Consideration and determination
- The Receiver commenced these proceedings by originating process filed on 18 August 2023. As stated in the introductory section of these reasons, the Receiver sought a direction pursuant to s 424 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) to the effect that he would be justified in entering into deeds of rescission with the Purchasers. The Court was informed at the outset of the hearing on 16 October 2023 that, notwithstanding the terms of the direction sought, the Receiver did not seek the direction in relation to certain (unnamed) Purchasers who have entered into a contractual arrangement with Mann 88 to purchase lots in "The Archibald by Aland" on terms that their deposit paid under their Sale Contract and held by McGrath are to be treated as deposits under their new contract with Mann 88. I note that, implicit in those arrangements between those Purchasers and Mann 88 is an acceptance by McGrath - the stakeholder under the Sale Contracts between the Purchasers and the Company - that it is obliged to account to the Purchasers for their deposits paid under the Sale Contracts which the Company is unable to complete.
- As stated at [4] above, the Receiver's solicitor gave evidence to the effect that all Purchasers seeking to have their deposits refunded have been given notice of the proceedings, and that those Purchasers have been provided with copies of the originating process and the evidence. The Purchasers seeking to have their deposits refunded are those Purchasers who have not entered into an arrangement with Mann 88 of the kind described immediately above. As I have already mentioned, no Purchaser sought to be heard.
- The deed of rescission in respect of which the Receiver sought the direction is identified in paragraph 64 of the Receiver's first affidavit sworn on 16 August 2023. A copy of the proposed deed in draft form is exhibited at pages 167 to 184 of Exhibit DAH-1 to that affidavit (the Draft Deed).
- During the hearing, I raised the following concerns about the terms of the Draft Deed with counsel for the Receiver.
- First, the Draft Deed provides in clause 3 that the Company (as vendor) and the Purchaser rescind the Sale Contract as and from the date of the deed. Counsel for the Receiver submitted that the Sale Contracts had already been terminated by frustration by about 11 October 2022. If so, then there are no longer any Sale Contracts on foot capable of now being rescinded as proposed in the Draft Deed. Depending on each individual Purchaser's response to the sale of the Land to Mann 88 and the Company's resulting inability to complete the relevant Sale Contract, it may be that the sale to Mann 88 without the assignment or novation of each Sale Contract constituted a repudiatory anticipatory breach of the Sale Contract by the Company from as early as April 2022, and that the Purchaser terminated the Sale Contract prior to 11 October 2022 by accepting that repudiation when they demanded the refund of their deposit. When asked during the hearing to identify any alternative scenario in which it was arguable that the Sale Contracts are presently remain on foot, counsel for the Receiver was unable to do so. It is not necessary for me to express any concluded view about how the Sale Contracts have been terminated. Irrespective of whether they have been terminated by frustration (as the Receiver submits), or for repudiation, there is no longer anything to rescind, and the Draft Deed is therefore based on a false premise.
- The false premise is to the Receiver's advantage because it obfuscates the reality that, if the provisions of the Sale Contracts relating to the deposit were in the same terms as the proforma contract, then the Purchasers have been entitled to the refund of their deposits from the date on which the Sale Contracts were terminated. In an apparent attempt to bootstrap the false premise, Recital J of the Draft Deed states that the Company is willing to rescind the Sale Contract "as a gesture of good faith" and without any admission of liability, and clause 2 of the Draft Deed provides that the parties acknowledge and agree that the recitals are true and correct in every material particular.
- Second, clause 6 of the Draft Deed contains what purports to be mutual releases by the Company and the Receiver in favour of the Purchaser, and by the Purchaser in favour of the Company and the Receiver. Each release extends to any claims arising out of, relating to, or in connection with the Land, the Sale Contract or the deposit. I have described those releases as purportedly mutual because, as counsel for the Receiver candidly acknowledged, the evidence before the Court does not disclose any potential claim by the Company or the Receiver against any Purchaser, yet the evidence does disclose possible claims by the Purchasers against the Company and/or the Receiver. I do not express any view about whether those possible claims are in fact arguable in the case of any particular Purchaser. Nor do I express any view about the merits of any such claims.
- Third, clause 7 of the Draft Deed requires the Purchaser to indemnify the Company and the Receiver against any loss incurred by the Company and the Receiver, or any claim made against them, arising out of, relating to, or in connection with the rescission of the Sale Contract (being the false premise) or the repayment of the deposit to the Purchaser. The evidence before the Court does not disclose any entitlement of the Receiver or the Company to require that indemnity from the Purchasers before the Receiver (on behalf of the Company) will agree to instruct McGrath to release the deposit to each Purchaser.
- Fourth, clause 10 of the Draft Deed contains a series of acknowledgements to be given by each party to the deed, including acknowledgements that the party has not been coerced into entering into the deed, that it considers the terms of the deed to be fair, and that it has entered into the deed without duress. I expressed the concern that, notwithstanding those acknowledgments, Purchasers choosing to enter into the Draft Deed may feel something akin to coercion or duress. Having already been kept out of their money by the Receiver's conduct concerning the deposits for at least the past year, Purchasers may feel that their only real choices are to execute the Draft Deed or to risk being kept out of their money for substantial further period of time while they continue to argue with the Receiver for the refund of their deposits.
- Fifth, clause 13.1 of the Draft Deed requires the Purchaser to pay the Company's costs of preparing the deed in the sum of $750 plus GST. I questioned the legal justification for requiring the Purchasers to pay those costs. No justification was identified.
- Counsel for the Receiver submitted, and I accept, that the directions that may be provided under s 424 of the Corporations Act are a form of personal guidance or advice that articulate the approach that a controller is justified in taking, having regard to the known circumstances and relevant legal principles. The Court does not give advice on how the controller should act, but whether there is legal justification to so act. [3]
- I indicated to counsel for the Receiver my view that there was no legal justification for the Receiver proffering the Draft Deed to Purchasers as the basis on which he would agree to cause the Company to direct McGrath to release the deposit moneys, and for entering into deeds of rescission with Purchasers on the terms of the Draft Deed. In summary, the reasons for my view were that those deposit moneys were paid to, and continue to be held by, McGrath. Assuming that the Sale Contracts are in the terms of the proforma contracts, McGrath holds those deposit moneys as stakeholder on the terms of the trust to which I have earlier referred. The Company lost any entitlement to have those deposit moneys paid to it when it became unable to complete the Sale Contracts for reasons that did not involve any default on the part of the Purchasers. Neither the Company nor the Receiver has any right to decline to direct McGrath to release the deposit moneys to the Purchasers unless and until each Purchaser enters into a deed on the terms of the Draft Deed, which benefit the Company and the Receiver to the detriment of the Purchasers for the reasons explained above. On the basis of the evidence before the Court, and assuming that the Sale Contracts are in the terms of the proforma contracts, the Purchasers have been entitled to the refund of their deposits from at least 11 October 2022, without entering into any deed with the Company and the Receiver.
- Counsel for the Receiver did not make submissions contrary to those views that I had put to him for response during the hearing. At counsel's request, I granted a short adjournment to allow him to take instructions. When the hearing resumed, counsel informed the Court that the Receiver no longer sought a direction in the terms stated in the originating process, and sought instead the following direction under s 424 of the Corporations Act:
"The Court directs pursuant to section 424 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) that the plaintiff, David Anthony Hurst in his capacity as receiver and manager of the property of The Gosford Pty Ltd ACN 630 253 557 (Receivers and Managers Appointed) (The Gosford), is justified in causing The Gosford to authorise the deposits paid by purchasers named in off the plan contracts for the sale and purchase of lots to be developed as part of The Gosford's development of the land described in paragraphs 11 and 33 of the affidavit of 64 paragraphs of David Anthony Hurst sworn on 16 August 2023, being contracts between The Gosford and those purchasers, to be released to those purchasers."
- It was submitted that the direction was within the power conferred by s 424, and that it was appropriate to exercise the discretion to make the direction in circumstances where Aquamore has taken an equivocal position about whether it claims a security interest in the deposit moneys, and the direction will provide some protection to the Receiver in the event that Aquamore makes such a claim after the deposit moneys have been released to the Purchasers.
- The evidence does not disclose any basis for a claim by Aquamore that any security interest that it has in relation to property of the Company extends to the deposit moneys, which are not property of the Company for the reasons that I have explained above. The prospect that Aquamore might nevertheless claim to have an interest in the deposit moneys in the future, when it has not done so to date, even after being notified of these proceedings, is remote. However, in circumstances where the Receiver's failure to cause the Company to direct McGrath to release the deposit moneys to the Purchasers is attributable, in part, to the Receiver's claimed concern that Aquamore may claim a security interest in those moneys, it is appropriate to make the direction and thereby remove any prospect of further delay on the part of the Receiver in issuing that direction to McGrath.
- The direction is framed in terms that apply to all Purchasers. The direction, in its terms, will not apply to any Purchasers whose deposits have already been effectively released by McGrath applying those moneys to deposits payable under the new contracts between the Purchasers and Mann 88 referred to at [35].