In response to this paragraph the defendant pleaded:
" As to paragraph 15 of the Statement of Claim, the Defendant admits that after repayment of all monies outstanding in relation to the Loan Agreement Pasquale Ciaglia did not transfer to the Plaintiff a half share interest in the Chatswood Property but says further that:
(a) at no time did the Plaintiff request that Pasquale Ciaglia transfer to the Plaintiff a half share interest in the Chatswood Property; and
(b) in or about 1999 or 2000 Pasquale Ciaglia offered to transfer the half share interest in the Chatswood Property to the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff refused this offer for the reason that matters with his former wife in the Family Court had not been resolved and he did not wish to have any property in his name. "
7 The defendant pleads that the reason she refused to transfer the half share in the Chatswood property to the plaintiff was that the plaintiff refused to acknowledge the entitlement of the defendant's children to a share in both the Crows Nest property and the Italy property. She did not aver that the reason she refused to transfer the half share in the Chatswood property to the plaintiff was that the loan had not been repaid. There was no evidence that any proposal was put to the plaintiff that the plaintiff acknowledge an entitlement of the defendant's children to a share in the Crows Nest property or the Italy property or of his refusing to do so, and no such matter was put to the plaintiff in cross-examination.
8 In about January 2003, not long after Pasquale Ciaglia's death, the plaintiff spoke to the defendant and said words to the effect that he wanted her to transfer his half of the property back into his name. She said "How do I know that the Chatswood property is half yours?". He replied "You know very well that half of it is mine and I want you to transfer my one half back to me."
9 Some time after 18 February 2003 the defendant handed the plaintiff a document and told him that "I've done this addendum so that it forms part of my Will. I've fixed everything up for you." The document she gave to the plaintiff was signed by her and was described as an addendum to her last will and testament. It was directed to a Mr Ralph Selwyn, the family solicitor. The defendant wrote:
" I being of sound mind wish to state that two properties, they being [...] Ridge Street Ettalong and [...] Goodchap Road, Chatswood, are shared properties and half ownership is to revert back to my brother-in-law Umberto known as [Robert] Ciaglia ... There are monies owed by myself and my late husband Pasquale Ciaglia to Robert, of which we are in the process of working out ... "
10 By this document the defendant acknowledged that the Chatswood property was a "shared property" with the plaintiff and that half ownership of that property was to revert back to him. Her acknowledgement that she and Pasquale Ciaglia owed money to the plaintiff is inconsistent with the plaintiff's not having repaid the loan.
11 Probate of Pasquale Ciaglia's estate was granted to the defendant on 28 May 2003. By a transmission application dated 16 December 2003 the defendant applied to be registered as proprietor of the estate or interest of the late Pasquale Ciaglia in the land as beneficiary of his will. She had notice of the plaintiff's claim to be entitled to a half share of the property. The property was vested in her on her obtaining the grant of probate pursuant to s 44 of the Probate and Administration Act 1898. The vesting of the property in her as executor was subject to any trust or equity affecting the same (Probate and Administration Act, s 45).
12 The admitted contract is an agreement for a loan and the grant of a common law mortgage notwithstanding that the property in question is land held under the provisions of the Real Property Act 1900. In G and C Kreglinger v New Patagonian Meat and Cold Storage Co Ltd [1914] AC 25, Lord Parker of Waddington said (at 47):
" My Lords, a legal mortgage has generally taken the form of a conveyance with a proviso for reconveyance on the payment of money by a specified date. But a conveyance in this form is by no means necessarily a mortgage. In order to determine whether it is or is not a mortgage, equity has always looked to the real intention of the parties, to be gathered not only from the terms of the particular instrument but from all the circumstances of the transaction, and has always admitted parol evidence in cases where the real intention was in doubt. Only if according to the real intention of the parties the property was to be held as a pledge or security for the payment of money, and as such to be restored to the mortgagor when the money was paid, was the conveyance considered to be a mortgage. "
13 A mortgage of Torrens title land can be effected by registering an instrument of transfer of the legal title from the mortgagor, and at the same time, entering into a separate agreement that confirms the intention that the transfer was by way of security only: Abigail v Lapin [1934] AC 491 at 501; Currey (Registrar of Titles) v The Federal Building Society (1929) 42 CLR 421.
14 On the defendant's admission, the transfer by the plaintiff to his brother of his half interest in the property was not intended to be an absolute conveyance and the money paid on the transfer was not paid as the price for a transfer on sale but as a loan to be repaid and on terms that the property was to be restored to the plaintiff when the loan was repaid. The real intention of the parties was that the plaintiff's half-interest in the land was to be held by Pasquale Ciaglia as security for the repayment of the advance with interest. In the case of a common law mortgage, where the mortgagee acquires the legal title to the property, upon the whole of the mortgage debt being repaid and the mortgagor becoming entitled to a reconveyance, the mortgagee holds the property on a constructive trust for the mortgagor (Venables v Foyle (1660) 1 Ch Cas 2; 22 ER 664; Richardson v Syms (1740) 1 Barn C 90; Cholmondeley v Clinton (1820) 2 Jac & W 1; 37 ER 527; RW Turner, The Equity of Redemption (1931) Cambridge University Press at 167; Pearce v Morris (1869) LR 8 Eq 217; Tyler, Young and Croft, Fisher & Lightwood's Law of Mortgage, 2nd Australian edition (2005) LexisNexis Butterworths at [32.54]).
15 Notwithstanding the defendant's admission, Mr Stack of counsel, who appeared for the defendant submitted that the evidence of repayment adduced by the plaintiff, did not show that the loan had been repaid. He submitted that I should determine whether the loan had been repaid based on that evidence and should find that it had not, notwithstanding the defendant's admission that it had been repaid. He referred to Damberg v Damberg [2001] NSWCA 87; (2001) 52 NSWLR 492 at 520-522.
16 The plaintiff deposed that the loan repayments were made partly from lump sum repayments which he made from Italy to his mother's account, and partly by payments from Lajido to Pasquale Ciaglia's loan account with the National Australia Bank which he obtained for the purposes of the mortgage raised on the Chatswood property. The plaintiff said that the payments from Lajido represented his half share of net income of Lajido to which he was entitled.
17 The plaintiff paid $117,050.77 into his mother's account between 23 April 1991 and 9 February 1993. Pasquale Ciaglia's loan account with the National Australia Bank was credited with 28 payments of $3,327 from Lajido between May 1991 and September 1993 ($93,156) and six payments in lump sums ranging between $15,000 and $40,000 made between 26 April 1991 and 19 February 1993 totalling $144,000. The latter payments were made from Mrs Maria Ciaglia's bank account.
18 In a number of cases the payments were prima facie made pursuant to a loan agreement between Mrs Maria Ciaglia and Pasquale. There is no evidence that any repayment by Pasquale to his mother was made or sought.
19 The result of these payments to Pasquale Ciaglia's account with the National Australia Bank for the loan he took was that the account was in credit. That is, Pasquale Ciaglia's loan from the National Australia Bank was repaid by August 1993.
20 Damberg v Damberg demonstrates that a court is not bound to act on the parties' admissions. But a fundamental purpose of pleadings is to define the issues so as to confine the matters on which evidence need be led. In Damberg v Damberg Heydon JA observed (at [160]) that courts will act on admissions of or about matters of fact where there is no reason to doubt their correctness, but are reluctant to do so if there is such doubt. Where a matter of fact is admitted on the pleadings, it is not a reason to doubt the correctness of the admission that attenuated evidence is given on that matter, which, but for the admission, would be insufficient to prove the fact. Were it otherwise pleadings would not only fail in their purpose, but could be the source of injustice. If a party who admits a fact is later able to say that the court should not act on the admission because the opposite party's evidence about the fact does not amount to proof on the balance of probabilities, the efficacy of pleadings is much diminished. The opposite party would have to prepare his or her case as if no such admission were made. That is not the law. I do not doubt the correctness of the admission because of the insufficiency of the objective corroboration of the plaintiff's evidence, considered without the admission, to prove the fact if it had been in issue. Other evidence might well have been called, for example from Mrs Maria Ciaglia, to explain the payments made through her account. As appears below, I consider that the indirect means of repayment were probably adopted due to the parties' desire to conceal the true nature of the transaction from the plaintiff's former wife.
21 During the hearing the defendant sought leave to withdraw the admission. I refused that application. There was no evidence that the admission was made by mistake. I had regard to the defendant's admission in her document of 18 February 2003 (at [9] above) that she and her husband were indebted to the plaintiff, which I regard as inconsistent with the plaintiff's not having repaid the admitted loan and interest.
22 Nothing turns on the question as to whether the loan was repaid in 1993 as deposed to by the plaintiff, or at some time before Pasquale's death as admitted by the defendant. In the absence of other evidence as to how the loan was repaid, and having regard to the defendant's admission, I accept that it was repaid by August 1993.
23 On the admissions of the defendant, she holds the land on a constructive trust for the plaintiff as to a one-half share subject to her defences of: