186 If the directors of Buzzle determined that there was sufficient cash flow to make the payment of $4.7 million, the Payments Deed and the Merger Deed required Buzzle to pay those amounts to the Resellers (cl 6.5(b)). Buzzle paid the $4.7 million to the plaintiff but did not receive a credit to its account with the plaintiff because the Resellers' accounts were credited with the relevant portion of the amount. As stated above, Mr Hartono advised Buzzle that it was easier and quicker to make the payments direct to the plaintiff.
187 The directors of Buzzle as and from 14 September 2000 included Liu, Mr Hartono and a number of the principals of the Resellers. In deciding to pay the amounts totalling $4.7 million in October and November 2000 the directors of Buzzle are taken to have decided that Buzzle had adequate cash flows to pay the amounts. Whoever Buzzle paid made no difference to the debt Buzzle owed to the plaintiff. If it paid the plaintiff instead of the Resellers (as it did) and there was a credit to the Resellers accounts (which there was), the Buzzle debt would be the same if Buzzle had paid the Resellers. Buzzle was not going to receive a credit to its account on either method of payment. The sooner the Apple Debt was repaid, the sooner Buzzle would be freed from the restriction in incurring financial indebtedness. The fact that Buzzle decided to make the payment direct to the plaintiff rather than to the Resellers does not affect Liu's liability under the Guarantee.
188 In my view it is not possible for Liu, as a director of Buzzle, to take the benefits of the payment of the $4.7 million: (1) to pay that proportion of the Apple Debt thus freeing up, or moving closer to freeing up, the trading arrangements for Buzzle; and (2) to have the directors'/Resellers' account credited in the relevant proportion; and then claim that such amounts should be credited to the Buzzle account for the purpose of reducing the directors' liability under the Guarantee.
189 I am not satisfied that the Buzzle debt should be reduced by $4,779,916.35.
Unauthorised Reversal of $1,090,226.90
190 On 17 October 2000, $1,090,226.90 was credited to the Mac's Place account with the plaintiff. On 18 October 2000 the sum of $1,090,226.90 was debited to the account of Mac's Place and credited to the Choice Connections account. That was done pursuant to a request from Mr Hartono as recorded in an internal e-mail of the plaintiff: "The Mac's Place Stock Value of $1,090,226.90 has been included in the credit to Choice Connections as requested by Donald" (Ex. Q; p. 9). Liu claims that this was an unauthorised reversal. The Cross-Claim deals with this alleged unauthorised reversal in a claim that Aircent had made an overpayment.
191 On 16 November 2000 Stephen Ong, the former eighth defendant in these proceedings, wrote by e-mail to an employee of Buzzle, Simon Obel (Ex. T). Mr Ong sent copies of the e-mail to a number of people including Liu. It was in the following terms:
Stock transferred from MP to Buzzle on 9/9/00 $2,227,928.62
Payment from Buzzle for the above on 31/10/00:
1. To CCA $1,023,758.21
2. To Apple $1,204,107.41
The above payment cleared all Apple account for MP.
Account owing from MP to CCA:
16/10/00 Old MP $1,096,969.25
16/10/00 New MP $355,780.73
Total $1,452,749.98
Less $200,000.00 on 22/9/00
Less $1,023,758.21 on 31/10/00
Net $228,991.77
192 It was submitted on Liu's behalf that even if this was "some sort of debt owed by Aircent to Choice Connections, absent proper consent, there is no justification for Apple debiting the amount to Mac's Place in the manner it did" (Subs. 29/11/02; par 10). Liu was cross-examined in relation to this claim and asked what he did on receipt of the e-mail between Mr Ong and Mr Obel. Liu agreed that between 29 August and 13 September 2000 Mr Hartono/Choice Connections managed Mac's Place with Scott Thompson. Liu agreed that there was an arrangement between himself/Aircent and Mr Hartono/Choice Connections that goods delivered to Mac's Place would be billed to Choice Connections (tr. 1182).
193 Liu gave evidence that he could not recall exactly what he did after he received the copy of the Ong e-mail, but that he said he did do something (tr. 1179, l. 47 to 48). He agreed it was a significant matter but that he could not recall whom he called, although it could have been Mr Obel (tr. 1180). Liu's evidence on this topic does not serve him well (tr. 1183-1184). It appeared to me that he was not answering the questions posed and was doing so intentionally. However with persistent cross-examination Liu ultimately agreed that Aircent owed money to Choice Connections for stock and that Mr Hartono did not chase Aircent for the payment in November 2000 (tr. 1185-1186). He also agreed that it was obvious that Choice Connections had been paid and conceded that he left it up to Mr Hartono to "sort it out" (tr. 1186, l. 47 and tr. 1188, l. 3 to 16).
194 In the light of this evidence I am not satisfied that this was an unauthorised reversal and it does not affect the amount of the debt for which Liu is liable.
Money received from other guarantors
195 Liu claimed that on a proper construction of the Guarantee the plaintiff is obliged to reduce the amount of the debt by the amounts received from other Guarantors before calculating Liu's 18.5% liability under the Guarantee. The plaintiff submitted that such a proposition is apt in instances in which guarantors jointly guarantee the whole of the principal amount but is not apt in this case where the Guarantors guarantee the whole debt with a limitation on their total liability, being their individual guaranteed share.
196 The plaintiff submitted that Liu's contention makes commercial nonsense of the Guarantee. Mr Hayes QC cautioned against approaching the matter on the basis of commercial sense and relied in support upon Fitzwood v Unique Goal Pty Ltd (in liq) (2001) 188 ALR 566 in which Finkelstein J said at 580 in par 47:
However, a judge must be cautious when there is an attempt to sway a case by reference to commercial good sense, because views may easily differ on what is good sense, and in some cases a party is willing to bargain away a good result on one aspect of a contract because of a perceived advantage in another: Bank of Nova Scotia v Hellenic Mutual War Risks Assn (Bermuda) Ltd [1990] 1 QB 818; [1989] 3 All ER 628.
197 The plaintiff has received payments from other Guarantors but has refused to provide Liu with details of the amounts that have been received. Liu submitted that this refusal is an act that potentially prejudices him in the sense contemplated in Black v The Ottoman Bank (1862) 15 Moo PCC 472; 15 ER 573.
198 If Liu's contention is correct it would mean that those who pay their share of the Guaranteed Money first, even if in the same percentage as Liu, would be obliged to pay more than Liu. For example, if the debt is $100,000 and the first guarantor paid his share at 18.5% being $18,500, the next guarantor whose liability is 18.5% would only have to pay $15,077 ($100,000 - $18,500 = $81,500 x .185 = $15,077). It would mean that the creditor would not be able to recover the debt in full because there would be a reducing amount each time a payment was made.
199 The issue is what the parties intended in signing the Guarantees. The combined Guaranteed Shares (cl 1.1) totalled 100%. "Guaranteed Money" was defined as all money "which is now or which may hereafter become or remain due and owing or unpaid by the Debtor" (cl 1.1). The "Debtor" was defined as "Buzzle" (cl 1.1). "Guarantor" was defined to mean "each of them severally" (cl 1.2). The Guarantors guaranteed the payment when due of the Guaranteed Money, that is the amount owing by the Debtor, but limited in their individual shares of that amount (cl 4.1).
200 It is my view that on a proper construction of the Guarantee, the amount of the debt, the Guaranteed Money, is the amount unpaid by the Debtor, Buzzle, at the date of the demand. It is that amount reduced by the amounts received from the Receivers, for the Debtor, that the Guarantors have agreed to pay in their respective percentages. It is not that amount reduced by amounts paid by other Guarantors. It is only reduced by the amounts paid by the Receivers, thus affecting the amount then remaining due by the Debtor. The amount of the debt is therefore not reduced by amounts paid by other Guarantors.
GST Adjustments
201 It is common ground that in calculating the debt referred to in the Certificate the plaintiff did not deduct the amounts representing GST. Liu submitted that the plaintiff is entitled to a refund from the Australian Taxation Office of an amount equal to 1/11th of the principal debt before payments from Guarantors are taken into account. It is submitted that the amount in the Certificate $14,176,496.10 less $605,000 received by the Receivers, totalling $13,571,496.10 should be reduced by 1/11th thus giving a figure for the debt of $13,571,496 - $1,233,772 = $12,337,724.
202 Buzzle commenced trading in September 2000 and all relevant transactions between the plaintiff and Buzzle were subject to GST. The plaintiff was liable to pay GST in an amount equal to 1/11th of the price it charged Buzzle for the supply: sections 9-5, 9-10(1) & (2), 9-25, 9-40, 9-70 and 9-75 of the GST Act. The plaintiff was required to account for GST on a non-cash basis: sections 29-40 and 29-45 of the GST Act.