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[2011] NSWSC 857
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In the matter of Clarecastle Pty Ltd (in liq) - Kassem and Secatore as liquidators of Clarecastle Pty Ltd (in liq)In the matter of ACN 050 070 463 Pty Ltd (in liq) - Kassem and Secatore as liquidators of ACN 050 070 463 Pty Ltd (in liq) [2011] NSWSC 857 (22 July 2011)
Last Updated: 18 August 2011
Case Title:
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In the matter of Clarecastle Pty Ltd (in liq) -
Kassem and Secatore as liquidators of Clarecastle Pty Ltd (in liq)In the matter
of
ACN 050 070 463 Pty Ltd (in liq) - Kassem and Secatore as liquidators of ACN
050 070 463 Pty Ltd (in liq)
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity Division - Corporations
List
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Before:
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Decision:
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Applications for extension of time under s
588FF(3)(b) dismissed other than in respect of one identified claim
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Catchwords:
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CORPORATIONS - application for leave pursuant to s
588FF(3)(b) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) to extend the time to bring
claims in relation to voidable transactions under s 588FF(1) - whether an
extension of time can be granted in relation to the bringing of voidable
transaction claims in general or 'blanket'
terms - application of test for
exercise of discretion in respect of such applications - HELD - decision in BP
Australia v Brown
binding on a single judge of this Court - discretion should be
exercised in favour of particular claim identified against Jasmic
Nominees Pty
Ltd - otherwise claim for extension of time dismissed.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Category:
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Parties:
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(10/081756) Ozem Kassem and Bruno Secatore as
liquidators of Clarecastle Pty Ltd (in liq)(First Plaintiff) Clarecastle Pty
Ltd (in liq)(Second Plaintiff) Jasmic Nominees Pty Ltd and Mr and Mrs Shea
(Jasmic Interested Parties) Mr Ross Seller, Mr Patrick McCarthy and Grant
McKenzie Pty Limited (Other Interested Parties (10/081786) Ozem Kassem and
Bruno Secatore as liquidators of ACN 050 070 463 Pty Ltd (in liq)(First
Plaintiff) ACN 050 070 463 Pty Ltd (in liq)(Second Plaintiff) Jasmic
Nominees Pty Ltd and Mr and Mrs Shea (Jasmic Interested Parties)
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Representation
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Counsel R Harper SC (with M Condon on 6 May
2011) (Plaintiffs) D R Pritchard SC (Jasmic Interested Parties)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors Sage Solicitors
(Plaintiffs) Spinks Eagle Lawyers (Jasmic Interested Parties) T Castle (6
May 2011) S Anderton (29 June 2011) (Atanaskovic Hartnell) (Other Interested
Parties)
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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Judgment
- HER
HONOUR : In separate proceedings, each commenced by the filing of an
originating process on 1 April 2010, Messrs Ozzem Kassem and Bruno Secatore,
in
their capacity as liquidators of Clarecastle Pty Limited (in liq) and of ACN 050
070 463 Pty Limited (in liq) (formerly Ladycare
Services Pty Ltd) (to which I
will refer as Ladycare), have sought orders pursuant to s 588FF(3)(b) of the
Corporations Act 2001 (NSW) extending up to 5 October 2011 the time in
which to bring applications under s 588FF(1) of the Act in relation to any
voidable
transactions concerning Clarecastle and Ladycare, respectively, in
respect of which proceedings have not yet been commenced. I will
refer to these
two sets of proceedings (81756 of 2010 and 81786 of 2010) respectively as the
Clarecastle and Ladycare Leave proceedings.
- The
liquidators also commenced on that date three other sets of proceedings in which
relief is sought in relation to specific transactions
involving one or other of
the two companies, as well as orders under s 588FF(3)(b) in relation to any
further claims that might be
made in respect of transactions made by the
relevant company in liquidation involving the defendant(s) to those proceedings.
Those
proceedings are:
(i) the Jasmic proceedings (81810 of
2010) brought in the name of the liquidators and Ladycare against Jasmic
Nominees Pty Ltd (the
sole shareholder of Clarecastle), Mr James Shea - the sole
director of Clarecastle and a co-director, with his wife, of both Ladycare
and
its sole shareholder (LCS IT Pty Limited), and his wife, Mrs Jan Shea (as noted,
a co-director of both Ladycare and LCS IT).
(I refer to the defendants in those
proceedings collectively as the "Jasmic parties");
(ii) the LCS IT
proceedings (81795 of 2010) brought in the name of the liquidators and Ladycare
against LCS IT and Mr and Mrs Shea;
and
(iii) the Clarecastle Windsor
Village proceedings (81774 of 2010) brought in the name of the liquidators and
Clarecastle against Jasmic
and Mr Shea;
- The
Jasmic parties were not joined as parties to either of the Clarecastle or
Ladycare Leave proceedings but were served with the
originating process and
affidavits in those proceedings (it being conceded that they are parties that
might be adversely affected
by the extensions sought) and have been represented
by Senior Counsel (Mr Pritchard SC) on the hearing of the extension applications
made in those proceedings.
- In
the Clarecastle proceedings there was also an appearance for others (to whom I
refer as the Other Interested Parties) who had an
involvement in one of the
transactions the subject of the liquidators' investigations into Clarecastle's
affairs. They were represented
on 6 May 2011 by Mr Castle, solicitor, and on 29
June 2011 by Mr Anderton, solicitor.
- In
the Clarecastle and Ladycare Leave proceedings all that is sought is the
extension of time for the making of claims in relation
to voidable transactions
involving those companies and the relief in that regard is framed in broad terms
(leading to the criticism
by Mr Pritchard of these as 'blanket orders'). In each
of the Jasmic, LCS IT and Clarecastle Windsor Village proceedings, various
declarations and orders are sought pursuant to ss 180,181, 182, 588FE(3), (4)
and (5), 588FH(2) and 1317H of the Corporations Act in relation to
transactions or dealings by the respective companies and alleged breach of
duties by the directors in relation thereto.
As noted, orders are further sought
in each of those proceedings, pursuant to s 588FF(3)(b) of the Act, extending
the time within
which applications under s 588(1) of the Act can be made against
the defendants in relation to any further claims that might be made
in respect
of the transactions the subject of those proceedings.
- It
is the perceived overlap between the relief sought in what I will call the three
specific proceedings (referred to in [2] above)
and that in the two more general
applications presently before me that prompted the initial submission by Mr
Pritchard that the present
applications were an abuse of process. At the hearing
before me, it was accepted that the same issues broadly arise under the
respective
s 588FF(3)(b) applications and I have proceeded, (without dissent
from the respective parties) on the basis that the applications
for relief under
s 588FF(3)(b) in the Clarecastle and Ladycare Leave proceedings will resolve the
similar applications made under
s 588FF(3)(b) in the three specific proceedings
(and on that basis I understand that Mr Pritchard does not press the submission
as
to abuse of process). (I should note, however, that I do not consider that
this would preclude an application in the three specific
proceedings for
amendment of the process to encompass other claims arising out of the same or
substantially the same facts as the
subject of those proceedings, and which
might raise claims for which leave under s 588FF(3)(b) is required, at least
where those
claims are against parties to whom notice of the present
applications was not given.)
- The
substantive relief claimed in the three specific proceedings relates to various
transactions entered into by the respective companies
prior to their entry into
liquidation:
(i) in the Jasmic proceedings , the liquidators seek declarations that
both a write off by Clarecastle (on 30 June 2006) of a loan recorded in its
books in the
sum of $352,788.00 payable to Clarecastle by Jasmic and the
transfer to Jasmic (on 31 December 2006) of a sum of $1,086,516.00 were
voidable
transactions (whether as insolvent and uncommercial transactions under s 588FB
and voidable under s 588FE(3); insolvent
transactions entered into with a
related party within the meaning of s 588FE(4); insolvent transactions for the
purpose of defeating
or interfering with the company's creditors within the
meaning of s 588FE(5); or insolvent transactions voidable under s 588FF);
(ii) in the LCS IT proceedings , the liquidators seek a declaration
that the payment of the sum of $270,000.00 by way of dividend by Ladycare to LCS
IT on 30 June
2006 was a voidable (or void) transaction (on the basis that it
was a transaction falling within one or other of the statutory provisions
referred to in (i) above); and
(iii) in the Clarecastle Windsor Village proceedings , the liquidators
seek declarations that the assignment by Clarecastle to Jasmic of an equity
interest in what is referred to as the
"Windsor Village Partnership" in about
July 2006 was similarly a voidable transaction (on one or other of the same
bases as the transactions
referred to in (i) and (ii) above).
- In
each of those proceedings, consequential orders are sought for the recovery of
the moneys (or asset) so paid (or transferred),
whether from the entity to which
it was paid (or transferred) or from the directors of the company in
liquidation. In the Clarecastle
Windsor Village proceedings, as an alternative
to the reconveyance which is sought of the Windsor Village Partnership equity
interest,
an order is sought for the payment of the sum of $601,875.50 pursuant
to s 588FF(1) or s 588FH(2). Declarations are also sought as
to breach by the
relevant directors (in each case Mr Shea and in the Jasmic proceedings also Mrs
Shea) of their various statutory
and common law duties as directors.
- Clarecastle
and Ladycare were both placed in liquidation on 5 April 2007, that being the
relation-back day as defined under s 9 of
the Act for the purposes of the
relevant statutory provisions. It is not in dispute that the time within which
(absent leave of the
Court) proceedings by the liquidators in relation to
alleged voidable transactions were required to be brought expired on 5 April
2010. Accordingly, the claims already on foot as to voidable transactions in the
three specific proceedings (including the Windsor
Village transaction to which
Mr Kassem refers in his affidavit in support of the Clarecastle leave
application) do not require the
leave of the Court. What is now sought is leave
to bring other applications or to make other claims in relation to voidable
transactions
involving those companies, in circumstances where the liquidators'
investigation of the affairs of the companies was not complete
as at the expiry
of the period within which such claims were to be brought (and, in at least some
respects, is not presently complete).
- The
Clarecastle and Ladycare Leave proceedings first came before me for hearing on 6
May 2011. For the reasons outlined in my reasons
for judgment in yet a further
set of proceedings (158014 of 2010) (those being proceedings in which an
application had been made
to set aside examination summonses and orders obtained
by the liquidators in relation to their investigation of the particular
transaction
involving Clarecastle in which the Other Interested Parties were
involved (the Scotch Whisky transaction) (see [2011] NSWSC 553), to which I will
refer as the examination proceedings), I commenced hearing the Clarecastle Leave
application on 6 May 2011 but adjourned
it part-heard to 29 June 2011. (In
relation to the Ladycare Leave proceedings, I did no more on 6 May 2011 than
formally to read
some of the affidavits relied upon by the liquidators for the
Ladycare Leave application.) On 29 June 2011, I completed the hearing
of the
Clarecastle Leave application together with the Ladycare Leave application
(having, in the interim, refused the application
for the setting aside of the
examination summonses).
- In
support of the applications made in the respective Clarecastle and Ladycare
Leave proceedings, Mr Kassem (one of the two liquidators
of the companies) has
affirmed four affidavits (one in each of the proceedings on both 31 March 2010
and on 24 September 2010). Affidavits
were also read in the liquidators' case
from Mr Andrew Rollins, solicitor, sworn on 5 May 2011 (deposing to issues as to
the discovery
or production of documents by the Jasmic parties in the 3 specific
proceedings), from Mr Mark Hutchins, now a partner of Mr Kassem
and director of
Cor Cordis Pty Ltd Accountants (who has had the day to day conduct of each of
the liquidations from about June 2090),
sworn on 4 May 2011 (deposing as to the
difficulties he has encountered in carrying out investigations of the companies'
affairs),
and from Mr Tony Carmona, the former Chief Executive Officer of
Ladycare, sworn on 16 March 2011 (deposing as to various matters
in relation to
the Ladycare business, including what he describes as indicative or non-binding
indicative offers made for the purchase
of that business in late 2006 and the
value Mr Carmona believes was attributed by Mr Shea to that business at that
time).
- When
the hearing resumed on 29 June 2011, affidavits were read by the respective
solicitors (Mr Rollins and Mr Spinks) going to the
complaints that had been made
as to discovery of documents. Senior Counsel for the liquidators (Mr Harper SC)
sought leave to file
two further affidavits sworn by the solicitor acting for Mr
Kassem (Mr Charly Tannous): the first (sworn on 28 June 2011) being a
confidential affidavit referring to the s 596 examinations that by then had
taken place (in private) of Mr Seller and Mr McCarthy
pursuant to the orders
that I had made in the examination proceedings (and exhibiting notes taken at
those examinations) and the
second (sworn on 29 June 2011) annexing a draft
Statement of Claim being the process that it is said the liquidators will file
(in
the Ladycare proceedings) if leave is granted on the Ladycare Leave
application.
- Objection
was raised to the lateness with which these affidavits were served (Mr Pritchard
noting that the lateness of service of
previous affidavit material had been the
cause of the earlier adjournment in May this year), but ultimately Mr Pritchard
indicated
that he was in a position to deal with the matters contained in those
affidavits and did not press his objection to the reading of
those affidavits.
- Where
objection was, however, strenuously pressed by Mr Pritchard was as to an
application by Mr Harper for leave to adduce further
evidence in chief from Mr
Kassem (prior to the resumption of his cross-examination) in order to appraise
the Court of a matter that
had arisen during the adjournment (in relation to the
question of funding of the proceedings for which the extension of time had
been
sought). This evidence was put forward as necessary in order to update the Court
and to avoid the situation where the Court
might otherwise be asked to determine
the extension applications based on an incorrect understanding of the factual
position in relation
to the funding available to the liquidators. I was informed
that the relevant development had occurred only the afternoon before
the
resumption of the hearing (hence it could not have been the subject of earlier
evidence).
- In
order to determine what prejudice, if any, the Jasmic parties would suffer from
the late admission of evidence on this issue, evidence
was taken on the voir
dire from Mr Kassem and then from Mr Hutchins (and subsequently admitted
without objection by Mr Pritchard in the proceedings) as to a
communication
received by Mr Hutchins at about 4pm on the afternoon before the resumption of
the hearing from the largest creditor
of Ladycare (the Australian Taxation
Office) confirming its willingness to provide funding (retrospectively) for the
examinations
and for the present leave applications, as well as (prospectively)
for a capped amount in relation to the substantive proceedings
(a total funding
package said to be in the order of $800,000).
- For
present purposes, therefore, the position is that there was no funding available
to the liquidators for investigation of the respective
companies' potential
claims during the three year period in which they could, without leave, have
commenced any voidable transaction
proceedings but such funding has now become
available. (The lack of funding has not, however, prevented the commencement of
the three
specific proceedings within the three year period.)
Issues
- The
issues before me on the current applications are within a relatively narrow
compass: balancing the factors applicable on an application
of this kind,
whether leave should be granted for the extension of time sought in one or both
of the Clarecastle and Ladycare proceedings
and, if so, should it be granted in
the broad terms in which it is sought.
- A
preliminary issue was raised Mr Pritchard as to the power of the Court to grant
an extension of time for the bringing of applications
in relation to voidable
transactions in general terms (i.e. without identification of the particular
transactions or the particular
defendants). Mr Pritchard submitted that the
power to make orders under s 588FF(3)(b) is limited to orders in relation to one
or
more identified transactions (and does not extend to the making of 'blanket
orders'). In this regard, it is submitted by Mr Pritchard
that BP Australia v
Brown [2003] NSWCA 216; (2003) 58 NSWLR 322 (to the extent that it holds
otherwise, and Mr Pritchard suggests there is some ambiguity as to the ratio in
Brown ) was wrongly decided. In response, Mr Harper contends that
Brown was correctly decided, noting that it has been followed on numerous
occasions and that it is in any event binding upon me. (He also
submits that it
is incorrect to characterise the orders sought in the present proceedings as
blanket orders.)
- Leaving
aside for the moment the question as to the correctness or otherwise of Brown
, there was no dispute as to the principles that are to be applied on an
application for an extension of time under s 588FF(3)(b),
those having been
outlined by White J in New Cap Reinsurance Corp v Reaseguros Alianza SA
[2004] NSWSC 787; (2004) 186 FLR 175 (at [52]) by reference to the following
propositions:
(a) ordinarily, the issues raised on an extension application are threefold:
(i) the explanation for the delay in bringing the proceedings;
(ii) a preliminary review of merits of the foreshadowed proceedings - that
is, an investigation as to whether such proceedings would
be so devoid of
prospects that it would be unfair, by granting an extension, to expose the other
party to the continuing prospect
of suit;
(iii) whether the likely actual prejudice resulting from the grant of an
extension is sufficiently substantial to outweigh the case
for granting an
extension;
(b) where the liquidator's purpose in seeking the extension of time is simply
to put himself into a position where he can properly
decide whether or not to
bring proceedings, a preliminary inquiry into the merits of any consequent
proceedings may not always be
necessary.
- In
Arnautovic v Nichola [2009] NSWSC 233 Barrett J (referring to the
considerations identified by Austin J in Green v Chiswell Furniture Pty Ltd
[1999] NSWSC 608 as emerging from the judgment of Finn J in Taylor v
Woden Constructions Pty Ltd [1998] FCA 1228 and the decision of the Court of
Appeal in Brown ), confirmed (at [7]) that the relevant matters to be
considered on an application such as the present are those set out by White
J at
[52] in New Cap .
- White
J went on to say (at [53]):
The principles were also considered by the Court of Appeal in BP Australia
Ltd v Brown [2003] NSWCA 216; (2003) 58 NSWLR 322 at 356-358. The Court of Appeal described
the question as being what was fair and just in all of the circumstances
having regard to factors which include the plaintiffs explanation for delay
and whether the defendant would suffer prejudice as a
result of the extension,
other than the prejudice of being required to repay money if the proceedings
succeed. (my emphasis)
- The
relevant factors to be considered in determining whether it is fair and just
that leave should be granted are therefore:
(i) the delay in
bringing the proceedings and the explanation for that delay;
(ii) the
merits of the proposed proceedings (except to the extent that the liquidators'
purpose is to investigate whether or not to
bring the proceedings); and
(iii) the question of prejudice arising from the grant of an extension.
Summary
- In
summary, for the reasons set out below, I am of the view that leave should not
be granted for the extensions of time sought in
either the Clarecastle or the
Ladycare Leave proceedings other than in relation to the particular claim
identified against Jasmic
in paragraphs [57] and [58] of the draft Statement of
Claim annexed to the affidavit of Mr Tannous sworn 29 June 2011. I consider
that, in circumstances where there was a commercial decision made by the
liquidator not to progress at an earlier stage investigations
into the
companies' affairs, any prejudice now suffered by an inability to pursue claims
for other voidable transactions not identified
and commenced within the
three-year period is self-inflicted and does not outweigh the presumptive
prejudice to the Jasmic parties
(or other proposed defendants) from the delay.
- Had
I been otherwise satisfied that the liquidators had established that leave
should be granted for an extension of time going beyond
the extension I propose
to grant, I would nevertheless have limited the leave to the balance of the
transactions now identified in
relation to Ladycare (as I am not satisfied that
any voidable transaction claims have been identified in relation to the Scotch
Whisky
transaction entered into by Clarecastle or that there is any reason to
expect that any such claim). (I am not satisfied that there
are exceptional
circumstances to warrant a broader extension of the kind that have in other
cases been considered necessary for a
blanket extension order to be granted in
that case). Further, I would have made any such orders subject to notification
of those
parties that would be likely to be adversely affected by them (and who
have not otherwise been formally notified of the application)
and I would have
given those parties an opportunity to make submissions as to why the relief
should not be granted before finalising
orders granting the extensions of time.
- As
to the correctness or otherwise of Brown (a decision of the Court of
Appeal of this Court which is binding on me as a single judge of the Court), I
note that the weight of
authority (and academic consideration) supports the
conclusion that an order may be made under s 588FF(3)(b) of the Corporations
Act extending the time for the commencement of proceedings in general or
"blanket" terms if it is not possible for the liquidator to identify
the
relevant defendants or transactions as at the time of making the application
(even though it is suggested that the circumstances
in which this is done will
be rare). Therefore, insofar as Mr Pritchard placed emphasis on the need for
comity in judicial decisions
considering and applying uniform national
legislation, that consideration would support the application of Brown as
permitting the making of the orders sought in the current case (had I been
satisfied that it was otherwise appropriate to grant
such leave).
Background
- The
Clarecastle and Ladycare companies formed part of a group under the control of
interests associated with Mr James Shea, a director
of both entities. Mr Shea is
now in his 70's and, during public examinations carried out by the liquidation
in March this year, gave
evidence that he is suffering from advanced glaucoma
and is nearly blind. (Transcript references were provided to me by both Counsel
on the present application after close of submissions in relation to Mr Shea's
evidence to his eyesight both now and at the relevant
times.)
- According
to Mr Kassem's affidavit of 31 March 2010 affirmed in the Clarecastle Leave
proceedings, the principal purpose of Clarecastle
(incorporated in 1999) was to
engage in tax effective investments ([7])). Mr Kassem deposes that his enquiries
have revealed that
the principal reason it was placed into external
administration in 2007 was that the company had invested in a number of
investment
schemes (for the purposes of creating tax losses in order to minimise
tax obligations of related entities that were consolidated
with the company for
tax purposes) that "lost their tax status" following audits undertaken by the
ATO (as communicated by the ATO
in February and May 2007), whereupon the
commercial purpose of the company ceased.
- Mr
Kassem has expressed the view, based on the company's financial records, that
Clarecastle was insolvent on and from 30 June 2005.
(Pausing there, it is noted
by Mr Pritchard that there is no suggestion that the company was insolvent at
the time of entry into
the Scotch Whisky transaction or became insolvent by
reason of entry into that transaction - therefore making any claim based on
this
as an insolvent transaction difficult to maintain in circumstances where Mr
Kassem acknowledged in cross-examination that there
was no reason to suspect
that the 2001 transaction was for the purpose of defeating creditors (T.33) but
was assumed to be for tax
minimisation purposes.
- The
two Clarecastle transactions on which focus has been placed (and which, as at
the time the extension application was made Mr Kassem
wished further to
investigate) are the entry by Clarecastle in 2001 into the Scotch Whisky scheme
(recently the subject of investigation
by regulatory and other authorities and
now the subject of criminal proceedings) and the assignment in 2006 by
Clarecastle to Jasmic
of an equity interest in the "Windsor Village
partnership".
- As
for Ladycare (incorporated in 1990), Mr Kassem has deposed, in his affidavit of
31 March 2010 affirmed in the Ladycare Leave proceedings,
that it operated a
business of washroom sanitation services and that, following the issue in
September 2005 by the ATO of a notice
of amended assessment relating to the
company's tax return for the financial year ended 30 June 1999 (in the sum of
$1,346,591.95,
which remains unpaid), transactions were undertaken between July
and December 2006 (characterised by Mr Harper as asset stripping)
by which the
assets of the business were transferred to related parties (see [10] -[14] of Mr
Kassem's affidavit).
- The
transfer of assets followed the provision of advice to Mr and Mrs Shea by a New
Zealand investment bank, HQZ Argentum. (A business
of the same kind as that
operated by Ladycare is now being conducted by a company incorporated on 6 March
2007 (after Ladycare had
changed its name to its current name), the new company
being Lady Care Services Pty Ltd (run by Mr and Mrs Shea's son) leading to
the
conclusion by Mr Kassem that the restructuring of Ladycare's assets and business
was part of a calculated "Phoenix transaction".
- Mr
Kassem has set out, in his 31 March 2010 affidavit in the Ladycare Leave
proceedings, the various transactions that he considers
to be voidable
transactions involving that company. Those are: first, the transfers to other
related entities, recorded by way of
journal entries, on 30 June 2006 of loan
accounts otherwise repayable to the company - being transfers to Jasmic, the
Shea Group
Trading Trust and the LCS Admin Unit Trust; second, the write-off,
again by journal entry, on 30 June 2006 of the balances of related
party loan
accounts - including the write-off of sums due from LCS Administration Unit
Trust, LC Washroom Pty Ltd, Clarecastle and
Jasmic - together with the payment
of a cash sum of $1,086,516 to Jasmic on 31 December 2006; and third, the
payment to Ladycare
of the sum of $1.15m by Jasmic on 29 May 2006, which sum was
"expensed" as a management and indemnity fee and credited to the loan
account of
the Shea Group Trading Trust on 30 June 2006. Some, at least, of those
transactions are already encompassed in the claims
brought in the Jasmic
proceedings (namely, the write off of the loan of $352,788 owing by Jasmic and
the payment to Jasmic of the
sum of $1,086,516).
- Mr
Kassem has deposed that, based upon his review of the company's records,
Ladycare became insolvent on or around 30 June 2006 as
a result of entering into
the alleged voidable transactions.
- Appointment of
liquidators
- Clarecastle
and Ladycare were both placed in liquidation on 5 April 2007, less than a year
after the various transactions of which
complaint is presently made in the three
specific proceedings occurred. (The Scotch Whisky transaction, which is not
presently the
subject of any proceedings but was the focus of the recent
examinations by the liquidators, took place much earlier - in 2001.)
- Mr
Kassem (or a member of his firm) was initially approached to act as the
liquidator of the companies by the accountant then acting
for the companies (Mr
Michael Roy) (T 34.4). Mr Kassem said in the witness box that he did not recall
meeting Mr and Mrs Shea until
towards the end of 2009 (T34.33), therefore quite
some time after his appointment as liquidator on 5 April 2007. He confirmed that
there was a meeting of the companies' members at which the appointment of
liquidators to the companies was approved and the appointment
was then confirmed
at a meeting of creditors on that day (T 35.17). Mr Ozem Kassem and Mr Deryk
Andrew were appointed joint liquidators
on that day. Mr Bruno Secatore was
subsequently appointed as joint liquidator in place of Mr Kassem on 20 March
2008.
- Investigations
by liquidators
- Mr
Kassem says that he was provided with some limited documents in relation to the
companies on 22 March 2007 (i.e. prior to his appointment).
By letter dated 11
April 2007, he wrote to Mr Roy, referring to his appointment as joint liquidator
of the companies, enclosing a
schedule of the companies' records that had been
delivered to the office on 22 March 2007 (being draft financial statements for
the
period ending 30 June 2006/31 December 2006, respectively, as well as
correspondence from the ATO and, in the case of Ladycare, 4
creditors'
statements) and asking Mr Roy to advise if he was in possession of any further
books and records of the companies. A letter
in identical terms was sent on the
same day to Mr Shea. Mr Kassem seemed to accept that this was a standard form
letter seeking to
gather in all the records of the companies (T 35.11). There is
nothing to suggest what response there was to that letter or, conversely,
any
attempt by the liquidators to follow up that request.
- The
next written communication with either Mr or Mrs Shea (or, for that matter, Mr
Roy) on the part of the liquidators appears to
have been in October 2009 when Mr
Kassem wrote separately to each of Mr and Mrs Shea (on 23 October 2009) in
relation to the liquidation
of Ladycare, making a formal demand pursuant to s
530A(1) of the Corporations Act that each furnish all records in their
possession or under their control in accordance with an attached Notice to
Deliver Books of
the Company to the Liquidator (or advise of their present
location). (A similar letter and Notice was sent to Mr Roy.) Similar demands
were issued in relation to Clarecastle including notices issued at this time to
some of those involved in the Scotch Whisky transaction
- Chambers Finance
Limited, the financier, and Mr Patrick McCarthy of Grant McKenzie Pty Limited,
the entity involved in the management
of the scheme on behalf of the investors.
- In
the witness box, Mr Kassem said that he did not think there was any written
correspondence prior to October 2009 with Mr or Mrs
Shea or Mr Roy in relation
to Clarecastle (T.36.8) or Ladycare (T 36.15), but would have expected some
correspondence to have been
sent at about the time that Mr Hutchins took
carriage of the file from about September/October 2009 (T 36.42). Mr Kassem did
not
dispute that no such correspondence (other than the 23 October letter) was
exhibited to his affidavits in the respective Leave proceedings
(T 37.9). He
said that he suspected that Mr Hutchins would have made "the demand" (by which I
understood him to be referring to a
demand for company records akin to the
letter of 23 October 2009) verbally, by telephone or in person, because there
had been a number
of meetings with Mr Roy from late 2009 (T 37.19). Mr Kassem
also said that "the usual response was that there are no further records"
(T
37.23) but acknowledged that he had not set out any conversations to that effect
in his affidavits (and, indeed, it does not appear
that Mr Kassem had the
primary carriage of investigations into these matters at the time and therefore
any such 'response', unless
in writing, would most likely have been made to
members of Mr Kassem's staff not to Mr Kassem himself).
- In
the meantime, between April 2007 and October 2009, it seems that there was some
communication by the liquidators in relation to
Clarecastle's entry into the
Scotch Whisky transaction with Chambers Finance Limited (the entity noted in
Clarecastle's books as
a creditor of the company in relation to the Scotch
Whisky scheme).
- By
letter dated 1 May 2007 information was sought from Chambers Finance in relation
to the transaction.
- Mr
Kassem accepted in the witness box that nothing in his affidavit disclosed any
communications with Chambers Finance in the period
1 May 2007 and 5 March 2009
(T 54.30/35). However, tendered by Mr Castle was a bundle of correspondence
(Exhibit 1) that comprises
some communications during that time. In particular
it appears that Mr Speirs, a director of Chambers Finance, responded to the
liquidators'
initial query by letter dated 9 July 2007. In that letter (which
raises no objection to answering the request for information), Mr
Speirs
explains the delay in responding as due to the fact that the address to which
the letter was sent was no longer current. He
then provides certain information
as to the loan documentation entered into by Clarecastle in 2000 and 2001
(noting that various
documents had been seized in the criminal investigation)
and of the whisky secured by the loan documentation. The letter concludes
co-operatively with the statement that "You, or Mr Francipane are welcome to
email me directly if there is anything further I can
clarify". (Mr Francipane
was the accountant in Mr Kassem's office with carriage of the investigation at
that point.)
- On
17 September 2007, in a letter also forming part of Exhibit 1, Mr Francipane
seems to have taken up that invitation and emailed
to Mr Speirs a further
request for information (seeking clarification as to whether it was expected
that any of the stocks in the
whisky pools in which Clarecastle had invested
would be sold that year and as to the volume of alcohol contained in a
hogshead).
Mr Speirs responded by letter on that same day, providing the
information requested and asking Mr Francipane to let him know if there
was
anything further he required and if he wished to have anything clarified (again,
hardly an unco-operative stance). (Reliance
on the information so provided seems
later to have been placed by the liquidators in the preparation of their 12 May
2010 report
to creditors insofar as that report gives a detailed account of how
much alcohol a hogshead of whisky normally contains that was
seemingly derived
from Mr Speir's response).
- Mr
Castle relies on the above correspondence as gainsaying the suggestion that
there was no cooperation given to the liquidators in
relation to their
investigation into the Scotch Whisky transaction (and Mr Pritchard supported the
tender of the correspondence in
Exhibit 1 also for that purpose).
- Nothing
further seems to have been raised with Chambers Finance until 5 March 2009 when
Mr Kassem wrote again to Chambers Finance
requesting information as to the stock
of whisky held by the company, its location, the estimated time that it is
likely to be realised
and the estimated sale proceeds. Mr Kassem says that he
received no response to this query (but again there is no suggestion that
the
liquidators pressed at the time for a response).
- For
the period from April 2007 until at least June 2008, Mr Sam Francipane had the
day to day conduct of the respective liquidations
within the liquidators'
office. It does not appear that he performed any work on either of those matters
from June 2008. From October
2009, work on the matters was carried out by Mr
Hutchins.
- Tendered
as Exhibit 2 were copies of the Cor Cordis time records in relation to both
liquidations, itemising the time spent on the
matter over that period.
- The
Clarecastle time sheets show a number of time entries for Mr Francipane from 5
April 2007 (the date of the appointment of liquidators)
through to February 2008
but followed by only one entry for Mr Francipane thereafter (review issues re
whisky stock) on 2 June 2008.
The Clarecastle entries focus in the main on the
Whisky transaction. On the Ladycare timesheets, Mr Francipane's time entries
again
start from 5 April 2007 and go through to 11 January 2008 (with an entry
on 2 June 2008 "review issues of whiskey stock 1.5 hours"
- seemingly an
incorrect file entry). For Ladycare, the time entries seem to relate largely to
dealings with directors; dealing with
accountant; meeting (3/5/2007) with
accountant; review documents in relation to commercial bond; and then on an
application to the
AAT and litigation in the County Court of Victoria.
- Without
adjustment to take into account what seems (from the narrative description on
the Ladycare timesheets) to be some wrong attribution
of time as between the
respective files, it appears that the time spent by Mr Francipane on the two
matters (Clarecastle and Ladycare)
was in the order of 22.5 and 20.5 hours
respectively up to June 2008 (and none thereafter) and that Mr Kassem spent very
little,
if any, time on the matter in that period (nor, for that matter, did
either Mr Andrew or Mr Secatore).
- Mr
Hutchins commenced work as a consultant with Cor Cordis from about June 2009.
The arrangement on which he was retained at that
time was that he was
remunerated by way of a percentage of recoveries on matters on which he worked
(though from about October 2009
this changed and he was put on a monthly
retainer). He explained in his affidavit that he reviewed dormant files but says
he also
acted on some funded matters. Although he commenced work in June 2009,
the first time recorded by Mr Hutchins in relation to the
Clarecastle or
Ladycare matters was from October 2009.
- From
a review of the Clarecastle time records, Mr Hutchins' first entry was 8 October
2009 - 5 hours (review books and records/prepare
email for accountant and search
for valuation of whisky data points), followed by 4 hours (investigations) on 13
October 2009, and
then 1.5 hours on 20 October 2009 (issue of
notices/undertaking investigations/review financials and company searches). From
6 November
2009 there were numerous time entries for Mr Hutchins in relation to
the matter, including for 6 November 2009 (meeting with accountant
Michael Roy
and preparation for meeting - 1.5 hours). Other members of the office also
recorded time in January and February 2010
as referable to the whisky
investigation. (On 7 February 2010, there is an entry for Mr Hutchins - 1.5
hours prepare instructions
for lawyers, that being the first reference to the
involvement of lawyers.)
- For
Ladycare, Mr Hutchins' time entries commence two days earlier on 6 October 2009
with 3 hours (review books and records/discussion
with Michael Roy); 5 hours on
7 October 2009 (review books and records/undertake searches/discuss further
information requirements
with Michael Roy/ prepare investigation notes for
follow up), with some 14 hours in total in October 2009 relating to
investigations
and the issue of statutory notices; and then discussions on 16
November 2009 with Mr Roy and Mr Francipane and a total of 31 hours
reviewing
financial records and account reconstruction in November 2009. On 3 December
2009 there is an entry for 3 hours recorded
as "preparation note and analysis
for Mr Kassem and meeting with Sam [Francipane] and previous advisor [who I
assume to be Mr Russell
from HQZ, since had it been a reference to Mr Roy it
would be consistent with other entries for his name to have been used]".
- The
above analysis of the time sheets mirrors what the documents show was taking
place at that time. On 8 October 2009, Mr Hutchins
sent an email to Mr Roy in
relation to both companies, setting out what he described as "obvious"
information required to complete
his investigation and indicating that
additional queries would likely flow from this. That email followed an earlier
email the day
before, in turn referring to a discussion on 6 October 2009, in
which Mr Hutchins suggested that Mr Roy hold off sending additional
records as
Mr Hutchins had "located some books and records".
- On
9 October 2009, Mr Hutchins sent an email to Chambers Finance and to Mr McCarthy
seeking information in relation to the whisky
ventures, from which again it
seems that Mr Hutchins had either met or spoken with Mr McCarthy earlier that
day (since he expressed
appreciation for Mr McCarthy's time, stating that "it
was a useful start in developing an appreciation of the past and current status
quo of the whisky venture").
- Accordingly,
it seems reasonable to infer that Mr Hutchins (having started to take steps in
the matter only in early October) was
at that stage trying to ascertain what
information the liquidators already had and what further information might be
required. In
the witness box Mr Hutchins said that he had spoken with Mr
Francipane when he started reviewing the matter, but the latter did not
recall
much.
- From
October 2009 through to around March 2010, Mr Hutchins met or spoke with Mr Roy
on a number of occasions, with Mr McCarthy on
one occasion and, in March 2010,
with Mr Roy and a representative from HQZ (Mr Russell).
- As
noted earlier, formal notices to produce documents were issued to Mr and Mrs
Shea and Mr Roy on 23 October 2009 and on that date
notices were also issued to
Mr McCarthy and Mr Speirs (of Chambers Finance) pursuant to s 530B(4) of the Act
for production of documents
relating to the scotch whisky transaction. (In
relation to the latter, Atanaskovic Hartnell responded by letter dated 30
October
2009 on behalf of Chambers Finance denying that the liquidator was
entitled to the documents because they were records of Chambers
Finance and not
books of the company as defined by Austin J in Hall v Sherman [2001]
NSWSC 810 at [47]).
- The
steps taken in issuing the formal notices to produce documents seem to have been
as part of a standard procedure to obtain all
relevant documents and not as a
response to a perceived lack of co-operation at that date. In the witness box,
Mr Hutchins did not
suggest a lack of co-operation at that stage.
- There
is also in evidence a copy of a one page typed bullet point document (p 257 CB)
that Mr Kassem says (at [17] of his September
affidavit) was provided by Mr Roy
during the course of the investigations and which appears to be a summary of the
Ladycare Services
business and the circumstances in which it was transferred or
taken over by a company associated with Mr Shea's son. (I note that
filed in
court on 29 June 2011 were affidavits from the respective solicitors, Mr Rollins
and Mr Spinks, in which issue was taken
as to various matters in relation to the
provision of discovery but in the course of which Mr Spinks deposes to his
recollection
being that this bullet point document had been provided in the
course of a discussion he thought had been on a without prejudice
basis.)
- This
document suggests that there was some dissatisfaction on the part of Mr Shea
with Mr Carmona's performance as CEO; refers to
the decision by Mr Shea's son to
take over the business that his father due to his health was unable to continue;
to the estate planning
and business transition advice sought by the Shea family
in December 2005 from HQZ Argentum; to the recommendation by the latter
that a
trading and a holdings trust be established; to the establishment of such
trusts; and to the commencement of trading in Shea
Group Trading Trust and
cessation of trading in Ladycare Services in accordance with HQZ's advice in
March 2006.
- The
document states that there was no goodwill in Ladycare as the contracts were on
a month-to-month basis and the company was unable
to comply with existing
contracts. Non-current assets were said to have been transferred in accordance
with a valuation provided.
- Mr
Carmona's affidavit places in issue a number of the factual statements contained
in this document.
- There
was a suggestion that this had in some way (intentionally or otherwise) misled
the liquidators as to the transactions in question
(and a different version of
events was proffered by Mr Carmona in his recent affidavit). However, there is
nothing on the part of
the liquidators to say that, but for the information so
provided, they would have taken a different course in the investigation of
the
Ladycare business and affairs. It seems to me that what this reflects is simply
that there is a very different view as between
the Shea interests and the
liquidators as to the construction to be placed on the events that occurred at
the time of the company
restructuring.
- By
early 2010 it appears that Mr Kassem had formed the view, based on Mr Hutchins'
investigations, that there were transactions that
appeared to be voidable
against the liquidators from which a recovery for creditors might be obtained
(49 cents in the dollar estimated
for the Clarecastle matter and 100 cents in
the dollar for Ladycare).
- By
letter dated 28 January 2010, Mr Kassem wrote to Mr Roy in relation to Ladycare,
referring to a number of transactions between
June 2006 and December 2006 which
were deemed to be voidable against the liquidators; outlining the liquidators'
observations and
conclusions in that regard and providing an opportunity for
information to be provided as to why proceedings should not immediately
be
commenced in relation to those claims. The identified voidable transactions
included the write-off of related party loans; the
management and indemnity fee;
the payment of a dividend by Jasmic; the transfer of cash at bank to Shea Group
Trading Trust and Jasmic
in December and a bond premium paid to the former also
in December. The second claim referred to in that letter was in relation to
the
transfer of the Ladycare business between June and December 2006.
- On
11 February 2010, Mr Kassem wrote to Mr Roy in relation to Clarecastle, in
similar fashion to the letter that had been sent in
relation to Ladycare,
outlining the position following the liquidators' review and asserting that the
assignment transaction entered
into on 7 July 2006 between Clarecastle and
Jasmic in relation to the Windsor Village Partnership investment was a deemed
voidable
transaction and affording an opportunity for information to be provided
as to why there should not be proceedings in relation to
the transaction. (There
was no reference in this letter to the Scotch Whisky transaction.)
- The
thrust of both those letters suggested that the liquidators were then in a
position to commence proceedings in relation to the
alleged voidable
transactions so identified.
- On
18 March 2010, Mr Hutchins sent an email to Mr Roy referring to a meeting on 9
March 2010 in relation to both matters and seeking
further information "to
assist in the ongoing investigation enquiries". It was put to Mr Kassem in
cross-examination that this was
the first occasion when information in relation
to the Scotch Whisky scheme was sought (at least in writing) from Mr Roy and Mr
Kassem
accepted that this was the case (T 39.39).
- The
above chronology is relevant when it comes to assessing the complaints made by
Mr Kassem and Mr Hutchins as to the lack of co-operation
or assistance in the
course of their investigation of the companies' affairs.
- Mr
Pritchard notes that Mr Kassem claims that, as at September 2010, more than 843
hours had been committed to investigating the affairs
of Ladycare (which, on Mr
Pritchard's calculations and assuming a 40 hour week, would amount to 21 weeks'
work on Ladycare). A similar
calculation for investigations into Clarecastle as
at the date of the filing of the application would convert the 490 hours said
to
have been spent by the liquidators to12 weeks.
- By
contrast, Mr Pritchard points to the time records that show very little time
spent for over 2 years from the commencement of the
liquidation (somewhere in
the order of 42 hours). (The submission by Mr Pritchard was that the liquidators
have had the resources
and capacity to act in a substantial manner when it suits
but otherwise were prepared to do very little.)
- Mr
Kassem, in his 24 September 2010 affidavits in the respective proceedings says
that since his appointment he has been provided
with very limited books and
records and that he has not received a satisfactory response to the demands
issued. As a result of the
lack of information he says that he was unable to
progress his investigations into the affairs of the companies.
- In
paragraph [14] of his September affidavit in the Clarecastle Leave proceedings,
Mr Kassem refers back to [55] to [70] of his March
affidavit, in which he
deposes to a belief that he was not provided with all the information in
relation to the assignment of the
interest in the Windsor Village partnership as
he would expect there to be more source documents [35]; says that the only
material
received from Mr Shea and Mr Roy were the company's general journals
for the period ending 30 June 2005 and 2006; financial statements
for those
years; financial statements for the Windsor Village partnership for 1999 to 2002
and a deed of assignment 7 July 2006;
and asserts at [71] that he has reached
the conclusion that Mr Shea or Mr Roy have in their possession further records
of the company
and are deliberately withholding documents from him "because of
their failure to respond to my notices and the limited records provided
to
date".
- In
other words, Mr Kassem's complaint of lack of co-operation in production of
documents is predicated on his assumption that Mr Shea
and Mr Roy must hold
further documents.
- A
similar assertion is made at [72] in relation to Mr McCarthy, namely that he
failed to provide any documentation or assistance to
substantiate his claims. At
[73], Mr Kassem deposes that no information was provided to his office by
Chambers Finance following
the request made of Chambers Finance. (He does not,
however, refer to the earlier correspondence in which information was provided
on request.) In his 24 September affidavit at [7], Mr Kassem says: "I am further
advised [by Mr Hutchins] that CFL [Chambers Finance]
has provided no assistance
except to confirm that there is an alleged debt owing by the Company in respect
of the purported loan".
He deposes that there was no written response to the
letter dated 5 March 2009 to Chambers Finance and that he is advised that Mr
Speirs has continued to direct him to make enquiries with Grant McKenzie. At [8]
of that second affidavit, read only as to the witness'
belief, Mr Kassem asserts
that it appears that Mr McCarthy "has no intention of cooperating with my
investigations into this transaction".
- Again,
Mr Kassem's complaint as to lack of co-operation in this regard assumes the
existence of documents and a refusal to produce
them. (In Mr Kassem's second
affidavits in the respective proceedings he sets out documents he would expect
to be in existence given
the nature of the investments.)
- At
[76] of Mr Kassem's first affidavit in the Clarecastle leave proceedings he
deposes that his investigation has been far from satisfactory
to date
"considering the complexities involved with each transaction and the lack of
co-operation from Mr Shea, Mr Roy and parties
in connection with the investment
schemes outlined in this affidavit". Similar complaint is made in [31] of his
affidavit in the
Ladycare Leave proceedings.
- In
his affidavits in support of the respective extension applications, Mr Kassem
bases his application for an extension of time on
two matters - the perceived
lack of cooperation with his investigation to date and the nature and complexity
of the issues involved
([82] in the Clarecastle affidavit, [76] in the Ladycare
affidavit). Mr Kassem sought at least 18 months to complete the Clarecastle
investigation (12 months in the Ladycare case), obtain legal advice on evidence
and alleged voidable transactions, determine whether
there are any possible
causes of action and to commence appropriate proceedings against the parties
concerned.
- At
some stage in early 2010 (or perhaps late 2009) Mr Kassem approached solicitors
to act on a speculative basis in relation to the
commencement of proceedings.
(In the witness box Mr Kassem said that he had approached solicitors in late
2009 or early 2010 but
the time sheets suggest that instructions for the
solicitors were not prepared until early 2010.)
- On
12 May 2010, the liquidators reported to the creditors of the respective
companies referring to "detailed investigations in relation
to the company from
a combination of books and records of the company and third party information
sources". (For Ladycare alone the
costs for time spent were $233,974.50,
including about $130,0000.00 on various investigations).
- Though
the creditors of Clarecastle were noted in Mr Kassem's affidavit as being
Ladycare ($538,205); Chambers Finance ($1,426,650);
Jasmic ($22,788); and the
ATO and Mr Shea (both for unknown amounts), Mr Pritchard contends that in fact
the only 'real' creditor
of Clarecastle is Jasmic (on the basis, as I understand
it, that a proof of debt had not been noted as having been lodged for Ladycare
and that the Chambers Finance debt was secured over the whisky). (Mr Castle
referred me to the loan documentation that suggests,
contrary to what had been
put to and accepted by Mr Kassem in cross-examination on 6 May 2011, that the
loan in relation to the Scotch
Whisky investment is not a limited recourse loan.
The report to creditors notes from the liquidators' review of the agreement
indicates
that security for the loan appears to be limited to a legal mortgage
over the scotch whisky investment.)
- The
report to creditors as at May 2010 identified the claims under investigation as
the Windsor Village partnership claim and the
Scotch Whisky claim (the latter
not suggested to be a voidable transaction claim).
- As
to the position with Ladycare, the largest creditor (as noted in the report to
creditors) is the ATO. The ATO had, on 14 September
2005, issued a notice of
amended assessment in relation to the company's tax return for the 1998/9
financial year resulting in a
liability to the ATO of over $1.3 million. The ATO
claims to be owed $1,440,975.77.
Proposed Ladycare proceedings
- I
note that when the matter was before me in June 2011, the liquidators had put on
evidence as to the particular transactions in respect
of which they wish to make
voidable transaction claims - as set out in a draft statement of claim annexed
to the 29 June 2011 affidavit
of Mr Tannous.
- In
that regard it is relevant to note that the only 588FF claim identified against
the Jasmic parties in that draft pleading (ignoring
a typographical error in the
paragraph numbering in the draft Statement of Claim) relates to a payment by
Ladycare on 3 August 2006
of $623,252 to Jasmic (said to be a voidable
transaction because it was entered into during the 2 years ending on the
relation back
day; was an uncommercial transaction and was an insolvent
transaction [57] or [58] was voidable pursuant to s 588FF(4) or (5) or
was with
intent to defraud creditors.
- Otherwise
the draft pleading makes a series of allegations in relation to transactions to
which other entities (albeit connected or
associated with Mr and/or Mrs Shea or
the Shea group) are involved (none of those entities, as I understand it, having
been given
notice of the present application).
- Briefly,
those voidable transaction claims are as follows:
- In Part D of the
draft pleading, a transaction involving Waltlo Pty Ltd (a company of which Mr
and Mrs Shea are said to be sole directors)
- it is alleged that it owed
Ladycare the sum of $2,646,839 and interest, which was purported to be written
off 30 June 2006;
- In Part E of the
draft pleading, a transaction involving LCS IT (of which Mr and Mrs Shea are
directors and which is a party to the
LCS IT proceedings) in its capacity as
trustee of the Victoria Unit Trust - in relation to the sum of $136,636
allegedly owed to
Ladycare as at 30 June 2005 and written off 30 June 2006;
- In Part G of the
draft pleading, a transaction involving Tama Pty Limited (a company of which Mr
and Mrs Shea's son is the sole director)
as trustee of the Tamarama Unit Trust -
in relation to the sum of $474,749 said to have been owed as at 30 June 2005 and
written
off on 30 June 2006;
- In Part H of the
draft pleading, a claim in relation to various transactions recorded in the
journals of the company - the commitment
on the part of Ladycare to pay a
management and service fee of $1.15m to Australian Custodians Ltd and
Providential Trustees Limited
as trustees of the Shea Group Trading Trust to pay
a management and service fee (a letter of 17 May 2006 seeking payment from
Ladycare
in respect of that claim being said to be part of the 'scheme'); the
credit of an amount to the loan account of Shea Group Management
Trust on 30
June 2006 ; and then on 3 August 2006, the payments by Ladycare to Tama of
$424,051 and to Jasmic of $623,252; the making
of journal entries on 31 December
2006 whereby those transactions were allocated to the loan account of Jasmic and
Ladycare transferred
$1,086,516 in purported discharge of its liability to
Jasmic, on which date Ladycare transferred $78,095 to the Shea Group Trading
Trust);
- In Part I of the
draft pleading, the Ladycare dividend in favour of LCSIT OF $270,000 (that being
the subject of a claim in the LCSIT
proceedings); and
- In Part P of the
draft pleading a claim against Enviro LCS (a company incorporated on 29 May 2006
with Mr and Mrs Shea as its directors
and members), which is said to have
received the benefit of transferred assets from Ladycare with the knowledge of a
breach of fiduciary
duty but is alternatively pleaded as a voidable transaction.
- Each
of the above transactions is said to be an insolvent and uncommercial
transaction and voidable pursuant to s 588FE(3) or alternatively
(4) or (5).
Orders are sought pursuant to s588FF and otherwise (including under s 37A
Conveyancing Act, setting aside the transactions).
Breaches of statutory, common
law and fiduciary duties are alleged. Equitable compensation or a declaration
that assets are held
on trust is sought (as well as a further extension to
commence proceedings to 5 February 2012). (I note that at least the dividend
claim in Part I and the transaction the subject of Part H involving a payment to
Jasmic in December 2006 of $1,086,516 already appear
to be part of the claims
made in the proceedings on foot and for which leave under s 588(3)(b) would not
be necessary. Insofar as
the August 2006 payment of $623,252 is a part of that
overall transaction, it might be thought to be encompassed by the existing
claim
in the Jasmic proceedings or a potential amendment to that claim.)
- The
draft Statement of Claim also contains other allegations for which an extension
of time under s 588FF(3)(b) would not be necessary
and has not been sought:
- In Part F of the
draft pleading, a claim against LCS in its own right for the sum of $8,204 as a
debt or under contract (based on
the amount disclosed in the company accounts)
or as money had and received and/or pursuant to a restitutionary claim;
- In Part J of the
draft pleading, claims against Mr and Mrs Shea as directors of Ladycare for
breach of their duties as directors (statutory,
common law, fiduciary) not to
gain an advantage for themselves or someone else or to cause detriment to the
company;
- In Part K of the
draft pleading, a claim in relation to the transfer of fixed assets to Enviro
LCS (it being said that the Ladycare
directors took no steps to cause Enviro to
pay the purchase price or to obtain security for the payment of the purchase
price, in
breach of their duties as directors);
- In Part L of the
draft pleading, a claim in relation to the transfer of other assets (goodwill
and benefit of contracts) to Enviro
LCS for no consideration, again said to be
in breach of directors' duties;
- In Part M of the
draft pleading, a claim that the rejection of an offer to purchase the business
of Ladycare, was in breach of their
duties as directors (seemingly based on Mr
Carmona's evidence although that referred only to indicative offers, as I read
his affidavit);
- In Part N of the
draft pleading, that the declaration of the dividend in the sum of $270,000 and
dissipation of Ladycare's assets
was in breach of their duties as directors;
- In Part O of the
draft pleading, that in relation to loans to related parties and the compromise
or discharge of debts owed by Waltlo,
LCS as trustee for Victoria Unit Trust,
LCS in its own right and Tama as trustee of Tamarama Unit Trust, the directors
of Ladycare
were in breach of directors' duties.
- As
pointed out by Mr Pritchard, insofar as the draft pleading includes claims
otherwise than voidable transactions with a standard
6 year limitation period
(such as the claims under s 37A of the Conveyancing Act and directors' duty
claims), no leave is required
or, at the most, leave is required to amend in
respect of pleadings already on foot in accordance with orthodox principles. In
that
regard, it has been said that s 588FF(1) operates to the exclusion of the
general power in s 1322(4)(d) of the Corporations Act but does not
exclude the operation of court rules which would allow the amendment of
proceedings to include additional transactions
( Rodgers v Commissioner of
Taxation (1998) 88 FCR 61; Davies v Chicago Boot Co Pty Ltd (No 2) [2007] SASC 12; (2007) 96
SASR 164).
- Mr
Harper submits that there has been a clear identification of the alleged
voidable transactions (referring to [16] of Mr Kassem's
31 March affidavit) and
notes that there is a commonality (at least in most cases) of Mr and Mrs Shea as
directors and/or shareholders
of the relevant entities proposed to be the
subject of the claims contained in the draft pleading.
- With
the above factual background in mind, I turn to the issues for determination.
(i) Correctness of Brown
- For
the reasons adverted to earlier, this is not an issue for determination in this
Court, given that the decision of the Court of
Appeal is binding on me. However,
I note the submissions that were made, particularly in the context that it is
suggested there is
some ambiguity in the reasoning in Brown .
- Mr
Pritchard submits that the subject leave applications seek ' blanket'
extensions (the orders not being confined to a specific transaction or
defendant), and that such a blanket extension of time application
cannot validly
be made. In that respect, the Jasmic parties do not accept the correctness of
the Court of Appeal's decision in Brown.
- In
Brown , an application had been made pursuant to s 588FF(3) for an order
in terms that "the period prescribed by s588(3)(b) of the Corporations Law
within which any application in respect to voidable transactions of [the company
in liquidation] under s 588FF be extended to [a specified date]" . At first
instance ( Brown v DML Resources Pty Ltd [2001] NSWSC 590; (2001) 52 NSWLR 685 at [693] -
[694]), Austin J considered a submission that s 588FF(3) did not permit the
making of a general order for an extension of time to make an application under
s 588FF(1) against any creditor. It was submitted that the application must be
made with respect to a specific person and a specific transaction.
Austin J at
[33] said:
In my opinion the applicants' submission places an unduly restrictive
interpretation on s 588FF(3). The statutory language does not literally require
the construction that they advance. It is true that subs (1) speaks of a
particular
application concerning a single transaction, and the opening words of
subs (3) refer to the specific application identified by subs
(1). But subs (3)
refers to the application under subs (1) only in order to say that such an
application must be made within the
period of time that subs (3) sets.
Subsection (3) does not say, as it might readily have said if the applicants'
contention were
correct, that the application under subs (1) may only be made
within a longer period than three years if the Court allows that application
to
be brought later. Instead, it sets the time limit for making an application
under subs (1) as three years after the relation-back
day, or such longer period
as the Court orders on an application under subs (3) - that is a different
application whose purpose is
only to extend the time period. Consistently with
the wording of subs (3), the application to extend the time limit can be an
application
to extend the time limit within which a particular subs (1)
application can be made, or a broader application that applies to the
particular
subs (1) application under consideration and to other applications as well. I
see no reason why the other applications
cannot be described by category rather
than in specific terms, provided that the description is clear.
- Before
the appeal from his Honour's decision was determined, a similar issue came to be
considered in the Queensland Court of Appeal
in Greig & Duff as
Liquidators of Australian Building Industries P/L (in Liq) v Australian Building
Industries P/L (in Liq) &
Anor [2003] QCA 298. There, Jerrard JA said
(at p 1585, [111]):
I agree with the view expressed by Williams JA that s 588FF(3) does not,
as a general rule , authorise blanket applications made ex parte without
any identification in the application (or order made) of any person or persons
against whom an application may ultimately be made for any one of the variety of
orders provided for in s 588FF(1)(a) - (j). (my emphasis)
...
It seems incongruous that s 588FF(3) should be construed as allowing a
(necessarily very specific) "application under subs (1)" to be made within such
extended period
as the Court orders, on an application brought ex parte in the
broadest possible terms. Instead, s 588FF(3) will be construed more consistently
with the particularity required in s 588FF(1) if s 588FF(3) is construed to
require that any foreshadowed "application under subs (1)", for the bringing of
which an extension of time is sought,
should itself be described in the
application made "under this paragraph" for that extension.
- Williams
JA had said at [45]:
Those arguments highlight a number of criticisms made above of the reasoning
of Austin J in Brown No 2 . The answer, in my respectful view, is not to
say that no creditor need be served with the application for an extension of
time,
but rather that any creditor sued outside the three year limitation period
must have been made a party to the application for an
order extending time.
Surely any liquidator doing his or her job competently would at least be able to
say towards the end of the
three year limitation period what transactions might
be challenged. Austin J in Brown No 2 at 694 referred to the situation
which existed in Green v Chiswell as indicating that in some situations
the liquidator may not be in the position to do that. I doubt, however, that
that would be so
in the circumstances which arose in Green v Chiswell .
There the relation back day was 1 May 1996 when administrators of the company
were appointed. Then those administrators were appointed
liquidators on 21
January 1999 only a couple of months before the three year limitation period
expired. But surely in such a situation,
particularly where there was an
identity between the administrators and liquidators, it would be known within
the three year period
what transactions were suspect. That would clearly be a
case where an extension would be granted, but the creditors affected thereby
would have to be served with
the application and given the opportunity of making
submissions as to why such an extension should not be granted . (my
emphasis)
- On
appeal, in Brown , Spigelman CJ said at [170] - [173] that:
[170] The power to extend the time limit for commencing proceedings is
intended to provide for the circumstance in which a liquidator
is not in a
position to commence proceedings within three years of the relation-back day,
for whatever reason, subject to the assessment
of the Court of all relevant
circumstances, including the liquidator's conduct. It is not difficult to
envisage a circumstance in
which a liquidator is still ascertaining the identity
of the recipients of benefits under possible voidable transactions and cannot
give the Court an indication of the creditors to be targeted. The power should
be broad enough to allow, in those circumstances,
for an order granting an
extension of time in general terms.
[171] The requirement of commercial certainty on the part of those who have
had past dealings with the corporation is to be balanced
against the conflicting
interest of the creditors of the company. The Court, through the discretions it
exercises under s588FF(3) and s588FF(1), is in a position to control unwarranted
delay by liquidators. Subject to reasonable expedition on the part of a
liquidator, and
to adopt the reasoning of Doyle CJ in Pegulan Floor Coverings
Pty Ltd v Carter (1997) 24 ACSR 651 at 659, the creditors are entitled
to:
"... the benefit of having the affairs of an insolvent company properly
investigated and administered in an orderly fashion in terms
of the provisions
of the law."
[172] Such an orderly administration is one of the underlying purposes of the
legislation. Pursuant to s5C of the Act and s15AA of the Acts Interpretation Act
1901, the Court must prefer a construction that would promote the purpose or
object underlying the Act. The purpose or object of orderly
liquidation is best
served by recognising that diligent liquidators may not be able to identify a
full list of targets for applications
under s588FF(1) within the three year
period specified in s588FF(3).
[173] There is nothing in the words of s588FF(3)(b) which ties the character
of the extension application to the specificity of what
is required in an
originating process for an order under s588FF(1). For the reasons I have
mentioned, it is not appropriate to construe
the section as if it did do so.
- Later
in his Honour's judgment, his Honour considered the import of Greig and
said (in a paragraph as to which Mr Pritchard submits there is some ambiguity)
(at [200]):
I have concluded above that the court does have power to grant an extension
of time in general terms by specification of categories.
I have left open the
issue of the right of persons, who are not targeted or even identified at the
time of the application, to move
the court to set aside the order extending
time. Some of the reasoning in Greig approaches the issue in a different way.
- The
starting point for Mr Pritchard's submission in this regard is that, in Brown
, the primary point of the appeal was the interpretation of s 1332(4)(d)
(not 588FF(3)), reference being made to the observation at
[77] by Spigelman CJ
that "in a sense, the section that falls to be construed on appeal is not
588FF(3) itself but s1322(4)(d)".
- Insofar
as the Chief Justice accepted that Austin J was correct in the conclusion that
an application under s 588FF(3)(b) seeking
a general order for an extension of
time to make an application under 588FF(1) against any creditor is a valid
application and an
order in those terms is a valid order, Mr Pritchard submits
that the conclusion to which Austin J came was not in fact that a blanket
application with no specificity could be made but rather that ([168]):
Consistently with the wording of Subs (3), the application to extend the time
limit can be an application to extend the time limit
within which a particular
subs(1) application can be made or a broader application that applies to a
particular subs(1) application
under consideration and to other applications as
well. I see no reason why the other application cannot describe by category
rather
than in specific terms provided that the description is clear.
- In
this regard, the distinction seemingly drawn by Mr Pritchard is that between an
application in which claims are described by category
(which Austin J considered
was permissible) and an application in general terms against any party.
(Nevertheless, as Mr Pritchard
notes, the finding made (at [170]) in Brown
was that the power under s 588FF(3)(b) was broad enough to allow for an
extension of time in general terms (in circumstances where
a liquidator is still
ascertaining the identity of the recipients of benefits under possible voidable
transactions and cannot give
the Court an indication of the creditors to be
targeted). (Mr Pritchard notes that the analysis at [160] in Brown was
not raised before Austin J; rather it was raised for the first time before the
Court of Appeal and the response to the submission
at that stage was that if
that issue had been raised below the application could have been amended to make
provision for a claim
in relation to specific transactions.)
99 Mr
Pritchard submits that the decision in Brown is wrong for a number of
reasons. First, by reference to the wording of the section (on the basis that s
588FF(1) contemplates an
application for one or more specific orders being made
and s 588FF(3) is directed to "an" application under subsection (1) - a
submission
considered and rejected in New Cap ). Second, on the basis
that the reasoning (at [45]) in Grieg (requiring the defendant to have
been made a party to the application) is inconsistent with the prospect of a
blanket application
being permissible. Third, the suggested inconsistency in the
fact that in Brown the Court (at [136]) had declined to decide whether or
not all persons affected by an order under 588FF(3) need be notified yet on
the
other hand the Court held the power should be broad enough to call for an order
in those circumstance (at [170]). Fourth, that
the construction in Brown
is inconsistent with the finding that the strength of the proposed
application should be considered and this cannot be done in a blanket
application (though I note that in New Cap it is recognised that this
factor may not be relevant where what the liquidator is seeking by the extension
is time to investigate
possible claims).
- Mr
Pritchard also raises public policy considerations, some of which seem to
overlap, in submitting that the construction preferred
in Brown would
create a number of unjust or undesirable outcomes (including that potential
defendants would be disadvantaged by not being identified
in s 588FF(3)
applications; that liquidators would be encouraged not to identify potential
defendants thereby reducing the prospect
of opposition (at least in the first
instance); that, having regard to accepted notions of natural justice, there may
be a multiplicity
of litigation by successive defendants applying to re-agitate
leave applications of which they had not been given notice in the first
instance; the possibility of inconsistent outcomes on applications to set aside
the grant of leave by respective defendants, since
each application would need
to have regard to the factors that need to be taken into account such as the
strength of the case against
that defendant and the prejudice to that defendant;
that there would be no finality as defendants who could claim that they were
fairly identifiable but not identified might cause ongoing challenges to any
leave granted; that liquidators would not have certainty
themselves and
prospective defendants may seek to have leave revoked after it has been granted
and after proceedings have been commenced;
that the interests of creditors could
not be served by such uncertainty and the potential for wasted costs to be
incurred; and that
applications would be decided by reference only to the
evidence that the liquidator elected to put before the Court.
- The
position in Brown has been followed on various occasions. In HIH
Insurance Ltd, Re McGrath (in liq) [2004] NSWSC 165; [2004] 22 ACLC 449, Barrett J made an
order on an application for leave "extending to a date 12 months from the date
of filing this application, or
such other period as the Court thinks fit, the
period within which the plaintiffs may make an application under s 588FF(1) of
the
Act with respect to any voidable transaction involving the HIH Companies
which have not been identified by the liquidators as at
the date of the filing
of this application". In that case, however, the liquidators had given evidence
of the very considerable tasks
which they faced in investigating the affairs of
the companies in the group having regard to the complexity of the business and
affairs
of the group, the need for continued liaison with regulatory and
investigatory bodies and the difficulty in obtaining access to relevant
information and documents. The order was granted by Barrett J, though excluding
from the general extension of time, those transactions
which the liquidators had
already identified as allegedly voidable transactions.
- In
New Cap , White J considered a submission by the defendants that if an
order under s 588FF(3)(b) were sought in general terms then the applications
falling within such an order must be described by category and the description
of each category must be clear. In New Cap the order sought in the
Originating Process was for an extension of time in respect of any claim of any
description which fell within
Pt 5.7B. White J noted that both before Austin J
and the Court of Appeal in Brown it had been submitted that s 588FF(3)
did not permit the making of a general order for an extension of time to make an
application
under s 588FF(1) against any creditor and that such an application
must be made with respect to a specific person and a specific
transaction. His
Honour noted that Spigelman CJ, with whom on this matter the other members of
the Court agreed, had held that an
application for a general order for an
extension of time to make an application under s 588FF(1) against any creditor
was a valid
application and that an order in those terms was a valid order and
then said at [19] - [20]:
[19] It is not obvious to me why the clarity of the description of a claim in
an application under s 588FF(3)(b) should be a criterion
of validity. Prima
facie, the validity of an application should depend on whether the claim made,
whether clearly or ambiguously, when properly
construed, is within the provision
. I doubt that [the sentence in his Honour's judgment that "I see no reason
why the other applications cannot be described by category
rather than in
specific terms, provided that the description is clear"] forms part of the ratio
of the decision either of Austin
J or the Court of Appeal. (my emphasis)
[20] A comparison with the order made in Brown v DML Resources Pty Ltd
and para 33 of his Honour's judgment shows that Austin J was of the view
that the description of an application being "in respect
of any voidable
transaction of [the company] under s 588FF" was a sufficiently clear description
by category. The category of "voidable
transactions" covered all of the
transactions in Div 2 of Pt 5.7B. It covered all of the transactions in respect
of which an order
could be made under s 588FF(1). Therefore the reference to
"category" does not require an identified sub-set of voidable transactions
in
respect of which an extension is sought.
- White
J went on (at [21]-[22]) to express the view that when Spigelman CJ in Brown
summarised his conclusion in the earlier part of his judgment as being that
"the Court does have power to grant an extension of time
in general terms by
specification of categories" (at [200]), his Honour must have been of the view
that a specified category of transactions
in respect of which an extension of
time may be granted includes any voidable transaction of the company.
- White
J noted that in Greig , Jerrard JA had described the proposition that the
section "does not authorise blanket applications made ex parte without any
identification
... of any person or persons against whom an application may
ultimately be made for any one of the variety of orders provided for
in the
section as a 'general rule'", and said, at [24]:
However, Jerrard JA went on to describe this as a general rule and said that
a case might be taken out of the general rule where a
liquidator could satisfy
the Court that the date of the liquidator's appointment, or the state of the
affairs of the company, have
resulted in the liquidator being unable to describe
the nature of a possible application or applications to be brought and the
identity
of the potential respondent or respondents (at para 112). This
indicates that the construction of s 588FF(3) propounded in the passage
quoted
is a construction as to how the section ought to be applied, rather than one
which goes to the validity of an application
in general terms for an order under
s 588FF(3)(b). In any event I should follow the decision in BP Australia Ltd
v Brown
- There,
his Honour was prepared to make the orders sought, noting that the ambit of the
orders could be discerned by the reference
to s 588FF itself. In other words,
since the reference in the application for extension was for the making of an
application under
s 588FF(1), and that subsection empowered the Court to make
specified orders where, on the application of a company's liquidator,
it is
satisfied that a transaction of the company is voidable because of s 588FE, his
Honour considered that the reference to s 588FF(3)
showed that the liquidator
must be seeking an extension of time for the bringing of proceedings or claims
against the defendant under
Part 5.7B of the Act in respect of transactions
which are alleged to be voidable transactions under s 588FE and said "The
paragraph
could not be seeking an extension of time in respect of any other
claim under Part 5.7B because s 588FF would have no application
to any such
claim." His Honour dismissed the submission that an application for an extension
of time for claims limited only by reference
to Div 2 of Part 5.7B would be too
wide, saying at [27]:
.... However it is clear from the orders which were made in BP Australia
Ltd v Brown and in McGrath & Ors v HIH Insurance Ltd (In Liq),
where the question of the allowable width of claims was a live issue, that
applications under s 588FF(3)(b) may be made in respect
of a category of claims
as wide as voidable transactions. Implicitly, but nonetheless sufficiently
clearly, that is the category
of transactions to which para 3 is directed.
- The
position in Brown has also been followed in the Federal Court in
Tolcher v Capital Finance Australia Ltd [2005] FCA 108, where the Full
Court of the Federal Court held that a liquidator may seek an extension of time
for bringing proceedings to recover
a voidable transaction by an application in
general (or "blanket") terms, rather than by reference to a particular
transaction or
class of transactions. There, objection was taken to the
application for an extension on the basis that the Court did not have the
power
to, and should not as a matter of discretion, grant an extension of time because
the application was made in a general form
in relation to a class of
transactions and therefore lacked sufficient specificity.
- In
rejecting that argument, Tamberlin J noted that the language of s 588FF(3)(b)
does not require an application to specify a particular
transaction as opposed
to a class or category. His Honour referred with approval to the decisions of
Austin J in Brown (No 2), the Court of Appeal in Brown and the
subsequent decisions of New Cap and McGrath v HIH . His Honour
noted the decision in Greig but considered (as had White J in New Cap
) that in that case Jerrard JA had directed his attention to the
application, rather than to a "proper interpretation", of s 588FF(3)(b)
and
noted that the decision in Greig had been considered in both Brown
and New Cap .
- Tamberlin
J ultimately concluded (at [28]) that:
In my view, the weight of authority and legal reasoning leads me to conclude
that an application in the present case is a valid application
and that the
Court has the necessary power to grant the extension sought. Apart from
authority, the literal wording of the Act and
the practical commercial
considerations favouring such an application of the provision persuade me that
the submissions of the respondent
as to the extent of the power under s
588FF(3)(b) should be rejected.
- In
South Australia, the Court of Appeal has also followed the views of Spigelman CJ
in Brown (in Ansell Ltd v Davies [2008] SASC 203; (2008) 67 ACSR
356 at [45]). There, the Court held that an application could be made under s
588FF(3)(b) even if the creditor was not joined. Doyle CJ agreed
that there
would be situations where a liquidator cannot identify within the required
period persons against whom claims can or should
be made under s 588FF(1) and
considered that it would surprising if there was no remedy for that situation
(noting that r 2.7 of
the Corporations Rules 2003 (SA) acknowledged that
there may be no respondent or defendant to an application, in providing that
service was to be effected on
"each defendant (if any) to the proceeding").
Although special leave was granted in respect of that decision the matter did
not proceed
to a hearing in the High Court.
- I
note that at first instance (Re Harris Scarfe Ltd (in liq) and Harris Scarfe
Wholesale Pty Ltd (in liq) (No 3) [2008] SASC 74; (2008) 65 ACSR 616),
Debelle J had expressed reservations as to the position and, it might fairly be
said, had somewhat reluctantly followed the position
in Brown . His
Honour, considering an extension of time to bring claims in respect of creditors
"who were not named or identified" in the application
said (at [17]):
In my view, serious questions exist whether the order made on 14 April 2004
is valid. As a general rule, orders are made against identified
and named
persons. This order was made in respect of creditors who were not named or
identified. It was capable of applying to any
creditor of HSL or HSW other than
those against whom proceedings under s 588FF had already been issued and the
creditors who were
listed in Sch 1 of the application and were described in the
order as "the ascertained creditors". It is doubtful whether parliament
intended
that s 588FF(3)(b) should authorise an order against unidentified creditors.
Orders of that kind have a real capacity to defeat the intention expressed in
the Harmer report that there should be commercial certainty
in the sense that
creditors know where they stand after the period of 3 years prescribed by s
588FF has elapsed : see Brown v DML Resources Pty Ltd (No 3) (in liq)
(2004) 164 FLR 337; 188 ALR 469; [2001] NSWSC 719 (Brown) quoted in BP
Australia Ltd v Brown (2003) 58 NSWLR 322; 46 ACSR 677; [2003] NSWCA 216 at
[54]- [58] (BP Australia Ltd). That question aside, there are real questions
whether an order can be made against a class of unidentified persons
in
circumstances such as these. An order extending the time limit has the capacity
to cause prejudice to certain creditors. Individual
issues affecting each
creditor may exist. As the events of these proceedings demonstrate, the order
will not bind those creditors
who obtain orders setting it aside on the ground
of a want of procedural fairness. The decisions in BP Australia Ltd and in
Greig v Australian Building Industries Pty Ltd (in liq) [2004] 2 Qd R 17;
[2003] QCA 298 (Greig) are further examples of the difficulties. However, the
validity of a general order granting an extension of time has been upheld
by two
Full Courts in BP Australia Ltd and in Greig, albeit in the latter decision the
validity of shelf or blanket orders was questioned.
(my emphasis)
- Debelle
J confirmed the order extending time, emphasising the desirability for
uniformity of decisions in the interpretation of the
Corporations Law and
the Corporations Act . Relevantly, his Honour said (at [19]) that:
Uniformity of decisions in the interpretation of the Corporations Law and the
Corporations Act is desirable and a single judge should not depart from the
interpretation placed on that legislation by an intermediate appellate
court
unless convinced that that interpretation is plainly wrong: Australian
Securities Commission v Marlborough Gold Mines Ltd [1993] HCA 15; (1993) 177 CLR 485 at 492
; [1993] HCA 15; 112 ALR 627 at 628-9 ; [1993] HCA 15; 10 ACSR 230 at 231-2 ; [1993] HCA 15. While I have real
concerns to the validity of the order in this case, I am not prepared to say
that the decisions in BP Australia
Ltd and in Greig are plainly wrong.
Furthermore, the reasoning in those decisions has been applied on a number of
occasions since:
see, for example, Australian Securities and Investments
Commission v Karl Suleman Enterprizes Pty Ltd (in liq) (2004) 52 ACSR 103 ;
[2004] NSWSC 1244; Tolcher v Capital Finance Australia Ltd (2005) 143 FCR
300 ; 52 ACSR 328 ; [2005] FCA 108; McGrath v National Indemnity Co
(2004) 182 FLR 309 ; 49 ACSR 403 ; [2004] NSWSC 391; Re McGrath v HIH
Insurance Ltd (in liq) (2004) 205 ALR 643 ; 48 ACSR 723 ; [2004] NSWSC 165;
Wallman v Milestone Enterprises Pty Ltd (2006) 24 ACLC 1541 ; [2006] WASC
260. It is not for me to play the role of judicial iconoclast. I apply the
reasoning in BP Australia Ltd and Greig holding that a court
has power under s
588FF(3)(b) generally to extend the time limit against all creditors.
Furthermore, none of the creditors sought to be joined has sought to invalidate
the order on this ground. Mr Hoffmann QC, who appeared for 16 creditors,
referred to the remarks of Spigelman CJ in BP Australia
Ltd at [135] and of
Williams JA in Grieg at [50]. He submitted that blanket orders of this kind
should only be made in exceptional
circumstances. He submitted that the
circumstances of this case were not sufficiently exceptional to justify the
order. In my view,
that is a matter to be considered later on the hearing of the
application against each creditor. It is inappropriate to determine
it at this
stage.
- Academic
commentary recognises that the weight of judicial authority favours the approach
in Brown .
- In
Austin & Black's Annotations to the Corporations Act , the learned
authors state in unqualified terms at [5.588FF] (though noting the contrary
authority) that:
An order may also be made under s 588FF(3)(b) extending the time for the
commencement of proceedings in general terms or in relation to a class of
transactions, if it is not possible
to identify the relevant persons or
proceedings: BP Australia Ltd v Brown , above at [170]-[173]; Tolcher
v Capital Finance Australia Ltd (2005) 143 FCR 300; 52 ACSR 328; [2005] FCA
108; New Cap Reinsurance v Reaseguros Alianza SA (2004) 186 FLR 175;
[2004] NSWSC 787; at[14]-[28], to the contrary Greig & Duff v Australian
Building Industries Pty Ltd (in liq) [2004] 2 Qd R 17; (2003) 21 ACLC 1565;
[2003] QCA 298 at [111]- [112]
- Similarly,
in Ford's Principles of Corporations Law , the learned authors summarise
the position in relation to "shelf" applications at [27.260] as follows:
An order under s 588FF(3) extending time does not have to be confined to
proposed proceedings concerning a particular person or particular transaction.
In a rare case an order can be made where the liquidator is still
identifying persons against whom s 588FF(1) applications might be made: BP
Australia Ltd v Brown (2003) 58 NSWLR 322; 46 ACSR 677; [2003] NSWCA 216 at
[168]; Re McGrath (as joint liq of the HIH companies ) (2004) 205 ALR
643; 48 ACSR 723; [2004] NSWSC 165; New Cap Reinsurance Ltd (in liq) v
Reaseguros Alianza SA [2004] NSWSC 787; Australian Securities and
Investments Commission v Karl Suleman Enterprises Pty Ltd (in liq) (2004) 52
ACSR 103; [2004] NSWSC 1244; Re Harris Scarfe Ltd (in liq) and Harris Scarfe
Wholesale Pty Ltd (in liq) (No 3) (2008) 65 ACSR 616; 254 LSJS 154; [2008]
SASC 74; aff'd sub nom Ansell Ltd v Davies (2008) 67 ACSR 356; [2008]
SASC 203; special leave to appeal to the High Court granted 13 November 2008.
(my emphasis)
The Federal Court has adopted a similar view: Tolcher (as liq of Lloyd
Scott Enterprises Pty Ltd (in liq)) v Capital Finance Australia Ltd (2005)
52 ACSR 328; [2005] FCA 108 not following Greig v Australian Building
Industries Pty Ltd (in liq) [2004] 2 Qd R 17; [2003] QCA 298.
- In
his journal article, 'Voidable transactions - extending the limitation period
under s 588FF(3) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)' (2009) 17 Insolvency Law
Journal 121, Matthew Broderick observes in relation to "blanket"
applications for leave (at pp 129 - 131):
The concern expressed about "blanket" applications/orders is that a
liquidator could avoid the three-year limitation period by filing
an application
to avoid any transaction and later supplement the application by the inclusion
of additional parties after the three-year
limitation period expired. This was
said to make a mockery of the three-year limitation period, and would allow
liquidators to procrastinate
in a liquidation rather than promptly identifying
voidable transactions. It could be utilised in theory where the court permitted
joinder of a defendant after the three-year limitation period.
...
[In Brown ] Spigelman CJ considered that that there were other means
by which the court could avoid any mischief created by liquidators using
"blanket" applications in inappropriate circumstances. First, courts maintain
case management procedures which could monitor shelf
or blanket applications.
Secondly, where a liquidator failed to give notice of his or her intention to
the party concerned in a shelf
or blanket application, the court could take that
failure into account in the exercise of its discretion at the subsequent inter
partes hearing.
concluding that:
Before the issue is tested by the High Court, the predominant view, in most
jurisdictions, is that "blanket" applications may be made
only in exceptional
circumstances.
- The
High Court in Australian Securities Commission v Malborough Gold Mines Ltd
[1993] HCA 15; (1993) 177 CLR 485 at [492] said that:
Although the considerations applying are somewhat different from those
applying in the case of Commonwealth legislation, uniformity
of decision in the
interpretation of uniform national legislation such as the Law is a sufficiently
important consideration to require
that an intermediate appellate court - and
all the more so a single judge - should not depart from an interpretation placed
on such
legislation by another Australian intermediate appellate court unless
convinced that that interpretation is plainly wrong.
- Insofar
as the Jasmic parties (and the other interested parties, since Mr Castle
expressly adopted the submissions made by Mr Pritchard
in relation to Brown
) seek to call into question the correctness of Brown they must do so
in another forum. The weight of authority supports Brown . To adopt the
words of Debelle J, it is not for me to play the role of judicial iconoclast.
Still less is it for me to disregard
the binding force of Brown , which I
understand to be authority for the proposition that there is power under s
588FF(3)(b), albeit that it might only be exercised in rare or exceptional
cases, to grant orders extending time for applications to be made
in relation to
voidable transactions the identity of which (or the parties to which) have not
been identified or identified only
in general terms at the time of the extension
application.
- Mr
Pritchard, accepting that I would be bound to follow Brown as being
correct, and hence to accept that blanket applications are permitted by s
588FF(3), nevertheless submitted that such an order should be granted only in
exceptional circumstances, referring to Australian Securities and Investments
Commission v Karl Suleman Enterprises Pty Ltd (in liq) [2004] NSWSC 1244;
(2004) 52 ACSR 103 (at [6]) where Barrett J said:
Before proceeding to those merits, I should refer to the distinction
recognised and accommodated by the liquidators of KSE between
the cases in which
a person has been already been identified as the potential target of a S588FF(1)
application and the case where no particular action is contemplated against any
particular person. An extension of time under 588FF(3)(b)
in relation to case of
the latter kind is possible and permissible but must be regarded as exceptional.
- It
is submitted by Mr Pritchard that there are no exceptional circumstances in
either of the present cases that would warrant a blanket
application being
allowed. In relation to Clarecastle, he points to the fact that proceedings have
already been commenced in relation
to the Windsor Village partnership claim
(and, I might add, it is not suggested that any other voidable transaction claim
in relation
to that assignment is contemplated) and there is no indication as to
what claim might be contemplated in relation to the Scotch Whisky
transaction.
In relation to Ladycare, Mr Pritchard submits that this is simply a case of
claimed lack of funds and lack of diligence
by the parties in the provision of
documentation to the liquidator.
- It
is not strictly necessary for me to consider whether exceptional circumstances
exist in the present case (nor is it necessary to
address Mr Harper's submission
that in fact this is not a blanket application, because the transactions and the
parties involved
in the transactions have now been identified), as I am not
satisfied that leave should be granted in any event (other than in one
limited
respect). Suffice it to note that the difficulty I would have in concluding that
there were exceptional circumstances to
warrant a blanket order in either case
is that I am not persuaded that it would not have been possible for the
liquidators, acting
diligently within the 3 year period, to identify the
particular transactions that have now been identified in relation to Ladycare.
Nor am I satisfied that it is likely that there are any voidable transactions to
be identified in relation to Clarecastle (other
than the transaction already the
subject of proceedings).
- As
to Mr Harper's submission that there are identified persons who have filed
appearances and made submissions about broadly identified
transactions, this
does not address the fact that the liquidators in the draft Ladycare statement
of claim now identify transactions
against parties who have not formally been
notified of the application and for whom no appearance has been made (such as
Waltlo,
Tama as trustee of the Tamarama Unit Trust, and Enviro LCS).
- As
to the submission that these are not blanket orders, Mr Harper places reliance
is placed on what was said by Barrett J in Arnautovic at [5]:
Three things may be said at the outset about this application under s
588FF(3)(b) for extension of the s 588FF(3) limitation period in respect of
those two defendants. First, the application was itself made within what s
588FF(3)(b) now calls "the paragraph (a) period". Second, the application,
relating as it does to identified and named persons, is not an application
"in
gross" or a "shelf application" of the type in respect of which appeal
proceedings in the High Court of Australia are pending
(see Ansell Ltd v
Davies [2008] HCA Trans 373). Third, it has been sufficiently shown that
each of the second defendant and the fourth defendant has been served and has
chosen not
to seek to be heard on the application.
and submits that the present applications are not "in gross" or a "shelf
application". Mr Harper submits that, consequently, there
is no occasion to
apply as a test the notion of "exceptional circumstances" as stated in Karl
Suleman at [6] (where Barrett J was referring to cases "where no particular
action is contemplated against any particular person").
- While
it is true that particular claims against particular defendants have now been
identified in relation to Ladycare (albeit that
those identified persons have
not all been notified of the present application nor given an opportunity to
make submissions in that
regard), the same could not be said in relation to
Clarecastle, where the position of the liquidators seems to be that the
liquidators
do not suggest that entry into the transaction in 2001 was a
voidable transaction but there may have been (unidentified) transactions
since
then that were.
- I
note that Mr Harper takes issue with the suggestion that the entities (other
than the Jasmic parties) identified in the draft Statement
of Claim as having
been party to voidable transactions involving Ladycare have not been (or should
have been separately) notified
of the current application, on the basis that
they are companies in the Shea group of companies and there are common
directorships
and/or shareholdings (a factual conclusion to which dissent was
expressed by Mr Pritchard). I accept that, to an extent there are
some common
directorships, but it is by no means clear that those entities should be treated
as on notice that voidable transaction
claims (as opposed to other claims
involving breach of directors' duties or the like) might be sought to be made
against them and
I consider that as a matter of procedural fairness they would
be entitled to be heard on the application (which, as against them,
must be
regarded as ex parte).
- In
conclusion, on this preliminary issue, I accept that Brown is authority
(binding on me) for the proposition that there is power to make the orders as
presently sought. I also accept that, insofar
as the liquidators have identified
the claims proposed to be made in relation to Ladycare, there is some comfort
that this is not
a 'shelf' application as such. That said, I am concerned at the
fact that there has not been an opportunity for a number of the identified
defendants to address the question as to whether leave should be granted (and,
in particular, to address the question of delay or
prejudice in relation to
their particular circumstances having regard to the particular claim
identified). Therefore, had I been
satisfied that it was otherwise in order to
extend the time for the making of the claims I would have imposed the
limitations on
the orders as indicated above. As it turns out, this is not
necessary as I am not satisfied (other than in respect of one claim)
that leave
should be granted, having considered the factors in New Cap , to which I
now turn.
(ii) Delay
- In
Itek Graphix Pty Ltd v Elliott [2002] NSWCA 104; (2002) 54 NSWLR 207 Ipp AJA, with whom
Spigelman CJ and Sheller JA agreed, said (at [224]) that:
... where a broad discretion is conferred to grant leave to sue after expiry
of a limitation period, the general question that has
to be asked is what is
fair and just (per Gleeson CJ in Salido ). Or what does the justice of
the case require (per McHugh J in Brisbane South Regional Health Authority
).
- In
New Cap , White J (at [54]) noted that in assessing what is fair and just
in all the circumstances, in the context of an application under
s 588FF(3)(b)
to extend the time for the bringing of claims, regard must be had to the public
policy underlying the imposition of limitation periods
both generally and in
relation to s 588FF(3)(b) in particular. His Honour noted that in Brisbane
South Regional Health Authority v Taylor [1996] HCA 25; (1996) 186 CLR 541, McHugh J (at
[552] - [553]) had identified four broad rationales for the enactment of
limitation periods (in a passage which was
expressly adopted also in Brown
):
First, as time goes by, relevant evidence is likely to be lost. Second, it is
oppressive, even 'cruel', to a defendant to allow an
action to be brought long
after the circumstances which gave rise to it have passed. Third, people should
be able to arrange their
affairs and utilise their resources on the basis that
claims can no longer be made against them Insurers, public institutions and
businesses, particularly limited liability companies, have a significant
interest in knowing that they have no liabilities beyond
a definite period. The
final rationale for limitation periods is that the public interest requires that
disputes be settled as quickly
as possible. (Citations omitted).
- White
J went on to say (at [55]):
In Itek Graphix Pty Ltd v Elliott [2002] NSWCA 104; (2002) 54 NSWLR 207 at 224, Ipp AJA
identified the issue of prejudice as being one which ordinarily should be of
paramount importance. But the absence of prejudice is not itself decisive. It
is rather a relevant factor to be taken into account in the exercise of the
general discretion. ( BP Australia Ltd v Brown at 358). There is
an onus on the applicant to show why it is fair and just that the general rule
established by s 588FF(3)(a) should not apply . (my emphasis)
- In
New Cap , White J considered that the complexity of the liquidation and
the many tasks which the liquidator faced was a mitigating factor
(at [70]) and
said at [71], in a passage on which reliance is placed by Mr Harper:
Whether there is an adequate explanation for the delay is only one factor to
be taken into account in considering where the interests
of justice lie. The
absence of any specific prejudice to the defendant is of more weight, although I
take into account that prejudice
may exist without its being able to be
identified because facts which were once known may now be forgotten, or their
significance
may not now be appreciated ( Brisbane South Regional Health
Authority v Taylor at 551). No evidence was led by the defendant as to its
course of business, or change of personnel, or record keeping, which might
bear
on the probability of there being prejudice of that kind.
- In
Brown , as noted earlier, Spigelman CJ had referred to the entitlement of
creditors to the benefit of having the affairs of an insolvent
company "properly
investigated and administered in an orderly fashion in terms of the provisions
of the law" (there anticipating
that the investigation would be by a "diligent"
liquidator). Mr Harper relies on this in submitting that because of the lack of
documents
available to the liquidators, creditors could not be satisfied that a
proper investigation had occurred of the companies affairs
of the kind which
they would be entitled to expect. (His Honour also, however, noted the public
interest in the completion of investigations
into insolvent companies within the
statutory period.)
- Circumstances
of the kind that may be relevant to a consideration of delay on the part of a
liquidator can be gleaned from the judgment
of Finn J in Taylor v Woden
(to which reference was made by Barrett J in Arnautovic ) in which
reference was made to indications in the material there before the court as to
matters such as the complexity of the affairs
of the companies and the gross
deficiencies in records; the lack of assets in the companies and hence lack of
financial resources
to fund an investigation; "importantly, the need to obtain,
and the time lag involved in obtaining, financial backing for the
investigation";
the place of this event in the web of matters in respect of
which legal proceedings could be considered and on which advice was necessary;
the other proceedings that have already been brought on; and the course the
liquidator was then taking in holding a s 596A examination for the purpose of
obtaining further evidence. In Itek , Burley J noted the listing of those
relevant factors by Finn J as of assistance in identifying what may need to be
established by
the applicant in any given case.
- The
approach in Brisbane South Regional Health Authority v Taylor (per McHugh
J at [554] and Kirby J at [564] - [565]) was also noted in Arthur Andersen
Corporate Finance Pty Ltd v Buzzle Operations Pty Ltd (in liq) [2009] NSWCA
104, where Ipp JA explained that, when considering the exercise of a judicial
discretion that is not fettered by inflexible prescriptions
the court must
exercise discretion in the context of and by reference to the statute by which
it is conferred (and any other statute
that is relevant to the legislative
context) and in accordance with principles developed by judicial decisions (the
statutory provisions
applicable in this jurisdiction including those contained
in ss 56 - 59 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW)).
- Similarly,
in Hans Pet Constructions Pty Ltd v Cassar [2009] NSWCA 230 at [36]
Allsop ACJ (with whom Campbell and Young JJA agreed) observed that these
provisions (together with ss 60 and 61 of the Act) bring
about:
a new statutory balance among various factors in litigation including court
and party efficiency and the delivery of individual justice.
Delay and case
backlog are not merely factors affecting the public cost of delivering justice,
they corrode the ability of the courts
to provide individual justice.
- Of
relevance, therefore, in considering the discretion under s 588FF(3)(b), is
whether the liquidators, who seek the exercise of the
discretion in their
favour, have "diligently pursued the object of disposing of the proceedings in a
timely way"; "used, or could
reasonably have used, available opportunities under
the rules or otherwise, to avoid delay"; and "reasonably implemented the
practice
and procedure of the court with the object of eliminating any lapse of
time between the commencement of the proceedings and their
final determination",
to adopt his Honour's formulation of the relevant policy objectives.
- I
note that Hodgson JA in Tolcher v Gordon [2005] NSWCA 135; (2005) 53 ACSR
442 (at [3], 443) also observed that an important aspect of the public policy
behind the limitation period is that potential defendants
should be made aware
of claims against them within a reasonable time.
- Relevantly,
in Brown, Spigelman CJ (having noted what had been said by McHugh J as to
the four broad rationales for the enactment of limitation periods)
went on to
say (at [112] - [114]) in the context of an extension of the time limit under s
588FF(3), the following:
There is, in my opinion, a broader public interest to be served by allowing
persons who have had dealings with companies which become
insolvent to conduct
their commercial affairs with a degree of certainty about their exposure to
having past transactions unravelled.
I note the traditional hostility of the common law to the exhumation of
bodies which was once described as an "inhuman and barbarous
felony". (
Haynes' case (1614) 12 Co Rep 113, 77 ER 1389. See also R v Lynn
[1788] EngR 257; (1788) TR 733, 100 ER 394; R v Sharpe [1856] EngR 24; (1857) 7 Cox CC 214, 169 ER
959.) In this respect, equity followed the common law. (P W Young " The
Exclusive Right to Burial " (1965) 39 ALJ 50; Beard v Baulkham Hills
Shire Council (1986) 7 NSWLR 273 esp at 280.) This policy is informed by
considerations of decency and human respect. Nevertheless, in my opinion,
there is also a public policy against the disinterring of corporate corpses.
Commercial life must at some stage rule
off the past and focus energy on the
future .
The commercial and economic life of the community is sometimes better
served by allowing the loss to lie where it falls, so that all
concerned may
proceed with a high degree of certainty as to their financial position. The
passage of time, even the passage of three
years, can be seen to legitimately
alter the balance of conflicting interests in this regard. (my emphasis)
- His
Honour observed (at [119]) that, in a context where conflicting interests have
to be balanced, the eventual loss of the ability
to make a relevant claim for a
voidable transaction may "reasonably be regarded as something to be surrendered,
in favour of providing
certainty to others who have had dealings with the
company, including other creditors, so that they can proceed with their business
affairs with an assurance that they are no longer at risk".
- In
Buzzle (at ([91]), Ipp JA expressed the view that a deliberate decision
to allow a statutory limitation period to expire would be a powerful
factor
against the grant of leave, noting that any prejudice suffered in such
circumstances, were the writ not to be extended, would
be self-inflicted. Here,
it is not suggested that there was a deliberate decision to allow the three-year
period to lapse without
bringing particular voidable transaction claims (and,
indeed, some voidable transaction claims have been brought within the relevant
period). However, what has occurred is that there was a seemingly deliberate
decision (or one made as part of the liquidators' ordinary
policy or practice in
prioritisation of work) on the part of the liquidators not to pursue, in as
timely a fashion as (with hindsight)
it is clear that they could have done, the
investigations for which an extension is now sought. That seems to me to be a
deliberate
decision of a similar kind to that considered in Buzzle , such
that any prejudice occasioned by the making of that decision might be said to be
self-inflicted.
- On
the issue of alleged delay the liquidators make specific reference to New Cap
where White J said at [72]:
It is probable that the litigation of the existing claim will require
investigation of the circumstances surrounding the other payments
which are the
subject of the proposed amendment. They may well be relevant to whether the
defendant knew or had reason to suspect
that New Cap was insolvent. Where the
defendant does not point to the delay causing any identified prejudice, it would
be somewhat
incongruous if the circumstances relating to the other payments,
which might themselves be unfair preferences, were investigated,
perhaps
minutely, to assess a defence to the claim, yet the liquidator was precluded
from claiming relief in respect of them.
- In
the present case, issue is taken as to the length of any relevant delay on the
part of the liquidators (Mr Harper contending that
any delay is at most 8-9
months in the period between the time that Mr Francipane ceased work on the
matters and Mr Hutchins resumed
such work) but in any event it is submitted for
the liquidators that such delay is explicable principally by reference to the
lack
of funding (which Mr Kassem says impeded the progress of the
investigations); the perceived lack of co-operation in the liquidators'
investigations and the complexity of the companies' affairs and lack of records.
I consider each in turn.
Lack of funding
- As
to the lack of funding, the evidence is that up until approximately 4pm on 28
June 2011, the liquidators were unfunded.
- Mr
Hutchins' evidence was that an application for funding was first made to the ATO
in about February 2011 (he initially put this
as occurring in April 2011 but
corrected that at T 107.41). He accepted that no other funding applications had
been made (T 99.41)
and thought that this was because the view had been formed
that the ATO was the only creditor and was therefore the most likely party
"to
have the most zest for it" (T 100.1). He says that the ATO initially rejected
the funding application but that about a month
ago the application was
re-submitted and, after discussions with an officer at the ATO who was able to
be convinced of the basis
for such an application, approval was given for a
funding package.
- Mr
Kassem had given evidence in his affidavits, sworn before the ATO agreement for
funding was obtained, that the liquidations were
totally unfunded and that this
was an impediment to the progress of his investigation into the companies'
affairs. Tested on this
in the witness box, it became apparent that the real
import of the lack of funding was that it had led to the investigation being
given a lesser priority within the liquidators' office than matters that were
funded. Mr Kassem explained that priority was accorded
to liquidations in which
there was funding. At T 43.29, Mr Kassem said:
A. Well, I don't know what, it's a question of- you have got to understand in
the liquidation side of the business when we don't have
a job that's funded;
when it's not funded we have got to be mindful of the time we spend on the job
- At
T 45.21 he said "We made the enquiries but nothing was brought to our attention
to warrant further... [investigation at that stage]".
In other words, it seems
that if a fairly basic level of investigation failed to disclose prospects or
avenues of recovery for creditors,
then further investigations were put in
abeyance.
- When
asked to explain how the lack of funding had interfered with any aspect of the
investigation to date, Mr Kassem said at T 46.12:
A. In every job we get a lot of matters that don't have funds or have very
limited assets so the policy with those jobs is to do a
preliminary
investigation and if nothing, if it doesn't result in discovery of assets or
transactions that need to be investigated
then we can't obviously spend a lot of
time on it but where the initial investigations lead to issues that need to be
investigated
or assets that need to be recovered, then the degree of that
evidence will obviously mean that more time can be spent on the file.
So, you
know, until matters were brought to my attention in late 2009, we weren't in a
position to allocated that sort of resource
where we didn't know whether we were
recovering assets.
- Mr
Kassem accepted that the lack of funding had not interfered with any aspect of
the investigation once the transaction was identified
(T 46.25) and his evidence
made it clear that the reason that the lack of funding had been regarded as the
source of interference
with the investigations was that "prior to Mark
[Hutchins] establishing what he did, it's still regarded as an unfunded job so
it
didn't take priority in the office" (T 46.47). He said "It changes once we
identify the transactions that I had to recover, it becomes
an unfunded repeat
with real significant transactions to pursue but it changes" (T 47.5). Mr Kassem
emphasised that Mr Hutchins was
being paid on a recovery basis, looking at
dormant files or where there was a reason to look at them, and was not getting
paid "unless
we made recoveries on it" (T 47.13- 27).
- The
position therefore seemed to me to be that, because these were unfunded
liquidations, there was an initial (fairly limited) investigation
and unless
there were avenues of recovery identified at that time, then further resources
were not applied (unless and until at a
later time there was something to
suggest that it was worth according the investigation a higher priority). It was
only the process
of utilising a consultant's services (on a contingency basis)
to investigate the position at a later stage that seems to have led
to a revival
of interest in the investigation of the potential voidable transaction claims.
- Under
cross-examination by Mr Castle, Mr Kassem accepted that he was aware of the
coercive powers open to a liquidator to conduct
examinations and request
production of documents and that there was an ASIC Assetless Administration Fund
to assist in the costs
of conducting investigations where there was an unfunded
administration (T 49.43). He conceded that no such application was made
in
relation to Clarecastle (T 50.11). Nor, it seems, was any such application made
in relation to Ladycare. Mr Kassem accepted that
his general rule (or practice)
was not to go through the costly business of conducting examinations where he
had cooperation from
interested parties (T 51.31) but did not accept that the
reason he had not done so here was because he was receiving cooperation
from the
parties in the present case. Mr Kassem was adamant that he did not think there
had ever being sufficient cooperation (T
50. 43) but seems to have based this
conclusion largely (if not wholly) on what was conveyed to him in that regard by
Mr Hutchins.
- Indeed
the lack of funding does not seem to have prevented the commencement of
proceedings in these matters, since the liquidators
were able to secure
speculative fee agreements in order to commence in April 2010 the 3 specific
proceedings, together with the leave
proceedings, before any funding had been
procured. Mr Kassem agreed in cross-examination that solicitors could have been
involved
much earlier than that but that he had delayed (until Mr Hutchins'
involvement in October 2009), before even starting to think about
whether he
would get legal advice (T 44.39).
- In
cross-examination by Mr Pritchard, Mr Kassem accepted that he did not take any
meaningful steps to investigate the affairs of Clarecastle
in the two and a half
years since he was appointed as liquidator (T 41.44) but would not accept that
before Mr Hutchins commenced
there had been no meaningful step taken at all
(referring to the steps taken by Mr Francipane) (T 41.48). (He nevertheless
accepted
that October 2009 was the first time any serious work started in
relation to the investigation of the Scotch Whisky matter (T 43.40)
and it would
seem from the time sheets that a similar concession would also have to be made
in relation to the Ladycare investigations.)
- Mr
Harper submits, and I accept, that it was not incumbent on the liquidators to
put their own assets at stake in commencing precipitate
litigation without
funding. Further, he submits that the liquidators would need to have a proper
foundation on the evidence to justify
commencing proceedings for recovery of
assets (and it might be expected that any litigation funder would wish to see
evidence as
to the prospects of an application).
- I
note that in Tolcher ,Tobias JA (at [50]) said in effect that the
deliberate decision by the liquidator in that case not to attempt service of the
statement
of claim until "the litigation funding was in place" was "appropriate,
prudent and responsible and not a decision for which the liquidator
can be
justifiably criticised".
- However,
a deliberate decision of this kind (whether to delay service of an originating
process or to delay investigation into particular
claims) while funding is not
available is nevertheless one that must be taken into account (even if not
determinative) on an application
such as the present. Ipp JA in Buzzle
recognised that a deliberate decision to delay is not a factor that has an
absolute effect on the discretion to be exercised, each
decision depending on
its own circumstances, but considered that a failure to take such a decision
into account would be (or at least
it was in that case) an error.
- As
noted above, Mr Kassem accepted in the witness box that not a lot had happened
in the administration in relation to Clarecastle
until October 2009 (T 44.50)
and that what had happened then was that Mr Hutchins commenced work and, because
of his involvement,
Mr Kassem thought that there should be more investigation (T
45.3-15). (The position would seem to be the same for Ladycare, having
regard to
the timesheets and the materials put before the court by the liquidators.) The
delay does not seem to me to have been caused
by any lack of cooperation on the
part of the Jasmic parties or anyone else.
- Mr
Kassem also accepted that the documents produced to the Court on this
application had been provided to him voluntarily or were
part of the company's
books at the time of appointment (T 52.25).
- Mr
Kassem accepted that the correspondence with Mr Speirs indicated that there was
cooperation by Chambers Finance in the provision
of information to assist in the
liquidation (T 64.36) and agreed that as at 2007 it would be wrong to suggest
any lack of cooperation
between Chambers Finance and the liquidators' office in
relation to the Clarecastle liquidation and the Scotch Whisky scheme (T 65.1).
The only requests to which there seems to have been no response (other than the
October 2009 Notice to Produce documents, which,
being a formal demand, was
perhaps not surprisingly met with a formal response) was the March 2009 letter
that does not appear to
have been pressed by the liquidators.
- Asked
whether he was aware that Mr Hutchins had spoken to or met with Mr McCarthy, at
T 69.27, Mr Kassem said "Look, I can only say
that's Mark Hutchins reporting to
me that he's not getting the cooperation he requires to get the information that
he needs".
- In
the period from 5 April 2007 until around October 2009, it seems to me that
there was not a large amount of time spent on enquiries
or investigations into
the transactions now the subject of the liquidators' focus. Mr Kassem and Mr
Secatore appear to have had little
direct involvement in the day-to-day conduct
of the liquidation; Mr Francipane carried out some investigations but not a
great deal
of time was spent in pursuing enquiries (and when Mr Hutchins became
involved it seems that Mr Francipane was not able to be of much
assistance to
him so it cannot be the case that any significant or detailed analysis had been
carried out before then). If Mr Hutchins
was capable of spending the time in
late 2009 (with the information then to hand) and coming to the view that there
were voidable
transactions that were worth pursuing, there seems no reason why
it would not have been possible for Mr Francipane or the liquidators
themselves
to have done so at an earlier time.
- As
noted above, Mr Harper submitted that there was a reasonable basis for the
decisions that had been taken in the absence of funding
and that liquidators
should not be expected to expose their personal assets in precipitate litigation
(referring to what was said
in Matthews v Ipex ITG Pty Limited [2007]
SASC 387.) I do not criticise the decisions taken by the liquidators as to how
to prioritise funds in an unfunded liquidation but I cannot accept
on the
material before me that the principal reason for the minimal effort that seems
to have been expended before Mr Hutchins became
involved was a lack of
co-operation by the persons involved in the management of the company or the
transactions in which the liquidators
are now enquiring and, to the extent that
there was a policy decision involved in the expenditure of funds at that stage,
that is
a decision the consequences of which must be borne by the liquidators.
- So,
for example, in relation to Clarecastle, while I accept that Mr Kassem has had
difficulty obtaining information as to the latter
(principally, it would seem
because his enquiries have largely post-dated the criminal investigations), I do
not accept that the
evidence establishes that the delay in those investigations
for the first two and a half years of the three-year period available
to Mr
Kassem was primarily due to any lack of co-operation on the part of the Jasmic
parties or of the other interested parties for
whom Atanaskovic Hartnell act.
(There seems to have been only one conversation or meeting with Mr McCarthy, for
example, and that
took place in early 2009.)
- It
seems to me that there was no real attempt at investigation into the scheme
(beyond some very broad general enquiries) until October
2009 and at that stage
what occurred was the issue of a demand to produce documents issued to Chambers
Finance (as well as the Sheas
and Mr Roy) and a number of meetings in relation
to the Ladycare transactions.
- It
is not suggested that the objection taken on behalf of Chambers Finance to the
demand for production of what were asserted to be
Chambers Finance's documents
and not the company's books and records was misconceived as a matter of law or
that it was unreasonable.
- Mr
Kassem in cross-examination was unable to point to any correspondence he had had
with Mr Shea in relation the Scotch Whisky Scheme
prior to October 2009 or the
to making of any allegation of breach of directors' duties in relation to this
matter (of the kind that
had, for example, been made in relation to the Windsor
Village Partnership transaction).
- Mr
Kassem's assertion that there had been deliberate non-production of records (or,
as Mr Harper described it, "calculated non-cooperation")
that had frustrated his
efforts to investigate the companies affairs, seems to be put solely on the
basis of his expectation that
there would be relevant documents (of the kind he
has identified) available to persons associated with Ladycare and therefore that
the non-production of those documents must have been intentional. That
conclusion is only as strong as the premise on which it is
based and, even then,
it does not take into account the possibility that the restructuring was left in
the hands of the advisers
from New Zealand with little input from either Mr Roy
or Mr and Mrs Shea, and they might not have the relevant information he seeks.
Mr Harper submits that the latter exhibited an "intransigent inability to
recall" matters during the course of their examinations
but it may equally be
possible that they do not in fact recall the particular matters in question.
- Significance
is placed on the fact that a financial document on which the liquidators place
some weight (being the financial statement
for the year ending 31 December 2006)
was only obtained on discovery in the related but separate proceedings (and
there was a complaint
made as to the manner in which discovery was provided - to
which the affidavit of Mr Spinks responds). However, that does not gainsay
the
fact that the liquidators' initial enquiries did not seem to suggest that
further material was necessary in order to enable the
liquidator (through Mr
Francipane) to come to a view as to whether investigation was warranted.
- Mr
Kassem, in his affidavit, broadly describes the attempts he has made to obtain
information from Mr Shea, Mr Roy and others involved
in the transactions (see,
for example, [17]-[32] of Mr Kassem's affidavit affirmed on 30 April 2010 in the
Ladycare Leave proceedings,
but there does not appear to have been more than
what might be described as cursory enquiries at least up until late 2009.
- What
Mr Kassem does accept is that is clear is that Mr Roy attended his office on a
number of occasions (Mr Kassem says that this
was in Mr Roy's capacity as
advisor to the Sheas but it must be remembered that he was also the company's
accountant). Mr Kassem
says that on all occasions, Mr Roy has advised him
(though it would seem the relevant meetings were with Mr Hutchins) that there
were no further books and records of the company and that Mr Roy and the Sheas
could not recall the specifics of the transactions
that took place ([25]). That
is consistent, as I understand it, with the evidence that emerged during the
public examinations (and
which is criticised as an 'intransigent inability to
recall' events). Mr Kassem does not accept this evidence and believes not only
that there must be further records but also that the non-production of those
records is the result of deliberate non-cooperation.
(Mr Pritchard points out,
however, that it was not put to any of the Jasmic parties during the
examinations that documents had been
lost or destroyed.)
- As
to the level of cooperation given to Mr Hutchins, Mr Hutchins confirmed in the
witness box that he had started with the firm in
June 2009 (before then having
been operating under his own consultancy) but did not start making enquiries
until October 2009. He
confirmed that he had spoken to Mr Francipane (T109) but
that the latter did not remember much about the matter.
- Mr
Hutchins had an initial meeting on 6 October 2009 meeting with Mr Roy (he says
that "Sam had mentioned that Michael Roy was across
all the information"). Mr
Hutchins says that he only asked to see Mr Roy (so their can be no issue as to a
lack of cooperation by
Mr and Mrs Shea at this stage). He was dismissive of the
assistance provided by Mr Roy (he says that he was told just that the business
had been transferred and was not making any money). Mr Roy apparently offered to
get some documents for Mr Hutchins to go through,
though it is not clear that
any were provided. Nevertheless, Mr Hutchins accepted that at that stage he
considered that Mr Roy was
trying his best to help (T 108.50).
- After
the October 2009 notices requesting the production of documents were issued, Mr
Roy asked to have another meeting with Mr Hutchins,
which led to a meeting on 16
October 2009 attended also by Mr Francipane, apparently at Mr Roy's request.
Some documents were apparently
then provided at that meeting.
- There
was a further meeting with Mr Roy on 26 November 2009 and at least another
discussion with Mr Roy, perhaps over the telephone,
to which reference was made
in Mr Hutchins' affidavit ([22]).
- Mr
Hutchins accepted that Mr Roy had arranged the meeting with Mr Russell of HQZ
(the reason for that being put by Mr Roy as being
that he did not understand the
transactions but that Mr Russell would explain them), which led to Mr Russell
travelling (presumably
at the Sheas' expense, since the liquidators did not pay
for it) from Brisbane for the meeting. At T 110.37, Mr Hutchins said of
that
meeting:
... That was a little bit of a joke to be frank. It went for 20 minutes. He
drew a couple of diagrams representing this type of transaction.
When I asked
him the commercial terms his answer was : I did not get involved in that.
Neither Mr Roy nor him could explain the commercial
transactions.
- At
T 110.44 he said:
It was a structure that was represented as being complex. All it was was a
couple of trading trusts that was set up represented by
Mr Russell as something
that he could not explain the commercial terms of"
- Mr
Hutchins' complaint was that he was only given the "elements of the structure"
(T 110.50) not an understanding of the commercial
terms and that Mr Russell did
not have all the information or documents (just "piecemeal photocopies"). Mr
Hutchins considered that
the diagram provided by Mr Russell as explaining the
restructuring did not look complicated (and said that he subsequently learned
it
was not the entirety of the transactions). Mr Hutchins was critical of the
information provided by Mr Russell and did not think
it was a very accurate
representation of reality (T 111.24).
- Another
meeting took place with Mr Roy meeting in early February 2010 but again Mr
Hutchins was critical of the information he was
given by Mr Roy at that meeting.
Mr Hutchins again met Mr Roy on 8 March 2010.
- It
seems apparent from the above that there was, contrary to the liquidators'
assertions, a level of cooperation on the part of the
Jasmic parties (albeit
that the liquidators were not satisfied as to the information gained from those
enquiries). The nub of Mr
Hutchins' complaint is that he says (accepting that
this is in hindsight), that he does not believe Mr Roy provided him with all
the
information. He clearly does not accept that Mr Roy was telling him the truth
when he said that he did not understand the transaction
(since it was Mr Roy who
had entered the transactions by way of journal entries on both sides of the
transactions (T 111.46). Nevertheless,
Mr Hutchins accepts that both Mr Roy and
the Sheas have been consistent in their evidence that they did not understand
the transactions
(it simply seems to be that he does not believe them and
therefore considers that they have been obstructive of his efforts to
investigate
the transactions) (T 112).
- Complexity of
companies' affairs
- Mr
Harper submits that both liquidations are complex, involving a number of related
companies and trusts between which assets were
transferred on the expert advice
of HQZ and pointing to the lack of records that have been available to the
liquidators as justification
for an extension of time. (Interestingly, the
complexity of the transactions seemed to be disavowed by Mr Hutchins in the
witness
box, who was dismissive of the suggestion that had been apparently made
to him by Mr Russell and Mr Roy as to the complexity of the
restructuring in
which they had engaged and seems to have regarded this as an attempt to mislead
him as to the restructuring that
had been undertaken.)
- Again,
while I accept that there was a level of complexity as to the companies' affairs
and that the liquidators were apparently faced
with a position where there was a
paucity of records, that does not address the fact that, had steps been taken at
an earlier time,
the liquidators might well now have been in the position where
no leave was necessary because all the investigations could have been
completed
to the stage where the transactions were identified and proceedings commenced
within the time period that the legislature
has considered a sufficient time for
that purpose in general.
(iii) Merits
- The
second factor to be considered in the context of the extension applications
involves a preliminary review of the merits (at least
so far as the purpose of
the extension is not simply to investigate possible claims).
- In
relation to Clarecastle, as at the time the extension applications were
commenced, there were two matters then the subject of consideration
by the
liquidators: the assignment to Jasmic of Clarecastle's interest in the Windsor
Village partnership (by then already the subject
of a voidable transaction
claim) and the Scotch Whisky scheme (about which little was then known).
- As
to the first, the liquidators' suspicions appear to have been raised by the fact
that the investment was recorded in Clarecastle's
balance sheet for the years
ended 30 June 2005 and 2006 as having a value of $601,876 but was transferred to
Jasmic (a related party)
for only $330,000 (and that this was at a time when the
liquidators believe Clarecastle was clearly insolvent and shortly after the
Australian Taxation Office had disallowed significant tax deductions claimed in
relation to the investment in the retirement village).
- Mr
Kassem has complained that he has received no assistance from Mr Roy in relation
to his investigation of this transaction (although
apart from a standard form
request for documents it is not apparent to what this complaint refers). Mr
Kassem in his affidavit at
[31] says that his investigations have revealed
nothing which indicates that the value for which the interest in the partnership
was assigned ($330,000) reflected the realisable value of this interest and
notes that the records provide no explanation why the
consideration for the
assignment is different to the amount indicated in the above general journal.
- However,
the fact that proceedings under s 588FF have already been commenced within the
three year period in relation to this transaction
means it cannot be a
transaction for which leave is sought in the present proceedings (within the
terms of the orders now sought)
and in any event that leave is not necessary. It
seems to me that this disposes of the application in relation to this aspect of
the matter.
- As
to the Scotch Whisky transaction, as outlined in my reasons on the application
to set aside the examination summonses, the position
of the liquidators was not
that they had identified particular transactions that they considered to be
voidable but, rather, that
they had insufficient information to determine what
the company's position was in relation to that investment and whether there
might
be any voidable transaction or other claims.
- The
Scotch Whisky transaction involved an investment of some $1,502 million
(financed by Chambers Finance to a large degree) on 27
March 2001. The
liquidators say that they experienced difficulties in obtaining information from
Mr Shea and from Clarecastle's advisers,
referring to requests for information
that were sent to the relevant parties. However, as is apparent from the above,
a number of
those requests seem to have been standard form requests and there
was little follow-up on those requests at least until 2009. Further,
as Mr
Castle noted in his submissions, Mr Kassem's affidavit did not disclose the
extent of assistance given (or the offers to provide
further clarification) by
Chambers Finance in 2007.
- Mr
Kassem said in cross-examination on 6 May 2011 that what was preventing him from
commencing proceedings in relation to the whisky
transaction was that he had not
been able to identify the asset (the whisky itself). Mr Kassem said that the
documents given to him
by the company's accountant (Mr Roy) disclosed the
Chambers Finance loan "so it appears in the company account as a liability but
there's no corresponding asset in the balance sheet" and that he had not been
able to obtain confirmation as to whether there was
an asset (T40.26). Mr Kassem
said that what had not been identified in relation to the Scheme is whether it
was a sham or was a genuine
investment by the company (T 40.6). He was therefore
unable to indicate what claim he might seek to make in relation to the
transaction
(T 40.47). Relevantly, however, it was not then, nor is it now,
suggested that there is any particular transaction which occurred
after entry
into the Scotch Whisky scheme which would fall within the definition of a
voidable transaction (and Mr Kassem has now
had the benefit of the examination
of those involved in the scheme, though the said examinations are not, as I
understand it, complete).
- In
summary, it was submitted that the position in relation to the whisky venture no
financial records of note had been produced, despite
demands; that no persons
associated with the venture had co-operated in providing information to the
liquidators; and that documents
relevant to the venture had been seized by
investigative bodies, who would not release any information to the liquidators.
Thus,
Mr Harper submitted that even "the most well funded of inquiries would
have come to nought in the face of the lack of co-operation
of those behind the
venture and the unavailability of records as a result of the seizures effected
by investigative bodies."
- However,
examinations have since taken place in relation to the Scotch Whisky scheme and
(although I think they had not been completed
at the time of the extension
applications in June 2011,) it does not seem that any claim in relation to
voidable transactions has
yet been identified. I accept that the authorities
suggest that it is not necessary to review the merits of a claim where the
reason
for the extension is that the liquidators' enquiries are not complete.
Nevertheless, where there is no articulation of any real basis
on which it is
suggested there may be a voidable transaction (and it is not suggested here that
anything of relevance occurred after
the entry into the scheme and in the period
up to the placement of the company in liquidation) then this is a factor to take
into
account in exercising a discretion to permit a blanket extension for any
such claim.
Ladycare
- As
to Ladycare, the liquidators believe that a series of transactions occurring
from March 2006 through to 30 June 2006 amount to
asset stripping in the context
of a classic "Phoenix transaction" whereby the benefit of the company's business
was assumed by a
company operated by a relative of Mr and Mrs Shea (their son).
- In
March 2006, Ladycare's business operations were transferred to the Shea Group
Trading Trust and the non-current assets were transferred
to Shea Group Holdings
Trust. Mr Kassem summarised the results of the transactions in his affidavit of
24 September 2010, noting
that the net asset position of the company as at 30
June 2005 (as recorded in the company's financial statements for the year ended
30 June 2006) included a significant portion of related party loans that were
due to the company and which haven been written off
by way of journal entries
during the 2006 financial year. Mr Kassem believes that these journal entries
were processed to reflect
significant losses which would reduce the net asset
position of the company and allow the company's business to be transferred for
no consideration. As at 31 December 2006, the company's balance sheet disclosed
as assets only a commercial bond and a current tax
asset, both said to have nil
realisable value.
- The
financial statements from which this conclusion was drawn were, according to Mr
Kassem, not available to him prior to the commencement
of the leave proceeding
or the related party proceedings commenced at the same time. Mr Kassem asserts,
and for the purposes of this
application I accept that it is arguable, that a
strong case exists that Ladycare "deliberately disposed of its assets to defeat
a claim from the ATO", Mr Kassem basing that conclusion on the fact that,
despite the "multitude" of payments said to have been made
to related parties
and for the benefit of Mr Shea's interests, no money was paid to the ATO in
respect of the tax determination (which
Mr Kassem notes was not the subject of
any challenge from Ladycare).
- Mr
Kassem estimates that success in relation to recovery of the related party
transactions would return as much as 100 cents in the
dollar to the creditors.
It is submitted that as the ATO is Ladycare's largest creditor, the fruits of
any successful litigation
will pass to the community at large.
- Mr
Pritchard notes that the liquidators have already commenced proceedings in
relation to the payment made to Jasmic in June 2006
and the payment made to LCS
IT Pty Ltd by way of dividend , so that leave is not needed for those claims.
- Further proposed
proceedings
- In
considering the merits of the proposed proceedings for which leave by way of a
extension of time is sought, consideration also
needs to be given to the claims
identified in the draft statement of claim sought to be filed in the Ladycare
proceedings.
- Mr
Pritchard submits that there is insufficient information as to the transactions
so identified to determine even on a preliminary
basis their prospects of
success . However, at least on the face of the proposed pleading it could not be
said that such claims would
be likely to be struck out as having no foundation
if the underlying facts on which they are based could be proved.
(iv) Prejudice
- Mr
Harper notes that there has been no evidence (other than by Messrs Seller and
McCarthy) by any interested party as to actual or
specific prejudice,
notwithstanding the opportunity to file and serve further evidence since 6 May
2011.
- On
the question of the prejudice arising from delay, McHugh J in the Brisbane
Health case, noted that:
.... The enactment of time limitations has been driven by the general
perception that "[w]here there is delay the whole quality of
justice
deteriorates". Sometimes the deterioration in quality is palpable, as in the
case where a crucial witness is dead or an important
document has been
destroyed. But sometimes, perhaps more often than we realise, the deterioration
in quality is not recognisable
even by the parties. Prejudice may exist without
the parties or anybody else realising that it exists. As the United States
Supreme
Court pointed out in Barker v Wingo , "what has been forgotten
can rarely be shown". So, it must often happen that important, perhaps decisive,
evidence has disappeared
without anybody now "knowing" that it ever existed.
Similarly, it must often happen that time will diminish the significance of a
known fact or circumstance because its relationship to the cause of action is no
longer as apparent as it was when the cause of action
arose.
...
The effect of delay on the quality of justice is no doubt one of the most
important influences motivating a legislature to enact limitation
periods for
commencing actions.
... A limitation provision is the general rule; an extension provision is the
exception to it. The extension provision is a legislative
recognition that
general conceptions of what justice requires in particular categories of cases
may sometimes be overridden by the
facts of an individual case. The purpose of a
provision such as s 31 is "to eliminate the injustice a prospective plaintiff
might
suffer by reason of the imposition of a rigid time limit within which an
action was to be commenced." But whether injustice has occurred
must be
evaluated by reference to the rationales of the limitation period that has
barred the action. The discretion to extend should therefore be seen as
requiring the applicant to show that his or her case is a justifiable exception
to the rule that the welfare of the State is best served by the limitation
period in question. Accordingly, when an applicant seeks
an extension of time to
commence an action after a limitation period has expired, he or she has the
positive burden of demonstrating
that the justice of the case requires that
extension . (my emphasis)
- Mr
Harper submits that the absence of any specific prejudice should be given great
weight and that it effectively neutralises any
argument as to prejudice in the
present case.
- In
Brown (at [119]), Spigelman CJ noted that, when balancing the requirement
for commercial certainty on the part of those who have past dealings
with the
company and the conflicting interest of the creditors of the company:
The eventual loss of the ability to make a relevant claim can be reasonably
regarded as something to be surrendered in favour of providing
commercial
certainty to other who have had dealings with the company.
- Mr
Harper submits (as adverted to earlier) that from a public policy perspective,
the absence of records to date means that the creditors
of the companies can
have no satisfaction that the companies' affairs have yet been adequately
investigated (citing Brown in this regard).
- Mr
Pritchard submits that if the liquidators are correct in their claim regarding
the Windsor Village Partnership (which is not admitted),
then the interests of
the only real creditor (Jasmic) are adequately protected and in any event, it is
questionable (having regard
to costs of litigation and the uncertainty of any
recovery) whether it is in the interests of creditors for further litigation to
proceed when it appears that enormous costs are being incurred to recover
$22,000.00 in circumstances where even that proof of debt
is not supported by
any evidence.
- In
relation to Ladycare, it is said that the one creditor (ATO) appears to be owed
$1,440,975.77 and that the claim in the Jasmic
proceedings and LCS IT proceeding
claim $ 1,709,304.00, such that if the liquidators succeed on these claims, then
all creditors
can be paid from the proceedings.
- Mr
Pritchard submits that the prejudice to Mr and Ms Shea is that, by reason of the
liquidators undertaking their duties in piecemeal
fashion they are becoming
involved in successive proceedings (3 to date), rather than the liquidator
putting forward one claim containing
all actions. It is said to be unfair to
require a defendant to be "peppered" with claims many years after the event and
that the
multiplicity of actions should be discouraged.
- On
the question of prejudice to the interested parties for whom Mr Castle appeared,
that was largely put in relation to the then forthcoming
examinations summonses
(and the prejudice arising from the fact that evidence would be compelled to be
given in advance of the pending
criminal trials against Messrs McCarthy and
Seller). That prejudice has been considered and, to the extent I considered
appropriate,
dealt with by the orders I made in the examination proceedings.
There seems to be no further specific prejudice to which those parties
point
(other than the presumptive prejudice arising from delay).
- As
to the issue of presumptive prejudice, in Agricultural & Rural Finance
(at [192]) Tobias JA said:
Although I accept the principle of presumptive prejudice is applicable to a
case such as the present, I do not think that it should
carry much weight when
balancing the various factors which the court is required to take into account
in the re-exercise of the relevant
discretion.
- I
have already noted above the dicta of White J in New Cap (at [55]) in
this regard in which his Honour observed that the absence of prejudice is not
itself decisive but is, rather, a relevant
factor to be taken into account in
the exercise of the general discretion.
- As
I have had occasion elsewhere to note ( In the matter of Pan Pharmaceuticals
Ltd (in liq) [2011] NSWSC 561 at [77]), the High Court in Jackamarra v
Krakouer [1998] HCA 27; (1998) 195 CLR 516 at [29] emphasised the prejudice
likely to be occasioned by delay:
Delays in the courts are a major cause of disquiet not only among those who
resort to the courts but also among judges and all others
associated with the
courts. Delay will almost always impede the proper disposition of any case
that does not come to trial promptly. Memories fade; records may
be lost. The
impediments are many, varied and obvious. (my emphasis)
- In
the present instance, the delay in commencing the proceedings beyond the time
period in which they were required (absent leave)
to be brought when measured by
reference to the time at which the application for leave was brought was only
small, but when measuring
the impact of that delay it must be remembered that
the time from the events in question is now some 5 years at least (it is not
apparent how long the time from the relevant events in relation to any claim
involving the Scotch Whisky transaction would be since
it is not clear to what
the claim would relate -any voidable transaction claim in relation to the 2001
transaction being disavowed).
(And it is necessary to bear in mind the reason
for the delay (which, it seems to me, is largely due to a policy decision by the
liquidators not to expend funds on an inquiry into claims in an unfunded
liquidation where no cause for investigation or potential
claim had apparently
been uncovered by the initial investigation into the company's affairs.
Reasonable or not, that forensic decision
is one that must have been made
knowing the potential consequences.)
- That
said, it seems to me that the prejudice likely to be suffered by the Jasmic
parties (if there were to be an extension of time
to bring proceedings in
relation to alleged voidable transactions arising out of the restructuring of
the Ladycare business and the
related company loans of the kind foreshadowed in
Part H of the draft pleading) must be considered in light of the fact that there
are already proceedings on foot in which claims relating to those transactions
are being raised. They will in any event be exposed
to the cost of proceedings
in relation to those matters and their recollection of events, diminished as it
may be, will necessarily
be tested in those proceedings whether or not leave is
given in the present proceedings.
- Therefore,
it seems to me that the prejudice likely to be suffered by the Jasmic parties as
a result of an extension of time to bring
voidable transaction claims in
relation to matters that are already the subject of or related to matters the
subject of proceedings
against them is considerably diminished.
- I
should note, however, as to prejudice, that the proposed claims sought to be
made involve other parties (such as Waltlo, LCIS IT,
Tama and Enviro LCS) to
whom notice was not given of the proposed application (and even if they had
indirect notice through Mr and
Mrs Shea, there was no identification of the
particular claim sought to be made against them).
- In
the ordinary course a party whose interests may be adversely affected by an
extension of time should be joined as a defendant to
the application ( Greig
; McGrath v National Indemnity Co [2004] NSWSC 391; (2004) 182 FLR 309). Insofar as
there is a series of individual transactions now sought to be impugned, it is
submitted by Mr Pritchard that the parties
to those transactions (with the one
exception of the Jasmic payment that seems already to be the subject of the
proceedings brought
against Jasmic or sufficiently related thereto to make it
perhaps likely that an amendment might be made to encompass that transaction
in
the existing proceedings) have not been given proper notice of the application.
Mr Pritchard thus submits that the question of
prejudice must be considered in
the context of the foreshadowed application against entities to whom notice of
the claim was not
given and that although (as Mr Harper submits) those entities
may have been on notice of investigation of matters such as directors'
duty
claims would not have been on notice of the particular claims now sought to be
maintained.
Conclusion
- When
considering the delay in the present case, the liquidators' position was that it
was explicable due to the:
- lack of funding
(though the impact of this was really only that a conscious decision seems to
have been made, in accordance with the
liquidators' practice, only to
investigate up to a certain point and there was no investigation of any means by
which the liquidators'
further investigations could have been funded in the
interim - any prejudice in now not being able to maintain a voidable transaction
claim would seem to me to be self-inflicted in the sense that this expression
was used in Buzzle );
- complexity of
the companies' affairs (though the Ladycare restructuring was not itself
regarded by Mr Hutchins as a transaction of
any complexity and, in any event,
this did not preclude the commencement of proceedings in Ladycare or in relation
to the Windsor
Village transaction - the real difficulty seeming to me to arise
from the lateness of the time at which the liquidators commenced
to make serious
efforts to investigate the position);
- lack of
information available to the liquidator (again, this seems to some extent to be
a product of the manner in which the investigations
proceeded largely in a
formulaic way issuing standard form requests for documents and not pursuing
those requests; in relation to
the complaints as to the manner of discovery,
this seems to me to be as to production in a manner not identified by reference
to
particular transactions but in any event there is evidence from the
solicitors acting for the Jasmic parties that production was
in the form sought
and that there was no complaint at the time); and
- lack of
cooperation (but the evidence suggests that there was a measure of cooperation
both on part of the Sheas and their accountant,
Mr Roy, and on the part of
McCarthy and Chambers Finance. In particular, Mr and Mrs Shea made available not
only Mr Roy but an adviser
from HQZ Argentum to provide information in relation
to the Ladycare transactions. Mr Hutchins did not accept the information given
by the respective accountants or advisers as helpful (and seemed to go so far as
to suggest that there was an attempt to present
the transaction in a misleading
fashion as very complex when he considered the structure to be simple and his
objection was to the
lack of information as to its commercial purpose), but that
seems to be a criticism as to the information he was given not a lack
of
cooperation in its provision. The liquidators were critical of the responses
given in the course of the examinations of those
involved with the Jasmic
interests (reference being made in submissions to an "intransigent inability to
recall" on the part of Mr
Shea), but it seems that equally the explanation might
be that the Sheas left matters in the hands of their advisers (hence their
inability now to be of much assistance in identifying what took place) and that
Mr Roy himself did not have a clear idea or does
not now have a clear idea of
the intricacies of a restructuring done on the advice of other advisers. Again,
a criticism as to the
lack of understanding of the parties involved in the
transaction is not the same as lack of cooperation in the investigations.)
- As
to the relevant period of delay, Mr Harper submits that it was at most 8-9
months during which time there was no activity on the
part of Mr Francipane and
the commencement of activity by Mr Hutchins; Mr Pritchard says that the delay is
in effect the 2 and a
half year period from the liquidators' appointment in
April 2007 to the taking of steps from October 2009. I am of the view that
the
effective delay in relation to the investigations is the latter period (since
the steps taken by Mr Francipane seem to have been
somewhat formulaic in the
sense of going through the motions (at least so far as the time sheets reveal)
and Mr Hutchins was clear
that he had obtained little assistance from the steps
taken in that earlier period).
- The
relevant delay, for the purposes of an extension application under s 588FF(3),
is the delay in the bringing of proceedings. That
time started to run from the
expiry of the three-year period. That is not a lengthy period of delay. However,
the presumptive prejudice
resulting from that delay is the deterioration in
memory in the time that has elapsed since the transactions that would be the
subject
of the voidable transaction proceedings if the period for bringing the
proceedings were to be extended and the likelihood of that
prejudice must be
assessed by reference to a greater period of time. (As Brown makes clear,
the statutory time limit involves a legislative balancing of the prejudice
arising from delay in this regard.)
- In
the present case, the reason for the delay in bringing the proceedings largely
seems to be the relative inactivity of the liquidators
for two and a half years
of the three-year period available to them (due to the policy decision not to
expend large funds on an unfunded
liquidation). Mr Harper submitted that this
was not an unreasonable approach. I accept the force of that. In the same
fashion, Tobias
JA in Tolcher accepted that it was responsible for a
liquidator not to incur costs in proceedings until knew litigation funding in
place. However,
by analogy with the reasoning in Buzzle , where the
decision is made not to pursue more than preliminary investigations unless
something is discovered in those investigations
that might make investigation
worthwhile and not to seek funding (or to make an application to the ASIC fund
for assistance) to do
so, then that is a forensic decision made by the
liquidators and in those circumstances the liquidators must bear the risk that
there
will be no extension granted.
- The
facts seem to me to suggest that had an exercise of the kind carried out by Mr
Hutchins in October 2009 been commenced at an earlier
stage then there is every
possibility that the liquidators could have obtained the same kind of
speculative funding arrangements
as they were able to do in early 2010. This
reinforces the conclusion that the situation in which the liquidators now find
themselves
is as a result of decisions consciously taken by them and hence any
prejudice is self inflicted.
- As
to the merits, I accept that an arguable case seems to be shown in relation to
the Ladycare transactions and the Windsor Village
partnership transactions.
- The
position is very different in relation to the Scotch Whisky transaction -
initially the position was that an extension was necessary
in order to enable a
n investigation of the position (Mr Kassem having made it clear in the witness
box in May this year that he
did not know what particular claim there might be;
did not know if there was in fact any whisky or the like); but since then
examinations
have taken place in relation to this issue and there is still no
articulation of any voidable transaction claim. There cannot be
a voidable
transaction claim in relation into the entry into the 2001 transaction per se
(unless the 10 year time period applied
- and at T 33 Mr Kassem disclaimed any
suggestion that it was considered that the transaction was entered into for
purpose of defeating
creditors; saying that he considered it bore the hallmarks
of a transaction entered into for tax minimisation purposes). Mr Harper
confirmed in closing submissions that there is not a claim to set aside the
transactions but that what the liquidator is enquiring
into is whether there is
a voidable transaction in relation to the performance of the whisky transaction
or during the period thereafter.
However, nothing has been put to me to suggest
that there is a basis for such a claim and given the delay to date I see no
reason
to grant a further extension to carry out what seems to be little more
than a fishing expedition in that regard.
- As
to the question of prejudice, Mr Harper emphasises that no evidence of actual
prejudice (other than the effect on the forthcoming
criminal trials of Messrs
Sellers and McCarthy) had been adduced. However, presumptive prejudice of the
kind identified in Brisbane Health is, of course, a presumption of actual
prejudice.
- For
his part, Mr Pritchard does not accept that there is no evidence of specific
prejudice in any event, referring to the evidence
of Mr Shea's advanced glaucoma
as constituting actual prejudice. In that regard, while I accept that a medical
condition of this
kind is likely to make the giving of evidence by Mr Shea more
difficult, this is not the same kind of prejudice as that which occurs
where a
witness has died or where there is a medical condition suffered which affects
the witness' memory. That said, prejudice to
some extent from the inevitable (or
at least very likely) deterioration of memory (exacerbated by the fact that Mr
Shea is an elderly
witness) should I think be inferred.
- However,
in circumstances where the Jasmic parties are already embroiled in claims
relating to the transactions the subject of the
leave application, and will no
doubt be required to give evidence in relation to the restructuring of the
Ladycare business for the
purpose of other claims, any prejudice in respect of
the deterioration of the quality of their memory is already present and it does
not seem likely to me that this will be greatly exacerbated by the addition of a
further voidable transaction claim in relation to
those matters.
- Balancing
the various considerations referred to above, my conclusion is that the
applications for extension of time to commence voidable
transaction proceedings
in both the Clarecastle and Ladycare Leave proceedings should be dismissed other
than in relation to the
claim foreshadowed against Jasmic in paragraph [57] and
[58] of the draft Statement of Claim (since I consider that the issues raised
by
it will be issues of the kind already raised in the proceedings on foot or which
could be brought without leave).
- I
note that this still leaves the liquidators in the position where there remain
claims in relation to the conduct of the respective
companies' affairs and it
may well be that an extension of time in relation to particular transactions can
be sought in the context
of an application for amendment to the existing
proceedings. Further, insofar as the applications for an extension of time in
the
3 specific proceedings involve parties other than the Jasmic parties (who
were not represented on this occasion) it seems to me that
the findings above
would not preclude an application for amendment of the existing proceedings to
include claims against those parties
and an extension of time in that regard
(particularly since different issues relevant to the weighing of the delay and
prejudice
considerations might well arise in relation to those other parties).
Orders
- For
the reasons set out above, I propose to make the following orders:
1. Pursuant to s 588FF(3)(b) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), I
extend the time for the bringing of a voidable transaction claim of the kind
identified in paragraphs [57] and [58] of the
draft Statement of Claim annexed
to the affidavit sworn 29 June 2011 of Mr Charly Tannous in these proceedings,
against Jasmic Nominees
Pty Limited.
2. Save as above, I dismiss the applications for an extension of time
pursuant to s 588FF(3)(b) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), brought in
proceedings 81756 of 2010 and 81786 of 2010.
- I
will hear submissions as to costs and as to the form of the proposed orders at
an appropriate time.
**********
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