Prior financial dealings between Scott Kitas and Joanna Kitas
7The security property is a house in Paddington. As at February 2007, when the mortgage was entered into, Joanna Kitas was the sole registered proprietor of the property. It is nonetheless relevant to consider her financial history and prior dealings with Scott Kitas in order to understand the context in which she was prevailed upon to grant the mortgage as security for a loan for his benefit.
8Joanna Kitas is an artist and part-time teachers' aide. Her income from the sale of her art appears to be sporadic. In 2006 her net business income exceeded $40,000 while in 2007 she returned a loss. Her regular income from her work as a teachers' aide is less than $25,000 per annum. Her past tax returns show additional income from rental properties, mostly offset by the expenses of those properties.
9There was a measure of vagueness in Joanna Kitas' evidence as to how she came to own the security property. It appears that, for much of her adult life, Ms Kitas has relied heavily on her mother in the management of her financial affairs, paying little attention herself to the detail of those matters. However, her mother was not called as a witness at the hearing. Although Ms Kitas has had a series of prior dealings in real property (including granting a number of mortgages), the principal evidence as to those dealings came from documents, with limited explanation from Ms Kitas.
10The property over which the loan was secured was bought in 1995 in the names of Joanna and Socrates Kitas as tenants in common in equal shares. According to Joanna Kitas, shortly after she finished high school, one or both of her parents (probably her mother) suggested that she and Scott buy the property. The purchase price was $290,000 (Exhibit 8, page 3). Joanna Kitas states that she contributed $40,000 to the purchase from her savings. Her mother organised a loan to her and Scott to assist in the purchase but the evidence does not reveal the amount of the loan or whether Scott Kitas contributed any part of the purchase price from his own funds.
11The property was rented from the time it was purchased. Joanna Kitas stated that she did not communicate or deal with the real estate agent who managed the tenancies. Her mother dealt with those matters.
12At some point, it appears Scott Kitas decided that he wished to withdraw from that investment. Their mother arranged for Joanna Kitas to buy him out. On 24 December 1998, Scott transferred his one half share in the property to Joanna. The form of transfer records that the consideration for that transaction was one dollar. However, Joanna Kitas stated in her evidence that Scott received $240,000 for his half share. She said (T159.24):
Scott had been paid for that. Whether it was through a loan that my mother may have organised from me or whether it was from my mother. He actually received $240,000. My mother would have just put the property on my name to - but, I mean, more than likely it did. It is her money, it's either her money or a loan, borrowed money from a bank, but he received $240,000 market price. It was quite high really, probably higher than he should have received.
13There were no documents in evidence to confirm Ms Kitas' recollection as to that issue. If Scott Kitas did receive $240,000, there was evidently a fraud on the revenue in the registration of the transfer for consideration of one dollar. However, there is no basis to conclude that Joanna Kitas was aware of that fact (if it be the fact).
14Joanna Kitas stated that, after she bought Scott's share of the property, she made payments to her mother from time to time which, so far as she was aware, were used to pay down or reduce a loan from the bank. Joanna Kitas did not know the name of the bank from which money had been borrowed, the amount of the loan, its term or the amount or frequency of repayments to be made. A search of the property discloses that there was no mortgage registered on the title during that time. It appears that her mother lodged a caveat on the title in August 1999, but Joanna Kitas understood that was for her protection (against unscrupulous third parties), not her mother's (T153.30). The caveat apparently recorded an equitable interest held by Joanna Kitas' parents to secure repayment of $20,000.
15The property continued to be rented until about November 2005, when Joanna Kitas moved in. Before moving into the property, she decided to renovate it. At her request, Scott Kitas organised a line of credit for her with Perpetual Trustees Victoria Ltd to pay for the renovations. The limit of the line of credit was $100,000, of which she drew down $46,961.25 (affidavit of Joanna Kitas sworn 24 January 2011 at paragraph 42; Exhibit 8 at page 78).
16The line of credit was secured by a registered first mortgage to Perpetual Trustees. Joanna Kitas acknowledges that she signed that mortgage and that, at the time she did so, she understood that she was responsible for repaying the money she had borrowed and that if she did not repay the money on time, the lender could take possession of and sell the property.
17Joanna Kitas moved into the renovated property in about November 2005. Some time after that, on an evening when Scott Kitas was at her house for dinner, he asked her whether he could borrow money from her using the line of credit. According to Joanna Kitas, he said:
I am caught between selling one property and buying another. Can I borrow money from you using the line of credit I organised for you? It is difficult for me to borrow money myself. I will repay you back (sic) in about six months. In the meantime, I will pay the interest on the money I borrow. You do not need to tell mum. I will take you to my solicitor. He will draw up a caveat over my home to protect you just in case anything happens to me. If the property is sold, the effect of the caveat is that you get your money back before anyone else gets their money.
18Joanna Kitas agreed to facilitate that advance. She stated that Scott wanted to borrow up to the limit of the facility immediately. In December 2005, she drew down an amount of $50,000, which she gave to him. In January 2006 that amount was repaid and she made a separate drawdown of $200,000, leaving the account in debit in the order of $246,000. A one-off payment in the sum of $20,000 reduced the borrowings to roughly $228,000. In March 2006, the borrowings were split into two facilities, each secured by the mortgage granted in July 2005.
19Joanna Kitas stated that, when she drew down the amount of $200,000 for Scott, she transferred that amount to an account with St George Bank which she had set up for that purpose. As to the repayment of the $50,000 into the Perpetual loan account, she said (at paragraph 50 of her affidavit sworn 24 January 2011):
A reason for the last step was that, as discussed between Scott and me at the time, Scott and I did not want our mother to find out that Scott was borrowing $200,000 from me. I was concerned that this would upset or worry her. I thought that the last step would assist in preventing my mother from finding out that Scott was borrowing $200,000 from me.
20Joanna Kitas stated that Scott paid the interest on the amount she lent him, although she "always had to chase him for payment" (paragraph 51 of the affidavit).
21At the time he approached his sister for a further loan, Scott had not repaid to her the amount of $200,000 borrowed on the original line of credit. As at the middle of February 2007, it remained the position that the property owned by Ms Kitas was mortgaged to Perpetual to secure both facilities. The sum of the debt on the two facilities was approximately $229,000. In re-examination (at T209.42) Ms Kitas said, and I accept, that the smaller facility (then in the order of $28,000) represented her outstanding debt in respect of the renovations. The larger facility (in the order of $201,000) was the debt owed by Scott.