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[2021] NSWSC 272
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Ye v Chen [2021] NSWSC 272 (22 March 2021)
Last Updated: 25 March 2021
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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Ye v Chen
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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22 March 2021
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Date of Orders:
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22 March 2021
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Decision Date:
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22 March 2021
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Jurisdiction:
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Common Law
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Before:
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Beech-Jones J
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Decision:
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(1) Set aside the stay orders granted by Stapleton LCM on
18 February 2021. In lieu thereof, order that:
(i) The sum of $86,019.33 currently held by
Ms Ye's solicitors be paid within four working days to the trust account of
Ms Chen's
solicitors, but not be further dissipated by them without an
order of the Court. (ii) The judgment of the Local
Court, the subject of this appeal, be stayed pending determination of the appeal
on condition that
on or before 31 May 2021, the appellants pay the further
sum of $150,000 into Ms Chen's solicitor's trust account, which if paid
are
not to be further dissipated by them without further order of the
court. (2) On or before 5pm on Thursday
1 April 2021, Ms Ye is to file and serve an affidavit setting out all
her assets and liabilities
and all the assets and liabilities of UCER Investment
and Resources Management Pty Ltd held within this country and
abroad. (3) Until further order, Ms Ye is
restrained from disposing of or dealing with or otherwise dissipating the net
proceeds of any
funds derived from the sale of property comprised in Lot 17 in
Deposited Plan 7118 and known as 26 Happ Street Auburn other than
to comply
with Order 1(ii). (4) Ms Ye is to provide the
solicitors for Ms Chen seven days' advance written notice
of: (a) her intention to place for sale the
property comprised in Lot 17 in Deposited Plan 7118 and known as 26 Happ
Street Auburn;
and (b) if it is proposed to sell
that property by auction, to notify of the reserve
price. (5) The plaintiffs pay the defendant's
costs of today. (6) The notice of motion dated 16
March 2021 seeking 11 orders, be otherwise dismissed.
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Catchwords:
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LOCAL COURT APPEAL – stay – no question of principle
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Category:
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Procedural rulings
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Parties:
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Rebecca Ye (Respondent/First Plaintiff) UCER Investment and Resources
and Management Pty Ltd (Respondent/Second Plaintiff) Yu Chen
(Applicant/Defendant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: J Harrison (Applicant) A Cheema
(Respondent)
Solicitors: Prudential Legal (Applicant) Auburn
Lawyers (Respondent)
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File Number(s):
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2021/6370
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EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT
- By
summons filed on 8 January 2021, the first plaintiff, Rebecca Ye, and the
second plaintiff, UCER Investment and Resources and Management
Pty Ltd
(“UCER”) appealed judgments entered against them, or at least one of
them, in the Local Court granted in favour
of the first defendant, Yu Chen.
- The
judgment had been given on 11 December 2020 in favour of Ms Chen for
the judgment sum of $72,350.66 together with interest which
ultimately totalled
the sum of $86,019.33.
- I
have briefly reviewed the learned Magistrate's reasons. In short, Ms Chen
alleged that she provided to Ms Ye and UCER the sum of
USD$50,000 on
account of migration services, which were not provided and that when confronted
with this, Ms Ye effectively guaranteed
their repayment.
- Ms Ye's
defence was a comprehensive denial that she had ever had anything to do with
Ms Chen or the provision of migration services
to her. The learned
Magistrate dealt with this sharp dispute over the facts by comprehensively
resolving them in favour of Ms Chen.
- I
am in no position whatsoever to assess the merits of any appeal from the
Magistrate's decision. However, it must be noted, that,
given it is restricted
to either a question of law or a mixed question of fact and law, then the
plaintiffs appear to have a reasonably
difficult task in front of them. Further,
of some relevance to these applications, is that on the Magistrate's findings,
Ms Ye appears
to have engaged in what could at least be described as sharp
conduct.
- Before
the Court are two notices of motion, both dated 16 March 2021. They both arise
out of the terms of a stay granted by the learned
Magistrate, to which I will
turn. One of the motions seeks relief removing UCER as a party and orders for
the ultimate dismissal
of the appeal. I have already indicated that the duty
list is not the place for summary judgment applications.
- I
would add that, given that an appeal from the Local Court should be a matter
that does not consume significant resources, summary
judgment applications for
appeals on questions of law will very rarely be entertained in advance of the
hearing of the final appeal.
- The
principal motion before the Court concerns another motion filed bearing the date
16 March 2021, which came before Bellew J on
18 March 2021. It seeks
various orders arising out of the stay, which I will shortly describe, including
an asset preservation order.
In the end result, his Honour granted an order
ex parte to the effect that, until further order of the Court, Ms Ye
was to be restrained
from disposing or dealing with, otherwise dissipating any
portion of any funds derived from the sale of the property in which she
has an
interest in Auburn.
- As
noted, the learned Magistrate granted a stay of the judgment. In particular, on
10 February, her Honour made orders that the judgment
be stayed on various
conditions. It was originally proposed that the defendants pay the sum of
$86,019.33 into a controlled monies
account. Instead, her Honour ordered that
the sum of $236,000 be paid into that account. The sum of $236,000 reflects, as
I understand
it, the judgment sum which, as I have noted, had grown to
$86,019.33, with the balance of approximately $150,000 said to represent
the
plaintiff in the lower court, that is Ms Chen's, costs.
- Her
Honour ordered that those monies be paid into an account by 10 March as a
condition of the stay.
- Generally,
events unravelled from there. In an affidavit bearing the date 19 March
2021, sworn on this application, Ms Ye says that,
as a result of the issue
of a writ that no doubt led to the application for a stay, she organised to
borrow the sum of $86,019.33
and paid those funds into a controlled account
pending an appeal. She said she then learned in February she had to organise
another
$150,000 to be paid into her solicitor's controlled money account as a
condition of the stay. She said that from that time she sought
to make
arrangements to borrow the full sum of $236,000. She says that on 9 March
she paid the $86,019.33 into her current solicitor's
trust account, on the basis
it cannot be withdrawn without an order of the court.
- In
relation to the remaining $150,000 she says she has been trying to arrange
finance and that, ultimately, on 26 February 2021 she
signed a sales agency
agreement to list for sale a property at Auburn. She says that decision was a
difficult one because her elderly
parents have nowhere to live if that house is
sold. She says that on 19 March 2021, which I note was after
Bellew J's orders, she
took the property off the market.
- In
his submissions, counsel for Ms Chen was scathing of this chronology. He
noted that if these were the steps taken by Ms Ye during
this period, no
one had notified his client to that effect. He noted that his client was
suspicious of Ms Ye's conduct. This is no
doubt part due to the history of
the relations between the parties, but also by, as I have said, her failure to
advise of what was
going on. Counsel also noted that the making of the orders by
Bellew J did not necessarily require the sale to not proceed, instead
they
were directed to the use of the sale proceeds.
- When
the matter returned this morning, counsel for Ms Chen sought a smorgasbord
of orders, all directed to, or centred around, the
enforcement of the
Magistrate's stay. This included orders about the dissipation of the sale
proceeds; orders requiring Ms Chen to
provide copies of contracts
associated with the sale; an order that Ms Ye provide an affidavit as to
her assets and that she also
appear before the Court to be questioned as to
those assets; an order that the $86,000 to be paid into Ms Ye's solicitor's
trust
account be released to Ms Chen; and that the proceedings be stayed
until such payment has been made.
- Counsel
for Ms Ye and UCER advised the Court that he and his solicitor had only
come into the matter since 10 March 2021. He stated
that efforts are being
made to locate the transcript and the exhibits and obtain Ms Ye's previous
solicitor's file, so as to put
the appeal in shape. He opposed the breadth of
the orders sought by counsel for Ms Chen. While not consenting, he appeared
to accept
the need for a continuation of an order made by Bellew J which is
directed to the dissipation of the proceeds of the sale derived
from the sale of
the property at Auburn. He expressed concern about an order for the payment over
of the $86,000, to Ms Chen, given
that Ms Chen was located overseas,
apparently in Canada. He submitted that payment would tend to frustrate his
client's appeal if
it was successful.
- The
only way to resolve this imbroglio is to return to the terms of the Magistrate's
stay orders. In that regard two things should
be noted. First, from the moment
of this matter came into this Court on appeal, then while the Local Court was
not robbed of the
ability to grant a stay, control over the execution of the
Local Court's orders ultimately rests with this Court and not the Local
Court.
As part of this Court's jurisdiction to hear the appeal, this Court has the
power to ultimately determine the terms of any
stay of the orders made below
going forward.
- Second,
notwithstanding that, some considerable deference is warranted to the opinion of
the Magistrate in hearing the matter below.
As I have said, at least at a
factual level, the learned Magistrate comprehensively rejected Ms Ye and
UCER's case. The only way
to characterise their conduct, as found by the
Magistrate, is as having involved sharp conduct.
- While
a stay conditional on payment of the full amount of costs and judgment would
ordinarily seem somewhat onerous as a condition
of a stay, that assessment has
to be seen in light of the fact that the Magistrate had the ability to observe
the parties, consider
their respective cases and resolve them.
- Going
forward, in my view the best and, in fact, the only appropriate course is as
follows. I will order that the sum of $86,019.33
which has been paid into
Ms Ye's solicitor's trust account, be paid over to Ms Chen's
solicitors. However, they are not to further
dissipate the sum to Ms Chen
given her location overseas.
- Second,
I will amend the terms of the stay for the payment of the balance of the
$150,000 to give Ms Ye until the end of May 2021
to secure that sum as
a condition of the ongoing stay.
- Third,
I will continue order 2 made by Bellew J concerning the dissipation of the
funds from the sale, although the order will be
amended to refer to net proceeds
of the sale; that is, it will not stop deductions from the sale proceeds of
expenses such as advertising
or the real estate agent's costs.
- Fourth,
one condition of the stay will be that Ms Ye will have to give seven day's
advance notice of any proposal to sell the subject
property; and if it proceeds
by way of auction, seven day's advance notice of the reserve price.
- Fifth,
Ms Chen will have to file an affidavit which sets out all of her and UCER's
assets and liabilities within 14 days.
Orders
(1) Set aside the stay orders granted by Stapleton LCM on
18 February 2021. In lieu thereof, order that:
(i) The sum of $86,019.33 currently held by Ms Ye's
solicitors be paid within four working days to the trust account of
Ms Chen's
solicitors, but not be further dissipated by them without an
order of the Court.
(ii) The judgment of the Local Court, the subject of this
appeal, be stayed pending determination of the appeal on condition that
on or
before 31 May 2021, the appellants pay the further sum of $150,000 into
Ms Chen's solicitor's trust account, which if paid
are not to be further
dissipated by them without further order of the court.
(2) On or before 5pm on Thursday 1 April 2021,
Ms Ye is to file and serve an affidavit setting out all her assets and
liabilities
and all the assets and liabilities of UCER Investment and Resources
Management Pty Ltd held within this country and abroad.
(3) Until further order, Ms Ye is restrained from
disposing of or dealing with or otherwise dissipating the net proceeds of any
funds derived from the sale of property comprised in Lot 17 in Deposited Plan
7118 and known as 26 Happ Street Auburn other than
to comply with Order
1(ii).
(4) Ms Ye is to provide the solicitors for Ms Chen
seven days' advance written notice of:
(a) her intention to place for sale the property comprised
in Lot 17 in Deposited Plan 7118 and known as 26 Happ Street Auburn;
and
(b) if it is proposed to sell that property by auction, to
notify of the reserve price.
(5) The plaintiffs pay the defendant's costs of today.
(6) The notice of motion dated 16 March 2021 seeking 11
orders, be otherwise dismissed.
**********
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