The proposed appeal
17 It is relevant to the resolution of the issues in the proposed appeal, including an argument as to whether leave to raise a fresh argument not put to the primary judge should be granted to Mr Iannuzzi, to note a few matters about the course of the hearing below.
18 Before the hearing, by letter dated 16 April 2018, Mr Iannuzzi's lawyers put the Commissioner on notice of the objection to the evidence being used in the proceeding on the basis that this constituted an "impermissible purpose". When the matter came on for hearing it was put for Mr Iannuzzi that the relief sought by the Commissioner in para 5 of his originating process, that Mr Iannuzzi compensate each of the companies for any loss sustained because of his breach of duty as liquidator, "will not … withstand proper analysis" as, amongst other things, the "prospect of compensation in respect of … any of the companies being a realistic outcome in these proceedings is so remote as to be ignored". In other words, what was being put orally was that a part of the proceeding which, on its face, would appear to be a permissible purpose, was not the Commissioner's "real" or "true" purpose.
19 By this time, however, the Commissioner had already filed the affidavits of Mr Zafiriou, Director in the Australian Public Service employed in the Significant Debt Management Area in the Australian Taxation Office (ATO). Mr Iannuzzi had also notified the Commissioner before the hearing that Mr Zafiriou was not required for cross-examination, so he was not available to be called by the Commissioner and was not cross-examined on his affidavits which annexed the compulsorily-obtained documents and contained his evidence that he was authorised to make the affidavits on the Commissioner's behalf (by necessary inference, in support of all of the relief sought in the originating process) and that he made the affidavits based on his own knowledge and belief from his review of the records of the ATO.
20 This was the context in which the primary judge was asked to find that, insofar as para 5 of the originating process may disclose a permissible purpose for the proceeding directed to the recovery of compensation from the companies, which it may then be inferred might possibly be available for taxation revenue (the Commissioner being a creditor of all but six of the companies, the affairs of which the Commissioner alleged were inter-related), it should be inferred that this seeming purpose was not in fact the Commissioner's real, operative or substantial purpose for bringing the proceeding. Rather, despite the appearance of para 5 in the originating process, Mr Zafiriou deposing that he was authorised by the Commissioner to make the affidavits which supported the application based on his knowledge as a taxation officer (a fact about which there was no debate), and Mr Zafiriou not being asked any question about the relief sought in the originating process, Mr Iannuzzi contended that other objective evidence demonstrated that para 6 of the originating process, seeking to discipline Mr Iannuzzi, was the real, operative or substantial purpose of the Commissioner.
21 The other objective evidence said to support this conclusion was summarised in Mr Iannuzzi's submissions in support of his application for leave to appeal as follows:
(a) in relation to the companies listed at items 4 to 22 of the [Originating Process], there is no prospect of compensation being paid to those companies, alternatively, being recovered by the Commissioner, because of one or more of the following reasons:
i. each of the companies was deregistered and, as noted, do not exist as a legal entity for which compensation might be sought;
ii. no relief was sought for the re-registration of those companies;
iii. no evidence was adduced as to any intention to re-register those companies;
iv. no evidence was adduced as to any intention to seek compensation for those companies;
v. the unchallenged evidence - as summarised in the table at 16 above - was that, even if (i)-(iv) was incorrect, the prospect of any dividend being paid to the Commissioner was extremely low.
(b) in relation to the companies listed at 2 and 3 of the [Originating Process], there was no prospect of compensation being paid to those companies, alternatively, being recovered by the Commissioner, because of one or more of the following reasons:
i. no evidence was adduced as to any intention to seek to compensation for those companies; and
ii. the unchallenged evidence - as summarised in the table at 16 above - was even if (i) was incorrect, the prospect of any dividend being paid to the Commissioner was extremely low.
(c) in relation to the company listed at item 1 of the [Originating Process] - North Shore - there is no prospect of the inquiry the subject of the orders yielding any compensation being paid to that company because, on the Commissioner's application, Robyn Erskine had been appointed liquidator of that company in place of Mr Iannuzzi, such that any compensation would be paid to that company by reason of the exercise of the powers of a liquidator under the Corporations Act. The Commissioner had obviously chosen an alternative route - namely funding a new liquidator - to achieve that purpose.
22 It was also submitted for Mr Iannuzzi that:
If compensation truly was the Commissioner's purpose, evidence to that effect could have been given. It was not. Further, applications to reinstate should have been made. They were not. The failure to take these steps cannot be put down to some oversight. The inutility of taking these steps is manifest from the circumstances relevant to each company as summarised in the table.
23 The table referred to in the passage extracted above is an aide memoire handed up to the primary judge by Mr Iannuzzi's counsel, which summarised information in the compulsorily-obtained documents to the effect that, apart from one company, RC Group Aust Pty Ltd, there was no or little prospect of recovery by the Commissioner.
24 Mr Iannuzzi sought, and continues to seek, a finding about a question of fact, being the Commissioner's purpose in bringing the proceeding. Before the primary judge, Mr Iannuzzi's argument was that the sole real, operative or substantial purpose was as stated in para 6 of the originating process (the disciplinary action) and not as stated in para 5 (the compensation action). Although the terms were not used, what was being put was that para 5 was "colourable", or mere "window dressing". But para 5 was (and is) in the originating application, and a taxation officer (Mr Zafiriou) had given evidence in support of the application as a whole. He had not been asked any question about the application, and, indeed, his evidence had not been challenged in any way. In these circumstances, it may be accepted that:
(1) Para 5 of the originating process seeks compensation to be paid to all of the companies, and this is clear evidence of the Commissioner's purpose.
(2) The Commissioner's case was that the dealings of the companies were inter-related so the fact that the Commissioner is or appears not to be a creditor of six of the companies does not mean that the affairs of those companies are able to be separated from the affairs of the other companies of which the Commissioner is a creditor. It must be inferred that one purpose of the inquiry is to identify the inter-relationships between the companies.
(3) The aide memoire was a document summarising the financial position of the very companies in respect of which it was alleged that Mr Iannuzzi was in breach of his duties as a liquidator. These allegations included that Mr Iannuzzi made knowingly false and misleading statements to creditors of these companies and failed to investigate unfair preferences and uncommercial transactions in connection with them. In this circumstance, it cannot be accepted that the aide memoire was or is a reliable foundation for any inference about the outcomes that may be achieved from an inquiry.
(4) It makes sense for the Commissioner to seek reinstatement of the one company which the evidence already indicated may well be a source of funds for the revenue and to defer seeking reinstatement of any other company until the outcome of the inquiry becomes apparent. The fact that the originating process seeks the reinstatement of one company does not support the inference urged by Mr Iannuzzi that the Commissioner accepted there would be no point in reinstating the other companies because there were no prospects of recovery. This too will be appropriately resolved through the inquiry.
(5) If it is truly a defect in the Commissioner's case not to have sought reinstatement of all of the companies before the inquiry commences, then that defect can and will be rectified by the Commissioner. It would not be a reason to grant leave to appeal to Mr Iannuzzi.
(6) As to the company, North Shore Property Developments Pty Ltd, Yates J only granted leave to the new liquidator to proceed in respect of certain transactions. While that decision is subject to appeal, it demonstrates that there may well be utility in the Commissioner continuing in this proceeding in relation to that company.
(7) It is objectively unlikely that the Commissioner would file the originating process including para 5 seeking compensation, authorise an ATO officer to support the application on affidavit, and instruct his lawyers that he intends to seek compensation if, in fact, para 5 of the originating process was colourable in the sense that it was not part of the Commissioner's actual purpose, and the Commissioner's real, operative or substantial purpose was confined to para 6.
25 These factors do not incline us to accept Mr Iannuzzi's characterisation of the Commissioner's purpose.
26 As already noted, Mr Zafiriou was not required for cross-examination. It is not an answer to this to refer, as Mr Iannuzzi did, to the absence of any express statement of purpose in Mr Zafiriou's affidavits. As noted, Mr Zafiriou gave his affidavit evidence in support of the whole of the originating application, including both paras 5 and 6, and he did so based on ATO records. These facts alone are evidence that compensation "truly was the Commissioner's purpose" (to use the language of the submissions for Mr Iannuzzi).
27 Even if, as Mr Iannuzzi contended, the Commissioner's actual purpose is to be determined wholly objectively (an issue that need not be determined here) statements of purpose as understood by the ATO officer directly involved would remain relevant to the objective ascertainment of the purpose.
28 In these circumstances Mr Iannuzzi has failed to discharge the onus of proof. He has not proved that the alleged improper purpose of disciplinary action was the real, operative or substantial purpose in the necessary sense of proving that without that purpose the proceeding would not have been brought at all: LHRC v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (No 3) [2015] FCA 52; 326 ALR 77 at [147]-[151]. As the Commissioner submitted, "[t]he recovery of tax-related liabilities includes the taking of any legally permissible step to recover or obtain satisfaction for sums which are or may be owing to the Commonwealth from the operation of the tax laws". The use of documents obtained in exercise of compulsive powers in a proceeding that includes a claim for compensation in respect of all of the companies has not, therefore, been proved to be for an impermissible purpose.
29 We would also uphold the Commissioner's notice of contention. It is clear from the table to s 355-50(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953 that item 3, in particular, is an expansive provision. We do not accept that the proceeding, which in para 5 of the originating application sought amelioration of the companies' financial position (for, it may be inferred, the benefit of the revenue) is not one "related to a taxation law" merely because that application also sought, in para 6, disciplinary action against Mr Iannuzzi. In this event, it is unnecessary to determine whether, as the Commissioner submitted, para 6 alone would suffice to make the proceeding one related to a taxation law. We accept that Canadian Pacific Tobacco Company Limited v Stapleton (1952) 86 CLR 1 is not authority for that proposition.
30 In the circumstances, we have no difficulty in concluding that the proceedings are related to a taxation law. As the primary judge said at [31], the words "are related to" involve a "broad connection". Further:
The present proceeding has as one of its endpoints an attempt to have compensated a number of defunct companies of which the Commissioner is a creditor. If that enterprise were to succeed it is certainly possible, although perhaps not inevitable, that the Commissioner will ultimately secure the payment of unpaid tax as a result of the proceeding. That easily means that the present proceeding is related to a taxation law. The matter is therefore covered by item 3.