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[2022] NSWSC 1752
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WFM Motors Pty Limited v Bar M Pty Limited (No 2) [2022] NSWSC 1752 (2 December 2022)
Last Updated: 16 December 2022
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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WFM Motors Pty Limited v Bar M Pty Limited (No 2)
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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25 November, 2 December 2022
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Date of Orders:
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2 December 2022
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Decision Date:
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2 December 2022
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity
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Before:
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Kunc J
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Decision:
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Orders made to give effect to principal judgment; ambiguity in principal
judgment clarified
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Catchwords:
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JUDGMENTS AND ORDERS — Interest — Agreements to pay interest
— Appropriate rate of interest where defendants had
filed notices
acknowledging claim shortly after proceedings commenced but no judgment had been
entered in accordance with UCPR Pt
20 r 20.34(3) JUDGMENTS AND
ORDERS — Reasons — Clarification of ambiguity
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Consequential orders
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Parties:
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WFM Motors Pty Ltd (Plaintiff/Cross-Defendant) Bar M Pty Ltd (First
Defendant) Walter Toppi (appointed by order of the Supreme Court of NSW to
represent the estate of the late Giovanna Toppi) (Second
Defendant/Cross-Claimant) Paola Toppi (Third Defendant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: PR Jammy (Plaintiff/Cross-Defendant) NJ Kidd SC (Second
Defendant/Cross-Claimant) M Pesman SC (First and Third
Defendants) Solicitors: HWL Ebsworth (Plaintiff) Beazley Lawyers (First
and Third Defendants) Levitt Robinson Solicitors (Second
Defendant/Cross-Claimant)
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File Number(s):
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2020/267822
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Publication Restriction:
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Nil
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EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT (REVISED)
INTRODUCTION
- HIS
HONOUR: The Court delivered its principal judgment in these proceedings on
4 November 2022 (WFM Motors Pty Ltd v Bar M Pty Ltd [2022]
NSWSC 1500) (the Principal Judgment). These reasons assume familiarity
and should be read with the Principal Judgment. Terms defined in the Principal
Judgment have the
same meaning in these reasons, which resolve various matters
in relation to the form of the final orders to give effect to the Principal
Judgment.
INTEREST ON THE JUDGMENT
- WFM
sought orders which included:
“1. Judgment for the Plaintiff against the First, Second and Third
Defendants in the amount of $1,118,231.52.
2. The First Defendant, Second Defendant and Third Defendant pay to the
Plaintiff interest on Judgment:
(a) in the amount of $182,935.64, being 8.5% per annum on $1,118,231.52 from 27
August 2020 to 2 December 2022 inclusive, less $29,424.66
paid to the Plaintiff
in reduction of the Loan during that period. ....
4. The sum of $1,301,167.16, being the sum of the Judgment Amount (at 1 above)
and Interest (at 2(a) above), be paid forthwith to
the Plaintiff from the funds
presently held in Court.
5. Upon the sum referred to in order 4 above being paid to the Plaintiff from
the funds presently held in Court, the First Defendant
indemnify the Second
Defendant in respect of that sum by paying to the Second Defendant the sum of
$1,182,879.24. ...
7. Upon the sum referred to in order 6 above being paid to the Plaintiff from
the funds presently held in Court, the First Defendant
indemnify the Second
Defendant in respect of the amount of the costs subject of the costs order in
3(a) above by paying that amount
to the Second Defendant.
Notations:
1 The Plaintiff neither consents to nor opposes Orders 5 and
7 above ...”
- Mr
M Pesman of Senior Counsel, who appeared for Bar M and Paola, submitted
that by reason of his clients having filed notices acknowledging
the whole of
WFM’s claim on 8 October 2020, the effect of the Uniform Civil
Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) (UCPR) Part 20 r 20.34(3) and (4) was
that that judgment should have been entered as at that date and that any claim
for interest up until that
date was therefore subsumed into the judgment. That
rule provides:
“20.34 Defendant may file acknowledgment
(1) In proceedings with respect to a liquidated claim, the defendant may
file a statement acknowledging the whole of the amount
of the claim.
(2) Subrule (1) does not apply if the defendant has filed a defence or the
plaintiff has, in accordance with these rules, filed
an application for a
default judgment.
(3) On the filing of a statement under subrule (1), judgment is to be
entered for the plaintiff for the whole of the amount of the
claim.
(4) Judgment entered as referred to in subrule (3) fully discharges all of
the plaintiff’s claims in the proceedings.
(5) In proceedings in which a default judgment has been set aside under
rule 36.15 or 36.16, the defendant may not file a statement referred to in
subrule (1) except by leave of the court.”
- Mr
Pesman SC drew to attention paragraph 2 of the statement of claim, which
was the claim for interest he submitted was subsumed into
the
judgment:
“2. Interest on the amount of $1,135,879.90 from 27 August 2020 until
judgment at a rate of 8.5% per annum.”
- He
submitted that the order now sought by WFM impermissibly claimed interest at the
higher inter partes contractual rate up to and
including today, rather than at
Court rates which would have applied had judgment been entered on 8 October 2020
in accordance with
r20.34(3) and (4).
- In
my respectful view, interest being claimed up today at the higher contractual
rate is the correct outcome. It may be arrived at
on more than one
basis. However, it seems to me that the most convenient course is to
accept for the sake of the argument that judgment
could and should have been
entered had the Plaintiff sought such a judgment on or shortly after
8 October 2020. Thereafter, at least
as against Bar M and Paola, interest
would have become post judgment interest.
- There
is no doubt that under s 101 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW)
(the CP Act) the Court has discretion to vary the rate of post judgment
interest from that prescribed by the rules. Clause 3.3 of the relevant
loan agreement provides:
“3.3 Interest after judgment
If a liability of the Borrower becomes merged in a judgment or order, the
Borrower, as an independent obligation, must pay interest
on the amount of that
liability, from (and including) the date of the judgment or order until it is
paid in full, at the higher of
the rate that applies under the judgment or order
and the Default Rule.”
- That
clause provides a proper basis for the Court to vary what would otherwise have
been the court rate of interest had the judgment
been entered on or about
8 October 2020 to reflect the higher contractual rate. As a matter of
formality, it is not necessary for
me to make any of those orders (e.g. entry of
judgment as at 8 October 2020 nunc pro tunc and then varying the post-judgment
interest
rate) because the way interest has been calculated in the order that I
will make gets to that result. But if the matter goes further,
I have at
least recorded my reasons as to why I accept that figure is the appropriate
figure.
ORDERS FOR INDEMNITY
- Giovanna
sought orders 5 and 7 set out in [3] above against Bar M.
- Mr Pesman
SC resisted those orders on the basis that no cross‑claim had been filed
by Giovanna in the proceedings for the indemnity
sought by those orders.
He submitted that when moneys were paid out of court in accordance with the
orders that I will shortly pronounce,
those monies undoubtedly were Giovanna's
funds and were being applied in satisfaction of her obligations as guarantor in
payment
to WFM. While it may be accepted in those circumstances that in
the ordinary course there would be an obligation on Bar M to indemnify
Giovanna
in respect of that sum, that was not a matter that had been before the Court and
was subject to any defences that may be
available.
- Mr N
J Kidd of Senior Counsel, who appeared for Giovanna, submitted that the Court
had jurisdiction, either inherent or derived from
s 56 of the CP Act, to
make indemnity orders of the kind that were sought. This was because they
were, in effect, consequential
upon the entry of judgment and the direction that
Giovanna’s money be paid out of court to satisfy that judgment.
- Mr Pesman
SC submitted in reply that s 56 did not cure the problem that the Court did
not have jurisdiction at the moment to deal
with the question, because no such
claim had ever been advanced by way of cross‑claim in the
proceedings.
- I
accept Mr Pesman SC's submission that it would not be appropriate in
circumstances where factual and legal issues may need to be
investigated in
relation to whether or not the indemnity can properly be sought, for this Court,
in the heel of the hunt, to deal
with parties' substantive rights that were not
litigated at all during the course of the proceedings. Such orders could be made
if
all the relevant parties consented, but that was not this case.
- I
therefore decline to make the indemnity orders sought in paragraphs 5 and 7 of
the proposed orders set out in [3] above. However,
I record that insofar as
Mr Pesman SC's clients have successfully achieved a position where any
questions that may arise in relation
to the obligation of Bar M to indemnify
Giovanna have been put off for another day, Mr Pesman SC on behalf of
Bar M has undertaken
to the Court that should any enforcement proceedings be
commenced in relation to the indemnity, no Anshun point will be taken by
Bar M,
having regard to the fact that no cross‑claim was brought in these
proceedings.
GIOVANNA'S GUARANTEE OF THE 2018 LEASE
- When
the proceedings were before me last Friday, Mr Kidd SC provided a note in
which he courteously raised a concern that the Court's
judgment had accidently
omitted the determination of Giovanna's claim about her guarantee of the 2018
Lease. This is referred to
as the Neild Avenue Guarantee in Giovanna's
cross‑claim, and I will refer to it as such in what follows. Because
Mr Kidd SC's
attempt to email his note to my chambers in the morning before
the hearing convened had apparently been foiled by a technical glitch,
I
was only made aware of the issue at the hearing and had not had an opportunity
to consider the point or review the Principal Judgment.
I indicated to the
parties that I would do so before today.
- On
reviewing the Principal Judgment, I readily acknowledge Mr Kidd SC was
entirely correct to raise this question, because the way
in which the Principal
Judgment was expressed has led to potential confusion on this point. While
I have now been able to satisfy
myself that the claim was not overlooked, it is
nevertheless appropriate that I provide some short clarification in case these
proceedings
go further. No orders have yet been made. Mr Kidd
SC's note has brought to attention an infelicity of expression or ambiguity at
the time short minutes were brought in, which I can, and should, now resolve in
accordance with the overriding purpose: see, for
example, Fexuto Pty
Ltd v Bosnjak Holdings Pty Ltd (No 2) [1998] NSWSC 578; (1998) 29 ACSR
290 per Young J (as his Honour then was).
- The
Neild Avenue Guarantee was not the principal focus of forensic attention during
the hearing but was not overlooked. This appears,
for example, from Principal
Judgment [49], [154], [185] and [186]. One obvious reason for its lesser
prominence was, as is recorded
at Principal Judgment [154] and [186], that it
was not being sued on by WFM. This difference in focus was reflected in
the identification
of the documents in the non‑exhaustive list in
Principal Judgment [45] (which were very much at the centre of the parties'
arguments) and dealing with the Neild Avenue Guarantee in the context of the
2018 Lease in Principal Judgment [49]. The connection
between the two was,
to my mind, as is recorded in Principal Judgment [49], that Giovanna's
obligation under the Neild Avenue Guarantee
"was also secured by the mortgage
she gave over the Property". Despite dividing the documents in the way I
had, I proceeded on the
basis that the Neild Avenue Guarantee was one of
Giovanna's signed transaction documents and formed part of the Transaction.
- For
the avoidance of doubt, I confirm that my reasoning and conclusions were
intended to apply to the Neild Avenue Guarantee. This
can be most easily
clarified if the reference to the third party mortgage in Principal Judgment
45(1) is read as including the Neild
Avenue Guarantee (given the former secured
Giovanna's obligations under the latter). This makes clear what I
intended, namely that
the reference to Transaction wherever appearing, but for
example, in paragraphs such as Principal Judgment [145], [146], [149], [153],
[154], [181] and [182] incorporated the Neild Avenue Guarantee. The
conclusion in Principal Judgment [193], that Giovanna's cross‑claim
will
be dismissed, therefore stands. That is one of the orders I will make
today.
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