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In the matter of Jodegan Pty Limited [2016] NSWSC 1090 (10 August 2016)
Last Updated: 11 August 2016
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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In the matter of Jodegan Pty Limited
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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[2016] NSWSC 1090
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Hearing Date(s):
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3 August 2016
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Date of Orders:
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10 August 2016
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Decision Date:
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10 August 2016
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity
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Before:
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Barrett AJA
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Decision:
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1. Order that the statutory demand dated 6 April 2016
served on the plaintiff by the defendant be varied by reducing the amount
thereof to $13,296.66. 2. Declare that the said statutory
demand has had effect, as so varied, as from when the demand was served on the
plaintiff. 3. Direct that any party seeking a costs order
do, by 5pm on 17 August 2016, file by delivery to my Associate and serve on the
other
party the terms of the order sought and brief written submissions in
support of the making of the order. 4. Direct that a party
so served do, by 5pm on 24 August 2016, file by delivery to my Associate and
serve on the other party such
submissions on costs as that party wishes to
make. 5. Reserve the question of costs for decision on the
papers.
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Catchwords:
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CORPORATIONS – winding up – statutory demand –
application for order setting aside – whether genuine dispute
about
existence of debts
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Plaintiff - Jodegan Pty Limited ACN 001625001 Defendant - Star
Electrical Limited ACN 000218708
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Representation:
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Counsel: Plaintiff – Mr D Currie Defendant – Mr FP
Hicks Solicitors: Plaintiff – JDC Lawyers Defendant
– Gadens Lawyers Sydney Pty Limited
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File Number(s):
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2016/127130
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Publication Restriction:
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Nil
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JUDGMENT
- BARRETT
AJA: The plaintiff makes application under s 459G of the
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) for an order setting aside a statutory demand
dated 6 April 2016 served on it by the defendant.
- The
statutory demand related to two debts described as
follows:
“Amount payable by Debtor Company to Creditor pursuant to the
Expert Determination of Bryan Ahern dated 24 August 2015
appointed pursuant to clauses 21(c) and 21(d) of the Subcontract
Between the Creditor and Company dated 1 August 2014
$72,646.75
Expert's fees unpaid by Debtor Company and paid by Creditor on
15 January 2016 pursuant to the Expert Determination Agreement
dated 21 May 2015
$13,296.66”
- The
plaintiff maintains that there is, as referred to in s 459H(1)(a), a
genuine dispute about the existence of each such debt.
- The
task of the court in a case such as this is confined to deciding whether, in the
words of McLelland CJ in Eq in Eyota Pty Ltd v Hanave Pty Ltd (1994) 12
ACSR 785 at 787, there is, in relation to the argument that the debt does not
exist, “a plausible contention requiring investigation”.
As
McLelland CJ in Eq said, the inquiry “raises much the same sort of
considerations as the ‘serious question to be tried’
criterion which
arises on an application for an interlocutory injunction or for the extension or
removal of a caveat”. The
plaintiff will fail only if its contentions are
found to be so devoid of substance that no further investigation is
warranted.
The parties’ relationship
- The
plaintiff’s business is installing and maintaining electrical equipment.
The defendant, an electrical contractor, was retained
in connection with a
building project at Wagga Wagga Base Hospital. The plaintiff became a
subcontractor to the defendant under a
subcontract dated 1 August
2014.
- The
subcontract contains, under the heading “Dispute Resolution”,
clause 21 as follows:
“(a) If any dispute or difference (‘dispute’)
concerning the Subcontract arises between Star Electrical and the
Subcontractor
then either party must give the other written notice of the dispute. The notice
is to detail the claims, all the entitlements
giving rise to the claims, and the
factual matters relevant to the dispute.
(b) Within five (5) business days after the giving of such a
notice the parties must confer at least once to attempt to resolve
the dispute.
At any such conference each party must be represented by someone having the
authority to settle the dispute.
(c) If the dispute is not resolved within 10 days of the
parties conferring in paragraph (b), then the dispute shall be referred
to
expert determination. The expert shall be appointed by the Chairperson of the
NSW Chapter of the Australian Institute of Mediators
and Arbitrators and shall
be conducted in accordance with the Australian Institute of Mediators and
Arbitrators Expert Determination
Rules.
(d) The expert's determination shall be final and binding on
the parties except where a claim by either party is in excess of
$250,000.”
Background – first debt
- On
17 April 2015, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff alleging indebtedness
of the plaintiff to the defendant in several respects.
The allegation was made
under three headings, with a sum considered by the defendant to be due set out
under each. The headings and
the respective amounts in the letter were:
“Overpayment” ($49,201.10 “excluding GST”),
“Default”
($151,524.00 “excluding GST”) and
“Rectification of defective work” ($31,650.30 “excluding
GST”).
The concluding paragraph of the letter was:
“We therefore seek D&M's agreement to a payment to Star of
$232,375.40 plus GST on or before 5:00pm this Monday 20 April 2015,
failing which we will escalate the matter through the formal dispute
process set
out in the Subcontract.”
- The
defendant wrote to the plaintiff again on 21 April 2015, as
follows:
“We refer to our claim for reimbursement of overpayments and additional
costs incurred by Star Electrical as a result of the
overpayments to D&M,
default by D&M and termination of the Subcontract Works as set out in our
letter to you dated 17 April
2015 (ref: D&M NOC 001).
We have no record of receiving your agreement to reimburse those costs by close
of business yesterday, as noted in the last paragraph
of our 17 April 2015
letter.
In those circumstances, we refer the matter to dispute pursuant to
clause 21 of the Subcontract.
Clause 21 requires the parties to confer at least once in the five (5)
business day period following the date of this notice to attempt
to resolve the
dispute before referring the matter for expert determination. I will call you
within the next day or two to arrange
a suitable time to confer for that
purpose.”
- Thereafter
(and following an unsuccessful meeting of the kind required by
clause 21(b)), the balance of the procedure envisaged by
clause 21 was
followed. Mr Bryan Ahern was appointed as expert by the Chairperson of the
NSW Chapter of the Australian Institute
of Mediators and Arbitrators and
proceeded to receive the parties’ submissions. Mr Ahern in due course
delivered a written
determination dated 24 August 2015. The ultimate
determination was that the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant in a net sum
of $72,646.75. That is the first of the elements referred to in the statutory
demand.
Background – second debt
- Clause
21(c) of the subcontract states that the “expert” (by which is
obviously meant the expert determination) is to
be conducted in accordance with
the Australian Institute of Mediators and Arbitrators Expert Determination
Rules. Rule 13 of those
rules provides as follows:
“1. Subject to any written agreement by the parties to the contrary, each
party shall pay its own costs of or incidental to
the Process.
2. Subject to any written agreement by the parties to the contrary, the parties
shall be jointly and severally liable for the costs
of the Process, and shall
pay those costs in equal shares.”
- The
evidence shows that, as at the conclusion of the process, Mr Ahern’s fees
were $35,345.20. At an early stage, each party
had paid a sum of $5,000 on
account. There was a subsequent request for further payment but the plaintiff
declined to pay. It took
the view that Mr Ahern’s fees were excessive and
pointed out his obligation under the rules to avoid unnecessary expense. The
plaintiff also wrote a letter of complaint to the professional body by which Mr
Ahern was appointed. It replied, in effect, that
it had no way of coming to any
view about the fees charged.
- The
defendant eventually paid the whole of the fees rendered by Mr Ahern over and
above the initial $10,000 paid on account by the
parties in equal proportions.
It did so because it recognised it was under a joint and several obligation in
respect of the whole
of the fees.
Alleged genuine dispute –
first debt
- The
plaintiff’s contention that there is a genuine dispute about the existence
of the debt of $72,646.75 is based on the proposition
that, because of the
concluding words of clause 12(d) (“except where a claim by either
party is in excess of $250,000”),
that clause had the effect that the
determination of Mr Ahern was not “final and binding on the
parties”. This is because,
on the view the plaintiff takes, there was
“a claim” by the defendant exceeding $250,000. The plaintiff says
that the
defendant therefore cannot look to clause 21 and Mr Ahern’s
determination as a basis for any conclusion of indebtedness of
the plaintiff to
the defendant to the extent of $72,646.75 or at all.
- As
regards the first debt, the central issue revolves around the words “a
claim” in clause 12(d). The plaintiff says that,
having regard to the
defendant’s letter of 21 April 2015 and its express reference back to
the letter of 17 April 2015, the
defendant made, in clause 21(d)
terms, “a claim” of “$232,375.40 plus GST”, as referred
to in the final paragraph
of the 17 April 2015 letter and that, based on
the prevailing GST rate of 10 per cent, that “claim” was “a
claim”
for $255,612.94 and therefore “a claim ... in excess of
$250,000”.
- The
defendant says that this approach misconstrues clause 21 and pays
insufficient attention to the words of the clause as a whole.
Thus,
clause 21(a) provides that, in the event of a “dispute or
difference” of the kind mentioned, either party must
give the other notice
of “the dispute”, and the notice must detail “the
claims” (no doubt the “claims”
of the party giving the
notice), all the entitlements giving rise to “the claims” and the
factual matters relevant to
the “dispute”. On the view the defendant
takes, clause 21 as a whole envisages that a single “dispute”
may
involve several “claims”, since the “notice of the
dispute” that one party gives to the other must detail
“the
claims”, that is, all the claims that the party makes and the
“entitlements giving rise to the claims”.
- The
defendant argues that, on that reading, the reference to “a claim by
either party” in clause 21(d) is a reference
to any one of the
several “claims” detailed pursuant to clause 21(a) and that it
is only if one of these “claims”
exceeds $250,000 that
clause 21(d) operates to cause the expert determination to be not final and
binding. On that construction and
since none of the three sums mentioned in the
17 April 2015 letter (with or without the addition of GST) exceeds
$250,000, the exception
to which clause 21(d) is subject does not
operate.
- Two
matters of contract construction are in issue between the parties. One is the
correct construction of clause 21 and the meaning
to be given to
“claim” in the concluding words of clause 21(d). The other goes
to the question whether the amount of
a “claim”, for the purposes of
those concluding words (and comparison with the stated limit of $250,000) is to
be viewed
on a GST-inclusive or a GST-exclusive basis.
- On
the language of clause 21(d), either postulated construction may be
correct. Neither can be said to be fanciful or clearly wrong.
The construction
for which the defendant contends proceeds on the basis that clause 21, read
as a whole, contemplates that several
“claims” may be included in a
dispute and that the concluding words of clause 21(d) refer to each of the
several claims.
The construction preferred by the plaintiff postulates a purpose
of limiting the availability of a particular dispute resolution
mechanism to a
case where $250,000 or less is in dispute.
- This
raises the question whether, in the present s 459H(1)(a) context, the court
should determine which construction is correct or
merely conclude that, based on
the different (and not fanciful) views concerning construction, there is genuine
dispute.
- In
Infratel Networks Pty Ltd v Gundry's Telco & Rigging Pty Ltd [2012]
NSWCA 365; 92 ACSR 27 at [45]–[46], the Court of Appeal said that
questions of construction should generally not be determined in a
s 459H(1)(a) case. The
Court of Appeal of Western Australia expressed a
like opinion in Pravenkav Group Pty Ltd v Diploma Construction Pty Ltd
[No 3] [ 2014] WASCA 132. Although there may be rare and clear cases
where such determination is appropriate, this is not such a case. In debt
recovery proceedings
based on the proposition that clause 21(d) had
produced a binding determination, the present plaintiff’s defence based on
the
exclusion in the concluding words might well be countered by reliance on the
fact that the present plaintiff had participated in
the dispute resolution
process even though it was clear from the very outset that the sum involved was
$232,375.40 on a GST-exclusive
basis or $255,612.94 on a GST-inclusive
basis.
- The
genuine dispute ground is made out in respect of the first
debt.
Alleged genuine dispute – second debt
- The
plaintiff maintains that the defendant was not obliged to pay the sum of
$13,296.66 to Mr Ahern and that the question of such
payment was solely a matter
between the plaintiff and Mr Ahern. Furthermore, the plaintiff says, its
complaint to Mr Ahern about
the amount claimed by him over and above the initial
$5,000 each showed that it disputed the supposed debt for fees. The defendant,
on the view the plaintiff takes, has taken it upon itself to pay a fee that the
plaintiff disputed and has done so at its own risk.
- The
defendant was correct to recognise that, under rule 13.2 (as imported by the
subcontract), the parties’ liability for Mr
Ahern’s remuneration was
joint and several. That circumstance put Mr Ahern into a position from which he
could have proceeded
against either the plaintiff or the defendant and, in case
of recovery against one debtor alone, the other debtor would have been
bound to
render restitution to the first for one-half of the burden incurred.
Furthermore, payment to Mr Ahern was, under the terms
to which the parties had
agreed, a necessary step to obtaining his determination. The circumstances are
therefore the same as those
considered by the Court of Exchequer Chamber in
Marsack v Webber [1860] EngR 966; (1860) 6 H&N 1; 158 ER 1
at [6]:
“We think that when two parties agree to employ an arbitrator, and one
pays a sum of money to take up the award, in reason,
justice and law he is
entitled to recover from the other a moiety of the sum so
paid.”
- The
liability of the plaintiff to reimburse the defendant for one-half of Mr
Ahern’s fee is clear. No further investigation
is warranted. The dispute
the plaintiff asserts about the existence of the second debt cannot be regarded
as a genuine dispute.
Disposition
- The
plaintiff’s genuine dispute case has succeeded in respect of the first
debt but not the second. Under s 459H(4), therefore,
the court should vary
the statutory demand so that the total sum is reduced by the amount of the first
debt.
- As
to costs, the fact that each party has had a measure of success makes it
desirable that I receive submissions on the costs order
that should be
made.
- I
make the following order, declaration and
directions:
1. Order that the statutory demand
dated 6 April 2016 served on the plaintiff by the defendant be varied by
reducing the amount
thereof to $13,296.66.
2. Declare that the said statutory demand has had effect, as
so varied, as from when the demand was served on the plaintiff.
3. Direct that any party seeking a costs order do, by 5pm on
17 August 2016, file by delivery to my Associate and serve on the other
party
the terms of the order sought and brief written submissions in support of the
making of the order.
4. Direct that a party so served do, by 5pm on 24 August
2016, file by delivery to my Associate and serve on the other party such
submissions on costs as that party wishes to make.
5. Reserve the question of costs for decision on the
papers.
**********
Amendments
11 August 2016 - Change (NSW) to (Cth) in coverpage legislation field.
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