Commonwealth of Australia v Endresz
[2019] FCA 301
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2019-03-08
Before
Mr J, Refshauge J, Flick J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (14 paragraphs)
- The parties are to bring in Short Minutes of Orders to give effect to these reasons within seven days. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
FLICK J: 1 There are presently before the Court four separate proceedings. Each of the proceedings was initially commenced in the Federal Circuit Court of Australia. But each proceeding was transferred to this Court on 21 June 2018. 2 In each proceeding the Applicant, the Commonwealth of Australia, seeks a sequestration order under s 43 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth). The four separate proceedings and the applications for sequestration orders arise out of the failure on the part of the following four persons to satisfy Bankruptcy Notices, namely: Mr Allan Paul Endresz; Ms Dawn May Endresz; Mr Jozsef Endresz; and Mr William Arthur Forge. Each of these persons is the Respondent to a separate proceeding brought by the Commonwealth. 3 Each of the Bankruptcy Notices (in turn) arises out of a separate proceeding commenced in the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory by the Commonwealth. In August 2013 a Judge of that Court, Refshauge J, concluded that the Commonwealth had made out claims for relief against each of the Respondents: Commonwealth v Davis Samuel Pty Ltd (No 7) [2013] ACTSC 146, (2013) 282 FLR 1 ('August 2013 judgment'). In November 2014 final orders were made by that Court against each of these persons in the following amounts: Mr Allan Endresz - $18,633,178.47; Ms Dawn Endresz - $12,715,615.17; Mr Jozsef Endresz - $18,633,178.47; and Mr William Forge - $12,715,615.17. Reasons for decision were published: Commonwealth of Australia v Davis Samuel Pty Limited (No 8) [2014] ACTSC 312 ('November 2014 judgment'). Appeals by some of the defendants against these final orders were filed in December 2014 but were dismissed in June 2016 by the Court of Appeal of the Australian Capital Territory for want of prosecution: Davis Samuel Pty Ltd v Commonwealth of Australia [2016] ACTCA 22. There has been no further appeal. Applications were thereafter made in the inherent jurisdiction of the Court to have the judgment and final orders set aside. In January 2017 Refshauge ACJ dismissed those applications: Commonwealth of Australia v Davis Samuel Pty Limited (No 11) [2017] ACTSC 2, (2017) 316 FLR 159 ('January 2017 judgment'). An application seeking relief in the High Court of Australia has also been apparently rejected. 4 Applications made in the Federal Circuit Court of Australia to have the Bankruptcy Notices set aside have also been dismissed. 5 In opposing the making of the sequestration orders, the Respondents seek to have this Court "go behind" the judgments of Refshauge J published in August 2013, November 2014 and January 2017. Although there was some discrepancy between the written and oral submissions advanced on behalf of the Respondents, the fundamental proposition sought to be advanced was that the sole issue to be resolved by the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory, and the only issue in respect to which it could make orders, was whether or not monies had been paid without authority by the Commonwealth to CTC Resources NL and to a partnership of two companies. That sole issue depended upon the application of the principles set forth in Auckland Harbour Board v R [1924] AC 318. Viscount Haldane, speaking for the Privy Council, there said: …it has been a principle of the British Constitution now for more than two centuries, a principle which their Lordships understand to have been inherited in the Constitution of New Zealand with the same stringency, that no money can be taken out of the Consolidated Fund into which the revenues of the State have been paid, excepting under a distinct authorisation from Parliament itself… Any payment out of the Consolidated Fund made without Parliamentary authority is simply illegal and ultra vires, and may be recovered by the Government if it can, as here, be traced… So much, it was submitted, flowed from the description of the "nature of action" set forth in the Amended Originating Application that was before the Supreme Court. 6 In expanding upon that fundamental proposition, the four arguments advanced on behalf of the Respondents were arguments directed to whether or not: the pleaded causes of action as set forth in the Sixth Amended Statement of Claim, being the form of pleading upon which the hearing before the Supreme Court was conducted, fell within the "nature of action" set forth in the Amended Originating Application, that being referred to as "the indorsement on the writ"; the manner in which Refshauge J dealt with and resolved other causes of action, albeit not causes of action of advanced against the Respondents before this Court, so undermined his Honour's reasoning and judgment that reliance could not be placed upon the manner in which the liability of the present Respondents was resolved; there were "inconsistent judicial findings" as between the findings made by Foster AJ in ASIC v Forge & Ors [2002] NSWSC 760 and the findings made by Refshauge J; and the manner in which Refshauge J resolved other causes of action, albeit not causes of action of immediate relevance to the present respondents, was such as to cause his Honour's judgment and orders to be so "tainted" that no reliance could now be placed upon the orders made as against the present four Respondents. The "taint" was such, so it was argued, to render the judgments and orders ultra vires. There was a considerable degree of overlap as between the second and fourth arguments. 7 Mr Allan Endresz was granted leave to appear on behalf of the other Respondents. Very much at the fore in the granting of such leave was that each of the submissions being advanced were common to all Respondents; no submission was advanced that the bases upon which one or other of the Respondents had been found liable gave rise to any different considerations. Mr Allan Endresz maintained that he had the authority of the other Respondents to make submissions on their behalf. 8 It is concluded that none of these arguments prevail. 9 The Commonwealth is entitled to the sequestration orders it seeks against each of the four individuals.