Re US Holdings Ltd

JurisdictionBermuda
Judgment Date17 February 2023
CourtSupreme Court (Bermuda)
Docket NumberCommercial Jurisdiction 2022 No 290

In the matter of the Companies Act 1981

Re US Holdings Ltd

[2023] Bda LR 14

Commercial Jurisdiction 2022 No 290

In The Supreme Court of Bermuda

Application for the appointment of joint provisional liquidators with full powers — Restructuring the equity and indebtedness of the company — Whether improper purpose — Whether commercial pressor leverage amounts to an improper collateral purpose — Test for the appointment of provisional liquidators — Whether exceptional circumstances

The following cases were referred to in the judgment:

Re LAEP Investments Ltd[2017] Bda LR 103

Re LAEP Investments Ltd[2014] Bda LR 35

Re Gerova Financial Group Ltd[2012] Bda LR 43

Re Demaglass Holdings Ltd[2001] 2 BCLC 633

Shandong Chenning Paper Holdings Ltd v Arjowiggins HKK 2 Ltd[2022] HKCFA 11

Re Agritrade Resources Ltd[2020] Bda LR 35

Re New Ocean Energy Holdings Ltd[2022] Bda LR 90

Mr H Tucker for the Petitioner

Mr K Taylof for US Holdings Ltd

Ms L Zuill for BMK Resources Ltd

JUDGMENT ofHargun CJ

Introduction

1. These proceedings concern a Petition presented by Outrider Master Fund, LP (“the Petitioner”) seeking an order that US Holdings Ltd (“the Company”) be wound up by the Court under the provisions of the Companies Act 1981 (“the Act”) and that Mr Michael Morrison and Mr Charles Thresh of Teneo (Bermuda) Limited be appointed as joint provisional liquidators of the Company (“JPLs”).

2. The Petition is based on a statutory demand dated 2 September 2022 (“the Statutory Demand”) demanding immediate repayment of the Facility A Repayment Amount and the Outrider Facility C Repayment Amount, being at least US $45,796,237. It is asserted in the Petition that the Statutory Demand was made on the Company following the Company's failure to honour its obligations. It is said that the Company has failed to pay the amounts due to the Petitioner as set out in the Statutory Demand or otherwise. In the premises, the Petitioner asserts that the Company is unable to pay its debts as they fall due whether by reason of the Statutory Demand pursuant to section 162(a) of the Act or otherwise and should therefore be wound up.

3. However, whilst the Petition was returnable at the hearing on 20 December 2022, the Petitioner is not seeking the winding up of the Company (at least at this stage) but instead is seeking the appointment of JPLs with full powers for the purposes of restructuring the Company. Indeed, as an earlier hearing on 28th of October 2020 Mr Tucker advised the Court that “it is unlikely that we will be seeking a full winding up order, because we don't want to necessarily destroy any value that might exist”.

The Background

4. The background to these proceedings is uncontroversial and is set out in the Petitioner's written submissions. On 18 May 2021, the Petitioner served a statutory demand on the Company (then known as Madagascar Oil Ltd) pursuant to section 162 (a) of the Act demanding repayment of US $36,816,841.18, due pursuant to the Facility A Loan, issued on 15 June 2017.

5. On 20 August 2021, the Petitioner presented a petition in respect of the Company (by then known as Green Acquisition Ltd) on the grounds of the Company's insolvency.

6. The Petitioner agreed to withdraw that petition as the Company and Petitioner agreed to the Twelfth Amendment & Restatement of the Facilities Agreement (“12th A&RFA”), which in turn extended the repayment date for the amounts owed to the Petitioner by the Company to 31 August 2022. The Company was unable to honour the 12th A&RFA agreement and the amounts owed to the Petitioner were not repaid by 31 August 2022.

7. On 2 September 2022, the Petitioner served the Statutory Demand on the Company (again known as Madagascar Oil Ltd) pursuant to section 162 (a) of the Act demanding repayment of US $45,796,237, due pursuant to the Facility A Loan and Facility caps the Loan.

8. On 29 September 2022, the Petitioner presented the Petition in respect of the Company (now known as US Holdings Limited) on the grounds of insolvency.

9. On 27 October 2022, by way of a letter to the Petitioner's attorneys, the Company's attorneys contended that the Petition was subject to an arbitration agreement. In the end the contention that the issues raised and relief sought in the Petition were the subject matter of mandatory arbitration proceedings was not pursued.

10. On 28 October 2022, at the hearing the Petitioner made known to the Court and the Company its intention to have JPLs appointed in the first instance in lieu of a winding up order. The Court ordered the issue of whether JPLs should be appointed, as well as whether the Petition is subject to an arbitration, should be dealt with by way of a rolled up hearing.

Position of the Parties

11. The Petitioner's application for the winding up order and the appointment of the JPLs is supported by the two affidavits of Mr Stephen Hope, Managing Member of the General Partner of the Petitioner, dated 2 November 2022 and 6 December 2022. In his second affidavit Mr Hope states that the purpose of filing the petition is either to receive payment for the Petition that from the Company or to appoint independent officers of the Court as JPLs for the purposes of evaluating whether there is a restructuring alternative to full winding up which will allow the Company to eliminate its due and unpaid debts and continue as a going concern, and which will repay creditors more than they would receive in liquidation alternative.

12. Mr Hope contends that the Petitioner expects that if the JPLs are appointed, they will consider in particular whether any of the following are in the interests of the stakeholders of the Company:

  • i. whether or not there are any viable options for maintaining the current capital structure and refinancing the defaulted unsecured debts of the Company, thereby allowing the Company to continue as a going concern without diluting the current equity interests;

  • ii. if no such means are available, whether there are any options to revise the current capital structure of the Company to eliminate the defaulted debt of the Company and allow it to continue as a going concern through a debt for equity swap together with interim funding and/or hybrid debt and equity capital raising; and

  • iii. if neither of the foregoing option are available, whether to pursue a process (following the winding up order or otherwise) to realise the assets of the Company, if any, for the benefit of the unsecured creditors of the Company, including the Petitioner.

13. Mr Hope considers that, for the following reasons, there is a benefit to the appointment of full powers JPLs in lieu of winding up order:

  • i. it takes the Company out of the hands of a sole director, Mr Njoo, who has a substantial conflict of interest in conducting any capital raising restructuring exercise since he indirectly owns over 80% of the equity in the Company and nearly 100% of the subordinated unsecured debt of the Company;

  • ii. it ensures that any proposal for restructuring the Company will be accompanied by an independent statement of the alternatives considered and the relative merits of those proposals; and

  • iii. it puts in place credible and reputable management without a track record of broken promises to liaise with the Office of National Mines and Strategic Industries of the Government of Madagascar (“MOSA” or “OMNIS”) and the Government of Madagascar...

Get this document and AI-powered insights with a free trial of vLex and Vincent AI

Get Started for Free

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex
1 cases
  • Re Island Ophthalmology Ltd
    • Bermuda
    • Supreme Court (Bermuda)
    • 3 March 2023
    ...[2002] Bda LR 39 Coulon Sanderson & Ward Ltd v Ward (1986) 2 BCC 99207 Re Demaglass Holdings Ltd [2001] 2 BCLC 633 Re US Holdings Ltd [2023] Bda LR 14 Re Bayoil SA [1999] 1 All ER 374 Re a Company [2018] EWHC 1143 Re a Company [2016] EWHC 3811 M R Williams for the Mr J Hindess for the Compa......