In the matter of Aeon Metals Limited (Administrators Appointed)

Case

[2024] NSWSC 1106

16 August 2024

No judgment structure available for this case.

Supreme Court


New South Wales

Medium Neutral Citation: In the matter of Aeon Metals Limited (Administrators Appointed) [2024] NSWSC 1106
Hearing dates: 16 August 2024
Date of orders: 16 August 2024
Decision date: 16 August 2024
Jurisdiction:Equity - Corporations List
Before: Black J
Decision:

Orders made in accordance with the Plaintiffs’ Short Minutes of Order.

Catchwords:

CORPORATIONS – Administration – whether convening period should be extended – where extension will facilitate sales process in respect of the companies’ business.

CORPORATIONS – Administration – application under s 447A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) for limitation of administrators' personal liability in respect of relevant borrowings – whether it is in the interests of the companies that the borrowing takes place.

Legislation Cited:

- Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), ss 435A, 443D and 447A

Cases Cited:

- Mighty River International Ltd v Hughes (2018) 265 CLR 480

- Re BCD Resources NL [2015] NSWSC 777

- Re Griffin Coal Mining Company Pty Ltd (2010) 82 ACSR 142

- Re RCR Tomlinson Ltd [2018] NSWSC 1859

- Re Riviera Group Pty Ltd (2009) 72 ACSR 352; [2009] NSWSC 585

Category:Principal judgment
Parties: Vaughan Strawbridge, Kathryn Evans and Benjamin Campbell in their capacity as joint and several administrators of each of the Second to Seventh Plaintiffs (First Plaintiffs)
Aeon Metals Limited (Administrators Appointed) (Second Plaintiff)
Aussie NQ Resources Pty Limited (Administrators Appointed (Third Plaintiff)
Aeon Walford Creek Ltd (Administrators Appointed) (Fourth Plaintiff)
Aeon Isa Exploration Pty Ltd (Administrators Appointed) (Fifth Plaintiff)
Aeon Monto Exploration Pty Ltd (Administrators Appointed) (Sixth Plaintiff)
Aeon Walford Exploration Pty Ltd (Administrators Appointed) Seventh Plaintiff)
Representation:

Counsel:
S Scott (Plaintiffs)

Solicitors:
Ashurst Australia (Plaintiffs)
File Number(s): 2024/300446

Judgment – ex tempore (Revised 19 August 2024)

Nature of the application

  1. By Originating Process filed on 15 August 2024, the Plaintiffs, Mr Strawbridge and others in their capacity as joint and several administrators of Aeon Metals Limited and several other companies (together "Aeon Group") seek two forms of order. The first is an order to extend the convening period, broadly, in order to permit the completion of a sales process in respect of the companies or business of the Aeon Group as a going concern. The second is an order, under s 477A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (“Act”), that Pt 5.3A of the Act operate so that, if the administrators' indemnity under s 443D of the Act is insufficient to meet the amount for which they may be liable in connection with a funding agreement, then they will not personally be liable to repay that amount to the extent of that insufficiency. That is a straightforward, and relatively common, application to limit the personal liability of the administrators under a funding arrangement in respect of a complex administration.

Affidavit evidence

  1. The application is supported by an open, and a confidential, affidavit of Ms Evans, who is one of the administrators, and an open and confidential exhibit to those affidavits. Ms Evans there outlines the business and structure of the Aeon Group. She notes, by way of background, that the Aeon Group is a mineral, exploration and development business which sought to become a producer of copper/cobalt for use in batteries and electrification, and is the holder of various tenements, particularly in Queensland. The structure of the Aeon Group's business has an obvious practical significance for the application, because it is plainly dependent on external funding, where it is seeking to realise the value in the tenements and develop a business rather than obtaining substantial ongoing income from a producing business. Ms Evans also refers to the primary project currently being undertaken by the Aeon Group, in respect of the development of a particular tenement, and to the financial position of the Aeon Group, which has only a small amount of cash at hand, and the position as to the Aeon Group’s creditors, including a secured creditor which has offered to provide funding in respect of the voluntary administration process.

  2. Ms Evans also outlines the process which is proposed for a sale process, which has already commenced, and which it is expected would be completed, to the point of binding offers, by 30 September 2024. Ms Evans also recognises that additional steps will be required to give effect to any successful binding offer, including, potentially, inspection or expert review of the tenements on behalf of a purchaser and the negotiation of relevant contracts.

  3. By her second, confidential affidavit, Ms Evans addresses the terms of the proposed funding arrangement, the amount of which reflects the estimate of the likely costs of continuing the Aeon Group in operation, and paying the voluntary administrators' remuneration and legal costs, during the sale process.

  4. The Plaintiffs also lead evidence that notice of this application was given to the Aeon Group's secured creditor, which has offered the relevant funding and has confirmed its support for the application. There is evidence that unsecured creditors were informed of the proposed application, both at the first meeting of creditors in early August 2024 and, more recently, by a circular to creditors, issued two days ago on 13 August 2024, which confirmed the matter which had previously been foreshadowed to unsecured creditors. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission has also been given, and has acknowledged receipt of, notice of the application but has not sought to appear in it.

Extension of the convening period

  1. Ms Scott, who appears for the voluntary administrators, outlines the nature of the Aeon Group's business, aspects of which I have noted above, in submissions, and points to the fact that voluntary administrators plainly require external funding in order to conduct a sales process, and maintain the Aeon Group as a going concern while that sale process is being undertaken. Ms Scott refers to Ms Evans' evidence that unless the Aeon Group is able to continue in the ordinary course, with the benefit of such funding, it could not be sold as a going concern, and that would likely result in a material decrease in its value, a reduction in the prospect of a sale or recapitalisation of the Group, and ultimately a reduced return to creditors and shareholders. That is, of course, a significant matter, both so far as the extension of the convening period and the application for a limitation of the voluntary administrators' personal liability under the funding agreement is concerned.

  2. Dealing first with the application to extend the convening period, Ms Scott refers to the applicable principles, which have been summarised in earlier decisions of this Court including Re Riviera Group Pty Ltd (2009) 72 ACSR 352; [2009] NSWSC 585 and in the High Court's decision in Mighty River International Ltd v Hughes (2018) 265 CLR 480 at [73]. The case law has recognised that the Court will give substantial weight to the considered judgment of voluntary administrators in matters of this kind: Re BCD Resources NL [2015] NSWSC 777. I have noted above that Ms Evans here gives cogent evidence of the advantages of a sale of the Aeon Group’s business as a going concern. It is plain enough that that would require an extension of the convening period, since the timetable for that sale process could not realistically be completed in a way that would maximise potential sale proceeds without an extension of a convening period. The period of the extension that is sought in turn allows both for the time that would be taken for a sale process under the existing timetable that has been indicated to creditors and to potential participants in the sale process, and the process of reviewing and considering offers and options for recapitalisation and then preparing a report to creditors in respect of the outcome.

  3. I am satisfied that, here, the Plaintiff’s administrators have properly formed their opinion that the extension of the convening period, so as to allow that sale process to be undertaken, will serve the interests of the creditors of the Aeon Group, and maximise the prospect that the Aeon Group will continue as a going concern, promoting the objectives in s 435A of the Act in respect of a voluntary administration. In these circumstances, I am comfortably satisfied that the extension of the time which is sought for the convening period should be granted. That order in turn supports the application to limit the voluntary administrators personal liability under the proposed funding arrangements, because the extension of the convening period would have no utility unless the voluntary administrators are placed in a position to continue to operate the business as a going concern, so as to maintain its value during the sale process.

Limitation of the voluntary administrators’ liability for the funding agreement

  1. Turning now to the voluntary administrators' application to limit their personal liability in respect of the funding agreement, the applicable legal principles emerge from cases including Re Griffin Coal Mining Company Pty Ltd (2010) 82 ACSR 142 at [130] and Re RCR Tomlinson Ltd [2018] NSWSC 1859 at [11]-[12], where I observed that voluntary administrators could not be expected to assume unlimited personal liability for a significant borrowing, or the risk that their indemnity against a company's assets was ultimately not sufficient to discharge that borrowing. That proposition here is stronger, where it is plain enough that mining tenements will involve greater uncertainty or at least greater complexity, in respect of a sale, than an operating business which was generating an ongoing cash flow.

  2. Here, then, the real question is whether it is in the interests of the Aeon Group that the borrowing takes place, and, if the Court concludes that it is in the interests of the Aeon Group that borrowing should take place, it will follow that the voluntary administrators should be allowed the relief they seek from personal liability, where they could not otherwise realistically proceed with the borrowing or the sale process that it will permit. Here, for the reasons noted above, it is plain enough that the sale process, and the funding provided to allow it to take place, are in the interests of the Aeon Group and its creditors, and there is nothing unreasonable on the face of the funding agreement which is in evidence.

  3. Ms Scott rightly points out that the voluntary administrators have themselves formed the view that it is necessary to obtain funding in the relevant circumstances; that it is in the best interests of creditors for the sale campaign to take place and for the Aeon Group to be sold as a going concern; and that that could not occur if the voluntary administrators were required to accept personal liability for the amount of the borrowing. I am satisfied that that view is well founded and, on that basis, the Court should also grant the relief which is sought in that respect.

  4. Ms Scott also points to a further order that is sought, confirming that the indemnity for the voluntary administrators is available from the property of the Aeon Group, in respect of all of the debts and liabilities incurred by the voluntary administrators under the funding agreement. I am satisfied that that order is properly made, where the sale process and borrowing will take place for the benefit of the Aeon Group as a whole, as would the sale process, and the indemnity should properly be available from group assets in that situation.

Orders

  1. For these reasons, I made the orders sought in the application.

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Decision last updated: 29 August 2024

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