Case-Name: | BCE Inc v 1976 Debentureholders |
Heard-Date: | 2008-06-17 |
Decided-Date: | 2008-06-20 |
Citations: | 2008 SCC 69; [2008] 3 SCR 560; 301 DLR (4th) 80; 52 BLR (4th) 1; 71 CPR (4th) 303 |
Docket: | 32647 |
History: | APPEALS and CROSS‑APPEALS from judgments of the Quebec Court of Appeal (Robert C.J.Q. and Otis, Nuss, Pelletier and Dalphond JJ.A.), 2008 QCCA 934 (CanLII), setting aside decisions by Silcoff J., 2008 QCCS 907 (CanLII) |
Ruling: | Appeals allowed and cross‑appeals dismissed. |
Ratio: | Under the CBCA, the s. 241 oppression action and the s. 192 requirement for court approval of a change to the corporate structure are different types of proceedings, engaging different inquiries. |
Chief-Justice: | McLachlin C.J. |
Puisne-Justices: | Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Abella and Charron JJ. |
Percuriam: | yes |
Notparticipating: | Bastarache J. |
Lawsapplied: | Canada Business Corporations Act |
BCE Inc v 1976 Debentureholders, 2008 SCC 69 (CanLII), [2008] 3 SCR 560 is a leading decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on the nature of the duties of corporate directors to act in the best interests of the corporation, "viewed as a good corporate citizen". This case introduced the principle of fair treatment as an organizing principle in Canadian corporate law.
BCE Inc. was the subject of multiple offers involving a leveraged buyout, for which an auction process was held and offers were submitted by three groups. All three offers contemplated the addition of a substantial amount of new debt for which Bell Canada, a whollyowned subsidiary of BCE, would be liable. One of the offers, which involved a consortium of three investors, was determined by BCE's directors to be in the best interests of BCE and BCE's shareholders. That was to be implemented by a plan of arrangement under s. 192 of the Canada Business Corporations Act,[1] which was approved by 97.93% of BCE's shareholders but opposed by a group of financial and other institutions that held debentures issued by Bell Canada and sought relief under the oppression remedy under s. 241 of the CBCA.[2] They also alleged that the arrangement was not "fair and reasonable" and opposed s. 192 approval by the court. Their main complaint was that, upon the completion of the arrangement, the short‑term trading value of the debentures would decline by an average of 20 percent and could lose investment grade status.
Silcoff J. of the Superior Court of Quebec approved the arrangement as fair and dismissed the claim for oppression.
On appeal, the Quebec Court of Appeal held:
BCE and Bell Canada appealed the overturning of the trial judge's approval of the plan of arrangement, and the debentureholders cross‑appealed the dismissal of the claims for oppression.
In a unanimous decision, the SCC ruled that the appeals should be allowed and the cross‑appeals dismissed. In summary, it held that the s. 241 oppression action and the s. 192 requirement for court approval of a change to the corporate structure are different types of proceedings, engaging different inquiries. The Court of Appeal's decision rested on an approach that erroneously combined the substance of the s. 241 oppression remedy with the onus of the s. 192 arrangement approval process, resulting in a conclusion that could not have been sustained under either provision, read on its own terms.
The SCC reviewed the various remedies available to shareholders that have developed under the common law, and that have subsequently been expanded upon in the CBCA:[3]
In the present case, only ss. 192 and 241 were being raised.
In assessing a claim of oppression, a court must answer two questions:[5]
Where conflicting interests arise, it falls to the directors of the corporation to resolve them in accordance with their fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of the corporation, "viewed as a good corporate citizen".[6]
To approve a plan of arrangement as fair and reasonable, courts must be satisfied that
(a) the arrangement has a valid business purpose, and
(b) the objections of those whose legal rights are being arranged are being resolved in a fair and balanced way.[8]
Courts on a s. 192 application should refrain from substituting their views of the "best" arrangement, but should not surrender their duty to scrutinize the arrangement. Under s. 192, only security holders whose legal rights stand to be affected by the proposal are envisioned. It is a fact that the corporation is permitted to alter individual rights that places the matter beyond the power of the directors and creates the need for shareholder and court approval. However, in some circumstances, interests that are not strictly legal could be considered. The fact that a group whose legal rights are left intact faces a reduction in the trading value of its securities generally does not, without more, constitute a circumstance where non‑legal interests should be considered on a s. 192 application.[9]
In this case, the debentureholders did not constitute an affected class under s. 192, and the trial judge was correct in concluding that they should not be permitted to veto almost 98 percent of the shareholders simply because the trading value of their securities would be affected. It was clear to the judge that the continuance of the corporation required acceptance of an arrangement that would entail increased debt and debt guarantees by Bell Canada. No superior arrangement had been put forward and BCE had been assisted throughout by expert legal and financial advisors. Recognizing that there is no such thing as a perfect arrangement, the trial judge correctly concluded that the arrangement had been shown to be fair and reasonable.[10]
The judgment expanded on the SCC's previous ruling in Peoples Department Stores Inc. (Trustee of) v. Wise concerning the latitude of discretion accorded to corporate directors, providing they follow certain procedural steps. There has been discussion as to whether these two judgments provide a coherent or complete summary of the law in that area.[11] [12]
There has also been extensive debate about the Court's obiter comment on the duties of directors:[13]
In addition, BCE Inc. effectively mandates the use of fairness hearings by courts in consideration of plans of arrangements, as was notably practiced during the litigation that took place on the 2010 share buyout by Magna International.[14]
Canadian corporate law contains an organizing principle of fair treatment within the Supreme Court's notion that directors are to act in the business interests of the corporation, "viewed as a good corporate citizen".[6] A connection exists between corporate law's principle of fair treatment and contract law's principle of good faith established in Bhasin v. Hrynew – the Court's concern for standards of conduct that are both ethical and commercially reasonable. The much higher fiduciary duty has strong conceptual differences from the principle of good faith, yet shares this common underlying policy governing corporate and commercial relationships.
Where conflicting interests arise, it falls to the directors of the corporation to resolve them in accordance with their fiduciary duty.[6] This is defined as a "tripartite fiduciary duty", composed of:
This tripartite structure encapsulates the duty of directors to act in the "best interests of the corporation, viewed as a good corporate citizen".[15] Following BCE, the Court of Appeal of British Columbia noted that "breach of fiduciary duty ... 'may assist in characterizing particular conduct as tending as well to be 'oppressive', 'unfair', or 'prejudicial'".[16] More recently, scholarly literature has clarified the connection between the oppression remedy and the fiduciary duty: