The Pepperfield Bowral Land
32 On 26 May 2005, DW was incorporated in order for it to buy and hold the Pepperfield Bowral Land for the business of the Denham Group of companies. Mr McGrath was the sole director and shareholder of DW at the time of incorporation. The Denham Group of companies comprised companies associated with Mr McGrath. In his affidavit, he lists 13 companies as being part of the Denham Group.
33 In July 2005, DW purchased Lots 100 and 101 Kangaloon Rd, Bowral (the Pepperfield Bowral Land) in respect of which development approval had been given for the construction of a retirement living complex.
34 On 7 July 2005, the Wyndham Estate Discretionary Trust (WEDT) was settled whereby DW held property on trust for the benefit of eligible beneficiaries, which included Mr McGrath, his family and (in effect) companies associated with him and MBL (for reasons that will be clear shortly).
35 It appears that at all relevant times DW was carrying on its business as trustee of the WEDT. DW held the Pepperfield Bowral Land and the business opportunity to develop the retirement complex on trust under the WEDT.
36 On 29 July 2005, DW "in its own right and as trustee of the WEDT" entered into an "Investment Facility and Guarantee Agreement" with MBL for the provision of finance for the construction and development on the Pepperfield Bowral Land (MBL Facility), comprising what is now known as the Pepperfield Bowral Lifestyle Resort. DC was a guarantor under this agreement, along with two other Denham Group companies and Mr McGrath. Mr McGrath said that MBL was a long-time funder of the Denham Group.
37 On 30 July 2005, relevantly the day after the MBL Facility was entered into, DC provided a loan facility to DW in a one-page document on a DC letterhead signed by Mr McGrath. It stated that DC provides to DW "a commercial loan for the purpose of developing the property as detailed in the project feasibility provided, and on the basis that [DC] secures the building contract for development." It also says that "[DC] is to be paid a capitalised interest rate of 7.2% on the invested funds upon completion of the development, and the return of the development profit to [DW]."
38 According to the DW general ledger, DC had commenced to make loans to DW prior to entering the loan agreement, namely from 31 May 2005, including an entry for "MBL Property Operating Account". The corresponding DC general ledger also records these loans.
39 On 24 May 2006, the MBL Facility was varied for the first time where, among other matters, the facility limit was increased and the development appears to have crystallised into "84 seniors living/self-care units and a 4 bed respite centre with community facilities" to be built in two stages. The guarantors remained the same.
40 On an unspecified date in 2007, the MBL Facility was varied for a second time where, among other matters, the facility limit was amended and the development was recorded as now being for "87 seniors' living/self-care units with community facilities." One of the Denham company guarantors was not a party to the variation, but the other guarantors remained.
41 In his affidavit, Mr McGrath said that in around 2010 the sale of the "villas" in the development had slowed due to the GFC and it became difficult for him to arrange for DW to meet interest payments under the MBL Facility. Mr McGrath met with representatives of MBL in order to address these financial difficulties.
42 The result was that on 6 May 2010, the MBL Facility was varied a third time by the "Third Deed of Variation of Development Finance Agreement". The Third Deed of Variation structured the debt as follows:
(1) Tranche 1 of $6.7 million (Tranche 1 Debt); and
(2) Tranche 2 of $25.263 million (Tranche 2 Debt).
43 Under the Third Deed of Variation, DC is defined as a "Guarantor". Mr McGrath and the other Denham company remained guarantors, and another Denham company was added as a guarantor. By cl 4.1(a) of the Third Deed of Variation, DC agreed to make monthly payments of $100,000 to MBL in reduction of the Tranche 1 Debt. Clause 4.3 states in effect that MBL agreed that if DC meets its obligations under cl 4.1(a), MBL will release all the guarantors from any further obligations in respect of the "Facility", which I understand to mean the entire loan amount, subject to cl 5 of the Third Deed of Variation. Importantly, and for the first time, DC had an obligation to make payments to MBL independent of any default by DW.
44 Mr McGrath said that the short term plan was that the Tranche 1 Debt was to be repaid by monthly instalments of $100,000 by DC and the Tranche 2 Debt was to be repaid from DW's proceeds on the sale of the retirement units on the Pepperfield Bowral Land and management fees generated from the on-going retirement village business.
45 Mr McGrath said that for a period of time DC was able to meet the $100,000 monthly payments as required by the Third Deed of Variation.
46 From 4 May 2010 to 29 June 2010, DC made four payments to MBL totalling $331,777.03 in accordance with the MBL Facility as varied. The transactions are described as "DW Business …" in a document headed the DC 'Find Report' which sets out a number of transactions made by DC. These payments were not recorded in the DC/DW loan account in the general ledgers of DW or DC.
47 As an aside, it is necessary to say something about the DC Find Report. There are two versions in evidence, each covering different but overlapping time periods. In the one, the description of the payments is given as "DW Business Loan" from which I infer that the description in the other of "DW Business …" is the same in the electronic file but the word "Loan" has been omitted in the printed copy because the column width was insufficient to accommodate it. That is to say, each of the payments in the DC Find Reports is a payment properly described as "DW Business Loan".
48 Also, the payments are recorded as being to the "MBL Property Operating Account". There is a separate MBL bank statement for that account which also records the payments that are recorded in the DC Find Reports. The statement shows that the account is an account in the name of DW for "Tranche 1". It commenced with an advance by MBL of $6.7 million which is the amount of Tranche 1 Debt under the Third Deed of Variation. That is to say, the DC Find Reports payments are payments by DC to an MBL loan account in the name of DW for the Tranche 1 Debt recorded in the Third Deed of Variation.
49 By 27 August 2010, the DC/DW loan account in the corresponding general ledgers of both companies recorded a debt owed by DW to DC totalling $7,219,251.71.
50 In the financial year ending 30 June 2011, DC made 11 payments of $100,000 to MBL totalling $1.1 million. This amount was recorded in each of DW and DC's general ledgers by journal entry on 30 June 2011 as $1.1 million paid on loan account and owed by DW to DC. All of these payments were given the description of "DW Business Loan" in the DC Find Report.
51 Mr Arnold explained that the payments by DC to MBL were reflected as being on loan to DW because DC was paying a liability of DW such that liability arose in DC's favour. The financial statements were then prepared in that way and Mr McGrath as director signed them.
52 Mr McGrath said in his affidavit that in around June 2012 he decided to restructure the debts in the Denham Group which was to include DW repaying the debt owed to DC. He said this was "in order to remove the receivables of entities related to [DC] from the books of [DC] for the purpose of providing more accurate financial statements to potential clients." Mr McGrath said that some of DC's potential clients had been critical of the intercompany loans in the Denham Group.
53 Purportedly for that reason, at the end of August 2012 a journal entry was posted for the year ending 30 June 2012. The result of this journal entry was an adjustment whereby the DC balance sheet recorded that the $8,319,252 amount had been repaid or written off and was no longer recorded as a loan owed by DW to DC. DW's general ledger records this adjustment as "as per PAM", which is a reference to Pinker, Arnold & McLoughlin, the Denham Group accountants. The DC general ledger has two entries that discharged the majority of the debt: the first is described as "clear COA SPV Float Fee" for $1,274,251.71, and the second "repay loan as per SM" for $7,000,000. The debt was recorded as discharged in each company's general ledger and balance sheet although the loan amounts in each are not quite the same. The difference of $45,000 is made up in DC's general ledger by four payments in the year ending 30 June 2012, two by DW to DC and two by DC to DW.
54 The $8,319,252 amount moved in DW's balance sheet from being a debt owed to DC to being a debt owed to Mr McGrath. However, the debt owed to Mr McGrath had gone up by $10,399,252 to $12,799,252 (an amount of $2,400,000 was carried forward from the previous year).
55 This extra amount can be explained as follows. The general journal transaction recorded in DW for 30 June 2012 shows that Mr McGrath's loan account in DW was credited with the following payments:
(1) $1,200,000, being the amount paid to MBL by DC that year;
(2) $8,319,252, being the amount of DW's indebtedness to DC;
(3) $200,000, being the amount of DW's indebtedness to Dortome Pty Ltd; and
(4) $725,000, being the amount of DW's indebtedness to Denham Developments Pty Ltd.
56 That is to say, $10,444,252 was credited to Mr McGrath's loan account with corresponding debits to extinguish the identified debts. The difference between that amount and the amount of $10,399,252 by which Mr McGrath's loan account increased that year is $45,000 which is reflected in Mr McGrath's loan account in DW's general ledger as being the four payments referred to at [53] above.
57 The short point is that by general journal all the debts of DW to the Denham companies DC, Dortome and Denham Developments, including the $1.2 million paid by DC to MBL in the 2012 financial year, were extinguished and credited to Mr McGrath's loan account in DW.
58 As indicated, DC continued to make the monthly $100,000 payments to MBL after 30 June 2011.
59 In the year ending 30 June 2013, DC paid MBL another $1.2 million. Monthly from July 2012 to June 2013, the DC Find Report sets out payments made by DC to the MBL property operating account. Some of these payments are described as "DW Business Loan", some are not described at all, but they are all nonetheless for $100,000 each month and total $1.2 million.
60 In the financial statements of DW, the balance sheet recorded that DW's debt to Mr McGrath increased to $13,999,252 for the year ended 30 June 2013, namely by $1.2 million. Mr McGrath could not explain this apparent coincidence.
61 In the year ending 30 June 2014, DC paid MBL $900,000. Again, the DC Find Report sets out payments to the MBL property operating account. The balance sheet of DW recorded that DW's loan to Mr McGrath had increased to $14,899,252 from the previous year, namely by $900,000. Mr McGrath could also not explain this apparent coincidence.
62 In the year ending 30 June 2015, DC paid MBL $350,000. Again, the balance sheet of DW recorded that Mr McGrath's loan increased to $15,316,309, an increase in excess of $350,000. It was not clear what the extra amount was for. Mr McGrath had no explanation for the increase, as to the $350,000 or the additional amount.
63 The public examination of Mr McGrath that was conducted in the liquidation of DC is illuminating with respect to the above payments and purported loan from Mr McGrath to DW. The transcript is not inadmissible hearsay because Mr McGrath was a witness in the proceeding: Evidence Act 1995 (Cth), s 64(3). In the examination, he said: "I certainly don't have a debt due from [DW] to Steve McGrath for $14 million at all", "I can tell you I didn't pay 100,000", and that he "[p]ersonally didn't pay 100,000 a month. Like, that's definite". When cross-examined on these statements, Mr McGrath said that he "probably never remitted the funds to [MBL]."