2 This amount differs slightly from the particulars at pp 9 and 10 of the Second Cocolas Affidavit because it includes the deposit of $30,100, and has no rounding.
3 This amount also differs from the particulars by $0.87 due to rounding.
18 Further, Mrs Smith submitted that:
The Trustee did not establish that Mrs Smith received the sum of $328,528.50 which could be traced into the Surfers Paradise Property.
Mr and Mrs Smith had agreed that Mr Smith's share of the proceeds of sale of the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property would be used to repay the mortgage, and that Mrs Smith's share would be used to buy the Surfers Paradise Property.
The transfer of Mr Smith's interest in the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property was effected by:
• the discharge of the whole of the joint debt (totalling $506,543.00) using Mr Smith's share of the net proceeds of sale; and
• the payment to Mrs Smith of the residue of Mr Smith's entitlement to the net proceeds of sale.
The only money that Mr Smith was entitled to receive, which was transferred to Ms Smith, was the sum of $73,811.40.
Although she had sufficient funds to purchase the Surfers Paradise Property, Mrs Smith used a fund that was mixed with that $73,811.40 and therefore accepted that the whole of the sum of $73,811.40 was traceable into the Surfers Paradise Property.
19 In relation to the concept of tracing, the Full Court in Frigger v Trenfield (No 3) [2023] FCAFC 49 observed that:
[373] However, 'tracing' is a factual enquiry whether or not undertaken in support of a proprietary claim. It requires evidence. It involves demonstrating causal or transactional links from the original property to the property now said to be a substitute for the original property. It does not necessarily require that one asset is 'substituted' directly for another. In the process of demonstrating causal or transaction links "common sense and reasonable inference play their part": Toksoz v Westpac Banking Corporation [2012] NSWCA 199; 289 ALR 577 at [7] -[10] . See, also, J Edelman, 'Understanding Tracing Rules' (2016) 16 QUT Law Review 1 at 7-11; Goldus Pty Ltd (Subject to a Deed of Company Arrangement) v Cummins (No 4) [2021] FCA 1095; 157 ACSR 118 at [265] -[283].
[374] The process of tracing funds (property) through bank accounts involving numerous transactions over many years can be complex and costly. It is usually undertaken with the assistance of a forensic accountant and evidence is given about the transactions underlying the entries in the bank statements and the links between those entries, such that the links between the claimant's original property and the putative substitute property are proven. Sometimes it is not possible to identify the links and the property cannot be traced into and out of a bank account. Whatever the case may be, it necessary for there to be evidence to establish the transactional or causal links.
20 Generally, tracing involves an extensive assessment of bank accounts and transactions to determine the links between the original property and the substitute property: Frigger at [374].
21 In the substantive Kirk judgment I found that:
the combined net proceeds of sale of the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property amounted to $1,162,639.36;
after payment of the mortgages the combined net proceeds of sale was $656,095.49; and
Mr Smith and Mrs Smith were each entitled to receive 50% of the net proceeds of sale of those properties, being for each person the amount of $328,047.74.
22 Key evidence before the Court was Transaction Listings for Accounts in Mrs Smith's name. Annexure GSS-02 to the affidavit of Mrs Smith filed 29 July 2021 contained a copy of the Transaction Listing for Account S26, being a Heritage Bank Account, for the period 28 February 2015 until 31 October 2020. Annexure GSS-05 to the same affidavit of Mrs Smith contained a copy of the Transaction Listing for Account S1, also a Heritage Bank Account, for the period 6 March 2015 until 2 November 2020.
23 The amount of money actually received by Mrs Smith following the sales of these properties totalled $655,131.07 (paras [20]-[21] of the substantive Kirk judgment). This is also plain from Transaction Listings that Mrs Smith received a total sum of $655,131.07 from the proceeds of sale from both the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property, and those funds were ultimately transferred into either or both Account S26 and Account S1. This amount represented Mrs Smith's entitlement to net proceeds as well as an amount representing slightly less than Mr Smith's entitlement.
24 It is further clear that monies were paid out of Account S26 and Account S1, and that those monies were used to purchase the Surfers Paradise Property. In particular I note the following evidence:
At the opening of 23 March 2016, the balance of Account S1 was $3,956.12.
From the sale of the Broadbeach Property, on 23 March 2016 an amount of $194,386.33 was paid into Account S1. The balance of Account S1 at the close of 23 March 2016 was $198,342.45.
At the opening of 24 March 2016, the balance of Account S26 was $1,088.58.
On 24 March 2016 the amount of $30,100.00 was paid into Account S26. This amount was paid into the account by Professionals Real Estate. This sum represented the deposit paid to the real estate agent by the purchasers of the Broadbeach Property from Mr and Mrs Smith (substantive Kirk judgment at [20]).
At the opening of 25 March 2016, the balance of Account S1 was $198,342.45.
On 25 March 2016, Mrs Smith transferred the amount of $195,000.00 from Account S1 to Account S26, which she deposed included monies that she had received from the sale of the Broadbeach Property.
On 12 April 2016, an amount of $78,500.00 was deposited into Account S1 with the description "Transfer from S26 Deposit #1240372220". On the same day, an amount of $78,500 was transferred out of Account S1 with the description "Counter Chq to BH1 PTY LTD TRUST ACCOUNT". In her affidavit filed 29 July 2021 Mrs Smith deposed at [111] that on or around 12 April 2016 she paid a deposit of $78,500.00 to secure the purchase of the Surfers Paradise Property. I am satisfied that the amount of $78,500.00 transferred out of Account S1 was the deposit for the Surfers Paradise Property.
As at the close of 12 April 2016 (after the amount of $78,500 was transferred out of Account S26), the balance of Account S26 was $108,001.93.
At the opening of 20 April 2016, the balance of Account S1 was $3,218.45.
From the net proceeds of sale of the Blue Mountain Heights Property, on 20 April 2016 the amount of $430,644.74 was paid into Account S1.
At the opening of 20 April 2016, the balance of Account S26 was $105,001.93.
On 20 April 2016, Mrs Smith transferred $431,000 from Account S1 to Account S26, which she deposed included monies that she had received from the sale of the Blue Mountain Heights Property.
At the close of 20 April 2016, the balance of Account S26 was $536,001.93.
At the opening of 26 April 2016, the balance of Account S26 was $536,001.93.
On 26 April 2016, the amount of $250,000 was transferred from lawyers Wonderley & Hall to Account S26. The amount of $250,000 represented the loan from Faloda to Mrs Smith.
At the close of 26 April 2016, after an RTGS payment fee of $10.00 was deducted from Account S26, the balance of Account S26 was $785,991.93.
At the opening of 3 May 2016 the balance of Account S26 was $786,659.80. This sum included interest credit of $667.87.
On 3 May 2016 the amount of $734,265.65 was paid from Account S26 to an account. Mrs Smith deposed in her affidavit of 29 July 2021 at [112] that this money was paid in settlement of the Surfers Paradise Property.
Further, during cross-examination Mr Smith gave the following evidence:
From the previous proposition, Mr Smith, that she received a larger portion of the proceeds of sale to repay her. If she has received more money from the proceeds of sale to repay it, it can't be still owing, can it, Mr Smith?---No. The reason she got the larger proportion of the proceeds of sale was because she invested all that money.
And she used those funds to but [SIC] the Surfer's Paradise property?---Yes.
(Transcript p 57)
25 During cross-examination, Mrs Smith gave evidence that the whole of the proceeds of sale received from the sale of the Broadbeach Property and Blue Mountain Heights Property were used to purchase the Surfers Paradise Property, and that Mrs Smith did not have other funds she was able to use to purchase that property:
And you would use your share to buy a new property?---He told us to go out and buy a property between 700 and a million dollars.
And you followed that advice?---No - well, we went out and bought something but not to those amounts and I couldn't figure out why those amounts - - -
The proceeds of sale of the Broadbeach and Blue Mountain Heights properties were not enough to pay that amount?---Yes.
You needed to get some more money to complete the purchase of the Surfers Paradise unit; that's right?---That's right.
(Transcript p 107)
26 Mrs Smith further gave evidence that her children did not contribute to the purchase of the Surfers Paradise Property:
The only thing that comes close is the sentence beginning, "My unit on the coast was purchased as my place of residence. My children assisted me."?---Mmm.
Your children did not assist you to purchase the Surfer's Paradise unit?---My children have been assisting me all along the line.
They didn't contribute to the purchase price of the Surfer's Paradise unit?---They didn't - they didn't contribute to the purchase price
(Transcript p 114)
27 I reject the submission of Mrs Smith that she and Mr Smith had agreed that Mr Smith's share of the residential properties would be used to repay the mortgage and Mrs Smith share would be used to buy a new property. This claim was never pleaded. Further, Mrs Smith has not pointed to any evidence in support of the claim. The mortgages over the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property were plainly joint debts. Further, in the circumstances as existed at the time of the discharge of those mortgages, I do not accept that Mr Smith and Mrs Smith could between themselves effectively agree that only Mr Smith's portion of the proceeds of sale of both properties was attributable to the discharge of the respective mortgages.
28 I am satisfied that the property of Mr Smith which Mrs Smith received as a result of the void property transactions, namely, the sum of $328,047.75, ceased to exist at the time of the bankruptcy in specie or in an identifiable form. However, I am also satisfied on the basis of the evidence before the Court that part or all of it may be traced or followed into the Surfers Paradise Property. In this respect I particularly have regard to the following observations of Lindgren J in Anscor Pty Ltd v Clout (Trustee) [2004] FCAFC 71:
43. …
…
(i) If the property the subject of a transfer made void by s 120 as a result of the trustee's election to avoid, no longer exists in specie as at the commencement of the bankruptcy, but can be seen to exist as at that date in an identifiable substitute form of property, such as a fund representing the proceeds of sale of the property, that substitute property will vest in the trustee in bankruptcy forthwith upon the debtor's becoming a bankrupt, if that substitute property, or an identifiable substitute for it, still exists then, subject, as ever, to the exceptions and the protections given to third parties found in s 120: cf Alvaro at 426-427; Halfey; In re Mouat; Kingston Cotton Mills Co v Mouat [1899] 1 Ch 831 ('Mouat') at 834-835; Brady v Stapleton at 332-333; Lumsden v Snelson [2001] FCA 83 at [24]-[27].
(j) If, at the commencement of the bankruptcy, property the subject of a transfer made void by s 120 exists neither in specie nor in an identifiable substitute form, equitable relief founded in equity's auxiliary jurisdiction may nonetheless be available to the trustee in bankruptcy. This may occur where, for example, the property, such as money, can be 'followed' or 'traced' into, other property which is not, however, simply an identifiable substitute for it: cf Mouat at 834-835; Trautwein v Richardson [1946] Arg LR 129; Issitch at [36]; O'Halloran at [80] per Allsop J and works cited by his Honour. In such a case an equitable charge over that other property in favour of the trustee in bankruptcy for the amount of the value of the property, or the amount of money which the debtor/bankrupt transferred plus interest, will often be found to be an appropriate remedy: for a recent illustration, see Fodare Pty Limited v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy [2000] FCA 1721.
29 In relation to tracing into mixed funds, Mrs Smith deposed in her affidavit filed 29 July 2021:
111. On or around 12 April 2016, I paid a deposit of $78,500.00 to secure the purchase of the Surfers Paradise Property.
112. On or about 3 May 2016, I paid the balance of the purchase price for the Surfers Paradise Property, being $734,265.65 using funds held in Account S26.
…..
114. The purchase of the Surfers Paradise Property was funded using:
(a) the $250,000.00 which I obtained from Faloda pursuant to the Loan Agreement; and
(b) part of my GSS Equity Entitlement of (which, including part of my Additional Equity Entitlement, was approximately $647,917.30).
30 In Re Global Finance Group (In Liq)(Supervisor Appointed) [2002] WASC 63; (2002) 26 WAR 385 McLure J said:
100 … [W]here a trustee mixes its own money with trust money, makes a withdrawal and dissipates the money, the trustee is assumed to have had an honest intention and drawn out its own money first. The beneficiaries of the trust are entitled to an equitable charge or lien on the whole of the remaining unused fund for the amount of the trust money: Re Hallett's Estate (1880) 13 Ch D 696; Brady v Stapleton [1952] HCA 62; (1952) 88 CLR 322 at 337-338.
(emphasis added)
31 In the present case the sale price of the Surfers Paradise Property was $785,000.00. The funds used to purchase the Surfers Paradise Property should properly be ascribed as follows:
(1) $250,000, being the loan to Mrs Smith from Faloda which, as I found in the substantive Kirk judgment, was not a void transaction; and
(2) $535,000.00, being the balance of the purchase price before adjustments which as I have found was attributable to the proceeds of sale of the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property. Of the proceeds of sale of those properties, $328,047.75 were monies to which Mrs Smith was entitled.
32 I am satisfied that, of the $785,000.00 being the value of the Surfers Paradise Property, the interest of the Trustee is the balance after deduction of:
the loan amount of $250,000 and
Mrs Smith's proportion of the net proceeds of sale, being $328,047.75.
33 The monetary interest of the Trustee in the Surfers Paradise Property accordingly is $206,952.25, representing 26.36% of the value of that property. I will make an Order to this effect.
34 It also follows that Mrs Smith, pursuant to the void transfer, has received and retained the difference between Mr Smith's proportion of the net proceeds of sale of the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property (being $328,047.75) and the amount of those monies attributable to the purchase of the Surfers Paradise Property (being $206,952.25), which difference is in the amount of $121,095.50. I will also make an order that this money be paid by Mrs Smith to the Trustee.
35 I note that Mr Smith's proportions of the net proceeds of sale of the Broadbeach Property and the Blue Mountain Heights Property were transferred to Mrs Smith at the same time as her entitlements to those proceeds were transferred, in transactions on 23 March 2016, 24 March 2016, and 20 April 2016. However I further note that on 17 December 2020 the Trustee's solicitor elected to treat the Property Transfers and the Superannuation Transfers as void, and that interest could properly accrue from that date. I will order that interest on the amount of $121,095.50 similarly accrue from that date pursuant to s 51A of the FCA Act.