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[2023] NSWSC 357
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In the matter of Property Asset Consultancy Services Pty Ltd trading as Property Asset Consultancy Services Pty Ltd ACN 604 192 583 (in liquidation) [2023] NSWSC 357 (4 April 2023)
Last Updated: 11 April 2023
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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In the matter of Property Asset Consultancy Services Pty Ltd trading as
Property Asset Consultancy Services Pty Ltd ACN 604 192 583
(in
liquidation)
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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4 April 2023
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Date of Orders:
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4 April 2023
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Decision Date:
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4 April 2023
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity - Duty List
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Before:
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Kunc J
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Decision:
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Warrant issued for arrest
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Catchwords:
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CORPORATIONS – Winding up – Summons to attend court and be
examined – Failure to attend at the examination –
Issue of arrest
warrant
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Ian Lawrence Struthers (in his capacity as liquidator) of P.A.C.I. Pty Ltd
[2005] NSWSC 864
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Category:
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Procedural rulings
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Parties:
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Andrew John Scott in his capacity as liquidator of Property Asset
Consultancy Services Pty Ltd ACN 604 192 583 (in liquidation)
(Plaintiff) Clinton Sarina (Defendant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: DJ Edney (Plaintiff) No appearance for the
Defendant
Solicitors: Shine Lawyers (Plaintiff) No appearance for
the Defendant
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File Number(s):
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2022/321663
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Publication Restriction:
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Nil
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EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT (REVISED)
Summary
- HIS
HONOUR: This is an application brought urgently in the Duty List (in the
absence of the immediate availability of the Corporations Judge)
for the issue
of an arrest warrant in respect of Clinton Sarina (Mr Sarina)
pursuant to r 11.10 of the Supreme Court (Corporations) Rules 1999
(NSW) (the Corporations Rules) and s 597(6) of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth) (the Act) on the basis of Mr Sarina
having failed to attend for examination as summoned pursuant to s 596A of
the Act.
- For
the reasons which follow, the Court has determined that is appropriate for a
warrant for Mr Sarina’s arrest to issue forthwith.
- Section
596A includes:
“596A Mandatory examination
The Court is to summon a person for examination about a corporation’s
examinable affairs if:
(a) an eligible applicant applies for the summons; and
(b) the Court is satisfied that the person is an officer or provisional
liquidator of the corporation or was such an officer or
provisional liquidator
during or after the 2 years ending:
(i) if the corporation is under administration—on the
section 513C day in relation to the administration; or
(ii) if the corporation has executed a deed of company arrangement that
has not yet terminated—on the section 513C day in relation to the
administration that ended when the deed was executed; or
(iia) if the corporation is under restructuring—on the
section 513CA day in relation to the restructuring; or
(iib) if the corporation has made a restructuring plan that has not yet
terminated—on the section 513CA day in relation to the restructuring
that ended when the plan was made; or
(iii) if the corporation is being, or has been, wound up—when the
winding up began; or
(iv) otherwise—when the application is made.”
- Section
597(6) states:
“597 Conduct of examination
...
(6) A person who is summoned under section 596A or 596B to
attend before the Court must not intentionally or recklessly:
(a) fail to attend as required by the summons; or
(b) fail to attend from day to day until the conclusion of the
examination.”
- Rule
11.10 states:
“11.10 Default in relation to
examination
(1) This rule applies if a person is summoned or ordered by the Court to
attend for examination, and:
(a) without reasonable cause, the person:
(i) fails to attend at the time and place appointed, or
(ii) fails to attend from day to day until the conclusion of the
examination, or
(iii) refuses or fails to take an oath or make an affirmation, or
(iv) refuses or fails to answer a question that the Court directs the
person to answer, or
(v) refuses or fails to produce books that the summons requires the
person to produce, or
(vi) fails to comply with a requirement by the Court to sign a
written record of the examination, or
(b) before the day fixed for the examination, the person who applied
for the summons or order satisfies the Court that there is
reason to believe
that the person summoned or ordered to attend for examination has absconded or
is about to abscond.
(2) The Court may:
(a) issue a warrant for the arrest of the person summoned or ordered
to attend for examination, and
(b) make any other orders that the Court thinks just or
necessary.”
- The
plaintiff, who is the liquidator of Property Asset Consultancy Services
Pty Ltd ACN 604 192 583 (in liquidation) (the
Company) was represented today by Mr D J Edney of Counsel. The Court
acknowledges the considerable assistance it has received from Mr Edney's
written submissions as developed during the course of short oral argument this
morning.
Facts
- Mr Sarina
is and was at all material times, from its incorporation until its liquidation,
the sole director of the Company of which
the plaintiff is now the
liquidator.
- On
6 December 2022, a summons was issued for Mr Sarina's examination
pursuant to s 596A of the Act requiring his attendance on 3 April
2023. There were apparently some difficulties in serving Mr Sarina because
orders
for substituted service were made on 16 March 2023.
- The
formal requirements to engage the Court's jurisdiction to issue an arrest
warrant were, with respect, helpfully considered by
Brereton J, as his
Honour then was, in Ian Lawrence Struthers (in his capacity as liquidator)
of P.A.C.I. Pty Ltd [2005] NSWSC 864 (Struthers).
I find that Mr Sarina has been duly summoned to attend for
examination, initially for yesterday, 3 April 2023. I also find that
he has relevantly failed to attend at the time and place appointed, in
circumstances which I will further set out in what follows.
- As
will shortly become apparent, there can be no dispute that Mr Sarina was
put on notice of the examination summons by reason of
the orders for substituted
service. This is because solicitors acting on his behalf have been corresponding
with the solicitors for
the plaintiff in relation to the examination summons
since 24 March 2023.
- Insofar
as the recent history is concerned, in the face of Mr Sarina by his
solicitors having raised various objections and difficulties
with his compliance
with the examination summons, an informal without prejudice meeting did occur
between Mr Sarina, his lawyers
and the plaintiff's representatives on
30 March 2023. There was then further correspondence between the parties
after that without
prejudice meeting in relation to the need for Mr Sarina
to comply with the examination summons by attending Court on 3 April 2023.
- The
history disclosed by that correspondence can be conveniently summarised by
reference to a letter from the plaintiff's solicitors
to Mr Sarina's
solicitors of 31 March 2023 which included:
“2. In relation to paragraphs 3, 4 and 9 of Your Letter, we respond as
follows.
(a) Whilst our client was prepared to consider an adjournment, our client has
come across financial matters of Property Asset Consultancy
Services Pty Ltd (In
Liq) (the Company) following the documents sent across by you this
morning that need to be dealt with urgently.
(b) Our client is therefore of the view that your client’s appearance on
Monday, 3 April 2023 is critical, as the director
of the Company.
(c) On that basis, we are instructed that Mr Sarina needs to appear on Monday so
that urgent questions can be asked of your client
relating to the financial
affairs of the Company. Our client is prepared to provide your client with an
adjournment of part of the
examination to a later date, but does need to ask any
urgent questions on Monday, 3 April 2023.
(d) Our client is prepared to complete a half-day examination of your client on
Monday, 3 April 2023, in compliance with the Summons
dated 6 December 2022.
(e) On that basis, we expect that your client will appear in Court on Monday, 3
April 2023, in compliance with the Summons dated
6 December 2022.
(f) For the avoidance of any doubt, should your client make an application for
adjournment to a later date, our client will oppose any application on
the basis that there are urgent questions our client has regarding the financial
affairs of the company. ...”
- In
setting out that paragraph, I note that Mr Edney expressly explained
that he did not rely upon, as a reason for urgency, the matter
referred to in
paragraph 2(a) of that letter. What is apparent from the correspondence
which the Court has seen is that there is
a degree of urgency, which is an
important consideration as to why the Court will order an arrest warrant be
issued for Mr Sarina
forthwith. The reason for that urgency is that there
are some limited matters upon which the plaintiff wishes to examine
Mr Sarina
in relation to transactions that occurred in April and May
of 2017. Those matters are subject to the possibility of an impending
limitation
period. It is significant for present purposes that the plaintiff (as is
apparent from paragraph 2(c) and (d) quoted above)
had agreed to limit the
examination, in the first instance, to a half-day examination about what were
referred to as the "urgent
questions".
- Mr Sarina's
solicitors responded to the letter of 31 March 2023 on the morning of
3 April 2023. That letter sets out a number of matters
said to explain why
Mr Sarina was "devastated and distressed by the decision to seek to proceed
with his public examination today".
The letter refers to Mr Sarina's
medical condition, a point to which I will return. The letter concluded
with:
“9. Further, Mr Sarina does not seek to permanently avoid public
examination in Court. He has offered his assistance and requested
his
examination be adjourned for a short period so that the Liquidator can test
whether this assistance is forthcoming.
10. We note that the Court has a lot of availability for public examinations in
May 2023. He has offered his assistance and requested
his examination be
adjourned for a short period so that the Liquidator can test whether his
assistance is forthcoming.
11. Mr Sarina is extremely upset about the Liquidator deciding to proceed with
the examination today, following the steps Mr Sarina
has already taken at little
notice to assist the Liquidator’s investigations this week (which are set
out above). Nevertheless,
Mar Sarina remains willing to assist the Liquidator to
the best of his ability, including by attempting to obtain any further documents
the Liquidator has requested or requests in the future, and by speaking with him
to answer any questions he has about the affairs
of the Company.
12. In light of the above, Mr Sarina once again requests that the Liquidator
agree to adjourn his examination to a date in May 2023
and he invites your
client to reconsider his rejection of that request.
13. In the event that your client is not prepared to adjourn the examination
today to a date in May 2023, we request that you provide
a copy of this letter
to the Court, so the Court can be informed of Mr Sarina’s position. Please
note we are not instructed
to attend Court on behalf of Mr Sarina today.
...”
- I record
that, in accordance with paragraph 13 of that letter, the totality of
Mr Sarina's solicitor's letter of 3 April 2023 was
drawn to my
attention on this application and I have taken its contents into account.
- At
10.29am on 3 April 2023, the plaintiff's solicitors responded to that
letter. That response included:
“5. The proposed immediate examination would include questioning as to
some transactions in April 2017 (that is, shortly to
be 6 years away and so
potentially giving rise to limitation issues if allowed to lie) the potential
significance of which has only
recently come to light. In circumstances where Mr
Sarina and his various representatives were asked several years ago to
account for the company’s transactions, it is not for Mr Sarina to
complain that the liquidator is now pressing for
a prompt examination,
particularly as to those matters.
6. We note that your letter states that you are not instructed to attend Court
today, and presumably Mr Sarina will also not attend
Court. If that is the case,
and Mr Sarina does not propose to make an application to adjourn his examination
summons, then our client
will seek the issue of a warrant for Mr Sarina’s
arrest. An examinee has no entitlement to simply ignore the Court’s
orders
in such a way. This email will be relied upon in support of that application.
...”
- At
11.10am yesterday (3 April 2023), consequent on Mr Sarina’s failure to
appear, the Registrar before whom the examination
was to be conducted made
orders which were included in an email shortly thereafter to Mr Sarina's
solicitors from the plaintiff's
solicitors:
“... Registrar Milligan has made the following Orders at approximately
11:10am today:
1. The Summons for the public examination against Mr Clinton Sarina made on 6
December 2022 is adjourned to 2pm on 3 April 2023 (today).
2. The solicitors for the liquidator is to provide notification of these Orders
to Clinton Sarina forthwith.
Given paragraph 2 of the Order made today, please send this on to your client
immediately. In circumstances where you have written
on behalf of your client on
this matter, unless being advised to the contrary, we believe you will provide
these Orders to your client
forthwith. ...”
- That
email led to a response on behalf of Mr Sarina from his solicitors at
12.54pm which included:
“... We confirm we will inform Mr Sarina of the orders made.
Due to the urgency of this matter, we are only responding to certain matters
raised in your below email at this time and will respond
to the balance of the
matters raised separately.
It appears that despite the comments raised in our letters dated 24 March 2023,
31 March 2023 and 3 April 2023 as to why your client
should agree to adjourn the
examination summons to a date in May 2023, your client intends to proceed with
the examination today
and with applying for an arrest warrant to be issued to
our client.
We confirm that our client opposes any application for an arrest warrant. There
is no evidence of any real urgency in respect of
the public examination,
especially in circumstances where our client has agreed to give your client
sworn evidence as to any matter
which needs to be dealt with before May 2023 and
our client has now provided medical evidence confirming he is not fit to attend
Court today.
Further, we note that Mr Sarina is presently interstate staying with relatives
at a location close to the hospital where he is being
treated for his medical
condition. Mr Sarina had been in Sydney on Thursday last week, but flew
interstate later that day, after
meeting with the Liquidator’s staff and
representatives, as he was under the impression his examination summons would be
adjourned
to a date in May 2023. Therefore, even if Mr Sarina was medically fit
to attend the examination today, which he is not, he is also
not in a position
to do so today, as he is not in NSW.
If your client does decide to proceed with applying for an arrest warrant, our
client once again requests that our letter dated 3
April 2023 be brought to the
Court’s attention, together with a copy of our:
1. Letters dated 24 March 2023 and 31 March 2023; and
2. Emails dated 27 March 2023 and 3 April 2023, including our email attaching
our client’s confidential medical certificate.
...”
- I
record that the various correspondence and attachments referred to in the
concluding paragraphs of that letter were drawn to my
attention and I have taken
them into account.
- At
1.12pm yesterday, the plaintiff's solicitors, noting that that Mr Sarina
was interstate, provided the link to Mr Sarina's solicitors
for him to
appear via video at 2pm yesterday. Mr Sarina did not appear at that
time.
- The
Registrar then made orders which included:
“... 4. Examination(s) of Clinton Sarina adjourned to 11:00am on 4 April
2023 via AVL or in person. If Mr Sarina is unable
to attend the examination in
person or via AVL, he must appear (or his legal representative) and make
application to be excused.
The Court notes Mr Clinton Sarina failed to appear today when formally called at
both 11:00am and 2:00pm.
The Court further notes that if Mr Clinton Sarina fails to appear at 11:00am on
4 April 2023, the Plaintiff Liquidator may ask the
Registrar to refer the matter
to a duty judge in order to make application for an arrest warrant for Mr
Sarina.
5. Matter stood over to 11:00am on 4 April 2023.
6. Solicitors for the Liquidator to provide a copy of these orders to Mr Clinton
Sarina and his legal representative. ...”
- Mr Sarina
failed to appear at 11am today. I was informed at approximately noon that the
present application would be made to me, owing
to the Corporations Judge being
engaged in another hearing.
- Before
going any further, it is appropriate that I say something more about the
references that have already been made in these reasons
to Mr Sarina's
medical condition. The Court has before it a medical certificate from a
urological surgeon dated 31 March 2023. I
have taken account of the
requests in the correspondence from Mr Sarina's solicitors that a
confidentiality order be made in relation
to that medical certificate. I am
not satisfied that any such order should be made.
- For
the purposes of these reasons, it is sufficient for me to record that while the
medical certificate sets out that Mr Sarina had
major surgery last year, nothing
in it explains why Mr Sarina would have been unable, by reason of any
medical condition, to have
attended for examination either yesterday or today.
The surgeon records that he had a consultation with Mr Sarina “last
week”,
the result of which was that the doctor has ordered some tests, and
required Mr Sarina to rest until the test results have been received.
The
certificate expresses no view about Mr Sarina's fitness to give
evidence.
- I accept
Mr Edney's submission that no real weight should be given to
Mr Sarina's reliance on whatever his medical condition may be
in the
absence of more substantial evidence than that provided by the medical
certificate. In particular, I accept Mr Edney's submission
that if, as
appears to have been the case, Mr Sarina was well enough to attend a
without prejudice meeting with the plaintiff's representatives,
there is nothing
before the Court at the moment that would provide any medical reason sufficient
to persuade the Court that Mr Sarina
could not have attended for
examination either yesterday or today.
Consideration
- I have
already set out in [9] above why the Court is satisfied that the first two
prerequisites to engage the jurisdiction to issue
an arrest warrant under the
Rules have been met. The third consideration is that the person has failed to
attend without reasonable
cause. I respectfully adopt the observation made
by Brereton J in Struthers that, because such a matter is almost
exclusively within the examinee's knowledge, only relatively "slight" evidence
would be required
to establish the absence of reasonable cause. The Court is
satisfied that Mr Sarina has failed to attend both yesterday and today
for
examination without reasonable cause.
- It
is clear from the correspondence that, while he has apparently travelled
interstate, Mr Sarina knew that the examination summons
had not been set
aside and that he was required to attend both yesterday and today. Furthermore,
insofar as an issue appears to have
arisen because he has travelled interstate,
that was accommodated by orders being made for him to give evidence by video
link if
necessary. I have already explained why I am not satisfied
that whatever medical condition Mr Sarina has is not, on the evidence,
a
sufficient basis to explain his refusal to appear for examination.
- Next,
while I am satisfied that the requirements for the issue of a warrant have
been met, it is also necessary to take into account
any relevant discretionary
considerations as to whether or not a warrant should issue (see Struthers
at [45]). In that regard:
- (1) I am
satisfied that the plaintiff has a prima facie entitlement, having procured the
issue of the examination summons, to have
it complied with and enforced.
- (2) There is a
public interest in ensuring that such orders are complied with.
- (3) I am
satisfied on the evidence that all reasonable steps have been taken to obtain
the cooperation of Mr Sarina to attend including,
if necessary, to enable
him to attend by video link.
- (4) There is
nothing to suggest that the burden imposed by the summons is prima facie
oppressive, especially in circumstances where
the plaintiff has agreed, in the
first instance, to limit the examination to a half-day about matters that are
urgent, having regard
to possible limitation issues.
- I have
also not overlooked that there has been some degree of informal cooperation by
Mr Sarina by agreeing to meet on a without prejudice
basis with the
plaintiff's representatives. However, that is not a sufficient reason to
overcome the public interest in ensuring
that the Court's order in relation to
the examination summons is satisfied.
- Finally,
I have also taken into account, but am unpersuaded by, the arguments made
in the correspondence on behalf of Mr Sarina that
there appears to have
been some delay in the plaintiff taking steps to examine Mr Sarina, given
that the liquidation has now been
ongoing for some years. Mr Edney
fairly accepted that there had been some delay, but submitted that it was not
sufficient in and
of itself to disqualify the plaintiff from being able to seek
enforcement of the summons that has been issued. I accept that submission.
I
also note that some months of the most recent delay may be attributed to
the need to obtain orders for the substituted service
of the examination summons
on Mr Sarina.
- Nothing
else raised in the correspondence to which I have been taken, written by
Mr Sarina's legal representatives, persuades me that
there is any other
discretionary reason why the Court should not issue the warrant for
Mr Sarina's arrest forthwith in order to compel
his compliance with the
Court's orders.
Conclusion
- The
Court’s orders are:
- (1) Pursuant to
rule 11.10(2) of the Supreme Court (Corporations) Rules 1999, a warrant
be issued for the arrest of Clinton Sarina in terms of Annexure “A”
attached hereto.
- (2) Leave be
reserved to Clinton Sarina and the plaintiff to apply on short notice by email
to the Associate to the Duty Judge.
- (3) The
plaintiff notify Clinton Sarina of these orders by emailing them to Matthews
Folbigg Lawyers at xxxxxxxx@matthewsfolbigg.com.au
and
xxxxxxxx@matthewsfolbigg.com.au.
- (4) Stand the
proceedings over to the Equity Division Duty Judge on 12 April 2023 at
10am.
- (5) Costs
reserved.
- (6) Direct these
orders be entered forthwith.
**********
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