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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 6 November 2001
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION: GE Capital Australia v Davis
[2001] NSWSC 933
CURRENT JURISDICTION: Equity
FILE
NUMBER(S): 4683/01
HEARING DATE{S): 26 September 2001
JUDGMENT
DATE: 26/09/2001
PARTIES:
GE Capital Australia (P)
Tana Ruth
Davis (D1)
Lessel George Davis (D2)
Veltex Pty Limited (D3)
Zeita Pty
Limited (D4)
JUDGMENT OF: Hamilton J
LOWER COURT
JURISDICTION: Not Applicable
LOWER COURT FILE NUMBER(S): Not
Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL OFFICER: Not Applicable
COUNSEL:
C R C Newlinds (P)
No appearance (D1-4)
SOLICITORS:
Kemp
Strang (P)
Hugh & Associates (D1-4)
CATCHWORDS:
EQUITY
[340] - Equitable remedies - Injunctions - Interlocutory injunctions -
Injunctions to preserve property pending determination
of rights - Mareva
injunctions - Other matters - Nature of evidence required - Defendants selling
house, declining to indicate nature
of defence to proceedings or reveal their
assets and failing to appear
PROCEDURE [81] - Supreme Court procedure -
Practice under Supreme Court Rules - Preliminary rules and generally -
Overriding purpose.
ACTS CITED:
Supreme Court Rules, Pt 1 r 3, Pt 9 r
1
DECISION:
Mareva order made until further order with liberty to
defendants to apply to discharge.
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME
COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
EQUITY
DIVISION
HAMILTON J
WEDNESDAY, 26 SEPTEMBER
2001
4683/01 G E CAPITAL AUSTRALIA v TANA RUTH DAVIS &
ORS
Judgment
1 HIS HONOUR: This is an
application by the plaintiff for what should now be referred to as a Mareva
order rather than a Mareva injunction: see
Cardile v LED Builders Pty
Ltd (1999) 198 CLR 380 at 401. The principles on which such relief is
generally granted were usefully set out by Gleeson CJ when Chief Justice of this
Court in Patterson v BTR Engineering (Australia) Ltd (1989) 18 NSWLR 319
where his Honour said at 321 – 322:
“The remedy is
discretionary, but it has been held that, in addition to any other
considerations that may be relevant in the
circumstances of a particular case,
as a general rule a plaintiff will need to establish, first, a prima facie cause
of action against
the defendant, and secondly, a danger that, by reason of the
defendant’s absconding, or of assets being removed out of the
jurisdiction
or disposed of within the jurisdiction or otherwise dealt with in some fashion,
the plaintiff, if he succeeds, will
not be able to have his judgment
satisfied.”
2 As will be apparent from what follows, on the
material before me the plaintiff has established a strong prima facie case that
it
will recover judgment against the first and second defendants (hereinafter
referred to as "the defendants") against whom the relief
is sought. However,
this is a case where the matter is closer to the line in drawing the necessary
inference that there is a danger
of the dissipation of the defendants’
assets so as to prevent satisfaction of a judgment if obtained. This matter
must be
looked at carefully because the courts have repeatedly emphasised that
the Mareva order ought not be used simply as a form of security
for the payment
of a judgment yet to be obtained, but should be granted only in circumstances
where such a danger is established.
3 The plaintiff advanced moneys to
companies with which the defendants were associated. On 6 March 2001 those
companies went into
voluntary administration. On 7 March 2001 they had
receivers appointed and on 21 May 2001 they were placed into liquidation. The
defendants had guaranteed those companies' obligations. Certainly no later than
the appointment of liquidators there was an event
of default under the loan
agreement so that the moneys became owing by the principal creditors and the
defendants, as guarantors,
became liable to meet those obligations if not met by
the principal creditors. Notice of demand was served on the creditors on 4
September 2001. Despite extensive correspondence, to which further reference
will need to be made, there has been no suggestion
as to what the defence is to
the claim against the defendants under their guarantees and the plaintiff must
be regarded as having
a strong prima facie case for the recovery of judgment
against them. The amount of the potential judgment is quantified in the
evidence
as exceeding $500,000.
4 There is no evidence about the
defendants' assets, save evidence relating to their home. The evidence shows
that they live at 40
Cuzco Street, South Coogee (“the property”) and
that they own the property. The evidence suggests that upon a sale of
the
property there will be, after payment out of the mortgage debt, a surplus in
excess of $600,000. The evidence shows that the
property was put to auction on
15 September 2001. That is not sufficiently long after the service of the
demands for an inference
to arise that the sale of the property was triggered by
service of the demands, but it is significant that it occurs not long after
the
companies of which the defendants were the guarantors had got into difficulties
and gone to the wall and, despite opportunities
given, no material is brought
forward to give any explanation whatever for sale at that stage. Correspondence
between the plaintiff's
solicitors, Kemp Strang, and the defendants' solicitors,
Hugh & Associates, commenced about 13 September and has continued in
a
steady stream since that time. The plaintiff threatened these proceedings and
then, on 21 September 2001, approached Bryson J
sitting as Duty Judge in this
Division for leave to serve short notice of this application. On that day it
filed a statement of
claim propounding its claim on the guarantees. Bryson J
gave leave to make the motion which I am dealing with returnable today in
the
Duty Court and gave leave to serve short notice by 5 pm on 21 September 2001.
Process servers went to 40 Cuzco Street, South
Coogee that afternoon and could
not find the defendants. Before 5 pm on that afternoon they left the documents
at those unattended
premises. This does not, of course, constitute personal
service as required by Pt 9 r 1 of the Supreme Court Rules 1970. Copies of the
documents were also forwarded to the defendants' solicitors.
5 I do not
think there is any useful purpose in my setting out the correspondence at length
but it goes, in the short time span involved,
through more than a half dozen
letters. The defendants' solicitors concede in that correspondence that they
act for the defendants,
that the defendants live at 40 Cuzco Street, South
Coogee, that they own the property and sold it by a contract exchanged on 19
September
2001 which provides for settlement 13 weeks after exchange. They
asked on a number of occasions what the plaintiff's claim over
the property was
and a number of other questions about the nature of the plaintiff's claim
against the defendants and the documentation
supporting it. All their enquiries
and requests for documents have been promptly and fully answered by the
plaintiff's solicitors.
The defendants' solicitor's correspondence continues to
deny that there has been service upon the defendants and suggests that,
on that
basis, the plaintiff's application ought not be heard today, although it is
clear that they are in possession of the documents
and that they and the
defendants are well aware of the application being made today. The plaintiff's
solicitors have at all times
made it entirely clear that the plaintiff claims no
proprietary interest in the property but it claims relief by way of a Mareva
order in relation to the judgment that it seeks against the defendants. The
defendants' solicitors have been repeatedly invited
to state what the defence to
the action is and also to state what is intended to be done with the proceeds of
sale of the property
and impliedly, if not expressly, to be given some assurance
that the defendants will not dissipate their assets so as to frustrate
the
execution of any judgment obtained.
6 Despite the continuing
correspondence not a word has been brought forward as to what the defence
against the claim may be, or as
to what the defendants' financial situation and
general position in life is. All that there has been is the cute assertion
that,
although the papers are in their possession, they have not been served in
accordance with the Rules and that the Court cannot or
ought not hear the
plaintiff's application today but should hear it at some time next week or the
week after, or some other time
when their counsel can be here and a defence
brought forward. There is no explanation as to why that cannot be done at least
in
some form today. This course of action is disingenuous. It would not have
been attractive in 1951 and in 2001, with a profound
change in the way that
litigation is conducted in the courts of this State, it is even less attractive
and may well be in breach
of the obligations of both the defendants as litigants
and their solicitors under Pt 1 r 3 of the Rules.
7 That particular lack
of explanation does not of itself, of course, establish that the matter
necessarily calls for a Mareva order
to be made against the defendants. But on
the issue of the likelihood of dissipation of their assets, the Court is left
with evidence
that the defendants' home with a large equity in it is on the
market shortly after their companies have come to grief, leaving them
exposed to
a six figure claim under a guarantee. They are well aware both of the claim
made by the statement of claim and the proceedings
under the notice of motion
for a Mareva order. Even if they are not able to bring forward a defence in
final form, they have chosen
not to inform the plaintiff or the Court of any
area in which it may be thought they have a defence to the claim. It would, of
course,
be a case in which a Mareva order ought not be made if, however strong a
claim for $600,000 there were against them, they were clearly
going to continue
themselves to be personally present in New South Wales and had large assets in
this State against which a judgment
could easily be executed. Again by choice,
not a word is brought forward before the Court about their whereabouts, their
intentions
as to their own location, their property or their intentions in
relation to their property. Bearing in mind all of the above circumstances,
it
is, in my view, possible to draw the inference referred to in Patterson's
case that there is a real risk of the respondents removing or dissipating their
assets and thereby depriving the plaintiff of the
fruits of a judgment and I do
draw that inference upon the material.
8 The relief by way of Mareva
order that the plaintiff actually seeks is sensibly limited to such portion of
the proceeds of the property
as would be necessary to meet the plaintiff's claim
under the guarantee and the costs of pursuing that claim. In those
circumstances
I am prepared to grant an order restraining the defendants from
disposing of, charging, mortgaging or otherwise encumbering or creating
an
interest in the net proceeds of the sale of the property other than any amount
in excess of $600,000 and from further charging,
mortgaging or otherwise
encumbering the property whilst it is still held by them. In the circumstances
of the case I am prepared
to make those orders until further order. I shall
grant to the defendants liberty to apply to discharge the orders on three days'
notice. I am also prepared to order that the defendants give to the plaintiff's
solicitors written notice of any earlier settlement
date of the sale of the
property than 19 December 2001. I shall also made an order in the circumstances
for the substituted service
of the statement of claim. I propose to make in the
plaintiff's favour the usual order for the costs of a successful applicant for
interlocutory relief, namely, that the costs of the application be the
plaintiff's costs in the proceedings.
9 I shall add at the end of the
minutes:
(8) The plaintiff's costs of this application be the plaintiff's
costs in the proceedings.
(9) I direct that these orders be entered
forthwith.
(10) I direct that the matter be placed in the Expedition Judge's
list on 12 October 2001.
There will be orders in accordance with the short
minutes initialled by me and placed with the papers.
*********************************
LAST UPDATED: 25/10/2001
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