5 McHugh J, in referring to the 15 propositions formulated by Santow J in Re HIH Insurance Ltd (in prov liq); Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Adler (2002) 42 ACSR 80 at 97-99, said that although they assume that a disqualification is protective rather than punitive, they "track the various matters that judges take into account in the criminal jurisdiction when sentencing offenders" (at par 48). It was the propositions relating to the recognition that disqualification provisions also have objectives of personal and general deterrence (propositions 5 and 6) that McHugh J said "strongly resemble principles under the criminal law" (at par 50). His Honour expressed the view that the factors of "retribution, deterrence, reformation, contrition and protection of the public" that are taken into account in the criminal jurisdiction are also "central" to determining whether an order for disqualification should be made under the Corporations Act (at 52). His Honour continued:
53 A good example of the approach of judges in this particular area of the law is found in the judgment of Bryson J in Re One.Tel Ltd (in liq); Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Rich . His Honour's reasons show that the jurisdiction cannot be characterised as purely protective. They reflect an approach that can be found in many other cases concerning the disqualification from office of company officers. Among the matters Bryson J thought were relevant were the second defendant's age and stage of career at which disqualification would fall, the office held, the extent of the second defendant's responsibilities in terms of the value of assets, the complexity of the activities and the number of people within the range of adverse effects of the second defendant's breaches of duty. His Honour warned that the guidance to be obtained from other decisions with respect to the reasons for ordering disqualification and the period of disqualification is limited. Each decision is closely related to its own facts, which tend to be highly complex. Further, the circumstances of each defendant are special to that person. Bryson J also said that there is "not much to be gained from considering or attempting to classify periods of disqualification which have been imposed in other cases". That is because breaches of the Corporations Act , the circumstances of the breaches and the outcomes of the breaches, including the number of persons and the value of the interests affected, may take many forms. In addition, the personal circumstances of persons in breach vary greatly.
6 Although the High Court was dealing with the later sections, these principles apply equally to the sections as they were at the time of the contraventions in this case. I intend to take these matters and the factors referred to by Santow J to which McHugh J referred, into account in considering whether orders sought by the plaintiff should be made.
Bankruptcy
7 The first, second and fourth defendants, John Barrie Loiterton (JBL), Ian Robert Hall (Hall), and Peter James Loiterton (PJL), were each made bankrupt on 12 July 2002, 16 May 2002 and 10 February 2003 respectively. A "creditor" requires leave to proceed or to continue proceedings against a bankrupt "in respect of a provable debt": s 58(3)(b) Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth). The plaintiff had originally sought orders for compensation against all of the defendants but abandoned those claims against the bankrupt defendants on the basis that, on reflection, it needed leave to proceed against them and had not sought and did not seek such leave. However the plaintiff maintains its claim against each of the bankrupt defendants for the imposition of a pecuniary penalty under the Act and submitted that such a penalty is not a provable debt. The bankrupt defendants did not make any submissions to the contrary.
8 Section 58(3) of the Bankruptcy Act provides:
(3) Except as provided by this Act, after a debtor has become a bankrupt, it is not competent for a creditor:
(a) to enforce any remedy against the person or the property of the bankrupt in respect of a provable debt: or
(b) except with the leave of the Court and on such terms as the Court thinks fit, to commence any legal proceeding in respect of a provable debt or take any fresh step in such a proceeding.
9 Prior to 30 June 1998 s 1317EA of the Corporations Law provided, inter alia, that a Court could order a person to pay a pecuniary penalty if satisfied that the person had contravened a civil penalty provision. During this period s 82(3AA) of the Bankruptcy Act provided that an amount payable "under an order made under paragraph 1317EA(3)(b) of the Corporations Law of a State or Territory" was not provable. Under the amendments to the Law and the Act since that date this Court applies corresponding provisions of the Act such that any order made under s 1317EA of the Law is taken to be made under s 1317G of the Act. Section 82(3AA) of the Bankruptcy Act provides that "an amount payable under an order made under section 1317G of the Corporations Act 2001 is not provable in bankruptcy". In all the circumstances I am satisfied that the plaintiff is able to proceed against the bankrupt defendants for the imposition of a pecuniary penalty without the leave of the Federal Court.
Orders sought
10 The plaintiff seeks an order against each of the defendants prohibiting them from managing a corporation: 25 years for JBL, 20 years for Hall, 15 years for Sapier and 3 years for PJL. The plaintiff has accepted that under the provisions in force at the time the pre-requisite to the making of such orders is that the Court must be satisfied that the contravention(s) is/are serious (s 1317EA). Under the new provisions the Court has to be satisfied that the disqualification is justified (s 206E). The plaintiff also seeks against each of the defendants the imposition of a pecuniary penalty; $500,000 for JBL; $350,000 for Hall; $250,000 for Sapier and $5,000 for PJL. Compensation in favour of CCL is sought against Sapier in the amount of $1,814,768.
John Barrie Loiterton (JBL)
11 The liability judgment should be read in conjunction with this judgment. The references in this judgment to paragraph numbers are references to the paragraphs of the liability judgment. I will adopt the description of the categories of conduct referred to in the liability judgment in respect of which declarations of contravention have been made.
12 The plaintiff claimed and JBL accepted that JBL was in a leadership position of a listed company, CCL, as chairman and chief executive officer. He was a director of CCL and was also a director of Signature, Ansair, JRA, Austchas and IDC at the relevant times referred to in the judgment.
13 JBL's conduct in relation to the Pre-Acquisition Fees (pars 126-245) was dishonest and the declarations of contravention made on 17 May 2004 were:
1. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL:- on about 26 June 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's December 1996 Half-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit included fictitious fees, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition Fee of $1,450,000, the Ansair Pre-acquisition Fee of $800,000 and the Signature Pre-acquisition fee of $252,300.
2. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit wrongly included fictitious fees, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition fee of $1,450,000, the Ansair Pre-acquisition Fee of $800,000 and the Signature Pre-acquisition Fee of $252,300.
3. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved CCL's 1996/1997 Full-Year Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of CCL's profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported profit wrongly included a fictitious fee, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition Fee of $1,450,000.
4. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL I that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL:- in about the period August 1996 to September 1997 he knowingly caused CCL to charge JRA a fictitious fee, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition Fee of $1,450,000.
5. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of Ansair, contravened s.232(2) in relation to Ansair in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of Ansair:- in about the period August 1996 to September 1997 he knowingly caused Ansair to charge a fictitious fee to JRA, namely the Ansair Pre-acquisition Fee of $800,000.
6. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of Signature, contravened s.232(2) in relation to Signature in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of Signature:- in about the period August 1996 to September 1997 he knowingly caused Signature to charge a fictitious fee to JRA, namely the Signature Pre-acquisition Fee of $232,500.
7. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of JRA, contravened s.232(2) in relation to JRA in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of JRA:- in about the period August 1996 to September 1997 he knowingly caused JRA to be charged fictitious fees by CCL, Ansair and Signature, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition Fee of $1,450,000, the Ansair Pre-acquisition Fee of $800,000 and the Signature Pre-acquisition Fee of $252,300.
8. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.295A:- on about 26 June 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's December 1996 Half-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit wrongly included fictitious fees, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition Fee of $1,450,000, the Ansair Pre-acquisition Fee of $800,000 and the Signature Pre-acquisition Fee of $252,300.
9. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.295A:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit wrongly included fictitious fees, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition Fee of $1,450,000, the Ansair Pre-acquisition Fee of $800,000 and the Signature Pre-acquisition Fee of $252,300.
10. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.292:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of CCL's 1996/1997 Full-Year Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of CCL's profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported profit wrongly included a fictitious fee, namely the CCL Pre-acquisition Fee of $1,450,000.
14 The plaintiff submitted that there were features of JBL's conduct that should be emphasised in the consideration of the imposition of any penalty. That conduct included creating and signing the Minutes of 28 June 1996 when he knew no such meeting had been held (pars. 152-154, 158, 232-233) and procuring senior officers of the Group to act dishonestly, namely Hall, whom he directed to charge the Signature Pre-acquisition Fee of $252,300 and Ellis, whom he directed to charge the other two Pre-acquisition Fees (pars. 163-164, 176, 229-230, 235, 238-242).
15 JBL's conduct in relation to the Signature Exclusivity Fees (pars 271 and 335) was also dishonest. The declarations of contravention made on 17 May 2004 in respect of that conduct were:
11. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL:- on about 26 June 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's December 1996 Half-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit included fictitious fees, namely the Signature Exclusivity Fees of $1,541,000.
12. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit wrongly included fictitious fees, namely the Signature Exclusivity Fees of $2,801,100 (which included the Signature Exclusivity Fees of $1,541,000).
14. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.295A:- on about 26 June 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's December 1996 Half-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit wrongly included fictitious fees, namely the Signature Exclusivity Fees of $1,541,000.
15. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.295A:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported consolidated profit wrongly included fictitious fees, namely the Signature Exclusivity Fees of $2,801,100 (which included the Signature Exclusivity Fees of $1,541,000).
16 The plaintiff highlighted JBL's conduct in approving the scheme put forward for charging these fees and signing fictitious documents, namely the Minutes of an IDC Directors' meeting of 11 July 1996 and the Minutes of CCL Directors' meeting of 5 October 1996 when he knew that no such meetings had been held (pars. 288-290, 309-310, 315).
17 JBL's conduct in respect of the Origin Fee (pars 336 and 388) was dishonest and declarations of contravention made on 17 May 2004 in respect of that conduct were:
16. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL;- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because they failed to disclose that the consolidated profit included a sum of money, namely the Origin Fee of $770,000, that John Barrie Loiterton had injected into Signature on no commercial basis at all.
17. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of Signature, contravened s.232(2) in relation to Signature in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of Signature:- in about June 1997 he caused Signature to record the receipt of a sum of money, namely the Origin Fee of $770,000, as a commercial fee from a third party when in truth it was money that John Barrie Loiterton had injected into Signature on no commercial basis at all.
18. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.295A:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because they failed to disclose that the consolidated profit included a sum of money, namely the Origin Fee of $770,000, that John Barrie Loiterton had injected into Signature on no commercial basis at all.
19. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.298:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that those accounts were not made out in accordance with accounting standard AASB1017 because they failed to disclose that the consolidated profit included a sum of money, namely the Origin Fee of $770,000, that John Barrie Loiterton had injected into Signature on no commercial basis at all.
18 The plaintiff originally claimed that JBL's conduct in respect of the Revesby Profit (pars 389-476) was dishonest. That claim was withdrawn and a claim was made that he had contravened s. 232(4). The declarations of contravention made against JBL on 17 May 2004 in respect of the Revesby Profit were:
20. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(4) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted in the exercise of his powers or the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL without exercising the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in a like position in a corporation would exercise in the corporation's circumstances:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts knowing that the reported consolidated profit included the Revesby Profit of $1,899,072 but without making proper enquiries as to whether the inclusion of that amount caused those accounts not to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them.
21. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of Austchas, contravened s.232(4) in relation to Austchas in that, by the following specified act, he acted in the exercise of his powers or the discharge of his duties as a director of Austchas without exercising the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in a like position in a corporation would exercise in the corporation's circumstances:- on 30 June 1997 he approved the execution by Austchas of a contract for the sale of a property at Revesby knowing that private companies associated with himself and the second defendant were funding the deposit because the purchaser itself lacked the funds, and knowing that the purchaser was not an independent third party, but without making proper enquiries as to the identity of the purchaser, the likelihood of the purchaser completing the purchase and the true nature of the transaction.
22. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified omission, he failed to take reasonable steps to secure compliance with s.295A:- before he approved on about 10 October 1997 the issue of Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full-Year Consolidated Accounts, knowing that the reported consolidated profit included the Revesby Profit of $1,899,072, he failed to make proper enquiries as to whether the inclusion of that amount caused those accounts not to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them.
19 Some of the features of JBL's conduct in respect of the Revesby profit highlighted by the plaintiff included the pressure he applied to Hall and Ellis to sell the property by 30 June 1997 (392 and 402), the extraordinary conduct in funding the deposit for the purchase through his own company and that of Hall's and his main concern that his private company, Leisuremark, might not be repaid $200,000 (448).
20 JBL's conduct in relation to the Dividends (pars 545 and 585) was in parts dishonest and in parts negligent. The declarations of contravention made on 17 May 2004 in respect off that conduct were as follows:
23. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(2) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved CCL's 1996/1997 Full-Year Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of CCL's profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported profit wrongly included the Signature February 1997 Dividend of $1,500,000 which had been paid by Signature otherwise than out of profits.
24. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of Signature, contravened s.232(2) in relation to Signature in that, by the following specified act, he acted dishonestly in the exercise of his powers and the discharge of his duties as a director of Signature:- on about 28 February 1997 he caused Signature to pay, purportedly out of profits, the Signature February 1997 Dividend of $1,500,000 when he knew that Signature had no profits from which to pay the dividend.
25. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he was knowingly the cause of a default under s.292:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved the issue of CCL's 1996/1997 Full-Year Accounts knowing that those accounts failed to give a true and fair view of CCL's profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them because the reported profit wrongly included the Signature February 1997 Dividend of $1,500,000 which had been paid by Signature otherwise than out of profits.
26. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(4) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted in the exercise of his powers or the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL without exercising the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in a like position in a corporation would exercise in the corporation's circumstances:- on about 10 October 1997 he approved CCL's 1996/1997 Full-Year Accounts knowing that the reported consolidated profit included the Austchas June 1997 Dividend of $1,899,072, but without making proper enquiries as to whether the inclusion of that amount caused those accounts not to give a true and fair view of Clifford Group's consolidated profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them by reason that the dividend might not have been paid out of profits.
27. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of Austchas, contravened s.232(4) in relation to Austchas in that, by the following specified act, he acted in the exercise of his powers or the discharge of his duties as a director of Austchas without exercising the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in a like position in a corporation would exercise in the corporation's circumstances:- on about 30 June 1997 when Austchas had no profits from which to pay a dividend, he caused Austchas to pay, purportedly out of profits, the Austchas 1997 Dividend of $1,899,072 without making proper enquiries as to whether Austchas had profits from which to pay the dividend.
28. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.318(1) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified omission, he failed to take reasonable steps to secure compliance with s.292:- before he approved on about 10 October 1997 the issue of CCL's Full-Year Accounts, knowing that that the reported profit included the Austchas 1997 Dividend of $1,899,072, he failed to make proper enquiries as to whether the inclusion of that amount caused those accounts not to give a true and fair view of CCL's profit or loss for the accounting period covered by them by reason that the dividend might not have been paid out of profits.
29. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(4) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted in the exercise of his powers or the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL without exercising the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in a like position in a corporation would exercise in the corporation's circumstances:- on about 30 April 1997 when CCL had no profits from which to pay a dividend, he approved the payment on that day of the CCL April 1997 Dividend of $1,425,825, purportedly out of profits, without making proper enquiries as to whether CCL had profits from which to pay the dividend.
30. A declaration that the first defendant John Barrie Loiterton, when a director of CCL, contravened s.232(4) in relation to CCL in that, by the following specified act, he acted in the exercise of his powers or the discharge of his duties as a director of CCL without exercising the degree of care and diligence that a reasonable person in a like position in a corporation would exercise in the corporation's circumstances:- on about 26 November 1997, when CCL had no profits from which to pay a dividend, he approved the payment on 17 December 1997, at which time CCL still had no profits from which to pay a dividend, of the CCL December 1997 Dividend of $2,905,509, purportedly out of profits, without making proper enquiries as to whether CCL had profits from which to pay the dividend.
21 The plaintiff emphasised JBL's knowledge that the dividends that were paid relied upon the false profits brought to account from the various transactions the subject of the declarations of contraventions involving dishonest conduct. The plaintiff has compared the reported profits of the Group and CCL with the various amounts that were included in the reported profit in relation to which dishonesty declarations and negligence declarations have been made against JBL. That comparison is as follows:
(a) Clifford Group's December 1996 Half-Year Consolidated Accounts:-
reported consolidated profit (par 63) $8,405,000 includes:
Pre-acquisition Fees ( dishonesty) $2,502,300
Exclusivity fees ( dishonesty) 1,541,000
(all dishonesty) $4,043,300
(b) Clifford Group's 1996/1997 Full Year Consolidated Accounts:-
reported consolidated profit (par 63) $11,511,000 includes:
Pre-acquisition Fees ( dishonesty) $2,502,300
Exclusivity Fees ( dishonesty) 2,801,100
Origin Fee ( dishonesty) 770,000
Revesby Profit ( negligence) 1,899,072
($6.07m dishonesty : $1.90m negligence) $7,972,472
(c) CCL's 1996/1997 Full-Year Accounts:
reported profit (jmt para 64) $4,120,000 includes:
CCL Pre-acquisition Fee (dishonesty) $1,450,000
Signature Feb 1997 Div'd
( dishonesty ) 1,500,000
Austchas June 1997 Div'd
( negligence) 1,899,072
($2.95m dishonesty : $1.90 negligence ) $4,849,072
22 The plaintiff submitted that JBL's contraventions should really be seen as involving 10 separate and distinct matters over a 12 month period. Those matters are: (1) the charging of the Pre-acquisition Fees (dishonesty); (2) the charging of the Exclusivity Fee (dishonesty); (3) the charging of the Origin Fee (dishonesty); (4) the approval of the Revesby Transaction (negligence); (5) the payment of the Signature February 1997 Dividend (dishonesty); (6) the payment of the Austchas June 1997 dividend (negligence); (7) the payment of the CCL April 1997 dividend (negligence); (8) the payment of the CCL December 1997 dividend (negligence); (9) the approval of Clifford's December 1996 Half-year Consolidated Accounts (dishonesty); and (10) the approval of Clifford's 1996/1997 Consolidated Accounts and CCL's 1996/1997 Accounts (dishonesty and negligence).
23 The plaintiff submitted that JBL's contraventions were very serious and that there are no mitigating circumstances. It was submitted that this justifies the imposition of a ban on JBL from managing a corporation for 25 years.