A judge will learn this week if a multimillion-pound settlement has been reached that would keep the former Royal Bank of Scotland chief executive Fred Goodwin from having to appear in court.
Goodwin has been called to give evidence in the long-running legal
battle brought by thousands of investors who argue they were misled into
buying the bank’s shares in a £12bn cash call in April 2008. The bank
was bailed out six months later, leaving the shareholders nursing
losses.Their claim for £520m of compensation had been due to begin in the
high court last Monday but was adjourned to allow the bank and
shareholders to try to thrash out a settlement thought to be worth around £200m.
While the court will not sit this week, Mr Justice Hildyard wants an
update on Tuesday and asked to be told on Thursday if a settlement could
be reached. The court is adjourned until 7 June.
The judge has been told that “progress is being made on a settlement” though some investors are being described as “diehards” who do not want to do a deal with the bank because they want to hold former senior managers to account.
The investors are bringing their claim against RBS, Goodwin and
three former directors. The last time Goodwin – who left RBS in the wake
of the 2008 bailout – accounted for his actions in public was in
February 2009 when he had appeared before MPs and issued a “profound and
unqualified apology for all of the distress that has been caused”.
It has been reported that the businessman Trevor Hemmings, who owns
Preston North End football club and is helping cover the shareholders’
legal costs, is willing to accept the RBS settlement.
Last December, RBS announced that it had £800m to share
among the various factions bringing claims relating to the April 2008
cash call. The bank has settled with 87% of them without admitting
liability but to “minimise material litigation expense and management
distraction”.
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