Melrose Group Publicly Files Complaint to the Ontario Securities Commission

In This Article:

Request to Halt Trading of Hank Payments Shares

The Melrose Group requests a halt on trading Hank Payments shares and any further transactions until the provenance of its shares can be established. This will ensure that the Melrose Group's unsolicited insider bid can be made with the correct price and quantity of shares.

Request for Exemptive Relief from the OSC

The Melrose Group seeks exemptive relief from the OSC due to management's refusal to provide the public with correct information regarding the beneficial ownership of shares generally and specifically at the UpTempo Inc holding Corp level. Uptempo Inc is admitted by management to be the largest owner of Hank Payments.

Exemptive relief should be granted in the form of the Melrose Group being exempt from the requirement that its total shareholdings, bid price, and bid quantity be disclosed until the OSC can determine the full provenance of Hank shares. To be sure, the share amounts used in the recent press releases by Melrose Group simply represent what Hank management is admitting, this is without prejudice to its claims on many more shares and the majority. Should the Melrose Group have a majority as it sits today, a bid of any kind would be mooted. A simple shareholder vote would determine control.

The OSC should reverse any conversion of shares that may have occurred until the provenance of Hank Payments shares is determined. At the very least, allow the pre-conversion shareholders the ability to vote on the conversion offer because it leads to an 80% dilution of their shares.

The OSC should examine the Hank Payment & UpTempo Inc founders shares and cancel those where no consideration was paid.

Under Canadian corporate law, specifically the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA), there are several key requirements and remedies related to the formation of a new company (UpTempo Inc) and the issuance of shares where the new company takes over an established company. In this case, the established company was founded in 2006 and had more customers when the Hilmer/Ewart group was brought in in 2018 than it does now.

Legal Requirement for Consideration

When shares are issued by a corporation, the CBCA mandates that consideration must be received for those shares. According to Section 25(3) of the CBCA, a corporation cannot issue shares until it has received full consideration for them. This consideration can be in the form of money, property, or past services rendered to the corporation.

Remedies for Non-Payment of Consideration

The Hilmer/Ewart group has referred to themselves as founders since inception in an attempt to explain their failure to pay consideration for the shares. The following remedies are available: