Background
7 In the opening paragraph of the Primary Judgment, the learned primary judge said:
This judgment is the culmination of a long, drawn-out and tortuous hearing of a creditor's petition.
8 The background to this appeal spans several judgments and appeals in the Supreme Court of New South Wales and the Federal Circuit Court, in addition to the proceeding before the primary judge and the present appeal.
9 The Primary Judgment as well as the Liability Proceeding originate from a 2012 property refinancing arrangement administered by Mr Dimitriou, which involved a suite of transactions. It is sufficient to mention some of the parties to, and features of, the refinancing arrangement:
Alfio and Biagina Rubino (the Rubinos), were the proprietors of certain property;
The properties were subject to mortgages which required refinancing;
The Australian and New Zealand Bank (ANZ), was the original mortgagee of the properties and ultimately became the refinancer;
Pineview had been incorporated to receive funds advanced by the ANZ for the purpose of re-financing and to hold the Rubinos' properties as trustee;
Ms Susan Huybers was at all relevant times the sole director and shareholder in Pineview. She was also at all relevant times a client of Mr Dimitriou;
Mr Dimitriou was the Rubinos' advisor and the architect of the refinancing arrangement involving the ANZ and Pineview; and
The Rubinos' son, Francesco (Frank) Rubino, acted as the Rubinos' agent for the purpose of engaging Mr Dimitriou.
10 The salient features of the refinancing arrangement and the proceedings which followed are described further below. In short, however, the funds provided by the ANZ to refinance the Rubinos' mortgage did not find their way to the Rubinos but were transferred to entities controlled by Mr Dimitriou. As a result, litigation ensued involving the parties referred to above, as well as various companies controlled by Mr Dimitriou. The relevant transactions and ensuing claims are set out in detail in the Liability Judgment at [3]-[21].
11 The transactions were precipitated by the financial difficulties Mr and Mrs Rubino were experiencing in about 2011. The Rubinos had secured their indebtedness to the ANZ with mortgages over certain properties owned by them. The ANZ called for repayment of the debt. Eventually a settlement was reached by which sums were assigned to particular titles. It was agreed that if those sums were paid by the Rubinos, the relevant titles held by the ANZ would be returned to them. The arrangement is described by White J at [7]-[10] of the Liability Judgment.
12 Mr Dimitriou, through a corporate entity named Wyse & Young International Pty Ltd, was engaged by the Rubinos' son, Frank Rubino, on behalf of the Rubinos to assist in sourcing funds to pay the sums required to release the titles. Eventually, Mr Dimitriou arranged for the ANZ to provide the refinance. Mr Dimitriou structured a transaction by which certain of the properties and their mortgages were transferred to Pineview, newly incorporated for that purpose, which became the counterparty to the new loan from the ANZ. Two of Mr Dimitriou's clients, Ms Susan Huybers and Mr Danny Kalischer, provided short term finance to Pineview to facilitate the transaction. Ms Huybers was the sole director and shareholder of Pineview, and she and a company she controlled called Green Global Pty Ltd guaranteed Pineview's obligations to the ANZ.
13 As a result of the arrangement, $1,990,551 was received by Pineview from the ANZ, secured by the mortgage of the titles which had been transferred by the Rubinos to Pineview. Of this sum, $1,296,043.96 was paid to Mr Dimitriou or companies associated with him. White J concluded (at [19] of the Liability Judgment):
The effect of what was done was that using the personal covenant of Pineview, and personal guarantees of Huybers and Green Global, and using the lands of the Rubinos, Dimitriou obtained for himself almost $1.3 million.
14 Pineview defaulted on its obligations to the ANZ.
15 On 8 April 2013, the ANZ commenced proceedings for possession of the properties. No defence was filed and default judgment for possession was obtained.
16 On 8 October 2013, Mr and Mrs Rubino commenced separate proceedings in the Equity Division of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, against several defendants, relevantly including the ANZ and Pineview. There were several cross-claims filed, including relevantly for present purposes the third cross-claim by Pineview and Ms Huybers against Mr Dimitriou and Wyse & Young and Wyse Accounting Pty Ltd (a further entity controlled by Mr Dimitriou).
17 On 25 November 2015, before the trial of the proceeding before White J, the ANZ, Biagina, Frank and Lee Rubino (Lee in her own capacity and in her capacity as executrix of Alfio's estate) entered into a settlement deed referred to as the ANZ Rubino Deed. By the ANZ Rubino Deed, ANZ and the Rubinos agreed to settle the Equity Proceedings (defined in the Deed as Supreme Court proceeding 2013/301796) on the terms that the Rubinos were to pay $1,315,000 to the ANZ in consideration for the discharge of mortgages over two of their properties.
18 White J upheld the cross claims by Pineview and Mrs Huybers against Mr Dimitriou and his related entities. In relation to Mr Dimitriou, White J said (at [20]-[21] of the Liability Judgment):
Dimitriou's conduct was unconscionable and fraudulent. The principal victim was Huybers, not the Rubinos. The Rubinos were not deprived of their land by fraud. They may have been defrauded to the extent the land was encumbered beyond what Frank Rubino on behalf of his parents had agreed to. But that was not the case the plaintiffs advanced.
Pineview and Huybers are entitled to damages or equitable compensation against Dimitriou, Wyse & Young International and Wyse Accounting. Other companies under the control of Dimitriou to which substantial moneys were paid were not joined as defendants. It may be open to Pineview and Huybers to bring proceedings against other Dimitriou companies, but that is not a question that presently arises.
19 White J held that Dimitriou and his controlled entities' conduct constituted breaches of several legal duties. His Honour found they owed fiduciary duties to both Ms Huybers and the Rubino entities which were breached (at [258]-[263]), and that they had committed the tort of deceit and engaged in unconscionable conduct within the meaning of s 20 of the Australian Consumer Law in Schedule 2 of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) (at [264]-[265]). Ultimately, however, his Honour concluded that the "simplest" of Pineview's claims was for an account of the moneys received by Mr Dimitriou and his entities from which Pineview did not receive any benefit (at [266]-[269]). This finding is of significance to this appeal and accordingly we set out White J's reasons on this issue in full:
Because Dimitriou did not have Huybers' authority to pay the moneys borrowed from the ANZ Bank to Wyse Accounting and Wyse & Young, the simplest of the claims is Pineview's claim for an account of the moneys received by those companies. Pineview was the legal owner of the moneys borrowed from the ANZ Bank. The receipt of those moneys by Wyse Accounting with knowledge through Dimitriou that the moneys legally belonged to Pineview requires Wyse Accounting to account for the moneys it received. Dimitriou, who arranged for the moneys to be paid to Wyse Accounting and Wyse & Young, and was responsible for the subsequent disbursement of the moneys, is personally liable as a principal.
Pineview pleads that it did not receive the benefit of the moneys advanced by the bank and was not aware that the sums were being directed to it on account of the mortgages given to the bank. It pleads that Dimitriou, through Wyse & Young and without authority, directed the bank to issue cheques in favour of Wyse Accounting and Wyse & Young. It pleads that Huybers was not aware that the moneys had been lent by the bank and it seeks an order that Dimitriou, Wyse & Young and Wyse Accounting account for the sum of $2,000,820 (sic) plus interest.
Dimitriou said that he relied on Frank Rubino's authority for the disbursement of moneys received by Wyse Accounting. He said he received a text message on his Blackberry from Frank Rubino authorising payments. He said that his Blackberry had been seized by the police. On the return of a subpoena to the NSW Police Detective Sergeant Schussler said that the Blackberry had been sent to Canada for forensic examination because Dimitriou had not provided the password. Dimitriou said that it was an old device and he no longer recalled the password. There was no corroboration of Dimitriou's evidence that Frank Rubino had authorised payments from the moneys borrowed from the ANZ Bank.
The issue is moot. Whilst Mr and Mrs Rubino were the beneficial owners of the moneys borrowed by Pineview, the authority of the legal owner of those moneys was required for their disbursement. A beneficiary of a trust may be entitled to call for the transfer of the trust property and so put an end to the trust. But whilst the trust exists, decisions in relation to the application of trust property are to be made by the trustee. That means that Dimitriou needed Huybers' authority, not Frank Rubino's authority, for the disbursement of the moneys that Pineview borrowed.
20 Judgment was entered for Pineview and Huybers' on their cross-claim and the following orders were made:
3. On the third cross-claim:
(a) order that the claims for relief by the cross-claimants against the first and second cross-defendants (the plaintiffs) be dismissed (save as to costs);
(b) give judgment for the first cross-claimant (Huybers) against the third, fourth and fifth cross-defendants [Mr Dimitriou and his entities] in the sum of $535,151.62 plus interest pursuant to s 100 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) from 9 March 2012;
(c) declare that the third, fourth and fifth cross-defendants [Mr Dimitriou and his entities] are liable to indemnify the first cross-claimant against her liability to the first defendant (the ANZ Bank) in respect of her guarantees of the moneys borrowed by the second cross-claimant (Pineview) from the ANZ Bank;
(d) give judgment for the second cross-claimant (Pineview) against the third, fourth and fifth cross-defendants [Mr Dimitriou and his entities] in the sum of $1,276,389.29, plus interest in accordance with s 100 of the Civil Procedure Act from 9 March 2012;
(e) declare that the third, fourth and fifth cross-defendants [Mr Dimitriou and his entities] are liable to indemnify the second cross-claimant against its liability to the ANZ Bank in connection with the mortgages given by it to the ANZ Bank on or about 9 March 2012 and in respect of any liability the second cross-claimant might have to the first and second cross-defendants in respect of payments made or liabilities incurred by the second cross-claimant otherwise than in the proper performance of the trusts on which the second cross-claimant holds the properties at Calderwood Road and Pine Valley Road, Galston for the first and second cross-defendants;
(f) Reserve the proceedings for further consideration and give the cross-claimants liberty to apply in respect of the working out of the declarations in para 3(c) and (e), or in respect of any application for proprietary relief or an account of profits in respect of the use of moneys of the cross-claimants misappropriated by the third and fifth cross-defendants.
21 Since the Liability Judgment was handed down on 30 June 2016, Mr Dimitriou has not paid the judgment debt. He sought to appeal against the judgment but was unable to do so due to non-compliance with self-executing orders for the filing of materials: Dimitriou v Huybers [2017] NSWCA 252. He also sought to have the statutory demand issued by Huybers and Pineview set aside, and sought leave to pay by instalments: Rubino & Anor v Pineview Property Holdings Pty Ltd & Ors; In the matter of Wyse Accounting Pty Ltd; In the matter of Wyse & Young International Pty Ltd; In the matter of Wyse & Young International Pty Ltd; In the matter of Wyse Accounting Pty Ltd [2016] NSWSC 1780. By August 2019, there were at least seven sets of published reasons in the Supreme Court of New South Wales concerning Mr Dimitriou and his entities and Ms Huybers and Pineview, at least three of which concerned applications for a stay of the orders made by White J referred to above: Rubino v Pineview Properties Pty Ltd (No 7) [2019] NSWSC 1031, [2]-[3] and [5].
22 Returning to the substance of the appeal, pursuant to the orders made by White J, Ms Huybers and Pineview were granted three categories of relief as against Mr Dimitriou and his entities:
payment of Ms Huybers' costs fixed in the sum of $535,151.62 plus interest (order 3(b));
a declaration that Mr Dimitriou and his entities indemnify Ms Huybers against liability to the ANZ under her guarantee of the loan to Pineview (order 3(c)), and indemnify Pineview for largely the same (order 3(e)); and
damages of $1,276,389.29 plus interest payable to Pineview (order 3(d)).
23 Subsequent to the Liability Judgment, the non-Dimitriou parties to the proceeding settled. Their settlement was recorded in the following deeds:
(1) The Deed of Release, substantially the subject of this appeal, dated 25 November 2015. The parties to the deed were those listed above at [9] save for Mr Dimitriou; and
(2) The Costs Deed, dated 24 November 2016. The parties to this deed were all of those parties to the Deed of Release and additional parties not relevant for present purposes.
24 Mr Dimitriou appears not to have known of the existence of the Deed of Release and Costs Deed when they were entered into.
25 Returning to the narrative, on 30 January 2018, Pineview issued a bankruptcy notice (BN221502) to Mr Dimitriou. This notice was subsequently set aside on 3 April 2018 by Registrar Wall. Pineview also commenced separate proceedings in the Federal Circuit Court (SYG2293/2017).
26 The Circuit Court proceedings have some relevance to this appeal as we shall explain. They concerned an anterior application for bankruptcy against Mr Dimitriou by Pineview and Ms Huybers. Of relevance is that Mr Dimitriou was given leave by Judge Dowdy to subpoena documents meeting the description of the Deed of Release and documents relating to the performance of it. The draft subpoenas were addressed to the ANZ and others and sought the following:
All documents that set out the settlement agreements and settlement deed and consent orders, included [sic] but not limited to the settlement adjustment sheet, the direction to pay advises [sic] between YOU, and [Pineview, Ms Huybers] and the 'Rubino Parties' … resulting from the [Liability Judgment] …
The indemnity release deed between YOU, and [Ms Huybers] as guarantor for [Pineview] that was made between 1 March 2016 - 2 December 2017.
A record of ALL payments made to you by The 'Rubinos Parties', on behalf of … [Pineview and Ms Huybers] … because of the [Liability Judgment].
27 Ultimately the subpoena was not issued as the proceedings were discontinued by Pineview. However, the subpoena takes on relevance in the course of events before the primary judge in the present proceeding as the documents sought to be subpoenaed were the subject of the unanswered call at a hearing before the primary judge.
28 On 18 April 2018, on Pineview's application the Official Receiver issued Bankruptcy Notice BN223293 which is the subject of the present proceeding (Primary Judgment at [3]). It was not complied with, and accordingly on 12 July 2018, Pineview filed a creditor's petition in this court seeking a sequestration order against Mr Dimitriou.