Salient facts
59 On 2 October 2012, GSVC was registered, with Ms Katherine Gai and Ms Zhu as its directors (CB15/6770). Ms Zhu was Ms Lin's mother and nominee, and at all times acted at Ms Lin's direction (affidavit of Ms Lin of 17.10.14 in the Supreme Court of NSW, paras 22-24: CB8/3333-4). In early 2013, GSVC purchased the shares in Ergo (3/1150-73) for the purpose of attracting investors who were looking to acquire a SIV (CB5/1905 and 3/1134-9). In mid-2013, the Gold Stone Future Investments Property Fund was established and issued an IM (CB4/1408-27), although its constitution is oddly dated 10 February 2014 (CB5/2038-66). The trustee of that fund was NGI, which had been appointed as AR of Ergo's AFSL, and was wholly owned by GSVC (CB15/6893, 6895). The directors of both Ergo and NGI were Ms Gai and Ms Zhu (CB15/6679). Ms Gai was married to Mr Kristjan Geering. Mr Geering and Ms Lin were the two directors of Austleg Lawyers Pty Ltd (CB15/6770). There was also a fund called the Gold Stone Income Fund (CB4/1435-6, 6/2702-4, 14/6438-53).
60 On 15 August 2013, a letter was sent by NGI as trustee for the Gold Stone Income Fund to Ms Chu, setting out an investment proposal for an investment of $3.5 million in the Gold Stone Income Fund for a period of 12 months (CB4/1435-6). A document was attached entitled "Significant Investor Visa Investment Plan" which referred to Ms Chu proposing to invest $1.5 million in Waratah Bonds and $3.5 million in the Gold Stone Managed Investment Scheme in conjunction with her SIV application (CB4/1437-8).
61 On 14 November 2013, Ms Chu submitted an application for a visa under the SIV application stream. The application form called for Ms Chu to give details of the complying investments which she planned to make in Australia, to which she responded: "invest 3.5 million AUD through Gold Stone's MIS, invest 1.5 million AUD in NSW Waratah Bonds" (CB4/1538 at 1548).
62 On 5 December 2013, Mr Xu made a SIV application, in which he stated in relation to the complying investments which he planned to make in Australia: "I want to invest AUD 5 million into a private company, Paragon Business Group" (CB4/1807 at 1815).
63 On 12 December 2013, Mr Darmali wrote an email to Ms Lin, Ms Gai and Mr Geering (a solicitor at Austleg Lawyers Pty Ltd) (CB5/1905) thanking them for their time the previous day and stating:
It has been almost a year now since we started Ergo Capital and it has been a challenging year for all of us to make the business successful. As they said, Rome was not built in a day. Well, I feel confident that we have the right people as well as resources to make Goldstone [sic] successful.
…
Next year is coming soon and I assumed that you have a big plan for Goldstone.
Ms Lin replied on 14 December 2013 (CB5/1905), thanking Mr Darmali for the email and for "your faith on us" and stated:
Truly appreciate your supports and professional inputs in the past 10 months. And personally I enjoyed the time spent with all of you.
Ergo Capital was acquired for the purpose of taking advantage of the SIV visa policy released by the Department of Immigration in Nov 2012. So far there are about 20 of SIV has been granted, despite the budget for business migration for year 2013/2014 is 7000. The good news is 700 SIV sponsorships have been approved by the States, and the Minister last week has clearly state that the Department shall speed up the process of SIV applications. So as we are expecting more business migrant invest to Australia, we are in a better position to take Gold Stone up.
We have been experienced the challenge to tailor our products to suite the clients appetite. Especially our target audience is to the high net worth individual and every one of them have their own unique needs, purpose and concern. To complicate further their investment decision is largely affected by their migration application outcome and family residence arrangement. At the moment we are trying to package a product provide the flexibility in terms of size and length of the investment can be made to attract wider range of audiences. The Gold Stone Mortgage Fund under the discussion is one of them.
The commercial application to the Mortgage Fund in my view will only be certain after we tested it and obviously the market will tell. There are risks involving large sum of money for conducting such trial. Maybe it is only sensible and logical to have something similar in nature for us to try before we commit largely to it. I think we should always to have alternative and contingency plan there to insure the execution of our big plan.
64 On 17 December 2013, GDI entered into a contract with C21, which referred by way of "Background" to C21 having arranged for the sale to GDI of six properties at 1444B-1452 Pacific Highway, Turramurra, and GDI having signed contracts for the purchase of those properties for $13,558,389 with a deposit of $1,510,000 (CB5/1956). The contract referred also to the total costs and expenses incurred by or on behalf of C21 in respect of the development application and ancillary matters being an amount of $1,541,611, which GDI had agreed to pay to C21 on completion of the contracts to purchase the Turramurra properties. GDI's obligations under the contract were guaranteed by Mr Cai and Mr Xufeng Wu (the latter being the father of the fifth defendant).
65 On either 19 December 2013 or 28 January 2914 (the document bears both dates), Fiducia Singapore and MVLC entered into a Joint Venture Agreement in relation to future property development projects: CB5/1965.1-6. The agreement was executed by Mr Darmali and Mr Fong respectively.
66 In January 2014 Mr Xu met with Ms Lin and others over dinner in Shanghai. Mr Xu affirmed an affidavit in which he gave evidence in direct speech (prefaced by the obfuscatory language "words to the following effect") as to what he and Ms Lin said at the dinner, but in his cross-examination all he could actually remember saying to Ms Lin was that if Ms Lin could guarantee the principal invested then he would invest in the fund which was under discussion: T232.40-234.42. Mr Chen recalled Mr Xu saying that his main goal was to guarantee that the principal was safe and that he did not really care about the return: T304.44-305.2. Mr Wang's evidence was to the same effect: affidavit of 3.11.23 at para 53. Ms Meng Xu (Mr Xu's niece) claimed to recall Mr Xu saying the opposite, namely "I put the investment with Louise and the interest is very safety and we can get higher returns. It is enough for you guys to live in Australia": T353.24-27. I do not accept Ms Meng Xu's evidence. I accept Mr Chen's and Mr Wang's evidence, and I accept Mr Xu's evidence to the extent that it is corroborated by Mr Chen and Mr Wang.
67 In January 2014, Ms Chu and Mr Chen met with Ms Lin in Sydney. Ms Chu gave evidence in direct speech in her affidavit as to what she and Ms Lin said, but in cross-examination Ms Chu accepted that she could not recall precisely what she said or what happened at the meeting: T179.18-26. However, Ms Chu did claim to recall saying that she needed to get her principal back: T179.33-41. Ms Chu claimed to have asked questions at the meeting about how the money was going to be invested, but then accepted (after being taken to her affidavit) that she did not ask such questions: T179.43-180.47. Mr Chen gave evidence (commendably in indirect speech) that Ms Chu said that she was not too concerned about interest or dividends, but she was concerned about the safety of her funds (affidavit of 26.4.24 at para 10). I accept Mr Chen's evidence, and I accept Ms Chu's evidence to the extent that it was corroborated by Mr Chen.
68 The notes of a meeting held on 27 January 2014 between Ms Lin, Ms Gai and Mr Geering refer to the funding and progress of the purchase of the Turramurra properties and the proposed development and on-sale of those properties as completed apartments (CB4/2002). The notes of the meeting then refer to the ultimate goal being for "the property fund to be registered proprietor" and refer to a mortgage fund offering a fixed return to the investor of 8% with a new trust company, namely Gold Stone with "Mr. Wu jnr. as director". Under the heading "David's [ie Mr Darmali's] Deal - credit lic./AFSL" the following appears (CB4/2003):
$50k or 100K plus share of the net profit - 5% < $20m, 10% + $20m, exclusive, actively manage the fund, report to the Investors, excluded from the AFSL deal, he is going to pick it anyway AFSL fee because of "funds under management", set up a board to make the investment decisions.
Role - manager excluding the investment decisions he make recommendations,
First three months $50kpa rate then $100kpa rate.
69 By early 2014, Ms Lin had lost confidence that GDI could undertake the development project at Turramurra on its own, and that for GDI to continue with the Turramurra development on its own would lead to a financial disaster and could adversely impact on GDI's important financial relationship with Mr Xufeng Wu, being a shareholder in GDI: affidavit of Ms Lin of 31.12.14 at [100] (tendered by the plaintiffs and admitted against Ms Lin only). Ms Lin gave evidence to the same effect in her affidavit of 17 October 2014 (paras 61-2) in the NSW Supreme Court case of Thomson v Golden Destiny Investments Pty Ltd (CB8/3346), and that evidence was admitted against all defendants (T700.20-25).
70 On 4 February 2014, Ms Lin sought vendor finance for the purchase of the Turramurra properties: CB5/2009. However, that proposal did not succeed.
71 On 7 February 2014, Gold Stone was incorporated, with Mr Cai and Mr Wu as its directors. A week later, on 14 February 2014, Ms Darmali also became a director (CB15/6762-3). The registered office and the address of the principal place of business of Gold Stone was given as level 6, Suite 606, 451 Pitt Street, Sydney which was also the office of Austleg Lawyers Pty Ltd where Ms Lin practised as a licensed conveyancer and was a director and shareholder. It was also the address of Mr Cai's real estate agency, Australian Sydney Realty Pty Ltd.
72 On 10 February 2014, Mr Cai and Mr Wu filled out and signed a Commonwealth Bank form nominating themselves as the authorised signatories for the 889 Account in the name of Gold Stone: CB4/2010. Mr Wu accepts that his signature on the form is genuine.
73 Also on 10 February 2014, the Fund Constitution was formed by way of a deed poll which was executed by Gold Stone (CB4/2067-93) setting out the terms of the unit trust known as the Gold Stone Secured Income Mortgage Fund, being the Fund at the heart of these proceedings. The deed was signed by Mr Cai and also purports to bear the signature of Mr Wu, who disputes that it is his signature and I accept that Mr Wu's signature is a forgery. Mr Cai gave evidence that Ms Lin gave him the trust deed and asked him to sign it (T452.15), and that he observed in 2014 that Ms Lin had a copy of the trust deed in her possession (T457.32-35). I accept that evidence despite my adverse view of Mr Cai's credibility. The evidence is consistent with the objective probabilities, as well as with the references by Ms Lin to Gold Stone as "my company" and to the Fund as "my mortgage fund" in her affidavit of 17 October 2014 in the NSW Supreme Court proceedings Thomson v Golden Destiny Investments Pty Ltd (CB8/3327): see paras 74, 119, 124 and 223 of that affidavit. Ms Lin accepted in her cross-examination in that case that Gold Stone as trustee of the Fund was controlled by her (CB8/3600 lines 40-45).
74 Gold Stone is referred to in the Fund Constitution as "RE" and the following appears as a "Notation" after the definitions:
Responsible Entity (RE) under the Act means the entity responsible for a registered managed investment scheme, (please refer to section 9 of the Act). Notwithstanding the use of Responsible Entity in this Deed it is the intention at the time of settling the Fund that it will not be required to be registered.
Clause 3 states that: "The RE has agreed to act as responsible entity and trustee of the Trust."
75 Clause 16 provides for reimbursement of expenses. Clause 16.1 provides relevantly:
Subject to clause 16.3, all the costs and expenses relating to the Trust are payable out of the Assets [being the Property, Investments, rights and income of the Trust].
Clause 16.3 provides as follows:
So long as and to the extent that it is required by the Act [ie Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)], the rights of reimbursement and indemnity granted under this clause 16 are only available to the extent the RE has properly performed its duties. However, to the extent permitted by the Act, nothing in this clause 16.3 limits any rights of reimbursement or indemnity conferred on a trustee or the RE by law or statute.
76 Clause 17 of the Fund Constitution deals with the RE's remuneration, and provides for an initial service fee of up to 1% of application money, a management fee equal to 1% per annum of the gross asset value and a performance fee calculated by reference to the extent to which the Fund outperforms a benchmark of an internal rate of return of 8% per annum. Clause 18.1 entitles the RE (together with its related bodies corporate and associates or officers and employees) to be interested in any contract or transaction with the RE as trustee of the Trust or in another capacity or with an associate of the RE or any unitholder. Clause 19 contains limitations on the RE's right of indemnity and clause 19.7 limits its indemnity to the extent that the RE "has properly performed its duties having regard to the powers and discretion conferred on the RE". In that regard, I note that the plaintiffs do not make any claim pursuant to s 197 of the Act.
77 Clause 20.4 of the Fund Constitution sets out the authorised investments of the Fund in the following terms, which are directly modelled on the legislative instrument referred to above, known as IMMI 13/092 which commenced on 23 November 2013:
On behalf of the Trust the RE is permitted only to invest in the following:
(a) infrastructure projects in Australia;
(b) cash held by Australian deposit taking institutions (including negotiable certificates of deposit, bank bills and other cash-like instruments);
(c) bonds issued by the Commonwealth Government or a State or Territory Government;
(d) bonds, equity, hybrids or other corporate debt in companies and trusts listed or expected to be listed 12 months on an Australian Stock Exchange;
(e) bonds or term deposits issued by Australian financial institutions;
(f) real property in Australia;
(g) Australian Agribusiness;
(h) annuities issued by an Australian registered life company in accordance with section 9 or 12A of the Life Insurance Act 1995;
(i) derivatives used for portfolio management and non-speculative purposes which constitute no more than 20 percent of the total value of the Net Asset Value;
(j) loans secured by mortgages over the investments listed in paragraphs (a) to (h) above;
(k) other managed funds that invest in the investments listed in (a) to (j) above;
(h) [bis] and other investment categories contained in the list of "Eligible Investments" as gazetted by the Minister from time to time for the purposes of Regulatiion 5.19B of the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth) or the said regulation's successor.
Paragraph (j) is of central importance in relation to the issue as to whether the Fund's investments were authorised or not.
78 On 10 February 2014, Gold Stone issued the IM as the Trustee and Manager of the Fund. The first page of the IM expressly stated that it was provided only to Eligible Investors (CB5/2016), defined as wholesale clients as defined by the Act (CB5/2028). That page also stated that an investment in the Fund is "subject to risk" and that "The value of your investment can fluctuate up or down with the value of the assets of the Fund." The IM stated that Gold Stone is a corporate AR of Ergo in relation to the latter's AFSL, and is a credit representative of Fiducia Asset in relation to its ACL (CB5/2018). The "Key Features of the Fund" (CB5/2019) included a statement of the investment strategy of the fund being "To invest directly or indirectly in Australian real estate mortgages, property mezzanine finance, term deposits and interest deposits (within Australian financial institution)". The investment objective of the Fund was stated to be 8% p.a. return on its invested capital net of all fees and charges. The minimum initial subscription was stated as AUD500,000 with a minimum holding of AUD250,000. The return to investors was stated to be 8% per annum fixed simple interest paid quarterly. However, the IM also stated that: "Where possible and in the absolute discretion of the Trustee and Manager, the Fund will make distributions to the unit holder quarterly, in the months of July, October, January and April": CB5/2021.The IM set out further details concerning the investment strategy and investment objective of the Fund (CB5/2020). The IM stated that "The fund manager will manage the investment in the most professional and competent way to achieve the target return": CB5/2020. I find that that was a reference to Mr Darmali who was the Fund Manager. It also referred to the entitlement of Gold Stone to use related bodies corporate and associates to provide services relating to the activities of the Fund, including providing mortgages and other loans to related entities and through joint venture agreements, but stated that "All related parties dealing will be at arms length and will not be breaching the conflict of interest as well as duty of care to our investors" (CB5/2022).
79 Under the heading "Factors Influencing Potential Success of the Trust", the IM identified the material risks associated with an investment in the Fund, stating that all investments carry risk, primarily relating to the risk of losing money (CB5/2026). The IM encouraged potential investors to read the entire document to fully appreciate the specific and general risks and if appropriate to seek professional advice before deciding whether to invest. Under the heading "Specific Risks", the IM said that when the industry-specific risks are aggregated, there is a possibility, however remote, that all application monies could be lost, and stated "Any investment in the Trust should be considered high risk" (CB5/2026). After providing a list of the "General Risks", the IM stated: "The Trustee and Manager manage these risks through a conservative lending policy and by diligent management of the Fund" (CB5/2027). The IM included an application form for units in the Fund, which included a declaration as follows (CB5/2031):
The applicant agrees to be bound by the provisions of the Constitution of the Gold Stone Secured Income Mortgage Fund (as amended and as it may be amended from time to time in the future) and acknowledges the Gold Stone Secured Income Mortgage Fund does not guarantee the performance of the Fund or the repayment of capital.
80 On 11 February 2014, an Authorised Corporate Representative Agreement was entered into between Fiducia Asset and Gold Stone, authorising Gold Stone to act as an AR in relation to Fiducia Asset's ACL (number 405904) (CB5/2096). The agreement was signed by Mr Darmali on behalf of Fiducia Asset, and by Mr Cai and Mr Wu on behalf of Gold Stone (CB5/2102). Mr Wu accepts that he did in fact sign that agreement. It is not entirely clear why Gold Stone regarded an ACL as necessary, but it would appear to relate potentially to two aspects of the authority granted to Fiducia Asset under its ACL in the event that Gold Stone were to engage in consumer lending, namely:
(iii) performing the obligations or exercising the rights of a mortgagee in relation to a mortgage or proposed mortgage that secures or will secure obligations under a credit contract under which the licensee is not the credit provider; and/or
(iv) performing the obligations or exercising the rights of a beneficiary under a guarantee or proposed guarantee that guarantees obligations under a credit contract under which the licensee is not the credit provider …
81 From 7 March 2014 to 17 January 2015, Gold Stone made 11 payments pursuant to the Authorised Corporate Representation Agreement relating to the ACL, totalling $108,261.20. The plaintiffs claim equitable compensation for that amount on the basis that the payments were made in breach of trust.
82 On 19 February 2014, Ms Lin was added as an authorised signatory for the 889 Account of Gold Stone (CB5/2133). Mr Wu correctly disputes that what purports to be his signature on that form is genuine, pointing out that it appears to have been copied from the initial Commonwealth Bank form of 10 February 2014 (CB5/2011).
83 On 24 February 2014, a deed was entered into between GDI, NGI, Gold Stone in its capacity as trustee for the Fund, and Ergo Investment Management Pty Ltd relating to the development project at Turramurra (CB5/2138-45). The recitals indicate that GDI did not wish to develop the project, that NGI as trustee of the Gold Stone Future Investments Property Fund did wish to develop the project provided certain terms and conditions were met, and that Gold Stone as trustee of the Fund or GDI wished to provide to NGI debt funding to pay the purchase price of $15.1 million for the Turramurra properties (CB5/2139). Clause 2.7 provides that in the event that the purchase contracts for those properties were novated to NGI, Gold Stone as trustee of the Fund or GDI will lend to NGI up to $5.5 million with the salient terms being an interest rate of 20% per annum for a loan by the Fund and 15% per annum for a loan by GDI (but without any reference to any security for such loans). The deed purports to be signed by Mr Wu on behalf of both GDI and Gold Stone, but he correctly disputes that the signature is genuine.
84 On 24 February 2014, GDI, NGI (as trustee for the Gold Stone Future Investments Property Fund), Gold Stone (as trustee for the Fund) and Ergo entered into a Short Form Deed whereby GDI agreed to novate the Turramurra contracts to NGI, and Gold Stone and GDI agreed to advance $5.5 million to fund the development: CB5/2138-45. Recital E stated that GDI did not wish to develop the Turramurra project: CB5/2139. Ms Lin continued her efforts to extricate GDI from the Turramurra development: CB5/2249.
85 On 25 February 2014, Ms Lin emailed Mr Wu, attaching a copy of the IM in Chinese, asking Mr Wu to make a copy and pass it on to anyone who was interested: CB5/2171.1, being the English translation of CB5/2146.
86 On 28 February 2014, Gold Stone as trustee of the Fund issued a term sheet for the purchase of units in the Fund for the "Aurora" project in Lane Cove, New South Wales, with a total proposed placement of $1 million (CB5/2255 at 2259). The project was identified as "Aurora" at 3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove, NSW and specified the target investment return as 10% per annum which was said to be guaranteed by the developer, MVLC. The security for the Fund is described as follows (CB5/2259):
GSC [ie Gold Stone] will secure its capital and interest with the following securities:
(i) Formal exchange contract of sale with deposit value of $1.3 millions on apartments number 1.06 and G.12, 3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove, NSW, with a deed option for full cash refund.
(ii) Guarantee by [MVLC] which owns Aurora Site.
At that time, the apartments referred to as security for the Fund did not exist as a matter of the law of real property, given that the draft strata plan was not yet registered. The borrower was identified as MVLC, and Mr Victor Fong was referred to as its director and shareholder (CB5/2263).
87 On 5 March 2014, Gold Stone applied to open the 645 Account, being a cash management account with Macquarie Bank (CB5/2318-25). The account signatories were identified as Mr Cai, Mr Darmali and Ms Lin, any two of whom were required to sign (CB5/2324). Mr Wu was not nominated as an authorised signatory. The application form was signed by Mr Cai, and purports to have been signed by Mr Wu, but Mr Wu correctly disputes the genuineness of that signature (CB5/2325). A separate form dated 5 March 2014 conferred authority on Fiducia Asset to operate the 645 Account (CB5/2326-30). The document was signed by Mr Cai, and purports to have been signed by Mr Wu who correctly disputes the genuineness of that signature (CB5/2330).
88 On 12 March 2014, the Joint Unitholders filled out and signed an application form for 500,000 units in the Fund, enclosing the initial subscription amount of $500,000 (CB5/2267-75, and see CB5/2265-6). Apart from the plaintiffs, they were the only other unitholders of the Fund. It appears that they invested jointly in those units. Mr Wengel, an expert accounting witness engaged by the plaintiffs, has identified that Gold Stone received into the 645 Account $100,000 on 12 March 2014 and $400,000 on 13 March 2014, being the subscription monies in relation to the investment by the Joint Unitholders in the Fund (report of 19.4.24 at para 19.2). The amount of $100,000 was sourced from a joint account held by the Joint Unitholders (CB6/2373), but the evidence concerning the $400,000 payment (CB6/2375) does not reveal its source. Mr Wengel identifies a payment of $500,000 on 18 March 2014 from the 645 Account to MVLC, corresponding to the $500,000 investment in units (report of 19.4.24 at para 19.6). I note at this point that on 31 December 2014, repayment was made to the Joint Unitholders in the amount of $552,446.30, being the return of their funds invested plus interest of $52,446.30 (Mr Wengel's report of 19.4.24 at para 19.11.1). That amount was paid into a joint account held by the Joint Unitholders (CB8/3525). Accordingly, two of the three entries for payments involving the Joint Unitholders expressly identify that the payment was made from or to a joint account. I infer that the Joint Unitholders paid for their units entirely from jointly held funds. Importantly, it appears that their units were redeemed, such that the only unitholders in the Fund after 31 December 2014 were the plaintiffs.
89 On 12 March 2014, Ms Lin sent an email to Mr Geering and Ms Gai stating (CB6/2374):
Gold Destiny [ie GDI] is not in a position to complete the Contract. NGI will complete the contract and Gold Destiny will provide fund up to 5.5M as per Agreement signed on 24th February 2014.
Gold Destiny has formally assigned its right to NGI under the Agreement.
90 On 17 March 2014, GDI failed to attend the scheduled settlement of the contracts to purchase the Turramurra properties: CB6/2398. At that time, Ms Lin was seeking funding, and discussed with Mr Darmali the possibility of finding a new investor to take over the Turramurra development: CB6/2401.
91 On 18 March 2014, a loan agreement was entered into between Ms Darmawati Darmawati (Mr Darmali's mother) as the lender and MVLC as the borrower for a loan of $1 million for six months at an annualised interest rate of 30% (and a default rate of 35%) (CB6/2402-16). The mortgaged property was said to be a particular lot in "an unregistered plan" being part of the "Aurora" development in Lane Cove (CB6/2415). I accept Mr Fong's evidence that Mr Darmali prepared the loan agreement and provided it to Mr Fong (T379.20-23), to which I have already referred at [42] in discussing Mr Darmali's lack of credibility as a witness. The format of the loan agreement is substantially identical to the three loan agreements discussed below under which Gold Stone lent money to two companies associated with Mr Fong.
92 On the same day, 18 March 2014, Gold Stone withdrew $500,000 from the Fund's 645 Account with Macquarie Bank, payable to MVLC. The withdrawal form was signed by Mr Darmali and Mr Cai, and also purports to have been signed by Mr Wu (although that signature is correctly disputed). The reference to appear on the destination's bank statement (ie MVLC's) was "Loan Gold Stone Capital" and the description to appear on Gold Stone's statement was "MV Developments (Lane Cove) P/L Draw Down" (6/2418). There is no evidence of a documented loan agreement. The loan thus appears to be an informal, unsecured loan repayable on demand. The withdrawal of $500,000 corresponds to the amount invested six days earlier by the Joint Unitholders (CB6/2417). Earlier that day, Mr Darmali had attempted to withdraw the $500,000 himself, but was asked by the bank to arrange for the withdrawal form to be signed by Gold Stone's two directors (Mr Cai and Mr Wu) (CB6/2421-31), which he did.
93 On 19 March 2014, Mr Geering of Austleg Lawyers Pty Ltd wrote to the solicitors for the vendors of the Turramurra properties, noting that one of the parties to the contracts of sale had passed away, thereby deferring the completion date pursuant to a special condition until 14 days after the legal personal representative of the deceased party had become the registered proprietor of the relevant property (CB6/2434). The contracts for the Turramurra properties were otherwise due for completion on 17 March 2014.
94 A Commonwealth Bank form for the nomination of authorised signatories for the 889 Account appears to have been signed on either 27 March 2014 or 27 May 2014. The date is not clear but 27 May 2014 appears to me to be what was written on the form. The form nominates any one of Mr Cai or Ms Lin as the authorised signatories for the 889 Account, and was signed by Mr Cai and purportedly by Mr Wu (although Mr Wu's signature is correctly disputed) (CB6/2444-5).
95 At some time in April 2014, Ms Chu signed an application for units in the Fund, although the form is otherwise blank: CB6/2455-66. The form contains a declaration whereby the applicant acknowledges that the Fund "does not guarantee the performance of the Fund or the repayment of capital", although that declaration is no more prominent than any other aspect of the application form (CB6/2458). On 3 April 2014, the Department of Immigration and Border Protection of the Australian Government wrote to Ms Chu advising her that her application for a visa in the SIV stream had reached the stage where she was invited to select and make a complying investment of at least $5 million in Australia (CB6/2481-4). On 17 April 2014, Ms Chu received and signed a letter from Fiducia Fund Management Pty Ltd providing a mandate to Fiducia Fund (of which Mr Darmali was the sole director) to obtain $1.5 million in NSW Waratah bonds (CB6/2566-7). Fiducia Fund was an AR of Fiducia Asset's AFSL (CB15/6709-10)
96 On 3 April 2014, Mr Xu signed a Form 1412 Deed of Acknowledgment, Undertaking and Release with the Department of Immigration and Citizenship acknowledging, among other things, that he was responsible for any financial or legal risk that exists in relation to the complying investment, including any risk in relation to a loss of value of the complying investment (CB6/2480).
97 On 4 April 2014, the solicitors for the vendors of the Turramurra properties served notices to complete on the purchasers (CB6/2509).
98 On 10 April 2014, Mr Darmali sent an email to Mr Fong, Mr Cai and Ms Lin referring to their discussions to date in which they had all agreed that Mr Fong would take over the Turramurra project from GDI, and attached a draft agreement between the Fund and Mr Fong which would also be extended to an SPV when the SPV was set up (CB6/2547). Mr Darmali's email then sets out a summary of the steps needed and the agreement in principle, which included:
• Upon the signing of signing of the JV agreement, Victor [Fong] will take over the liaising between the vendor and [GDI].
• A new SPV will be set up which comprise of Vic and the fund interest.
• Mortgagee document will be sign by the SPV and the fund.
• The fund will place the $6.5M investment into the SPV.
• Victor will provide the blance of the fund needed from the start of the take over to the final completion of the project.
• Victor will organise the settlement and has the financial capability to settle as well as complete the project profitably.
• The fund will be second in line as creditor after the senior debt.
• Victor will pay GDI the sum of $1.5m on the novating of the contract to the SPV.
• The balance of the payment of $230,000 which cover the cost of the work to date will be reimburse to GDI at the final settlement date.
• Victor will run and managed the project to ensure its profitability.
• John will be allocated a number of apartments (to $ value) to market and paid commission as per commercial arrangement.
• David Darmali will be the fund manager and point of contact for all parties.
99 On 17 April 2014, Mr Darmali sent a further email to Ms Lin and Mr Fong on the subject of "Turramurra", relevantly as follows (CB6/2545):
From discussion with both of you, these are my understanding on the propose change:
Louise need assurance that Victor [Fong] is committed and has financial capability to settle and complete the project.
Victor need assurance that fund will invest $6.5M.
To help Improve the return of the project, the fund will invest $1m into Lane Cove Aurora development with security as previous placement.
The new SPV will be set up and the fund will contribute $5.5m and within 7 days Victor will place $1M minimum.
Louise [Lin] will receive $1.5M at the novation of the contract to the SPV and a further $231,000 at the final settlement.
Victor will provide guarantee return of 17% net p.a from the date of settlement to maturity at the end of 2 years.
Victor will provide return of 10% p.a for the fund placement in the SPV up to the final settlement date.
Considering the time pressure, we need to make a decision one way or another. So could you please come back to me by email today if the above is OK or any adjustment need to be made.
100 On 17 April 2014, Ms Lin sent an email to Mr Darmali and Mr Fong, copied to Austleg Lawyers, as follows (CB6/2545):
Thank you for the email. We are negotiating a replacement contract with the vendor with 3 months addition settlement period. That gives everyone time for the proposed SPV.
Either NGI or Gold Stone Capital can be the funding partner for the SPV subject to Victor provide assurance to settle and complete the project, plus deliver point 4 to 7.
The new settlement arrangement with the vendor will take the heat off this deal and we can meet and discuss detail with you next week.
101 In an affidavit made on 27 November 2015 in the Supreme Court of New South Wales in Lum v MV Developments (Lane Cove) Pty Ltd, Ms Lin said that she was the person on behalf of Gold Stone who carried out the discussions with Mr Fong as deposed to in that affidavit: CB10/4485 at para 2. Those matters included the loans to Mr Fong's companies under agreements dated 5 May 2014, 26 May 2014 and 8 August 2014, and the Turramurra development project. Importantly, Ms Lin said that the three loans were advanced "In the interests of furthering the proposed relationship between GDI and Fong": para 6. The three loans are referred to below as the MVLC Loan Agreement, the First MVLC Loan Agreement and the Second MVLC Loan Agreement.
102 On 17 April 2014, an unsigned letter was sent by Fiducia Fund to Ms Chu headed "Investment mandate", and referring to Ms Chu's proposed investment of $1.5m into NSW Waratah Bonds for a period of 4 years (CB6/2566). The letter made a recommendation for that investment. The letter stated that if Ms Chu required clarification of any issues raised in the letter, then she should contact Mr Darmali and provided his mobile telephone number. The document was signed by Ms Chu as confirmation of acceptance of its terms. Although the typed letter referred to an engagement and establishment fee of 1% of the investment amount, the word "waived" was handwritten beside that matter. Mr Darmali gave unchallenged evidence, which I accept, that he agreed to waive the 1% engagement and establishment fee at Ms Lin's request because Ms Lin told Mr Darmali that Ms Chu was very wealthy and might become a financial planning client of Fiducia: affidavit of 8.2.24 at [76]-[77]; T571.12-41. I infer that the mandate letter was sent by Mr Darmali.
103 On 17 April 2014, the solicitors for the vendors of the Turramurra properties wrote to the solicitors for the purchaser, stating that the purchaser had had ample time to settle the purchase and the vendors were not prepared to wait any longer for completion beyond three months from the expected date of exchange of the new contracts for sale, that is, 22 July 2014 (CB6/2570-1). On 23 April 2014, GDI entered into six new contracts for the purchase of the Turramurra properties, and before the exchange of those contracts Ms Lin "expressed that she no longer wanted to take the risks associated with the project and wanted to get out of the project": CB6/2628.
104 Between 24 and 28 April 2014, Ms Chu deposited a total of $5 million into the Fund's 645 Account (CB14/6478 and 6/2623-5).
105 On 29 April 2014, Mr Fong sent an email to Mr Darmali on the subject of "Turramurra" attaching a revised feasibility study based on their discussion the day before (CB6/2645). Mr Fong stated that the project was showing a 62% return on equity for a 30 month period and added "I have serious concern regarding the project." Mr Fong gave evidence, which I accept, that the property developments that he had invested in had typically provided a return on equity of 100% over the period of about three years of the project: T382.22-28.
106 On 30 April 2014, Mr Darmali as the "Fund Manager" of the Fund signed a Form 1413 Declaration in relation to managed funds to the Department of Immigration and Border Protection of the Australian Government (CB6/2647). The declaration is to the effect that the Fund meets the definition set out in reg 1.03 of the Migration Regulations 1994, and sets out that definition in the body of the declaration. The declaration also includes the proposition that "I understand that giving false or misleading information is a serious offence." On the same day, Mr Darmali as "Fund Manager" signed a letter to Ms Chu on the letterhead of Gold Stone confirming receipt from her of $5 million and referred to Ms Chu's intention to invest $1.5 million in NSW State Government Waratah Bonds and $3.5 million in the Fund (CB/2648).
107 On 2 May 2014, Mr Darmali sent an email to Mr Geering, copied to Ms Gai and Ms Lin, referring to a meeting the day before between Mr Fong, Mr Darmali, Ms Lin and Mr Cai in relation to GDI's interest in the Turramurra project (CB6/2659). Mr Darmali stated that: "It is at the end of the day, up to the director of Golden Destiny (GD) to make a decision what to do with their existing commitment with vendor of Turramurra." The email ends with the following paragraph:
Could you please make yourself clear, who are you acting in your dealing? Are you acting on behalf of Gold Stone Capital Pty Ltd (because I am the fund manager) as lawyer or are you acting in your capacity as shareholder (Ergo) or trustee of New Galaxy?
108 On 5 May 2014, the MVLC Loan Agreement was entered into between Gold Stone as trustee for the Fund as the Lender and MVLC as the Borrower for an amount of $500,000 for a term of 9 months (CB6/2665-80). Mr Fong gave evidence, which I accept, that the loan was the result of a request made by Mr Fong to Mr Darmali for a loan of $500,000 for the Manly project: T366.17-35. The document was executed by Mr Fong on behalf of MVLC (and on his own behalf as guarantor) and by Mr Cai as director of Gold Stone. The interest rate was expressed as "Fixed at 30% for 9 months", and in relation to unpaid amounts the interest was stated to be "40% per annum" (CB6/2678). Accordingly, the interest rate was effectively 40% per annum, irrespective of whether the Borrower was in default.
109 Clause 12 of the MVLC Loan Agreement dealt with "Security" and provided as follows (CB6/2672):
12.1 The Borrower hereby charges with payment of monies hereby secured all the right, title and interest of the Borrower in the Land Mortgaged.
12.2 The Borrower hereby covenants with the Lender to sign, seal and deliver to the Lender the Collateral Documents on the execution hereof.
12.3 The Borrower hereby covenants with the Lender to do all such things and pay all such monies and carry out all such acts as are necessary to effect registration of the Collateral Documents and ensure that all requirements and requisitions of the Land Titles Office and the Registrar General are met for the purpose of effecting such registration.
110 The term "Land Mortgaged" is defined in cl 1.1(g) as the land described as such in Item 6 of the Schedule, which specifies the "Mortgaged Property" as (CB6/2678):
Unit 1.06/3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove, NSW unregistered plan which is part of Lot 71-74 Plan 10155 (Part Folio 71-74/10155) which also named at "Aurora" Lane Cove - Unit 1. 06/3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove, NSW.
As is clear from the express language used in Item 6 of the Schedule, the proposed strata plan for the relevant property was then "unregistered". That is, the strata plan had not been registered under s 7(2) of the Strata Schemes (Freehold Development) Act 1973 (NSW), which was then in force. Mr Fong gave evidence, which I accept, that he told Mr Darmali at the time that the development and the units were not registered: T366.39-367.21. Mr Fong also told Mr Darmali that MVLC was unable to grant any security over the Lane Cove property in light of the two mortgages already granted to Westpac and Wingate: T368.1-18. Those mortgages were stamped at a total secured figure of $26.94 million (CB4/1466) and $6.1 million respectively (CB4/1444): T362.12-363.10. I accept that Mr Fong was surprised that Gold Stone was prepared to lend money without security: T368.28-35.
111 The term "Collateral Documents" is defined in cl 1.1(c) as the documents described as such in Item 8 of the Schedule, which refers to (CB6/2678):
Deed of call option to purchase Unit 1.06/3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove NSW with the contract deposit value of $1,100,000.00.
There is no evidence of any such deed of call option ever being drafted or executed. There is no other identification of the terms of any such call option. Clause 12.3 of the MVLC Loan Agreement is oddly drafted, in that it obliges MVLC as the Borrower to effect registration of the Collateral Documents, and makes no reference to any obligation to effect registration of a mortgage. It is not clear how it was proposed to register a deed of call option with the Land Titles Office. Nor is it clear what the notion of a "contract deposit value of $1,100,000.00" was intended to mean.
112 The following day, on 6 May 2014, the amount of $500,000 was withdrawn from the Fund's 645 Account in favour of MVLC (CB6/2684). Mr Darmali wrote as the reference to appear on the destination statement "Gold Stone Capital (Loan)", and as the narrative to appear on Gold Stone's statement "MV Development (Loan Draw Down)": cross-examination of Mr Darmali, T533.1-6. The payment was clearly the advance of the principal amount under the MVLC Loan Agreement entered into the previous day. The withdrawal form for the 645 Account with Macquarie Bank was signed by Mr Darmali and by Mr Cai (CB6/2684).
113 On 13 May 2014, Ms Lin sent an email to Ms Gai and Mr Cai, copied to Mr Darmali and Mr Geering (CB6/2688), stating that after discussion with all parties with an interest in the Turramurra site, "we decide for the best interest of the investors and Golden Destiny Investment Pty Ltd, we will not assign the Contracts to New Galaxy Investment Pty Ltd ATF Gold Stone Future Investment [Property] Fund. We will assign the Contracts to a company which is more suitable to develop the site."
114 On 15 May 2014, Mr Darmali sent an email to Mr Huxley (a lawyer engaged by Mr Fong), Ms Lin, Mr Fong and Ms Kwok (CB6/2692) beginning as follows:
As per our telephone conversation, Louise [Lin] (the MIS) and Victor [Fong] will be JV partner in Turramurra development project. The Fund will provide $6.5M Injection, Golden Destiny will be reimburse for the deposit of $1.5M as well as other out of pocket expenses at the novation of the contract to the new SPV (Sarah [Kwok] will set this up today).
Later in the email the MIS is referred to as "Gold Stone Security Income Mortgage Fund" (that is, the Fund) and the SPV is identified as an entity associated with Mr Fong. Mr Darmali identified himself at the end of the email as "Fund Manager Gold Stone Capital Pty Ltd" (CB6/2693).
115 On 19 May 2014, the Fund sent to Ms Chu a "Confirmation Statement", referring to Ms Chu as the holder of 3.5 million units in the Fund at a unit price of $1.00 (CB6/2708).
116 On 26 May 2014, the First MVDA Loan Agreement was entered into between Gold Stone as trustee for the Fund as the Lender and MVDA as the Borrower (CB6/2746-61). The document was executed by Mr Fong on behalf of MVDA and on his own behalf as guarantor (his signature being witnessed by Mr Darmali) (CB6/2760). The document was also executed by Mr Cai as director of Gold Stone, and purports to have been executed by Mr Wu, although Mr Wu's signature is disputed (CB6/2761). The First MVDA Loan Agreement is in the same form as the MVLC Loan Agreement, including the oddity in the drafting of cl 12.3 to which I have referred at [111] above. The Schedule identifies the principal amount as $2,700,000, and the term is stated to be 12 months (CB6/2759). The interest rate is stated to be 18% for 12 months, although the higher interest rate applying to outstanding amounts is stated as 25% per annum (CB6/2759).
117 Item 6 identifies the "Mortgaged Property" as follows:
• 12-13 Marine Parade, Manly and being the whole of the land in Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 2/575535 and being Lot 2 in Deposited Plan 5755535.
• 102 Bower Street, Manly and being the whole of the land in Certificate of Title Folio Identifier C/345580A and C/345580B and being Lot C in Deposited Plan 345580A and Lot C in Deposited Plan 345580B.
At that time, the registered proprietors of those two properties in Manly were Mr Fitzgerald and Ms Rees, who were not associated with MVDA or any of Mr Fong's entities. The two properties were adjacent to each other and effectively one property on separate titles (Fong, T372.26-27). There is no evidence that Mr Fitzgerald and Ms Rees had consented to their properties being mortgaged in favour of Gold Stone, and there is no evidence of any rational basis on which they would ever have given such consent. Mr Fong gave evidence, which I accept, that he told Mr Darmali, Ms Lin and Mr Cai at the time that he did not own either of the two Manly properties and was trying to borrow funds to buy those properties: Fong, T372.7-20, and see T370.39-46. Mr Fong gave evidence, which I accept, that he was "pleasantly surprised" that Gold Stone was willing to advance a loan "secured" by property that he did not own: T373.20-23.
118 I note at this point that the evidence includes a single front page of two contracts for the sale of the Manly properties to MVDA signed by Mr Fitzgerald and Ms Rees as vendors, each dated 28 February 2014: CB5/2290.1-2. One provides for a purchase price of $5,518,948 (and a 10% deposit), and the other provides for a purchase price of $8,278,422 (and a 10% deposit). They both provide for a completion date of 26 May 2014. The rest of the contracts was not tendered, and apparently could not be found. The report of the liquidators of MVDA to creditors dated 18 March 2020 refers to a deposit having been paid for the purchase of those properties on an unspecified date in May 2014 (CB13/5903), and the signed transfers of the properties by Mr Fitzgerald and Ms Rees were made on 18 August 2014 (CB7/3147.1-2). The liquidators' report does not identify the amount of the deposit. Given that the deposit was not paid until May 2014, it is most unlikely that contracts were exchanged on 28 February 2014, or at any time before May. It is possible that the two single front pages (CB5/2290.1-2) were intended to be included in an option agreement in late February 2014, but the evidence is not sufficient to support a finding that any such option agreement was entered into at that time.
119 Further, I am unable to conclude that the deposit for the Manly properties was paid by MVDA on or before 26 May 2014 (being the date of the First MVDA Loan Agreement), or that contracts had been exchanged at that time, given that the liquidators' reference to the payment of the deposit in May 2014 does not specify a date. In one sense, there is a mathematical probability of 26:31 that the deposit paid in May 2014 was paid on a day from 1 to 26 May, rather than on a day from 27 to 31 May, given the length of those respective periods. However, when the law requires the proof of any fact, the tribunal must feel an actual persuasion of its occurrence or existence before it can be found, and it cannot be found as a result of a mere mechanical comparison of probabilities independent of any belief in its reality: Briginshaw v Briginshaw (1938) 60 CLR 336 at 361 (Dixon J). The facts proved must form a reasonable basis for a definite conclusion affirmatively drawn of the truth of which the tribunal of fact may reasonably be satisfied, not merely a choice between guesses on the ground that one guess seems more likely than another or others: West v Government Insurance Office of New South Wales (1981) 148 CLR 62 at 66 (Stephen, Mason, Aickin and Wilson JJ). The point is illustrated by the hypothetical example given by Jonathan Cohen in The Probable and the Provable (OUP, 1977) of 499 people paying for admission to a rodeo, but 1,000 are counted on the seats, including the defendant. As Cohen contends, a court would not find in favour of the promoter of the rodeo in an action against the defendant, on the basis of a bare 0.501 probability that the defendant did not pay. As Justice DH Hodgson said extra-judicially, the bare 0.501 probability would not be based on adequate material concerning the circumstances: "The Scales of Justice: Probability and Proof in Legal Fact Finding" (1995) 69 ALJ 731 at 735-6. In the present case, I have found that Mr Fong told Mr Darmali, Ms Lin and Mr Cai at the time that the First MVDA Loan Agreement was entered into that he did not own the two Manly properties which were referred to as the Mortgaged Property, and was trying to borrow funds to buy them, from which I infer that there was then no contract by which MVDA was entitled and obliged to purchase the properties.
120 Item 8 of the Schedule identifies the "Collateral Documents" as follows:
Deed of call option to purchase Unit 3/12-13 Marine Parade, Manly, New South Wales 2095 and 102 Bower Street, Manly, New South Wales 2095, Being Lot 3 in an unregistered Strata Plan - To be advised.
There is no evidence that any such deed of call option was ever drafted or executed. It is clear that what is described as "Lot 3" in Item 8 did not then exist as real property recognised by the law, but was a lot which was proposed to be created in a strata plan which was at that time "unregistered". Although Item 8 ends with the words "To be advised", there is no evidence that any such advice was ever given.
121 On 27 May 2014, the day after the First MVDA Loan Agreement was entered into, Gold Stone withdrew $2,700,000 from the Fund's 645 Account in favour of MVDA (CB6/2781). The withdrawal form for Macquarie Bank was executed by Mr Cai and Mr Darmali. The amount was clearly the advance of principal under the First MVDA Loan Agreement.
122 On 28 May 2014, Ms Chu signed a Form 1412 Deed of Acknowledgement, Undertaking and Release with the Department of Immigration and Citizenship of the Australian Government, acknowledging among other things that she was responsible for any financial or legal risk that exists in relation to the complying investment, including any risk in relation to a loss of value of the complying investment (CB6/2785).
123 On 28 May 2014, a payment was made by MVDA to Ms Darmawati Darmawati (the mother of Mr Darmali) in the amount of $220,000 (CB6/2790). A handwritten notation by Mr Fong at the foot of the relevant RTGS Application states that the payment was "for loan on 26/5/14". Mr Fong gave evidence, which I accept, that the payment was for commission earned by Mr Darmali in relation to the First MVDA Loan Agreement: T374.18-21. I accept Mr Fong's evidence that he had an oral arrangement with Mr Darmali to pay him commission of about 10% for every loan that Mr Fong received through Mr Darmali (with the exception of the MVLC Loan Agreement): T374.25-44; 380.1-11. The source of funds for Mr Fong to pay that commission was the funds advanced by Gold Stone the day before: T375.1-5.
124 On 29 May 2014, an Authorised Corporate Representative Agreement was entered into between Fiducia Fund (as the AR of Fiducia Asset) and Gold Stone, whereby Gold Stone was appointed as the AR of Fiducia Fund in relation to the AFSL No 387963 issued to Fiducia Asset (CB6/2791-2801). The agreement was executed by Mr Darmali on behalf of Fiducia Fund and by Mr Cai and Ms Lin on behalf of Gold Stone (CB6/2801). The agreement also purports to bear the signature of Mr Wu, but that signature is correctly disputed. The agreement authorises Gold Stone to do a number of things listed in the AFSL, relevantly (CB6/2794):
(a) to provide financial product advice for interests in managed investment schemes limited to "Own managed investment scheme only";
(b) to deal in a financial product by issuing, applying for, acquiring, varying or disposing of a financial product in respect of interests in managed investment schemes limited to "Own managed investment scheme only"; and
(c) to deal in a financial product by applying for, acquiring, varying or disposing of a financial product on behalf of another person in respect of interests in managed investment schemes limited to "own managed investment scheme only".
That authorisation and its limitation correspond to the terms of AFSL No 387963 effective from 11 February 2011 (CB15/6706-7). The agreement set out fees payable by Gold Stone by reference to, among other things, the amount of funds under management (CB6/2796). The agreement also obliged Gold Stone to provide Fiducia Fund with complete access to records relevant to the activities under the AFSL, including the information memorandum and clients' files including all correspondence (CB6/2798). Gold Stone ceased to be the AR of Ergo in relation to the latter's AFSL No 420978 on 28 May 2014 (CB15/6766).
125 On 6 June 2014, Mr Fong's lawyer, Mr Huxley, sent an email to Mr Fong, Ms Lin, Mr Darmali and Mr Cai, referring to the intention of the parties to novate the current contracts to purchase the Turramurra properties from GDI to MV Golden Destiny Development (Turramurra) Pty Ltd, of which Mr Fong was the sole director and company shareholder, with the shares in that company being held equally by Mr Fong and GDI (CB6/2818). Mr Huxley refers to the funds advanced to date being about $8 million and queries the nature of the "funding agreement with the MIS", but this does not appear to be a reference to the Fund as no money from the Fund was ever advanced directly for the Turramurra project. Accordingly, the reference to "the MIS" appears to be a reference to a separate managed investment scheme. A deed of novation was executed to effect the intended novation in July 2014 (CB7/2848-2862). The recitals to that deed refer to the completion date of the contracts to purchase the Turramurra properties as 22 July 2014 (CB7/2848).
126 On 4 July 2014, Mr Darmali as "Fund Manager" of the Fund sent a letter to Mr Xu, confirming that the Fund is a complying fund for the purpose of the SIV requirements (CB7/2871). In relation to the Fund, Mr Darmali stated, among other things:
The [Fund] fund the Projects as debt holders secured over the real assets of the Project. Subject to the management fee, the Fund allows the investor to receive a quarterly return on capital and be secured and preferred over the development projects and properties.
The plaintiffs submit (T48.31-34), and I accept, that the meaning of that awkward language is that Mr Darmali and Gold Stone were assuring Mr Xu as a potential investor that Gold Stone's loans were secured over the real property assets of the relevant projects.
127 On 5 July 2014, Mr Darmali as "Fund Manager" wrote to Ms Chu on the letterhead of Gold Stone, making a recommendation that Ms Chu open a line of credit against the $1.5 million NSW Waratah Bond with Deutsche Bank Australia for $1.2 million, and invest in a "Wholesale" Gold Stone Secured Income Mortgage Fund. The letter states that the investment in the Fund is not guaranteed by Gold Stone nor its directors or associates, and is subject to risks of loss because of market, currency, economic, political, human error, business and other events (CB7/2874). The letter appears to be signed by Ms Chu (CB7/2878), but she disputes the authenticity of the signature (affidavit of 30.5.24 at para 5), and I accept Ms Chu's evidence in that regard. (I also accept her denial as to the genuineness of her signature on the Deutsche Bank Private Wealth Management document at CB14/6425-6.)
128 On 9 July 2014, Ms Chu received a letter from the Australian Government Department of Immigration and Border Protection advising her that she had been granted a visa the previous day pursuant to the SIV stream (CB7/2879-86).
129 On 24 July 2014, a letter was sent to Mr Xu on the Fund's letterhead, purporting to be from Mr Darmali (whose name is misspelt "Darmili") as "Fund Manager", confirming that the Fund is a complying fund for the purpose of meeting the requirements of the SIV stream (CB7/3047). The letter contains the same statement extracted above from the letter of 4 July 2014 to Mr Xu as to the Fund funding projects as debt holders secured over the real assets of the project, with investors receiving a quarterly return on capital (CB7/3048). I find that the letter was sent by Mr Darmali. A sentence had been added to the earlier letter's description of the Fund's investments to state that, in general, 50% of the property mezzanine finance will be allocated to Victorian-based development projects. This appears to have been prompted by a discussion with the office of the Victorian government's business migration sponsorship sector as to how the Fund invests to benefit the economy of the State of Victoria (CB7/3047). There is no evidence that the Fund ever advanced finance to Victorian-based development projects, or had any such intention, although Mr Xu did invest $1.5 million in Victorian Government bonds.
130 On 24 July 2014, Mr Darmali as "Fund Manager" wrote a letter "To Whom it May Concern" on the letterhead of the Fund, warranting that it is a complying fund for the purposes of qualifying for the SIV stream and stating as follows (CB7/3059):
[The Fund] invests in a diversified portfolio Australian real estate mortgages, property mezzanine finance, term deposits and interest deposits (within Australian financial institution) and government bond. [The Fund] in general puts 40% of its fund to Victoria based real [property] development projects and 40% to NSW based projects. [The Fund] retain 20% in term deposits and government bond maintain it cash liquidity.
The [Fund] fund the Projects as debt holders secured over the real assets of the Project of Victoria. Subject to the management fee, the Fund allows the investor to receive a quarterly return on capital and be secured and preferred over the development project and properties.
The letter goes on to refer to the Fund's claimed economic benefit to Victoria's economy including funding Melbourne-based property development, working closely with Melbourne based professional service providers such as lawyers and accountants, and allocating funds to Victorian State government bonds. There does not appear to be any basis in fact for any of those claimed benefits said to be provided by the Fund to the Victorian economy.
131 On 28 July 2014, the Department of Immigration and Border Protection of the Australian Government advised Mr Xu that his application for a visa had reached the stage where he was invited to select and make a complying investment of at least $5 million in Australia (CB7/3061). On about 30 July 2014, a meeting was conducted over Skype involving Mr Xu, Mr Chen, Mr Wang, Ms Lin and Mr Darmali. Mr Xu gave evidence in his affidavit in direct speech of that meeting, but all he could recall in his cross-examination was that he said to Ms Lin that the principal would be safe and that was why he would make the investment: T234.21-42. Mr Chen also gave evidence that Mr Xu said that as long as Ms Lin could guarantee that his principal was safe, there was no problem, to which Ms Lin replied that it was guaranteed: T306.7-27. Mr Wang's evidence was to the same effect: affidavit of 3.11.23 at para 57. I accept that evidence.
132 On 1 August 2014, Mr Darmali sent an email to Ms Lin copied to Ms Kwok as follows (CB7/3065.1):
Thank you for great work in rising the capital. Please find attached the mandate letter fro Mr Xu. Could you kindly check make sure I didn't miss anything before send it to him? He need to initial all pages and signed on the acceptance section.
On 1 August 2014, Mr Darmali as the "Fund Manager" wrote to Mr Xu under the heading "Investment mandate" referring to his application for a SIV. The letter recommended an investment in a bond issued by the Victorian State government, and an investment in "ASIC regulated managed investment scheme (MIS), which provide investment into Australian property with a fixed return (eg 8% p.a)". The letter also stated "investment into property MIS is subject to risks of loss because of market, currency, economic, political, human error, business and other events" (CB7/3065.13). The letter invited Mr Xu to contact Mr Darmali on his mobile telephone number if he required clarification of any issues raised in the letter. Mr Xu signed the letter as confirmation of acceptance of its terms (CB7/3071).
133 Mr Xu paid $3,069,229.12 into the Fund's 645 Account between 5 and 7 August 2014, and paid further amounts of $892,540.10 on 11 August 2014 and $1,746.06 on 14 August 2014, being a total of $3,963,515.28 (CB14/6481).
134 On 8 August 2014, the Second MVDA Loan Agreement was entered into between Gold Stone as trustee for the Fund as the Lender and MVDA as the Borrower (CB7/3090). The agreement is in the same form as the MVLC Loan Agreement and the First MVDA Loan Agreement. The Schedule identifies the principal amount as $3,200,000 and the term of the loan is expressed as "6 months (option for 3 months)". The interest rate is expressed as "Fixed at 10% for 6 months", with a higher interest rate on amounts in arrears of "25% per annum".
135 Item 6 of the Schedule identifies the Mortgaged Property as follows:
Unit 4, 12-13 Marine Parade, Manly, NSW 2095 and 102 Bower Street, Manly, NSW 2095. Unregister Plan: Lot in an unregistered Strata Plan which is part of 2/575535, C/345580A and C/345580B, Part Folio: 2/575535, C/345580A and C/345580B.
Unit 2. 07/3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove. Unregistered Plan: Lot 35 in an unregistered plan which is part of Lot 71-74 Plan 10155, Part Folio 71-74 /10155.
Unit 2. 06/3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove. Unregistered Plan: Lot 34 in an unregistered plan which is part of Lot 71-74 Plan 10155, Part Folio 71-74 /10155.
As I have indicated above, a proposed lot in an unregistered strata plan is not a form of real property known to the law. Mr Fong could not recall discussing with Mr Darmali, Ms Lin or Mr Cai on this occasion the identification of the Mortgaged Property or the legal consequence of the strata plans being unregistered: T376.39-377.7. I accept that Mr Fong was again surprised that Gold Stone agreed to lend money on an unsecured basis: T377.8-12.
136 Item 8 of the Schedule identifies the "Collateral Documents" as follows:
Deed of call option to purchase Unit 4, 12-13 Marine Parade, Manly, NSW 2095 and 102 Bower Street, Manly, NSW 2095, with the contract deposit value of $3,520,000.00,
There is no evidence that any such deed of call option was ever drafted or executed.
137 The agreement was executed by Mr Fong on behalf of MVDA and on his own behalf as guarantor, his signature being witnessed by Mr Darmali (CB7/3105). Mr Cai executed the agreement on behalf of Gold Stone, and the document also bears what purports to be the signature of Mr Wu (although that signature is correctly disputed) (CB7/3106). Mr Darmali earned and received a commission of $300,000 in relation to the Second MVDA Loan Agreement, consistently with Mr Fong's handwritten note on the bank transfer record of 2 October 2014 (CB7/3326) and with Mr Fong's testimony (T378.7-18 and 402.14-17). The source of funds for the payment of that commission was the loan by Gold Stone of $3.2 million (Fong, T378.27-30).
138 On 8 August 2014, Mr Darmali and Ms Lin signed a withdrawal form for Macquarie Bank to withdraw $3 million from the Fund's 645 Account to be paid to MVDA. Also on that day, Mr Darmali and Ms Lin signed a separate withdrawal form with Macquarie Bank for a withdrawal of $200,000 from the Fund's 645 Account to be paid to MVDA (CB7/3135).
139 8 August 2014 was a Friday. On the following Monday, 11 August 2014 at 8.20 am, Ms Kwok sent an email to Ms Lin and Mr Darmali as follows (CB7/3135.3):
Further to our meeting last Friday, could you please confirm which unit number of the Manly site for GSSIMF [i.e. the Fund] to invest AUD$3.2 million to MV Development?
I believe that there is an mistake for the "call option for unit 3" and the loan agreement in last Friday as well as the sale contract. Could you please checking with MV Development which unit number of that call option for GSSIM invested that AUD$3.2 million. If something you're unclear or unsure as a fund manager, I would recommend that to hold on the investment fund until clear. Also, how do you do the due diligence checked on this Manly project? We need to ensure the investors money not investing to risk position and/or mistake. Please note, GSSIM has invested $2.7 million in Manly Project (sale contract named at unit 3) for Ms Chu Hong's fund in May 2014.
140 Mr Darmali replied on 11 August 2014 at 9.26 am to Ms Kwok, copied to Ms Lin (CB7/3135.2) as follows:
Spoken to Victor [Fong] and he will give us 2 of the Lane Cove apartments and the unit number for Manly for this one is number 4 (number 3 is for previous one). In all for this $3.2M we will be holding close to $9 millions of security plus a reduced price of $1m on the apartments which will be valued in completion for $7m (this is based on bank senior debt assessment).
As per the due diligent, we have the full visibility study, his sales contract, building cost, funding arrangements but most important is sufficient security in the case of worst scenario.
Ms Kwok replied at 9.56 am saying (CB7/3135.1):
I will wait for all revised signed contract for unit 4 and loan agreement as well as call option.
141 On 12 August 2014 at 2.47 pm, Ms Kwok sent an email to Ms Lin, Mr Cai and Mr Darmali (CB7/3137.1-2), asking specifically of Mr Darmali:
Could you please update me the information about the investors fund for Mr Xu and copy signed contract and loan agreement for my compliance records.
Mr Darmali responded at 4.21 pm that day, copying Ms Lin and Mr Cai (CB7/3137.1), saying:
I will include the other 2 properties in Lane Cove in the loan documents.
142 I draw the inference from the emails of 11 and 12 August 2014 that what now appears as the Schedule to the Second MVDA Loan Agreement (CB7/3104) was not part of the document executed by the parties and provided to Ms Kwok on Friday 8 August 2014. Mr Darmali agreed that that was fairly obvious: T627.3-8. The Schedule which now appears refers to a call option over Unit 4, rather than Unit 3 as referred to by Ms Kwok. Further, the Schedule which now appears refers to two proposed lots in the unregistered strata plan at Lane Cove, which is what Mr Darmali said at 9.26 am on 11 August 2014 Mr Fong had now offered to provide, and what Mr Darmali said at 4.21 pm on 12 August 2014 he would include in the loan documents. Mr Darmali denied being involved in replacing the original schedule in the 8 August 2014 loan agreement with the Schedule that now appears (T625.37-627.47), but I reject Mr Darmali's evidence and find that he personally replaced the original schedule with the new one on about 12 August 2014. The original Schedule in the document executed on 8 August 2014 is not in evidence. It appears to me from the emails of 11 and 12 August 2014 that the Schedule in the document signed on 8 August 2014 referred in Item 6 to Unit 4 of the Manly unregistered strata plan (and not the two units in the Lane Cove unregistered strata plan) and referred in Item 8 to Unit 3 (not Unit 4) in the Lane Cove unregistered strata plan.
143 On 11 August 2014, a Form 1413 Declaration in relation to managed funds was sent to the Australian Government in relation to Mr Xu's investment in the Fund. The document purports to have been signed by Mr Darmali as the "Fund Manager", and declares that the Fund meets the definition set out in reg 1.03 of the Migration Regulations 1994 (CB7/3136). Mr Darmali disputes that the signature on the document is his, but I do not accept that evidence. As discussed at [54] above in relation to Mr Darmali's credibility, the signature is not so markedly different from versions of Mr Darmali's signature which he accepts to be genuine for me to draw that conclusion in the absence of expert handwriting evidence, and as I have indicated above, I do not regard Mr Darmali's uncorroborated evidence as being credible. Also on 11 August 2014, the Fund sent to Mr Xu a Confirmation Statement recording his holding of 3.5 million units in the Fund at a unit price of $1.
144 On 13 August 2014, Ms Lin sent an email to Ms Kwok copied to Mr Darmali referring, among other transactions, to the two transfers of funds by Gold Stone to MVDA amounting to $3.2 million (CB7/3140.2). The email pointed out that a certificate had to be issued for the issue of 3.5 million units in the Fund on 11 August 2014, and also a letter to confirm the receipt of Mr Xu's funds in the Fund's trust account. On 13 August 2014, Ms Lin sent an email to Ms Kwok saying that she needed the two documents that day "or the client will miss his deadline for SIV" (CB7/3140.1). On 14 August 2014, Mr Darmali as "Fund Manager" of the Fund wrote to Mr Xu confirming that the Fund had received his transfer of $3,963,515.28 into the Fund's trust account, and that there was a settlement delay for the balance of the fund totalling $5 million for reasons relating to the banking system (and apparently relating to the exchange of currency). The letter confirmed the investment of $3.5 million in the Fund "as per mandate" (CB7/3142).
145 On 18 August 2014, Mr Fitzgerald and Ms Rees executed two transfers of the properties in Manly in favour of MVDA, being Folios 2/575535, C/345580A and C/345580B (CB7/3147.1-3). At about that time, MVDA executed two mortgages in favour of Win Senior No 123 Pty Ltd, the first in respect of Folios C/345580A and C/345580B (CB7/3148) and the second in respect of Folios 71/10155, 72/10155, 73/10155, and 74/10155 (CB7/3190). The second of those mortgages was cross-collateralised with the existing second mortgage given by MVLC to Win Mezz No 75 Pty Ltd (CB4/1444). Another mortgage, to XPC and others, was later registered on the Manly site in about late October 2014 (CB8/3438). MVDA did not at that time execute a mortgage in favour of Gold Stone, nor did cl 12.3 of the First MVDA Loan Agreement require it to do so.
146 On 26 August 2014, Ms Chu received a distribution statement from the Fund, referring to a payment of $70,000 (less withholding tax) being 2% of the $3.5 million which she had invested in the Fund (CB7/3262).
147 On 9 September 2014, Mr Darmali as "Fund Manager" of the Fund wrote to Mr Xu confirming the receipt of a total of $5,000,025.18 into the Fund's trust account (CB7/3281). The letter stated that, in accordance with Mr Xu's instructions, $3.5 million had been invested in the Fund, and $1.5 million had been transferred to the Treasury Corporation of Victoria.
148 On 17 September 2014, Mrs Darmawati Darmawati sent a letter to Mr Fong on behalf of MVLC directing that the final repayment of the loan of 18 March 2014 be made to Mr Darmali's personal bank account (CB7/3296). On 2 October 2014, an amount of $800,000 was received by Mr Darmali in that bank account (CB7/3326). The bank transfer document of 2 October 2014 (CB7/3326) has a handwritten note by Mr Fong referring to a payment of $300,000 for the loan dated 8 August 2014, being the Second MVDA Loan Agreement. I infer that the balance of $500,000 paid on 2 October 2014 was the final payment for Mrs Darmawati's loan, although Mr Fong could not recall that (T378.20-21; 404.19-20).
149 Mr Darmali gave evidence (in his affidavit of 3 May 2024, paras 51-53) that the payment of $800,000 on 2 October 2014 was for the balance of his mother's $1 million loan (after the 28 May 2014 payment of $220,000 which included interest), and it was paid to Mr Darmali under her payment direction of 17 September 2014. I do not accept the evidence that the full amount of $800,000 was a loan repayment. Although the evidence does not show any other repayments by MVDA of Mrs Darmawati's loan, it may well be that the documentary evidence is incomplete. Even if there were no other repayments to Mrs Darmawati, I find that Mrs Darmawati accepted the $800,000 payment (which she directed to be paid to her son) in full and final settlement of her loan, despite the fact that the two amounts of $220,000 and $300,000 were commissions payable to Mr Darmali. Mrs Darmawati may not have known of the commission arrangement between her son and Mr Fong, and Mr Darmali may not have told her (if it was the case) that she was entitled to a further repayment of $500,000. These possibilities were not explored in the cross-examination of Mr Darmali, but that would have been a pointless exercise in circumstances where Mr Darmali refused to accept that there was any commission arrangement between him and Mr Fong.
150 Ms King submitted that if the commission arrangement had existed as recounted by Mr Fong, then it would have been reflected in the banking records referred to in Mr Fong's affidavit of 11 June 2024, and would have been noticed and reported on by the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA. The effect of Mr Fong's evidence was that the 10% commission would generally be paid by the lender directly to Mr Darmali, and the commission paid for the two MVDA loans was exceptional, in that the full amount of principal was advanced by Gold Stone as lender and the commission was then paid by MVDA: T380.1-11. Mr Fong gave evidence, which I accept, that the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA did not ask him any questions about the commission arrangements: T397.45-398.2. Mr Darmali's affidavit of 11 June 2024 contained banking records for his personal account with ANZ from 23 January 2014 to 22 May 2015, and for Fiducia Asset's ANZ account from 3 February 2014 to 1 April 2015, in an attempt to establish that Mr Darmali did not receive the alleged commissions. However, Mr Darmali did not say in the affidavit or elsewhere that they were the only bank accounts which Mr Darmali or his companies held or controlled, and the evidence refers to an account in his name with NAB (CB9/4259). The records pertaining to that NAB account were not produced, despite the fact that they fell within the terms of a notice to produce served by the plaintiffs on Mr Darmali on 4 June 2024 (CB14/6475.1-.2). As to the liquidators' investigations and reports, in my view a diligent liquidator may well have missed the commission arrangement and payments, given the very brief and opaque handwritten reference made on the two bank withdrawal documents. I find that the commission arrangement was based on an oral agreement made between Mr Darmali and Mr Fong, such that there was no written agreement which would have been available to the liquidators. Further, it is not clear to me that the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA would have taken any particular interest in the matter. While a 10% commission appears to me to be unusually high, the financial constraints facing MVLC and MVDA at the time may have made the task of finding a willing lender unusually challenging and thus deserving of a relatively high reward. The evidence is insufficient for me to form a view as to whether the amount of the commission was unreasonably high in the circumstances, or would have struck the liquidators as unreasonably high if they had become aware of it. Further, I do not regard it as implausible that, in the case of the loans by Gold Stone, the commissions were (contrary to Mr Fong's evidence of the usual practice) paid by MVDA rather than by Gold Stone directly out of the loan amount, in that Mr Darmali would have had to disclose the commissions to Gold Stone if the usual procedure had been followed, and he may well have been reluctant to do so.
151 On 18 October 2014, Mr Xu was advised by the Department of Immigration and Border Protection of the Australian Government that he had been granted a visa in the SIV stream (CB8/3427).
152 On 26 November 2014, Ms Chu received her second distribution statement from the Fund, again in the amount of $70,000 (less withholding tax) at a rate of 2% of her investment of $3.5 million (CB8/3505).
153 On 19 January 2015, Ms Kwok sent an email to Mr Fong, copied to Ms Lin, Mr Cai and Mr Darmali, reminding him that there were two loan agreements due for repayment shortly, being $650,000 on 6 February 2015 (an apparent reference to the MVLC Loan Agreement including interest) and $3,520,000 due on 8 February 2015 (an apparent reference to the Second MVDA Loan Agreement including interest) (CB8/3558). Ms Kwok sent a further email to that effect on 2 February 2015 (CB8/3566). On 9 February 2015, Ms Kwok sent a further email to Mr Fong (copied to Mr Cai, Ms Lin and Mr Darmali) asking him to advise when he could make the repayment, and stating that "The director of trustee will take an action and lodge a caveat on the properties if we haven't heard from you by today at 5:00 pm" (CB8/3567). Gold Stone did in fact lodge caveats in March 2015, one in relation to Folio 1/1202366 of which the registered proprietor was MVLC (CB8/3582) and the second in relation to Folios 2/575535, C/345580A and C/345580B in respect of which MVDA was the registered proprietor (CB8/3584). In both caveats, the particulars of the estate or interest claimed were stated to be the Loan Agreements of 5 May 2014 and 8 August 2014 which were said to be "secured over the property", but in the section of the caveats calling for further information under the subheading "By virtue of the facts stated below" reference is made only to the personal guarantee provided by Mr Fong (CB8/3583 and 3585). In each case the statutory declaration required by the caveats was made by Mr Cai on 3 March 2015 (CB8/3583 and 3585). Ms Lin witnessed Mr Cai's making of those statutory declarations in her capacity as a Justice of the Peace.
154 On 9 March 2015, Ms Meng Xu (Mr Xu's niece) made an inquiry of Mr Xu's migration agent, Mr Leon Wang, as to why Mr Xu had not received a quarterly distribution from the Fund (CB8/3750). Mr Wang responded that he would check with the Fund. On 13 March 2015, Mr Xu received his first distribution statement from the Fund in the amount of $70,000 (less withholding tax) at a rate of 2% of his investment of $3.5 million (CB8/3751). On 16 March 2015, three days later, Mr Xu received his second distribution statement, again in the amount of $70,000 (CB8/3752). On 16 March 2015, Ms Chu received her third distribution statement in the amount of $70,000 (CB8/3753).
155 On 18 March 2015, Ms Lin sent an email to Ms Kwok, Mr Darmali, Mr Wu and Mr Cai stating that a letter of demand had been sent to Mr Fong and MVLC on 16 March 2015 (CB8/3754). The email referred to a meeting between Ms Lin and Mr Fong on Monday afternoon (i.e. 16 March 2015) in which Mr Fong had advised that St George Bank had told him by email that he had been served with "Default Advice" and that an administrator may be appointed to MVLC. Ms Lin stated:
We need meet urgently to discuss what we shall do to protect Fund Assets and resolve the current cash flow problems.
Mr Darmali and Mr Wu denied attending any such meeting, and I am not satisfied that the foreshadowed meeting actually took place.
156 On 27 March 2015, a Priority Agreement was entered into between Gold Stone as trustee of the Fund, MVLC, MVDA and Mr Fong (CB8/3774). The recitals to that agreement refer to caveats having been lodged on 10 and 16 March 2015 on the titles to the Lane Cove property and the Manly property, and refer to the Lane Cove property being encumbered by mortgages to St George Bank, and to Win Mezz No 75 Pty Ltd and Win Senior No 123 Pty Ltd (the latter two referred to as the Wingate Mortgages). The recitals also refer to Gold Stone having agreed at the request of Mr Fong to withdraw the caveats on the terms of the agreement. MVLC and MVDA agreed to repay the monies borrowed under the Loan Agreements of 5 May 2014 and 8 August 2014 as and from the date on which all of the monies owing by MVLC were repaid to St George Bank and Wingate (cl 1.1). Gold Stone agreed that on signing the Priority Agreement it would deliver signed withdrawals of the caveats (cl 2.1). MVLC and MVDA agreed to deliver to Gold Stone upon exchange of the Priority Agreement the mortgages over certain units (cl 3.1) in registrable form and duly executed, being:
The units in the Lane Cove Project being the lots numbered 5, 14, 23, 25, 34, 43, 49, 50 and 56 in the strata plan 85782 to be registered in respect of that project.
Annexure A to the Priority Agreement set out the terms of those mortgages. Plainly, the strata plan had not yet been registered and the so-called lots referred to as the subject-matter of the mortgages did not yet exist.
157 On 16 April 2015, Strata Plan 85782 was registered, being in respect of the property at 3-9 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove, NSW (CB9/3830.12). A mortgage was granted by MVLC to Gold Stone in respect of Lots 5, 14, 23, 25, 34, 43, 49, 50 and 56 of Strata Plan 85782 but the mortgage is undated (CB8/3761). On 22 June 2015, Gold Stone lodged a further caveat over Lots 5, 14, 23, 25, 43, 49, 50 and 56 (but not Lot 34) of Strata Plan 85782, claiming an interest as mortgagee under a mortgage granted by MVLC (CB9/3882-4).
158 On 23 June 2015, Gold Stone as trustee of the Fund sent a creditor's statutory demand for payment of a debt to MVLC in the amount of $7,853,367.40, signed by Mr Cai as director (CB9/3898-9). The affidavit accompanying the statutory demand was made by Mr Cai and stated in para 2 (CB9/3900):
I am the person who, on behalf of the Gold Stone Capital, had the dealings with the debtor company that gave rise to the debt and I have inspected the business records of Gold Stone Capital Pty Ltd in relation to the debtor company's account with Gold Stone Capital Pty Ltd.
Mr Cai ultimately accepted in his cross-examination that that statement was true (T436.43-45), in contradiction of his earlier denials (which were expressed with great confidence and absolute certainty) that he had not had any dealings with MVLC or MVDA in relation to these loans (T435.12-29, 436.28-32). There is an element of exaggeration in the statement quoted above from Mr Cai's affidavit accompanying the statutory demand, in that Mr Darmali also had extensive dealings with MVLC on behalf of Gold Stone, and Ms Lin was also centrally and directly involved in these dealings. I have referred above to the evidence given by Ms Lin in NSW Supreme Court proceedings in her affidavit dated 27 November 2015 that she was the person who discussed and negotiated the three loans with Mr Fong. However, Mr Cai was also directly involved as a central participant in Gold Stone entering into and performing the three loan agreements.
159 On 26 June 2015, administrators were appointed to MVLC (CB9/3908 and 13/5897). On 1 July 2015, administrators were appointed to MVDA (CB9/3925 and 13/5897).
160 In early July 2015, Ms Lin and Mr Cai sought advice from Mr Paul Reese of Summer Lawyers in relation to recovery of Gold Stone's loans to MVLC and MVDA (CB9/3958). On 20 July 2015, Mr Reese sent an email to Ms Lin on the subject of Lin v MV Golden Destiny Developments (Turramurra) Pty Ltd and Dahua Group Turramurra Project Pty Ltd, setting out a schedule of properties at Lane Cove and Manly and the security held by Gold Stone in relation to them (CB9/4000). In relation to the Lane Cove properties, the schedule refers to Gold Stone as holding a fourth and fifth charge in relation to Lots 5, 14, 20, 23, 34, 43, 49 and 56 of Strata Plan 85782. In relation to the Manly properties, Gold Stone is stated as having a fourth charge in relation to Folios C/345580B and 2/575535. Mr Reese says in the email that he finds the loan agreements and security completely unacceptable for an outlay of $7 million and adds: "Frankly speaking you might as well have had no security whatsoever for your money." In an email of 12 August 2015, sent by Ms Lin to Mr Darmali, Mr Cai and others, Ms Lin refers to the amounts owed by MVLC and MVDA to Gold Stone as being $8,109,948.56 (CB9/4011-12).
161 On 12 August 2015, Ms Lin on behalf of Gold Stone submitted a proof of debt in the administrations of MVLC and MVDA (copied to Mr Cai and Mr Darmali) claiming a secured debt of $8,109,948.56 (CB9/4011-6).
162 On 18 August 2015, $1 million was credited to the Fund's 065 Account and the balance of the 065 Account at the end of that day was $1 million (CB13/5978). The accounting expert engaged by the plaintiffs, Mr Wengel, was unable to identify the source of that amount, describing it as "Unknown": report of 19.4.24, para 15.8, Table 11. Mr Cai gave evidence that the source of the $1 million deposit was GDI, which had obtained the money from the settlement of the Turramurra project: T418.6-15. That evidence was accepted by the plaintiffs in final address: T890.7, 1179.21-29. I accept that evidence as being consistent with the objective probabilities, and in the absence of any other plausible explanation. As no units in the Fund were ever issued to GDI, I regard the payment by GDI to the Fund as a loan, noting that Gold Stone was entitled to borrow money pursuant to cl 20.2(g) of the Fund Constitution (CB5/2086).
163 Jumping ahead in the chronology but staying with the subject of GDI's loan to Gold Stone, on 21 July 2016, Gold Stone withdrew $300,000 from the Fund's 065 Account, and deposited that amount in the 022 Account (CB13/5980). On the same day, Gold Stone transferred $300,000 from the 022 account in favour of G3, a company controlled by Ms Lin as sole director and shareholder. Mr Wengel noted the transactions with G3 (report of 19.4.24 at para 14.8.6), but did not include them in his calculation of the GDI loan balances. The bank trace documents show that Ms Lin authorised the payment of $300,000 by Gold Stone to G3: CB12/5887-8. I accept the plaintiffs' submission that the payment to G3 should be treated as having been at the request or direction of GDI, and thus a partial repayment by Gold Stone of its loan account with GDI (T1190.25-47). None of the defendants opposed that characterisation.
164 Mr Wengel analysed the transactions between GDI and Gold Stone in the Fund's bank accounts (excluding the $1 million deposit on 18 August 2015 and the $300,000 paid to G3 on 21 July 2016), treating the deposits from GDI as loan advances, and withdrawals in favour of GDI as loan repayments, and also calculated a running balance of GDI's loans to the Fund: report of 19.4.24, para 19.29.2, Table 27. If the $1 million deposit on 18 August 2015 and the payment to G3 of $300,000 on 21 July 2016 are included, the relevant amounts are as follows:
165 GDI is now de-registered and is therefore unable to make any claim to the balance of $99,613.21.
166 On 20 August 2015, Gold Stone ceased to be an AR of Fiducia Asset (CB15/6766). I accept Mr Darmali's evidence that Fiducia Asset terminated its AR agreement with Gold Stone due to unpaid invoices: affidavit of Mr Darmali of 8.2.24 at paras 140-3. However, I reject Mr Darmali's evidence (at para 140) that at the time, so far as he was aware, the Fund was in good financial order and there were no issues with the Fund. That evidence is contrary to the emails from Ms Lin of 18 March 2015 (CB8/3754) and 12 August 2015 (CB9/4011), and inconsistent with Gold Stone's non-payment of Fiducia Asset's monthly invoices from February to July 2015 amounting to $74,797.80 (Mr Darmali's affidavit of 8.2.24, para 133; CB10/4700), as I have discussed at [52]-[53] above in relation to Mr Darmali's credibility.
167 On 21 August 2015, Mr Cai and Mr Wu signed a Commonwealth Bank form for the 889 Account, changing the signatories to the account to Mr Cai and Ms Lin (CB9/4116-7).
168 On 31 August 2015, MVDA and MVLC were wound up by order of the Supreme Court of New South Wales (CB9/4286 and 13/5897). The administrators were appointed as liquidators of both companies.
169 On 14 September 2015, Ms Lin was told that the property at 102 Bower Street and 10-12 Marine Parade, Manly was the subject of a contract for sale for the amount of $16.35 million (CB9/4247).
170 On 1 October 2015, the Fund sent a letter to Ms Chu under the heading "Investment Summary Report for 2014/2015 Financial Year" (CB9/4278). The letter records Ms Chu's return on investment as $210,000, and contains a highly misleading description of the Fund's investments, including relevantly (CB9/4280-81):
• The Fund Manager has made direct investment to the development project located at 102 Bower Street & 13 Marine Parade Manly. The investment is charge over the real estate of the Project. The Project is a DA approved development for luxury oceanfront prestigious apartments. As at the date of this report the development has been disposed for a gain and the Trustee is expecting part of the investment to be liquidated on November 2015.
• The Fund Manager has made direct investment to the development project located at 3 Finlayson Street, Lane Cove NSW. The Lane Cove Development contains 55 residential apartments in Sydney North Shore area and it is complete the building construction on May 2015 ready for occupation. The Fund investment is secured over the unsold apartments with a Priority Agreement after the mortgagee. The Lane Cove Development is under process of liquidation with prospect to distribute all the sales proceed to creditors as soon as possible.
171 On 1 October 2015, the Fund sent a letter to Mr Xu containing the same information as to the Fund's investments, and referring to Mr Xu's return on investment as $210,000 (CB10/4471). On 10 October 2015, Gold Stone paid further distributions to Ms Chu (CB14/6553).
172 On 30 October 2015, the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA issued a report to creditors (CB9/4283). In relation to MVLC, the liquidators estimated its assets to be between $18,603,523 and $26,782,123 (CB9/4296). MVLC's secured creditors, namely Westpac Banking Corporation and the two Wingate lenders, were owed a total of $22,917,500, or $12,517,500 if the $10.4 million owing to Win Senior Pty Ltd was totally repaid out of the assts of MVDA (CB9/4348). Gold Stone and Ta Lee Investments Pty Ltd are described as "Caveator Creditors", being owed $8,109,948.56 and $3,420,242.64 respectively (CB9/4348). Unsecured creditors were estimated to be in the range of $33,669,807 to $34,729,809 (CB9/4348). In relation to MVDA, the liquidators estimated its assets to be $18,750,000 (CB9/4302). MVDA's secured creditors were owed $15,983,487 (CB9/4350), leaving a potential surplus of $2,766,513. Gold Stone was said to be one of four "Caveator Creditors", being owed $8,109,948.56 out of a total amount owed to Caveator Creditors of $11,078,703.07. Unsecured creditors were estimated to be in the range of $16,939,229 to $17,239,229. The claims by creditors estimated by the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA were stated as subject to change as a result of interest and costs accruing, together with the results of the liquidators' security review. Ultimately, as I explain at [179] below, Gold Stone's claims were settled on arm's length terms with the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA on 14 November 2017 for a payment to Gold Stone of $445,000.
173 On 20 November 2015, Mr Xu received a third distribution statement from the Fund in the amount of $70,000 (less withholding tax), calculated at the rate of 2% of $3.5 million (CB10/4483). On 14 December 2015, Mr Xu was paid a further distribution in the amount of $56,636.36 (CB14/6555). On 12 January 2016, Ms Meng Xu noticed that the distribution at the end of 2015 was less than the previous quarterly distributions, and asked Mr Wang to investigate (CB10/4531). Mr Wang then said that Gold Stone had replied that there had been changes in the tax rate (CB10/4531), which was plainly a false explanation provided by Gold Stone.
174 It appears that the initial sale of the Manly property at $16.35 million fell through, and the property was again listed for sale. At an auction held on 1 March 2016, the property achieved a final sale price of $13.1 million (CB10/4621). The liquidators' report to creditors of 18 March 2020 (CB13/5894) provides evidence of the following matters. From the sale proceeds, the debt owing to the first-ranking mortgagee (Win Senior No 123 Pty Ltd) was discharged in full and $1.641 million was paid to the second-ranking mortgagee, XPC, in partial satisfaction of its debt (which totalled about $3 million: CB9/4302). There was also an amount of $1.267 million retained as the subject of a marshalling claim by Gold Stone and another secured creditor (CB13/5915). At that time, the liquidators still had a damages claim against the original purchaser and its guarantor, and they still held the $1.635 million deposit that the purchaser had paid, which was the subject of a claim by the purchaser. That deposit was later paid to XPC after the claim against the purchaser was settled in 2017 (CB13/5913-4).
175 On 28 February 2016, a meeting took place in Sydney between Mr Xu, Mr Jin (a relative of Mr Xu), Mr Chen and Ms Lin. I accept the evidence of Mr Jin (affidavit of 27.10.23 at paras 9-21) to the following effect. Mr Xu asked what had happened to his capital and asked for it to be returned, to which Ms Lin responded by seeking to interest Mr Xu in a property development at Gosford. Mr Xu expressed a lack of interest in the Gosford project and reminded Ms Lin of her statement that his $3.5 million was capital guaranteed. Ms Lin responded that she was unable to repay Mr Xu's $3.5 million and again sought to interest him in the Gosford project.
176 On 27 June 2016, Mr Fong was made bankrupt (CB13/5898).
177 On 22 August 2016, Ms Meng Xu sent a WeChat message to Mr Leo Wong, saying that the Fund had not paid the interest for two instalments and she had contacted Ms Lin (CB10/4757). On 26 August 2016, Ms Lin sent an email to Ms Meng Xu, referring to Gold Stone having been the AR of Ergo and later of Fiducia Asset (CB10/4818), and then stating as follows:
The AFSL license holder is responsible to design the product and ensure the Fund compliance with ASIC. The Licensee and Director of Fidusa Asset Management is David Darmali who is also the fund manager of Gold Stone Secured Income Fund to make the investment decision.
Ms Meng Xu responded that day (CB10/4817), including the following:
You have informed that the Trustee has engaged a new responsible manager. Is that indicating David Darmili is no longer the fund manager of the Gold Stone Fund? Should information of new fund manager be given to the investors? Since David Darmali is the Licensee and Director of Fidusa Asset Management, how can we ensure the Fund still compliance with ASIC if he is not fund manager?
Ms Lin's email stated that Gold Stone had engaged a new responsible manager and was in the process of applying for an AFSL through an associated entity in order to take full control of the Fund's operation.
178 In September 2016, Ms Chu and Mr Lincoln Wong met with Mr Chen, who said that Ms Lin had told him that there was a problem with the investment, and there was then a meeting in Ms Lin's office in Sydney. Ms Lin said that the investment had failed, whereupon Ms Chu said to Ms Lin that before investing, Ms Lin had promised her that the principal was guaranteed, to which Ms Lin replied that every investment carries risks, and that she was not in charge of the fund, and referred Ms Chu to Ms Lin's lawyer (Chu affidavit of 3.11.23, paras 80-84).
179 On 14 November 2017, Gold Stone entered into a Deed of Settlement and Release with the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA and others under which Gold Stone was paid $445,000, and in return released the liquidators of MVLC and MVDA from all claims relating to the matters identified as being in dispute (cl 2.2(a)(i) and (b)(i)) (CB11/5090). The deed records the agreement of the parties that Gold Stone has an equitable interest in (a) the proceeds of sale of Lots 5, 10, 13, 18, 38, 43, 46, 49 and 50 of the Strata Plan at Lane Cove; (b) the proceeds of sale of Folios C/3455880A, C/3455880B and 2/575535 in Manly; and (c) Lot 34 in the Strata Plan at Lane Cove (cl 2.1(a)(i)). On 20 November 2017, an amount of $395,504.40 was deposited into Gold Stone's 022 Account with the Commonwealth Bank (CB11/5153 and CB14/6555), being the settlement payment of $445,000 less legal expenses.
180 On 23 April 2018, an amount of $3,000 was withdrawn from the 889 Account by way of bank transfer, and was described as "service fee". Mr Cai was not cross-examined on that withdrawal, but no issue of procedural fairness arises as the transaction was clearly pleaded (para 132H Item 1 in the Third Further Amended Statement of Claim). The description is substantially similar to the withdrawal of $5,500 on 8 October 2018, described as "Trustee service fee", and in light of Mr Cai's admission that there was no proper basis for such a charge I similarly regard it as a transaction known by Mr Cai to have been improper at the time: see [182] below.
181 On 24 July 2018, an amount of $205,000 was withdrawn from the 022 Account with the description "deposit for hotel" (CB14/6555). Mr Cai made that payment to G3 in accordance with a direction from Ms Lin (affidavit of Mr Cai of 2.12.23 at para 66). The amount was a 0.5% deposit for a development project in Gosford for which Ms Lin had sought unsuccessfully to obtain funding from Ms Chu and Mr Xu at the meeting in September 2017 to which I have referred above. Mr Cai gave unchallenged evidence that he understood at the time that Ms Chu and Mr Xu consented to that payment being made (T493.24-33). I accept that evidence. Clearly, however, Ms Lin knew that the plaintiffs had not consented to the payment and that it was a misappropriation of cash held by Gold Stone as trustee of the Fund. Ultimately, the amount of $205,000 was repaid to the Fund's 022 Account on 17 January 2020, although no interest on that amount was paid. The plaintiffs do not make a claim for that interest.
182 On 8 October 2018, an amount of $10,000 was withdrawn from the 022 Account and credited to the 889 Account (CB14/6554-5). On the same day, an amount of $5,500 described as "Trustee service fee" was withdrawn from the 889 Account by Mr Cai, who agreed in cross-examination that there was no proper basis for him to charge a service fee to the Fund in October 2018 (T495.20-23).
183 Also on 8 October 2018, Mr Cai made a cash withdrawal from the Commonwealth Bank in Victoria Avenue in Chatswood of $6,600 (CB7/2963 and 14/6554). Mr Cai accepted that it was inappropriate for him as the director of the trustee of the Fund to withdraw that money from the Fund's 889 Account in October 2018 (T496.18-22). Although it is pleaded in the Third Further Amended Statement of Claim (para 132, Item 4) that the payment was authorised by Mr Cai and/or Ms Lin, Mr Cai said that he could not recall whether it was him or Ms Lin who made the withdrawal (T495.35-39). After being taken to the withdrawal voucher (CB7/2963), Mr Cai conceded that he had made the withdrawal (T495.41-496.22). I am not satisfied on the balance of probabilities that Ms Lin also authorised the withdrawal.
184 On 17 October 2018, Mr Cai transferred $15,000 from the 022 Account to the 889 Account (CB14/6554-5). On the same day, Mr Cai withdrew $15,000 from the 889 Account and described the withdrawal as "Director Fee" (CB14/6554). Mr Cai accepted that there was no appropriate basis on which he could charge the Fund a fee for his work as a director (T497.23-27). Mr Cai gave evidence that Ms Lin had told him that he could charge a director fee and he decided that $15,000 was an appropriate amount (T497.27-39). I accept that evidence.
185 On 18 December 2018, Mr Cai sent a message to a WeChat chat group called the Goldstone Fund Group (CB11/5272), saying:
Hi everyone, as the director of Goldstone Capital, I would like to take the deposit back (it was agreed as fully refundable deposit), which has transferred to Louise's company G3 Assets in formal legal procedures. I have almost arranged a lawyer. Do you still want to pay $41 million for 100 hotel rooms, which have not built yet and it is difficult to build property.
On 30 December 2018, Mr Cai sent a further message to the Gold Stone Fund Group asking for written confirmation as to whether the investors in Gold Stone still wanted to leave the deposit with G3 Assets Holding (CB11/5284).
186 On 9 January 2019, Mr Cai withdrew an amount of $100,000 from the 022 Account described as "back to GDI" (CB14/6556). Mr Cai said in cross-examination that he knew at the time that the investors in the Fund had not authorised that payment and that there was no lawful basis to his knowledge for that money to be paid out of the trust account to GDI in January 2019 (T500.25-34). However, that is one of the payments which Mr Wengel treated as a repayment of GDI's loan to the Fund, and I accept Mr Wengel's characterisation of the payment. Accordingly, I do not accept Mr Cai's concession that he knew there was no lawful basis for the payment.
187 Also on 9 January 2019, Mr Cai withdrew an amount of $40,000 from the 022 Account which was transferred into the 889 Account (CB14/6554, 6556). On the same day, Mr Cai withdrew $10,000 by cashing a cheque on the 889 Account at a branch in Chatswood (CB7/2967 and T500.42-501.19). Mr Cai accepted that there was no appropriate basis for that withdrawal of $10,000 on 9 January 2019 (T501.21-29).
188 On 10 January 2019, $20,000 was paid from the 889 Account with a reference "Back to GDI" (CB14/6554). Mr Cai accepted that he knew at the time that the investors in the Fund had not authorised that payment (T501.46-502.1). However, Mr Wengel identified that transaction as a repayment of GDI's loan, and I accept that evidence.
189 On 15 February 2019, a further payment of $10,000 was paid from the 889 Account with the description "Back to GDI" (CB14/6554). Mr Cai said that he understood that GDI had invested $1 million in the Fund which GDI should get back (T502.25-29). I accept that evidence. Although GDI was never a unitholder in the Fund, it had advanced loan monies to the Fund, and the running balance of the loan account at the time was a credit of $320,000 in GDI's favour. Mr Cai did accept that he was conflicted in making a decision as to GDI getting its money back (T502.31-42).
190 On 11 April 2019, Mr Cai made a cash withdrawal of $4,000 from a bank branch at Chatswood Chase (T503.38-504.28). Mr Cai accepted that to his knowledge there was no basis upon which he could properly withdraw that money from the account (T504.30-37).
191 On 4 June 2019, Mr Cai withdrew $10,000 from the 889 Account (CB14/6554). Mr Cai sought to say that there was a proper basis upon which he was entitled to withdraw that money, namely that it was a repayment to GDI (T506.20-38). The withdrawal was made by Mr Cai in cash at the counter of the Commonwealth Bank at its Chatswood branch (CB7/2971 and T506.40-47). I reject Mr Cai's evidence that it was a repayment to GDI. The money was withdrawn in cash rather than by way of bank transfer, and I do not accept that a repayment to GDI would have been made in that matter and without documentary evidence that GDI received the benefit of it. Mr Cai could not recall making the withdrawal when he made his affidavit of 28 May 2024 (para 11), but accepted that the withdrawal was made in cash (para 5, item 10).
192 As I have indicated above, the amount of $205,000 was repaid to the Fund's 002 Account on 17 January 2020 (CB14/6556). On 9 March 2020, Mr Cai withdrew the entire amount of the credit balance of the 022 Account, which amounted to $210,169.40 (CB14/6556). Mr Cai paid that amount to GDI (T507.46-508.7). Mr Cai accepted that there was no legitimate reason for him to pay that amount to GDI rather than to the investors in the Fund (T508.9-13). Mr Cai agreed that the money should have been paid to the investors in the Fund (T508.22-25). Mr Cai said that, despite knowing that it was trust money, he deliberately paid the money to GDI "because GDI is part of the trust" (T508.34-37). However, Mr Wengel treated the $210,000 as a repayment of GDI's loan, which I regard as the correct characterisation. In that sense (ie as a lender to the Fund), GDI was "part of the trust". Mr Wengel did not deal with the additional withdrawal that day of $169.40, but I infer that it was also a repayment to GDI in reduction of the running loan account. I deal below with the question whether the plaintiffs were entitled to the amount of $210,169.40, rather than GDI.
193 On 30 July 2020, Mr Cai sent a message to the Goldstone Fund Group (CB11/5318), saying:
Hello, everyone. Don't you want to get your investments money back? I feel sorry for you guys.
At the time that Mr Cai sent that message, he knew that he had paid away all of the amount in the trust fund to GDI (T510.13-16). After Mr Chen responded that "of course we want to get them back", Mr Cai sent a further message (CB11/5318), saying:
You should ask Louise [Lin]. She has all the money. I am also the victim.