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[2019] NSWSC 413
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In the matter of Harmon International Holdings Pty Ltd [2019] NSWSC 413 (15 April 2019)
Last Updated: 15 April 2019
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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In the matter of Harmon International Holdings Pty Ltd
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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12 March 2019
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Date of Orders:
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15 April 2019
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Decision Date:
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15 April 2019
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity - Corporations List
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Before:
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Rees J
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Decision:
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(1) Pursuant to section 459H of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), order that
the statutory demand dated 6 November 2018 served by the defendant upon the
plaintiff be set aside. (2) Order the defendant to pay the
plaintiff’s costs of the application.
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Catchwords:
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CORPORATIONS — Winding up — Statutory demand — Genuine
dispute about existence of debt — Defendant claims
to have been subrogated
to mortgagee’s rights on discharge of plaintiff’s mortgage —
Plaintiff disputes defendant’s
involvement in transaction —
Plaintiff disputes entitlement to subrogation — Genuine dispute made out
— Demand
set aside. EVIDENCE — Hearsay —
Transcript of liquidator’s examination — Application of s 591(14) of
the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) — Rule does not exclude admissibility
through the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW). EVIDENCE — Hearsay
— Applicability of hearsay rule in application to set aside statutory
demand — Admissibility
of second-hand hearsay — Identification of
the fact in issue as the existence of a genuine dispute. EVIDENCE
— Inferences — Rule in Jones v Dunkel [1959] HCA 8; (1959) 101 CLR 298 —
Applicability of rule in application to set aside statutory demand.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Cleaver, M.J., Equitable Subrogation in Australia and England (2018) 29
JBFLP 34 Heydon et al., Meagher Gummow & Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines
& Remedies (5th ed., LexisNexis, 2014) Parkinson, ed., The Principles of
Equity (2nd ed., Lawbook Co., 2003)
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Harmon International Holdings Pty Ltd ACN 602 420 959
(Plaintiff) Hartford Investments Pty Ltd (in liquidation) ACN 607
002 102 (Defendant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: D.S. Weinberger (Plaintiff) H.W. Somerville
(Defendant) Solicitors: Bowles Lawyers
(Plaintiff) Nelson McKinnon Lawyers (Defendant)
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File Number(s):
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2018/365141
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Publication Restriction:
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Nil
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JUDGMENT
- HER
HONOUR: This is an application under sections 459G and 459H
of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) to set aside a statutory demand on the
basis that there is a genuine dispute as to the existence of the debt. Hartford
Investments
Pty Ltd (Hartford), the creditor, claimed in a statutory
demand to be entitled to be subrogated to the rights of H&H Mezz Pty Ltd,
which had lent
monies to the plaintiff, Harmon International Holdings Pty Ltd
(Harmon), a debt said to have been repaid by Hartford. Harmon says that
Hartford is not entitled to be subrogated, either to the security
accompanying
the loan, the terms of the loan agreement between H&H Mezz in respect of
interest, or at all.
ADMISSIBILITY OF EXAMINATION
TRANSCRIPTS
- Before
turning to the facts, it is necessary to give reasons for an evidentiary ruling
made during the hearing, as I indicated that
I would. Hartford is itself now in
liquidation. The liquidator of Hartford tendered the transcript of a
liquidator’s examination
of Ali Talanehzar, the sole shareholder, director
and secretary of Harmon. Mr Talanehzar is also known as Alan Zar. Objection was
taken to the admissibility of the transcript under section 597(14) of the
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) which provides: (emphasis
added)
... any written record of an examination ... may be used in evidence in any
legal proceedings against the person.
It was submitted
that these were not legal proceedings “against the person”, that is,
Mr Talanehzar, but against the company
Harmon. The submission was correct, but
not dispositive. Rather, the examination transcript may be used in evidence in
any legal
proceedings against Mr Talanehzar and may also be used against another
person or entity as long as it is admissible under the Evidence Act 1995
(NSW).
- A
situation relevantly identical to the one at hand was considered by
Gordon J in Rathner (in his capacity as official liquidator of Kalimand
Pty Ltd (in liq) v Hawthorn (2014) 320 ALR 776; [2014] FCA 1067. A
liquidator examined Mr Hawthorn, who was the sole director of Kalimand and
also sole director and shareholder of High Country Meats
(Vic) Pty Ltd. The
liquidator brought a claim against High Country Meats to recover a voidable
transaction and assets alleged to
be held on trust by High Country Meats for
Kalimand. The liquidator sought to tender parts of the transcript of the
examination of
Mr Hawthorn as evidence against High Country Meats. Whilst her
Honour considered that the transcript was not admissible under section 597(14)
of the Corporations Act, it was admissible under section 63(2) of the
Evidence Act 1995 (Cth), which governs the admissibility of
documents containing a previous representation of a person who is not available
to give
evidence.
- A
similar approach was taken in earlier cases. In Wily v Lo Presti (1997)
16 ACLC 82, a liquidator brought proceedings to recover a voidable preference
from Mr Lo Presti. The liquidator could not locate a witness,
Mr
Lettieri-Barbato. The liquidator tendered a transcript of the examination of Mr
Lettieri-Barbato. Young J considered that section
597(14) said nothing about the
admissibility of transcript of evidence of other persons than that of Mr Lo
Presti. His Honour proceeded
to deal with the admissibility of the transcript
under section 63(2) of the Evidence Act. In Southern Equities Corp
Limited (in liq) v Bond (2001) 78 SASR 554; [2001] SASC 70 at [133],
Wily is cited as authority for the proposition that transcript may be
admitted against others.
- In
Fodare Pty Ltd v Shearn (2010) 240 FLR 187; [2010] NSWSC 737, Barrett J
noted that section 597(14) has the result that the transcript of examination is
admissible against the examinee but, where
there are several defendants, it is
not admissible by force of section 597(14) against the other defendants: at
[39]; citing In the matter of Westgate Wool Co Pty Ltd (2006) 206 FLR
190; [2006] SASC 372 at [22] per Debelle J. However, at
[41]:
Given the limiting effect of s 597(14) of the Corporations Act, it is
necessary to go back to the Evidence Act and to see whether it creates
any greater degree of admissibility in relation to the signed records of the
examinations. I frame
the question in that way because I am satisfied that s
597(14) does not, as it were, make an exhaustive statement on the question
of
admissibility or, putting this another way, contain at the end the invisible
words, “but may not otherwise be used in
evidence”.
His Honour was not otherwise prepared to admit
the examination transcripts into evidence against the other defendants under the
Evidence Act.
- In
this case, the examination transcript was relied upon to counter Harmon’s
evidence in the form of an affidavit sworn by Mr
Talanehzar setting out the
facts upon which it is said that the Court should conclude that there is a
genuine dispute as to the debt.
The examination transcript was, as I understood
it, relied upon as a prior admission against interest by Mr Talanehzar and
Harmon,
being a version of events given when examined on the subject in August
2018. Section 81 of the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW) has the result that the
transcript is admissible as evidence of a previous representation, and I admit
it.
FACTS
- This
case is hampered by a lack of documents and witnesses. The liquidator of
Hartford has few records. The person behind Hartford,
Peter Larcombe, is dead.
Mr Talanehzar provided no records and apparently has none. The person who is
said by Harmon to have actually
discharged the H&H Mezz loan, George Eleter,
did not give evidence.
Harmon
- In
2014, Harmon was incorporated. Michael Eleter was sole shareholder, director and
secretary of the company. Harmon was engaged in
property investment and
development. Harmon exchanged contracts to buy two adjoining boarding houses at
306 and 308 Cleveland Street,
Surry Hills for $2,480,000. Solicitors’
trust account statements in respect of the purchase record the client as George
Eleter.
Presumably, therefore, George Eleter had something to do with the
decision by Harmon to acquire the properties.
- In
2015, Tony Eleter became sole shareholder, director and secretary of Harmon. A
month later, Mr Talanehzar became the sole shareholder,
director and secretary
of Harmon. It is apparent from emails in evidence that Mr Talanehzar had a
business relationship with Mr Larcombe
of Aventis Capital.
- Harmon
was also buying other properties. In May 2015, Mr Larcombe authorised his
solicitors to release $350,000 held in the solicitors’
trust account to
complete Harmon’s purchase of a property in Stanmore for $1,652,000. It
would appear that Mr Larcombe was
a contributor of funds to acquire
Harmon’s investment properties, apparently as equity as no mortgages were
recorded on the
title of the Stanmore property in respect of Mr Larcombe’s
contribution. Harman also obtained a loan from H&H Mezz, a company
owned by
Gabreal Halvagi, to buy the Stanmore property. A second mortgage to H&H Mezz
was registered on the title of the Stanmore
property.
Loan from
H&H Mezz
- Harmon
obtained a loan from Sydney Wyde Mortgage Fund to buy the Surry Hills
properties. On 9 June 2015, Harmon also entered into
a Deed of Loan with H&H
Mezz, which agreed to lend Harman $408,400 secured by a second mortgage over the
Surry Hills properties.
The term of the loan was 6 months. Interest was payable
at 24% per annum, with four months’ interest payable in advance. On
10
June 2015, purchase of the Surry Hills properties was completed and title was
transferred to Harmon. H&H Mezz’s loan
to Harmon was secured by a
registered second mortgage over the Surry Hills properties.
- On
10 July 2015, Hartford was incorporated. Christian Budd-Madison was the sole
shareholder, director and secretary of Hartford but
all decisions in the company
were made by Mr Larcombe.
- In
September 2015, Harmon purchased a property in Paddington for $1 million. On 20
October 2015, Mr Larcombe requested a solicitor
provide settlement sheets for
the purchases of Surry Hills, Stanmore and Paddington properties, together with
details of the amounts
sent to the solicitors’ trust account for
settlement of each of the properties. The information was provided, together
with
the first pages of the contracts for sale for each property. The trust
account statements in respect of the Surry Hills properties
recorded:
- (a) the client
was George Eleter; and
- (b) Mr Larcombe
had provided some $505,000 towards the purchase of the Surry Hills
properties.
It would appear that Mr Larcombe had an
interest in the properties acquired by Harmon. It would also appear from the
corporate history
of Harmon and the trust account statement that members of the
Eleter family including George Eleter had also had some involvement
in the
acquisition of the Surry Hills properties.
Repayment of loan
- The
loan from H&H Mezz in respect of the Surry Hills properties was due to be
repaid on 9 December 2015. On 5 November 2015, Mr
Halvagi of H&H Mezz sent
Mr Talanehzar a letter to be signed and returned. The draft letter stated that
the Stanmore property
was currently being sold.
From the proceeds, which will be ample, once the first and second mortgage loans
are cleared on the Stanmore property, we request
the second mortgage for
$408,400 to H&H Mezz on the Surry Hills properties be cleared in full also.
There is also unpaid fees
of $9,000 which includes GST owing which we wish to
pay from the sale. A caveat in the amount of $418,300 to be placed on the
Stanmore
property is acceptable to us.
Mr Halvagi clearly wanted
the loans in respect of both the Stanmore and Surry Hills properties paid out on
the sale of the Stanmore
property, which was apparently then under
consideration.
- On
15 November 2015, Mr Talanehzar forwarded the proposed letter to Mr Larcombe,
together with statements of account from the first
mortgagee in respect of the
loans to purchase the properties, noting “Mate also Vaucluse mortgage is
due on 20th with Paddo”.
On 10 December 2015, the loan from H&H Mezz
was not repaid.
- On
22 January 2016, Mr Talanehzar sent Mr Larcombe and George Eleter the first page
of the contracts of sale for the Surry Hills and
Stanmore properties. H&H
Mezz conducted a title search for the Surry Hills properties. On 29 January
2016, George Eleter emailed
Mr Talanehzar and Daniel Hausman of Aventis Group in
respect of one of the Surry Hills properties, and Mr Hausman replied (copied
to
Mr Larcombe) that he had read both contracts and noted there were no section 149
certificates and the title searches were out of date. Two days later, on 31
January 2016, Mr Hausman sent an email to Mr Larcombe:
... Pete – please advise ASAP re tomorrow morning caveats as I’m
ready to go – notwithstanding Alan’s plea
to me Friday to hold off
on Friday re 306– 308 Cleveland Street Surry Hills given a potential NAB
refinancing that Gaby is
doing which I personally do not recommend so I need to
know by 10am tomorrow to advise my lawyer. He has what he needs to lodge
tomorrow.
I have no faith in Gaby/ Alan’s a nice guy but the likelihood of them
refinancing $2.1 million worth of funding off the back
valuation of $2.5 (84%)
and Alan’s balance sheet or whatever I find difficult to swallow –
in the meantime on those properties,
you have about $400K equity now if sold for
current valuation. If Gaby continues to rape you on the second mortgage –
the $400K
will wither down in no time.
Would be a good outcome if they took Surry Hills and he told me that’s
what they want to do and they’re running their
DA for 10 units which is
apparently DA’d which I don’t believe – you take Paddo –
value $1.45/ Stanmore –
value $2.2 million/ Adam take Rozelle –
value $2.3 million (virtually zero equity) and Tris/ Synd take MacDonald –
that
all works for the lebs – we whiteboards do it – but how is
Alan/ George going to fund $2.1 million debt on $2.5 val?
The rest I agree Friday which is a good outcome and gives you back circa
$1.8million (allowing $200,000 for Adam if he buys Rozelle).
I email you work–out I did with Ali.
It would appear that
Mr Larcombe was considering selling the Surry Hills properties in order to
extract his equity in the investment,
and Mr Talanehzar and George Eleter were
endeavouring to obtain finance to refinance the existing loans on the properties
and buy
out Mr Larcombe’s interest. Mr Larcombe, or his company Aventis
Capital, was preparing to lodge caveats and Mr Larcombe was
being advised to pay
out the H&H Mezz loan in order to prevent the erosion of his equity in the
Surry Hills properties by high
interest rates charged under that loan.
- On
2 February 2016, Mr Halvagi of H&H Mezz emailed Mr Talanehzar a further
document to be signed and returned, and also emailed
Mr Larcombe asking him to
get Mr Talanehzar to sign and return it. A week later, Mr Larcombe replied
“Yes. Speak Tuesday morning
mate.” A week later on 16 February 2016,
Mr Halvagi emailed Mr Larcombe again “call me” and a few days later,
Mr
Larcombe replied “working on refi the second mate. Should have answer
am.” It would appear from these emails that Mr
Halvagi saw Mr Larcombe,
rather than Mr Talanehzar, as the person to deal with in respect of repayment of
the H&H Mezz loan,
and Mr Larcombe was endeavouring to refinance the second
mortgage.
George Eleter
- Mr
Talanehzar says that he started to look for someone to refinance the H&H
Mezz loan. He spoke to George Eleter, a former business
associate. On 18
February 2016, Mr Talanehzar says he had a conversation with George Eleter,
which he deposed was to the following
effect:
Mr Eleter: I have spoken to Peter [Larcombe]. He is willing to
give me a loan. Once received I will give Harmon a loan so it can
pay out
H&H.
Mr Talanehzar: Is Peter serious about lending you the money? I
can’t stuff Gabreal [Halvagi] around as he won’t wait
any longer
Mr Eleter: Yes I have spoken at length with Peter and he will
definitely lend me the money. It will take about a week.
Mr Talanehzar: Can it be done any quicker?
Mr Eleter: Get the final figures and account details from
H&H and to save time I will tell Peter to pay H&H directly.
Mr Talanehzar: Ok that would be great.
- Mr
Talanehzar says that he called Mr Halvagi and advised that he had obtained
finance to pay out the mortgage and needed about a week.
Mr Halvagi said that he
would calculate a payout figure for the next week but it needed to be paid out
by that date or he would push
ahead legally. Mr Talanehzar told Mr Halvagi that
he understood and was hoping that payment would be made directly by Mr Larcombe
by direct deposit into H&H Mezz’s account. Mr Talanehzar said he was
happy for Mr Halvagi to liaise with Mr Larcombe to
make sure everyone had
the correct figures and account information.
- On
19 February 2016, Mr Halvagi of H&H Mezz sent a default notice to Mr
Larcombe and Mr Talanehzar noting that the loan had been
due for repayment on 10
December 2015 and was now in default. Mr Halvagi noted “promised return 25
February 2016” and
calculated the amount due and payable on that date to
be $439,714. H&H Mezz’s bank account details were provided. Mr Halvagi
advised that if the amount was not paid in full by 25 February 2016, legal
action would be commenced.
Payment by Hartford
- On
24 February 2016, $440,000 was paid from the bank account of Hartford to H&H
Mezz. Mr Budd-Maddison deposed that he made the
payment at the direction of Mr
Larcombe. The amount paid was roughly the same as the payout figure advised by
H&H Mezz on 19
February 2016. According to Mr Budd-Maddison, Mr Larcombe
told him:
Mate, we need to make this payment to extinguish H&H. They’ve cost me
so much money so far. I’ve been covering them
because Ali hasn’t
been making mortgage payments.
- Mr
Budd-Maddison deposed that Hartford did not have any contractual dealings or
agreements with Harmon, George Eleter or H&H Mezz
which created any
obligation on the part of Hartford to make the payment. Further, the liquidator
of Hartford has not found any satisfactory
explanation or justification in
Hartford’s books and records for the payment.
- The
following day, on 25 February 2016, Mr Talanehzar deposed that he had a
conversation with George Eleter, as follows:
Mr Eleter: Peter [Larcombe] has confirmed that the payment of
$440,000 went into the account of H&H Mezz. I now owe Peter $440,000.
Mr Talanehzar: Thanks for everything George it takes a lot of
pressure off. Harmon will pay you back the $440,000 as soon as it
can.
Mr Eleter: That’s all good I’m glad I could help. I
understand Harmon’s position at the moment let’s sort
out how and
when Harmon will repay me when things settle down.
- Objection
was taken by Hartford to the admissibility of Mr Talanehzar’s evidence of
conversations with George Eleter in which
George Eleter conveyed what Mr
Larcombe had told him about approving and providing a loan. This is second-hand
hearsay evidence.
However, the evidence is admissible to prove the fact of the
conversation, and what Mr Eleter asserted to Mr Talanehzar, irrespective
of the
truth of what Mr Eleter asserted to Mr Talanehzar. Such evidence is admissible
to establish the existence of a genuine dispute
as to the debt, being in this
case whether Hartford repaid the H&H Mezz loan on its own account or as
agent for Hartford’s
borrower, George Eleter: In the matter of Creata
(Aust) Pty Ltd [2017] NSWSC 1055 at [14]- [16] per Black J; Creata (Aust)
Pty Ltd v Faull (2017) 125 ACSR 212; [2017] NSWCA 300 at [38] and footnote
[9]. Whilst admissible for this purpose, the Court may ultimately find that the
mere fact that a third party asserts
a fact is not a sufficient basis to
establish a genuine dispute as to a debt: Black J at [15].
- On
23 March 2016, Mr Talanehzar emailed Mr Larcombe, George Eleter and Patrick
Willmott of Aventis Capital. Mr Talanehzar provided
Mr Willmott with details of
upcoming mortgage repayments, noting:
Hey mate
Pete has asked me to send you the below, can you note these to be paid a few
days prior to the date.
We are paying a shitload in penalties etc ...
Mr Talanehzar
provided details of the payments due to the first mortgagees on the Surry Hills
and Stanmore properties and mortgage
repayments to La Trobe Finance in respect
of the Paddington and Vaucluse properties. Apparently, La Trobe loans were paid
by “direct
debit from Harmon”. It would appear that, although Mr
Talanehzar was the sole office-holder and shareholder of Harmon, it was
Mr
Larcombe who stood behind and made the mortgage repayments in respect of each of
the properties.
- On
17 May 2016, Mr Talanehzar sent George Eleter and Mr Larcombe a title search for
each of the properties. Repayment of the H&H
Mezz loan had not been followed
by a discharge of the second mortgage on the Surry Hills
properties.
Liquidators appointed to Hartford
- On
20 September 2016, liquidators were appointed to Hartford. On 31 October 2016, a
discharge of mortgage was registered in respect
of the H&H Mezz second
mortgage on the Surry Hills properties. The discharge of mortgage was dated 30
June 2016. Whether the
discharge of mortgage was executed on 30 June 2016 or at
the time it was registered on 31 October 2016, whether this occurred before
or
after Mr Larcombe died, and the surrounding circumstances, are not in evidence.
As the authorities to which I will shortly refer
attest, such evidence may
indicate whether the discharge of mortgage rebuts a presumption that Hartford
intended to keep the mortgage
alive for its own benefit, or is neutral as being
consistent only with an intention by those surviving Mr Larcombe to remove the
secured nature of the debt.
- Hartford’s
liquidators issued summons for examination and production of documents. In July
2018, Mr Talanehzar was served with
a summons for examination by the liquidators
of Hartford, and says that this was the first time he had heard of
Hartford.
- On
21 August 2018, Mr Talanehzar was examined before Judicial Register Ng of the
Federal Court of Australia. His evidence in the examination
was broadly
consistent with his affidavits in these proceedings. Mr Talanehzar agreed that
Harmon had not made the payment which
gave rise to the discharge of H&H
Mezz’s mortgage. He agreed that, having regard to the documents that he
was shown, which
appear to have been the same documents in evidence in these
proceedings, that Hartford had discharged the mortgage:
... It seems to show that, but I had not borrowed any funds from Hartford
or — nor had any knowledge of that. ... I had an idea that the
payment was made, but not from Hartford.
Where did you think it came from? — From my business associate, George
Eleter.
Did you have any correspondence with George Eleter in relation to this payment?
— ... Yes.
And what was the form of that correspondence? — ... That I had a short
time to make this payment. I was under default, and
I needed these funds, and he
agreed to arrange the funds to be lent to me by himself, and I still, today, owe
that money to Mr George
Eleter.
- Mr
Talanehzar said that the arrangement with Mr Eleter was oral. Mr Talanehzar
repeated:
... I believe Mr Eleter, in talking with Mr Larcombe, arranged funds between him
and Mr Larcombe to be paid to sort out my debt.
But I borrowed the funds —
or my company borrowed the funds from Mr Eleter.
So do I understand that when you are saying that the chain was that when you
spoke to Mr Eleter, Mr Eleter spoke to Mr Larcombe,
and Mr Larcombe caused the
payment to be made? — ...That’s what I believe.
And you understood, at the time that this was taking place, that Mr Eleter was
arranging for Mr Larcombe to have the payments made;
correct? —
...Yes.
- Mr
Talanehzar said that he had no idea that Mr Larcombe was associated with
Harmon.
... Mr George Eleter is a business associate of mine and I consulted him
regarding this matter and he arranged the funds.
At your instigation? You said, George, can you sort this out? — I
wasn’t aware where he was going to get it from but
it seems that he got it
from Mr Larcombe.
- Mr
Talanehzar repeated:
... What I am saying is I borrowed the funds from Mr Eleter, Mr Eleter then
borrowed the funds from Mr Larcombe to pay out this mortgage.
And did Mr Eleter tell you that he borrowed the funds from Mr Larcombe, did he?
— at that time, yes, he told me to correspond
with Mr Larcombe to arrange
to get it paid out. And I sent him whatever he needs.
- Mr
Talanehzar also said that he later sold his shares in Harmon to Mr Eleter and,
since leaving the company, had not kept any of the
documents relating to Harmon
or the loan.
Statutory demand
- On
6 November 2018, Hartford issued a statutory demand to Harmon supported by an
affidavit of the liquidator. The schedule to the
statutory demand described the
discharge of H&H Mezz’s mortgage as a result of Hartford’s
payment to H&H Mezz
of $440,000 and continued:
5. The Creditor is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of
H&H as mortgagee.
6. The Creditor is entitled to be repaid the sum it advanced to
discharge the Mortgage, and interest charges that have accrued
since that
date.
7. As at 6 November 2018, the total amount the Creditor is
entitled to be repaid is $841,804.46, being the sum of the Payment and
the
interest charges to date.
- The
statutory demand contains two elements. The first element is assertion of an
entitlement to an equitable mortgage arising through
the doctrine of
subrogation. Such an entitlement may not give rise to a debt “due and
payable” under section 459E of the Corporations Act but rather an
alternate means of obtaining repayment if the debt is not repaid on demand. The
second element is an entitlement to
monies under the Deed of Loan. As the loan
was due and payable some time ago, this is more likely to qualify as a debt
“due
and payable”, assuming that Hartford was subrogated not only to
the security but to H&H Mezz’s contractual entitlements.
The
authorities to which I was taken were largely relevant to the first element but
not the second.
- On
27 November 2018, Harmon filed an originating process to set aside the statutory
demand, supported by an affidavit of Mr Talanehzar,
who described his
conversations with George Eleter on 18 and 25 February 2016, already set out in
this judgment. In response, Hartford
served an affidavit by the liquidator and
also Mr Budd-Maddison. The liquidator noted that the books and records of
Hartford appeared
to be incomplete but said that he had been unable to ascertain
any satisfactory explanation or justification in Hartford’s
books and
records for the payment of $440,000 to H&H Mezz.
Jones v
Dunkel
- Hartford
submitted that the Court should draw a Jones v Dunkel [1959] HCA 8; (1959) 101 CLR 298
inference in respect of Harmon’s failure to call George Eleter citing
BI (Contracting) Pty Ltd v Strikwerda (2005) 3 DDCR 149; [2005] NSWCA 288
at [37] per Mason P. Hartford submitted that a Jones v Dunkel inference
should also be drawn in respect of Harmon’s failure to call Mr Halvagi. I
am not sure that the latter follows as
it is difficult to see why Mr Halvagi
could be considered to be “in the camp” of Harmon as opposed to,
say, Hartford.
- There
is nothing in principle to stop the Court drawing a Jones v Dunkel
inference in an application under section 459H to set aside a statutory demand
by reason of a genuine dispute as to the debt, although the nature of such
applications and the evidence
which may be relied upon in such applications may
suggest that it would be unusual to do so. Such an inference was drawn by Senior
Master Mahoney in Radly Corporation Pty Ltd v Suncorp-Metway Ltd (2001)
19 ACLC 1597; [2001] VSC 272 at [29(c)] and [33]. The Court was invited to do so
in similar applications but did not draw the inference in Tony Innaimo
Transport Pty Ltd v Skyroad Logistics Pty Ltd [2018] FCA 1134 at [35],
[51]-[52] per Griffiths J (application for leave under 459S); Complete
Equipment Solutions Pty Ltd v Tesab Engineering Ltd (2016) 309 FLR 236;
[2016] VSC 253 per Randall AsJ (whether service effected); XSRE Pty Ltd v
Lightning Electrical Group Pty Ltd [2011] NSWSC 1147 at [7] per Ward J
(offsetting claim).
- Harmon
submitted that it was not appropriate to draw a Jones v Dunkel inference
having regard to the use to which hearsay evidence may be put in such
applications. As explained by Barrett AJA (with whom
Gleeson and White JJA
agreed) in Creata (Aust) Pty Ltd v Faull (2017) 125 ACSR 212; [2017]
NSWCA 300 at [39]:
Mr Henderson’s evidence of what he had been told by Mr Saunders ... was
tendered not to prove the truth of what Mr Saunders
reportedly said to Mr
Henderson but to prove the existence of a person who, if called as a witness in
a future debt recovery action
brought by Mr Faull against Creata, might
confidently be expected to give evidence of things said to him by Mr Faull
which, if true,
would justify or contribute to a finding in that action that Mr
Faull had breached [a contract] and was not entitled to recover the
debt.
- Here,
Harmon called evidence directed to establishing whether there is a genuine
dispute as to the debt, rather than establishing
on a final basis that Hartford
is not entitled to be subrogated to H&H Mezz’s position. It was
sufficient for Harmon to
do so by the use of “hearsay” evidence (in
the sense described by Barrett AJA). It was not necessary to call George Eleter,
and I do not draw a Jones v Dunkel inference for failure to do
so.
WHAT IS THE DEBT?
- Hartford
claims to be entitled to be subrogated to H&H Mezz’s entitlements
under the Deed of Loan and the second mortgage
in respect of the Surry Hills
properties. Subrogation is an equitable doctrine by which rights are transferred
from one person to
another by operation of law with the consequence that persons
owing obligations are ordered to tender performance to a person other
than the
one originally entitled: Parkinson, ed., The Principles of Equity (2nd
ed., Lawbook Co., 2003) at [1501], [1502]. One of the recognised situations
founding subrogation is where a lender makes an unsecured
loan which pays out a
secured creditor. In this case, the lender may be subrogated to the secured
rights. Equity makes the rebuttable
presumption that the security is to be kept
alive for the lender’s benefit. In Australia, the formulation of the
principle
most often cited is that of Lord Jenkins in delivering the advice of
the Privy Council in Ghana Commercial Bank v Chandiram [1960] AC 732 at
745:
It is not open to doubt that where a third party pays off the mortgage he is
presumed, unless the contrary appears, to intend that
the mortgage shall be kept
alive for his own benefit.
This statement has been widely
following including in Rogers v Resi-Statewide Corp Ltd (No 2) [1991] FCA 535; (1991) 32
FCR 344 at 352 per von Doussa J; Cochrane v Cochrane (1985) 3 NSWLR 403
at 405 per Kearney J; Re H & S Credits Ltd (in liquidation), Tucker v
Roberts [1969] Qd R 280 at 285, 288 (per WB Campbell J, with whom Lucas and
Douglas JJ agreed); see also Heydon et al., Meagher Gummow &
Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines & Remedies (5th ed., LexisNexis, 2014)
at [9-075]-[9-090].
- There
has been a divergence in recent times between Australian and English law on this
subject: see Banque Financière de la Cité v Parc (Battersea)
Ltd [1998] UKHL 7; [1999] 1 AC 221 cf. Challenger Managed Investments Limited v Direct
Money Corp Pty Ltd (2003) 59 NSWLR 452; [2003] NSWSC 1072 at [48]- [50] per
Bryson J, approved by Bofinger v Kingsway Group Ltd (2009) 239 CLR 269;
[2009] HCA 44 at [98], per curiam. This is not the occasion of a detailed
examination of this topic, suffice it to say that Ghana Commercial Bank
remains good law in Australia: see also MJ Cleaver, Equitable Subrogation
in Australia and England (2018) 29 JBFLP 34 for a discussion of the position
after recent developments in the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. As the
learned
authors of Parkinson, op. cit., succinctly explain at
[1514]:
Sometimes it is said that this form of subrogation is only attracted if the
whole circumstances of the lending transaction make it
clear that the parties
intended the lender to have security for the loan (Evandale Estates Pty Ltd v
Keck [1967] VR 647, Hudson J at 652; Cid v Cortes (1987) 4 BPR 9391,
Young JA, at 9393-4; Paul v Speirway Ltd (in liquidation) [1976] 1 Ch
220). However, the better view may be that a lender will be subrogated to
security rights of a paid-out creditor unless the circumstances
of the
transaction indicate a contrary intention. In effect, the defendants bears the
burden of rebutting the doctrines application
(discussed in State Bank of New
South Wales v Geeport Developments Pty Ltd (1991) 5 BPR 11,947, Cohen JA at
11,950-4.
- An
illustration of the application of these principles is Re H & S Credits
Ltd (in liquidation), Tucker v Roberts [1969] Qd R 280 where a receiver
mistakenly believed that a debenture deed had a particular effect such that he
could safely cause the mortgages
over a property to be extinguished. He did not
intend to keep the mortgages alive for the benefit of the debenture holders but
to
rely upon an existing security which he considered valuable and effective.
The receiver evinced a plain intention at all times to
have the mortgages
extinguished and for them not to be kept alive for the benefit of the debenture
holders. The actual discharge
of the mortgages was inconsistent with an
intention to keep them alive. By reason of the receiver’s actual
intentions, the
presumption had no application.
A ‘GENUINE
DISPUTE’
- The
threshold to establish a genuine dispute about the existence of a debt is a
relatively low one. The principles were concisely
collated by Black J in In
the matter of Gorji Property Investment Pty Ltd [2018] NSWSC 1671 at
[14]- [15], in particular:
In Spencer Constructions Pty Ltd v G & M Aldridge Pty
Ltd [1997] FCA 681; (1997) 76 FCR 452 at 464, the Full Court of the Federal Court held
that a “genuine dispute" must be bona fide and truly exist in fact, and
the
ground for that dispute must be real and not spurious, hypothetical,
illusory or misconceived. In Panel Tech Industries (Aust) Pty Ltd v
Australian Skyreach Equipment Pty Ltd (No 2) [2003] NSWSC 896 at [18],
Barrett J (as his Honour then was) formulated that proposition as follows, in a
proposition applied in subsequent cases:
“Once the company shows that even one issue has a sufficient degree of
cogency to be arguable, a finding of genuine dispute
must follow. The court does
not engage in any form of balancing exercise between the strengths of competing
contentions. If it sees
any factor that, on rational grounds, indicates an
arguable case on the part of the company, it must find that a genuine dispute
exists, even where any case apparently available to be advanced against the
company seems stronger.”
In TR Administration Pty Ltd v Frank Marchetti & Sons Pty
Ltd [2008] VSCA 70; (2008) 66 ACLR 67 at [71], Dodds-Streeton JA in turn observed that
a genuine dispute required only that a claim have a "sufficient objective
existence and
prima facie plausibility to distinguish it from a merely spurious
claim, bluster or assertion, and sufficient factual particularity
to exclude the
merely fanciful or futile."
- As
McLelland CJ in Eq explained in Eyota Pty Ltd v Hanave Pty Ltd (1994) 12
ACSR 785; (1994) 12 ACLC 669 at ACSR 787 (citations
omitted):
This does not mean that the court must accept uncritically as giving rise to a
genuine dispute, every statement in an affidavit “however
equivocal,
lacking in precision, inconsistent with undisputed contemporary documents or
other statements by the same deponent, or
inherently improbable in itself, it
may be” not having “sufficient prima facie plausibility to merit
further investigation
as to [its] truth”, or “a patently feeble
legal argument or an assertion of facts unsupported by
evidence”.
This statement was approved in Britten-Norman
Pty Ltd v Analysis & Technology Australia Pty Ltd (2013) 85 NSWLR 601;
[2013] NSWCA 344 at [46].
- In
Britten-Norman, the Court of Appeal clarified the standard of evidence
required in such an application, at [36]:
Accordingly, there must be evidence that satisfies the court that there is
“a serious question to be tried”, or “an
issue deserving of a
hearing”, or a “plausible contention requiring investigation”
of the existence of either a
dispute as to the debt or an offsetting claim. It
is apparent, therefore, that evidence sufficient to satisfy this test, given the
time period in which the affidavit must be filed, cannot and need not
conclusively prove the claim or otherwise be incontrovertible
or substantially
non-contestable.
- The
Court, at [48], also approved the following statement of Thomas J in Re
Morris Catering (Australia) Pty Ltd (1993) 11 ACSR
601:
There is little doubt that Div 3 ... prescribes a formula that requires the
court to assess the position between the parties, and
preserve demands where it
can be seen that there is no genuine dispute and no sufficient genuine
offsetting claim. That is not to
say that the court will examine the merits or
settle the dispute. The specified limits of the court’s examination are
the ascertainment
of whether there is a ‘genuine dispute’ and
whether there is a ‘genuine claim’.
It is often possible to discern the spurious, and to identify mere bluster or
assertion. But beyond a perception of genuineness (or
the lack of it) the court
has no function. It is not helpful to perceive that one party is more likely
than the other to succeed,
or that the eventual state of the account between the
parties is more likely to be one result than another.
The essential task is relatively simple — to identify the genuine level of
a claim (not the likely result of it) and to identify
the genuine level of an
offsetting claim (not the likely result of it).
THE DISPUTE IN
THIS CASE
- Harmon
submits that Hartford has no right of subrogation in the circumstances of this
case. Harmon relied upon the analysis of Eve
J in Wylie v Carlyon [1922]
1 Ch 51 at 53:
An individual who advances money to another for the purpose of enabling that
other to pay specific debts does not in the absence
of a special bargain thereby
acquire the rights of the person’s whose debts are discharged out of his
monies against the property
of the debtor.
I do not, with
respect, consider that this reflects the current law in Australia.
- Beyond
this, Harmon submitted correctly that “in order to determine whether the
presumption applies in any given case the circumstances
of the case have to be
looked at”: Cochrane v Cochrane (1985) 3 NSWLR 403 at 405; see also
Re H&S Credits Limited (in liq), discussed above. In particular,
Harmon relied upon Paul v Speirway Ltd (in liquidation) [1976] Ch 220
where Oliver J concluded at 233:
Where a Court, upon a review of the facts, comes to the conclusion that what was
intended between the parties was really an unsecured
borrowing, there is no room
for the doctrine of subrogation ... because to apply the doctrine of subrogation
in such a case would
in fact be putting the lender in a better position than he
is bargaining to be put in when he advances money.
- Harmon
submits that in order to determine intention it is necessary to look at the
circumstances of the case. That is not possible
on the application to set aside
the statutory demand and it is not possible because there is no evidence adduced
by the relevant
officers of Hartford. The last submission is not correct, as Mr
Budd-Madison gave evidence including as to the intention of Mr Larcombe.
- Further,
Harmon disputes that Hartford is entitled to stand in the shoes of H&H Mezz
under the Deed of Loan. The fact that the
loan was discharged by the payment of
$440,000 had the result that the Deed of Loan is at an end. According to Mr
Budd-Maddison,
Hartford did not have any agreement with Harmon and as such there
is no basis to assert that Hartford is entitled to interest at
24% per annum,
giving rise to the asserted debt of $841,804.46 and there is a genuine dispute
that the debt claimed in the statutory
demand is due and payable.
- Hartford
submits that the fact of Hartford’s $440,000 payment and the subsequent
discharge of the mortgage give rise to the
presumption that Hartford intended to
keep the H&H Mezz mortgage alive for its own benefit, and Harmon has failed
to rebut that
presumption as Harmon’s evidence does not rise above a bare
assertion of facts unsupported by evidence. Putting differently,
if the Court is
disinclined to accept the evidence of the Harmon, the presumption is not
displaced and Hartford is entitled to subrogation.
It is submitted that Hartford
is thus entitled to rely on the presumption and is subrogated to the rights of
H&H Mezz as mortgagee
and is entitled to recover, as a debt, $440,000 plus
interest calculated under the Deed of Loan.
- Hartford
submits that the mere assertion of a contrary position by a plaintiff does not
form the foundation of a conclusion that a
genuine dispute has arisen. Indeed,
it would be a perverse outcome if a plaintiff were to be permitted to simply
file an application
supported by an affidavit which merely recounts a
countervailing version of events to that contended by the defendant in support
of the original statutory demand. A degree of scrutiny necessarily informs the
Court’s consideration of the evidence of each
party to the dispute (which
may not be a genuine one). As Lockhart J stated in Chadwick Industries (South
Coast) Pty Ltd v Condensing Vaporisers Pty Ltd (1994) 13 ACSR 37 at
[35]:
...the court must be careful, because if all an applicant has to do is to assert
both a claim and some basis for it, without more,
it would mean in almost every
case that the court would set aside statutory demands where application is made
to that effect. Plainly
that is not what the legislature intended by introducing
this new regime.
- Hartford
submitted that Harmon’s evidence amounted to unsupported bare assertions.
Whilst hearsay evidence is admissible on
statutory demand cases, the Court would
give little weight to the representations of Mr Talanehzar where such
representations could
have been supported or corroborated by documentary
evidence or evidence from Mr Eleter. Further, Harmon’s contentions were
said to be implausible as:
(a) Mr Eleter advanced
funds to a company in distress without, apparently any documentation;
(b) Mr Eleter caused no safeguard to be implemented to
secure the loan, by caveat, mortgage or otherwise;
(c) Harmon has not produced a single document which
evidences a liability to Mr Eleter; and
(d) there is no evidence of Harmon having repaid anyone (let
alone Mr Eleter), nor is there evidence that Mr Eleter has requested
payment in
the ensuing three years.
CONCLUSION
- Harmon’s
contention, essentially, is that Hartford is not entitled to subrogation as
Hartford did not discharge the secured
H&H Mezz loan but George Eleter did.
On Harmon’s case, Mr Larcombe lent the money to George Eleter for the
purpose of on-lending
to Harmon to repay a secured loan. That fact that Hartford
paid the funds directly to H&H Mezz was because Mr Larcombe was directed
by
George Eleter to pay the loan funds directly to H&H Mezz. In doing so,
Hartford was not repaying the H&H Mezz loan on
its own account but on behalf
of George Eleter. Further, Harmon contends that the nature of the loan from Mr
Larcombe to George Eleter
was unsecured. That is, this is not a case of
subrogation at all or, alternatively, the presumption described in Ghana
Commercial Bank can be rebutted in this case.
- Hartford
submitted that there were no accounting entries or financial statements which
corroborated the existence of a loan from George
Eleter to Harmon in
circumstances where Mr Talanehzar, according to his affidavit, had had access to
the books and records of the
company when preparing his evidence. But evidence
does not have to be supported by contemporaneous documentation. “Whilst a
witness’s evidence may be more cogent if it is supported by such
documentation, the absence of documentation does not, of itself,
render a
witness’s evidence lacking in credibility, reliability or cogency:
Britten-Norman at [61]. In that case, the Court noted that the available
emails posed difficulties for Britten-Norman but, at
[60]:
The existence of evidence that cast doubt, even significant doubt, on
applicant’s contention that there is a disputed debt
... is not the basis
for a rejection of an application under s 459H. ... The email
correspondence did not so undermine the appellant’s evidence as to make it
implausible or to justify a conclusion
that the claim was not
genuine.
- The
available emails in this case indicate that Mr Larcombe had an investment in
Harmon and the properties it owned, was in a business
relationship with Mr
Talanehzar and / or George Eleter and may have been effectively the person
behind Harmon. The emails indicate
that Mr Larcombe wanted to repay the H&H
Mezz loan in order to remove an expensive source of finance that was eroding his
equity
in the Surry Hills properties. But the evidence is scant and not
sufficiently definitive to exclude another version of events.
- Mr
Talanehzar’s version of events is unsupported by any contemporaneous
documents and may be supported by George Eleter. The
paucity of emails and other
documentation also points to the parties conducting business orally and having
informal arrangements
based upon business relationships of some long standing.
Is the loan described by Mr Talanehzar spurious, mere bluster or assertion?
Does
it have a sufficient objective existence and prima facie plausibility and
sufficient factual particularity to exclude the merely
fanciful or futile? It is
not inconsistent with undisputed contemporary documents as there are so few
which exist, and the available
records are themselves obscure. If Hartford and
Mr Larcombe had kept accounting and financial records which one might commonly
expect
to see in a property investment business, then one might think that Mr
Talanehzar’s assertion could be readily rejected out
of hand. But in the
absence of such records, I am unable to do so. It seems to me that Mr
Talanehzar’s affidavit is sufficient
to establish a genuine dispute as to
the debt such that Harmon’s application to set aside the statutory demand
on the basis
of a genuine dispute as to the existence of the debt should be
granted. This does not mean that the liquidator will not be able to
prove that
Harmon is obliged to repay the monies to Hartford but simply that issuing a
statutory demand is not the way to go about
it.
ORDERS
- For
these reasons, I make the following orders:
- (1) Pursuant to
section 459H of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), order that the statutory
demand dated 6 November 2018 served by the defendant upon the plaintiff be set
aside.
- (2) Order the
defendant to pay the plaintiff’s costs of the
application.
**********
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