The plaintiff/respondent's submissions
21 Mr Rayment QC contended that the construction of clause 2.1(b) is linked to the provisions of clause 4.1(b). He submitted that it will be necessary for the Court to construe what is meant by the latter provision in the context of the Deed.
22 The contention was that in order to understand the effect of clause 4.1(b), it will be necessary for the Court to receive evidence of surrounding circumstances and this fact alone operated against summary dismissal of the claim.
23 In addition, Mr Rayment emphasised that the indemnity provided for in clause 2.1(b) was not in respect of a payment but related to "any liability". An indemnity for a liability, he argued, was quite different from an indemnity or promise to pay or re-pay an amount of money.
24 Mr Rayment contended that clause 2.1(b) should be interpreted as an indemnity for any liability that the first plaintiff incurred, not an indemnity for payments made by the plaintiff. In Rotavator (supra), an employer sought to recover the amount of compensation it had paid to the employee under s.64(1)(b) of the Workers Compensation Act 1926 from the tortfeasor. The employer was given a statutory indemnity in respect of the compensation which he had paid being a right of action in respect of each payment made. The distinguishing factor was that the present case does not concern a payment, but rather a liability.
25 A letter from the first plaintiff's solicitors to the defendant dated 31 March 2009 (Exhibit 2) was relied upon by the first plaintiff as constituting a demand for the payment of the income tax liability. Clause 2 of the deed of indemnity is referred to on page 1 of the letter. On p.2, the first plaintiff sought recovery of the sum of $591,792.99 for outstanding invoices, the sum of $124,814.48 for the accrual of interest and the sum of $1,775,378.96 for GST on the invoices. The total amount, $2,491,986.43, was the subject of the demand for payment in the letter. Ms Richards for the defendant submitted that although the letter claimed payment for various sums, including GST, it did not specifically make a demand for the amount of the income tax liability in question in these proceedings.
26 In construing clause 4.1 of the Deed, Mr Rayment submitted on behalf of the first plaintiff that the Court would, on a final hearing, apply the principles expressed in Pacific Carriers Limited v BNP Paribas (2004) 218 CLR 451. A majority of the High Court stated at [22]:-
"The construction of the letters of indemnity is to be determined by what a reasonable person in the position of Pacific would have understood them to mean. That requires consideration, not only of the text of the documents, but also the surrounding circumstances known to Pacific and BNP, and the purpose and object of the transaction. In Codelfa Constructions Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of NSW , Mason J set out with evident approval the statement by Lord Wilberforce in Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Hansen-Tangen :
'In a commercial contract it is certainly right that the court should know the commercial purpose of the contract and this in turn presupposes knowledge of the genesis of the transaction, the background, the context, the market in which the parties are operating.'"
27 In reference to the "surrounding circumstances" in which the Deed was entered into, Mr Rayment outlined, by way of background, that the first plaintiff took the leases of all of the shopping centre in question and received a fit-out allowance from the landlord and, in return, he was to find sub-tenants or assigned tenants for the whole of the shopping centre. Part of his remuneration for the fit-out was the contributions paid by way of the fit-out unless particular shops were passed on to those who would become his sub-tenants. He maintained that what was envisaged was that the leases for the shopping centre in favour of the first plaintiff would be for a period of three years.
28 In the present case, the surrounding circumstances, it was said, would be those that were known to the parties including the purpose and object of entering into the deed. Proof of the surrounding circumstances by evidence was a matter to be determined at trial. These circumstances include the fact that the first plaintiff entered into certain lease agreements on the condition that the defendant would provide an indemnity for any tax liability incurred by the first plaintiff in respect of fit-out contributions paid by the defendant.
29 Mr Rayment submitted that there are a number of possible constructions of clause 4.1(b). Firstly, the clause could be construed so as to effectively apply to the contributions that were made in the period of three years of the deed but not thereafter and would operate with respect to tax liability whenever assessed. Secondly, the clause could be understood as only applying to fit-out contributions which have attracted an actual liability to income tax within three years of the deed. Thirdly, the clause could apply to contributions that have attracted actual liability to income tax and been the subject of a demand and sued upon within three years (that is, in the nature of a statute of limitations provision). The third possibility, it seems is the construction that the defendant will contend for at any final hearing.
30 As to the second suggested interpretation, the argument outlined included the following points:-