{"id":8273,"date":"2023-09-18T09:36:12","date_gmt":"2023-09-18T14:36:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.campbellslegal.com\/?p=8273"},"modified":"2023-10-04T10:10:49","modified_gmt":"2023-10-04T15:10:49","slug":"recent-developments-in-merger-appraisal-litigation-in-the-cayman-islands","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.campbellslegal.com\/articles\/recent-developments-in-merger-appraisal-litigation-in-the-cayman-islands-8273\/","title":{"rendered":"Recent Developments in Merger Appraisal Litigation in the Cayman Islands"},"content":{"rendered":"

Merger appraisal disputes are now a common feature of the litigation landscape in the Cayman Islands.<\/p>\n

Upon a merger or consolidation of a Cayman company, Section 238 of the Companies Act provides a statutory mechanism for dissenting shareholders to seek a determination from the Grand Court as to the fair value of their shares.<\/p>\n

The Section 238 mechanism was first introduced in 2009. Since the first Section 238 case reached trial in 2015, there has been a succession of decisions in which the Grand Court considered the mechanism and developed its jurisprudence in this fast-growing area. In particular, there has been an increasing number of take-private transactions in which Cayman companies operating in the People\u2019s Republic of China have delisted from US stock exchanges via a merger or consolidation. Some of these transactions have resulted in Section 238 proceedings, as dissenting shareholders have challenged the agreed merger price and sought a determination as to the fair value of their shares.<\/p>\n

This trend has continued into 2023.<\/p>\n

A common battlefield in Section 238 cases relates to the extent of the documentary and other evidence to be given by the company, which is relevant to the assessment of fair value. Three notable decisions from the first half of 2023 address and expand the evidential burden on companies in this regard.<\/p>\n

In the Matter of 58.com \u2013 Discovery and Privilege in Section 238 Proceedings<\/h3>\n

In\u00a058.com<\/em>, the Grand Court considered the extent to which the company could assert legal professional privilege as against dissenting shareholders, the effect of which would allow the company to avoid disclosing privileged material in the litigation.<\/p>\n

In considering this issue, Kawaley J applied the seminal English case Woodhouse v Woodhouse [1914] TLR 559 (Woodhouse<\/em>), which held that privilege cannot be asserted over a communication in circumstances where the parties to a relationship have a joint interest in the subject matter of that communication at the time it came into existence. Accordingly, where a shareholder can establish a joint interest with the company in legal advice obtained by it, the relevant advice is not privileged as between company and shareholder.<\/p>\n

Kawaley J held the following.<\/p>\n

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