Introduction
Few Latin phrases are remembered better by law graduates than caveat emptor,
meaning “buyer beware”. It is the principle that the buyer alone is responsible for
checking the quality and suitability of goods before a purchase is made. Sophisticated
M&A lawyers have long since mitigated this buyer risk through expansive due diligence
exercises and tight contractual controls. In particular, M&A deals feature often heavily
negotiated representations and warranties, designed to provide a purchaser with a
cause of action against the seller in case of skeletons in the closet. Post-acquisition price
adjustment mechanisms are another means for the parties to revisit the equilibrium of
the transaction after the deal has closed. This article examines the growth of arbitration
as a forum for resolving disputes that arise from these contractual mitigants of risk,
before considering the impact of legal technology in this area.
Getting what you pay for and paying for what you get
Representations and warranties are
simply statements contained in the
contractual transaction documents
and made by the seller to promise that
certain facts are true, usually pertaining
to the target business and in particular
its financial and operational health. A
common example is that: “The company
is not involved in any litigation”. Where
after closing, the statement turns out
to be false, the buyer has a contractual
cause of action, usually to recover
monetary damages.
As corporate lawyers have sought to
minimize buyer risk, so representations
and warranties have become increasingly
expansive, designed to provide belt and
braces protection to a buyer, and plug
gaps (known and unknown) in the
buyer’s due diligence exercise.
Lawyers on the other side look to
protect the seller by including within
the sale and purchase agreements terms
designed to exclude, reduce or carefully
delimit the seller’s liability, including for
example through the use of disclaimers
or exclusions, contractual limitation
periods and de minimis and de maximis
thresholds for claims.
Price adjustment mechanisms are
another important means for the buyer
to ensure that it only pays for what it
gets and that the seller gets fair value
for what it sells. Earn-out provisions,
for example, subject the purchase price
to adjustment post-closing based on
some future metric, normally turnover
or profit performance.
Risk mitigation means disputes
Of course disputes can arise at all
stages of an M&A transaction, including
before the deal is signed and between
signing and closing. At the pre-signing
stage, these disputes commonly
relate to alleged breaches of whatever
agreements have been put in place at the
nascent stage of the deal: memoranda
of understanding, letters of intent and
confidentiality agreements, for example.
In between signing and closing, it is
common for disputes to arise over the
non-fulfilment of conditions precedent
or other contingent obligations set out in
the agreement, requiring procurement of
certain outcomes, for example, relevant
authority approvals for the deal or putting
in place appropriate escrow arrangements.
But post-closing disputes can often be
the most difficult. Although designed to
reduce and mitigate risk, representations
and warranties and price adjustment
mechanisms are themselves a common
source of disputes, given that in essence
they each provide a means for one party
to challenge the quantum of the
transaction consideration after the event.
This can result for the other party in a
significant shift away from the deal that
it thought it had done, which is a recipe
for a bitter fight.
Arbitration of M&A disputes
Arbitration has become a prominent
forum for the resolution of corporate
disputes, including those arising from
M&A deals. The LCIA’s 2018 Annual
Casework Report records that 2018 saw
a significant increase in the number of
shareholder, share purchase and joint
venture agreements being referred to LCIA
arbitration. The proportion of total LCIA
cases involving disputes arising from such
agreements was 21 per cent in 2018, up
from 15 per cent in 2017. By contrast over
the same period there was a 3 per cent
fall in the number disputes involving
loan and other debt facility agreements.
One particular advantage of LCIA
arbitration in the context of an M&A
dispute is that the LCIA Rules (unlike
some other forms of arbitration) contain
an express confidentiality obligation. As
a general rule, transaction parties will
often prefer to address disputes over the
deal in private. Particularly, for example,
disputes in relation to purchase price
arising potentially many months after
the deal has become public knowledge
or the target has been merged into the
purchasing entity.
Another attraction of arbitration is the
parties’ ability to choose their arbitrator,
thus tailoring the expertise of the
tribunal to suit the particular facts at
issue. Post-closing disputes in particular
often centre on factual, accounting or
technical issues (establishing whether
the warranty was true or whether the
price should be adjusted) rather than
purely legal issues.
For the same reason, it is also common
in an M&A context for the parties to
include provision in their transaction
documentation for expert determination,
either as a preliminary or parallel step to
pursuing claims in arbitration. Although
decisions of an expert determiner
might be contractually binding, they
are not enforceable like a judgment or
arbitration award, and so must be the
subject of a separate further action in
court or arbitration if not voluntarily
complied with.
Evolution of arbitration
There is sometimes a sense that arbitration
might have risked becoming a bit of a
victim of its own success in resolving
commercial disputes. Having begun life as
a shorter, cheaper, alternative process for
resolving disputes privately on a bi-partisan
basis, its huge growth to become a
predominant forum for cross-border
commercial cases has meant that it has
had to evolve to meet the needs of more
and more complex circumstances.
Big-ticket arbitrations are now likely to
involve at least the same time, costs and
complexities as English litigation.
Recent years have seen significant efforts
by the leading arbitral institutions
to ensure that arbitration remains a
flexible and effective forum and to meet
other challenges in relation to complex
corporate disputes.
In particular, M&A deals often involve
not a single bi-partisan agreement, but a
suite of transaction documents between
multiple parties. This might include the
buyer, seller and the target company but
also other shareholders, any guarantors
and even any key suppliers, subsidiaries
or other stakeholders. As most arbitral
rules are written on a bi-partisan basis
(i.e. claimant versus respondent),
arbitration does not at first sight readily
lend itself to disputes arising from such
multi-party, multi-contract disputes,
particularly where each transaction
document might have its own arbitration
agreement. Clearly such an arrangement
runs the risk of multiple parallel
proceedings relating to the same set
of facts.
Many institutions, including the ICC,
have therefore added clear provisions
on consolidation and joinder into their
procedural rules and by incorporating such rules into their arbitration agreement,
parties will normally have consented in
advance to the possibility of the
consolidation of proceedings and the
joinder of third parties in disputes arising
under compatible arbitration agreements.
What is a compatible arbitration
agreement and whether there is clear
consent from all parties for consolidation
or joinder is not always straightforward
of course. Although the institutional
rules provide a clear procedure for
consolidating proceedings or adding
parties, arbitration is still a consensual
process and the clear consent of all of
the parties to the proceedings will need
to be established following normal
contractual principles. This means that
arbitration clauses containing
consolidation or joinder provisions are
notoriously difficult to draft, generally
requiring either something entirely
bespoke and very specific, or else, at the
complete opposite end of the spectrum,
something very light touch.
Addressing time and cost concerns,
many institutions have introduced or
clarified rules designed to provide for
expedited arbitration, with simplified
procedures and restrictive time limits.
The ICC expedited procedure rules for example do away with the Terms
of Reference stage and foresee that a
tribunal will generally determine the
case on paper, on the basis of limited
documents and pleadings, and without a
final evidentiary hearing.
These elements can be tailored of course,
and there remains in Article 22 of the ICC
Rules both the duty on the tribunal to
manage the case effectively and also the
discretion over how the proceedings are
carried out to discharge that duty. This
is a duty that extends to the parties to
ensure that the proceedings are carried
out expeditiously but proportionately.
As well as saving time in an appropriate
case, the expedited procedure is
cheaper. The ICC online costs calculator
suggests anticipated arbitration costs are
around 20 per cent lower following the
expedited procedure versus the standard
ICC procedure.
Finally, M&A disputes may require
interim measures on an urgent basis, in
particular in those cases arising between
signing and closing, for example to
compel or prevent actions being taken by
either party that might affect the value of
the target. Although arbitral rules have
long since recognized the right of parties
to go to a competent local court to obtain
such relief on an urgent interim basis
(see for example Article 28(2) of the ICC
Rules), the introduction of emergency
arbitrator provisions to provide interim relief from a promptly appointed sole
arbitrator (who is thereafter prevented
from acting in the main dispute on the
merits), has reinforced the ability of
parties to obtain such urgent relief
within the agreed disputes forum, that
is to say within the arbitration.
The decision of the English High Court
in Gerald Metals SA v Timis Trust [2016]
EWHC 2327 (Ch) further underlines the
shift. The effect of the decision in that
case was that by opting the availability
of emergency arbitrator relief into the
scope of their arbitration agreement (by
incorporating by reference institutional
rules containing emergency arbitrator
provisions), parties are likely to have
limited the jurisdiction of the English
court to grant that interim relief.
These trends underline that arbitration
is a preferred forum for resolving
corporate disputes.
Future trends
Like many areas of legal practice,
technology is changing the way that
parties approach M&A deals and disputes.
For example, Norton Rose Fulbright has
developed a number of legal processes
that automate and add significant
efficiencies to the management of
satisfying conditions precedent, a key
stage of completing any M&A deal. As
such processes become more and more
standardized in order to be capable of
being better and better managed by
computers, so the data relating to such
matters becomes more consistent.
Consistent data sets and machine
learning then allow for more exciting
uses of artificial intelligence, including
useful and error-free data analysis and,
with that, outcomes prediction.
Many M&A disputes turn on accountancy
data and the purchase price ultimately
paid (and any adjustment to it) is often
linked to the company’s accounts or other
financial reporting, carefully compared
to contractual reference dates. Presently
this typically requires an accountancy or
valuation expert witness to undertake a
forensic exercise, reviewing relevant
data and documents, before filtering and
analyzing the information revealed in
order to opine on the outcome of those
data and documents in a written report
upon which the expert will be crossexamined
in front of a tribunal.
Numerous legal technology tools are
already available and utilized by the
best legal and accountancy teams to
assist and streamline this traditional
approach – including e-disclosure tools
that utilize predictive coding to sort data
sets and data visualization and analytics
tools that sort and present such data to
the tribunal in the most comprehensible
and persuasive way. This is the advocacy
of the now, rather than the advocacy of
the future.
However, as the objectivization of data
continues (and particularly as legal
technology solutions are increasingly
used at the front end of a transaction,
as in the case of conditions precedent
automation), we will increasingly see
innovative process-led solutions being
applied not merely as bolt-on tools that
augment a traditional approach to the
resolution of disputes arising from such
transactions, but as genuine alternatives
to those traditional approaches. A
dispute over whether a condition
precedent has been complied with,
a representation was true, or a price
adjustment is required will, for example,
become increasingly the product of a
computer’s reading of the consistent and
objective data at the computer’s disposal
in relation to those promises, and less
and less about human interpretations of
that data.
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