The purported appointment of Rarebreed as trustee of the Trust
49As I have set out above, by clause 6(i)(a) of the Deed, Mr Cullen was empowered to appoint a new trustee of the Trust. However, by reason of clause 6(iii) of the Deed, such power was not to be exercised by Mr Cullen in his own favour. The clause provided that the power of appointment was not to be exercised "in favour of (...) the person exercising the power of appointment".
50This prohibition is consistent with, and indeed reflects, the law that the power to remove and appoint a trustee must be exercised for the benefit of the beneficiaries of the Trust, and not for the benefit of the appointor.
51Thus is Re Burton; Wily v Burton (1994) 126 ALR 557 at 559-560 Davies J held: -
"When the power is contained in a deed of trust, the donee of the power is even more constrained to act in the interests of the persons for whose benefit the power was conferred. Thus, in Re Skeats' Settlement (1889) 42 Ch D 522, Kay J held that, as a power of appointing new trustee was fiduciary power, the donee of the power may not exercise it so as to appoint himself. At 527, His Lordship said:
...the universal rule is that a man should not be judge in his own case; that he should not decide that he is the best possible person, and say that he ought to be the trustee.
Naturally no human being can be imagined who would not have some bias one way or the other as to his own personal fitness, and to appoint himself among other people, or excluding them to appoint himself, would certainly be an improper exercise of any power of selection of a fiduciary character such as this is.
See also Re Newen; Newen v Barnes [1894] 2 Ch 297 at 308-9.
Statutory provisions, such as s 6(3) of the Trustee Act 1925 (NSW), which permit such an appointment to be made, do not affect the underlying equitable principle."
52Further in Fitzwood Pty Ltd v Unique Goal Pty Ltd (2001) 188 ALR 566 (reversed on other grounds at [2002] FCAFC 285) Finkelstein J held at [98]: -
"I am prepared to accept that a power of removal of a trustee may be a fiduciary power that must be exercised for the benefit of the beneficiaries and not for the benefit of the donee of the power, at least when the donee is not a beneficiary, although much will depend upon the terms of the trust instrument: Re Skeats' Settlement (1889) 42 Ch D 522 at 526; [1886-90] All ER Rep 989 at 990; Inland Revenue Commissioners v Schroder [1983] STC 480 at 500."
53In Hillcrest (Ilford) Pty Ltd v Kingsford (Ilford) Pty Ltd (No 2) [2010] NSWSC 285, Biscoe AJ considered a clause relevantly indistinguishable from clause 6(iii) of the deed and held at [42]: -
"The prohibition in (...) the trust deed is not limited to an appointment of the person exercising the power of appointment. The prohibition extends beyond that by the words 'in favour'. Those words should be given their normal meaning. The Macquarie Dictionary (3rd ed) gives the following meaning to 'in favour of': 'in support of; on the side of; to the advantage of'. Similarly, the Shorter Oxford Dictionary (5th ed) gives the following meaning to 'in favour of': 'on behalf of, in support of, on the side of, to the advantage of'."
54I agree with these observations and consider that they apply, directly, to the present case.
55In my opinion, by purporting to appoint Rarebreed as trustee of the Trust, Mr Cullen was purporting to exercise the power in his own favour - that is "in support of" or "on the side of" or to "the advantage" of himself.
56In my opinion, the evidence reveals that Mr Cullen was motivated to appoint Rarebreed by two things. The first was Mrs Cullen's purported appointment of Mr Chamberlain as administrator of Austec. The second was Mr Cullen's suspicion that Mrs Cullen had removed funds from Austec's bank account. Thus, immediately on receipt of Mrs Cullen's solicitor's letter of 8 July 2011 enclosing the purported appointment of Mr Chamberlain as administrator, Mr Cullen's solicitor asked for a copy of the Deed to "see what we can do".
57Mr Cullen received advice that he had "unfettered power" to remove Austec as trustee and, in my opinion, Mr Cullen proceeded on that basis.
58According to Mr Cullen's solicitor's letter of 14 July 2011: -
"[Mrs Cullen's] actions in appointing Mr Chamberlain as Administrator of the Company have placed at risk the viability and potential value of the business. In these circumstances our client is of the opinion that he has no choice other than to remove [Austec] as trustee of the Trust."
59In his affidavit evidence in these proceedings, Mr Cullen said that, faced with Mrs Cullen's purported appointment of Mr Chamberlain as administrator; -
"I decided that the best way in which to protect the Business as a going concern was to remove Austec as trustee and appoint another. I did this on 14 July 2011."
60But Mr Cullen did not purport to appoint a neutral, independent party, as trustee. Rather he purported to appoint as trustee a company, Rarebreed, whose sole director and shareholder was Mr Sanbrook who was an employee of the Business.
61Mr McKeand SC, who appeared for Mr Cullen and Rarebreed accepted that Mr Cullen had "an influence" on Rarebreed and that Rarebreed was "subject to guidance" by Mr Cullen.
62In my opinion, this is not a sufficient description of the relationship between Mr Cullen and Mr Sanbrook.
63Mr Cullen said that he had "been authorised by Rarebreed to act on its behalf" and agreed that he alone was the signatory on the bank account, opened on 24 June 2011 into which, since 18 July 2011, the income of the Business has been deposited.
64Mr Ireland QC, who appeared for Mrs Cullen, made the following submissions, which I accept to be an accurate statement of the effect of the evidence: -
"The participation of Rarebreed and Mr Sanbrook has been neither genuine nor independent. Mr Sanbrook has given no evidence in these proceedings. Mr Sanbrook is a 25 year old man who has worked as a storeman in the business since he was 17. He has acted under direction from Mr Cullen for the whole of his working life and has been a subordinate to Mr Cullen's management of the business. Mr Cullen's management of the business has continued through the period of his wife' s participation as sole director and shareholder of Austec and now Mr Sanbrook's supposed participation as sole director and shareholder of Rarebreed. In fact, Mr Cullen is now calling the shots. He controls the finances. Mr Sanbrook is not a signatory on the bank account which operates the business. All of the income of the business is under the direct and exclusive control of Mr Cullen."
65In my opinion, Mr Cullen purported to appoint Rarebreed as trustee so that in the face of the increasingly acrimonious relationship he had with Mrs Cullen, he could assume control of the Business.
66He may well have believed that it was in the best interests of the Business that he take such control, and he may be right about that.
67But that is not the point. By reason of clause 6(iii) of the Deed he was not permitted to exercise his appointment in his own favour. I think it plain that he has purported to do so.
68For the same reasons, my opinion is that Mr Cullen's purported appointment of Rarebreed as trustee of the Trust was a fraud on the power of appointment.
69As Young et al in On Equity, (2009) Lawbook Company at [8.880] pointed out: -
"In the present context, 'fraud' does not necessary denote conduct that will be termed 'fraud' at common law. Rather, fraud on a power means, in the words of Lord Parker in Vatcher v Poull 'that the power has been exercised for a purpose, or with an intention, beyond the scope of or not justified, by the instrument creating the power' Vatcher v Poull is the leading case on fraud on a power, and the above passage has been considered on many occasions since, particularly in Commonwealth v Colonial Coming, Spinning and Weaving Co Limited, where Higgins J cited Lord Parker's words with approval, and went on to note that fraud on a power was established by showing that the execution of a power was for purposes foreign to the power'." (citations omitted).
70In my opinion, Mr Cullen's purported appointment of Rarebreed was not a step taken by him to promote the objects of the trust. Rather, it was to ensure that he achieved control of the Trust and thus the Business.
71It follows, in my opinion, that Mr Cullen's purported appointment of Rarebreed was of no effect.
72Thus, Austec remains trustee of the Trust.