Senior Reporter
derek.achong@guardian.co.tt
Contracting companies and service providers owed hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid fees from state-owned project management company Education Facilities Company Limited (EFCL), have scored a major legal victory in their bid to recoup their outstanding debts.
Delivering a decision yesterday, High Court Judge Carol Gobin dismissed a petition from the company’s board to wind up the company.
Had the petition been granted, a court-appointed liquidator would have been mandated with selling the company’s minimal assets to repay its creditors.
Considering that when the petition was filed last year, EFCL’s assets consisted of $4,508 in its account at RBC Royal Bank and $46,000 in office furniture it would have meant that the contractors could have only hoped to have recovered a minuscule fraction of what they are in fact owed.
Provided that EFCL does not successfully appeal Justice Gobin’s decision, it now means that the companies can now bring litigation against members of EFCL’s board, who served between 2015 to present, the Office of the Attorney General, the Minister of Education, or the Minister of Finance to recover their debts.
In deciding on the petition, Justice Gobin had to consider whether Section 355 of the Companies Act, which prescribes the procedure for court-ordered liquidation, could apply to State-owned special-purpose companies such as EFCL.
She noted that it could not as under the Constitution and legislation, the Minister of Finance as the company’s corporation sole is required to report to Parliament on its financial well-being. She pointed out that such a duty for transparency and accountability does not apply to private companies.
“The court would be offering winding up as a readily available alternative. This, in my opinion, is impermissible,” she added.
Justice Gobin also made note of the fact that the winding up of the company was not suggested when EFCL’s financial situation and alleged systemic mismanagement were considered by a Joint Select Committee (JSC) on State Enterprises in March 2018.
Justice Gobin also considered claims by the companies that challenged the petition, that EFCL did not provide evidence that its board and not the Government decided on the course of action.
Stating that the decision was inconsistent with the optimism expressed before the JSC, Justice Gobin said, “Given the level of control that is exercised and the state to which EFCL had been reduced as a result of decisions taken by the government, the recommendation claimed would be otiose.”
Dealing with EFCL’s claims over its inability to service its significant debts, Justice Gobin pointed out that it was partially due to its gross recklessness in defending litigation against it for unpaid fees.
“The debt was simply allowed to mount. It is astounding that this was allowed to happen with seeming disregard for the effects on the public purse,” she said.
Justice Gobin noted that the most disturbing aspect of the petition was the company’s claim that it has ceased to carry on business and is unable to meet the objectives for which it was established.
She noted that despite the claims, the objecting companies provided evidence that another State company, the National Maintenance Training Service Company (MTS), is now providing the services formally provided by EFCL.
“What has been achieved from the move over from EFCL to MTS facilitates a troubling degree of arbitrariness. It raised suspicions of deliberate manipulation to wield unfairness and unequal treatment of creditors,” she added.
Justice Gobin also pointed out that in 2018 former planning and development minister Camille Robinson-Regis acknowledged EFCL’s debt and stated that contractors would eventually be paid.
Justice Gobin also stated that the objecting companies had valid claims for unjust enrichment as they provided goods and services for the benefit of the State and were not paid.
“In the circumstances, winding up will be an exercise in futility insofar as their quest for justice is concerned,” she said.
She also noted the fact that only a minority of creditors objected to the move was not relevant.
“I would not be surprised if others have chosen to adopt a wait-and-see approach,” she said.
As part of the decision, EFCL was ordered to pay the companies’ legal costs.
In its petition, filed in late February, last year, EFCL’s acting chief executive officer Gayatri Badri-Maharaj sought to detail the company’s current assets and liabilities in a bid to have it wound up.
She noted that the company had 79 unsatisfied judgments/awards dating back to 2016 and totalling $321 million, 30 pending lawsuits in the High Court and Industrial Court over $119 million, and legal claims which are yet to be filed totalling $47 million.
It also has a $156 million balance on a syndicated loan agreement with RBC Trust (T&T) Limited, which it entered into to help finance the construction of schools in 2017.
Badri-Maharaj also pointed out that the company’s 41 employees have not been paid since September 2021 and were owed approximately $2.27 million.