12 The Defendant, who at that time was divorced from his wife, had access on alternate weekends to his two children Ashley and Megan (who at that time were aged eight and almost five respectively). Subsequently the Defendant's children came to reside with him at his Picnic Point residence in August 2001, as a result of a custody order made in his favour by the Family Court of Australia in consequence of an application in that regard filed by him in the Local Court at Sutherland.
13 According to the Plaintiff, shortly before she moved into residence at the Picnic Point property in late 1995 the Defendant had two boarders residing in that property, being the Plaintiff's son Peter and another boarder, named Michael [Garner]. It was after Peter Amiet moved out in about November 1995 that, according to the Plaintiff, she had a conversation with the Defendant about her moving into the Picnic Point property, and the financial arrangements regarding her occupancy therein.
14 It was the Plaintiff's evidence that she then moved into residence in the Picnic Point property in January 1996, and that Michael, the other boarder, moved out in about mid-February of that year. According to the Plaintiff, she and the Defendant agreed that each should then contribute half of the expenses of the property, rather than for the Defendant to advertise for another boarder.
15 In March 1996, according to the Plaintiff, there was a further conversation in which the Defendant said that because he could not make ends meet he was proposing to advertise for another boarder. That was done, and another boarder, Bill [Lemont], arrived about a week later. That boarder remained until about October 1996. After a further conversation it was, according to the Plaintiff, agreed between herself and the Defendant that there should be no further boarders, but that the Plaintiff would have to go back to paying half of all expenses. No boarders were in the Picnic Point residence from October 1996 to August 1997.
16 When, according to her, the Plaintiff left the Picnic Point property in August 1997 she moved into rented accommodation at Bass Hill until March 1998, when she went to live with her sister at Cronulla. She returned to reside at Picnic Point, according to her evidence, in about late July or early August 1998.
17 In August 2000 the Plaintiff removed to Port Macquarie, where she remained, in employment, until May 2001. Before departing Picnic Point in August 2000 the Plaintiff gave to the Defendant written notice of her intention to do. She took with her all her furniture and belongings from Picnic Point. The Plaintiff said that she then returned to Picnic Point in May 2001, residing there until August 2002. When she moved out at that time the Plaintiff again took with her all her belongings.
18 On the crucial issue of whether the Plaintiff and the Defendant were in de facto relationship it is curious that at the relevant time the Plaintiff, who now asserts such a relationship with the Defendant, was denying that she was living in a de facto relationship with anyone, whilst the Defendant, who now denies such a relationship with the Plaintiff, was asserting that he was living in a de facto relationship with the Plaintiff. During the hearing each of the Plaintiff and the Defendant stated that that party had, concerning the existence or non-existence of such a de facto relationship, deliberately lied to, respectively, Centrelink and the Family Court of Australia.
19 Each of the parties is a self-confessed liar who (if that party's present evidence be accepted) had no hesitation, in the case of the Plaintiff, in lying to Centrelink for personal financial gain from the public purse (by receiving Rent Assistance and Newstart Allowance); and, in the case of the Defendant, in lying under oath to the Family Court (in his affidavit of 3 October 2001, filed in the Local Court at Sutherland) for personal benefit in relation to the custody of his children.
20 It will be appreciated, however, that there is no particular reason why the present evidence of the Plaintiff should be preferred over that which she gave at the earlier time, or why the present evidence of the Defendant should be preferred over that which he gave at the earlier time. The Plaintiff has a motive to give false evidence in the present proceedings, that motive being the making of an order in her favour, awarding to her an interest in the Defendant's property (or the monetary equivalent thereof), whilst the Defendant also has a motive to give false evidence in the present proceedings, that motive being the resistance to such an order against him.
21 All that clearly emerges from the total inconsistency between the statements made by each party during the relevant period and the evidence given by that party in the present proceedings is that each party is a witness devoid of credibility, whose uncorroborated evidence on any issue in dispute between them the Court should be most reluctant to accept.
22 It was not in dispute that there were three separate periods during which the Plaintiff resided in the Defendant's Picnic Point property, although the parties were not in agreement as to the precise dates of commencement and of termination of each of those three periods. According to the Plaintiff those periods were;
· January 1996 until August 1997 (19 months)
· August 1998 until August 2000 (24 months)
· May 2001 until August 2002 (15 months)
23 That is, the Plaintiff asserts that in totality she and the Defendant resided together for a period of 58 months.
24 It should also be recorded that the Plaintiff asserted that from August 2002 she was in the habit of staying in the Picnic Point property for between two and five nights a week and that that arrangement continued until January 2004, when the relationship between the parties finally broke down. Although she asserted the existence of a domestic relationship between the parties from August 2002 to January 2004, I do not understand it ultimately to be the case for the Plaintiff that the de facto relationship which she asserted between them obtained after August 2002.
25 According to the Defendant the Plaintiff resided in the Picnic Point property for the following periods:
· March 1996 until January 1998 (21 months)
· January 1999 until August 2000 (19 months)
· May 2001 until August 2002 (15 months)
26 That is, the Defendant asserts that the Plaintiff resided in his property for a total period of 55 months.
27 The commencement date and the termination date of the first period were in dispute. The parties did not agree upon the commencement date of the second period, but were in agreement on the termination date (which was when the Plaintiff removed to Port Macquarie). The parties were in agreement on both the commencement date and the termination date of the third period.
28 Each of the three separate periods of the asserted relationship had come to an end more than two years before the institution of the present proceedings on 20 October 2004. Accordingly, in respect to each of those three periods the Plaintiff is out of time (section 18(1) of the Property (Relationships) Act). No application has been made by the Plaintiff for extension of time, pursuant to section 18(2) of the Act.
29 Further, it will be appreciated that, even accepting the periods asserted by the Plaintiff, the Court is precluded by section 17(1) from making an order for the adjustment of the interests of the parties in property in respect to the first and third periods asserted by the Plaintiff (since each of those periods was a period of less than two years) unless the Plaintiff can invoke the discretion vested in the Court under subsection (2) of section 17. Since there is no child of the parties, it will be necessary for the Plaintiff to satisfy the prerequisite set forth in paragraph (b)(i) of that subsection before the discretion of the Court can be invoked. That prerequisite is that the Plaintiff has made substantial contributions of the kind referred to in section 20(1)(a) or (b) for which she would otherwise not be adequately compensated if the order were not made.
30 If, however, ultimately it be established (as the Defendant contends) that each of the three periods was of less than two years, then in respect to each of those three periods, it would still be necessary for the Plaintiff to satisfy the requirement set forth in section 17(2)(b) of the Act.
31 At the time of the commencement of the first period of the asserted relationship the Plaintiff was employed as a customer service supervisor receiving a salary of about $30,000 (gross) a year. At that time she had no significant assets, other than a 1983 Mazda motor car (which she subsequently sold for $300). The Plaintiff continued in that, and subsequent, employment until about October 2001. From then until April 2002 the Plaintiff was not in employment. She continued in employment until the end of the third period of the asserted relationship.
32 During the third period of the asserted relationship the Plaintiff was on 18 December 2001 declared bankrupt on her own petition, and, indeed, appears to have still been an undischarged bankrupt at the time of the institution of the present proceedings. (The Plaintiff had previously been bankrupt for a period of three years in the early or mid-1990s.) It was the assertion of the Defendant (but denied by the Plaintiff) that the reason for the Plaintiff's resignation from her employment in October 2001 was to enable her to receive all her leave entitlements before she filed for bankruptcy in December 2001, and not (as asserted by the Plaintiff) to embark upon a change of lifestyle by removing to Port Macquarie.