The relevant orders
18The notice of motion relied on by ILP was imprecise as to the orders which were sought to be stayed. The difficulty was not reduced by the uncertainty as to the form of the orders. The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) ("the UCPR") provide, in respect of entry of judgments and orders:
" 36.11 Entry of judgments and orders
(1) Any judgment or order of the court is to be entered.
(2) Unless the court orders otherwise, a judgment or order is taken to be entered when it is recorded in the court's computerised court record system.
(2A) If the court directs that a judgment or order be entered forthwith, the judgment or order is taken to be entered:
(a) when a document embodying the judgment or order is signed and sealed by a registrar, or
(b) when the judgment or order is recorded as referred to in subrule (2),
whichever first occurs."
19In the present case, both occurred; thus the Court's computer record contains the following entries:
"Appeal dismissed with costs.
Cross-appeal allowed with costs.
Declaration that first respondent validly rescinded funding agreement.
Consequential orders as first respondent's short minutes of order."
20The contents of a minute of order signed and sealed by a registrar do not appear on the computerised record system, but do appear as having been made or given on 3 June 2011 and are dated 20 June 2011. They are in different terms to the orders contained in the computerised record system. However, it is the written document which was relied upon by the parties as recording the orders. This may be accepted for present purposes.
21As counsel for Chameleon pointed out, the relevant orders fall into two categories. First, there are the financial payment orders, being orders 7 and 9. Order 7 required that ILP pay Chameleon the amount of $618,855.70 forthwith by way of restitution. Order 9 required that the appellant (and the receivers) pay the costs of Chameleon and Cape Lambert. ILP withdrew any intention to seek a stay in respect of the costs of Cape Lambert, which it agreed to pay in accordance with the terms of the order.
22So far as costs are concerned, there was an affidavit from the solicitor for Chameleon estimating his client's recoverable costs before the primary judge and on appeal in the range $243,000-$278,000. This range was not challenged. Taking a figure at the lower end of that range, and adding it to the amount repayable by way of restitution, the amount in question, to be paid by ILP, is in the order of $870,000.
23The second aspect of the stay application concerned the discharge of ILP's security over the assets of Chameleon. If it were to be successful in the High Court, it would be entitled to a payment by Chameleon of approximately $8.6 million. ILP placed before the Court on affidavit accounts of Chameleon indicating its financial circumstances from December 2010 to March 2011. It is not necessary to set out the details in these half-yearly and quarterly reports. It suffices to say that the assets of the company, including its cash on hand, would be insufficient to meet a judgment in favour of ILP, if it were successful on the appeal.
24The respondents base their resistance to the stay in respect of the discharge of the security on an entirely separate proposition, namely that Chameleon would be financially better off if the security held by ILP were to be discharged. That course, it was submitted, would release a limited recourse loan facility in an amount of $6.5 million provided by Cape Lambert, which was conditional upon Cape Lambert obtaining a first charge over the assets of Chameleon. Two critical clauses, presumably relied on for this submission, read as follows:
"8. [Cape Lambert] warrants that it has the funds available to provide the Standby Facility and agrees to pay, within 1 business day of a request from [Chameleon] such amount of the Standby Facility as required by [Chameleon]:
8.1 for such purposes may be agreed by [Cape Lambert] in writing;
8.2 to make a payment to International Litigation Partners Pte Ltd in discharge of their security; or
8.3 to make a tender of payment to International Litigation Partners Pte Ltd conditional upon discharge of its security."
25Clause 9 provided for security by way of a fixed and floating charge over the assets of Chameleon. Clause 10 provided:
"10. Such charge be first ranking (subject to discharge of fixed and floating charge in favour of International Litigation Partners Pte Ltd)."
26This, being the evidence of the arrangement between Cape Lambert and Chameleon, did not reflect an unambiguous agreement between the parties. Far from requiring discharge of ILP's security as a condition of drawdown, the specified purpose of the loan was to provide the resources to permit payment to ILP and thus obtain a discharge of its security. Ultimately, this agreement has little relevance to the proposed stay.
27Prior to the hearing of the application, the respondents had not suggested in writing that there be any conditions imposed on a stay, if it were to be granted. It was only in the dying stages of the hearing that conditions were proposed.
28While it is apparent that Chameleon has limited resources from which it might pay a judgment in favour of ILP if it were successful on its appeal, it is also true that ILP has not, on the evidence, demonstrated a capacity to pay the amounts presently owing to Chameleon. It is a private company incorporated in Singapore, having a share capital of one share (nominal value $1) owned by a company resident in the British Virgin Islands. To the extent that it has current liabilities, it should be required to provide security.