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High Court of Australia |
INDUSTRIAL EQUITY LTD. v. BLACKBURN [1977] HCA 59; (1977) 137 CLR 567
Companies
High Court of Australia
Stephen(1), Mason(2), Jacobs(3), Murphy(4) and Aickin(5) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Companies - Dividends - Payable only out of profits - Holding company - Declaration and payment of dividend - Amount of dividend more than profits of holding company - Profits of group exceeding amount of dividend - Articles of association - Power to resolve to pay dividend wholly or in part by distribution of specific assets - Resolution to distribute assets to some shareholders and to pay cash to others - Whether authorized by article - Companies Act, 1961 (NSW), s 376 (1).
HEARING
Sydney, 1977, August 22; November 15. 15:11:1977DECISION
November 15.
MASON J. On the application of the respondents who are shareholders in the
appellant Industrial Equity Ltd. ("the Company") the
Supreme Court of New
South Wales in its Equity Division (Needham J.) (1976) 2 ACLR 8; 40 ACLC 267
made a declaration that "the
special distribution" declared by the Company and
paid to its shareholders on or about 14th November 1975 was not authorized by
its articles of association. An appeal from this decision to the New South
Wales Court of Appeal failed (1977) 2 ACLR 421; 40 ACLC
370 . Undeterred by
their lack of success the appellants appealed to this Court. (at p569)
2. In the notice dated 7th October 1975 of the annual general meeting of the
Company to be held on 30th October 1975 the only
reference to dividends was
contained in the following item of business:
"2. To approve the payment of dividends for the year ended
30th June, 1975." (at p569)
3. In the annual report of the Company dated 3rd October 1975, a copy of
which was circulated to shareholders with the notice
of meetings and copies of
the accounts, the respondent Brierley, who was the chairman of the Company,
advised that the annual dividend
was being maintained at the rate of 15 per
cent per annum with interim and final payments of 7 1/2 per cent each, the
interim dividend
having been paid earlier in the year. The report continued:
"In addition the Board proposes a special distribution of 1
ordinary share in Minerva Centre Ltd (a subsidiary of the
group) for every 4 shares held in Industrial Equity Ltd. In
the case of shares held by the parent company or in parcels of
less than 400 there will be a cash payment instead at the rate
of 35% (17 1/2 cents per Industrial Equity share). The purpose
of this distribution is to provide an immediate bonus to
shareholders and to enable them to participate directly in the
future development of Minerva Centre Ltd which intends to
develop as an active property investor." (at p570)
4. At a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Company on 39th October 1975
it was resolved
"that a Dividend payable partly in cash and partly by theLater on the same day the annual general meeting approved "The declaration of dividends on the basis adopted by a resolution of the Board of Directors". (at p570)
distribution of specific assets, namely, fully paid up shares of
$1 each in the capital of Minerva Centre Limited, be and is
hereby declared at the rate of 3 3/4c and one quarter share in
the capital of Minerva Centre Limited for each share in the
company registered in the name of each Member at 5 p.m. on
the 24th October, 1975 subject to and upon the conditions
following:
1. That such dividend be payable on 14th November, 1975.
2. That any entitlement to a fraction of a cent or a fraction of
a share in Minerva Centre Limited shall be disregarded.
3. That to settle difficulties which may arise in regard to the
distribution of shares in Minerva Centre Limited, the value
of such shares is fixed at 70c per share.
4. That cash payments upon the footing of the value so fixed
be made to Members holding less than 400 shares in the
Company.
5. That a cash payment upon the footing of the value so fixed
be made on shares beneficially owned by the Citizens &
Graziers Life Assurance Company Limited."
5. At that time the capital of the Company was divided into shares of 50c
each. Citizens & Graziers Life Assurance Co. Ltd.
("the
Assurance Company")
beneficially owned more than onehalf of the issued capital of the Company. It
was agreed that the amount
required
to meet the special distribution, valuing
the shares in Minerva Centre Ltd. at 70c per share, was $647,500. The amount
required
to meet the cash dividend of 15 per cent for the year was $261,567.
Yet the profit and loss account of the Company for
the year
ended 30th June
1975 disclosed a net profit for the year of $207,492 only, with unappropriated
profits from previous years
standing
at $106,058, yielding total
unappropriated profits from which dividends might be declared or paid of
$313,550. In the
profit and
loss account the interim dividend of 7 1/2 per
cent and the proposed final dividend of 7 1/2 per cent, each being part
of the
annual
cash dividend of 15 per cent for the year, were debited against the
amount of $313,550, leaving a balance of $51,983
unappropriated
profits at
30th June 1975 available to meet the special distribution. The profit and loss
account made no provision
in respect
of the proposed special distribution and
it is this circumstance which has founded the suggestion that the special
distribution
was an interim dividend for the year ending 30th June 1976.
Clause 3 (i) of the Ninth Schedule to the Companies Act, 1961 (N.S.W.),
as
amended, requires that the accounts disclose in respect of the financial year
"the amount of dividends paid during the financial
year and the amount of
dividends proposed to be paid", excluding amounts shown in the accounts of the
previous year as amounts
proposed to be paid. For reasons which I shall
express later, the suggestion that the special distribution was an interim
dividend
must be rejected. (at p571)
6. In fact the net profit of $207,492 for the year ended 30th June 1975 had
been calculated after taking into account an operating
loss of $802,508 and an
extraordinary item of profit amounting to $1,010,000 arising from a
revaluation of investments in subsidiary
companies. (at p571)
7. The attack upon the validity of the special distribution was made on two
grounds:
(a) That it involved the payment of a dividend otherwise than out of
profits, contrary to art. 129 and s. 376 (1) of the Companies
Act, 1961
(N.S.W.), as amended; and
(b) That it was not authorized by the articles of association in that it
discriminated against other shareholders by providing
for payment in cash to
the majority beneficial shareholder, there being no authority for the making
of that payment in the circumstances.
(at p571)
8. The articles of association vest in the directors, not in the Company in
general meeting, the power to declare a dividend.
Article 128 provides:
"128. The directors may declare a dividend to be paid toIt is followed by arts. 129 and 130 which are in these terms:
the members according to their rights and interests in the
profits and may fix the time for payment."
"129. No dividend shall be payable except out of the
profits of the Company and no dividend shall carry interest
as against the Company.
130. The declaration of the directors as to the amount of
the net profits of the Company shall be conclusive." (at p571)
9. The directors are also given a power to pay interim dividends by art. 131
which provides:
"131. The directors may from time to time pay to theIt will be noticed that this is expressed as a power to pay and not as a power to declare interim dividends. There is a well recognized distinction between a power to declare a final dividend and a power to pay an interim dividend. One consequence of the distinction is that although the declaration of a final dividend gives rise to a debt payable by the company to the shareholder immediately or from the date stipulated for payment, a resolution for the payment of an interim dividend does not create such a debt in favour of the shareholder (Potel v. Inland Revenue Commissioners (1971) 2 All ER 504, at pp 511-512; (1970) 46 TC 658, at p 667 ). (at p572)
members such interim dividends as in their judgment the
position of the Company justifies and may fix the time for
payment."
10. Article 134 provides:
"134. The directors when declaring a dividend mayAs this power is expressed to be given to the directors "when declaring a dividend" it must be taken to refer to the directors' power to "declare a dividend" under art. 128, not to their power to "pay ... interim dividends" under art. 131. This interpretation of art. 134 destroys the appellants' submission that the special distribution can be justified as the payment of an interim dividend. But it should not be thought that this is the only flaw in that submission. There are others. Article 137, to which I shall shortly refer, from which the appellants sought to draw authority for fixing the value for distribution of specific assets and for determining that a cash payment should be made to Minerva Centre Ltd. upon the footing of a value so fixed, does not apply to the payment of an interim dividend. Its area of application is designated by its opening words, "For the purpose of giving effect to any resolution under the three last preceding articles ..." They do not include art. 131. (at p572)
resolve that such dividend be paid wholly or in part by the
distribution of specific assets and in particular of paid-up
shares debentures or debenture stock of the Company or
paid-up shares debentures or debenture stock of any other company
or in any one or more of such ways."
11. Indeed, the facts which I have already recited show the submission to be
misconceived. The resolution passed by the directors
on 30th October was
expressed to be for one dividend, payable as to part in cash at the rate of 3
3/4 cents per share and as to
the balance by the special distribution. The
directors did not seek to draw any distinction between the two elements in the
resolution
and it is acknowledged that the cash dividend of 7 1/2 per cent was
declared for the year ended 30th June 1975 and included in the
profit and loss
account for the year. Nor did the general meeting draw any distinction between
the two when it approved by resolution
on the same day. The notice convening
the annual general meeting, as I have said, gave notice only in the second
item of the intention
to approve the payment of dividends for that year and
the proposal for the special distribution as outlined in the chairman's report
for the year gives no indication that it was intended to be an interim
dividend for the succeeding year. And the chairman at the
annual general
meeting stated that the special distribution was open for discussion under the
second item in the notice convening
the meeting. (at p573)
12. For all these reasons at least the special distribution cannot be
sustained as the payment of an interim dividend under art.
131. (at p573)
13. Article 134 enables the Company to distribute specific assets in entire
or partial satisfaction of a dividend, subject to
an appropriate resolution by
the directors. There is in my view no warrant for giving it a further
significance by reading it as
though it authorized the directors to resolve
that some shareholders should receive the dividends in cash and others in
specific
assets. The language of the article contains nothing to indicate that
it was directed to such a situation. And we should not assume,
in the absence
of some indication of intention, that the articles authorize the directors to
discriminate as between shareholders
in paying or satisfying a dividend. The
article has to be read with art. 137. So far my comments have been directed to
art. 134
according to its tenor without the added operation given to it by the
later provision. (at p573)
14. Article 134 is followed by arts. 135 and 136. The first of the two
articles gives power to capitalize profits and distribute
them as shares or
debentures. The second empowers the Company to pay up any unissued shares to
be issued to members out of a capital
redemption fund arising from redemption
of redeemable preference shares. These two articles, together with art. 134,
constitute
"the last three preceding articles" referred to in art. 137 which
goes on to provide:
"137. For the purpose of giving effect to any resolutionIt is an essential condition of the power conferred by this article that there should exist a difficulty in regard to the distribution. The provisions give some indications of the kinds of difficulty which are contemplated, as, for example, where on the proposed distribution a shareholder would be entitled to a fraction of a share or a debenture and where shareholders are to receive both specific assets and cash. Here the appellants' difficulty is that there was according to the terms of the special distribution no difficulty which called for the directors to settle it by resolving that the major beneficial shareholder should receive cash. All that appears is that the directors discriminated between that shareholder and other shareholders, at least those holding 400 or more shares in the Company, without assigning any reason for so doing, let alone a reason relating to difficulties inherent in or arising in connexion with the proposed distribution. (at p574)
under the three last preceding articles the directors may settle
any difficulty which may arise in regard to the distribution
as they think expedient and in particular may issue
fractional certificates and may fix the value for distribution
of any specific assets and may determine that cash payments
shall be made to any members upon the footing of the value
so fixed or that fractions of less value than one dollar may be
disregarded in order to adjust the rights of all parties and
may vest any such cash or specific assets in trustees upon
capatalised funds as may seem expedient to the
directors. Where requisite a proper contract or particulars thereof
shall be filed in accordance with the provisions of the
Companies Act and the directors may appoint any person to
sign such contract on behalf of the persons entitled to the
dividend or capitalised fund and such appointment shall be
effective."
15. The interpretation which I have placed on arts. 134 and 137 is fatal to
the special distribution considered either as a dividend
for the year ended
30th June 1975 or as an interim dividend for the succeeding year. (at p574)
16. Although this conclusion disposes of the appeal, I now turn to the
question which arose in relation to art. 129 and s. 376
(1) because it was
fully argued. Section 376 (1) of the Companies Act, which is similar to art.
129, provides: "No dividend shall
be payable to the shareholders of any
company except out of profits or pursuant to section sixty." The reference to
s. 60, which
relates to payments from the share premium account, may be
disregarded. The consequences of a violation of the prohibition contained
in
sub-s. (1) of s. 376 are set out in sub-ss. (2) and (3) . They provide:
"(2) Every director or manager of a company who wilfully
pays or permits to be paid any dividend out of what he knows
is not profits except pursuant to section sixty -
(a) shall without prejudice to any other liability be guilty
of an offence against this Act; and
(b) shall also be liable to the creditors of the company for
the amount of the debts due by the company to them
respectively to the extent by which the dividends so
paid have exceeded the profits and such amount may
be recovered by the creditors or the liquidator suing on
behalf of the creditors.
Penalty: One thousand dollars.
(3) If the whole amount is recovered from one director or
from the manager he may recover contribution against any
other person liable who has directed or consented to such
payment." (at p575)
17. The appellants' case in this Court is that the consolidated accounts for
the year ended 30th June 1975 of the group of companies
of which the Company
was the holding or parent company show that there were available sufficient
group profits from which the dividend
could be paid. According to these
accounts the net profit of the group for the year after making provision for
taxation and after
making allowance for the proportion of profit due to
outside interests and for profits earned prior to acquisition was $1,120,938,
an amount well in excess of the dividends declared on 30th October 1975.
Moreover, the consolidated accounts showed the existence
of unappropriated
group profits at the end of the financial year at $5,599,066 after making
allowance for the payment of a 15 per
cent dividend. (at p575)
18. The question then is whether in ascertaining the amount of profits
available for distribution by a holding company by way
of dividend it is
correct to look at the profit of the holding company itself or to the group
profit as disclosed by the consolidated
accounts. The appellants say that
profits in the subsidiaries lie within the disposition of the holding company
which may, by virtue
of its capacity to control a general meeting of each of
its subsidiaries, ensure the distribution of profits to it by declaration
and
payment of dividends. Consequently, the subsidiaries' profits are effectively
the profits of the holding company for the purpose
of computing what it may
distribute by way of dividend - that is how the argument runs. The appellants
also seek to enlist support
from s. 162 of the Companies Act on the footing
that it requires the preparation and circulation of group accounts, thereby
indicating,
so it is suggested, that it is to the group profits that one
should look for relevant purposes. (at p575)
19. But in the end the argument brings us back to the provisions of art. 129
and to s. 376 (1). No doubt s. 376 (1) , like art.
129, operates to deny to a
company power to make the prohibited payment as it is a statutory expression
of a rule, often enshrined
as here in the articles, which relates to the
powers of a company. The issue is then whether the reference to profits in the
article,
and for that matter in the sub-section, is a reference to the profits
of the holding company that is proposing to declare and pay
a dividend or to
the profits of the group of which it is a parent. Article 129, unlike s. 376
(1), speaks of "the profits of the
Company". However, the appellants do not
concede that this excludes the profits of the group, claiming that for
relevant purposes
the profits of the group are the profits of "the Company".
(at p576)
20. Although s. 376 (1) does not explicitly identify the source of the
profits to which it refers, it should also be understood
as referring to the
profits of the company which declares and pays the dividend. The sub-section
is not a recent innovation. It
has a history in Australian company law dating
back to s. 48 of the Companies Act 1896 (Vict.), long before consolidated or
group
accounts became a gleam in the draftsman's eye. It has no statutory
counterpart in the United Kingdom, though it is but a reflection
of the
principle enunciated in the English courts much earlier - see, e.g., Burnes v.
Pennell [1849] EngR 740; (1849) 2 HLC 497 (9 ER 1181) ; In
re National Funds Assurance Co.
(1878) 10 Ch D 118 . The principle, which was certainly designed
to protect
creditors and, I think,
shareholders, more particularly where there is more
than one class of shareholder in a company,
inhibits the payment by way of
dividends out of a company's capital. It is founded on the proposition
recognized in Trevor v. Whitworth
(1887) 12 App Cas 409
that a reduction of
capital can only be effected in accordance with the statutory procedure and
that there
can be no return of
capital except in accordance with that
procedure - In re Exchange Banking Co. (Flitcroft's Case) (1882) 21 Ch
D 519,
at p 533 .
The rule is frequently expressed, as here, in the form of a
prohibition against dividends being payable except
out of profits. (at
p576)
21. In this case there is no reason for me to explore all the complexities
which have emerged in relation to the application of
the rule - whether it
refers to the amount of nominal capital which has been paid up (a view on
which some of the earlier cases
seem to turn) or to assets in which the
paid-up capital has been invested (a view on which the later cases appear to
proceed),
whether the obscure distinction taken between fixed and circulating
capital which lies at the heart of some of the statements (Lee
v. Neuchatel
Asphalte Co. (1889) 41 Ch D 1 ; Verner v. General and Commercial Investment
Trust (1894) 2 Ch 239, at pp 266-267 ;
In re National Bank of Wales Ltd.
(1899) 2 Ch 629, at pp 670-671 : affd. sub. nom. Dovey v. Cory (1901) AC 477 ;
Ammonia Soda Co.
Ltd. v. Chamberlain (1918) 1 Ch 266, at pp 286-287; cf at p
299 ) is correctly taken, and as to what precisely is meant by the word
"profits" in this context (see, for example, the discussion in Palmer's
Company Law, 22nd ed. (1976), pp. 794 et seq.). It is sufficient
to say that
in all the cases it has been assumed the principle refers exclusively to the
profits of the company declaring and paying
the dividend, though, so far as I
am aware, in none of the decided cases did it appear that there were profits
in subsidiary companies
to which the article of association might have been
applied. There are, I think, a number of reasons which sustain the accuracy
of
this assumption. (at p577)
22. In the first place, it is a natural consequence of the recognition of the
separate personality of each company, a recognition
which derives from Salomon
v. Salomon & Co. Ltd. (1897) AC 22 , and which has been confirmed by Lee v.
Lee's Air Farming Ltd.
(1961)
AC 12 . It has been said that the rigours of the
doctrine enunciated by Salomon v. Salomon & Co. Ltd. have been alleviated
by
the
modern requirements as to consolidated or group accounts introduced in the
United Kingdom by the Companies Act, 1948 and
in New
South Wales by the
Companies Act, 1961 (N.S.W.) - see Gower, Modern Company Law, 3rd ed. (1969),
pp. 198-199. But the purpose
of
these requirements is to ensure that the
members of, and for that matter persons dealing with, a holding company are
provided
with
accurate information as to the profit or loss and the state of
affairs of that company and its subsidiary companies within
the group,
information which would not be forthcoming if all the shareholders received
was limited to the accounts of the holding
company
disclosing as assets the
shares which it holds in its subsidiaries. It is for this purpose that the
Companies Act treats
the business
group as one entity and requires that its
financial results be incorporated in consolidated accounts to be circulated
to
shareholders
and laid before a general meeting (s. 162 (4) , s. 164 (1)) and
requires that the accounts and other documents
shall accompany the
annual
return which shall be lodged with the Corporate Affairs Commission (s. 158;
Eighth Schedule, Pt II).
(at p577)
23. However, it can scarcely be contended that the provisions of the Act
operate to deny the separate legal personality of each
company in a group.
Thus, in the absence of contract creating some additional right, the creditors
of company A, a subsidiary company
within a group, can look only to that
company for payment of their debts. They cannot look to company B, the holding
company, for
payment (see Walker v. Wimborne [1976] HCA 7; (1976) 137 CLR 1, at p 6 ). (at
p577)
24. The Companies Act does not, in the case of holding companies, substitute
the requirement for group accounts for the old requirement
of accounts of the
holding company itself. Group accounts are an additional requirement; the
holding company is still obliged to
lay before its shareholders in general
meeting its profit and loss account and balance sheets (s. 162 (1) and (3) ),
containing
the information prescribed by the statute and accompanied by the
prescribed documents. Indeed, s. 162 in sub-s. (1) and sub-s. (4)
draws a
distinction between the "profit or loss of the company" and "the profit or
loss of the company and its subsidiaries", thereby
indicating, to my mind,
that s. 376 (1) refers to the profits of the company, not those of the group.
The predecessors of s. 376
(1), expressed in like terms, were in force well
before the provisions as to group accounts were introduced. There are, of
course,
even stronger grounds for taking a similar view of art. 129 expressed,
as it is, according to a time-honoured formula which originated
long before
group accounts or groups of companies became part of the company scene. (at
p578)
25. Underlying the rule that dividends are payable out of profits is the
notion that the profits in question have already accrued
in the company and
that upon the declaration of a dividend by the directors or the company in
general meeting there immediately
springs into existence, fully armed so to
speak, a debt owing by the company to each shareholder (In re Severn and Wye
and Severn
Bridge Railway Co. (1896) 1 Ch 559 ; Bond v. Barrow Haematite Steel
Co. (1902) 1 Ch 353, at p 362 ; Potel v. Inland Revenue Commissioners
(1971) 2
All ER 504; (1970) 46 TC 658 ). However, it is accepted that a company may
declare a dividend which is to be paid or payable
to shareholders at some
future date. This has evidently inspired the thought that the requirement as
to the existence of profits
is satisfied if they exist at the time stipulated
for payment. It is incorrect. Both the article and the section are to be
understood
as stipulating that the profits in an amount necessary to sustain
the dividend are in existence in the company itself at the time
of the
declaration of the dividend. The prohibition is not against dividends being
"paid" otherwise than out of profits, but against
their being "payable"
otherwise than out of profits. The prohibition is certainly directed to the
declaration of a dividend - though
it is possible that it is also directed to
payment - because it is the declaration that creates the right in the
shareholder and
it is the declaration that reflects the consideration by the
directors or shareholders of the accounts and profit situation of the
company.
The rule has been expressed in the United States in these terms: "...
corporations can only declare dividends from earnings,
which must be present
when the dividend is declared. They cannot be declared in anticipation of
earnings." (In re Given's Estate
(1936) 185 A 778, at p 780 ). It has been
stated in somewhat less inflexible terms in American Jurisprudence, vol. 19,
2d, s. 826:
"The theory of a dividend is that it shall be payable onlyIt would be productive of confusion and uncertainty if companies were to declare dividends against the possibility that profits not in existence at the time of declaration would or might be earned or received by the time the dividend was paid. In this instance the dividend declared by the Company was for the year ended 30th June 1975. It was therefore a dividend payable out of the accumulated profits of the Company at the end of that year. Any additional receipts by way of dividend or otherwise by the Company from its subsidiaries after the end of the financial year stood to be considered as an element in the Company's profit situation in the succeeding year. (at p579)
from ... earnings which are or will be ready for actual
distribution at a definite date provided for in the resolution
declaring the dividend. Generally, the earnings or profits
from which dividends are properly payable must be present
when the dividend is declared; it cannot ordinarily be
declared in anticipation of earnings or on a mere hope or
expectation of profits."
26. What I have already said disposes of the appellants' contention that the
respondents should not succeed because they failed
to discharge the onus of
demonstrating that profits may have been received by the Company in the form
of distributions by subsidiaries
before the date of declaration or the date of
payment of the dividend. The dividend was in my opinion declared for the year
ended
30th June 1975, that is, out of the profits of the Company as they stood
at that date. It has been shown that they were inadequate.
Even if profits
were earned after that date they were not the source of the dividend which was
declared. And in any event the evidence
is sufficient to justify the inference
that the dividend was declared by the directors and approved by the
shareholders on 30th
October 1975 exclusively by reference to the materials to
which I have referred and that neither the directors nor the shareholders
had
the advantage of more recent or up-to-date accounts reflecting the profit
situation of the Company at a later date, say 30th
September 1975. (at p580)
27. It is common ground that the special distribution, which in my opinion
was ultra vires for the reasons already given, is severable
from the cash
dividend of 15 per cent. (at p580)
28. In the event I would dismiss the appeal. (at p580)
JACOBS J. I am of opinion that the whole of the special distribution made in
mid-November 1975 was invalid and I would dismiss
the appeal. (at p580)
2. The special distribution needed to be made out of profits earned up to a
date which was either the date of the declaration
of the special distribution
as a dividend or the date of the making of that distribution. I do not find it
necessary to decide
which of these dates is the relevant one in application of
s. 376 (1) of the Companies Act or art. 129 of the company's articles
of
association and I would prefer not to express a concluded opinion on this
question. (at p580)
3. I am satisfied that the relevant profits earned must be profits in the
company itself, that undistributed profits from subsidiaries
cannot as such be
taken into account. I do not wich to add anything to the reasons which Mason
J. has given for this conclusion.
(at p580)
4. Next, I would make it clear that the appellants expressly disclaimed any
reliance upon the accumulation of profits in subsidiary
companies as evidence
that the shares in those subsidiaries had additional value, so that, if a
revaluation of assets had taken
place, there would have been disclosed capital
profits with the result that such capital profits could be taken into account
even
without a revaluation. It was accepted before this court that the
reasoning of Buckey J. in Dimbula Valley (Ceylon) Tea Co. Ltd.
v. Laurie
(1961) 1 Ch 353 correctly stated the law. (at p580)
5. The question then is - did the respondents who bore the onus of proof
establish that there were no profits sufficient to cover
the amount of the
special distribution? The appellants have submitted that they did not, in that
the respondents relied on the
accounts of the company up to 30th June 1975 and
did not establish that profits had not accumulated between that date and the
dates
of declaration and payment (or distribution) of the dividend. It was
submitted that the dividend could be regarded as an interim
dividend and might
have been out of profits made or disclosed after 30th June 1975. I am
satisfied that the distribution could
not be regarded as an interim dividend
in respect of the financial year ended 30th June 1976. I agree with the
reasons expressed
by Mason J. for this conclusion and do not wish to add
anything in this respect. Further, I am not satisfied that it would make
any
difference even if it were. No dividend can be paid except out of profits and
the impugned dividend and distribution was in
fact paid and made. The
application of this requirement is not governed either by accounting periods
or the accounting system.
(at p581)
6. The question is whether there were profits at the relevant time which I
shall take to be the time of the payment and the making
of the distribution.
(If there were not profits at that date then certainly there were not profits
at the date, a little earlier,
when the dividend was declared and I am
therefore content to examine the position at the date of payment and
distribution.) (at
p581)
7. It must be borne in mind that, although the respondents bore the onus, the
whole of the information upon the subject matter
lay within the knowledge of
the appellant company. That being so the burden of proof could be satisfied by
such evidence as could
support the inference that the special distribution was
not a dividend in respect of profits acquired or disclosed subsequently
to
30th June 1975. The appellant company could easily have cleared up the
misapprehension if the drawing of such an inference was
in fact a
misapprehension of the true position but it did not do so. The fact that the
profits had not been earned or disclosed
up to 30th June 1975 carried the
respondents some distance towards establishing that they had not been earned
up to the time of
the special distribution in mid-November. To this must be
added the circumstances of the calling and holding of the annual general
meeting. The notice of meeting relevantly gave as an item of business only the
approval of the payment of dividends for the year
ended 30th June 1975. The
annual report dated 3rd October 1975 gave no hint that the special
distribution which was described therein
was to be made out of profits which
had been earned or disclosed since the end of the last accounting period. In
these circumstances
the inference that they had not been earned or disclosed
since the end of that period was certainly open. The failure to make any
attempt to rebut it gave it greatly added strength. The course of the hearing
before Needham J. when adjournment was granted to
enable a revaluation of
assets to be made is practically conclusive that there had not been an earlier
revaluation. I am therefore
of the opinion that the respondents established
their case that the special distribution was contrary to s. 376 (1) of the
Companies
Act and art. 129 of the appellant company's articles of association.
(at p581)
8. Having come to this conclusion it is not necessary for me to express an
opinion on the question whether the company had power
to make a discriminatory
distribution of cash in respect of the shares beneficially owned by one
company only and of shares in
Minerva Centre Ltd. in respect of shares held by
all other shareholders. I bear in mind that the good faith of the directors
and
the members in general meeting was not challenged. The question turns upon
the construction of arts. 134 and 137 of the articles
of association. I am not
satisfied that in no circumstances could directors under such articles
distribute shares to some shareholder
or shareholders and cash to another or
others, exercising their powers under art. 137 for that purpose. That being
so, I prefer
to express no concluded opinion on the question. (at p582)
MURPHY J. The appeal should be dismissed for the reasons given by Mason J.
(at p582)
AICKIN J. I have had the advantage of reading the reasons for judgment
prepared by my brother Mason and am in agreement with them.
(at p582)
2. I would therefore dismiss the appeal. (at p582)
ORDER
Appeal dismissed with costs.
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