest debtor of London Capital & Finance Plc ("LCF"). LCF issued "mini-bonds" to investors until it was required to cease trading by the Financial Conduct Authority in December 2018. LCF went into administration on 20th January 2019, owing its investors some £237 million. LCF was the Company's principal source of funds, which the Company used to make onward loans and investments. The cessation of LCF's business meant that the Company's own business ceased and it followed LCF into administration on 18th March 2019.
The Applicants' investigations led them to conclude that, between March 2016 and December 2018, the gross sum borrowed from LCF by LOG was some £122,049,137.58, although the net figure, after deduction of agent's commission, amounted to £91,344,566.41. Almost all this borrowing was lent onwards to other entities, including LG LLP, or invested in other entities. Putting the operation of the Novation Agreements aside, the Applicants concluded that LG LLP was a debtor of the Company in the sum of about £32.6 million. This sum was shown as having been lent to LG LLP in the Company's draft trial balance sheets. The Applicants' case is that most of this sum was, in fact, paid to LG LLP's beneficial owners. Mr Bednash's statement contains an analysis of the payments made that were recorded as loans to LG LLP. £13 million was transferred directly from the Company to LG LLP, £27,000 was transferred directly from LCF to LG LLP and £20 million transferred by LCF's payment agent to four individuals: Mr Barker, Mr Andrew Thomson (the chairman of LCF), Mr Hume-Kendall and a Mr Spencer Golding.
The Novation Agreements purported to novate LG LLP's borrowing to LPE and to LP&T with effect from 1st January 2019. The novation agreement to which LPE was a party ("the LPE Novation Agreement") defines LOG as "the Lender", LG LLP as "the Transferor" and LPE as "the Transferee". It records that the Transferor "is the borrower under an inter company loan arrangement (Intercompany Facility)" and that the Lender:
It goes on:
The "Facility Agreement" to which the Novation Agreement refers is set out in the schedule. This provided that the Company would provide a term loan facility of up to £20 million for the purpose set out in clause 4 of the scheduled Facility Agreement as follows:
The operative provisions of the LPE Novation Agreement provide, at clause 3:
The "Debt" is defined as the sums due under or in connection with the Intercompany Facility.
The LPE Novation Agreement is signed on its last page, after the scheduled facility agreement, by Mr Simon Hume-Kendall on behalf of the Company as one of its directors, on behalf of LG LLP in his capacity as a designated member and on behalf of LPE as its director. Each instance of Mr Hume-Kendall's signature was witnessed by Mr Robert Sedgwick, who had been the company secretary of the Company until 12th March 2018. He ceased to be the company secretary following his suspension by the Solicitors' Regulation Authority from practice as a solicitor for a period of 12 months. The facility agreement is not itself executed.
The novation agreement to which LP&T is a party ("the LP&T Novation Agreement") is in similar terms, although the scheduled "Facility Agreement" refers to a loan of up to £30,000,000 being provided by the Company to LP&T for the purpose of purchasing 25,000,000 redeemable preference shares in London Power Corporation Limited ("LPC"). The LP&T Novation Agreement is again signed by Mr Hume-Kendall on behalf of the Company, LG LLP and LP&T after the scheduled facility agreement, which again is not itself signed. Mr Sedgwick was the witness to each instance of Mr Hume- Kendall's signature.
Mr Bednash's statement explains that former directors of the Company, Mr Robin Hudson, Mr Francis Starkie and Mr Martin Ruscoe, and Mr David Elliot, the former company secretary, confirmed at interviews following the administration of the Company that they had not seen the Novation Agreements prior to those interviews. No mention of these agreements is made in the minutes of board meetings of the Company or in those of any of its related entities in the evidence that I have seen.
The application came before Chief ICC Judge Briggs on 30th September 2019. He gave directions for specific disclosure of certain classes of documents to the Respondents and the filing and service of responsive evidence. He directed the listing of a trial of three and a half days, with half a day of judicial pre-reading. The time for filing and service of evidence in answer and reply were subsequently varied by consent.
The Respondents filed evidence in answer from Mr Hume-Kendall, Mr Sedgwick, Mr Starkie and Mr Michael Peacock, a chartered accountant who provided advice to the Company. Those statements are dated 31st January 2020. The Respondents' case, which is principally set out in Mr Hume-Kendall's statement, is that there was no loan to LG LLP at all. The loans made by the Company were to:
The Respondents' position is that the Novation Agreements were simply devices to correct an erroneous position shown in the Company's nominal ledgers, which error came about, as Mr Hume-Kendall states in his witness statement, as a result of "poor communication between those making the payments and the recording them by the accounts staff." The true position was that the shareholders of LPC wished to acquire for the group certain technology assets, in the form of shares in LAI and ITI, and redeem certain preference shares. A restructuring of the group companies was contemplated, on which Mazars LLP, a firm of accountants, advised in June 2018. At a board meeting of LPC on 14th June 2018 the restructuring plan was approved, and it was agreed that the technology assets were to be brought in at a "fair valuation", estimated to be £20 million. The funding for the acquisition of the technology interests and the redemption of the LPC preference shares was to be provided by LOG and the precise mechanism was left to Mr Hume-Kendall and LPC's advisors to achieve.
Mr Hume-Kendall states that he asked Mr Sedgwick to assist with implementing the board's decision and they decided to use LPE to acquire the technology assets and to use LP&T, which was a new company incorporated for the purpose, to purchase the preference shares. Mr Sedgwick produced a share purchase agreement for LPE's purchase of the technology assets, being the shares in LAI and ITI, which were then owned by Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Elten Barker, the other legal member of LG LLP and also a director of LPC and LOG. The purchase price was £20 million. The share purchase agreement was executed and bears the date 21st July 2018, although it records that that some £12.9 million had been paid to Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker prior to this point. As to the purchase of the preference shares by LP&T, this is said to have been conducted in accordance with Mazars LLP's report. The members of LG LLP voted to distribute the preference shares to themselves in specie and the preference shares owned by Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker were sold to LP&T on 27th July 2018 for the stated sum of £32,225,096. A share purchase agreement bearing that date was prepared by Mr Sedgwick. Mr Hume-Kendall explains that, although the agreement refers to £32,225,096, this was subsequently revised to just over £16.7 million. Though these purchase agreements were executed, the completion of the transfers did not take place immediately. Instead, according to the Respondents, the transfers of the shares was to happen when all the payments had taken place and the restructuring of LPC had been put into effect.
At board meetings in early 2019 Mr Elliot, then the company secretary of LOG, expressed concern that the "paperwork was not complete" and that the loans to LPE and LP&T were not properly documented. Executed facility agreements setting out loans to LPE and LP&T were put before the board for ratification on 12th February 2019. Although the executed version in respect of LPE bears the date 21st June 2018 and that in respect of LP&T bears the date of 27th July 2018 the uncontested evidence is that these were prepared by Mr Sedgwick and executed by Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker in January 2019 as part of this "ratification" process. While there was no mention of the Novation Agreements at this meeting, Mr Sedgwick produced them on 12th February 2019 and asked Mr Hume-Kendall to sign them. Mr Hume-Kendall contends that this was a day-to-day matter of the correction of the error that he has described and was exactly the sort of transaction that he had authority to enter into on behalf of the Company.
In reply, the Applicants filed a statement from Mr David Hudson, an insolvency practitioner assisting the administrators, dated 16th April 2020, together with a further statement from Mr Bednash and a statement from Ms Sarah Spurling, a solicitor at Mishcon de Reya LLP, the Applicants' solicitors, both dated 17th April 2020. I need not address the contents of those statements at this stage, save to say that the Applicants do not accept the Respondents' contentions as to the arrangements between the Company, LG LLP, LPE and LP&T. In particular, Mr Bednash further queries the "legitimacy" of the facility agreements prepared in January 2019. As I shall explain, Mr Shaw, who appeared for the Applicants, invited me to set aside those agreements as well. Developments shortly before trial
A pre-trial review was listed before me on 18th May 2020. Shortly in advance of that, the Respondents filed an application, dated 14th May 2020, seeking adjournment of the trial, permission to adduce further evidence and an order for specific disclosure of certain documents. I was only asked to deal with the adjournment application at the PTR, which I refused. I directed that the remaining parts of the application be heard in the ICC Interim Applications List in the following week. In fact, the Respondents abandoned the remainder the application prior to that hearing.
At the trial, Mr Shaw took me through the developments thereafter. In the week after the PTR, Mishcon de Reya wrote to Nobles Solicitors, the solicitors for the Respondents, to confirm arrangements for the trial to be conducted remotely. There was a prolonged period of silence from the Respondents, punctuated by a reply from Nobles on 29th May 2020 to say that the proposed remote platform was too expensive. On 11th June 2020 Mishcon de Reya asked for details of the Respondents' counsel for the trial. Nobles replied to say that LPE and LP&T had entered administration and that notice of intention to appoint had been filed in respect of LG LLP.
Mr Andrew Fender, one of the administrators of LPE, emailed Mishcon de Reya shortly thereafter, enclosing various documents, and seeking consent to the adjournment of the trial. The attached documents show that LPE had entered administration on 29th May 2020 and the administrators, Mr Fender and Mrs Sandra Fender, were appointed by Mr Hume-Kendall as floating charge holder. The administrators' consents to act were dated 4th May 2020. It is therefore clear that administration was contemplated long before the PTR. Indeed, it seems that there was a video call between Mr and Mrs Fender and Mr Hume-Kendall on 27th April 2020.
A further email from Mr and Mrs Fender, this time as administrators of LP&T, was received shortly thereafter. This informed the Applicants that LP&T had also gone into administration on 29th May 2020, on this occasion by an appointment by its sole director, Mr Hume-Kendall. Again, their consents to act are dated 5th May 2020. It is likely that the insolvency and administration of this company was considered in the video call on 27th April 2020 too. There is no evidence of any other contact prior to 5th May 2020.
Finally, again on 11th June 2020, an email was received attaching LG LLP notice of intention to appoint an administrator. The notice was signed on 5th June and filed on 8th June 2020. The resolution in favour of the appointment was passed by the vote of Mr Hume-Kendall, the other member, Mr Barker, having abstained. The notice of intention to appoint refers to advice having been received from Mr and Mrs Fender in the video call on 27th April 2020. Mr Shaw noted in submissions that the accounts for LG LLP for the period ended March 2020, approved by Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker, showed a net asset surplus of £29 million. The accounts for the period ending May 2020 however, signed by Mr Hume-Kendall alone, show a very substantial asset write down allowing the firm to be certified to be insolvent. Mr and Mrs Fender were not appointed on this occasion. Mr Bednash and Mr Asher Miller were appointed by LCF as qualifying floating charge holder on 17th June 2020.
Mr Shaw invited me to note that the administration of all three of Respondents was plainly in contemplation long before the PTR. Moreover, the Respondents did not see fit to alert the Applicants to any of the administrations until two weeks before the trial. He asks me to regard this, together, with the application made at the PTR as indicative of the Respondents' reluctance to have these matters determined.
On 17th June 2020 Mr and Mrs Fender gave consent to the continuation of the proceedings in relation to LPE and LP&T and, on 23rd June 2020, confirmed that they would take a neutral stance on the proceedings and rely upon the witness statements filed for the respondents. The administrators of LG LLP similarly took a neutral stance but no longer rely upon the witness statements filed.
For the sake of completeness, I should also say that my attention was drawn to emails from a Ms Jane Sanders, who is apparently "in house counsel" for Mr and Mrs Fender. The email made various proposals as to the resolution of the issues between the parties. I also received a document from Mr Fender at the start of trial, making various observations as to the conduct of the case by the Applicants.
Approach to the evidence
Mr Shaw submitted that the trial should proceed, taking into account the evidence filed by the Respondents. The directions order listing the trial contained an order for cross- examination in the usual form, that is to say that the makers of witness statements were required to attend to be cross-examined, in default of which their statements would not be read without the permission of the court. None of the witnesses for the Respondents attended but Mr Shaw proposed that witness statements should nonetheless be read, first because LPE and LP&T wish to rely upon them and, secondly, because the Applicants' case has been prepared on the basis that they are part of the evidence before the court and evidence in reply has been filed. I adopted Mr Shaw's suggested course. There was no basis on which to adjourn the trial. The Respondents were well aware of the trial and their officers appear to have entered administration as a tactic to avoid engaging with it. They had filed evidence and the proportionate approach appeared to me to be that I should take that evidence into account. That evidence has not been tested by cross-examination and the Respondents were not represented before me to offer submissions on it. I have, however, read that evidence and Mr Shaw drew my attention to those parts of it that he considered to be of significance.
Mr Bednash, Mr Hudson and Ms Spurling all attended the trial by Skype and were each called to give evidence on behalf of the Applicants. In the absence of a representative of the Respondents they were not cross-examined and did no more than confirm the truth of the contents of their witness statements. I have no reason to doubt their evidence, which is of course predominantly based on contemporaneous documents of which they have no direct knowledge. I accept the evidence set out in their witness statements.
Relevant background
It is necessary to give an account of the relevant background as it appears from the evidence produced by the parties in order to give proper context to their cases as to the context in which the Novation Agreements came to be created. It will already be apparent from what I have said above that LG LLP, LPC and LOG were related entities and had common officers.
LG LLP was the entity that owned the voting shares in LPC. LG LLP was incorporated on 17 March 2017 and Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker are the only legal members of the partnership. Mr Hume-Kendall's evidence is that the beneficial owners of the partnership are:
The Applicants contend, on the basis of their analysis of the distribution of monies via LG LLP, that the beneficial owners are Mr Barker (as to 7.5%), Mr Thomson (as to 7.5%), Mr Hume-Kendall and/or the Simon Hume-Kendall Trust (as to 42.5%) and Mr Spencer Golding and/or the Golding Trust (as to 42.5%). It is not necessary for me to express any view on the Applicants' contention on this and I make no finding as to it.
LPC has been LOG's sole shareholder since 4th May 2017. Its directors on 4th April 2019, when it entered administration, were:
Between 2 December 2016 and 12 March 2018, Mr Sedgwick was the company secretary. He was replaced as company secretary by Mr Elliot and Mr Elliot himself resigned in February 2019.
LOG was incorporated on 15th August 2015 and at the date of its administration its directors were:
The company secretary between 24 October 2017 and 12 March 2018 was Mr Sedgwick. He was replaced as company secretary by Mr Elliot, who again resigned in February 2019.
LPE was incorporated on 23rd June 2016. Its directors were Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker. Since 5th February 2018, the sole shareholder of LPE has been TW Private LLP, the members of which are LG LLP, Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker. A share sale agreement bearing the date 21st July 2018 states that LPE purchased from Mr Hume- Kendall and Mr Barker the following:
There is, however, a share sale agreement dated 27th July 2018 by which TW Private LLP purported to sell its shares in LPE to LP&T for £1 ("the LPE Shares Sale Agreement"). I will return to this agreement later.
LP&T was incorporated on 20 July 2018, apparently as a vehicle to receive the redeemable preference shares in LPC. According to a share sale agreement dated 27th July 2018, it purchased Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker's redeemable preference shares in LPC for £32.2 million, subsequently reduced to £16.9 million ("the Redeemable Shares Sale Agreement"). Mr Hume-Kendall has been the sole director of LP&T since its incorporation. He was also its sole shareholder from incorporation although, as I shall explain, there is a declaration of trust apparently made by him on 13th November 2018 that provides that he holds the sole share in LP&T on trust for LG LLP ("the LP&T Declaration of Trust").
In the above introduction to the parties and the principal transactions I have attempted to avoid giving the impression that I accept that any of the documents to which I refer were in fact executed or, indeed, created on the date they bear, because this application is characterised by the number of documents which are backdated, exist in multiple and slightly differing forms or which are inconsistent with other documents and contemporaneous events. By way of example, the Applicants have identified three versions of a facility agreement from March 2016 between LCF and the Company. All of these are signed by Mr Hume-Kendall for the Company and Mr Thomson for LCF. It is not clear which of them was to govern the borrowing between the Company and LCF from that time. Depending on the version, the facility offered to the Company in March 2016 was a loan of up to £20 million or £25 million. The Applicants have also identified a further facility agreement, dated 18th October 2018, under which some £150 million was offered.
Two further facility agreements have been discovered, the authenticity of which has been questioned by the Applicants. The first is dated 1st December 2017, which on its face extends the limit of the facility of March 2016 to £50 million. The second is dated 4th December 2017 and grants a facility with a limit of £120 million. Both are apparently signed by Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker for the Company on the one part and Thomson for LCF on the other. The authenticity of these documents is not accepted by the Applicants, predominantly because no mention is made of them in contemporaneous documents in which one might expect them to be addressed. There might or might not be an explanation, but one has not been offered in the evidence that I have seen.
The Applicants' starting point is that the Company's trial balance as at 6th March 2019 shows LG LLP to have borrowed some £32.6 million from LOG. The Applicants' evidence sets out their contentions as to the ultimate beneficiaries of the sums referable to LG LLP. As I have said, according to Mr Bednash's evidence about £20m was paid directly to Mr Thomson, Mr Hume-Kendall, Mr Spencer Golding and Mr Barker on behalf of LCF (as lender to LOG) by its agent Global Currency Exchange Network Limited ("GCEN"). The vast majority of the remainder was paid to LG LLP, and appears to have been paid on to individuals, including Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker. The Company's bank account statements between 5th February 2018 and 29th May 2018 confirm the payments made out of the account. Various descriptions are given for the payments. For example, some are descried as 'Pref Share Adv', although LOG itself did not itself have any preference shares.
Discussions began as to the matters on which the Respondents rely in 2018. On 14th April 2018 there was a meeting of the board of LPC. The minutes record that LG LLP and LPC were proposing to "consolidate into one TopCo" which would enable some shareholders to sell and to simplify the share structure. It was noted that Mr Elliot had approached Mazars LLP to provide advice in this regard. The minutes record that the
Mr Barker and Mr Elliot were said to be looking into new banking arrangements and begin the transition to those new arrangements at the time of the proposed restructure. It is notable that the restructuring proposals were then at a very early stage. While the restructuring had been approved, the process was still to be explored and Mazars LLP were yet to report on the process.
Mazars LLP in fact produced draft proposals for the restructuring on 11th June 2018. They proposed that LG LLP should distribute its shares in LPC to its members in specie and that those members who wished to retain an interest in LPC should form a new TopCo, to which they would transfer their shares and which would then acquire the shares from the members of LG LLP who did not wish to retain their interest.
The LPC Board met again on 14th June 2018. According to the minutes of that meeting it was reported that Mazars had produced a "Step Plan" for the restructuring. They record that a system was being considered to buy shares from those directors who were looking to sell them. The minutes state:
They go on:
As Mr Shaw emphasised, this shows the grant of express authority to Mr Elliot and Mr Hume-Kendall to take the restructuring proposals forward but it was clear that the final structure would be subject to the final approval of the board. In relation to restructuring, the following action point is noted:
The minutes continued with an account of a discussion of further investment opportunities in LAI and Asset Mapping Limited. The minutes state as follows:
In summary therefore, LP&T had been identified as the new TopCo that would be used to receive the preference shares that Mazars LLP had envisaged would first be distributed to the members of LG LLP, though this was still subject to confirmation by LPC's board. A further new company is also contemplated that would be the subsidiary of the new TopCo into which the technology assets would be brought at a value of around £20 million, though that was to be subject to a professional valuation. This would be funded by a facility from LCF and the arrangements for that would be decided in due course.
That then takes us to the Technology Assets Sale Agreement to which I have referred. LPE was owned TW Private LLP, of which Mr Barker and Mr Hume-Kendall were the members. That is entirely at odds with what was contemplated at the LPC board meeting. The meeting had considered the purchase of the technology assets by the new TopCo or a subsidiary of it. LPE was neither. Mr Hudson had estimated a value of £20 million, but this was to be subject to confirmation by a proper valuation process. That had not been undertaken. The Technology Assets Sale Agreement notes that £12.9 million of the purchase price had already been paid. Mr Shaw invites me to accept that this was part of the £13 million shown to be transferred to LG LLP and distributed onwards to its members between February and May 2018, as shown by LOG's Metro bank statements. Indeed, this accords with Mr Sedgwick's evidence at paragraph 39 of his statement that he was told by either Mr Hume-Kendall or Mr Barker that this sum had been paid by LOG to LG LLP and was paid on to those gentlemen or their beneficiaries. I accept Mr Shaw's submission. I also note that the assets the board contemplated to be purchased by LPE do not accord with those purchased under the Technology Assets Sale Agreement.
The next document to note is the Redeemable Shares Sale Agreement, apparently entered into in the following month, on 27th July 2018. Again, this was done in advance of approval of the restructuring on the part of the board of LPC or of LOG. There was a meeting of the latter on 7th August 2019. Once again the proposal to restructure was approved and they authorised Mr Hume-Kendall, Mr Elliot, Mr Marshall and Lewis Silkin to continue to progress it, but it is made quite clear that there would need to be final board approval of documents giving effect to the reorganisation. The minutes provide as follows:
The minutes go on to consider LOG's exposure to LCF and its need to build a cash reserve. There is no discussion of sums being paid to either an entity outside the LPC group to purchase technology assets or of the agreement of a newly formed company to pay seven figure sums to acquire Mr Hume-Kendall or Mr Barker's preference shares in LPC.
On the same day there was a meeting of the board of LPC. These record:
In relation to the reorganisation of the group the minutes record:
Pausing there, the Redeemable Shares Sale Agreement that purported to sell those shares is dated 27th July 2018. The only persons who could have informed the board of LPC about activities of LG LLP were Mr Barker and Mr Hume-Kendall, both of whom were present at the meeting. The board were not informed of this development and the minutes proceed on the basis that the restructuring plan is still in the course of finalisation. Similarly, the minutes continue to discuss the proposal to acquire the technology assets at section 12 –
While Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker disclosed their interest in the technology companies, there is no mention of sale by them to LPE on the basis of monies advanced by LOG to LPE for the purposes of the purchase. The minutes here do not accord with the case now advanced by the Respondents. Moreover, as at 7th August 2018, when this meeting took place, the proposal was that the transaction would be financed by a loan from LCF to the proposed new TopCo. There is no mention of any agreement that LOG had or will make a loan to LPE.
The meeting was reconvened on 9th August 2018 at which point the board of LPC authorised Mr Hume-Kendall, Mr Elliot and others to continue with the reorganisation. The formation of the TopCo was ratified, and Mr Elliot was authorised to form any further companies necessary to effect the reorganisation. The proposed acquisition of the technology assets was expressed to be subject to both "legal due diligence" and "final board approval".
The next significant documents are the communications between Mr Peacock and the auditors of LPC and LOG. By an email dated 26th October 2018, Mr Peacock wrote to Mr Irfaan Limalia of BDO, attaching LOG's draft trial balance for 30th September 2018. This records a debt due from LG LLP in the sum of £37.8 million. That email, with that attachment, was forwarded to Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Elliot on the following day. BDO raised particular queries, including in relation to the loan to LG LLP, during the course of the following month as follows:
On 15th November 2018 Mr Limalia chased Mr Elliot and said:
Up to this point the financial team appear to have been proceeding on the basis that LG LLP had a substantial liability to the Company.
Mr Elliot email BDO on 5th December 2018 to which was attached a document that begins to set out the alternative account now relied upon by the Respondents.
He also attached the LPE Shares Sale Agreement. This would of course have had the effect of bringing the shares in ITI and LAI back into the group, consistently, to some extent, with what had been contemplated by the LPC and LOG boards. As Mr Shaw notes, there are problems with this document. Although the LPE Shares Sale Agreement is dated 27th July 2018 there is no contemporaneous evidence to support its execution on this date. In this regard it is notable that this document is inconsistent with an option apparently granted to LOG to purchase these shares only a month earlier on 21st June 2018. Nor is it consistent with the Register of Persons with Significant Control maintained by the Registrar of Companies. TW Private LLP continues to be shown in 2020 as the person with significant control in relation to LPE.
Mr Elliot also sent the LP&T Declaration of Trust to the auditors. It is dated 30th November 2018 and describes Mr Hume-Kendall as the owner of the sole share in LP&T, which, it states, he held on trust for LG LLP. This would mean that LG LLP had purportedly distributed its preference shares in LPC in specie to Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Barker, who then sold their shares for £16.7 million to LP&T using, on their case, a loan from LOG. The beneficial owner of LP&T is LG LLP. The beneficial owners of LG LLP thus have the benefit of £16.7 million and remain the owners of the shares in LPC.
On 9th January 2019 it appears that Mr Hume-Kendall granting a facility of up to £10 million to LPE, secured by fixed and floating charges. It would seem that is linked to the cessation of LCF's business, or the cessation of LCF's ability to provide funds, as a result of the intervention of the FCA. On the same day there was a meeting of the LOG board. The minutes include a discussion the Company's borrowing from LCF as follows:
Mr Elliot's email to BDO and his account of the position the Company's board appears to have been based on his discussions with Mr Sedgwick. Mr Sedgwick's witness statement explains that, at some point in January 2019, two facility agreements were created and backdated as follows:
That appears to be a reference to the note that Mr Elliot prepared for the auditors and sent under cover of an email on 5th December 2019, to which I have referred above. Mr Elliot therefore appears to have requested an explanation of the position from Mr Sedgwick, who at that time had no formal role within the group, and noted that there was no documentation of the transactions which were said to have taken place. As a result of this, Mr Sedgwick produced two facility agreements.
These are the facility agreements that Mr Shaw invites me to find are void. The first is dated 21st June 2018. It does not state that it is effective from that date, though executed later. It simply gives the impression that it was executed on the date that it bears. It states that it is made between LPE and LOG and that a facility of £20 million is offered to LPE, which sums were borrowed by LOG from LFC. Clause 4 of the agreement provides that the purpose of the facility is as follows:
In fact, the monies from LOG had also been used to acquire LAI, so this document does not reflect the transaction that it is purportedly intended to evidence (although this is corrected in the facility agreement scheduled to the LPE Novation Agreement). The agreement provided that LPE would indemnify LOG in respect of its borrowing of the facility sum from LCAF. In other words, it did not confer any commercial benefit on LOG. LOG was merely a conduit for the monies. The agreement is signed by Mr Barker on behalf of LPE and Mr Hume-Kendall on behalf of LOG. They were of course both directors of these companies.
The second facility agreement is dated 27th July 2018 and is purportedly made between LOG and LP&T. It too gives the impression that it was executed on the date given, rather than in January 2019. It provides that a facility of up to £30 million is to be provided for the purchase of the redeemable preference shares in LPC. It similarly requires LP&T to indemnify LOG in respect of its borrowing of the facility sum from LCAF, without conferring any additional benefit on LOG. It is executed by Mr Barker on behalf of LOG and Mr Hume-Kendall on behalf of LP&T.
This takes place against backdrop of the failure of LCF and the appointment of administrators of that Company on 30th January 2019. On 6th February 2019, Mr Colin Hardman, one of the administrators of LCF, wrote to Mr Elliot and Mr Hume-Kendall. It is evident from that email that one of Mr Hardman's principal concerns was the financial position of IOG, which was a substantial debtor of LOG. According to Mr Bednash's first statement, LOG had made loans totalling around £34.6 to IOG. Mr Hume-Kendall's evidence explains that the loan was convertible into equity in IOG and LOG's value thus fluctuated with the value of IOG. Mr Hardman also asked about loans to LPE and LP&T. Understandably, Mr Hardman is concerned to establish the overall financial health of LOG as a major debtor of LCF.
This concern is reflected in Mr Elliot's email to the board of LOG on the same day. He contemplated that meetings would be held of the boards of LPC and LOG and he said:
He referred to the instruction of Stephenson Harwood LLP, a firm of solicitors, to advise the Company and the need to consider, among other things:
On 7th February 2019 Mr Finbarr O'Connell, in his capacity as an administrator of LCF, wrote to Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Elliot. The principal concern raised in his email was again the risk that IOG would be unable to repay the sums it had borrowed from LOG:
He raised the concerns that bondholders should have about LOG's "speculative and risky" lending to IOG and raised various queries about LOG's financial position.
On that same day, Mr Elliot emailed the Susan Moore, a solicitor at Stephenson Harwood, sending LOG's draft trial balance as at 30 September 2018, which had been forwarded to him by Mr Peacock. This again showed lending to LG LLP of £33.49 million
On 11th February 2019 Mr Elliot emailed Mr Hume-Kendall, Mr Barker and the other LOG board members. The email was headed "Summary of undocumented/unapproved loans by LOG to other London Group related entities". He said:
He went on:
I have quoted extensively there to illustrate that Mr Elliot was highlighting that the payments were allocated to LG LLP as there was no other information as to the purpose of the payments and that the accounts team were entirely unaware of any other basis on which those payments were made. He stresses that they will need to be ratified, taking into account any benefit to LOG in doing so. It is evident that this had been set in motion by the auditors' query as to whether LG LLP could repay the loan and the enquiries made of Mr Sedgwick by Mr Elliot.
A meeting of the LOG board took place on 12th February 2019. The first piece of business recorded in the draft minutes in evidence is "Review the position of LOG in light of the appointment of administrators". It was noted that the board had received standard advice for companies in financial difficulties from Stephenson Harwood and that, while the balance sheet was positive, the availability of funding needed to be considered. Funding was being provided from LPE with funds provided by Mr Hume- Kendall. The draft minutes state:
The minutes also record that Mr Elliot makes it clear that he did not consider that the LOG board had approved lending to LP&T and LPE. He said:
He consistently repeats that he did not see loan agreement in relation to LPE or LP&T.
The board purported to ratify the loans and there is one final exchange which I should note. Mr Elliot resigned as company secretary at the meeting. He was asked if he would consider changing his mind. The minutes record Mr Elliot then saying the following.
To which Mr Hume-Kendall is recorded as responding:
I stress that these are draft minutes but, if they accurately record what was said that it a quite extraordinary statement from Mr Hume-Kendall. He had within the last month, executed the two backdated loan agreements.
As I said at the outset of this judgment the Novation Agreements were executed on the 15th February 2019. I need only say a few further words about them and the circumstances in which they were created. The first and obvious point is that they are entirely at odds with the account given by the Respondents that the backdated loan agreements to which I have referred are designed to support. They both record that LG LLP, as transferor, is the borrower under an intercompany loan arrangement and that it is to be released from the lending on basis of the assumption of an obligation under the scheduled facility agreement (a facility agreement that was apparently entirely unnecessary if one is to believe that such a facility was entered into in June 2018). That is entirely at odds with suggestion that the Novation Agreements were intended to correct an administrative error. On the contrary, they affirm that there was lending to LG LPP, from which the parties seek to release it. There is no doubt that the Novation Agreements were not approved by the board and it is accepted that were not even mentioned to it. In this regard I need do no more than quote from paragraph 72 of Mr Hume-Kendall's statement in which he accepts that "At no point in the meeting of 12 February... was there any mention of any novation agreements."
The parlous state of the Company's finances was confirmed on 18th March 2019 when notice of appointment of administrators was filed at court, which appointment took effect on 19th March 2019.
Authority to enter into the Novation Agreements
Having set out the background I now turn to the arguments. Mr Shaw principally focused on the argument that the Novation Agreements were entered into without authority and that any purported ratification of them was of no effect. I shall therefore address this argument first.
The Applicants' case proceeds from the proposition that an agent cannot bind his principal without the actual or apparent authority of that principal. In Criterion Properties plc v Stratford UK Properties LLC [2004] 1 WLR 1846 , Lord Nicholls said as follows at paragraph 4:
If B is aware that a director of A is acting in breach of duty, B cannot rely on the director's apparent authority to enter into the transaction. In the same case, Lord Scott of Foscote said at paragraph 31:
Again, Mr Shaw took me to GHLM Trading Ltd v Maroo [2012] 2 BCLC 369 in which Newey J (as he then was) held that a contract entered into in breach of duty to the knowledge of the parties was void:
"Notice" in such cases includes constructive notice. In Wrexham Association Football Club Ltd v Crucialmove Lt d [2007] BCC 130, Sir Peter Gibson said:
A void act can of course be ratified. This might be done by the directors if it is within their powers and, if not, by the members. A helpful summary is provided in the judgment of Waller J in Suncorp Insurance and Finance v Milano Assecurazioni SpA [1993] 2 Lloyd's Rep 225, at 234-235.
In order to form a view on the authority to enter into the Novation Agreements is necessary to form a view on the preceding transactions. This is not least because Mr Hume-Kendall characterises the entry into the Novation Agreements as the sort of administrative matter that he had authority to enter into. Whether that is a sustainable characterisation requires consideration of what the position was apart from the Novation Agreements.
I am satisfied that Mr Hume-Kendall had neither actual or ostensible authority on LOG's behalf to enter into any arrangement whereby LOG was to make loans to LPE or to LP&T for the purpose of acquiring the technology assets or the purchasing LPC's redeemable shares. The Company had adopted the model articles provided for at Schedule 1 to The Companies (Model Articles) Regulations 2008 as its articles of association. Article 7 of requires that any decision of directors must be taken at a meeting or in accordance with Article 8, which provides for a written resolution. The evidence is quite clear that both of those matters required the approval of the boards of LPC and LOG. The arrangements as documented the Technology Assets Sale Agreement and the Redeemable Shares Sale Agreement, and the loan arrangements as reduced to writing in 2019, are at odds with the proposals being considered by the board. Mr Hume-Kendall had no authority to approve such loans. That absence of authority was known to LG LLP, LPE and LP&T because, in each instance, those entities were acting by Mr Hume-Kendall and his knowledge is to be imputed to each of them. In my judgment the loans and the loan agreements entered into and executed in 2019 are void.
Similarly, I am entirely satisfied that there was no actual authority for Mr Hume-Kendall to enter into the Novation Agreements. It is abundantly clear that the board were ignorant of these documents. It is particularly striking that these documents were not considered at a meeting called in part to purport to ratify the facility arrangements said to have been entered into in 2018 with LPE and LP&T, which were reduced to writing in 2019. Nothing further than the ratification of those arrangements was considered, which I shall address below. There is no basis on which it could be said that the meeting impliedly authorised the entry into the Novation Agreements.
Moreover, I am satisfied that Mr Hume-Kendall was acting in breach of duty in executing the Novation Agreements. Pursuant to section 171 of the Companies Act 2006 a director owes the following duty:
Pursuant to section 172 a director also has the following duty:
Subsection (3) refers to the rule that, where the directors know or ought to know that a company is insolvent or is likely to become insolvent, they have a duty to take into account the interests of creditors (see BTI (2014) Limited and others v Sequana SA [2019] EWCA Civ 112 per David Richards LJ).
Mr Sedgwick says in his witness statement that the Novation Agreements were executed to provide a "belt and braces approach" to ensure that LG LLP had no debt liability to LOG. In other words, they were designed to close off any claim that the Company otherwise had to pursue LG LLP for the debt. In my judgment, it was not a proper exercise of any power that Mr Hume-Kendall had to enter into the Novation Agreements to do so as to insulate LG LLP from a claim by LOG, in circumstances where, as I shall explain below, it was unlikely that any debt due from LPE or LP&T would recoverable. Nor was it consistent with his duty to promote the success of the Company or to consider the interests of creditors to have done so at a time when the Company was likely to become insolvent, if it was not actually insolvent. As to this, there was significant doubt as to the recoverability of the debt from its principal debtor, IOG; the principal source of funds to LOG to had ceased lending; and, as recorded in the draft minutes for the meeting on 12th February 2020 the running costs of the Company ran to £200,000 a month. The minutes show that the Company was relying on funding ultimately derived from Mr Hume-Kendall, who would himself be subject to a restraint order in March 2019.
There is no basis to contend that the execution of the Novation Agreement was simply an administrative consequence of the ratification of the facility arrangements with LPE and LP&T. On the Respondents' case, the Novation Agreements were unnecessary and did not reflect the true position because the sums recorded as owed by LG LLP had in fact been lent to LPE and LP&T and this lending, which had not been authorised, had been ratified by LOG's board on 12th February 2020. There was no ratification of those arrangements to which the Novation Agreements could be said to be ancillary. I am satisfied that the board were not in possession of the material facts to enable them to make a proper judgment as to whether to ratify such lending or not. To the contrary the board were misled. They were not told that the facility agreements recording those arrangements were not in fact executed in June and July 2018 but in January 2019, shortly before they were asked to ratify the transactions. They were not told that they were to approve lending that had the effect of allowing an LLP owned by Mr Barker and Mr Hume-Kendall to buy the technology assets from those gentlemen for £20 million. Nor do the board appear to have understood that the net effect of the loan for £16.7 million to LP&T was to enable LG LLP to buy the LPC preference shares from itself under the circuitous arrangement I have described. Finally, they do not appear to have been aware that around £20 million of the monies purportedly lent by LOG to LPE and/or LP&T had actually been advanced directly by LCF to either LG LLP or its beneficial owners and a significant proportion of the lending had been paid to LG LLP's beneficial owners before the transactions that were to be financed by the purported loans took place. All of those matters would have been material to the approval of the facility agreements put before them. In the absence of that information, in my judgment the purported ratification of the loans purportedly made pursuant to those agreements was similarly void.
Again, ratification by the board of these loan agreements would have been a breach of the board's duties to LOG under 172 of the Companies Act 2006 in the financial circumstances in which the Company found itself. It should have been apparent to the directors that the Company was on the cusp of insolvency and there was no benefit to LOG in making loans to LPE and LP&T. LOG did not stand to make any return on the loans at all. It appears to me that it would have been a breach of the board's duty to consider the interest of creditors to ratify lending arrangements that would serve only to limit the ability to recover the monies immediately.
Transactions at an undervalue
The second limb of the Applicants' case is that, if the Novation Agreements are otherwise valid and genuine, they nonetheless are challengeable as transactions at an undervalue. Section 238 of the 1986 Act provides as follows:
The "relevant time" for these purposes is the period of two years ending with the onset of insolvency, which in the case of a company in administration where the administrators were appointed out of court is defined as the date on which the notice of intention to appoint is filed at court (section 240 of the 1986 Act).
It is also a requirement that the company must either be unable to pay its debts at the time of the impugned transaction or must have become unable to pay its debts by reason of the impugned transaction; although this requirement is presumed to be satisfied where the transaction was entered into with a person connected with the company (section 240(2) IA 1986). In determining whether the defence at section 238(5) IA 1986 applies, it is the company which must act in good faith and have reasonable grounds for believing that the transaction would benefit it, rather than the person entering into the transaction with the company ( Sinai Securities v Rosshill Properties Ltd [2004] BCC 986, per Hart J at paragraph 21).
I reject the Respondents' contention that no monies were owed by LG LLP. I am unable to accept the Mr Hume-Kendall and Mr Sedgwick's account in the absence of independent corroborating evidence, given their willingness to produce misleading documents. In my judgment the best guide to LG LLP's indebtedness is given in LOG's trial balances, drafted prior to the insolvency of LCF and the possibility of action by LCF's administrators. By the Novation Agreements, Mr Hume-Kendall sought to transfer LG LLP's borrowing to LP&T and LPE. There was however, no consideration given by LG LLP for its release and the payment covenants given by LPE and LP&T did not have any value. LPE was dormant and its only assets were LAI and ITI, the value of which was entirely uncertain, given that the contemplated valuation did not take place. Even if the sale of the preference shares by LPC to LP&T had completed, about which there is doubt, LP&T's only assets were the preference shares in LPC, the value of which was entirely dependent on the value of LOG, which was insolvent, or likely to become insolvent, as at 15th February 2019. The preference shares therefore had no value. Neither LPE nor LP&T seem to have had any cash from which to repay loans to them.
These transactions took place shortly before the entry into administration of the Company, within the relevant period and at a time when it was plainly insolvent. Their effect was to substitute as debtor companies that were unable to meet the debts in place of LG LLP, which might have valuable claims against the recipients of the monies received from LOG. There is no basis on which they can properly be regarded as being for the Company's benefit. If I am wrong that the Novation Agreements are void, the order that I should make pursuant to section 238 of the 1986 Act would be to set aside those agreements.
Sham
The final ground on which the Applicants challenge the Novation Agreements is that of sham. Lord Diplock's speech in Snook v London and West Riding Investments [1967] 2 QB 786 at 802 provides the classic definition as follows:
There is a strong presumption that parties intend to be bound by the terms of the agreements entered into by them and, consequently, a strong and natural presumption against holding that a provision or a document is a sham ( National Westminster Bank v Jones [2001] 1 BCLC 98 , per Neuberger J at [98]). In Hitch v Stone [2001] EWCA Civ 63 , Arden LJ (as she then) was noted at paragraph 64 that a determination that a document is a sham requires a careful analysis of the facts. She summarised the following points that she had derived from earlier authorities:
Here it is said that monies were advanced by LCF and LOG to LG LLP or its beneficial owners and were recorded as debts due from LG LLP to LOG. Subsequently, following an enquiry from LOG's auditors as to the collectability of the monies lent to LG LLP, transaction documents were produced that purported to show that the monies lent to LG LLP had in fact been lent to LPE and LP&T or that LOG's loans to LG LLP had been novated to LPE and LP&T. The net effect of the transactions was that the beneficial owners of LG LLP, and in particular Mr Barker and Mr Hume-Kendall, received the monies loaned to LG LLP, while retaining beneficial ownership of the assets purportedly transferred by those transactions. The Applicants contend that the Novation Agreements are a sham designed to conceal from them the fact that LG LLP is a substantial debtor of LOG and to shield its members from recovery action by any office-holders appointed over LOG. Alternatively, if, contrary to the position set out above, LG LLP did not owe LOG any money, then the purported effect of the Novation Agreements differed from the actual contractual position between the parties. Accordingly, they are also a sham and of no effect and should be set aside.
In view of my conclusions above it is not necessary to consider this element of the Applicant's case. I was not addressed on it in detail, but it is certainly the case that the Novation Agreements are at odds with the case advanced by the Respondents now. They contend that there was no loan to LG LLP but the Novation Agreements say that there was. Mr Sedgwick's characterisation of the Novation Agreements as being part of a "belt and braces" approach suggests that the intention behind the agreements was that if, contrary to the Respondents' primary position that there was no loan to LG LLP at all, it was found there was such a loan, then LG LLP would be released from it. The Applicants' case is that LG LLP was indeed a substantial debtor of LOG and for the purposes of this application I accept that. The intention on the part of the signatories to the Novation Agreements – to free LG LLP from its debt to the Company, thus accords with the position on the face of the documents. Given the Applicants' contentions as to the debt due from LG LLP and my findings as to the existence of that debt, it is difficult to characterise the Novation Agreements as shams.
Conclusion
I am satisfied that the Novation Agreements are void on the basis that they were entered into without authority. Alternatively, I would set them aside on the basis that they constitute transactions at an undervalue.