You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Supreme Court of New South Wales >>
2023 >>
[2023] NSWSC 791
Database Search
| Name Search
| Recent Decisions
| Noteup
| LawCite
| Download
| Context | No Context | Help
In the matter of Linmas Holdings Pty Ltd [2023] NSWSC 791 (7 July 2023)
Last Updated: 7 July 2023
|
Supreme Court
New South Wales
|
Case Name:
|
In the matter of Linmas Holdings Pty Ltd
|
Medium Neutral Citation:
|
|
Hearing Date(s):
|
30 June 2023
|
Date of Orders:
|
7 July 2023
|
Decision Date:
|
7 July 2023
|
Jurisdiction:
|
Equity - Corporations List
|
Before:
|
Williams J
|
Decision:
|
See conclusion at [71].
|
Catchwords:
|
CORPORATIONS — Statutory demand — Debt arising out of
adjudication under Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act
1999 (NSW) — Where statutory demand issued in respect of judgment debt for
adjudicated amount — Whether application to set
aside statutory demand on
grounds of offsetting claim supported by affidavit served within 21-day
statutory period — Claim
for declarations that adjudicated amount not
truly payable is not an offsetting claim within the meaning of s 459H —
Where
claim for damages for breach of contract for defective building work
— Where plaintiff relied on costs of rectifying defects
as measure of
damages — Where plaintiff’s evidence did not disclose that building
has been sold — Where no evidence
raising plausible contention as to
reasonableness of undertaking rectification work in those circumstances —
Proceedings dismissed
|
Legislation Cited:
|
|
Cases Cited:
|
|
Texts Cited:
|
N/A
|
Category:
|
Principal judgment
|
Parties:
|
Linmas Holdings Pty Ltd (ACN 600 935 653) (Plaintiff) Infigo II Pty Ltd
(ACN 605 309 279) (Defendant)
|
Representation:
|
Counsel: Mr D S Weinberger (Plaintiff) Mr M Sheldon with Mr S T
Hanscomb (Defendant)
Solicitors: Chedid Storey Legal
(Plaintiff) Vincent Young (Defendant)
|
File Number(s):
|
2023/107730
|
Publication Restriction:
|
N/A
|
JUDGMENT
Introduction
- These
reasons for judgment concern an application by the plaintiff, Linmas Holdings
Pty Ltd (Linmas), to set aside a statutory demand issued by the
defendant, Infigo II Pty Ltd (Infigo), on the basis of an alleged
offsetting claim.
Salient facts
- The
following matters are not in dispute, except where the contrary is
indicated.
- Linmas
conducts residential and hospitality building projects.
- Infigo
is a builder specialising in the construction and redevelopment of hospitality
and hotel sites.
- On
4 July 2022, Linmas entered into a contract with Infigo for certain renovation
work to a building containing 38 studio apartments
at 1 Caroline Street, Balmain
(the Property).
- On
9 December 2022, Infigo served on Linmas a payment claim under s 13 of the
Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act 1999 (NSW)
(the SOP Act) for works undertaken at the Property. Infigo claimed
payment in respect of 17 categories of work. Those works had a total contract
value of $2,185,204,[1] of which
Linmas had paid $1,909,978 prior to this payment claim. Subject to one
exception, Infigo claimed that the works were now
complete, and sought payment
of the balance of the contract value. The exception concerns tiling works, which
were said to be 98
per cent complete, and in respect of which Infigo claimed
payment of a further sum that would take Linmas’ total payments up
to 98
per cent of the contract value for tiling works. The total payment claimed by
Infigo for the 17 work categories was $270,756,
which (if paid) would take the
total amount paid by Linmas for contract works to $2,180,734. In addition,
Infigo claimed a total
sum of $408,856 in respect of what it described as
approved variations to the contract works.
- On
23 December 2022, Linmas served a payment schedule on Infigo pursuant to s 14 of
the SOP Act. Linmas contended that Infigo’s
work in each of the 17
categories was defective and/or incomplete. Linmas therefore scheduled an amount
for payment in respect of
each category that was, in many instances, less than
the amount paid in respect of that category to date. Overall, Linmas scheduled
a
total amount of $1,810,993 for contract works, being $98,985 less than the
amount of $1,909,978 paid to date, and $369,741 less
than the total of the
amount paid to date plus the further $270,756 claimed by Infigo in this payment
claim. Linmas’ payment
schedule disallowed most of the variations claimed
by Infigo. Linmas also made a claim for liquidated damages in the sum of
$33,000.
- On
20 January 2023, Infigo filed an adjudication application under s 17 of the SOP
Act.
- Linmas
filed its adjudication response on 30 January 2023, accompanied by a report of
Linmas’ building consultant, Mr Ken Winton.
The adjudication response
reflected the position taken by Linmas in its payment schedule concerning
contract works, Infigo’s
variation claims, and liquidated damages.
- The
adjudication response and Mr Winton’s report provided greater detail about
Linmas’ allegations that aspects of the
work were defective and/or
incomplete. Those allegations do not appear to concern structural matters. They
include, for example,
allegations that Infigo failed to install some power
points and lights, that some floor boards had not been laid under the skirting
and that some skirting repairs were outstanding, that 16 bathrooms required
re-tiling and waterproofing to repair a sink waste point,
that certain repairs
were required to some bathroom fittings and fixtures, that further coats of
paint were required externally and
to the ceiling and walls of the common areas,
and that Infigo failed to complete the cleaning of the building and to remove
certain
builders’ waste.
- The
adjudication response and Mr Winton’s report also provided greater detail
about Linmas’ reasons for rejecting most
of the variation claims. Linmas
contended that most of the works for which Infigo had claimed variations were
within the scope of
the work specified in the contract, and so were not
variations.
- On
20 February 2023, the adjudicator determined that the total amount payable for
contract works was $2,129,164. This flowed from
a determination that Infigo was
entitled to further payments totalling $219,186 in respect of contract works,
being $51,570 less
than the claimed amount of $270,756. In addition, the
adjudicator also determined that Infigo was entitled under the SOP Act to
$188,520
in respect of variations. The adjudicator disallowed Linmas’
claim for liquidated damages. The overall result of the adjudication,
taking
into account these determinations and certain delay costs that the adjudicator
allowed to Infigo, was that Infigo was entitled
under the SOP Act to payment of
$406,990 (the adjudicated amount).
- On
3 March 2023, judgment was entered in the District Court of New South Wales in
favour of Infigo against Linmas in the amount of
$453,934 pursuant to s 25(1) of
the SOP Act. Linmas does not dispute that the amount for which judgment was
entered reflects the
adjudicator’s determination.
- On
10 March 2023, Infigo issued a statutory demand to Linmas in respect of a debt
of $453,605, being the amount of that judgment debt
less an immaterial amount
paid to Infigo by Westpac Banking Corporation pursuant to a garnishee order made
in on 6 March 2023 in
the same District Court proceeding in which the judgment
was entered.
- The
statutory demand was served on Linmas on 13 March 2023. Linmas commenced these
proceedings by originating process filed on 3 April
2023 claiming an order
setting aside the statutory demand. An affidavit of Linmas’ solicitor, Mr
Benjamin Chedid, was filed
and served together with the originating process.
Linmas read that affidavit, together with a further affidavit of Mr Chedid sworn
on 31 May 2023, at the hearing of these proceedings on 30 June 2023.
- Mr
Chedid’s first affidavit sworn on 3 April 2023 referred to the events that
I have described at [5]-[15] above, and exhibited copies of the building works
contract, Infigo’s payment claim, Linmas’ payment schedule, part of
Infigo’s adjudication application, part of the Linmas’ adjudication
response (including Mr Winton’s report), and
the adjudicator’s
determination.
- Mr
Chedid then deposed:
“Offsetting claim
13. Identified in Linmas’s Payment Schedule and
Adjudication Response are incomplete works Infigo was required to perform
under
the Contract. Linmas has incurred and is set to incur costs to complete and
rectify defective work.
14. To date, Linmas has paid the amount of $1,994,023.17 to
Infigo under the Contract. Works completed to date are valued in Linmas’
Adjudication Response as $1,817,660.00.
15. Clause 34.7 of the Contract contains express provision for
liquidated damages against Infigo, should Practical Completion not
be reached by
the Completion Date. Under the Contract, practical completion was to be achieved
by 27 September 2022. The date for
practical completion was adjusted to 10
October 2022. The Superintendent granted practical completion on 12 November
2022, 33 days
later.
16. Mr Hilmer has instructed me to draft and file a Statement
of Claim, naming Infigo as the defendant, for breach of contract
and negligence,
seeking damages exceeding the amount of the Judgment.
17. I anticipate filing those proceedings in the next 14
days.”
- Mr
Chedid’s first affidavit was the only supporting affidavit filed and
served by Linmas within the 21-day statutory period.
- Mr
Hilmer, who is referred to in paragraph 16 of Mr Chedid’s affidavit
(excerpted above at [17]), is a director of Linmas.
- The
basis of Mr Chedid’s evidence in paragraph 13 of his affidavit that Linmas
“has incurred and is set to incur costs to complete and rectify
defective work” is not apparent from the affidavit. Mr Chedid does not
claim to have any personal knowledge of those matters. Nor does he state that
this aspect of his evidence is given on information and belief, or that it is a
summary of his instructions. Infigo disputes that
Linmas has incurred any such
costs to date, as the statement of claim filed by Linmas in the District Court
proceedings referred
to at [21]-[22] below describes all of that work as prospective and
there is no evidence in these proceedings that Linmas has already carried out
any such work. Infigo also disputes that Linmas will incur any such costs in the
future because it no longer owns the Property, as
referred to at [27] below.
- In
his second affidavit sworn on 31 May 2023, Mr Chedid gave evidence of a
statement of claim that he had prepared and filed in the
District Court on
behalf of Linmas against Infigo on 30 May 2023. A copy of the statement of
claim, which was verified by Mr Hilmer,
was annexed to the affidavit.
- The
statement of claim pleads that Linmas “is and was at all material
times” the owner of the Property. It pleads the contract entered into
on 4 July 2022, and certain terms of that contract. The statement
of claim then
pleads that Infigo breached the contract by leaving certain works incomplete and
by carrying out other works in a defective
manner. The details of the allegedly
incomplete and defective works are set out in Annexure A to the statement of
claim. It is then
pleaded that:
“9 The plaintiff has suffered loss and damage, being:
a. the cost of rectifying the work in the amount of
$364,178.80;
b. loss of rent during the rectification work, including to
existing tenants, carry out the rectification work, and find replacement
tenants; and
c. the cost of a project manager to oversee the works.”
- The
statement of claim then pleads a further breach of contract by Infigo in failing
to achieve practical completion by 27 September
2022. Linmas claims $59,000 in
liquidated damages in the statement of claim in respect of that alleged
breach.
- In
his second affidavit, Mr Chedid deposed that he was still waiting to receive a
quotation for the project management services included
in the alleged loss
pleaded in paragraph 9 of the statement of claim excerpted above.
- In
relation to the loss of rent aspect of the damages claim as pleaded in the
statement of claim, Mr Chedid deposed in his second
affidavit that he was
“aware through my dealings with the Plaintiff and my instructions that
the building is managed by an entity known as UKO”. Mr Chedid referred
to a copy of the tenancy schedule for the Property that he had obtained from UKO
on 30 May 2023. Mr Chedid continued:
“The rectification works will require tenants to vacate their units so the
works can be carried out and a reasonable time to
find a suitable tenant. In my
experience as a property and construction lawyer, including my dealings with
developers and owners
of properties for lease, I estimate that it will
reasonably take:
a. a few days to a week for rooms to be vacated and works to
commence;
b. two weeks for works to be carried out; and
c. one to two weeks to find another suitable tenant.”
- At
the hearing on 30 June 2023, Infigo tendered an affidavit sworn by Mr Chedid on
22 June 2023. Linmas had served that affidavit
on Infigo in separate proceedings
in this Court in which Infigo seeks orders under s 37A of the Conveyancing
Act 1919 (NSW) setting aside a transfer of the Property from Linmas to
2041House Pty Ltd (2041House). The affidavit had been read at a hearing
of Infigo’s application for freezing orders in those
proceedings.[2]
- The
salient aspects of the contents of Mr Chedid’s 22 June 2023 affidavit, and
the documents exhibited thereto, may be summarised as follows:
- (1) Mr Chedid is
the principal of the firm of solicitors acting for all three defendants in those
proceedings;
- (2) Linmas
purchased the Property on or about 25 October 2021 in its capacity as trustee of
the Linmas Trust;
- (3) Linmas
entered into the building contract with Infigo in its own capacity on 4 July
2022, and immediately entered into “a back-to-back construction
contract” with itself in its capacity as trustee for a contract sum
that was $100,000 greater than the contract sum payable by Linmas to Infigo
under the first-mentioned
contract;[3]
- (4) Mr Hilmer
instructed Mr Chedid in early February 2023 that, in circumstances where Linmas
was in dispute with Infigo about the
building work, Mr Hilmer wished to appoint
a new trustee to the Linmas Trust;
- (5) Linmas was
removed, and 2041House was appointed, as trustee of the Linmas Trust on 23
February 2023;
- (6) pursuant to
clause 2 of the Deed of Removal and Appointment of Trustee—between Mr
Hilmer (as Appointor), Linmas (as Outgoing
Trustee), and 2041House (as New
Trustee)—dated 23 February 2023, Linmas agreed to cause the trust fund of
the Linmas Trust,
“and all rights, benefits and provisions
thereof” to be vested in 2041House upon the trusts and subject to the
powers and provisions contained in the trust deed, upon receiving a request
from
2041House to do so;
- (7) on 13 March
2023, Mr Chedid wrote to Revenue NSW enclosing an executed transfer of the
Property from Linmas to 2041House and applying
for a complex assessment for
transfer duty under s 54(3) of the Duties Act 1997 (NSW);
- (8) Revenue NSW
wrote to Mr Chedid on 18 April 2023 enclosing an assessment of the duty payable
by 2041House on the transfer of the
Property in the amount of $50 in accordance
with s 54 of the Duties Act;
- (9) Mr Chedid
took steps to arrange the transfer of the Property from Linmas to 2041House from
18 April 2023, and 2041House became
the registered proprietor of the Property on
9 June 2023 after some delay occasioned by requirements of the registered
mortgagee;
- (10) in the
meantime, 2041House exchanged contracts on 15 May 2023 for the sale of the
Property to Co-Living HeadCo Pty Ltd as trustee
of the Caroline Balmain Trust
(Co-Living) for $15,100,000;
- (11) the sale of
the Property to Co-Living was subject to conditions that Mr Chedid was informed
on 16 June 2023 had been satisfied.
Issues
- Linmas
does not dispute the judgment debt in respect of which Infigo issued the
statutory demand. Linmas contends that the statutory
demand should be set aside
because it has an offsetting claim against Infigo for an amount greater than the
amount of that judgment
debt.
- The
brief written opening submissions served by Linmas prior to the hearing alluded
in vague terms to the following five elements
of the offsetting claim:
- (1) a claim for
the cost of completing and rectifying allegedly incomplete and defective
building work;
- (2) a claim for
“any consequential losses”, which was presumably intended to
refer to the loss of rent and the cost of project management services claimed in
paragraph 9 of
the statement of claim that Linmas had filed in the District
Court on 30 May 2023 and referred to in Mr Chedid’s second affidavit;
- (3) a claim for
liquidated damages in the sum of $33,000;
- (4) a contention
that there was “a differential ... of about $215,000” between
variations quantified by in Mr Winton’s report and the variations that had
been claimed by Infigo and allowed by the
adjudicator; and
- (5) a claim to
recover an amount of $176,363, which was described as being the amount by which
Linmas contends that the total sums
it has paid to Infigo to date exceed the
value of the building work completed by
Infigo.[4]
- At
the hearing on 30 June 2023, Linmas limited the offsetting claim on which it
relies, or purports to rely, in these proceedings
to:
- (1) the
“differential” in relation to variations referred to above,
which Linmas submitted was a claim for approximately $185,915 (the variations
differential);[5] and
- (2) a claim for
the cost of completing and rectifying the allegedly incomplete and defective
building work identified in its payment
schedule and adjudication response,
which Linmas quantified in the amount of approximately $329,690.
- Infigo
submitted that Mr Chedid’s first affidavit did not support an application
to set aside the statutory demand on the basis
of the variations differential or
on the basis of the rectification claim, and that the Court therefore lacks
jurisdiction to set
aside the statutory demand on the basis of those claims.
- Infigo
further submitted that the variations differential was not an offsetting claim
within the meaning of s 459H of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), and that
the rectification claim was not a genuine offsetting claim.
Consideration
- I
have considered all of the parties’ written and oral submissions, although
I do not consider it necessary to recount all of
them in order to explain my
reasons for the decision that I have arrived at.
The variations
differential
- I
accept Infigo’s submission that Mr Chedid’s first affidavit does not
support an application to set aside the statutory
demand on the basis of the
variations differential. It follows that the Court lacks jurisdiction to set
aside the statutory demand
on the basis of the variations differential, even if
it were an offsetting claim. The variations differential is not an offsetting
claim in any event, for the reasons explained below.
- The
applicable principles are clear. An application to set aside a statutory demand
under s 459G of the Corporations Act is validly made only if it is filed
together with “an affidavit supporting the application”
within the 21-day statutory period.[6]
In the context of an application to set aside a statutory demand on the basis
that there is a genuine offsetting claim, the affidavit
must provide the basis
for establishing the existence of that bona fide claim, expressly or by
reasonably available inference. Precisely
what that requires, and what might
reasonably be inferred from the affidavit and documents exhibited or annexed to
it, will depend
on the facts of the particular case. It is necessary to bear in
mind in every case the summary nature of the procedure and the limited
time
available for the filing of the supporting affidavit, and that the court is to
determine whether a genuine offsetting claim
exists, and not to determine its
merits.[7]
- Linmas
submitted that Mr Chedid’s first affidavit supported an application to set
aside the statutory demand on the grounds
of the variations differential and the
rectification claim by exhibiting its payment schedule and adjudication
response. Linmas submitted
that it was clear from the inclusion of those
documents in the exhibits to Mr Chedid’s first affidavit that Linmas
maintained
the position that it had adopted in its payment schedule and
adjudication response, and that Infigo could not be in any doubt that
Linmas was
raising a claim that would effectively be “a re-run” of
everything that was before the adjudicator.
- I
reject that submission. All that could reasonably be inferred from Mr
Chedid’s first affidavit was that, in the context of
the building contract
between Linmas and Infigo, and of the adjudication process and determination
which Mr Chedid summarised in
paragraphs 4 to 12 of his affidavit (exhibiting
the documents generated through that process), Linmas asserted the claim against
Infigo described in paragraphs 13 to 17 of his affidavit under the heading
“Offsetting Claim”. That is the claim for damages for breach
of contract and negligence referred to in paragraph 16 of the affidavit,
referable to the
matters referred to in paragraphs 13 to 15 of the
affidavit—allegedly incomplete and defective works, an allegation that the
total amount paid by Linmas to Infigo for the building works to date (excluding
the unpaid amount that is the subject of the statutory
demand) exceeds the value
of the building works, and liquidated damages. As I have explained at [29]-[30] above, Linmas no
longer relies on the overpayment claim or the liquidated damages claim described
by Mr Chedid as grounds for setting
aside the statutory demand. The description
of the offsetting claim in Mr Chedid’s affidavit makes no mention of
either the
variations differential or of any claim in respect of that
differential.
- It
follows that the Court has no jurisdiction in these proceedings to vary or set
aside the statutory demand on the basis of any offsetting
claim founded on the
variations differential, because no application to set aside the demand on that
basis was validly made in within
the 21-day statutory period.
- Even
if I had determined that Mr Chedid’s first affidavit did sufficiently
raise an offsetting claim based on the variations
differential, I would have
held that this was not an offsetting claim within the meaning of s 459H of the
Corporations Act.
- At
the hearing, counsel for Linmas initially submitted that this was a claim for
restitution for overpayment of the $188,915 in circumstances
where Infigo was
not in truth entitled to that amount determined by the adjudicator in respect of
variations. However, counsel for
Linmas later conceded that an offsetting claim
within the meaning of s 459H of the Corporations Act is a claim that the
company presently has, and that Linmas does not presently have a restitutionary
claim against Infigo in respect
of the variations differential because
Linmas has not paid any part of the adjudicated amount that is the subject of
the judgment debt in respect of which Infigo
issued the statutory demand. That
concession was properly made.[8]
- Counsel
for Linmas then endeavoured to formulate the claim relating to the variations
differential as a claim in contract arising
under two specific provisions of the
building contract. However, after identifying each of the provisions on which he
relied, counsel
promptly and correctly conceded that they did not confer any
right on Linmas that would support a claim in respect of the variations
that
were incorporated in the adjudicated amount, at least prior to Linmas paying the
amount of the adjudicator’s determination
and judgment debt to
Infigo.
- The
third and final iteration of the alleged offsetting claim based on the
variations differential propounded by counsel for Linmas
during the hearing was
a claim for declarations to the effect that Infigo was not entitled under the
building contract to payment
for specific variations, being those variations
that the adjudicator had determined in Infigo’s favour. It was submitted
that
s 32 of the SOP Act expressly permits Linmas to make such a claim, and that
the claim would not be an appeal from or “direct attack on”
the adjudication, because Linmas would simply be seeking declarations
concerning the parties’ rights under the building contract,
and the claim
would not even refer to the adjudication. Counsel for Linmas submitted
that this claim for declaratory relief was an offsetting claim within the
meaning of s 459H of the Corporations Act because the declarations, if
made, would be “a complete answer” to the judgment debt for
the adjudicated amount.
- I
reject those submissions. After undertaking an extensive analysis of relevant
authorities in In the matter of Douglas Aerospace Pty
Ltd,[9] Brereton J (as his Honour
then was) followed the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Western Australia
in Diploma Construction (WA) Pty Ltd v KPA Architects Pty
Ltd[10] in determining
that an arguable claim that the adjudication does not reflect the true legal
rights of the parties does not amount
to an offsetting claim for the purpose of
s 459H(1)(b) of the Corporations Act where there is no cross-demand for
damages, and where there has been no payment and there is therefore no complete
claim for restitution.
As his Honour
explained:[11]
“... a curial proceeding in which a party to a construction contract
seeks, by way of enforcing its contractual rights, a declaration
that an
adjudicated amount is not truly due and payable is in a position closely
analogous to one who applies to set aside a judgment,
or to appeal from a
judgment – essentially, the contention is that the adjudication, and thus
the judgment founded on it, is
wrong. Despite the width of the concept of
‘offsetting claim’, it has never been thought to extend to an appeal
from,
or application to set aside, a judgment. In the absence of payment of an
amount of which restitution might be claimed, there is nothing
to be set off
against the judgment debt, but only a contention that the adjudication is in
error. A contention that a debt does not
exist is not a ‘counterclaim,
set-off or cross-demand’. Such a contention denies the debt, whereas a
counterclaim, set-off
or cross-demand admits it, but asserts that there is a
countervailing liability. That the curial proceedings might produce a different
result is no different from an appeal. The general principle that an appeal or
application to set aside a judgment does not found
a genuine dispute, or (at
least without more) provide some other reason to set aside a demand, supports
the conclusion that a claim
that an adjudication does not reflect the true
contractual rights of the parties does not amount to an offsetting claim.”
- Contrary
to the submissions made on behalf of Linmas in the present case, it is not to
the point that the claim for declaratory relief
might be framed in terms that
avoid referring to the adjudication. As a matter of substance, the claim for
declaratory relief would
be a contention that the judgment debt does not exist,
rather than a counterclaim, set-off, or cross-demand. Moreover, that contention
is unsustainable. As Brereton J explained, the judgment debt is indisputable so
long as the judgment stands, notwithstanding that
s 32 of the SOP Act preserves
to the parties the right to contend for a different result in curial
proceedings, and notwithstanding
that any judgment in such curial proceedings
can take the adjudication into account and make any adjustment necessary to give
effect
to what the court finds to be the true legal rights of the
parties.[12]
- For
all of those reasons, the Court does not have jurisdiction to entertain
Linmas’ application to set aside the statutory demand
on the basis that it
has some offsetting claim in relation to the variations differential. However,
even if I had been of the view
that this ground of challenge was sufficiently
identified in Mr Chedid’s first affidavit to confer jurisdiction on the
Court,
I would have held that Linmas’ foreshadowed claim for declaratory
relief in respect of the parties’ true contractual
rights in relation to
variations is not an offsetting claim within the meaning of s 459H of the
Corporations Act, assuming for present purposes that Linmas’
contention as to the parties’ true contractual rights is arguable. I would
therefore have declined to set aside or vary the statutory demand on account of
that foreshadowed claim.
The rectification claim
- The
rectification claim described in paragraph 13 of Mr Chedid’s first
affidavit sworn on 3 April 2023 is a claim for costs
that he asserted Linmas had
incurred, and would incur in the future, to complete and rectify allegedly
defective work. Mr Chedid’s
affidavit did not disclose that Linmas held
the Property on trust for the Linmas Trust, that 2041House had replaced Linmas
as trustee
of the Linmas Trust with effect from 23 February 2023, that Linmas
had executed a transfer of the Property to 2041House, and that
the transfer was
in the process of being assessed for stamp duty as at 13 March 2023, with a view
to the transfer being
registered.[13] Mr Chedid’s
second affidavit sworn on 31 May 2023 also failed to disclose those matters and
the subsequent developments—that
Linmas had been taking steps to complete
the transfer of the Property to 2041House since 18 April 2023, and that
2041House had entered
into a contract for the sale of the Property to a third
party. The statement of claim that Linmas filed in the District Court on
30 May
2023 was also silent about those matters and simply pleaded that Linmas was the
owner of the Property.[14]
- Infigo
submitted that the undisclosed matters render the rectification claim a
fundamentally different claim from that described in
Mr Chedid’s first
affidavit. The claim described by Mr Chedid is a claim for the actual costs
incurred in the past, and to
be incurred by Linmas in the future, in carrying
out the work that it contends is necessary to complete the building works and to
rectify the alleged defects. By contrast, Infigo submitted that the
rectification claim articulated by Linmas at the hearing is a
different claim
for damages equivalent to the cost of making the building work conform to the
contractual specification. For that
reason, Infigo submitted that Linmas’
application to set aside the statutory demand on the basis of its rectification
claim
as formulated at the hearing was not validly made in accordance with s
459G(3) of the Corporations Act, and that the Court therefore lacks
jurisdiction to determine the application to set aside the statutory demand in
so far as it relies
on that rectification claim.
- Linmas
submitted that the rectification claim articulated at the hearing is the same
claim as that which was identified in Mr Chedid’s
first affidavit. Linmas
submitted that the transfer of the Property from Linmas to 2041House, and the
subsequent contract for the
sale of the Property from 2041House to a third
party, are irrelevant to its rectification claim.
- Where
a landowner contracts to have a building work performed on their land, and the
builder fails to perform the work in accordance
with the contract and the
specifications that form part of it, the damage incurred by the owner is the
loss that they have sustained
by reason of the builder’s failure to
perform its contractual obligations. In Bellgrove v Eldridge, the High
Court said:[15]
“This loss cannot be measured by comparing the value of the building which
has been erected with the value it would have borne
if erected in accordance
with the contract; [the owner’s] loss can, prima facie, be measured only
by ascertaining the amount
required to rectify the defects complained of and so
give to [them] the equivalent of a building on [their] land which is
substantially
in accordance with the contract.
...
The qualification, however, to which this rule is subject is that, not only must
the work undertaken be necessary to produce conformity,
but that also, it must
be a reasonable course to adopt.”
- In
Tabcorp Holdings Ltd v Bowen Investments Pty Ltd (Tabcorp), the
High Court explained this “rule” as an application of the
overriding principle that a party who suffers loss by reason of a breach of
contract is to be placed in the
same position as if the contract had been
performed, so far as money is able to do
that.[16] The High Court cited with
approval the following passage from the judgment of Oliver J in Radford v De
Froberville:[17]
“Now, it may be that, viewed objectively, it is not to the
plaintiff’s financial advantage to be supplied with the article
or service
which he has stipulated. It may be that another person might say that what the
plaintiff has stipulated for will not serve
his commercial interests so well as
some other scheme or course of action. And that may be quite right. But that,
surely, must be
for the plaintiff to judge. Pacta sunt servanda. If he contracts
for the supply of that which he thinks serves his interests –
be they
commercial, aesthetic or merely eccentric – then if that which is
contracted for is not supplied by the other contracting
party I do not see why,
in principle, he should not be compensated by being provided with the cost of
supplying it through someone
else or in a different way, subject to the proviso,
of course, that he is seeking compensation for a genuine loss and not merely
using a technical breach to secure an uncovenanted profit.”
- The
High Court referred to the qualification expressed in Bellgrove v Eldridge
that the work must be necessary to produce conformity with the contract, and
a reasonable course to adopt, and noted the example of
unreasonableness given in
that case:[18]
“No one would doubt that where pursuant to a building contract calling for
the erection of a house with cement rendered external
walls of second-hand
bricks, the builder has constructed the walls of new bricks of first quality the
owner would not be entitled
to the cost of demolishing the walls and re-erecting
them in second-hand bricks.”
- The
High Court in Tabcorp stated that the
example:[19]
“... tends to indicate that the test of ‘unreasonableness’ is
only to be satisfied by fairly exceptional circumstances.
The example given by
the court aligns closely with what Oliver J said in Radford,
that is, that the diminution in value measure of damages will only apply where
the innocent party is ‘merely using a technical
breach to secure an
uncovenanted profit’.”
- In
Cordon Investments Pty Ltd v Lesdor Properties Pty
Ltd[20] (Cordon),
the Court of Appeal considered a claim by the registered proprietor of premises
on which residential units had been developed for
damages for breach of contract
by the developer, measured as the cost of rectifying defects on that part of the
property which became
common property on registration of the strata plan and
which had therefore vested in the owners corporation. The Court of Appeal
held
that the primary judge was justified in concluding, on the basis of the evidence
adduced at trial, that the rectification work
would not be carried out. The
evidence given by the witnesses called by the former registered proprietor
(Lesdor) was equivocal as
to whether Lesdor intended to carry out the work, and
there was no evidence that the owners corporation proposed to carry out the
work
or to call on Lesdor to do so. Bathurst CJ, with whom Macfarlan and Meagher JJA
agreed, accepted that a possibility that rectification
work will not be carried
out does not preclude a claim for damages for the cost of the rectification
work. Referring to Tabcorp, the Chief Justice also accepted that
unreasonableness will only be established in exceptional circumstances.
Nevertheless, His Honour
held
that:[21]
“The combination of the lack of intention to carry out the rectification
work, the transfer of the property from Lesdor to
the owners corporation and the
absence of any evidence that the defects were affecting the use and occupation
of the building or
the common property leads, in my opinion, to the conclusion
that it would be unreasonable to carry out the work and that damages
for the
cost of rectification should therefore not be awarded.”
- In
coming to that conclusion, his Honour approved and applied the following
observations about the nexus between intention or lack
of intention to carry out
rectification work and unreasonableness in Westpoint Management Ltd v
Chocolate Factory Apartments Ltd
(Westpoint):[22]
“59 Relevance of the plaintiff’s intention to carry
out the rectification work to reasonableness is accepted in, for
example, Chitty on Contracts, 29th ed, at 20-016,
and Hudson’s Building and Engineering Contracts, 11th ed at
8-138. It appears to have been accepted in De Cesare v Deluxe Motors Pty
Ltd – indeed, sale of the building may have relevance through
whether or not the rectification work will be carried out. If truly
going to
reasonableness, I do not think consideration of whether or not the plaintiff
will carry out the rectification work is inconsistent
with Bellgrove v
Eldridge, since the regard to it is part of arriving at the
plaintiff’s compensable loss. Once there is compensable loss, the court
is
not concerned with the plaintiff’s use of the compensation.
60 But the plaintiff’s intention to carry out the
rectification work, it seems to me, is not of significance in itself. The
plaintiff may intend to carry out rectification work which is not necessary and
reasonable, or may intend not to carry out rectification
work which is necessary
and reasonable. The significance will lie in why the plaintiff intends or does
not intend to carry out the
rectification work, for the light it sheds on
whether the rectification is necessary and reasonable. Putting the same point
not in
terms of intention, but of whether or not the plaintiff will carry out
the rectification work, whether the plaintiff will do so has
significance for
the same reason, and not through the bald question of whether or not the
plaintiff will carry out the rectification
work. That question is immaterial,
see Bellgrove v Eldridge.
61 So if supervening events mean that the rectification work
can not be carried out, it can hardly be found that the rectification
work is
reasonable in order to achieve the contractual objective: achievement of the
contractual objective is no longer relevant.
If sale of the property to a
contented purchaser means that the plaintiff did not think and the purchaser
does not think the rectification
work needs to be carried out, it may well be
found to be unreasonable to carry out, the rectification work. An intention not
to carry
out the rectification work will not of itself make carrying out the
work unreasonable, but it may be evidentiary of unreasonableness;
if the reason
for the intention is that the property is perfectly functional and aesthetically
pleasing despite the non-complying
work, for example, it may well be found that
rectification is out of all proportion to achievement of the contractual
objective or
to the benefit to be thereby obtained.”
- As
Bathurst CJ observed in Cordon, the question of whether it is reasonable
to carry out the rectification works is a question of fact in each
case.[23]
- Counsel
for Linmas relied on the subsequent Court of Appeal decision in Rialto Sports
Pty Ltd v Cancer Care Associates Pty
Ltd[24] (Rialto)
as support for his submission that a change of ownership of the property is
irrelevant to the former owner’s entitlement to
damages for the cost of
rectification works which may not be carried out. Counsel emphasised that, in
Rialto, the strata lot owners were held to be entitled to such damages in
respect of remedial works to the common property, notwithstanding
that the lot
owners had never been owners of the common property. However, that case turns on
its own facts and does not support
the general proposition advanced by counsel
for Linmas. In Rialto, the lot owners’ claims were made against the
owner of the property from whom they had purchased their lots off the plan under
contracts containing covenants that the building would be constructed in a
proper and workmanlike manner. The defects to the common
property related to
combustible aluminium cladding and waterproofing issues. Gleeson JA, with whom
Bell CJ and Macfarlan JA agreed,
held that the lot owners had suffered loss by
reason of the defects to the common property, being a diminution in the value of
each
lot owner’s proprietary interest in the common property as an
equitable tenant in common with the other lot owners. The lot
owners were
therefore entitled to damages against the owner for breach of those covenants.
Rectification works were necessary, and
it was reasonable for those works to be
carried out. In those circumstances, the cost of those works was the appropriate
measure
of damages, notwithstanding the possibility that the works may not be
carried out by the owners corporation (which was controlled
by the
vendor/owner). Rialto represents an application of the principles to
which I have referred at [49]-[55] above to the particular circumstances of that case.
- Turning
to the present case, I reject Infigo’s submission that the rectification
claim on which Linmas relies in challenging
the statutory demand is a different
claim from that which was described in Mr Chedid’s first affidavit. It is
the same claim
for damages for alleged breaches of contract, measured as the
cost of undertaking work that Linmas contends is necessary to rectify
the
alleged defects. As the authorities discussed above make plain, it is not an
essential element of such a claim that the claimant
will carry out the
rectification works and will incur those costs. The matters referred to at [27] above, which first
became known to Infigo through other proceedings in this Court, do not change
the character of the claim. However,
they are relevant to the claim, as
discussed further below. Accordingly, the Court has jurisdiction to determine
Linmas’ application
to set aside the statutory demand on the basis that of
rectification claim.
- In
Grandview Ausbuilder Pty Ltd v Budget Demolitions Pty Ltd
(Grandview), Bell P (as the Chief Justice then was) addressed
what is required in order to demonstrate the existence of a genuine offsetting
claim:[25]
“61. ... it is desirable to say something as to the
meaning of the word ‘genuine’ in the context of the
definition of ‘offsetting claim’ in s 459H(5) of
the Corporations Act and how it has been interpreted in the case law. ...
62. In Ozone Manufacturing Pty Ltd v Deputy
Commissioner of Taxation (2006) 94 SASR 269;
[2006] SASC 91
at
[46]
-
[49]
per Debelle J (with whom Besanko and Layton JJ agreed) said:
‘[46] The meaning of the expression
“offsetting claim”, like the meaning of “genuine
dispute”
has been illuminated by analogies found in applications for
injunctions to restrain the commencement, advertisement and prosecution
of
winding-up proceedings pre-dating the enactment of s 459G and in the opposing of
a notional application by the person who has served the statutory demand for
summary judgment against the
company for the debt the subject of the
demand: Chase Manhattan at 136. Thus, when deciding whether an
offsetting claim exists, the test is whether the court is satisfied that there
is a serious
question to be tried that the person on whom the demand has been
served has an offsetting claim: Scanhill Pty Ltd v Century 21
Australasia Pty Ltd [1993] FCA 618; (1993) 12 ACSR 341 at 357, or that
the claim is not frivolous or vexatious: Chadwick Industries (South
Coast) Pty Ltd v Condensing Vaporisers Pty Ltd (1994) 13 ACSR 37, or
that it is not fictitious or merely colourable: Edge Technology Pty Ltd
v Lite-on Technology Corporation [2000] NSWSC 471; (2000) 156 FLR 181
at 184-5, citing Jesseron Holdings Pty Ltd v Middle East Trading
Consultants Pty Ltd (No 2) (1994) 13 ACSR 787.
[47] The test whether an offsetting claim
exists is the same as for a genuine dispute, that is to say, the claim must be
bona
fide and truly exist in fact and that the grounds for alleging the
existence of the dispute are real and not spurious, hypothetical,
illusory or
misconceived. The issue is whether the offsetting claim is bona fide, real and
not spurious: Edge Technology per Santow J at [25].
[48] I do not think that the test identified
by Santow J imposes a more onerous task on the party disputing the statutory
demand
than the serious question test. The expression “good faith”
means arguable on the basis of facts asserted with a sufficient
particularity to
enable the court to determine that the claim is not fanciful: Macleay
Nominees Pty Ltd v Belle Property East Pty Ltd [2001] NSWSC 743 per
Palmer J. McPherson JA expressed the same concept in these terms
in JJMMR Pty Ltd v LG International Corporation [2003] QCA 519
at [18]:
“Anyone can make a claim to a right of setoff against a creditor. What the
definition in s 459H(5) requires, however, is that it be ‘genuine’.
The same word in s 459H(1) has already elicited so many synonyms and shades of
meaning that it will not help to add more. Its antithesis is to be seen in the
word ‘artificial’. The claim to set off against the debt demanded
must not have been manufactured or got up simply for
the purpose of defeating
the demand made against the company. It must have an existence that is
objectively demonstrable independently
of the exigencies of the demand that
evoked it.
The observations of Palmer J and McPherson JA were applied by Chesterman J
in Cooloola Dairies Pty Ltd v National Foods Milk Ltd [2004]
QSC 308; [2005] 1 Qd R 12.”’
63. In addition to these valuable observations, reference
should be made to the judgment of McLelland CJ in Eq in Eyota Pty Ltd v
Hanave Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACSR 785 at 787 where his Honour, having
characterised the test for whether or not there was a ‘genuine
claim’ in terms of whether there was ‘a plausible contention
which requires investigation’, went on to say:
‘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”. (cf Eng Mee Yong v
Letchunanan [1979] UKPC 13; [1980] AC 331 at 341), or “a patently feeble legal
argument or an assertion of facts unsupported by evidence”:
cf South Australia v Wall (1980) 24 SASR 189 at 194.’
64. The Victorian Court of Appeal has spoken of ‘prima
facie plausibility’ in this context: TR Administration Pty Ltd v
Frank Marchetti & Sons Pty Ltd [2008] VSCA 70; 66 ACSR 67 at [71];
see also Britten-Norman Pty Ltd v Analysis and Technology Australia
Pty Ltd (2013) 85 NSWLR 601; [2013] NSWCA 344 at [48]- [49].
65. Most recently, in In the matter of Citadel
Financial Corporation Pty Ltd [2019] NSWSC 65 at [30], White JA said:
‘In judging the sufficiency of the evidence to give rise to an offsetting
claim, the question is not whether the evidence is
sufficient to establish the
offsetting claim or its amount, but whether it is sufficient to establish that
the offsetting claim is
genuine and its genuine level (Re Morris Catering
(Australia) Pty Ltd (1993) 11 ACSR 601 at 605; Britten-Norman Pty Ltd
v Analysis and Technology Australia Pty Ltd (2013) 85 NSWLR 601; [2013]
NSWCA 344 at [48] and [49]). It is sufficient if there be a plausible contention
requiring investigation (Britten-Norman Pty Ltd v Analysis and Technology
Australia Pty Ltd at [70]). The offsetting claim should have a
sufficient objective existence and prima facie plausibility to distinguish it
from a
merely spurious claim, bluster or assertion and not be merely fanciful or
futile (TR Administration Pty Ltd v Frank Marchetti & Sons Pty
Ltd [2008] VSCA 70; (2008) 66 ACSR 67 at [71] cited with approval
in Britten-Norman Pty Ltd v Analysis and Technology Australia Pty
Ltd at [52]-[53]).’”
- Bell
P had earlier observed
that:[26]
“8. The establishment of an offsetting claim for the
purposes of s 459H does not, of course, constitute a finding that the claim
is a good one, or that it has been made out. It represents nothing more
than a
finding that there is a serious question as to the existence of an offsetting
claim or an issue deserving of a hearing as
to whether the company has such a
claim against the creditor and that a claim is made in good faith and is
arguable and not frivolous
or vexatious: Scanhill Pty Ltd v Century 21
Australasia Pty Ltd [1993] FCA 618; (1993) 47 FCR 451 at 460, 467 per Beazley J
(as her Honour then was); In the matter of Oztec Pty
Ltd [2012] NSWSC 1234 at [22] per Black J...”
- White
JA and Sackville AJA agreed with Bell
P.[27]
- In
the present case, Linmas has not adduced sufficient evidence to establish that
its rectification claim is a genuine offsetting
claim. The payment schedule and
adjudication response (including Mr Winton’s report) exhibited to Mr
Chedid’s first affidavit
pre-date Linmas’ removal as trustee of the
Linmas Trust, its transfer of the Property to the new trustee, and the sale of
the
Property by that new trustee to a third party. Mr Chedid’s evidence
does not add to these documents in any meaningful way.
Mr Chedid merely
describes the incomplete works identified in those documents as issues in
respect of which “Linmas has incurred and is set to incur costs to
complete and rectify defective work.” Mr Chedid is the solicitor for
Linmas. The evidence does not point to Mr Chedid having any personal knowledge
of either the alleged
defects or whether Linmas intends to undertake any work to
rectify those defects. Counsel for Linmas acknowledged that this statement
in
paragraph 13 of Mr Chedid’s first affidavit was, in substance, a
submission based on the adjudication response. Accordingly,
the statement itself
has no evidentiary weight, and rises no higher than the adjudication response.
- Neither
the adjudication response nor any other evidence adduced by Linmas establishes a
plausible contention requiring investigation
that, notwithstanding all of the
matters referred to at [27] above, rectification of the defects described at [10] above can be carried
out, and that it is reasonable to carry out that work. Linmas did not raise any
contention, even in submissions,
that it can carry out the rectification work,
notwithstanding that the Property has already been transferred to 2041House and
is
about to be transferred to Co-Living. Nor did Linmas contend that the value
of the Property or the price at which the Property has
been sold to Co-Living
were diminished by reason of the allegedly incomplete and defective work. Nor
did Linmas identify how any
such diminution would arguably represent a loss to
Linmas, as opposed to the Linmas Trust and 2041House as the new trustee of that
Trust.
- Counsel
for Linmas initially submitted that the sale of the Property was simply
irrelevant. I reject that submission, which is inconsistent
with the decisions
in Cordon and Westpoint to which I have referred above.
- Inconsistently
with his initial submission, counsel for Linmas then submitted that Linmas was
not required to adduce any evidence
in these proceedings touching on the
reasonableness question because “it is ultimately a factual
issue” whereby “[i]f your Honour can see there is scope for
my client to demonstrate reasonableness and necessity, then there is an arguable
case in the sense that expression is used on an application for an injunction,
or, in the General Steel sense, my client doesn’t
need to go further and
positively satisfy your Honour on this application.” I reject that
submission as an inaccurate gloss on what an applicant seeking to set aside a
statutory demand on the basis of a genuine
offsetting claim must establish. What
Linmas was required to establish in these proceedings were plausible contentions
(as distinct
from spurious assertions) that the rectification work underpinning
its offsetting claim was necessary, and that it was reasonable
to carry out that
work in the circumstances referred to at [27] above. Linmas adduced no evidence from any witness
bearing on reasonableness in those circumstances, and did not identify material
within the three volumes of documentary evidence that supported plausible
contentions that it was reasonable to carry out the work
in those circumstances.
- During
the hearing, I pressed counsel for Linmas to identify any evidence relied on in
support of the submission that there was “scope” to
demonstrate reasonableness at trial, counsel for Linmas answered:
“There are two ways I can put it. I can put it that the defendant
shouldn’t have the benefit of being paid for work that
is defective. It
can be characterised as what is the true value of the work carried out by the
defendant? The adjudicator valued
it at X and said my client has to pay $188,000
for variations, some other bits and pieces and $200,000 on account of the work
carried
out.
So, another way to characterise the case is that the value of the work is not as
asserted and as found by the adjudicator, to the
point that my client
doesn’t even have to get into the ... Cordon question.
...
Another way my client can put its case is not that rectification is necessary
and reasonable, is simply that the value of the works
was somewhat less than
found by the adjudicator.”
- I
understand this response to my question—which simply formulated a
restitutionary claim in the alternative to a claim for damages
for breach of
contract—as a concession that there is no evidence in these proceedings
that supports Linmas’ submission
that there is “scope”
for it to demonstrate reasonableness at trial.
- Counsel
returned to this alternative claim in his submissions in reply at the conclusion
of the hearing. Counsel referred me to Infigo’s
claim in its payment
claim/adjudication application that the value of the contract works was
$2,180,734, Linmas’ contention
in its payment schedule/adjudication
response that the value was only $1,810,993, and the adjudicator’s
determination that
the value was
$2,129,164.[28] Counsel submitted
that: “That’s an alternative way of casting the
differential”.
- I
consider it doubtful that this alternative claim—for restitution of the
difference between Linmas’ $1,810,993 valuation
of the contract works and
the adjudicator’s valuation of $2,129,164—was supported by Mr
Chedid’s first affidavit.
That affidavit did identify a different claim
for restitution of any amount said to represent the difference between
Linmas’
$1,810,993 valuation of the contract works and the amount that it
has paid to date in respect of the contract works. Linmas abandoned
any reliance
on that claim as offsetting claim at the hearing, as referred to at [28]-[29] above.
- In
any event, the alternative referred to at [65]-[67] above is a claim for restitution of an amount that
includes the value of works for which Linmas has not yet paid. That is because
the adjudicator’s valuation of $2,129,164 includes part of the adjudicated
amount that is the subject of the judgment debt,
which Linmas has not
paid.29 T[29]t is not a genuine
offsetting claim.30
- For
all of those reasons, the evidence before the Court in these proceedings did not
establish that the rectification claim—in
either of its
formulations—is a genuine offsetting claim in the sense explained in
Grandview.
Conclusion
- Linmas
has failed to establish any of the grounds on which it ultimately relied in
challenging the statutory demand. There will be
an order dismissing the
proceedings. I will hear the parties in relation to
costs.
**********
[1] All monetary amounts have been
rounded to the nearest whole dollar
amount.
[2] Proceedings
2023/192930. The freezing order application was determined on 29 June
2023—see Infigo II Pty Ltd v Linmas Holdings
Pty Ltd [2023] NSWSC
755.
[3] My summary of Mr
Chedid’s evidence should not be understood as accepting the proposition
that Linmas was able to enter into
a contract with itself: Infigo II Pty Ltd v
Linmas Holdings Pty Ltd [2023] NSWSC 755 at [62]- [63] (Meek J) (and the
authorities there referred to); see also [65]-[82] of that
judgment.
[4] The evidence does not
explain how the amount of $176,363 is calculated, and I am unable to reconcile
it with the evidence summarised
in [6]-[12] above. However, nothing material
turns on that in these
proceedings.
[5] This involved an
implicit concession by Linmas that the amount of $215,000 in Linmas’
opening submissions was an error, and
that the amount of the
“differential” could be no more than $185,915, calculated as the sum
of $188,520 that had been
allowed by the adjudicator and the amount of $2,604
that had been accepted by Linmas (through Mr Winton) in its adjudication
response.
[6] Corporations Act, s
459G(3).
[7] Ziegler as trustee for
the Doris Gayst Testamentary Trust v Cenric Group Pty Ltd [2020] NSWCA 85 at
[31]- [37] (Gleeson JA, Meagher and McCallum JJA agreeing); Sceam Construction
Pty Ltd v Clyne (2021) 64 VR 404; (2021) 365 FLR 326; [2021] VSCA 270 at
[38]- [42] (Ferguson CJ, Sifris and Walker
JJA).
[8] In the matter of Douglas
Aerospace Pty Ltd (2015) 294 FLR 186; (2015) 33 ACLC 15-012; [2015] NSWSC 167 at
[99] (Brereton J) (Douglas
Aerospace).
[9] Ibid at
[45]-[100].
[10] [2014] WASCA
91.
[11] Douglas Aerospace at
[98].
[12] Ibid at [53]-[54] and
[58]-[66].
[13] See [27]
above.
[14] See [21]-[27]
above.
[15] (1954) 90 CLR 613;
[1954] ALR 929; 28 ALJ 319; [1954] HCA 36 at 90 CLR 617-618 (Dixon CJ, Webb and
Taylor JJ).
[16] [2009] HCA 8; (2009) 236 CLR
272; (2009) 83 ALJR 390; (2009) 253 ALR 1; [2009] NSW ConvR 56-232; [2009] V
ConvR 54-757; [2009] Q ConvR 54-711; (2009) 25 BCL 256; [2009] HCA 8 at
[13]- [17] (French CJ, Gummow, Heydon, Crennan, and Kiefel
JJ).
[17] [1978] 1 All ER 33;
[1977] 1 WLR 1262; 7 BLR 35 at 1 All ER 42, excerpted in Tabcorp at
[16].
[18] Belgrove v Eldridge at
218; Tabcorp at [17].
[19] At
[17].
[20] [2012] NSWCA
184.
[21] Ibid at
[230].
[22] [2007] NSWCA 253 at
[59]- [61] (Giles JA, McColl and Campbell JJA
agreeing).
[23] Cordon at
[214].
[24] [2022] NSWCA
146.
[25] (2019) 99 NSWLR 397;
(2019) 136 ACSR 563; [2019] NSWCA 60 at [61]- [65] (White JA and Sackville AJA
agreeing).
[26] Ibid at [8]
(White JA and Sackville AJA
agreeing).
[27] Ibid at [93]-[96]
(White JA) and [98]-[100] (Sackville
AJA).
[28] See [6]-[12]
above.
[29] See [12]
above.
[30] Douglas Aerospace at
[99].
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nsw/NSWSC/2023/791.html