The statutory scheme in Part 5.3A of the Corporations Act
26 There is no suggestion here that the administrators have the purpose of interfering with or frustrating the ordinary execution of the Court's orders. But, the effect of implementation of a deed of company arrangement, as opposed to a liquidation, can radically affect the ordinary rights of creditors. In a liquidation their rights would be converted into a right to prove in the liquidation which may be different to their rights under a deed of company arrangement. Indeed, some of the proposed terms of Lehman Brothers Asia Holdings' deed to which I have referred, such as the release of rights against third parties including directors and officers, could have a significant and adverse affect on a creditor being able to enforce its ordinary remedies. In addition, the suggested deed of company arrangement will make provision for the distribution of whatever entitlements may be available to creditors that would otherwise have had rights in respect of insurance policies, such as those written by insurers A, B or C that might respond to the various claims. Those proposals include ones affecting the creditors rights to proceed directly against insurers under s 6 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1946 (NSW) or against the directors and officers of Lehman Brothers or their insurers.
27 I am of opinion that the Court's power to require Lehman Brothers to produce the insurance documents is found in s 23 and the inherent or implied power of the Court to do justice in a matter before it. It is an important part of the Court's ordinary processes to permit litigants before it to have effective remedies and the means, if appropriate, of enforcing them when orders are made.
28 In a case where administration under Pt 5.3A or liquidation intervenes and so affects the rights of an applicant or plaintiff against a party sued by it for relief, the court must be careful to ensure that it both maintains the statutory scheme for administration of insolvent companies and preserves such rights that the plaintiff or applicant may otherwise possess that might exist outside that scheme or that might be arguably said to exist outside that scheme. One such right is, of course, the independent right given by s 6 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act. That provision creates a charge in circumstances where a person in Lehman Brothers' position has entered into a contract of insurance by which they are indemnified against liability to pay damages or compensation. That Act provides that the amount of that liability, will be a charge on all insurance moneys that have become payable in respect of the liability on the happening of the event (that is at a time before action is brought in the ordinary course) giving rise to the claim for compensation or damages, and notwithstanding that that claim may not have been quantified or determined. And, s 6(4) provides that every such charge is enforceable by an action against the insurer in the same way and in the same court as if the action were an action to recover damages or compensation from the insured.
29 Accordingly, the council argues that it has a current, potential right to bring proceedings against insurers A, B or C, provided that they have policies to which the claims made by the council in these proceedings respond, and that they may do so in this proceeding.
30 The basis on which Lehman Brothers argues, however, that the council should not be permitted access to the insurance documents, is that such access would cut across the policy of Pt 5.3A of the Corporations Act.
31 The objects of Pt 5.3A are to provide for the business, property and affairs of an insolvent company to be administered in a way that first, maximises its chances, or those of as much as possible of its business, to continue in existence, or, secondly, if that is not possible, results in a better return for the company's creditors and members than would result from an immediate winding up of the company (s 435A). So under ss 439A(3) and (4), the administrator must convene meetings of creditors and provide documents to the creditors with a report to enable them to vote on the company's future. Among other things, the report by the administrator must deal with the company's business, property, affairs and financial circumstances. The administrator must also provide a statement setting out his or her opinion about whether it would be in the creditors' interests for the company to execute a deed of company arrangement, for the administration to end, or for the company to go into liquidation. In addition, the report must set out the administrator's reasons for those opinions, and "… such other information known to the administrator as will enable the creditors to make an informed decision about" each of the options covered above (s 439A(4)(b)).
32 In addition, a creditor who seeks to challenge the appropriateness of a deed of company arrangement may apply to the court to have it terminated on the grounds set out in s 445D. Those grounds include, first, a power for the Court to terminate the deed if it is satisfied that information given to the administrator or to the creditors concerned about the company's business, property, affairs or financial circumstances was false or misleading and could reasonably be expected to have been material to creditors of the company in deciding whether to vote in favour of the resolution for the company to execute the deed (s 445D(1)(a)). Secondly, the deed can be terminated if misleading information was contained in a report or statement under s 439A(4), leading to the resolution being passed (s 445D(1)(a)), or, thirdly, that there was an omission from such a report or statement that could reasonably be expected to have been material to the creditors in their decision-making (s 445D(1)(b) and (c)). Further bases for termination of a deed under s 445D(1) is that effect could not be given to the deed without injustice or undue delay, or that, in substance, the deed or one of its provisions or an act or omission done or made under it, or proposed to be done or made, was oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory against, one or more creditors, or contrary to the interests of the creditors of the company as a whole, or for some other reason (see s 445D(1), (d), (e), (f) and (g)).
33 Thus, there is a wide basis for a creditor who is disappointed with the decision to enter into a deed of company arrangement, to seek to have it set aside if, in some way, there has been incomplete information provided to creditors for the purposes of them voting on the proposed deed, or, relevant prejudice or unfairness could be demonstrated.
34 Lehman Brothers argues that when one considers the objects and comprehensive nature of the provisions in Pt 5.3A, it is clear that the Parliament intended that creditors, including persons in the council's position, would be given recourse to the information and remedies provided in Pt 5.3A itself rather than that they be permitted to pursue to their conclusion, other rights and remedies before having to vote on the company's future at the second meeting of creditors. Indeed, Lehman Brothers argues that the stay of, then, current proceedings provided in s 440D reinforces such a construction. It argued that this is because s 440D contemplates that the ordinary course of an administration will require all proceedings against the company in a court to be stayed unless one of the exceptions in the section is satisfied. Lehman Brothers argued that this stay enables the creditors and the administrators to concentrate on propounding a course for the future of the company within the confines and ambit of Pt 5.3A.
35 Consequently, Lehman Brothers argues that it would be important to have regard to the objects of Pt 5.3A in construing the ambit of the power, and in exercising any discretion to order documents to be produced of the kind sought by the council here. It says that the adventitious existence of current litigation in the ordinary course could not be a sufficient reason to allow a party to that litigation to seek remedies in those very proceedings against the company for the purposes of advancing itself in relation to the conduct of the future of the administration. It contends that the rights of creditors are to be seen as restricted because of the stay in s 440D, and the recognition in s 439A(4) of limitations in the material and information which may be available to all creditors when they come to vote on any proposal put forward by the administrators at a meeting in accordance with their report and statements under s 439A(4).
36 Lehman Brothers argues that this puts all persons affected by the administration on equal footing, and that in principle it would not be appropriate to make an order favouring one particular creditor merely because that creditor is involved in current, but stayed, litigation. Lehman Brothers contends that, to the extent that that creditor's interests may be adversely effected by any vote that takes place on the administrator's recommendations or at the meeting, that creditor may have a remedy under s 455D.