The third question: As to the funds remaining with Aquagenics, what if any further advantage should be given to TasWater pursuant to s 562 or s 564 of the Act?
56 Section 562 of the Act provides:
Application of proceeds of contracts of insurance
(1) Where a company is, under a contract of insurance (not being a contract of reinsurance) entered into before the relevant date, insured against liability to third parties, then, if such a liability is incurred by the company (whether before or after the relevant date) and an amount in respect of that liability has been or is received by the company or the liquidator from the insurer, the amount must, after deducting any expenses of or incidental to getting in that amount, be paid by the liquidator to the third party in respect of whom the liability was incurred to the extent necessary to discharge that liability, or any part of that liability remaining undischarged, in priority to all payments in respect of the debts mentioned in section 556.
(2) If the liability of the insurer to the company is less than the liability of the company to the third party, subsection (1) does not limit the rights of the third party in respect of the balance.
(3) This section has effect notwithstanding any agreement to the contrary.
57 Here, TasWater provided a complete indemnity to the liquidator for his cost and expenses, including remuneration, in respect of pursuing the claim against the insurer. The costs of getting in the sum from the insurer were paid directly by TasWater pursuant to the funding agreement.
58 Unsurprisingly, the actual costs and expenses incurred by TasWater pursuant to the funding agreement were substantially greater than the party/party costs. The costs and expenses paid directly by TasWater and not accounted for in the party/party costs were said to be:
(a) $3,504.04, being the balance of the legal costs paid to Mr McElwaine SC (as his Honour then was), plus disbursements of $19,305;
(b) $41,089.42, being fees paid to Simmonds & Bristow for Mr David Bristow's engagement as an expert in the proceeding before Davies J; and
(c) $33,788.81, being the liquidator's remuneration.
59 TasWater also said that it paid $27,056.15 to Mr Hayes for his costs of progressing the claim against the insurer while he was deed administrator.
60 TasWater submitted that it is entitled to recover those costs pursuant to s 562 of the Act, because the section "provides that the proper expenses of and incidental to getting in an insurance sum will be paid in priority to any distribution of that sum".
61 I do not agree. As Mr Groves submitted, s 562 relevantly concerns the liquidator's obligation to deduct his or her "expenses of or incidental to getting in" an "amount in respect of" a liability in respect of which the company was insured - not amounts incurred and paid by a litigation funder.
62 Such amounts are instead the province of s 564 of the Act, which provides:
Power of Court to make orders in favour of certain creditors
Where in any winding up:
(a) property has been recovered under an indemnity for costs of litigation given by certain creditors, or has been protected or preserved by the payment of money or the giving of indemnity by creditors; or
(b) expenses in relation to which a creditor has indemnified a liquidator have been recovered;
the Court may make such orders, as it deems just with respect to the distribution of that property and the amount of those expenses so recovered with a view to giving those creditors an advantage over others in consideration of the risk assumed by them.
63 TasWater has applied for an order under s 564 of the Act, seeking an advantage over other creditors as to those funds to which it is not immediately entitled.
64 As Campbell J explained in Jarbin Pty Ltd v Clutha Ltd (in liq) [2004] NSWSC 28; (2004) 208 ALR 242, 259-260 [68]:
The exercise of the power under s 564 needs to be conducted bearing in mind the statutory scheme of which s 564 is part. Under that statutory scheme, except to the extent that the Corporations Law provides otherwise, all debts proved in the winding up rank equally, and if the property of the company is insufficient to meet them in full, they are paid proportionately (s 555 Corporations Law). Certain classes of payment are given priority under s 556(1) and, pursuant to s 559, debts of any of the classes created by s 556(1) rank equally between themselves and are paid in full, unless the property of the company is insufficient to meet them, in which case they are paid proportionately. Section 564 operates as an exception to the prima facie equality of treatment of all unsecured creditors within the respective classes which s 556 recognises. The onus of proving the facts which ground any departure from equal treatment of the creditors, and of persuading the Court of the extent to which any such departure is just, lies on the creditor who seeks the exercise of the power under s 564.
65 To come within the scope of the section, all that is needed is that the property which has been recovered, protected or preserved be property which is ultimately distributable in the liquidation of the company. See Jarbin Pty Ltd v Clutha Ltd (in liq) [2004] NSWSC 28; (2004) 208 ALR 242 at 258 [58].
66 Here, it is clear, and the parties did not dispute, that property has been recovered by means of an indemnity for costs of litigation. That is sufficient to establish that the court has jurisdiction under s 564(a).
67 In Re Ken Godfrey Pty Ltd (in liq) (1994) 14 ACSR 610 at 612, Hayne J said that: "… the discretion … is a broad and general discretion and one that is to be exercised having regard to the desirability in the public interest of encouraging creditors to indemnify liquidators who desire to pursue claims in the winding up of companies".
68 And in Household Financial Services Pty Ltd v Chase Medical Centre Pty Ltd (1995) 18 ACSR 294, Brownie J, at 296-297, said:
The last words of s 564 provide for, and the authorities accent the need to assess the risk run by the indemnifying creditors, for whose benefit an application is made, but the authorities show that it is also appropriate to look to the sum recovered (or the value of the property recovered), the failure of other creditors to provide the indemnity, the proportions between the debts of the indemnifying creditors and the other debts, the public interest in encouraging creditors to provide indemnities so as to enable assets to be recovered, and, generally, the totality of the circumstances; and there has been a tendency in recent times to adopt a more liberal approach, in favour of indemnifying creditors.
69 Here, TasWater contends that it would be just in the circumstances to award it 100% of the balance of the Disputed Pool for the following reasons:
(1) the Disputed Pool has only come into existence as a consequence of Aquagenics' liability to TasWater, and the loss and damage suffered by TasWater;
(2) TasWater undertook the whole of the proceedings to recover the sum from the insurer, including the initial proceedings resulting in the DOCA being set aside, and bore the entire costs and risks of those proceedings;
(3) contrary to the plaintiffs' submission, the proceedings involved risk and complexity and required TasWater to fund a defence against an appeal;
(4) having regard to the total costs and expenses outlaid by TasWater pursuant to the funding agreement ($203,382.27) plus additional costs paid to Mr Hayes ($27,382.27), the degree of risk assumed by TasWater was not insubstantial, and had the claim not succeeded, TasWater would have been required to pay the insurer's costs;
(5) TasWater was the only party who pushed for and progressed the claims against the insurer, and it is relevant to note that:
(a) TasWater voted against the DOCA, which extinguished the right for Aquagenics to pursue the insurer;
(b) no other creditor joined in the funding, including Mr Day who, whilst a director, did not make any notification of a claim;
(c) it was only on 9 May 2014, after the administrator was appointed, that a formal notification of the claim was made, which resulted in additional complexity in the proceedings against the insurer; and
(d) neither the administrator nor the liquidator issued proceedings (or presumably would have issued proceedings) until the indemnity was provided by TasWater; and
(6) the other creditors' debts have been dealt with in accordance with the DOCA - in terminating the DOCA, Middleton J found that "the DOCA has been fully effectuated, save that [Aquagenics] has potential claims against insurers, the sole beneficiary of which, under s 562 of the Act, is [TasWater]", and it was therefore not anticipated by the other creditors that any further amount would become available for general distribution as a consequence of the claim against the insurer, that claim arising as it did from Aquagenics' insured liability to TasWater.
70 The plaintiffs submitted that:
(1) the obvious reason that TasWater agreed to indemnify the liquidator was to recover moneys payable to TasWater under s 562, which is a statutory priority in itself;
(2) TasWater assumed litigation risk to further its own recoveries - it was never the discernible intention of TasWater to recover funds for the body of general creditors;
(3) accordingly, there was no genuine opportunity for, or relevant failure by, other creditors to indemnify the liquidator;
(4) the sum recovered is the 16% balance of the recovery made by the liquidator at the behest of TasWater, and TasWater has already, in satisfaction of its assumption of risk, been paid its 84% insured loss together with party/party costs;
(5) while there is an inherent risk to all litigation, the proceedings (including the appeal) were not overly long or complex; and
(6) it is appropriate to return to TasWater the disparity between the benefit of the liquidator's costs recovery and TasWater's costs indemnity, together with the liquidator's remuneration paid by TasWater.
71 The plaintiffs thus agree that in the particular circumstances of this case it is an appropriate exercise of the discretion under s 564 of the Act that TasWater be paid an advantage from the Disputed Pool in the amount of the total of the expenses referred to in [58] and [59] above. For the reasons advanced by the plaintiffs, I agree. (I should add that counsel for Mr Hayes and Mr Day also agreed with the plaintiffs' submissions in this regard.)
72 In my view, and as the plaintiffs also submitted, it is not appropriate that TasWater should receive any further amount from anything that remains in the Disputed Pool, including because to do so would effectively mean that TasWater would rank above the deed administrator's costs, and the general pool of unsecured creditors would miss out altogether. As Hodgson JA said in State Bank of New South Wales v Brown [2001] NSWCA 223; (2001) 38 ACSR 715 at 728 [91]:
I accept that it is not the object of the section to encourage litigation for the sake of litigation, or for the private benefit of creditors who provide the indemnity or the funds. In my opinion, there are two public purposes involved in the encouragement of pursuit of claims by liquidators, namely to benefit creditors and shareholders generally, and to recover property from wrong-doers and thus discourage misconduct in relation to corporations.
(Emphasis added)
73 As Mr Groves put it in this exchange with me:
HIS HONOUR: Well, how do you say I should exercise the discretion under 564?
MR GROVES: Your Honour, if TasWater's costs are returned to it, that allowance puts it in the position that it got everything that it could have ever possibly got in pursuing litigation against the insurer. And, in my submission, it's then a situation where there is some money left which can flow through into the deed of company arrangement, which, [were] it not for the bank guarantee and the retention monies being cashed years ago, would have been assets of the company if they had been left alone.
74 Mr Groves also submitted, and I agree, that to order that TasWater receive the whole of the remaining Disputed Pool would mean that the statutory priority given to the liquidator's costs under s 556 would be displaced and that that is an inappropriate exercise of the discretion under s 564 for the following reasons:
First … it's the liquidator who we say brought this overpayment to the attention of TasWater, and it's the liquidator who has spent considerable time and costs addressing that. We're here today on the liquidator's application which then saw a cross-application by TasWater, not the other way around.
Second, the work that the liquidator performed was necessary to identify the pool that we are now concerned with. And, were it not for that work, the application under section 564 couldn't be properly made. One needs to identify what's left to then pursue [an] advantage. Next, your Honour, while TasWater correctly points to the proposition that your Honour does have the power to escalate its priority above the liquidator, there's not really submissions put to your Honour as to why that should be the case. And that is particularly so given that Mr Hamilton is a liquidator appointed by this court. He holds a court ordered and statutory office. So the work he has done is necessary and one would expect him to be remunerated for it in the ordinary way.
Finally, I make the point that if TasWater were elevated above Mr Hamilton, his costs and remuneration would ultimately need to come back to him by operation of the deed of indemnity because he's entitled to his ordinary remuneration and he's entitled to his costs in respect of the litigation, which, in my submission, would encompass everything up to and including today. So I don't think it's helpful to have a circuitous scenario where monies are going across to TasWater because it gets some elevated priority and we then need to deal with, somehow, clawing those back under the previous funding agreement.