73 The pleading does not allege that Zetta Jet itself bought the vessel. Instead, it is alleged that Mr Cassidy entered into a written contract for the purchase of the Dragon Pearl for $3,660,125.82 (later varied to AU$4,492,034.82 payable by instalments), i.e., the agreement was with him not Zetta Jet.
74 Part F of the pleading alleges that the payments made by Zetta Jet to Maritimo constituted an unreasonable director-related transaction of Zetta Jet within the meaning of s 588FDA and ought to be set aside. It is also said that Linkage or DPL (that latter of which received the vessel as the nominee or representative of Mr Cassidy) should be directed to pay Zetta Jet an amount representing the benefits they have received because of the transaction.
75 For its part, Linkage submits that it has available to it the defence conferred by s 588FG(1). It provides:
'588FG Transaction not voidable as against certain persons
(1) A court is not to make under section 588FF an order materially prejudicing a right or interest of a person other than a party to the transaction if it is proved that:
(a) the person received no benefit because of the transaction; or
(b) in relation to each benefit that the person received because of the transaction:
(i) the person received the benefit in good faith; and
(ii) at the time when the person received the benefit:
(A) the person had no reasonable grounds for suspecting that the company was insolvent at that time or would become insolvent as mentioned in paragraph 588FC(b); and
(B) a reasonable person in the person's circumstances would have had no such grounds for so suspecting.
…'
76 Linkage submits that it received no benefit because of the transaction. The transaction is pleaded to be the payments by Zetta Jet to Maritimo. It says that it did not exist at the time of the transaction and could not have benefited from it. In particular, the payments were made between April and December 2016 whereas Linkage was not incorporated until 22 August 2017.
77 In terms of s 588FG(1), I accept Linkage's submission that it was not a party to the transaction constituted by the payments. However, its submission is that it has a defence under s 588FG(1)(a) and that requires it to demonstrate that it has not received any benefit because of those transactions. I am unpersuaded, at this stage, that Linkage's defence on that basis is so likely to succeed at trial that the Plaintiffs' case should be peremptorily terminated. As the Plaintiffs pointed out, the bare facts appear to be:
(a) Zetta Jet paid Maritimo AU$4,492,034.82;
(b) this was in satisfaction of Mr Cassidy's obligation to pay for the Dragon Pearl;
(c) there was no benefit for Zetta Jet in this and it was not authorised;
(d) DPL acquired the ship without paying any money for it; and
(e) Linkage acquired the vessel from DPL for US$1 and other unidentified consideration.
78 The Defendants say these transactions can be explained and are innocent. Maybe so. It suffices to say that I would regard the issues of whether Linkage has benefitted from the taking of the Dragon Pearl as worthy of trial. Consequently, I do not accept that its defence under s 588FG(1) must inevitably succeed.
79 The conclusion disposes of the Defendant's argument in relation to Part F of the proposed statement of claim. The same reasoning also applies to Parts G and H.
80 The Defendant's next objection was to Part I of the pleading. The allegation in that part is as follows. The pleader points to three, heretofore separate, transactions and contends that they may be viewed as a composite transaction. It is then said that this composite transaction was uncommercial. The three transactions are:
(1) the transaction between Zetta Jet and Maritimo under which Zetta Jet paid Maritimo between April and December 2016 and thereby allowed Mr Cassidy to complete the purchase of the Dragon Pearl;
(2) the transaction between Maritimo and DPL under which Maritimo transferred title to the Dragon Pearl to DPL on 5 December 2016; and
(3) the transaction between DPL and Linkage on 18 June 2018 under which DPL transferred title to Linkage for US$1.
81 At ¶68 it is pleaded that these three transactions taken together themselves constituted a transaction, that is to say, a composite transaction. Extensive particulars are provided for the allegation of the composite transaction. They are as follows:
'PARTICULARS
The matters referred to in paragraphs 13 to 16 and 20, 23, 27, 29, 31, 36, 38, 40, 43 and 45 above, looked at in their totality, were a series of events in a course of dealings initiated by Cassidy with the common purpose, aim and/or effect of (i) moving assets away from Zetta Jet and into other entities associated with Cassidy or Wu Kebo or both, and (ii) depriving Zetta Jet and its creditors of the assets.
There were no benefits to Zetta Jet from the transaction because it made payments for which it received nothing in return. There was a detriment to Zetta Jet from the transaction, as the effect of the payments was to diminish Zetta Jet's assets. The transaction conferred benefits on entities associated with Cassidy or Wu Kebo, including DPL and Linkage, to which they would not have been otherwise entitled, namely obtaining ownership of the Ship. As set out in paragraph 22 above, Wu Kebo is associated with Du Yan, NT, DPL and Linkage. The benefit to Wu Kebo was that he (or his associates) received the value of the Ship (through the transfer of the shares in DPL to Du Yan), and has retained the value of the Ship (through its transfer from DPL to Linkage).
Although Cassidy is not named as a director or shareholder of Linkage, it may be inferred that Cassidy and Linkage are associated having regard to, inter alia, (i) the consideration for the transfer of US$1; (ii) the timing of the transfer, which was half-an-hour after dismissal of the appeal by the Full Federal Court in VID 706/2018; (iii) their use of the same law firms (Holman Fenwick in Hong Kong and Mills Oakley in Sydney); (iv) the participation of Linkage's director in supporting an application by New Target Investments Ltd (a company to which Cassidy was purportedly indebted) to delay the US bankruptcy proceeding in relation to Zetta Jet; (v) the misappropriation of Zetta Jet's funds to acquire the Ship as described in paragraph 18 above; (vi) the submissions made by Mills Oakley (which previously acted for DPL and now acts for Linkage), in the context of the Plaintiffs' application for injunctive relief, that the owner of the Ship has been unable to use it since its arrest; (vii) the admission in paragraph 32 of the affidavit of Maurice Lynch dated 19 September 2018 filed in this proceeding, which quotes Henry Fung of Holman Fenwick Willan as stating that NT (Wu Kebo's company), which through Du Yan controlled DPL, wished to and did transfer the Ship to a new 'clean' company controlled by it in case there were any claims against DPL, whether by Cassidy or third parties; (viii) the statements in the email from Catherine Smith of Holman Fenwick Wilson sent on 18 June 2018 at 6:57am and in the email from Catherine Smith sent on 12 June 2018 at 7:27am that the designated persons / authorised representatives of the Ship are Henry Fung and Fiona Chow, and they would not change, and would continue to be the designated persons / authorised representatives of Linkage (pages 169.3 and 169.17 further folder of documents tendered by the Plaintiffs at the hearing on 8 October 2018).
Further particulars may be provided after discovery.'
82 The particulars pick up earlier allegations in the pleading. These allegations are not straightforward. They begin with the transfer to DPL on 5 December 2016 following the payment by Zetta Jet of the purchase price. At this time Mr Cassidy was the owner and controller of DPL. Next there was a transfer of the shares in DPL to a Chinese actor, Ms Du Yan, on 28 September 2017 for US$1. The reasons Mr Cassidy would transfer his ownership of the Dragon Pearl via DPL to a Chinese actor are not at once obvious (although, given the other elements of this litigation, this curiosity can hardly be described as surprising either). The answer appears to be that Ms Du Yan is an associate of a Hong Kong businessman, Mr Wu Kebo, and ownership of DPL is to be seen as having something to do with him.
83 Mr Wu Kebo and Mr Cassidy were connected by a guarantee which Mr Cassidy had given Mr Wu Kebo in relation to certain debts of Zetta Jet. The debts owed by Zetta Jet to Mr Wu Kebo (or his companies) appear somewhat irregular. Part of them includes the purchase of a plane from Mr Wu Kebo's interests at a price of US$11 million when it was arguably worth only US$6-8 million. There were also a number of agreements under which Zetta Jet agreed to allow Mr Wu Kebo's interests to use the plane. It was Zetta Jet's obligations under these which it appears Mr Cassidy guaranteed.
84 Next it appears that Zetta Jet defaulted on these obligations with the consequence that Mr Cassidy's guarantee obligation was enlivened. It was this obligation under the guarantee to Mr Wu Kebo's interests which was subsequently to be seen as the consideration provided to Mr Wu Kebo for the transfer to the Chinese actor of the Dragon Pearl (by means of the shares in DPL). Then it is alleged that it was Mr Wu Kebo who was behind the incorporation of Linkage on 22 August 2017. It was, of course, to Linkage that the vessel was transferred on 18 June 2018 (immediately after the Full Court's dismissal of the First Maritime Appeal).
85 The Plaintiffs submit that this shows that there is an arguable case that the steps which have resulted in Zetta Jet's money being used to buy the Dragon Pearl (and its subsequent passing through DPL and on to Linkage) may be seen as a single elaborate transaction orchestrated by Mr Cassidy and Mr Wu Kebo to take money from Zetta Jet. It is for that reason that the three transactions are to be seen as composite in nature.
86 There is a difficulty with this. It lies in the final step where Linkage is tied into the transaction by the allegation that Mr Wu Kebo (or his associates) lay behind the incorporation of Linkage. The particulars provided for this are:
'The certificate of incorporation is at page 63 of the exhibits to the affidavit of Maurice Lynch dated 19 September 2018 filed in this proceeding.'
87 Recourse to that certificate of incorporation, however, provides no support for the allegation that it was Mr Wu Kebo or his associates who incorporated Linkage. Despite that, I do not think that I would reject the composite transaction case at this stage. The transfer to Linkage appears to have been for US$1. Assuming, as appears to be asserted, that there was some non-cash consideration as well, this would suggest an antecedent relationship between Linkage and Mr Wu Kebo. That suggests part of the picture is missing. There is enough - just enough - for this to proceed to trial (if it were otherwise tenable).