Grounds 3(a) and 3(b): The findings concerning ownership of the Moggill property
242 In grounds 3(a) and 3(b) of the appeal, Ms George complained that the federal magistrate had erred in fact and law in failing to find that:
(a) Ms George was the registered owner of the Moggill property, as trustee for her son; and
(b) held a beneficial interest as the owner of a life estate in the property under a constructive trust for her and her son.
243 It is convenient to deal with these two grounds of appeal together, as they are related. It is also convenient to recapitulate some of the background facts and contentions.
244 Mr Fletcher obtained title to the Moggill property when it was transferred to him by the registered owner of the property, DPIPL. Ms George contended that DPIPL was not capable of transferring beneficial ownership of the Moggill property to Mr Fletcher. This is because, so Ms George submitted, in 2005, when she transferred the Moggill property to DPIPL she held the property on trust for her son, subject to the life interest for herself and her son, and that DPIPL had agreed to acquire, and to hold, the Moggill property on trust for her in that capacity.
245 It will be recalled that in support of this contention Ms George maintained that on or about 27 November 1997 she declared herself to hold all her interest in real and personal property on trust for her infant son and, consistently with that, later made two declarations of trust by endorsing the two reprints of the Trusts Act.
246 It will also be recalled that as corroboration of her claim that the Moggill property was held on trust for her son before it was transferred to DPIPL, Ms George also relied on the contents of a number of documents associated with the sale of the Moggill property to DPIPL in 2005.
247 In particular, Ms George relied on a document which conveyed the title of the Moggill property to her and a General Tenancy Agreement she entered into with DPIPL. Each of these documents contained handwritten notations, which Ms George contended were present on the documents at the time that they were executed, and which evidenced the fact that the Moggill property was then held on trust for her son. We will refer to these documents in more detail later.
248 The federal magistrate rejected Ms George's claim that she held the registered title to the Moggill property on trust for her son when she contracted to sell the property to DPIPL on 18 June 2005 or when she transferred title to that property to DPIPL by a transfer she signed on 14 September 2005.
249 The federal magistrate made the following crucial findings of fact adverse to Ms George's case.
250 First, Ms George made no oral declaration of trust of her property at or around the time of the birth of her son in November 1997.
251 Secondly, Ms George did not make a written declaration of trust in May 2002 in respect of the Pullenvale property by making the handwritten notations she claimed to have made on a reprint of the Trusts Act.
252 Thirdly, Ms George did not make a written declaration of trust in December 2003 in respect of the Moggill property by making the handwritten notations she claimed to have made on a reprint of the Trusts Act.
253 Fourthly, the circumstances surrounding the entry into the contract for the sale of the Moggill property to DPIPL and its completion did not provide any evidentiary support for Ms George's claim that she held the Moggill property on trust for her son, subject to the life interest claimed, that she had transferred that property to DPIPL in that capacity, or that DPIPL had agreed to hold the Moggill property as trustee for her in her capacity as trustee for her son, subject to the life interest claimed.
254 Fifthly, in 2007 Ms George, then bankrupt, conceived of the idea to claim that she had, at all times, held the Moggill property on trust for her son, subject to a life interest in her and her son's favour, and that Ms George then manufactured evidence to support her newly invented claim by "concocting" a number of documents.
255 The federal magistrate supported these findings with the following subsidiary findings.
256 First, his Honour made a general adverse credibility finding against Ms George. He said that he did not accept any evidence she gave which was not corroborated by any reliable and independent source.
257 Secondly, and more particularly, his Honour did not accept Ms George's evidence that she had constituted herself as trustee of all her property in favour of her son at or about the time of his birth. His Honour said that he found that that evidence was not corroborated and that he was not bound to accept uncontradicted evidence. The federal magistrate adopted observations by Spender J in Re Hope; Ex parte Carter (1985) 59 ALR 609 to the effect that whether a court accepted uncontradicted evidence would depend on all the circumstances of the case, including its inherent probability and the possibility of calling evidence in denial.
258 The federal magistrate said that the evidence was not corroborated by the evidence of Mr George, Ms George's former husband. Mr George said that he had not been informed of any trust. His Honour said that was because no trust was ever settled as Ms George contended. Indeed, he found that it was inherently improbable that such a trust was ever settled.
259 In making this finding, the federal magistrate also considered whether an express trust had been created by the various wills Ms George had made. The wills to which his Honour referred were dated 29 December 1987, 16 March 1990, 17 February 1992, 28 April 2000, 27 August 2005 and 21 March 2006. In essence, his Honour found that the wills each provided for bequests on death and the creation of a testamentary trust in favour of Ms George's son in the event of her death. The federal magistrate found that the wills did not deal with the inter vivos position for which Ms George contended.
260 As we have already indicated, the federal magistrate also rejected Ms George's evidence that she had made declarations of trust by making the handwritten notations she claimed to have made on the reprints of the Trusts Act in May 2002 and December 2003 and found that she had fabricated the two documents comprising the annotated reprints some time in late 2007.
261 The federal magistrate also observed that Ms George did not disclose the two documents said to evidence the trusts in favour of her son in her Family Court proceeding against her former husband which concluded in 2005. His Honour found that it was implausible that, if those documents had then existed, Ms George would not have referred to the trusts in the matrimonial proceeding. His Honour said that it was evident from the manner in which Ms George had conducted her case before him that, had the trusts been in existence at the time of the matrimonial proceeding, Ms George would not have hesitated to instruct her counsel and solicitors about them and she would have made "every effort to advance that matter in her case". His Honour said that he was satisfied for that reason alone that the two documents did not exist at the time of the matrimonial proceeding in the Family Court.
262 Thirdly, the federal magistrate found that a number of documents associated with the 2005 DPIPL property transaction had been annotated by Ms George about two years after the date of the execution of the documents for the purpose of corroborating her recently invented claims.
263 The federal magistrate treated the following documents as being particularly relevant to the 2005 DPIPL property transaction:
(a) A contract for the sale of the Moggill property, which bears the date of 18 June 2005, between the seller, Ms George (using the name Lauren Kay Cordes) and the buyer, DPIPL. This document contains a combination of printed and handwritten entries. As mentioned previously, the document contains a handwritten notation referring to a 30 year tenancy agreement from the settlement date at a monthly rental of $269 per month, as a tenancy affecting the property. Importantly, Ms George is not described in this document as a trustee for her son.
(b) A General Tenancy Agreement between DPIPL and Ms George. This document, which comprises a completed standard form (Form 18A), purports to be a tenancy agreement for the Moggill property. The entries on the document are all written in Ms George's hand. The agreement bears the signatures of Dr Ironside on behalf of DPIPL and Ms George using the name of Lauren K Cordes. The document records that Mr Glasspool witnessed each of their signatures on 27 August 2005.
(c) The transfer deed which was executed by Ms George using the name, Lauren Kay Cordes, on 14 September 2005. This document only records entries which are printed, other than for the date, which is handwritten. This document records the transferor as Lauren Kay Cordes and DPIPL as the transferee. There is no reference to Ms George transferring the property as trustee for her son or anyone else for that matter. Nor does it record DPIPL, the transferee, as acting in the capacity of trustee. The document also records that duty was paid on the instrument.
(d) A document entitled Transfer (exhibit 87) which was signed by Dr Ironside, on behalf of DPIPL, and Ms George (using the name Lauren Kay Cordes) to give effect to the collateral agreement between them. The document purports to transfer the Moggill property from DPIPL to Ms George as trustee for her son, Alexander. This document also contains a combination of printed and handwritten entries.
264 In support of her central contention that at the time of the 2005 DPIPL transaction she held the Moggill property on trust for her son Ms George relied in particular on exhibit 87 and the General Tenancy Agreement.
265 The transfer deed contains the printed words "Lauren Kay Cordes" as the transferee. Exhibit 87 (the transfer document) contains the additional words "in trust for Alexander George" in handwriting immediately after the printed words "Lauren Kay Cordes" in the space on the written form describing the transferee. Also, within that space on the form, is inserted, in handwriting, the word "Life" between the words on the form "Given names" and "Surname/Company name and number" and the word "Interest" after the latter printed words. Further, the handwritten words "Life Estate" have been inserted adjacent to the printed words "Fee Simple" in that part of the form which records the interest being transferred. The form additionally records in handwriting that the consideration for the transfer was $400,000 "on or before death". Ms George's signature was witnessed by Mr Lethbridge, solicitor, on 24 August 2005 and Dr Ironside's by Mr Glasspool on 27 August 2005.
266 As mentioned, the General Tenancy Agreement comprised a form completed entirely in Ms George's handwriting. That document contained a handwritten notation in a part of the form, headed "Special Terms", to the effect that Ms George and her son had a life interest in the Moggill property. Further, the document recorded the term of the tenancy agreement in handwriting as "periodic/life interest mother & child". The rent was recorded as "$269 a month". The signatures of both Dr Ironside and Ms George were witnessed by Mr Glasspool on 27 August 2005.
267 Ms George, Dr Ironside, Mr Glasspool and Mr Lethbridge all gave evidence about the execution of one or more of the documents relevant to the 2005 DPIPL property transaction.
268 During the course of the hearing before the federal magistrate, Ms George admitted that she had added the words "Life Estate", "Life" and "Interest" to the transfer form (exhibit 87) in November 2007, some two years after the original transfer was executed and witnessed. But she maintained that the handwritten words "in trust for Alexander George" were part of the transfer document which was signed by Dr Ironside; as were all the words in the General Tenancy Agreement form referred to at [266] above.
269 Dr Ironside strongly denied that the agreement he made with Ms George was that DPIPL was to hold the property on trust for Ms George as trustee for her son, or that he agreed to any arrangement in respect of which Ms George or her son was to have a life interest in the Moggill property. The federal magistrate accepted Dr Ironside's evidence that he would not have entered into an arrangement on those terms. The federal magistrate also accepted the evidence of Dr Ironside that there was nothing in the contractual document at the time that he signed it which provided that Ms George was conveying the property to him subject to a life interest either in her favour or in favour of her son or that a 30-year tenancy agreement was referred to in the contract for sale.
270 As for the General Tenancy Agreement, Dr Ironside said that he did not recall seeing the words "life interest mother & child" after the word "periodic" in the document he signed. Dr Ironside deposed that those words took the agreement beyond that which had been agreed in June 2005. Dr Ironside also said that the words under the heading "Special Terms" were not in the document he signed. The federal magistrate accepted Dr Ironside's evidence on this point, too. His Honour found that the evidence of Mr Glasspool was not helpful on the question of whether the General Tenancy Agreement contained the contentious words at the time that Mr Glasspool witnessed the parties' signatures.
271 His Honour went on to find that it would have been irrational for Dr Ironside to have entered into the transaction contended for by Ms George, because DPIPL had borrowed $400,000 to complete the purchase, and would thereby have exposed itself to the risk of not being able to resort to the property as security to repay the loan.
272 As for the transfer document (exhibit 87), the federal magistrate found that the words "in trust for Alexander George" had been handwritten in the same ink as the words Ms George admitted she had added to the document in November 2007. His Honour also found that when signed in 2005, the contract of sale did not refer to a tenancy to Lauren Kay Cordes for 30 years from the settlement date of a monthly rental of $269 per month; and that Ms George added those words in November 2007 together with the words "life interest mother & child" and the words under the heading "Special Terms" in the General Tenancy Agreement. He found that she did so after becoming aware of the prospect of losing the Moggill property to the trustee in bankruptcy and that claiming a trust in favour of her son was a means of defeating his claim to the property. His Honour held that the insertion by Ms George of the handwritten words into the documents was a "fraudulent concoction on her part".
273 In her appeal, Ms George contended that the federal magistrate made a number of errors, which led him to make the factual findings she impugned under these two grounds of appeal.
274 First, Ms George contended that the federal magistrate erred in accepting Dr Ironside's evidence that he did not agree, on behalf of DPIPL, to acquire or hold the Moggill property on trust for Ms George as trustee for her son, with a life interest in favour of her and her son. Ms George argued that Dr Ironside's evidence was undermined by the fact that Dr Ironside had in email correspondence with her acknowledged the trust relationship in respect of the Moggill property.
275 Ms George referred the Court to two emails from Dr Ironside upon which she relied as evidencing Dr Ironside's acknowledgement of the trust relationship. There is, indeed, a reference in the emails to the property being held on trust. But the emails contain no acknowledgment that Ms George held the Moggill property on trust for her son. The reference in the emails to a trust arises in the context of the question whether the Moggill property would be part of the matrimonial property for the purposes of a property settlement in the Ironside proceeding; or whether it would be excluded on the grounds that it was held on trust.
276 The relevant parts of the two emails are as follows:
Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2007 7:20 AM
Subject: Re: United front
My offer to jane can't happen until the conference in which we state that you and I have a trust agreement about the house. The mediator will then have to arrange a prelim hearing before a judge to address that issue.
Sent: Saturday, August 25, 2007 2:45 PM
Subject: Re: United front
I have now read the stuff that you sent to Margaret. Your are really not getting it. The parties have NOT agreed to leave your house out of it , and that is what we need to be united about in front a judge. We want to leave your house out of it , but the only offer from jane's side includes it.
…
Take some advice , and stop giving us instructions which we can't take. The first part of the process is to establish that the house is in trust and then it will be left out. That is what we are trying to do. By having you as a co-respondent , it enables you to have your say and to present your actual interest in the house. To be saying that you don't want to be a co-respondent puts the whole process at great risk. If you are not going to get independent legal advice , then , please at least take ours.
(Emphasis added.)
277 Dr Ironside explained in cross-examination that he was using the word "trust" loosely, to describe the collateral arrangement reached with Ms George whereby Ms George had a right to repurchase the Moggill property. There is nothing in the emails to suggest that Dr Ironside knew that Ms George held the Moggill property on trust for her son.
278 Accordingly, these emails do not assist Ms George's contention that DPIPL agreed to acquire and hold the Moggill property on trust for her in her capacity as trustee for her son, Nor do they demonstrate that the federal magistrate erred in accepting Dr Ironside's evidence.
279 Secondly, Ms George claimed that the evidence of Dr Ironside's step-daughter, Ms Mitchell, corroborated her claim that DPIPL held the property on trust for her as trustee for her son; and that the federal magistrate erred in failing to give any weight to that evidence.
280 The evidence to which Ms George referred is an affidavit in which Ms Mitchell deposed that on 18 September 2007 she sent a text message to Dr Ironside about his matrimonial dispute. Ms Mitchell went on to depose that Dr Ironside had replied to her text message with a text message of his own which stated:
Trying to establish that the house is in trust and not an asset not to sell.
281 In our view, the federal magistrate did not err in not treating Ms Mitchell's evidence as corroborating Ms George's contention that in August 2005 she held the Moggill property on trust for her son and that DPIPL took the transfer of the Moggill property subject to those trust interests. This evidence goes no further than providing possible support for a finding that Dr Ironside had acknowledged that Ms George may have had some beneficial interest in the Moggill property. It does not prove that Dr Ironside acknowledged that DPIPL held the property on trust for Ms George as trustee for her son.
282 Thirdly, Ms George complained that the federal magistrate erred in his assessment of the evidence of Mr Lethbridge, the solicitor who witnessed Ms George's signature to the transfer document (exhibit 87) on 24 August 2005. It will be recalled that exhibit 87 contained the handwritten additions Ms George relied upon as evidencing the existence, in August 2005, of the trust she claimed in favour of her son. At the time he gave evidence, Mr Lethbridge had his affidavit and a copy of exhibit 87 in front of him. Mr Lethbridge testified that he would not usually witness documents that were partially completed. He went on to state, on a number of occasions, that he had no actual recollection of witnessing Ms George's signature on that document. The federal magistrate referred to this evidence and observed (at [171]) that it was not inconsistent with the finding that Ms George had added words to the document in November 2007 - well after Mr Lethbridge had apparently witnessed her signature.
283 Ms George contended that the federal magistrate's assessment of Mr Lethbridge's evidence was undermined by the fact that Mr Lethbridge had given evidence by telephone and was not, therefore, able to inspect the original document (exhibit 87). Had this occurred, said Ms George, Mr Lethbridge's memory might have been sparked. As we have intimated (at [125] above), there is no reason to believe that if Mr Lethbridge had seen the original, rather than a copy, his evidence would have been any different. As the federal magistrate found, Mr Lethbridge gave evidence that he had no recollection of the event in question. In this regard, Mr Lethbridge referred to the fact that he witnessed about 30 documents a day, and to the amount of time that had elapsed since he had witnessed Ms George's signature. In our view, the federal magistrate did not err in his assessment of Mr Lethbridge's evidence.
284 Fourthly, Ms George contended that the evidence of Mr Glasspool corroborated her claim and the federal magistrate erred in failing so to find. On 27 August 2005 Mr Glasspool, it will be recalled, witnessed Dr Ironside's signature on exhibit 87 and the General Tenancy Agreement and Ms George's signature on the General Tenancy Agreement.
285 Mr Glasspool testified that he was a justice of the peace and not a lawyer. He gave evidence as to his practice in witnessing signatures on documents. He said that he would not witness a signature on a blank form; nor would he add his initials to a handwritten notation in a document if there was nothing to show that the handwriting had been corrected. Mr Glasspool also said that he would not normally initial the handwritten parts of a form where the entries on the form were a combination of printed and handwritten entries.
286 As mentioned, the federal magistrate concluded that Mr Glasspool's evidence was not helpful on the question of whether Ms George's handwritten notations in exhibit 87 and the General Tenancy Agreement were part of the documents he witnessed on 27 August 2005. Ms George contended that in light of Mr Glasspool's evidence referred to in the preceding paragraph, the federal magistrate erred in this assessment. Rather, Ms George submitted, Mr Glasspool's evidence supported her contention that both exhibit 87 and the General Tenancy Agreement contained the crucial contentious handwritten terms at the time they were signed.
287 In our view, it was open to the federal magistrate to make the assessment of Mr Glasspool's evidence that he did. That is because, during his evidence, Mr Glasspool accepted that he could not say whether the handwritten notations on exhibit 87 were present at the time that he witnessed Dr Ironside's signature on that document, nor could he confirm that the contentious notations were part of the General Tenancy Agreement on which he had witnessed Ms George's and Dr Ironside's signatures.
288 Fifthly, Ms George submitted that the evidence of her sister, Ms Wilson, supported her contention that at the time that she entered into the 2005 DPIPL transaction, she (Ms George) held the Moggill property on trust for her son and that DPIPL acquired and held the property on trust for Ms George in the same capacity.
289 Ms George drew the Court's attention to Ms Wilson's oral evidence at the trial that she was upset when she learned from Ms George of the 2005 DPIPL transaction and that Ms George held exhibit 87 in a safety deposit box. Ms Wilson said that she was upset because she thought that her husband was seeking to use the Moggill property to "blackmail" her in a future property settlement. This evidence went nowhere. It did not support Ms George's claim that in August 2005 she held the Moggill property on trust for her son. Consequently, the federal magistrate did not err in placing no weight on it.
290 Sixthly, during oral submissions Ms George complained that the federal magistrate erred by not giving any weight to two documents: Exhibits 11 and 92.
291 Exhibit 11 is a document which purports to be an agreement in the form of an undertaking between Ms George and DPIPL. It was not witnessed by Mr Glasspool, although it carries the same (handwritten) date (27 August 2005) as the dates of the General Tenancy Agreement and exhibit 87, the transfer document. Exhibit 11 contains the following printed clause:
2/The property situated above will not be sold or the mortgage debt increased without consent and knowledge from both parties. If sold the funds will repay the debt/mortgage to Dr Peter Ironside Pty Ltd with the remaining funds going to Lauren K Cordes.
292 At the end of this clause, there is then inserted in handwriting the words:
in trust for Alexander George.
293 The document bears the signatures of Dr Ironside and Ms George. Dr Ironside acknowledged in cross-examination that the signature on the document was his. However, he deposed that he did not recall executing such a document, and that the terms set out in the document did not reflect the terms of the arrangement on which he agreed to purchase the Moggill property from Ms George. Dr Ironside acknowledged that in their discussions, Ms George raised the possibility of her son being able to purchase the property in the event that she died. But he denied that Ms George mentioned to him that she held the property on trust for her son.
294 In the light of that evidence, it was open to the federal magistrate not to place any weight on exhibit 11. Further, the document was not witnessed and the handwritten addition was not initialled by Ms George and Dr Ironside to acknowledge it as an amendment. Having regard to his Honour's findings concerning Ms George's fraudulent conduct in altering the documents already referred to, it was open to him not to place any weight on this document.
295 Exhibit 92 is a form entitled Property Transfer Information which had been completed entirely in Ms George's hand. The document describes DPIPL as the transferor of the Moggill property and "Lauren Kay Cordes in trust for Alexander George" as the transferee. The document is not signed or witnessed by any other party. It provides no independent support for Ms George's case. In these circumstances, the federal magistrate did not err in failing to advert to it as corroborative of Ms George's central contention.
296 Seventhly, in the course of her oral submissions Ms George referred to the various wills she had made. The wills showed that on her death her son would inherit her property. They provided no support for the notion that she held the property on trust for her son during her lifetime. The same is true of Ms George's evidence that her husband, Matthew, had acknowledged that, in the event that she predeceased him, her property was to go to her son, and not to Mr George's side of the family.
297 Ms George also referred to a certificate of title which showed that she was the legal owner of the Pullenvale property. This document did not support Ms George's central contention, either.
298 Consequently, the federal magistrate did not err in giving these documents no weight.
299 In addition Ms George referred to two documents relating to the Ironside proceeding.
300 One of the documents is an application to the Family Court dated 14 November 2007, filed by Dr Ironside's solicitors in the Ironside proceeding, seeking "the construction of the agreement (if any)" between Dr Ironside, Ms Wilson and the trustee [Mr Fletcher], and for the declaration of the bankruptcy trustee's interest in the Moggill property. Among the orders sought in the application were orders contemplating that Mr Fletcher, as Ms George's trustee in bankruptcy, might have an interest in the Moggill property on behalf of Ms George as trustee for her son.
301 The second document comprises the instructions to the mediator in the Ironside proceeding which were prepared by Dr Ironside's solicitors. The instructions stated that in an affidavit of 15 November 2007 (filed in the Ironside proceeding), Dr Ironside said that he "appeared" to have executed a transfer document in which he transferred the Moggill property to Ms George as trustee for Alexander George. Dr Ironside went on to say that he remained unaware of the meaning and effect of that transfer document.
302 Ms George submitted that these two documents proved that Dr Ironside acknowledged that, at the time of its transfer, Ms George held the Moggill property on trust for her son. In our view, the references in those two Family Court documents relating to the possibility of Alexander George holding the beneficial interest in the Moggill property do not support the submission. This is because it is plain that, in preparing the two documents and Dr Ironside's affidavit of 15 November 2007, Dr Ironside's solicitors took the contents of exhibit 87 (which by then included the handwritten amendments made by Ms George) at face value. This is apparent from the fact that in the affidavit (referred to in the mediation instructions), Dr Ironside said only that he "appeared" to have signed the transfer document transferring the Moggill property to Ms George as trustee for Alexander George, not that he had in fact signed a transfer document to that effect.
303 It follows that the federal magistrate did not err in placing no weight on these documents either.
304 In summary, the federal magistrate did not err in making any of the impugned factual findings. It was open to his Honour to find that Ms George had in November 2007 fabricated the documents by making the handwritten notations on the two reprints of the Trusts Act, the contract for sale, exhibit 87 and the General Tenancy Agreement. In making those findings, the federal magistrate placed considerable significance on the fact that Ms George had not referred to the written declarations of trust evidenced by the annotated reprints of the Trusts Act in her matrimonial proceedings against her former husband. We agree with his Honour that this circumstance is particularly telling against Ms George's credibility.
305 Ms George advanced a number of arguments in her outline of written submissions relating to the law on the formal requirements for the creation of a trust affecting land. The submissions contained a number of legal propositions and references to observations from cases. The submissions, so far as we could discern, were directed towards a contention that in declaring the trusts upon which she relied, Ms George had complied with the formal requirements of the law for the declaration and creation of a trust of land. The premise for all these submissions was Ms George's evidence that she had in fact declared and created the trusts for which she contended. In the light of our finding that the federal magistrate did not err in rejecting Ms George's evidence concerning the declaration and creation of those trusts, it is unnecessary to deal with Ms George's submissions as to the law.
306 Grounds 3(a) and 3(b) must be dismissed.