Prima FacIe Case
29 Houthoff Buruma has raised two distinct arguments in support of its contention that s 6 of the LR(MP) Act cannot apply in the circumstances of this case. Both these arguments draw upon the reasoning of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Chubb Insurance Company of Australia Ltd v Moore (2013) 302 ALR 101; [2013] NSWCA 212 (Chubb).
30 The first argument focuses upon the language of s 6(1) and, in particular, the words "on the happening of the event giving rise to the claim for damages or compensation." In Chubb Emmett JA and Ball J (Bathurst CJ, Beazley P and Macfarlan JA agreeing) held at [57]:
The reference in s 6(1) to "the happening of the event giving rise to the claim for damages or compensation" should be construed as a reference to the moment when the liability arises, rather than to a later time when the claim based on that liability is made. That is to say, it should be construed as referring to "the happening of the event giving rise to the liability to pay damages or compensation". The charge comes into existence on the happening of the event that gives rise to the liability to pay damages or compensation, not when the claim for damages or compensation that that liability may prompt is made. The claim for damages or compensation will ordinarily be made some time after the liability arises.
(original italics)
31 After considering the conflicting approaches to s 6 indicated in FAI General Insurance Ltd v McSweeney (1997) 73 FCR 379 at 415 (Lindgren J) and the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Owners - Strata Plan No 50530 v Walter Construction Group Ltd (in liq) (2007) 14 ANZ Ins Cas 61-734; [2007] NSWCA 124 (Walter Construction), Emmett JA and Ball J concluded at numbered paragraph (3) of para [207] of their reasons in Chubb:
The decision of the court in the Walter Construction case should be followed to the extent that it concludes that s 6 does not create a charge based upon a claim arising from an event that has, or events that have, occurred prior to the inception of the policies. Accordingly, s 6 of the Reform Act is not capable of applying to insurance moneys that are or may become payable under the policies in respect of a liability to pay damages or compensation to any of the PDS claimants, where the alleged conduct of the insured giving rise to the claim for damages or compensation happened before the inception of the policies.
32 In the present case Houthoff Buruma contend that the alleged conduct of RCMML giving rise to the applicants' damages claim took place prior to 1 October 2007 (the inception date of the Policy) such that s 6 cannot operate so as to impose a charge upon any insurance monies payable in respect of any liability RCMML may have to the applicants.
33 It is not disputed by the applicants that the conduct of RCMML which they say caused them to suffer damage occurred prior to the inception of the Policy. Nevertheless, they submit that it is reasonably arguable that the statutory charge could not have come into existence until such time as the applicants first suffered damage which is when the relevant causes of action accrued. They further submit that damage was first suffered no earlier than the date upon which the Tunnel was opened, that being the earliest possible time from which it could have been apparent that the relevant traffic projections were likely to be excessively optimistic.
34 There was no evidence before me to indicate the price at which the stapled units traded either before or after the date they were first listed on the ASX. The ASX listing occurred almost four years prior to the opening of the Tunnel.
35 In support of their position, the applicants referred to the reasons of Hodgson JA (with whom Giles and Tobias JJA agreed) in Walter Construction where his Honour referred to the event giving rise to the charge as the event that completes the cause of action against the insured. Hodgson JA said at [30]:
It is common ground, as well as being asserted by the High Court in Bailey, that under s.6(1) the "charge" must arise, if at all, on the happening of the "event" giving rise to the claim against the insured, and not at some later time. That being so, if there is to be any charge in any cases where that event (whatever completes the cause of action against the insured) occurs before any contract of insurance is made, it would have to be a "charge" arising where there is no property or even potential property to which it could apply, and not even any identifiable insurer with whom such property, if and when it came into existence, might be associated. It would thus be a "charge" without having even as much substance as a contract to give a charge on after-acquired property, where there is at least a person against whom a contractual right exists pursuant to which (assuming the contract is specifically enforceable) an equitable charge can arise if and when the property is acquired.
His Honour seems clearly to have regarded the event that completes the cause of action as the event giving rise to the charge.
36 Some of the language used by Emmett JA, Ball J and Hodgson J when referring to "the event giving rise to the claim" is drawn from the judgment of McHugh and Gummow JJ (with whom Brennan CJ, Deane and Dawson JJ agreed) in Bailey v New South Wales Medical Defence Union Ltd (1995) 184 CLR 399 (Bailey). Their Honours said at 447:
Although the claimant is a stranger to the contract between the insurer and the insured, the charge created by the section is enforceable, by reason of s 6(4), by way of an action by the claimant against the insurer. This action is to be maintained in the same way and in the same court as if it were an action by the claimant to recover damages or compensation from the insured. Moreover, in respect of that action and of the judgment given therein, the parties to it, the claimant and the insurer, have, to the extent of the charge, the same rights and liabilities and the court has the same powers as if the action were brought by the claimant against the insured. In most circumstances, the action cannot be commenced save with leave of the court.
(footnote omitted)
37 In the present case the applicants' claims against RCMML are founded upon s 1022B of the Corporations Act which confers a statutory right upon a person who suffers loss or damage because of certain conduct to recover damages. Thus, the cause of action under s 1022B arises when the person suffers such loss or damage.
38 In Wardley Australia Ltd v Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514, Mason CJ and Dawson, Gaudron and McHugh JJ observed at 527:
The kind of economic loss which is sustained and the time when it is first sustained depend upon the nature of the interest infringed and, perhaps, the nature of the interference to which it is subjected. With economic loss, as with other forms of damage, there has to be some actual damage. Prospective loss is not enough.
When a plaintiff is induced by a misrepresentation to enter into an agreement which is, or proves to be, to his or her disadvantage, the plaintiff sustains a detriment in a general sense on entry into the agreement. That is because the agreement subjects the plaintiff to obligations and liabilities which exceed the value or worth of the rights and benefits which it confers upon the plaintiff. But, as will appear shortly, detriment in this general sense has not universally been equated with the legal concept of "loss or damage". And that is just as well. In many instances the disadvantageous character or effect of the agreement cannot be ascertained until some future date when its impact upon events as they unfold becomes known or apparent and, by then, the relevant limitation period may have expired. To compel a plaintiff to institute proceedings before the existence of his or her loss is ascertained or ascertainable would be unjust. Moreover, it would increase the possibility that the courts would be forced to estimate damages on the basis of likelihood or probability instead of assessing damages by reference to established events. In such a situation, there would be an ever-present risk of undercompensation or overcompensation, the risk of the former being the greater.
(footnotes omitted)
39 In the present case it is reasonably arguable that the applicants did not suffer any damage because of the (allegedly) defective PDS until after the Tunnel opened. In particular, it is reasonably arguable that any detriment to which the applicants were exposed as a consequence of acquiring the stapled units was in the nature of prospective loss, that is to say, a loss that they might or might not suffer depending upon the number of vehicles that actually used the Tunnel.
40 It follows that it is reasonably arguable that s 6 was engaged after the inception of the Policy when the applicants first suffered loss or damage, and when their causes of action against RCMML accrued.
41 The second point raised by Houthoff Buruma with respect to s 6 is that it cannot apply to a proceeding brought by the applicants against RCMML in the Federal Court of Australia.
42 In Chubb, Emmett JA and Ball J observed at [202]-[204]:
[202] The fundamental legislative purpose behind s 6 is to protect claimants who have obtained a judgment or settlement, or who are entitled to obtain a judgment, and to secure the payment of that judgment or settlement when the defendant is insured from moneys that would otherwise be payable to the insured in respect of that judgment or settlement. It is difficult to see why the New South Wales legislature would not have intended to protect any person who properly brings a claim in New South Wales, even where that claim is governed by some other law, given the focus in s 6(4) upon the powers of the court in the s 6 enforcement process. Section 6(4) provides the essential enforcement mechanism, by the claimant against the insurer, without which the claimant will not be protected by s 6. Put another way, s 6 may be described as a procedural mechanism by which that fundamental purpose is achieved. At the heart of that mechanism is s 6(4). The s 6(4) enforcement mechanism is the hinge or central concern of s 6, and the references to courts in s 6(4) referred to above indicate that s 6 is focused on New South Wales courts.
[203] On the other hand, it is not obvious that the New South Wales Parliament would have intended that s 6 should protect any claimant who chose to bring a claim against an insurer elsewhere, even if that claim is in relation to a contract of insurance the proper law of which is New South Wales.
[204] In all of the circumstances, the preferable approach is to treat s 6 as applying to all claims brought in a court of New South Wales, and as not applying to a claim brought in a court that is not a court of New South Wales. None of the Great Southern proceedings has been brought in a New South Wales court. It follows that s 6 has no application to any of the claims being prosecuted in the Great Southern proceedings.
Their Honours held that s 6 of the LR(MP) Act had no application in proceedings commenced in the Supreme Court of Victoria or the Supreme Court of Western Australia.
43 Houthoff Buruma's argument overlooks s 79 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth). Section 79 relevantly provides:
79 State or Territory laws to govern where applicable
(1) The laws of each State or Territory, including the laws relating to procedure, evidence, and the competency of witnesses, shall, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution or the laws of the Commonwealth, be binding on all Courts exercising federal jurisdiction in that State or Territory in all cases to which they are applicable.
Section 79 is intended to facilitate the exercise of federal jurisdiction by the application of a "coherent body of law" consisting of Commonwealth law and, where applicable, the laws of the States or Territories in which such jurisdiction is being exercised: Northern Territory of Australia v GPAO (1999) 196 CLR 553 at [80] per Gleeson CJ and Gummow J. In its adjudications in this proceeding this Court is exercising, and will continue to exercise, federal jurisdiction in New South Wales. Accordingly, s 79(1) of the Judiciary Act will "pick up" s 6 of the LR(MP) Act, which will apply even though it is a State law the terms of which were interpreted by the Court of Appeal in Chubb as limiting its application to proceedings in a court of New South Wales: Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Edensor Nominees Pty Ltd (2001) 204 CLR 559 at [55]-[59].
44 Leaving aside the need for the applicants to obtain leave to proceed pursuant to s 6(4) of the LR(MP) Act, I am satisfied that the applicants have established a prima facie case for the relief they seek against AIG Europe.