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216 SECRETARIAL PRACTICE 
Creditors. 
nominated by each party and an umpire to be agreed upon. 
The Arbitration Act of 1889 also applies where it is not incon- 
sistent with the Companies Clauses Consolidation Act, 1845. 
But where the company’s articles make other provisions for 
arbitration, they may be followed, to the exclusion of the 
Act [De Rosaz v. Anglo-Italian Bank (1869), L.R. 4 Q.B. 462]. 
The value must be determined by the arbitrator, who will 
often rely on the evidence of experts. He should not assume 
that the shares which form the purchase consideration are 
worth par, nor should he assume that the market price of the 
shares represents their true value. The value of the selling 
company’s business as a going concern, taking all the cir- 
cumstances into consideration, will be an important element 
in enabling him to come to a conclusion. 
In framing the scheme care should be taken to provide a 
fund sufficient to purchase the interests of dissentients. This 
may be done by the exclusion from the sale of a sufficient 
portion of the assets of the old company, but it is more usual 
for the whole of the assets to be sold and the new company 
to undertake to provide the necessary money. This they 
may do by borrowing, or, if their shares are partly paid, out 
of the funds obtained by making a call thereon. If the 
interests of the dissentients are not adequately protected by 
the scheme, by the provision of adequate funds, the liquidator 
may be restrained from parting with the assets. The rights 
of dissentients are statutory rights, and members cannot be 
deprived of them by provisions in the articles; any such 
provisions are wholly invalid [Baring-Gould v. Sharpington 
Syndicate (1899), 2 Ch. go]. 
A scheme under s. 234 is, as has been stated, binding on 
the shareholders, but the rights of creditors are protected; for 
the section provides as follows: ‘If an order is made within a 
year for winding up the company by or subject to the super- 
vision of the Court, the special resolution shall not be valid 
unless sanctioned by the Court.” There is, accordingly, for 
the space of a year, a danger of the scheme becoming inopera- 
tive; but at the expiration of a year, if no winding-up order 
or supervision order is made, the scheme is binding upon 
creditors as well as shareholders. There is a method of 
insuring the scheme against becoming inoperative which has 
sometimes been adopted; this is to procure a friendly creditor 
to petition for a supervision order, and afterwards to obtain 
the sanction of the Court to the scheme. However, it is 
usual for the matter of the creditors to be dealt with when 
the scheme is first mooted. Debenture holders are asked to 
agree to accept debentures in the new companv in lieu of
	        
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