Clause 4.4(a) provided that prior to completion the vendors would ensure that InterTan declared a dividend, payable on completion, on its ordinary shares equal, in total, to the Dividend Amount.
4 Clauses 7.7 and 7.8 of the Agreement were in the following form:
"7.7 Discharge of Intra-Group Liabilities
On Completion, immediately after payment of the Purchase Price, the Purchaser shall fund the Company so that the Company is able to discharge the debts created by the declaration of the dividend referred to in clause 4.4. Immediately following such funding, the parties shall procure that the Company pay that dividend, less any amount which the Company is required to withhold on account of the dividend not being fully franked.
7.8 Simultaneous completion
Neither the Vendors nor the Purchaser need complete the sale of any Shares unless the sale of all the Shares is completed simultaneously. Neither Vendor is obliged to complete the sale of the Shares unless the Purchaser has performed, or is ready, willing and able to perform, its obligations under clause 7.7.
5 The dividend declared was for $25,584,097. The declaration of dividend presumably took place immediately before completion. At completion the respondent paid $88,555,552 (i.e. $114,139,649 minus $25,584,097) to the vendors. Immediately after the payment to the vendors, the respondent addressed itself to performance of its obligations under Clause 7.7. This it did by making a loan of $25,584,097 to the Company InterTAN Australia Ltd.
6 The respondent submits that the "consideration" which was dutiable under s. 21 of the Act was $88,555,552. The agreement makes it clear that the sale was a sale at a price, not certainly a price which was ascertainable at the date of the agreement, but on which became ascertainable thereafter. It is also clear from the terms of the agreement that the sale was of the shares ex dividend. That is what the parties bargained for, and that is what the respondent got. In return for payment to the vendors of the amount stipulated in the agreement it acquired the shares described in that agreement. It had never promised to pay $114,139,644, or any sum other than $88,555,552, for the shares.
7 It had never even promised, in the agreement, to lend to the company the sum of $25,584,097 or any other sum. It had promised the vendors that it would "fund" the payment of a dividend by InterTAN Australia Ltd. There were, no doubt, many ways such a "funding" could take place: lending money was but one of them. Nor was the amount stated with any precision. The obligation was "to fund" to the extent that it was necessary for the company to pay its dividend; presumably, if the company had reserves of its own sufficient to pay the dividend, it would have had no right to call on the respondent to fund anything. The respondent's obligation in this regard was to "fund" the dividend to the extent that it was necessary to do so.
8 Nor was the "funding" part of the consideration for the acquisition of the shares. It was a separate transaction, and between different parties. And, presumably, it left InterTAN Australia Ltd in a position where it had to repay to the Respondent the sum of $25,584,097.
9 There were, in fact, two transactions involved: a Sale of Shares ex dividend from the vendors to the respondent, and (as it turned out) a loan from the respondent to InterTan. As far as the sale is concerned, the consideration was $88,555,552. In this regard, the locus classicus on the meaning of the word "consideration" is that of Dixon J in Archibald Howie Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Stamp Duties (NSW) (1948) 77 CLR 143, who said (at 152):
"In the context I think that the word "consideration" should receive the wider meaning or operation that belongs to it in conveyancing rather than the more precise meaning of the law of simple contracts. The difference is perhaps not very material because the consideration must be in money or money's worth. But in the law of simple contracts it is involved with offer and acceptance: indeed properly understood it is perhaps merely a consequence of aspect of offer and acceptance. Under s 66 the consideration is rather the money or value passing which moves the conveyance or transfer."