Lavery Lawyers
February 14, 2011 - Quebec
CCAA: The use of credit bids at an auction is scrutiniezed by Quebec Courts
by Jean-Yves Simard and Jonathan Warin
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In a recent decision of the court of appeal, the Honourable Pierre J. Dalphone confirmed that a secured creditor may ust its debt to acquire the assets which are charged with its security interests in the context of a sale process monitored by the court under the companies creditors arrangement act (CCAA) background. White Birch Paper Inc. and several of its subsidiaries (collectively, the “White Birch Group”February 24, 2010)obtained an initial order under the CCAA. The White Birch Group is active in the pulp and paper industry. It employs approximately 1,200 people and operates plants mainly in Quebec (Stadacona, Papiers Masson, F.F. Soucy, Scierie Leduc) but also in Virginia (Bear Island). Following a process for marketing the assets of the White Birch Group that was monitored by the Court, which included the approval of a process for the solicitation of offers, the acceptance of a stalking horse bidder and the issuance of bidding procedures for the auction, two potential purchasers were invited to participate in an auction held in New York on September 21, 2010. The first group of purchasers (“Black Diamond”) was composed of entities which, collectively, represented the majority of the lenders under a syndicated loan secured by first charge security interests on the long-term assets of White Birch Group (the “Loan”). Black Diamond was the court-approved stalking horse. The second group of purchasers (“Sixth Ave”) was composed of entities which, collectively, represented a minority of the lenders that made the Loan. The auction rules provided that a secured creditor could use the amount of its secured debt to purchase the charged assets, a procedure known as “credit bidding”, as opposed to using cash to bid at the auction. Both purchasers made offers at the auction, basically on the following terms: * Black Diamond offered a cash amount of $90 million to acquire the current assets of the White Birch Group (free from any encumbrances, except for the one created by the court to secure the repayment of the interim loan, in exactly the same amount of $90 million) and a credit bid for the long-term assets, for an amount which was increased as the bidding progressed. * Sixth Ave offered a cash amount, which was increased as the bidding progressed, to acquire all the assets of the White Birch Group. The cash was allocated entirely to the current assets, up to their value in the context of a continuing business, the balance being allocated to the long-term assets. At the conclusion of the auction, the offer of Black Diamond was declared the best offer (the “Winning Bid”). It included the following components: $90 million in cash for the current assets and $82.5 million for the long-term assets, that is, $4.5 million in cash (to secure payment to the holders of construction legal hypothecs) and $78 million in the form of a credit bid related to the Loan, for a total of $172.5 million. That offer was deemed superior to the last offer of the minority group of lenders, which was $172 million in cash. DISPUTE DECISION IN THE FIRST INSTANCE Mr. Justice Mongeon also confirmed that a credit bid of $1 is equal to a cash bid of $1. Contrary to what Sixth Ave maintained, the value of a credit bid is not limited to the fair market value of the assets charged with the security interests; such value is rather the same as the secured claim, up to the amount of the security. Lastly, Mr. Justice Mongeon analyzed the criteria in section 36 of the CCAA and concluded that they had been met in the case under review. Such criteria in section 36 of the CCAA are not limitative and it is not necessary to meet them all. He further stated that the proposed transaction must be considered in its entirety and that it is therefore not necessary that a sale generate benefits for each category of creditors in order for it to be approved by the court under the CCAA. DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEAL In its motion for leave to appeal, Sixth Ave had argued that its offer should not be compared to Black Diamond’s because the latter offer included a significant credit bid component ($78 million) while its own was a cash offer. Sixth Ave argued that the long-term assets were worthless and therefore the $78 million credit bid allocated to those assets could not be compared to cash. Mr. Justice Dalphond noted that the use of credit bidding was part of the process approved by the parties. To address the issue again would be tantamount to changing the rules of the game after it had been played. Nobody had ever raised the argument that a dollar in credit bid should not be equal to a dollar in cash. Moreover, Mr. Justice Dalphond noted that no evidence had been produced to the effect that the long-term assets were worthless (Sixth Ave had even made a US$35,300,000 offer for those assets). Mr. Justice Dalphond emphasized in particular that the entities which formed Sixth Ave were unsecured creditors of the White Birch Group only to the extent that the whole amount of the Loan had not been used as a credit bid at the auction. In this capacity, Sixth Ave was not the kind of unsecured creditor that the law seeks to protect. In the circumstances, he concluded that the dissatisfaction of the minority creditors in a syndicated loan should not be allowed to interfere in the context of a reorganization process under the CCAA. CONCLUSION |
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Read full article at: http://lavery.ca/upload/pdf/en/DS_110102A.pdf