UK case law

TISO Blackstar Group Se Plc, Re (Supplemental)

[2020] EWHC CH 3535 · High Court (Chancery Division) · 2020

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Full judgment

1 In the course of preparing the form SH19, identifying the number of shares to be cancelled, investigations have incidentally thrown up a matter concerning the shareholding of the CEO of Tiso, Mr Bonamour. 2 At the time when the circular was posted, scheme shareholders were told that 26.65 percent of the scheme shares were owned by the directors, and that 25.35 percent of those shares were to be voted in favour of a “continuation” as opposed to an “exit” election. That was correct at the time when the circular was distributed. But subsequent to the distribution of the circular, and because the scheme was proceeding at far slower pace than had been anticipated, Mr Bonamour decided that instead of making a “continuation” election for the entirety of his 13,760,000 shares, he preferred to make an “exit” election in relation to 1,500,000 of those shares. No announcement was made of that change in the circumstances disclosed in the circular. 3 The question is: was that failure to make an announcement concerning those 1,500,000 shares in any sense material? Is there a real risk that it would it have caused any scheme shareholder to vote differently in relation to the scheme as a whole? Is there a real risk that it would it have caused any scheme shareholder to make an election different from that based on the circular alone? In my judgment, the answer to all of those questions is ‘no’. 4 The effect of Mr Bonamour’s decision to make an “exit” election in relation to 1,500,000 of his shares means that he is still making a continuation election in relation to 90 percent of his shareholding. Any scheme shareholder who was guided by what the individual directors were doing in relation to their shareholding is unlikely to have altered his course because Mr Bonamour’s elections had moved from 100 percent “continuation” to 90 percent “continuation”. OPUS 2 DIGITAL TRANSCRIPTION 5 Equally, any scheme shareholders who had recognised that 25.35 percent of the director’s shares were to be voted in favour of the scheme and in favour of making a “continuation” election would be unlikely to have altered that decision if it had become apparent that instead of 25.35 percent of the shares being voted in that way, it was only 24.80 percent of the shares that were being voted in the sense of making a “continuation election”. 6 The movement is very small (and has no impact upon the total number of shares that can be “cashed out”) and I do not consider that it would have had any material effect upon any scheme shareholder making a decision whether to support the scheme or making a decision about whether to elect to continue or to exit. It is unfortunate that no announcement was made but, in the end, I hold that it was immaterial. __________ OPUS 2 DIGITAL TRANSCRIPTION CERTIFICATE Opus 2 International Limited hereby certifies that the above is an accurate and complete record of the Judgment or part thereof. Transcribed by Opus 2 International Limited Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers 5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737 [email protected] OPUS 2 DIGITAL TRANSCRIPTION

TISO Blackstar Group Se Plc, Re (Supplemental) [2020] EWHC CH 3535 — UK case law · My AI Mortgage