Whether the special circumstances test is satisfied
42 The gravamen of the submission put by the Receivers was that the special circumstances test is satisfied because the purpose for which the Receivers wish to use the s 19 transcripts and examination bundles is to consider those documents to determine whether to pursue proceedings against two former directors of Allco and, if so, to commence those proceedings. This was said to be consistent with the purpose for which the examinations were conducted.
43 That purpose was also said to be not inconsistent with the use which was contemplated to be made of the documents under the terms of the express confidentiality undertaking itself which prevented the Receivers from using the documents other than for the purpose of the conduct of "those proceedings", that is to say, the examinations.
44 Although Mr J C Sheahan SC for the Receivers acknowledged the terms of that limitation, the effect of what he said was that use for the purpose of the examinations necessarily contemplated the possibility that the documents would be used for the purposes now sought. Indeed, the Receivers said, it follows that the intended purpose is not collateral to the purpose of use within the examination proceedings and is harmonious with the working out of the objectives pursued by ASIC in its investigation of the Rubicon Transaction.
45 The substance of the submissions of Mr Wood was that the use proposed by the Receivers cannot be said to be part of the process of getting in the assets of Allco for the benefit of the creditors generally. Rather, what follows from the quantum of the claim (which according to Dr Fell's submissions is to be limited by the amount of the cash consideration of $64 million) is that the Receivers wish to pursue any claim for the sole benefit of the secured creditors.
46 Thus, at the heart of Mr Wood's submission is the proposition that the Receivers are in the position of creditors who wish to have access to the documents to consider, and if thought fit, to pursue a claim against Dr Fell and Mr Coe. Mr Wood submits that it follows in these circumstances that the Receivers must establish a realistic prospect of success in any contemplated proceeding. This was said to follow from the approach taken by Santow J in New Cap, and in particular from that of Campbell J in Eurostar.
47 Mr Wood submits that, on this approach, the intended use stated in Mr Korbel's affidavit, and refined in the solicitors' letter, is too vague and uncertain to reveal any prospects of success.
48 It seems to me that the effect of the authorities, in particular New Cap and Eurostar, is that the question of whether special circumstances exist in the present application is to be determined by reference to the objectives which underlie the statutory regime contained in Division 1 of Part 5.9 of the Corporations Act.
49 However, I do not consider that it follows that I must accept the approach urged on me on behalf of Mr Coe and Dr Fell. In particular, I reject the submission made by Mr Wood that the position of the Receivers is analogous to that of a creditor pursuing a claim against a third party. Here, the Receivers stand in the shoes of Allco and were an "eligible applicant" for the examination summonses pursuant to which the subpoenas were issued: see s 596A of the Corporations Act and the definition of "eligible applicant" in s 9.
50 It is evident from the fact that the examination summonses were issued that the Receivers were authorised by ASIC to make application under Division 1 of Part 5.9 for the summonses: see the definition in s 9 of the Corporations Act and, in particular para (e) of the definition.
51 The examination summonses, and the steps taken under it, were an investigatory proceeding established under Part 5.9. Once the Receivers were appointed as an eligible applicant, they had standing to conduct the examinations and were entrusted with carrying through the purposes that underlie Part 5.9: Eurostar at [28].
52 Those purposes include, as Santow J observed in New Cap at [15] the wider statutory purpose of investigating and potentially instituting proceedings against those who have contributed to the corporate collapse.
53 It is therefore not to the point that the Receivers' articulation of the claim lacks the degree of precision necessary to test the question of its prospects of success. Nor is it an answer to suggest that any claim may be limited to the cash component of the consideration paid in the Rubicon Transaction and, hence, may not benefit the unsecured creditors of Allco.
54 The position is quite different from that which existed in Royal Guardian Mortgage Corporation Pty Ltd v Australian Mortgage Securities Pty Ltd [2011] NSWSC 967. That case did not concern an undertaking given in relation to documents obtained for the purposes of an examination. Moreover, McDougall J held at [64] that the proposed proceedings were not maintainable.
55 Also, the observations made by Vickery J in Ambridge at [54] have no application to the present case. There, his Honour stated that the balancing exercise required under the special circumstances test could not be carried out without identification of the precise cause of action sought to be pursued in the second proceeding. However, that case did not concern the overlay on the special circumstances test arising from Part 5.9 of the Corporations Act.
56 In my opinion, the documents for which release from the undertaking is sought by the Receivers are sufficiently specified in the application and in Mr Korbel's affidavit. They are the documents which were produced in answer to the subpoenas. Again, the position here is different from that which existed before Vickery J: see Ambridge at [52].
57 It is true, as Mr Wood submits, that what the Receivers seek is access to every single page of every one of the transcripts and examination bundles. The ambit of the release from the undertaking is therefore very wide. Indeed, it would give the Receivers a complete release notwithstanding that it is unlikely that the Receivers need every part of the transcripts and documents to consider and institute any proceedings against Mr Coe and Dr Fell.
58 However, the answer to the difficulty is that it would have been open to the Receivers to have carried out that exercise for the purpose of the examination. There is some force in Mr Wood's submission that the exercise of "mining" the documents which the Receivers now wish to undertake should have been undertaken before the examination of Dr Fell. Certainly, that would have been in the best interests of the speedy administration of justice. But it seems to me that the delay is not so great that the Receivers should be prevented from now doing that which they would have been entitled to do in the course of the examinations.
59 In coming to this view, I have taken into account the approach which the Receivers took at the examination of Dr Fell on 8 September 2011. Whether or not the course which was adopted was the preferable one, I do not consider that the Receivers should now be prejudiced by adopting a course that was considered to be a sensible one at the time of the examination. Indeed, there is some suggestion that it was a course that was proposed by the examinees but I have not taken that into account.
60 Here, the critical consideration seems to me to be that the legislative policy contained in Part 5.9 of the Corporations Act points in favour of a departure from the general principle as to when a court will permit the use for purposes other than the proceedings in which they were obtained, of documents obtained by compulsory process, namely the transcripts and examination bundles: Eurostar at [15].