
James Heinicke
Partner | Legal
Cayman Islands
James Heinicke
Partner
Cayman Islands
In cross-border financing transactions involving Cayman entities, lenders will almost always require a Cayman Islands legal opinion as a condition precedent to closing.
These legal opinions play a crucial role in providing deal teams with confidence that the Cayman entity involved has been properly formed, has the capacity and authority to enter into the financing and that the transaction documents are legally binding under Cayman Islands law.
This briefing outlines the core elements typically covered in a Cayman Islands legal opinion for a financing transaction and explains what these opinions mean – and don't mean - for transaction parties.
A legal opinion is a professional statement outlining a law firm's assessment on matters relating to a transaction, the parties involved and the transaction documents. It provides the parties with a level of legal certainty and helps to allocate risk by confirming key legal points they cannot easily verify themselves.
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Typical opinion |
What this means |
What this doesn’t mean |
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Corporate status |
The company is duly incorporated, validly existing and is in good standing. |
The company has been properly formed, continues to exist and is up to date with requisite Companies Registry fees. |
This does not confirm solvency of the company or an absence of litigation or disputes involving the company. |
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Corporate power |
The company has the power to enter into and perform its obligations under the document. |
Under its constitutional documents and Cayman law, the company is legally capable of entering into the document and performing its obligations under it. |
N/A |
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Authority |
The company has taken all necessary action to authorise the entry into, delivery and performance of the document. |
The company has obtained requisite corporate / internal approvals (eg, director resolutions) to approve the company's entrance into and performance of the document. |
This does not address any approvals or authorisations that may be required from third parties, such as regulatory bodies or parties with whom the company has contracted. |
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Execution |
The document has been duly executed by the company. |
The document has, on its face, been signed by a person who could legally bind the company.
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This does not confirm or verify the authenticity or genuineness of signatures to the document.
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Non-conflict |
The execution and delivery by the company of the document and the performance of its obligations thereunder do not and will not contravene: (i) the constitutional documents of the company; or (ii) violate or contravene any Cayman law or regulation applicable to the company. |
The document does not violate Cayman law or the company’s constitutional documents. |
This does not address compliance with foreign laws or whether the entrance into the document conflicts with any other agreements or documents entered into by the company. |
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Approvals/ consents |
The company does not need to obtain any consents, approvals, licence or authorisations of any governmental or regulatory authorities in connection with its entry into and performance of the document. |
The document and the transaction does not trigger any licensing or regulatory approvals in Cayman. |
This does not confirm compliance with foreign licensing or regulatory approvals. |
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Choice of law |
The choice of law that governs the document would be recognised and applied as a valid choice of law in any proceedings in the courts of the Cayman Islands and applied by such courts in proceedings in relation to the document as the governing law thereof. |
A Cayman Islands court will construe and interpret the document in accordance with the law chosen by the parties in the governing-law clause. |
N/A |
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Enforceability |
The document constitutes legal, valid, binding and enforceable obligations of the company. |
This opinion confirms the essential enforceability of the document. |
This does not confirm performance of the document by the transaction parties. |
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Filings |
It is not necessary to ensure the validity or enforceability, that the document or any other document relating to it be filed or recorded with any governmental or regulatory authority, agency or court of the Cayman Islands. |
This assures the opinion recipient that no documents need to be filed in public places in the Cayman Islands to ensure the validity or enforceability of the document in the Cayman Islands. |
This opinion does not address any filings that may be necessary or desirable to be made in connection with the document outside the Cayman Islands. |
Cayman legal opinions will be based upon legal and factual assumptions and will be caveated by the inclusion of certain qualifications. Together, these assumptions and qualifications define the boundaries to the opinion.
An opinion will ordinarily be addressed to the opinion recipient who is able to rely on the opinion, with limited rights to disclose the opinion to third parties. The parties may wish to expand both the class of persons to whom the opinion may be disclosed and those entitled to rely on it beyond the named addressees.
Cayman legal opinions are an important condition precedent of cross-border finance transactions involving Cayman entities since they mitigate legal risk and provide transaction parties with formal legal assurance.
Ogier's Cayman Islands finance lawyers are regularly instructed both to provide Cayman Islands legal opinions and, given the precise and considered way in which such opinions are crafted, to review them on behalf of clients.
Contact us to find out more.
Ogier is a professional services firm with the knowledge and expertise to handle the most demanding and complex transactions and provide expert, efficient and cost-effective services to all our clients. We regularly win awards for the quality of our client service, our work and our people.
This client briefing has been prepared for clients and professional associates of Ogier. The information and expressions of opinion which it contains are not intended to be a comprehensive study or to provide legal advice and should not be treated as a substitute for specific advice concerning individual situations.
Regulatory information can be found under Legal Notice
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