In the matter of TASK Group Holdings Limited
[2024] NSWSC 646
•28 May 2024
Supreme Court
New South Wales
- Amendment notes
Medium Neutral Citation: In the matter of TASK Group Holdings Limited [2024] NSWSC 646 Hearing dates: 28 May 2024 Date of orders: 28 May 2024 Decision date: 28 May 2024 Jurisdiction: Equity - Corporations List Before: Gleeson J Decision: Orders made for convening meeting
Catchwords: CORPORATIONS – compromise and arrangement – scheme of arrangement – transfer scheme – offer of mixed consideration – election between cash and scrip or combination of both – first court hearing – assessment of procedural and substantive requirements – whether orders convening meeting of members should be made
Legislation Cited: Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), s 411
Securities Act of 1933, Pt 3 of Sch 8 of the (US), s 3(a)(10)
Supreme Court (Corporations) Rules, rr 1.3, 2.4(1), 3.4
Supreme Court Corporations List Practice Note: SC-Eq 4
Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), r 36.11(2)
Cases Cited: Re Arthur Yates & Co Ltd [2001] NSWSC 40; (2001) 36 ACSR 758
Re Cashcard Australia Limited [2004] FCA 223; (2004) 48 ACSR 738
Re Cirrus Networks Ltd [2023] NSWSC 1298
Re Crown Resorts Limited [2022] FCA 367
Re DWS Ltd [2020] FCA 1590; (2020) 148 ACSR 616
Re Foster’s Group Limited [2011] VSC 547
Re Foundation Healthcare Ltd [2002] FCA 742; (2002) 42 ACSR 252
Re Healthscope Ltd [2019] FCA 542; (2019) 139 ACSR 608
Re Hills Motorway Management Ltd [2002] NSWSC 897; (2002) 43 ACSR 101
Re Hostworks Group Ltd [2008] FCA 64
Re Macquarie Private Capital A Pty Ltd [2008] NSWSC 323
Re NRMA Ltd [2000] NSWSC 82; (2000) 33 ACSR 595
Re Permanent Trustee Co Ltd [2002] NSWSC 1177; (2002) 43 ACSR 601
Re Villa World Limited [2019] NSWSC 1207; (2019) 139 ACSR 550
Texts Cited: Takeover Panel: Guidance Note 7 – Lock-up devices
ASX Listing Rules, r 6.23.4
Category: Principal judgment Parties: TASK Group Holdings Limited (Plaintiff)
PAR Global Australia Pty Ltd (Acquirer / Interested party)Representation: Counsel:
Solicitors:
I Ahmed SC (Plaintiff)
M A Izzo SC (Acquirer / Interested party)
King & Wood Mallesons (Plaintiff)
Clayton Utz (Acquirer / Interested party)
File Number(s): 2024/169249
Judgment
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GLEESON J: Application is made by TASK Group Holdings Limited (TASK) under s 411(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) to convene a meeting of its members for the purpose of considering a scheme of arrangement proposed between the company and its members. The proposed scheme is a “transfer” scheme. The purpose of the scheme is to implement the takeover of TASK by PAR Global Australia Pty Ltd (the Acquirer), a wholly owned subsidiary of PAR Technology Corporation (PAR).
Overview
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TASK is a public company listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX). It has two divisions: TASK and Plexure. The TASK division is engaged in providing enterprise transaction management platform services. The Plexure division is engaged in providing technology solutions to global hospitality clients. TASK has only one class of shares (fully paid ordinary shares); in excess of 356,000,000 ordinary shares are quoted on the ASX. It also has granted or issued 3,535,318 options, 19,986,033 restricted share units and 2,923,187 deferred share rights under executive or employee performance plans. TASK has four directors, three of whom are independent non-executive directors (including the chairman). The other director is the chief executive officer, Mr Daniel Houden.
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PAR is incorporated in the State of Delaware, USA and is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. It is a global restaurant technology company and is engaged in providing omnichannel cloud-based software and hardware services to the restaurant and retail industries.
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TASK and PAR have entered into a scheme implementation agreement to implement the scheme. The full terms of that agreement were included in an ASX announcement by TASK on 11 March 2024. As permitted by that agreement, PAR has nominated the Acquirer as the bidder; the Acquirer is a company limited by shares registered under the Corporations Act. If the proposed scheme is approved by TASK shareholders, and all conditions precedent are satisfied, on the Record Date (the date four business days after the scheme becomes effective), TASK shareholders (excluding ineligible foreign shareholders) ill have their fully paid ordinary shares in TASK transferred to the Acquirer, and will receive in return either:
(a) $0.81 per TASK share; or
(b) if they so elect, the mixed consideration of cash and scrip, subject to a cap on the maximum amount of scrip consideration, being up to 50 per cent scrip consideration at a ratio of 0.015 PAR shares for each TASK share, with the balance payable as cash consideration of $0.81 per TASK share. (This is referred to in the scheme booklet as the “mix and match” election.)
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Ineligible foreign shareholders of TASK, as defined, will receive the cash consideration. TASK members who do not make a valid election will also receive the cash consideration.
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Upon the implementation of the scheme, the Acquirer will become the sole member of TASK. TASK will then apply for removal of its securities from the quotation on the official list of the ASX.
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As neither PAR nor the Acquirer is a party to the scheme itself, their obligations to the scheme participants as provided for under the scheme implementation agreement and the scheme are backed up by a deed poll executed by both PAR and the Acquirer in favour of scheme participants.
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The conditions precedent to the scheme include a “minimum elections” condition, namely that valid elections to receive scrip consideration have been received by TASK from TASK shareholders by the Election Date (5:00 pm on the date five business days before the scheme meeting, or such other time as TASK and PAR agree in writing), such that scrip consideration will comprise at least 18 per cent of the scheme consideration. The scheme booklet records in section 1.1(j) that TASK expects that this condition will be satisfied given the voting intention statements and election intention statements it has received as at 22 May 2024, from shareholders who together hold more than 39 per cent of all TASK shares.
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RSM Corporate Australia Pty Ltd, the independent expert appointed by the TASK Board to assess the scheme. The independent expert has:
valued the fully paid ordinary TASK shares, on a controlling basis, in the range of $0.59 to $0.67 per TASK share, utilising the capitalised future maintainable revenue approach and taking into account the dilutionary impact of the employee share scheme interests (being 24,851,021 out of a total 26,610,098 options, deferred share rights and restricted share units on issue, which service conditions have passed); and
valued the mixed consideration (on a 50/50 split) in the range of $0.89 to $0.91 per TASK share, assessing the fair value of a PAR share, on a non-controlling basis, immediately following implementation of the scheme.
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The independent expert has concluded that the scheme is fair and reasonable and in the best interests of all TASK fully paid shareholders; it is fair in that the value of the scheme consideration, whether cash or the mixed consideration, exceeds the range of fair value attributed by the independent expert to shares in TASK, and reasonable in that being fair, it is necessarily reasonable.
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The directors of TASK unanimously recommend that TASK shareholders vote in favour of the scheme at the proposed meeting, in the absence of a superior proposal, and subject to the independent expert continuing to conclude that the scheme is in the best interests of TASK’s shareholders. The directors make no recommendation in relation to the mix and match election.
Role of the Court at the first hearing
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The role of the Court at the first court hearing is supervisory. The Court is primarily concerned that certain substantive and procedural requirements have been met, including adequate disclosure. Whilst the commercial merit of the scheme is a matter for shareholders, the Court needs to be satisfied that (1) the scheme is of such a nature or cast in such terms that, if it receives statutory majority at the meeting, the Court will likely approve it on the hearing of an application that is unopposed, and (2) the explanatory statement fairly presents the scheme to shareholders so that they can be properly informed before the scheme meeting.
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As to substantive matters, I am satisfied that (a) TASK is a “Part 5.1 body”, (b) the scheme is an “arrangement” within the meaning of s 411 as it touches and concerns the rights or obligations of the company or its members (Re NRMA Ltd [2000] NSWSC 82; (2000) 33 ACSR 595 at [38] (Santow J); Re Foundation Healthcare Ltd [2002] FCA 742; (2002) 42 ACSR 252 at [39] (French J), relevantly, by the terms of the scheme (cl 8) the members appoint TASK as their attorney and agent to transfer their TASK shares to PAR in return for the scheme consideration, and to enforce the deed poll against PAR and the Acquirer, (c) the scheme is bona fide and properly proposed, and (d) the factual information in the scheme booklet, including the explanatory statement (required by s 412(1)(a) of the Corporations Act) has been the subject of a thorough verification and due diligence process. I am satisfied that the scheme booklet adequately explains the scheme to shareholders and provides them with the required information.
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As to procedural matters, it is proposed that the scheme meeting be conducted as a virtual meeting by means of an online platform. The arrangements for the calling and conduct of the scheme meeting, including the manner of despatch of the documents to TASK shareholders who have (i) elected to receive communications electronically, (ii) elected to receive hard copy communications by mail, and (iii) made no election as to how to receive communications, do not raise any novel issues and are satisfactory.
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Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has had at least 14 days’ notice of the hearing date of the present application and has had a reasonable opportunity to examine the proposed scheme and draft explanatory statement and make submissions to the Court: s 411(2) of the Corporations Act. In accordance with its usual practice, ASIC has indicated (Ex B) that it does not wish to be heard on the application at the first court hearing.
Particular aspects of the transaction
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Counsel for TASK has provided detailed written submissions, a copy of which will be retained on the court file. The proposed scheme contains a number of features which are common in change of control transactions effected through a transfer scheme. None of them are exceptional although I will briefly mention several matters.
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Ineligible foreign shareholders: although ineligible foreign shareholders (as defined) will have no right of election and will only be entitled to receive the cash consideration, it is well-established that they do not constitute a separate class by that reason alone: Re Hills Motorway Management Ltd [2002] NSWSC 897; (2002) 43 ACSR 101 at 104 (Barrett J).
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Potential classes: the alternative consideration options under the scheme, subject to the cap on the on the maximum amount of scrip consideration, are helpfully explained in section 3.12(b) of the scheme booklet, which provides a worked example of the application of the mixed consideration election. That some TASK shareholders may elect one form of consideration over another is not class creating. All existing rights of TASK shareholders qua shareholder are the same; the rights afforded to them under the scheme are the same (except for ineligible foreign shareholders); and there is no impediment, let alone impossibility, to all shareholders consulting together with a view to their common interest: Re Hills Motorway at 104; Re Cirrus Networks Ltd [2023] NSWSC 1298 at [17].
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Performance rights and options: Three types of interests have been granted or issued to employees of TASK under several employee performance plans: (i) options, (ii) deferred share rights, and (iii) restricted share units. The terms of these interests entitle the holder to have TASK shares issued to them subject to satisfaction of relevant vesting and exercise conditions. The scheme implementation agreement (cl 4.5) requires TASK to put in place arrangements to deal with these equity incentives in connection with the scheme, either by (a) causing them to vest and following vesting to transfer or issue the relevant number of TASK shares to the holder of such interests in sufficient time to allow them to participate in the scheme, or (b) making cash equivalent payments to the holders of such interests. The scheme booklet summarises in section 10.3(b) that the TASK Board has resolved, subject to:
obtaining a waiver of ASX Listing Rule 6.23.4 to permit amendments to the Employee Share Option Scheme – Rules (ESOS Rules) that govern the options, the Deferred Share Rights Rules that govern the deferred share rights and the 2022 Restricted Share Units Rules and 2023 Restricted Share Units Rules that govern the restricted share rights; and
the scheme becoming effective,
to accelerate the exercise of all options and the vesting and exercise of all deferred share rights and restricted share units, such that the holders of these interests will receive TASK shares prior to the record date, and can participate in the scheme in respect of the TASK shares issued to them on exercise of the options or early vesting and exercise of the deferred share rights and restricted share units, as the case may be.
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Senior counsel for TASK informed the Court that only one holder of the performance rights and options also holds TASK shares. The additional benefit to be received by one TASK shareholder (Mr Russell Bennett), who also holds restricted share units, is not class creating. That the scheme may be more financially advantageous for him than for the shareholders does not mean that he cannot consult with shareholders who are in a different position: Re Cashcard Australia Limited [2004] FCA 223; (2004) 48 ACSR 738; Re Foster’s Group Limited [2011] VSC 547 at [42]. The same conclusion in relation to performance rights was reached by O’Callaghan J in Re Kidman Resources Ltd [2019] FCA 1226; (2019) 375 ALR 760 at [15], referring to observations of Robson J in Re Skilled Group Ltd [2015] VSC 789; (2015) 113 ACSR 525 at [82], which were cited with approval by Beach J in Re Healthscope Ltd [2019] FCA 542; (2019) 139 ACSR 608 at [167].
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Additional restricted share units: The scheme booklet discloses in section 10.3(c) that the TASK Board has resolved, subject to shareholder approval (at an extraordinary general meeting to be held immediately after the scheme meeting), that additional restricted share units will be issued to two senior executives, namely (i) 666,667 restricted share units to Daniel Houden, and (ii) 249,615 restricted share units to Dean Houden, the general manager of the TASK division. Mr Glenn, the chief group financial officer for TASK has given affidavit evidence that these awards are the long-term incentive component of the remuneration of Daniel Houden and Dean Houden respectively. He describes these awards as retrospective awards based on their performance against key performance indicators during the financial year 2024.
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The additional restricted share units to be issued to Daniel Houden and Dean Houden will be treated in the same way as existing restricted share units if the scheme becomes effective. That is, the additional 916,282 restricted share units will convert into 916,283 TASK shares upon accelerated vesting and exercise prior to the record date. There is no potential class issue, as neither Daniel Houden or Dean Houden is a shareholder of TASK and they do not have a vote at the scheme meeting.
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Director’s recommendation: a separate issue arises about Daniel Houden, one of the directors of TASK, making a voting recommendation with respect to the scheme in circumstances where he is the holder of restricted share units and subject to shareholder approval, will hold additional restricted share units to be issued to him prior to the record date. Whether a director who receives an additional financial benefit should make a recommendation has been the subject of some conflicting authority. The preponderance of first instance authority is that ordinarily a director’s interest in the outcome does not prevent him or her from making a voting recommendation to shareholders with appropriate disclosure of the nature of that interest to allow shareholders to determine what weight they give to that recommendation in the circumstances: see, for example, Re Villa World Ltd [2019] NSWSC 1207; (2019) 139 ACSR 550 at [38]-[40] (Black J); Re DWS Ltd [2020] FCA 1590; (2020) 148 ACSR 616 at [41]-[49] (Beach J), including the cases referred to at [42].
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Here, Daniel Houden’s interest as holder of existing and proposed additional restricted share units is sufficiently disclosed in the scheme booklet to be sent to shareholders, including (i) a note from him that he considered a recommendation appropriate given his role in the management and operations of TASK, (ii) a note from the other directors (excluding him) they thought his disclosure was appropriate, and (ii) wherever the directors’ recommendation is mentioned, a note stating that the aggregate implied value of Daniel Houden’s restricted share units and proposed additional restricted share units to be issued (on conversion to TASK shares and the scheme becoming effective, assuming a mixed consideration election, with a 50/50 split) is AUD$1.2 million. I do not consider that Daniel Houden’s voting recommendation is a reason not to convene the scheme meeting.
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Deal protection provisions: the scheme implementation agreement contains exclusivity provisions, in the form of “no shop”, “no talk” and “no due diligence” restrictions (cls 9.2, 9.3 and 9.4), a “notification of approach” obligation (cl 9.7), and a “matching right” (cl 9.8) in favour of PAR. The general approach to exclusivity provisions is well established; they will not preclude the making of orders convening a meeting of members provided: (a) they are for no more than a reasonable period which is capable of precise ascertainment, (b) they are subject to an overriding obligation not to breach director’s fiduciary duties or be otherwise unlawful, and (c) adequate prominence is given to them in the explanatory statement to be sent to shareholders: Re Arthur Yates & Co Ltd [2001] NSWSC 40; (2021) 36 ACSR 758 at [9] (Santow J).
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Here, the exclusivity period is capable of precise ascertainment. The longest period during which the exclusivity provisions could be anticipated to apply is some 5 months which, I am satisfied, is a period necessary to bring the current proposal to its conclusion in the ordinary course. Such a period is also within the range of periods that Courts have accepted as reasonable: Re Crown Resorts Limited [2022] FCA 367 at [38] (O’Bryan J). Adequate prominence is given to the exclusivity provisions in the scheme booklet to be sent to shareholders in section 10.11(c).
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Insofar as the exclusivity provisions are directed to dealing with an unsolicited alternative merger proposal, the “no talk” and “no due diligence” restrictions and the “matching right” are all subject to TASK’s Board’s fiduciary and statutory obligations. Exclusivity provisions broadly in the form of these provisions are now commonplace in schemes of arrangement and are not inconsistent with the Takeover Panel: Guidance Note 7 – Lock-up devices (Guidance Note 7). The “no shop” restriction is not subject to a fiduciary carve-out; however, this is acceptable given that the transaction has been announced, and is consistent with the Panel’s Guidance Note 7 and existing authorities such as: Re Macquarie Private Capital A Pty Ltd [2008] NSWSC 323 at [19]; Re Hostworks Group Ltd [2008] FCA 64 at [34].
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Break fee: allied to the exclusivity provisions, a break fee of $1.3 million is payable by TASK to PAR under certain circumstances, as is a reverse break fee of $1.3 million payable by PAR to TASK under other circumstances. The evidence of Mr Day is that the reverse break fee was calculated in a commercial negotiation to mirror the break fee. Both break fees are prominently disclosed in section 1(d) of the scheme booklet in section 1(d).
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The amount of the break fee payable by TASK to PAR is approximately 1 per cent of the equity value of TASK of $142.5 million prior to the announcement of the proposed scheme on 11 March 2024, based on the closing price on 8 March 2024 and the total issued share capital at that time. This level of break fee is consistent with that set out in the Panel’s Guidance Note 7 at [48]. The break fee is not payable by TASK merely because shareholders vote down the scheme. It is payable where a competing proposal is announced by a third party prior to 31 August 2024 (or such other date as is agreed by PAR and TASK in writing), and within 12 months of the end date, a competing transaction completes. I do not consider the amount of the break fee is likely to affect how the TASK shareholders will vote let alone coerce them.
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Performance risk: the scheme booklet states in section 5.7 that PAR expects that it will be able to satisfy its obligation to fund the cash component of the scheme consideration by a new credit facility between PAR and Blue Owl Capital Corporation, together with PAR’s cash resources (which as of 31 December 2023 are referred to in section 5.10(b) of the scheme booklet). This section of the scheme booklet has been verified by PAR. An affidavit of Ms Cathy King, chief legal counsel and corporate secretary of PAR, provides an update of PAR’s increase in cash resources since December 2023, by reference to PAR’s 31 March 2024 filing with the US Securities Exchange Commission (par 28). The “performance risk” for TASK shareholders is addressed here by the combination of:
the requirement that the cash component of the aggregate scheme consideration of $0.81 per share is paid by PAR into a trust account operated by TASK as trustee for scheme participants, by no later than the business day before they are divested of their TASK shares, being the implementation date: cl 6.6(a), scheme;
the requirement that the scrip component of the scheme consideration being issued by PAR to scheme shareholders before 12:00 pm (or such later time as PAR and TASK may agree in writing) on the implementation date, again before they are divested of their TASK shares: cl 6.7(a), scheme; and
the deed poll executed by PAR and the Acquirer in favour of scheme participants.
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Proposed shareholder communications: the content of TASK’s proposed communications with shareholders, additional to the scheme booklet, has been put before the Court. These communications comprise the script for a shareholder information line to answer shareholders’ queries, and proposed ASX announcements by TASK concerning the first and second court hearings. I have reviewed that script and the proposed ASX announcements and indicate that I have no difficulty with them.
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US Securities Act of 1933: counsel for TASK informed the Court that if the scheme obtains the required statutory majority and is approved by the Court, PAR proposes to rely on the Court’s approval for the purpose of qualifying for exemption from the registration requirements of the US Securities Act of 1933, s 3(a)(10) in connection with the implementation and provision of the scrip consideration under the scheme to scheme participants who are US shareholders. Disclosure of this intention is given in section 10.9 of the scheme booklet. Otherwise, this is an issue for the second court hearing: Re Permanent Trustee Co Ltd [2002] NSWSC 1177; (2002) 43 ACSR 601 at [11]-[20].
Form of orders
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TASK seeks dispensation under Supreme Court (Corporations) Rules, r 1.3 with compliance with the following Supreme Court (Corporations) Rules: first, r 2.4(1) concerning the content of the affidavit in support of the application. This dispensation is consistent with par [26(b)] of the Court’s Corporations List Practice Note: SC-Eq 4; and, second, r 3.4 relating to publishing a notice of hearing in a daily newspaper and that, in lieu, an announcement with respect to the date of the second court hearing be published by way of the ASX announcement platform. This dispensation is consistent with par [26(f)] of the Court’s Corporations List Practice Note SC-Eq 4. It is appropriate to make these orders.
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Overall, the proposed scheme is a relatively straightforward proposal, which the members of TASK should have the opportunity of considering.
Orders
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For the above reasons, at the conclusion of the hearing on 28 May 2024, I made orders in the short minutes of order which I initialled and dated and placed in the Court file. Those orders have subsequently been recorded in the Court’s computerised court record system, in accordance with Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), r 36.11(2).
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Amendments
28 May 2024 - [8] - "18.95" replaced with "39"
[30], line 4 - delete "as"
Decision last updated: 28 May 2024
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