BG & E Management Pty Ltd v de Aboitiz
[2016] FCA 1368
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2016-11-07
Before
Wigney J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
- Declares that the terms set out in the notice of compulsory acquisition issued to each of the shareholders in Australian Water Holdings Pty Limited ACN 003 702 832 (excluding the plaintiff) by the plaintiff dated 1 June 2015 (being each of the notices at pages 89 to 907 of Exhibit FC1 to the affidavit of Frank Cerra sworn 30 July 2015) ("the Compulsory Acquisition Notices") give a fair value for the securities the subject of each of the Compulsory Acquisition Notices.
- Approves the acquisition of the securities by the Plaintiff on the terms set out in each of the Compulsory Acquisition Notices. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
HIS HONOUR: 1 In December 2014, BG & E Management Pty Limited acquired an interest in a tranche of shares in Australian Water Holdings Pty Limited. That acquisition resulted in BG & E holding slightly more than 90 per cent of the issued ordinary shares of AWH. Shortly thereafter, BG & E instigated a procedure available to it under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) whereby it could compulsorily acquire the balance of the shares in AWH from the minority shareholders. The first step in that process is the service of a compulsory acquisition notice on the minority shareholders. The notice that BG & E served on the AWH minority shareholders specified an acquisition price their AWH shares of 1.30 cents per share. A number of the shareholders objected to the compulsory acquisition of their AWH shares on the terms set out in the notice. BG & E now applies to the Court for approval of the compulsory acquisition of shares from the AWH minority shareholders pursuant to s 664F of the Corporations Act. 2 There are essentially no contradictors in respect of BG & E's application. That is because the shareholders who originally objected to the compulsory acquisition, and who are the defendants to the proceeding, have all agreed to transfer their AWH shares to BG & E on the terms set out in the compulsory acquisition notice. All but one of the other shareholders who did not object to the acquisition have also transferred their AWH shares to BG & E. 3 The sole shareholder who has held out did not object to the compulsory acquisition in accordance with the notice. He is accordingly not a party to the proceeding. Perhaps more importantly, he did not appear at the hearing of BG&E's application or otherwise make any submissions in opposition to the compulsory acquisition. 4 The resolution of BG & E's application essentially involves two questions. First, has BG & E established that it meets or has complied with the formal and procedural requirements for a compulsory acquisition under Pt 6A.2 of the Corporations Act? Second, and perhaps more fundamentally, has BG & E established that the terms set out in the compulsory acquisition notice give a fair value for the AWH shares in question? 5 For the reasons that follow, the answer to both those questions is in the affirmative. In such circumstances, the Court must approve the acquisition of the shares on those terms.