Section 413 orders
82 The proposed schemes are reliant upon orders sought under s 413 of the Corporations Act, which provision relates to schemes of arrangement that propose an amalgamation or reconstruction of Part 5.1 bodies.
83 The interrelationship between ss 411 and 413 is explained in AGL Energy at [14]-[15] by Emmett J as follows:
[14] A scheme for reconstruction or amalgamation within s 413 is not, of itself, a compromise or arrangement between a Part 5.1 body and its creditors within s 411. However, before the jurisdiction under s 413 can be exercised, there must be such a compromise or arrangement. As a practical matter, it may be that the compromise or arrangement is one that does not need to rely on s 411(4), because it is something that could be effected privately between a company and its members, as in this case, between the Company and the Company Member. However, there is nothing untoward, in invoking the powers conferred on the Court by s 411 as a prerequisite to enlivening the further provisions of s 413 (see, for example, Re Clydesdale Bank Limited (1950) SC 30 at 36 ff, where a clear distinction was drawn between a compromise or arrangement and a scheme of reconstruction or amalgamation under s 206 and s 208 of the Companies Act 1948 (United Kingdom), which correspond with ss 411 and 413 of the Act).
[15] The element of compromise or arrangement that is necessary to satisfy s 411 need not be of any great magnitude or significance, so long as what is proposed can fairly be characterised as a compromise or arrangement between a company, on the one hand, and its members, on the other. That will suffice to enliven the Court's powers under s 413, so long as the compromise or arrangement is proposed for the purposes of, or in connection with, a scheme for the reconstruction or amalgamation. Clearly enough, what is being proposed is for the purposes of, and in connection with, such a scheme.
84 Section 413 confers jurisdiction on the Court to make orders if three conditions precedent are met:
(1) there must be a compromise or arrangement (that is addressed above);
(2) the compromise or arrangement must have been proposed "for the purposes of, or in connection with, a scheme for" the reconstruction of a Part 5.1 body or bodies or the amalgamation of any two or more Part 5.1 bodies (addressed below); and
(3) under the scheme, "the whole or any part of the undertaking or of the property of a body concerned in the scheme … is to be transferred to a company" (addressed below).
85 If these are satisfied, the Court can make orders either at the approval of the compromise or arrangement (at the second court hearing on the scheme) or by any subsequent order.
86 It has been said that a provisional view at this stage need only be made that there is no jurisdictional impediment to the Court making the foreshadowed orders under s 413: Equatorial Mining at [29].
87 At this stage, it can be demonstrated that s 413 will likely support the orders required to give effect to the proposed schemes.
88 The relevant matters are dealt with, in turn, below.