|
One area of law on which we are being asked to advise
with increasing regularity is that relating to the circumstances
in which companies lawfully can pay dividends (or "make
distributions" if one is using the technically
correct parlance).
The circumstances in which UK companies can make distributions
are well established and enshrined in Part VIII of the
Companies Act 1985 (although bear in mind that the common
law rules relating to distributions also apply).
To re-cap, a company can only make a distribution out
of profits available for the purpose, i.e. accumulated,
realised profits (not previously distributed or capitalised)
less its accumulated, realised losses (not previously
written off in a reduction or reorganisation). Profits
and losses means revenue and capital profits and losses.
A company decides if it has profits available for distribution
by reference to its "relevant accounts". These
are normally its last annual accounts. If these do not
show enough distributable profits the company can prepare
interim accounts, which must enable a reasonable judgment
to be made inter alia about the company's profits position.
A problem we have encountered recently relates to the
situation where a company has sufficient distributable
reserves at the time it actually makes a distribution
but the distribution cannot be justified by reference
to its last audited accounts and no interim accounts
have been prepared by the company. In this case, the
part of the distribution that is not supported by the
last audited accounts would be rendered unlawful, ultra
vires and therefore incapable of shareholder ratification.
A shareholder who received the dividend would also be
liable to repay the unlawful part of the dividend to
the company in certain circumstances.
Recent case law (Bairstow v Queens Moat Houses) is
clear that this situation would not be viewed by the
courts as constituting a mere procedural irregularity
that can be ratified by shareholder resolution (although
earlier cases suggested that it might). Companies finding
themselves in this position must, therefore, take the
matter very seriously.
There is, however, a solution. It is open to the company
to prepare new interim accounts (as at the date the
dividend was originally paid) showing the distributable
reserves and the dividend (that was paid unlawfully)
being recoverable as a debt from the shareholder. The
company would then make a declaration of a new dividend
of the same amount, expressed to be satisfied by the
release of the shareholder from its obligation to repay
the unlawful dividend to the company.
This may seem a rather long-winded way of regularising
what one might justifiably consider to be an internal
corporate housekeeping error, but it does bring home
the mandatory, non-excludable nature of the rules relating
to distributions set out in Part VIII of the Companies
Act.
If you wish to find out more about any of these
issues, please contact Glafkos
Tombolis on 020 7203 5298 or click
here to email him.
|