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Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Ltd, in the matter of the application of The Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Ltd [2011] FCA 23 (21 January 2011)
Last Updated: 24 January 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Ltd, in
the matter of the application of The Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Ltd [2011]
FCA 23
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Citation:
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Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Ltd, in the matter of the application of The
Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Ltd [2011] FCA 23
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Parties:
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IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF THE
COPENHAGEN REINSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED (ABN 99 070 671 948) FOR CONFIRMATION OF
A SCHEME
FOR THE TRANSFER OF INSURANCE BUSINESS TO GORDIAN RUNOFF LIMITED (ABN
11 052 179 647) PURSUANT TO DIVISION 3A OF PART III OF THE
INSURANCE ACT 1973
(CTH)
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File number:
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NSD 1330 of 2010
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Judge:
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EDMONDS J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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INSURANCE – transfer of the general
insurance business of an Australian branch of a foreign insurer to an Australian
company within the
same group of companies – application to Court for
confirmation of scheme.
Held: having regard to the considerations in s 17(1A) of the
Insurance Act 1973 (Cth) the Court, in an exercise of its discretion,
confirmed the scheme.
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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54
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Counsel for the Applicant:
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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HWL Ebsworth Lawyers
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Solicitor for the Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority:
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Mr D Sun
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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THE APPLICATION OF THE COPENHAGEN REINSURANCE
COMPANY LIMITED (ABN 99 070 671 948) FOR CONFIRMATION OF A SCHEME FOR THE
TRANSFER OF
INSURANCE BUSINESS TO GORDIAN RUNOFF LIMITED (ABN 11 052 179 647)
PURSUANT TO DIVISION 3A OF PART III OF THE INSURANCE ACT 1973 (CTH)
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Pursuant
to s 17F of the Insurance Act 1973 (Cth), the scheme for the transfer of
the general insurance business of the Australian branch of The Copenhagen
Reinsurance Company
Limited (ABN 99 070 671 948) (‘Cop Re’) to
Gordian RunOff Limited (ABN 11 052 179 647) (‘Gordian’) (‘the
Scheme’), a copy of which appears at pages 3 to 11 of Exhibit SMG referred
to in Steven Moore Girvan’s Affidavit sworn
on 29 November 2010
(‘Girvan’s Affidavit’) be confirmed.
- The
transfer date for the purposes of the Scheme and the Deed to Transfer Insurance
Business which appears at pages 13 to 36 of Exhibit
SMG referred to in
Girvan’s Affidavit be 6 December 2010.
- Cop
Re pay the costs of APRA as agreed, or if agreement cannot be reached, as taxed.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 1330 of 2010
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IN THE MATTER OF:
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THE APPLICATION OF THE COPENHAGEN REINSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED (ABN 99
070 671 948) FOR CONFIRMATION OF A SCHEME FOR THE TRANSFER OF
INSURANCE BUSINESS
TO GORDIAN RUNOFF LIMITED (ABN 11 052 179 647) PURSUANT TO DIVISION 3A OF PART
III OF THE INSURANCE ACT 1973 (CTH)
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JUDGE:
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EDMONDS J
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DATE:
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21 JANUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- This
is an application for an order pursuant to s 17F of the Insurance Act
1973 (Cth) (‘the Act’) confirming a scheme involving the
transfer of the general insurance business of the Australian branch
of The
Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Limited (‘Cop Re’) to Gordian RunOff
Limited (‘Gordian’) (‘the
Scheme’).
- On
2 December 2010, after hearing from counsel for Cop Re, at which hearing a
solicitor representing the Australian Prudential Regulations
Authority
(‘APRA’) was in attendance, and having received written confirmation
from APRA that, having reviewed the affidavits
of Paul Thomas and Thomas Nichols
both sworn 30 November 2010 (Exs 7 and 8 respectively), it had no objection to
their contents or
to the Scheme being confirmed, I made orders confirming the
Scheme, fixing the transfer date for the purposes of the Scheme and the
Deed to
Transfer Insurance Business to be 6 December 2010 and requiring Cop Re to pay
the costs of APRA as agreed or taxed.
- I
made these orders over an objection received by the solicitors for Cop Re from a
person representing Suncorp Metway Insurance Limited
and GIO General Limited
(together ‘Suncorp’). The relevant objection was contained in
correspondence passing between
the parties.
- Letter
dated 26 November 2010: Suncorp to Cop Re’s
solicitors:
‘Objection to Scheme for the transfer of certain insurance business of
The Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Limited to Gordian Run Off
Limited
Following David Mitchell’s telephone call of 24 November 2010 advising of
Suncorp’s intention to be heard in respect
to the above captioned scheme I
detail our objections below.
Background
- Suncorp Metway Insurance Limited (SMIL) and GIO General Limited (GIOG) are
current policyholders of The Copenhagen Reinsurance
Company Limited (Cop Re).
- SMIL and GIO together have reinsurance recoverable due from Cop Re in excess
of $670,000, being approximately 15% of the scheme
transfer sum.
- SMIL and GlO’s objections to the scheme are in respect the absence of
any treatment of particular conditions that attach
to Cop Re’s
authorisation to conduct insurance business.
Detail of Objections
The notice varying conditions on authorisation to carry on insurance business
issued to Cop Re by APRA dated 8 January 2010 contains
certain conditions. Those
conditions are not continued once the scheme is complete. We find that the loss
of these conditions is
to our detriment. The conditions that are of concern
are:
2.a. the requirement for assets of Cop Re not to be removed from
Australia;
2.b. the requirement that assets of Cop Re not be used to discharge liabilities
outside of Australia;
2.c. the requirement that assets of Cop Re not be charged to persons outside of
Australia;
- the
need for books of Cop Re to be kept at the usual place of business in Australia;
and
- the
need for assets of Cop Re to be invested in deposits with an ADI.
We observe no reference to the continuation of these conditions in the scheme
document. We find that the scheme’s failure to
treat these leaves SMIL and
GIOG in a detrimental state in that:
- The transfer of the Cop Re assets to Gordian RunOff Limited (Gordian) creates
a situation where the Cop Re assets are pooled with
existing Gordian assets
without any continuation of the conditions 2a, 2b, 2c, 3 and 6 identified above
Accordingly, SMIL and GIOG
are deprived of the certainty that the conditions
create.
- After the scheme transfer, SMIL and GIOG are not protected in respect of the
location of the relevant assets or the location of
the accounting records such
that recovery from Gordian may be more complex than from Cop
Re.
- After the scheme transfer, SMIL and GIOG’s access to assets is exposed
to possible contagion of obligations due by international
associate companies of
Cop Re.
- After the scheme transfer, SMIL and GIOG’s access to assets is exposed
to possible volatility of Gordian’s investment
value from an investments
portfolio that is of higher risk than deposits with an ADI. SMIL and GIOG have
no transparency of the existing
obligations of Gordian. Such existing
obligations could erode the assets transferred from Cop Re to the point where
SMIL and GIOG’s
obligations are not resolved. This issue is not readily
apparent from the scheme documentation in that actuarial conclusions as to
adequacy of post scheme solvency operate around point-in-time observations of
the obligations.
To that end, Suncorp sees no benefit in trading Cop Re solvency coverage ratio
of 3.02 at March 2010 for the lesser post scheme solvency
coverage ratio of
2.64.
Please don’t hesitate to contact me if you would like to discuss
anything.’
- Letter
dated 26 November 2010: Co Re’s solicitors to
Suncorp:
‘Insurance Portfolio Transfer from The Copenhagen Reinsurance Company
Limited to Gordian RunOff Limited
Thank you for your letter dated 26 November 2010 which sets out Suncorp Metway
Insurance Limited’s (SMIL) and GIO General Limited’s
(GIOG) objection to the scheme of transfer of certain insurance business
of The Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Limited (Cop Re) to Gordian Runoff
Limited (Gordian),
Your letter indicated that the basis of your objection is the variance or
difference in the conditions of authorisation between Cop
Re and Gordian. In
particular, you indicate that the following conditions are of concern to
you:
• 2(a) - the requirement for assets of Cop Re not to be removed from
Australia.
- 2(b) - the
requirement that assets of Cop Re not be used to discharged liabilities outside
of Australia.
- 2(c) - the
requirement that assets of Cop Re not be charged to persons outside of
Australia.
- 3 - the need
for books of Cop Re to [be] kept at the usual place of business in
Australia.
• 6 - the need for assets of Cop Re to be invested in deposit with an
ADI.
As you are aware, Cop Re operates in Australia as a branch of a Danish regulated
insurer. APRA, in order to protect local shareholders,
often places restrictions
on the conditions of branch offices located in Australia to ensure that assets
in Australia are available
to protect Australian policy holders. The reason for
these protections is that as a branch the Australian operations have no distinct
legal identity separate from the Danish parent company and as such the local
operations and assets are at risk of adverse events
occurring in its home
jurisdiction. APRA places these conditions on branches to create a framework
that makes the branch office replicate
the conditions of operation as much as
possible of a locally registered insurer.
Gordian is not a branch insurer but is a locally registered insurance authorised
to conduct run off insurance. Therefore, all of
the conditions that you have
stated as grounds for your concern would not be applicable to Gordian as it has
no parent or overseas
operation which has the right, through its legal
organisational structure, to request, demand or extract assets from
Australia.
Therefore, the claim made in your objection that SMIL or GIOG would be in a
worse position by virtue of the application due to the
loss of any benefit from
the continuation of conditions 2(a), 2(b), 2(c) and 3 with all due respect is
not valid as those conditions
already exist by virtue of Gordian being a locally
registered insurer.
Therefore, we address your concerns as set out in your letter in the following
manner:
- The
supporting actuarial report has opined that the transfer of Cop Re’s
assets and liabilities to Gordian does not create
a situation where Cop
Re’s policy holders in Australia would be detrimentally affected. The
assets of Cop Re will be pooled
with existing Gordian assets upon completion of
the transaction. These assets are held in Australia by an Australian insurer and
are subject to regulation by APRA. As a local insurer its assets are not at risk
of a foreign regulator or a foreign creditor extracting
funds by virtue of any
foreign regulatory right.
- SMIL
and GIOG, if they were forced or were required to seek a judgement or order to
recover assets, would be in a more secure position
if such action is brought in
Australia against. an Australian insurance company. Furthermore, APRA requires
that local insurers maintain
their records in Australia so there would be no
concern with records leaving the jurisdiction.
- We
do not understand the third ground as we do not understand how once the assets
and liabilities have been transferred from Cop Re,
how there is an increased
exposure to contagion of obligations due to international associate companies of
Cop Re. In actuality,
once the transfer is completed, any associate companies of
Cop Re will no longer have the ability to claim or draw against the assets.
Therefore, the risk of a potential contagion or obligations to those companies
is significantly reduced after the transaction.
- With
respect to your concern about the loss of condition 6, Gordian is obliged to
invest its assets as, as are all Australian insurers,
pursuant to the Prudential
Standards set by APRA and the Insurance Act. Gordian, as a regulated
entity is also required to maintain-sufficient capital to meet its obligations.
Therefore; while Gordian
is not required to keep its assets in an ADI it does
hold sufficient assets, and the actuarial report confirms this, to meet its
obligations and those assets not held in ADIs are subject to the APRA mandated
risk charge to take into account any potential additional
risk.
- Finally,
you note that SMIL and GIOG see no benefit in trading Cop Re’s solvency
coverage of 3.02 at March 2010 for the lesser
post scheme solvency coverage of
2.64. Please note that an update of the actuarial report was conducted by
Warrick Gard on 25 November
2010 in support of this application. Mr Gard has
indicated that an amendment by APRA of the manner in which it determines
Gordian’s
ongoing regulatory capital requirements will result in
Gordian’s solvency coverage being 3.69 after the transaction rather
than
2.64. This revised amount means that Gordian’s solvency coverage following
the proposed transfer will be higher than Cop
Re’s currency solvency ratio
of 3.02.
Therefore, we do not believe that the grounds for your objections to the
transfer are valid and it is Gordian’s intention to
proceed with the
application [on] Thursday, 2 December 2010.
We confirm that we will provide a copy of your letter to the Court as part of
the affidavit evidence submitted by Gordian and Cop
Re in support of the
application. Please be advised that Cop Re reserves its right to also introduce
as evidence additional email
correspondence between the parties that has been
exchanged with respect to commutation
negotiations.
At this stage if you still wish to pursue your objection, we invite you to brief
Counsel and attend the application on Thursday,
2 December 2010. Neither Gordian
nor Cop Re will oppose any application you may wish to make for leave to appear
at the application.
We look forward to hearing from you.’
- Letter
dated 2 December 2010: Suncorp to Cop Re’s
solicitors:
‘Objection to Scheme for the transfer of certain insurance business of
The Copenhagen Reinsurance Company Limited to Gordian Run Off
Limited
Thank you for your correspondence dated 26 November
2010.
We find that we have had inadequate time to review information that first came
to light on receipt of that correspondence. We refer
specifically to Warwick
Gard’s updated actuarial report dated 25 November 2010. Suncorp first
secured that updated actuarial
report on 30 November
2010.
Upon completing full consideration of the information, Suncorp will conclude as
to whether it will continue its objection.
Suncorp does not intend to appear in court in respect to your application of
2 December 2010, We believe that the court will
look favourably at granting
Suncorp a suitable period of time to consider its position. To that end, we
appreciate your submission
of this letter to the
court.’
- Towards
the end of the hearing on 2 December 2010, I indicated to counsel for Cop Re
that I thought it appropriate that I publish
my reasons for making the orders I
did on that date over Suncorp’s objection.
BACKGROUND
Cop Re
- Cop
Re is a Danish company. On 15 October 2009, Cop Re was acquired by Marlon
Insurance Company Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Enstar Group Ltd. From that
date Cop Re has been an indirectly, wholly-owned, subsidiary of Enstar Group
Ltd.
- Cop
Re has operated an Australian ‘branch’ since 1961.
- There
is a general requirement under the Act (s 28) that insurers maintain ‘in
Australia’ assets at least equal to the value of their liabilities
‘in Australia’.
Other provisions of the Act also refer to the
ability of a general insurer to meet its liabilities in Australia from its
assets
in Australia: see ss 62M, 62ZZC, 62ZZE. The meaning of assets and
liabilities in Australia is elaborated upon in s 116A of the Act.
- Prudential
Standards require foreign general insurers to maintain assets in Australia in
excess of their liabilities in Australia
in an amount at least equal to a
variant of a certain Minimum Capital Requirement (‘MCR’) (see
Prudential Standard GPS 110 Capital Adequacy, especially para 11).
Foreign general insurers must therefore maintain a separate balance sheet in
respect of their Australian operations.
The accounts so prepared depict the
financial condition not of a separate legal entity, but of a notional entity
representing the
insurance liabilities and Australian associated assets of that
company in Australia: ‘the Australian branch’.
- This
notional division between a foreign insurer’s Australian operations and
its other operations is reinforced by restrictions
APRA places on their ability
to deal with their Australian assets. That is to say, a foreign insurer may not
reduce their Australian
assets (save to the extent of current year profits)
without APRA approval (see Prudential Standard GPS 110 Capital Adequacy,
para 25). The result is that a foreign insurer’s assets in Australia are
segregated and preserved for the benefit of Australian
policyholders. While the
global assets of a foreign insurer may thus be applied for the benefit of
Australian policyholders (subject
to any contrary requirement of foreign law),
the foreign insurer’s assets in Australia may not be applied in
satisfaction of
non-Australian liabilities.
- The
business written by Cop Re’s Australian branch was predominantly excess of
loss reinsurance of casualty, property and marine
risks. It also wrote
significant amounts of proportional and facultative business.
- In
2001, Cop Re (including its Australian branch) was placed into run-off (in other
words, it ceased to write new or renewal business).
The authorisation given to
Cop Re to conduct a general insurance business in Australia was accordingly
limited to an authority to
conduct a business in run-off.
- Cop
Re’s Australian branch does not have any employees. Its business is
managed by employees of Enstar Australia Ltd (another
subsidiary of Enstar Group
Ltd) pursuant to contractual agreement.
- Based
on its most recent APRA return (30 September 2010), Cop Re’s Australian
branch has a solvency coverage ratio of 3.0992.
Its minimum capital
requirement, as determined by APRA, is $5,000,000, and it holds net assets in
Australia for APRA purposes of
$15,496,000.
Gordian
- Gordian
is an Australian company, owned as to 70% (indirectly) by Enstar Group Ltd, and
as to 30% by the J C Flowers II Limited Partnership.
- Like
Cop Re, Gordian is authorised by APRA only to conduct a run-off general
insurance business. It has been in run-off since September
1999. The principal
business of Gordian is the acquisition of insurance portfolios in run-off, and
their management.
- Also
like Cop Re, Gordian does not employ any staff. Its business is also managed,
pursuant to a contract agreement, by employees
of Enstar Australia Ltd.
- Based
on its most recent APRA return (30 September 2010), Gordian has a solvency
coverage ratio of 3.89. Its minimum capital requirement,
as determined by APRA
is $43,593,000, and its capital base, for APRA purposes, is $169,580,000.
THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
- Section
17B(1) of the Act provides that (subject to a presently irrelevant exception)
one general insurer’s business may not be transferred
to another general
insurer or amalgamated with the business of another general insurer except
pursuant to a scheme confirmed by this
Court.
- Section
17E(1) (read in conjunction with s 17A) provides that any party to a scheme may
apply to the Court for confirmation of the scheme.
- Such
an application cannot be made until the steps outlined in s 17C(2) have been
taken, and must be made in accordance with the prudential standards: s
17E(2).
- Section
17F(1) then provides that the Court may confirm the scheme (either as presented
or as modified by the Court) or refuse to confirm the scheme.
- Section
17F(1A) provides that, in deciding whether to confirm a scheme the Court must
have regard to certain considerations (described
below).
THE DISCRETION TO CONFIRM THE SCHEME
- A
review of the authorities (including cases decided under similar provisions of
the Life Insurance Act 1995 (Cth)) suggests that, in general terms, the
Court has treated the critical factor governing the exercise of its discretion
as being
whether ‘affected policyholders’ will be materially
detrimentally affected by the implementation of the scheme: Re Insurance
Australia Ltd (2004) 137 FCR 450 at [76]; In the matter of GIO Personal
Investment Services Ltd and AMP Life Ltd [2000] FCA 1871 at [27].
- The
expression ‘affected policyholder’ is defined and used in s 17C of
the Act. That section is concerned with steps
to be taken before the
application for confirmation is made. In Re Insurance Australia Ltd,
Lindgren J held at [19] – [24] that an ‘affected policyholder’
within the meaning of s 17C is a holder of a policy
being transferred under the
scheme. Accordingly, in the present case it is the policyholders of Cop Re who
are ‘affected policyholders’
for the purposes of s 17C of the Act.
Lindgren J also held, however, that this does not necessarily mean that the
effect that the
scheme will have on other policyholders is irrelevant to the
exercise of the Court’s discretion: Re Insurance Australia Ltd at
[25].
- The
Court’s discretion to confirm a scheme for the transfer of an insurance
business is conferred by s 17F. In In the matter of Reward Insurance Ltd
[2004] FCA 151, Heerey J observed (at [3]) that the discretion was a general one
and that the Act did not specify any criteria that were to be considered.
His
Honour described as ‘a prime consideration’ the nature of the actual
and potential claims to which the transferor
insurer is subject and the
financial viability of the transferee insurer. In In the matter of MDU
Australian Insurance Co Pty Ltd [2008] FCA 490, Emmett J identified (at [7])
‘[t]he critical consideration’ as being whether the affected
policyholders would be detrimentally
affected. His Honour also said (at [9])
that the interests of the existing policyholders of the transferee insurer must
be considered.
Earlier, in Mercantile & General Reinsurance Co of
Australia Ltd [2004] FCA 1773, his Honour had raised (at [23]) the question
of the desirability of legislative amendment to make consideration of the
interests
of the latter mandatory.
- The
position must now be considered in the light of s 17F(1A) of the Act: see In
the matter of Westport Insurance Corporation (No 2) [2009] FCA 1598 at [35].
That subsection provides:
‘In deciding whether to confirm a scheme (with or without modifications),
the
Federal Court must have regard to:
(a) the interests of the policyholders of a body corporate affected by the
scheme; and
(b) if a report relevant to all or part of the scheme has been filed with the
Court under section 62ZI – that report; and
(c) any other matter the Court considers
relevant.’
- Sub-section
(b) is not applicable in the circumstances of this Scheme.
- In
line with Emmett J’s suggestion, subs (a) now specifically requires the
interests of the policyholders of the transferee
company (i.e. Gordian) to be
taken into account.
- For
the reasons outlined below, it was submitted that the Court should exercise its
discretion to confirm the Scheme.
The Transfer is an Intra-Group Transfer
- Fundamentally,
this scheme is part of the rationalisation or consolidation of the Enstar Group
Ltd’s Australian operations.
In other words, the Australian policyholders
of one subsidiary (Cop Re) will be transferred to another member of the same
group
(Gordian).
- In
circumstances where policyholders are simply being moved from one member of a
group to another, there is less risk that they will
thereby suffer any real
disadvantage. That is particularly so where there are real and objective
reasons for the rationalisation,
and benefits to be gained therefrom.
- As
the Chief Financial Officer of Enstar Australia Ltd has observed in Ex 3, the
transfer will reduce duplication in certain administrative
functions
(accounting, company secretarial and regulatory functions), and regulatory
compliance costs (audit, taxation, actuarial
services). The reduction in
regulatory compliance costs achieved by the cancellation of Cop Re’s
separate authorisation as
a general insurer by APRA is estimated to be about
$430,000 per annum.
- Consequently,
the scheme can be seen to promote a legitimate objective for the Enstar group of
companies consistent with the protection
of policyholder interests.
- Following
the transfer, it is intended an application will be made to APRA to revoke Cop
Re’s authorisation, and surplus capital
remaining in the Australian branch
will be repatriated to Denmark.
The Solvency Position of the Companies
- Obviously,
the central issue in determining whether policyholders are likely to be
materially disadvantaged by the scheme is the
adequacy of the capital position
of the entity into which they are being transferred.
- The
capital adequacy of the two companies is conveniently set out in the actuarial
report of Mr Gard (Ex 1). The most recent APRA
returns considered in Mr
Gard’s report were those for the period ended 31 March 2010. It is
apparent from the 30 September
2010 APRA returns in evidence that there has been
no material adverse change.
- The
position described in the Gard report is as follows:
(1) Cop Re had,
as at 31 March 2010, a solvency ratio of 3.02.
(2) Gordian had, as at 31 March 2010 (taking into account a proposed capital
release, and the novation of certain claims), a solvency
ratio of 2.66.
(3) Following the transfer, Gordian is expected to have a solvency ratio of
2.64. (Following the change in APRA treatment of certain
related-party loans,
Mr Gard, in Ex 1, has calculated that the post-transfer solvency ratio will
be 3.69).
(4) It can thus be seen that:
(a) Absent the change in APRA’s treatment of certain of Gordian’s
related-party loans, the effect of the transfer on the
solvency ratio enjoyed by
Cop Re policyholders would have been a modest reduction (from 3.02 to 2.64).
(b) Taking into account the APRA change, the effect of the transfer on the
solvency ratio enjoyed by Cop Re policyholders will be
an increase from 3.02 to
3.69.
(c) The effect of the transfer on Gordian’s policyholders is negligible
(2.66 to 2.64, excluding the effect of the change in
APRA policy).
- Mr
Gard also observed that:
(1) The industry average solvency coverage
ratio is 1.94, so policyholders will still enjoy above average security.
(2) Even without the transfer, Cop Re could (with APRA approval) reduce its
capital to a level that is sufficient to cover its insurance
liabilities at a
probability of sufficiency of 99.5%. Gordian holds sufficient assets to cover
liabilities (including the Cop Re
liabilities) at a probability of sufficiency
of 99.5%, so the level of protection for policyholders following the transfer
remains
materially the same. Because Gordian is also an insurer in run-off, Cop
Re’s policyholders will continue to be protected by
APRA rules precluding
capital reductions that would leave assets equal to less than liabilities valued
at a 99.5% probability of
sufficiency.
(3) There are benefits to Cop Re policyholders in moving from a small to a
large insurer. The benefit arises because the occurrence
of one unusually large
claim prior to the transfer could have a material impact on the capital
available to satisfy other claims,
however, such a claim would have a negligible
impact on the net assets of Gordian.
- It
was submitted that, from a policyholder security perspective, the scheme will
not materially disadvantage the policyholders of
either Cop Re or Gordian.
- Mr
Gard concluded that the scheme ‘will not materially adversely impact the
policyholders of either [Cop Re] or [Gordian]’,
and his conclusions were
supported by the review of Mr Atkins (Ex 2), an independent
actuary.
Policy Terms
- There
will be no change to the policy terms and conditions of affected policyholders,
apart from the substitution of Gordian as insurer.
Claims Handling Procedures and Culture
- At
present, all claims and other activities of Cop Re and Gordian are managed by
employees of Enstar Australia Ltd. Following the
transfer, Enstar Australia
staff will continue to manage Gordian’s business. It is thus expected
that claims will be managed
in accordance with the same procedures, and in the
context of the same culture, both pre- and
post-transfer.
Views of APRA and Affected Policyholders
- The
Court will place great weight, and reliance, on the attitude of APRA to the
scheme. Given that APRA is the government regulator
charged with ensuring that
insurance businesses are conducted in such a way that the legitimate interests
of policyholders are protected,
the non-objection to the scheme by APRA will be
a matter from which the Court can draw significant comfort.
- Equally,
the Court may take into account the extent to which affected policyholders,
having been given notice of the scheme and an
adequate opportunity to comment
upon it, express or refrain from expressing a view in relation to the scheme.
The lack of objection
to the scheme by affected policyholders, in circumstances
where they have been given an adequate opportunity to do so, is a matter
speaking in favour of the confirmation of the scheme.
ANALYSIS
- As
noted in [3] above, one affected policyholder, Suncorp, has indicated that it
objects to the Scheme. The detail of its objection
is set out in its letter of
26 November 2010 (see [3(1)] above). Fundamentally, it appears to contend that
there will be a reduction
in policyholder security following the transfer. In
my view, the contention has no substance.
- The
conditions attached to Cop Re’s APRA authorisation are designed to impose
restrictions on Cop Re (as the Australia branch
of a foreign insurer) so as to
provide security for policyholders equivalent to that enjoyed by policyholders
of Australian incorporated
insurers. Gordian, being an Australian incorporated
insurer, is not subject to the additional restrictions customarily imposed on
foreign insurers, but is subject to the full range of restrictions applicable to
Australian insurers pursuant to the Act and Prudential
Standards.
- To
the extent that Suncorp is concerned that it will suffer a reduction in solvency
ratio as a result of the transfer, there are
two answers to the objection.
First, following APRA’s change in policy regarding the treatment of
certain related-party loans,
Cop Re policyholders will be moving to an insurer
with a higher solvency ratio. Secondly, the mere reduction in solvency ratio
(especially
one of a relatively minor order of magnitude) does not represent a
material disadvantage to policyholders: Mercantile & General Reinsurance
Co of Australia Limited [2004] FCA 1773; Re HDI-Gerling Australia
Insurance Co Pty Ltd (No 2) [2010] FCA 669; In the matter of Combined
Insurance Co of America [2010] FCA 962.
- Suncorp
was invited to attend the hearing on 2 December 2010 and to engage legal
representation for that purpose. Moreover, it was
indicated to Suncorp that
neither Cop Re nor Gordian would oppose any application Suncorp may wish to make
for leave to appear.
Suncorp chose not to appear, but its letter of
communication of that choice was produced to the Court (see [3(3)] above) (Ex
4).
- As
well as the matters referred to in [45] to [47] above, I also relied on the
following two matters in making the orders I did on
2 December 2010 over
Suncorp’s objection:
(1) The fact that APRA had no objection
to the Scheme being confirmed as indicated in its letter to the Court following
the hearing
on 2 December 2010; and
(2) the inference I drew from certain email communications that were in
evidence as part of Ex 4 that Suncorp’s objection to
the Scheme had more
to do with its inability to satisfactorily conclude commutation negotiations
with the Enstar group than it did
with a concern over policyholder security
following the transfer. Of course, no evidence was led to rebut that
inference.
PRECONDITIONS TO MAKING AN APPLICATION
- It
is settled that steps required to be taken prior to the ‘making’ of
an application need only be taken prior to the
time at which the Court is moved
for an order of confirmation of the scheme. They are not required to have been
taken prior to the
filing of the application in the Court registry: Re
Armstrong Jones Life Assurance Ltd (1997) 74 FCR 160 at 163, per Emmet J;
Re Royal & Sun Alliance Life Assurance Ltd [2000] FCA 1259; (2000) 104 FCR 37 at 39,
per Katz J; Re Insurance Australia Ltd at [30] – [37], per Lindgren
J.
- The
fact that the required steps have not been taken has not been regarded as a
matter precluding the Court from confirming a scheme.
Rather, the failures are
considered in the exercise of the Court’s discretion to confirm the
scheme: Re Armstrong Jones Life Assurance Ltd at 162; Re Royal &
Sun Alliance Life Assurance Ltd at [16].
- A
combined reading of s 17C(2) of the Act and Prudential Standard GPS 410
discloses that the following steps must be taken before an application for
confirmation may be made:
(1) The applicant must provide a copy of
the scheme to APRA: s 17C(2)(a). That must be done before the steps outlined at
points (5)
and (6) below are taken: Prudential Standard GPS 410 para.
5.
(2) The applicant must provide a copy of any actuarial report on which the
scheme is based to APRA: s. 17C(2)(a). That must be done
before the steps
outlined at points (5) and (6) below are taken: Prudential Standard GPS
410 para 5.
(3) The applicant must obtain APRA’s approval of its summary of the
scheme (the ‘Scheme Summary’): Prudential Standard GPS 410
para 8. This approval must be obtained before the step outlined at point
(5) below is taken: Prudential Standard GPS 410 para 8.
(4) The applicant must obtain APRA’s approval of its notice of
intention: Prudential Standard GPS 410 para 9.
(5) The applicant must publish a notice of intention to make the application:
s 17C(2)(b). That notice must contain the information
specified in
Prudential Standard GPS 410 para 10. That notice must be published in
(a) the Government Gazette and (b) one or more newspapers, approved by APRA,
circulating
in each State and Territory in which an affected policyholder
resides: Prudential Standard GPS 410 para 9. This notice must be
published before the step outlined at point (7) below is taken: Prudential
Standard GPS 410 para 11.
(6) The applicant must give to every affected policyholder the Scheme Summary
described at point (3) above. In these proceedings,
this requirement was waived
pursuant to orders made on 26 October 2010. Those orders waived the requirement
on the condition that
certain other actions were taken. Those steps are
outlined below.
(7) The applicant must make a copy of the scheme available for public
inspection from 9.00 a.m. until 5.00 p.m. every day (except
weekends and public
holidays) for a period of at least 15 days at an office of the applicant or some
other location approved by APRA
in each State and Territory in which an affected
policyholder resides: Prudential Standard GPS 410 para 16.
- The
steps required to be taken in this case pursuant to the orders made on
26 October 2010 were as follows:
(1) Cop Re was required,
before the public inspection period commenced, to send a copy of the Scheme
Summary to each policyholder
identified by the searches identified in accordance
with an affidavit of Vu Tran Pham, read on 26 October 2010.
(2) Cop Re was required, before the public inspection period commenced, to
publish an advertisement in certain specified publications.
(3) Cop Re was required to display on the Enstar Australia Ltd website a link
to the various scheme documents.
(4) Cop Re was required to make the scheme documents available for public
inspection, for a period of 15 business days, at Enstar
Group Ltd’s UK
offices.
(5) Cop Re was required to provide a copy of the scheme documents to any
affected policyholder that requested them, free of charge.
- Evidence
was read at the hearing demonstrating that all of the above steps had been
complied with.
I certify that the preceding fifty-four (54)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Edmonds.
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Associate:
Dated: 21 January 2011
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2011/23.html