5085/04 GAIL MARGARET BENNETT v CLARK PHILIP ROSS GOODWIN
JUDGMENT
HIS HONOUR:
Nature of Claim
1 This is a claim to recover money alleged to have been lent, together with interest and enforcement expenses, and for enforcement of an alleged agreement to give security over certain land for those amounts. This judgment relates to a hearing which was a trial of all questions in the proceedings except the value of a certain spreader, tractor, and accessories.
The Factual Background
2 The plaintiff and the defendant met in about 2000. A relationship developed between them, and they became engaged to be married.
3 The plaintiff has at all relevant times lived at a property known as 'Sunning Hill', located at Marshdale Road, Dungog. Title to that property was, prior to January 2003, held by Rodabi Pty Ltd ("Rodabi"), a company controlled by the plaintiff's parents. It had been purchased by Rodabi as trustee for the plaintiff with the proceeds of a life insurance policy on the life of the plaintiff's late husband, who had died in 1995.
4 The defendant at all relevant times has been the registered proprietor of a two-thirds interest as tenant in common in a rural property known as 'Summer Leaves', situated in Clarence Town Road, Dungog. The registered proprietor of the other one-third interest is and at all relevant times has been his mother.
5 The defendant developed a plan whereby 'Summer Leaves' would be subdivided, and various lots within it sold for use as rural weekenders. The defendant and plaintiff planned that when the subdivision and sale was completed the plaintiff, who has a long-standing involvement with horses, would be able to carry out various activities connected with horse breeding and horse riding on the part of the property which the defendant kept. As well, they had a plan to build a house which would be their matrimonial home on part of 'Summer Leaves'.
6 Wadley Holdings Pty Ltd ("Wadley Holdings") is a company of which the plaintiff's parents were directors, and in which Rodabi was a shareholder. Prior to May 2001 'Sunning Hill' had been mortgaged to the National Australia Bank ("NAB") to secure a debt owed by Wadley Holdings. That loan was one of around $15,000, and had been incurred by the plaintiff. The plaintiff's parents had given NAB a guarantee of that debt.
7 In May 2001 a conversation took place between the plaintiff's father, Mr Finn, and the defendant, in which the defendant said that he understood that the company had a debt to the NAB of approximately $15,000, and that he would be prepared to take over the company and pay off the debt. The two men agreed that if the defendant paid off the debt, he could have the company. Documents were then executed to transfer the shareholding in the company to the defendant, and arrangements were made for him to become a director. However, the defendant did not pay off the debt owed by Wadley Holdings to NAB. He promised Mr Finn on several occasions that he would pay off the debt "tomorrow", but never did so.
8 In April 2002 NAB served a formal demand on Wadley Holdings, requiring it to repay the debt, which had by then grown to a little over $41,000. The debt continued unpaid for the whole of 2002.
9 On 23 April 2002 Wadley Holdings purchased a business called 'Just Ride Western Wear', which sold clothing to people involved in activities connected with horses. The defendant provided the whole of the purchase price which Wadley Holdings used to buy that business, $52,500. The plaintiff worked in that business, but derived no personal benefit from it. Ownership of the business name was transferred from Wadley Holdings to the plaintiff on 15 April 2003, in circumstances which were not examined in the evidence. The defendant executed a resignation as director of Wadley Holdings on 1 March 2003, but for reasons not satisfactorily explained by the evidence, that resignation has never been registered. Hence the defendant remains the director and shareholder of Wadley Holdings.
10 Cunningham & Adam are solicitors who acted for the plaintiff's parents. By September 2002 Cunningham & Adam were involved in the problem which had arisen concerning non-payment of Wadley Holdings' debt to NAB. In September 2002 the defendant gave Cunningham & Adam a cheque for $22,000, made out to their trust account, which was not met upon presentation, because the defendant had stopped payment on it.
11 Throughout the time relevant to this case the defendant was short of money. In October 2001 the defendant requested the plaintiff to lease a Jeep in her name, which was substantially for his use, because of his poor credit rating. She did so. In June 2002 the defendant's phone was cut off, and the telecommunications company with which he dealt would not re-connect it. He asked the plaintiff to supply him with a mobile phone, and to use her fax and email for business purposes, on the basis that he paid the entirety of her phone bills. She assented, and supplied him with her mobile phone and, afterwards, the defendant used that mobile phone as his own. The numbers which appeared on the defendant's letterhead for a telephone number, fax number, and mobile phone number were all those of the plaintiff. The defendant was regularly at the plaintiff's home at that time, five or six days a week, and sometimes twice per day, and he made frequent use of her email, fax and land line. However, he did not always pay the telephone bills. He asked the plaintiff to pay one phone bill in April 2003 from money the plaintiff had borrowed, in circumstances discussed later in this judgment, from Westpac, and promised it would be repaid. Over the period 13 September 2002 to 19 January 2004 he paid 16 cheques to Telstra totalling $55,010.70, all of which were dishonoured. He referred to cheques which he knew would be dishonoured as "dumb cheques". By December 2003 Telstra had disconnected the telephone from the plaintiff's house. That led to an agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant that certain cattle of the defendant would be sold to enable the plaintiff to receive the amount of the outstanding Telstra bills.
12 As well, in June 2003 he gave the plaintiff a cheque for $7,500 drawn on the account of a company called 'The Ensemble Group Pty Ltd'. That company was a company of which the defendant had been a director and secretary, but which had been deregistered in June 2001. The bank account on which the cheque was written had, of course, been closed by June 2003, and in consequence the cheque which he gave to the plaintiff was returned unpaid. He could offer no explanation in cross-examination as to why he had done this.
13 In the last few months of 2002 the defendant was associated with Mr John Rhodin in various business deals. One strand of these deals involved the defendant providing finance to Mr Rhodin for dealing in second-hand cars. Another strand concerned the subdivision and development of 'Summer Leaves'. On 26 September 2002, at Mr Rhodin's request, the defendant and his mother executed a joint venture agreement with Mr Rhodin's son concerning the development of 'Summer Leaves', under which Mr Rhodin Jnr would receive one-third of the net proceeds of the development.
14 'Summer Leaves' had two mortgages on it in the latter months of 2002 - a first mortgage to a mortgagee associated with Stacks Finance, and a second mortgage to, or to some entity associated with, Mr Russell Cupit. The plaintiff did not know about these two mortgages at that time. She was aware, however, that the defendant "had a bad credit rating and no-one would touch him".
The Oral Loan Agreement
15 The plaintiff had a conversation with the defendant, at a time she fixes as being approximately November 2002, to the following effect:
GOODWIN: "As you are aware I wish to develop my property but am unable to do so because I do not have the funds and am unable to obtain the necessary finance. My property is unencumbered. I need approximately $200,000 to proceed with the development. Will you loan me this amount? You could finance it by obtaining a loan from the bank that would need to be secured over your property. My business partner, John Rhodin, expects to be in funds to the sum of approximately $300,000 in three months time. I really need to proceed with this development immediately. You will be repaid in three months when I receive funds from John Rhodin. I will reimburse you for all expenses associated with obtaining the loan from the bank including legal fees and interest. It will not cost you anything."
BENNETT: "How on earth will I get this loan, I'm on a pension."
GOODWIN: "I will take care of that."
16 At that time, the plaintiff was not working, and her only source of income was a carer's pension, arising from her having responsibility for her teenage son who suffers from a medical condition called "Aspergers Disease".
17 After considering the matter she told the defendant she would give him the loan, saying that she would pay his development expenses as they were incurred rather than giving him the $200,000 in a lump sum.
18 It is possible that the plaintiff was a little out in her estimating the time of the conversation as "approximately November 2002", because there is a tax invoice dated 16 September 2002 for the valuation of the plaintiff's property for the purpose of obtaining the loan. However, if there was any mis-estimation of the date on the plaintiff's part, it is of no consequence.
19 Mr Rhodin, at the defendant's request brought documents from Sydney to the plaintiff's home to sign concerning the Westpac loan application. Those documents were filled out by the plaintiff and the defendant together over the course of twenty to thirty minutes, though Mr Rhodin was not privy to their discussion. The documents then were given to Mr Rhodin, who took them back to Sydney for delivery to Westpac.
20 The plaintiff's evidence is that she did not fill in an amount in the loan application. The defendant's evidence is that he did not in any way know of the amount of loan which had been applied for. Mr Rhodin's evidence is that he did not read the loan application and had no idea how much they were applying to borrow. I find that the defendant was aware that the plaintiff had made an application for a loan supported by information sufficient to justify a bank in making a loan of the order of $200,000.
21 At some stage in the last couple of months of 2002 the plaintiff received a loan offer from Westpac. The loan offer document bears a footer date of 29 November 2002, so it is likely that she received it on or soon after that date. It offered a loan of $196,000, secured by first mortgage over 'Sunning Hill'.
22 Around this time the defendant also asked the plaintiff whether she would be able to discharge the debt which Wadley Holdings owed to NAB from the loan monies which she would receive from Westpac. The plaintiff agreed to that. I mention that it would in any event have been necessary for the loan of Wadley Holdings to NAB to be discharged if NAB was to release its mortgage over 'Sunning Hill', and thereby clear the way for a grant of a first mortgage over 'Sunning Hill' to Westpac. The defendant had promised the plaintiff's father than he would discharge the debt of Wadley Holdings to NAB, but had not done so. Thus, by the plaintiff discharging that debt she was discharging an obligation of the defendant, at his request. That in itself is enough to create an implied obligation on the defendant to repay her. As well, I accept the following evidence of the plaintiff:
"Q. …So did he not promise to you that he would pay it out?
A. He promised to me that he would pay it out for my father.