Lexpert Magazine

Jul/Aug 2016

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JULY/AUGUST 2016 17 Copper & Gold Corp., a private company with mining interests in Turkey. Once negotiations began, an AER director dis- closed that he was a shareholder in Black Sea and its CFO. AER's board responded by striking a committee of non-interested directors to consider the transaction. In October 2015, AER signed a letter of intent to acquire Black Sea. e deal con- templated a reconstitution of AER's board to consist of two directors from the exist- ing AER and two from Black Sea. Most of the consideration for the acquisition would come in the form of AER shares, thereby diluting the stake of existing shareholders. Jaguar objected to the transaction and initiated oppression proceedings under the BC Business Corporations Act for the failure of AER's directors to disclose their interest as represented by the new posi- tions they would assume. Jaguar also main- tained that the transaction was essentially a reverse takeover that prejudiced its inter- ests, and asked the court to restrain the deal's closing unless approved by a prior special resolution of AER's shareholders. e motions judge sided with Jaguar, but AER appealed and the British Colum- bia Court of Appeal overturned the decision. As the court saw it, the fact that AER's directors would stay on did not make their interest disclosable, par- ticularly since the proposed remuneration High Bar for Minority Voters Perceived conflict not enough for minority shareholders to demand statutory protection BY JULIUS MELNITZER was commercially reasonable. "e court made a contextual analysis," Good says. "If it had appeared from the terms of the agree- ment that the benefits were outlandish or not in keeping with existing benefits or with the nature of the company's busi- ness, the court might have interfered." Andrews believes that the decision re- assesses the balance between minority rights and a board's rights to govern a company the way it sees fit. "It's a pragmatic decision that says mi- nority shareholder need to have a very sub- stantial case that meets a high threshold if they want to get the protection of statutory provisions," he says. "ey can't walk in armed only with innuendo and suspicion and lay waste to what the board is doing." Other appellate courts will take heed, Andrews says: "Although the decision is to some degree based on BC statutes, there is quite good cross-fertilization between Ca- nadian appellate courts, especially between Ontario and British Columbia. Jaguar is consistent with Ontario law and will cer- tainly be picked up in Ontario and maybe in other jurisdictions." Ironically, however, Jaguar may invite more litigation on the subject of directors who stay on aer an acquisition. "e ar- gument that the AER directors were in conflict was surprising to some extent, because what they did is not at all uncom- mon and there are already general rules in existence to prevent breaches of fiduciary duty," Good says. "But Jaguar could result in more scrutiny from the simple fact of directors staying on, which could become a more common avenue from which transac- tions can be challenged." THE RECENT decision from the BC Court of Appeal in Jaguar Financial v. Alternative Earth Resources has upped the ante for litigants attacking the conduct of boards during takeover proceedings. "e case is an authoritative and detailed reminder that minority shareholders seek- ing the protection of statutory provisions must meet significant requirements so as to preserve a pragmatic balance between their rights and respect for the democratic rights of boards elected by a majority of share- holders to run the affairs of a company," says Mark Andrews of Fasken Martineau Dumoulin LLP in Vancouver. Jaguar also directly addresses the issue of conflicts when directors of a target com- pany are poised to take on positions with the acquirer following a combination. "e case clarifies that the intention of taking on a position with an acquirer is not inherently fatal to being involved with the transaction on behalf of the target," says Mathew Good of Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP in Van- couver. "However, if an individual's prima- ry motivating purpose is to accrue benefits from a position with the target, then that is cause for intervention by the courts." e ruling arose in the context of a dis- pute over the future of TSX-V listed Alter- nate Earth Resources Inc. Jaguar Financial Corp., an investment bank, held almost 20 per cent of AER's shares and was the company's largest shareholder. In 2014, the company sold its assets, leaving it with cash but no operations. AER identified a potential acquisition in the purchase of the shares of Black Sea MARK ANDREWS > FASKEN MARTINEAU DUMOULIN LLP MATTHEW GOOD > BLAKE, CASSELS & GRAYDON LLP ON THE CASE "The intention of taking on a position with an acquirer is not inherently fatal to being involved on behalf of the target. However, if an individual's primary motivation is to benefit from a position with the target, then that is cause for intervention." > MATTHEW GOOD, BLAKE, CASSELS & GRAYDON LLP

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