THE FACTUAL CIRCUMSTANCES
37Coombing Park has been held by the King family for some generations. In 1999 it was held as follows.
38One part, called Coombing West, was owned by Esk Pty Ltd whose shares were owned by Berkeley King, his sister Patricia Bellamy and his brother Peter King (or their interests) as to approximately one-third each.
39The remainder of the properties comprising Coombing Park were owned by The Whitney Pastoral Co Pty Ltd ("Whitney" or "WPC") whose major shareholder (owning 65.71%) was Somers Investments Pty Ltd in which Berkeley King, Patricia Bellamy and Peter King (or their interests) held approximately one-third of the shares each. Brumby Run Pty Ltd held a further 22.3% of Whitney as trustee for the Brumby Trust of which the same three persons were beneficiaries. Peter King and Patricia Bellamy held small direct interests in Whitney, with most of the remainder of the shares in that company being held by interests associated with Berkeley King or his daughters Katie and Kristen (the latter also being known as "Shish"). Those interests (totalling 5.99% of Whitney's capital) and Berkeley King's approximately one-third shareholding in Esk were referred to in the proceedings and in the contemporaneous documents as "the Minority Shares".
40George King gave evidence that in 1996, about five years after he left school, he agreed with his father and uncle that he would undertake the management of Coombing Park on the basis that they would leave to him their shareholding interests in the companies that had direct or indirect ownership of the properties. He said that further discussions in the following years culminated in the following agreement with Berkeley in early August 1999:
"Berkeley: 'I will transfer my Somers shares to you and will resign as CEO to make way for you to be Managing Director. You will be the majority shareholder. I would prefer you to shake a warm hand instead of a cold one. But I expect you to pay fair value for my remaining shares in WPC and Esk.'
Me: 'I agree to this as long as I am not asked to buy out the shares at a time or for an amount that will compromise the business.'"
41George King went on in his affidavit to say:
"I understood that my purchase of Berkeley's remaining ESK and WPC shares at an appropriate time in the future was intended to generate sufficient cash to provide an amount to be left as an inheritance to my sisters. The amount Berkeley received as a result of my purchase together with my parents['] remaining estate (non-Coombing Park assets) would provide my sisters with an inheritance equivalent to the one third of Somers that I have received. That is
(a) I had received 33% of Somers which equated to 21.90% of WPC.
(b) ...
(c) I understood that Berkeley's remaining Coombing Park shares which comprised 135 Esk shares and 38,280 WPC shares had a value approximately equal to the one third of Somers I was receiving and that I would have to pay that amount to purchase them at an appropriate time in the future.
(d) My parents' non-Coombing Park assets (comprising other property holdings and a share portfolio) were worth approximately $1 million and would be left to Katie and Kristen.
(e) In light of the above I understood that each of Katie, Kristen and I were to receive approximately equal amounts from our parents. I had received one third of Somers worth $800,000. Katie and Kristen were together to receive my parents['] remaining estate worth $1 million, plus the amount when I purchased Berkeley's remaining shares."
42Acting on Mr Benecke's advice (which the primary judge found to have been negligent) that transfer to him of Berkeley King's shares in Somers could result in a substantial stamp duty and/or capital gains tax liability, George King agreed in 2000 that Berkeley's 15 Somers shares that he had agreed to transfer to George would instead be held by Berkeley in trust for George, with Berkeley promising to leave them to George by will. This transaction was referred to in the proceedings as the "Berkeley Transaction".
43Thereafter, Peter King agreed to sell his shares in Somers, Whitney and Esk to George King (the "Peter Transaction"). On the advice of Mr Benecke (again found by the primary judge to be negligent), the shares were transferred to Weander Pty Ltd as the trustee of the Berkeley King Share Trust, rather than to George personally. This occurred upon the basis that Berkeley had agreed that George would acquire (as transpired) a controlling interest in Weander Pty Ltd, with the concept put to George being that he would control the shares held by the Berkeley King Share Trust if he controlled the trustee.
44In 2003 Patricia Bellamy commenced proceedings against Berkeley and the principal group companies claiming that they were guilty of oppressive conduct towards her in relation to her shares in those companies. Under a settlement reached in 2006, her shareholding interests in Somers and Whitney were extinguished and those in Esk were transferred to Whitney. The primary judge found that the settlement was "highly favourable to Whitney" (Judgment [614]) and that the value of George King's interest in Whitney increased dramatically as a result of the settlement (Judgment [617]).
45In a letter of 20 July 2006 to Mr Benecke, George King said the following:
"We had a facilitated family meeting on the 22nd of June at the request of my Sisters to come to an agreement as to what was due to them from the WPC Group given that I have received my inheritance from Berkeley around 1999. I put forward a pay - out plans [sic] for my sisters (Please refer to annexure marked A.) which was agreed to and accepted.
I have been away on annual holidays for the past two weeks and they have decided (Katie in particular) that is not what they want and have asked that 'Gobabla' [one of the Coombing Park properties] be sold and the proceeds from that sale less some debt be given equally to my two sisters."
46Annexure A to the letter calculated a total "payout value" to George King's sisters of $1,294,702 ($647,351 each). It proceeded upon the basis that his sisters were entitled to, or at least should receive, the same proportion of the value of Berkeley King's direct and indirect interests in Whitney (and those of persons associated with him, including his daughters) as George King had or would have. The calculation included not only the value of the family's Whitney shares but also the value of the shares in Somers that Berkeley King had promised to give George King in 1999.
47The primary judge held that the figure of $1,294,702 assumed a value of $5 per share in Whitney (Judgment [618]) but George King contends that the value assumed was $7.35. The offer did not relate to Berkeley's shares in Esk as well as those in Whitney.
48George King's letter of 20 July 2006 went on to say:
" ... Peter King agreed to the transfer of his shares to me on the condition that Berkeley transferred his shares to me; this effectively gave me control of the Group. Berkeley gave a condition on the transfer of his shares that I 'look after' the girls in with respect [sic] to purchasing the WPC & Esk shares from his and Penny's estate. It was never expected to be dollar equal. (Please refer to annexure marked C.) This is Katie and Kristen's actual legal position."
49The issues that motivated George King to make the offer to his sisters are apparent from the following further statements in his letter to Mr Benecke of 20 July 2006:
"What is happening is that I am being expected to 'pay - out' each of the girls an amount equivalent to the minority shareholder value of one third of the entire WPC Group. This is based on the assumption by Berkeley, Penny, Katie and Kristen that the work I have done of the past ten years has been for the direct benefit of the family and to no benefit to me as an adult. What is seen as unfair by my sisters is that I have had the use of my inheritance from Berkeley which has put me in a position to purchase both Peter's and Patricia's shareholdings. The original agreement with Berkeley was that I received his Somers Shares (22% / $800,000) and my sisters get the remaining WPC and ESK shares and all of Berkeley and Penny's residual estate which is valued at about 1.4 million dollars at the moment. At Katie's request she wanted to change the original plan so as to get some asset out now.
...
My thoughts are that if this is to continue it will destroy family relationships. I also see it as un-winnable by me on the emotional grounds it appears to be played on at the moment. If I were to do nothing my legal position with all this is extremely clear and I do not think I require advice on that front. My position is I would like to return to Berkeley the equivalent amount of shares he transferred to me in 1999."
50In a letter of 21 July 2006 to a Mr Michael Adamedes, George King said:
"Agreement of Somers
The agreement that was in place was that it was my responsibility to even up the dollar value of inheritance, I had to pay back the shareholder loans (which are at call) and pay fair value for all the shares in WPC and Esk that were left to the girls. The residual estate from [the property] Weander was also going to the girls. I understood the 22% shareholding via Somers was to be my total inheritance and I could base my career decisions on that."
51On 23 July 2006 Berkeley King wrote a note that included the following:
"George has the legal right to not give any part of the WPC to anyone, every one else in the family is a minority shareholder in a private coy and we all know only too well what that means. I believe George also has moral obligations which if he chooses to ignore them will have disastrous consequences for our family".
52In an email to Berkeley King of 23 July 2006 George King wrote:
" ... I have no doubt now that if you had the control you would sell what ever you wanted to pay out what you wanted, what you are telling me to do now is a betrayal of what you promised in 1999 ..."
53After a further mediation in July 2006, George King made an offer to pay his sisters $1,761,412, being $880,706 each. He referred to this offer as follows in a note that he prepared on about 31 July 2006:
"● I have also offered to purchase the remaining 198,855 [Whitney] shares (26.6%) for $7.50; this is 50% above the last share sale. Also have offered to purchase the 135 Esk shares for $2,000 per share.
● I do not think the Company should commit to any more than this amount at this time.
● $1,761,412 or $880,706 each."
Unlike his offer of June 2006, this offer included Berkeley's shares in Esk. The parties agreed that the primary judge was in error in saying otherwise.
54On 18 June 2007 George King wrote a letter to Berkeley King that included the following:
""I believe the only way Katie and Shish will see this as fair is if they get the [equivalent] of one third of Coombing each.
...
It causes me anguish that in 1999 we made a deal that you would transfer your Somers shares to me which equated to 22% of WPC and that was to be my entire inheritance and the girls were to get the remainder of your estate and your Esk and WPC shares. Now because I have secured [Peter King's] shares formally and Bellamy's Somers and WPC shares are extinguished and land values have trebled it seems that the original deal is null and void and any achievements I have made from the strong position you gave me are now on the table to be divided again."
55On 21 June 2007 Berkeley King wrote a letter to George King that included the following:
"I have three children that have all become adults and I love them all with all my heart and unconditionally. At this moment I have one with great wealth (some of which was given and some of which was earned) and two with nothing. I have no choice but to fight for my two who have nothing, especially Katie whose needs are great at this time."
56On 27 June 2007 George King wrote a letter to Berkeley King that included the following:
"My understanding of where you are all at with this is that you only intended to transfer control of your shares to me, not ownership. I can now see that if you all perceive that you didn't transfer ownership to me - that your shares were being held by me in Trust for the family that your position is where you now see it. Your letter of the 21st said that half of Bellamy's shares and half of Brumby Run should go to you and half should go to me via Peter. To think this you must be assuming you must have title to one third of Whitney?
I see this as the area of most confusion on both sides, you and the girls think I am 'stealing' shares that I have no 'legal or moral right to' ... If you see that you still have moral right to the shares you gave me then the girls would be understandably angry with me. I don't even think you have told them of the circumstances around the 1999 transfer of your shares or the deal we made then."
57In early August 2007 a conversation occurred between George King and Berkeley King in the following terms:
"[George King]: 'Are you planning on doing something different with the Somers shares you are holding for me?'
Berkeley: 'If you don't trust me I will sign them across to you now'.
[George King]: 'I'll organise it.'"
58In August 2007 Mr Benecke prepared the documents necessary to effect the transfer. In mid-August 2007, Mr Benecke told George King that Berkeley had not signed them.
59In September 2007 George King prepared a position paper for a further mediation which took place on 16 October 2007. It included the following:
"Dad wrote to me on the 23rd July 2006 saying I had a moral obligation to either sign Gobabla over to the girls or sell it and give them the net proceeds after a fair distribution of the Company debt, or this would have disastrous consequences for our family.
...
I have subsequently sold Gobabla which equated to approximately our debt. Dad has said for the last year that he thinks the girls should get $1M each as a fair payout which I have been working towards. The asset valuation of all the remaining shares is $2.6M. Two million dollars for the remaining 14.5% is nearly six times the value we paid for Bellamy's 33%. There is now talk of including a beach house for Mum, I don't know if this is in addition to or including the two million dollars."
60Berkeley King's position paper, also prepared in September 2007, reaffirmed his promise to leave his shares in Somers to George King. Nevertheless Berkeley treated himself as still owning the shares as he said in the position paper that he owned "just over 50% of the group" whilst George owned "just under 50%" and 199 of the 200 voting shares.
61The record of the mediation (prepared by Ms Kathy Sims) noted points that the parties agreed at the mediation on 16 October 2007 would form "the basis for further discussion". These points contemplated a payment out of George King's resources of $3.5 million. In his affidavit of 31 August 2010, George King said that at the mediation his family collectively proposed that they would accept $3.5 million and that he agreed to investigate "whether the company could obtain finance to pay $3.5 million" ([166]). This was on the basis that Berkeley and his wife would have the right of occupancy of the Coombing Park main homestead rent-free for their lifetimes. In his evidence-in-chief, George sought to clarify or amend that evidence by saying that whilst the remainder of his family "agreed that I was to go away and do that. I didn't answer them" (Transcript p 43).
62George King referred to the mediation of 16 October 2007 as follows in his email of 18 October 2007 to the mediator, Ms Lyn Sykes:
"The 'big house' has gone into a spin with a sense of hysteria from Katie again. I don't feel comfortable dealing with them outside of a facilitated meeting. I will wait to our December meeting as agreed in our meeting of Tuesday [16 October 2007].
They need a bit of time to settle down, from experience they will need this time to become rational again and to not keep moving the goal posts ... ".
63An email of 22 October 2007 from George King to Ms Sykes included the following:
"This is where the main point of contention is. If Berkeley stood by his agreement of 1999 about transferring his Somers shares to me, including the equity shares the position would now be that I had 85.5% of [Whitney] and Berkeley would have 14.5% as the majority of shares the Aunt held were in Somers Investments. My understanding from the deal in 1999 was crystal clear that that was to be my only inheritance, the unclear part was that I had to buy Berkeley's remaining shares at 'fair value'.
...
Every time I disagreed to something they have told me they say that I am treating this as a business transaction and not as family, they don't want me to disagree with their proposals. I am hearing don't be difficult and just agree with them regardless of the consequence for me and my new family?
What do I have to do in this process to limit the damage to relationships?"
64On 24 October 2007 Berkeley King signed a codicil to his will providing that his shares in Somers were to be held by his will trustees for the benefit of his wife, Penny King, until 2027.
65On about 6 November 2007 George King saw a tax invoice from Mr Benecke that referred to Mr Benecke providing services concerning the alteration of Berkeley King's will.
66In about mid-November 2007 George King first heard of the concept of an "appointor" of a trust and came to understand that such a person had the power to change the trustee. He assumed that Berkeley King was the appointor of the Berkeley King Share Trust and became worried that if he did not obtain the Berkeley and Peters' shares in Somers, Berkeley would be able to sell Coombing Park without requiring George's agreement (affidavit of 31 August 2010, [176]).
67On 18 December 2007 George King said the following to his solicitor concerning a mediation between the family members that had taken place the previous day:
"My guess from the meeting yesterday is that they (Dad & Katie) are going to start legal action. I suspect they will start with dismissing Deerslayer Pty Limited as Trustee for The Berkeley King Share Trust. Are we [certain] everything is closed there?
I offered $3.5 for the three respective share groups, they had previously been demanding $4.0 and in yesterday[']s meeting changed their demand to $5.2."
68The primary judge found that at the mediation on 17 December 2007, George King offered to pay $3.5 million (without an immediate right in him to occupy the homestead). George King contends that this finding was wrong and that the amount of the offer was in fact $3 million, with a documentary reference by him to $3.5 million (see [67] above) being a typographical error.
69On 19 December 2007 George King said in an email to the mediator, Ms Sykes:
" ... All Dad's life he's lectured everyone he's met about morals and integrity. He's gone back on his promise about holding the Somers shares in trust for me, (he's changed his Will, gave me the bill to pay which had codicil changing these shares) ... Has given me shares in a trust that he had the power to take back and his solicitor put shares I purchased into the trust!!!"
70On 24 December 2007 George King wrote to Berkeley King in the following terms:
"I know you are really angry with me at the moment & you have started legal action against me. I just want you to know no matter what happens I will always love you."
71On 8 January 2008 Berkeley King, as appointor, executed a deed replacing Deerslayer as trustee of the Berkeley King Share Trust.
72On 12 March 2008 Berkeley King told George King that he was seeking to have George removed as manager of Coombing Park, resulting in George striking him on his right ear.
73On 28 March 2008 George King was charged with assault and at that time Berkeley, his wife and their daughters obtained Apprehended Domestic Violence Orders against George.
74On about 16 June 2008 George King received a handwritten note from his mother, Penny King, offering to accept a settlement of $7,598,000. This represented 50% of what she referred to as 2008 valuations of the properties at $15.196 million.
75In his letter of 17 June 2008 in response, George King asserted that the net assets of Whitney were $13,021,961 less, apparently, certain costs of realising an asset or assets. He asserted that he owned 85.42% of Whitney. Presumably this ownership was largely through the three one-third interests in Somers that he had, or thought he had, acquired from Berkeley King, Peter King and Patricia Bellamy, together with the interests in Esk that he had acquired from Peter King and Patricia Bellamy. He identified the components of the outstanding 14-15%. These were in essence the Minority Shares (including Berkeley King's one-third interest in Esk) and one share in Brumby Run. For that outstanding percentage he offered $2,909,279 plus an additional $250,000, making a total of $3,250,000.
76In a letter of 7 July 2008 to Penny King, George King said the following:
"I am prepared to offer you and the girls full asset backing of $1,626,102.00 for all your shares in the WPC Group. In addition to this, in an effort to finalise this matter and as a gesture of good-will I [am] prepared to offer you all a further $1,373,898.00 lifting my offer to $3,000,000.00. As an incentive to vacate the Coombing Park homestead by 31 December 2008 I am prepared to offer you all a further $500,000.00 bringing my total and final offer to THREE MILLION FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS ($3,500,000.00)."
77The family dispute was settled at a mediation on 5 December 2008. George King agreed to pay $3,550,000, with $2,550,000 payable by 1 February 2009 and $1,000,000 payable by 31 December 2010. His parents and sisters were to have the right to reside in the homestead only until 30 June 2009.
78In his affidavit of 31 August 2010, George King said that the agreement was preceded at the mediation by offers from his family to accept, first, $6,000,000 and then successively $5,500,000, $4,000,000 plus a right of occupation of the homestead until 31 December 2010, $3,255,000 plus acquisition of Coombing South and the right to live in the homestead until 30 June 2009, and $3,650,000 plus the right to live in the homestead until 31 March 2009. In oral evidence, George said that he could not recall whether he made any counter-offers. However his counsel submitted that a file note in evidence suggested that he did.