Salient Facts
6 Litigation in relation to ENA existed well before the Liquidator's appointment. Proceedings were initially commenced in the Supreme Court of New South Wales by Mr and Mrs Pham against Mr Sebie in 2015. That litigation concerned a claim by Mr and Mrs Pham as purchasers to enforce a contract for the sale of land in Chiswick entered into between them and Mr Sebie, which Mr Sebie failed to complete, and the subsequent transfer of that property by Mr Sebie to Enterprise ICT (the Chiswick Specific Performance Proceedings).
7 That litigation led to further litigation. Ultimately, a number of costs orders were made against ENA and others. ENA failed to comply with those costs orders, and as a result, a statutory demand was issued. ENA failed to comply with that statutory demand, and Mr and Mrs Pham commenced winding up proceedings in the Supreme Court of New South Wales. Those proceedings were heard and determined on 27 January 2022. Despite ENA's opposition to the application, ENA was wound up, and Mr Krejci was appointed as Liquidator. On 3 February 2022, the Liquidator commenced proceedings in the Supreme Court of New South Wales seeking an order appointing him as receiver of the assets of the ENA Development Trust (the Trust Proceedings).
8 Since the date of his appointment, the Liquidator has been the subject of numerous applications by each of the respondents. What follows is a brief summary of those applications.
9 During the period 7 to 14 August 2022, Mr Jemmott, Enterprise INT, Enterprise ICT, One T and others filed applications in the Supreme Court of New South Wales seeking orders, in effect, for the termination of the winding up of ENA, the replacement of the Liquidator, and declarations about the purported appointment of One T as trustee of various trusts.
10 The first of those applications, filed on 7 August 2022 in the Trust Proceedings, was dismissed by consent on 10 August 2022. On 12 August 2022, a motion in almost identical form was served. Despite the associate to Black J raising by email on 12 August 2022 with those parties the question of whether or not the motion should be dismissed as an abuse of process, on 14 August 2022, a further interlocutory process was filed in relevantly identical terms. Once again, the associate to Black J invited those parties to make submissions as to why that motion should not be dismissed as an abuse of process. None were made.
11 Ultimately, on 15 August 2022, and after having sought that the 14 August 2022 motion be re-enlivened (having been dismissed by the Supreme Court of New South Wales earlier that day), the Supreme Court of New South Wales granted leave to Mr Jemmott, Enterprise INT and Enterprise ICT and others to discontinue the 14 August 2022 interlocutory process. The grant of leave was on the basis of an undertaking given by each of One T and the applicants by their counsel not to bring a further application, interlocutory process or notice of motion, in or substantially in the form of certain paragraphs of the interlocutory process filed on 14 August 2022.
12 Despite that undertaking, further applications seeking the same relief were filed. I note at this point that, although Mr Sebie was not party to those applications, on 17 August 2022 the solicitor for those applicants ceased to act, and listed as a contact email for those parties the email address "robert.sebie@hotmail.com".
13 On 16 August 2022, Mr Jemmott commenced proceedings in the Federal Court (the First Jemmott Federal Court Proceedings), and on 25 August 2022 filed an interlocutory process, in both of which he sought relief in substantially the same form as that sought less than a week earlier in the Supreme Court. On 15 September 2022, Mr Sebie sought to appear at a case management hearing in those proceedings. On 21 September 2022, those proceedings were transferred to the Supreme Court of New South Wales: Jemmott v ENA Development Pty Ltd (in liq) (Receiver Appointed) [2022] FCA 1134.
14 On or about 31 August 2022, Mr Sebie filed a Notice of Motion in the Trust Proceedings in the Supreme Court seeking, among other things, orders that he be joined to those proceedings and a declaration that certain land in Homebush (the Homebush Property) was a trust asset, claiming that he and his brother, Richard, were beneficially entitled to that property. On 21 October 2022, that motion was dismissed.
15 On 25 October 2022, an application was filed by One T in proceedings in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, seeking, among other things, orders in part similar to those sought in the applications made in the Supreme Court of New South Wales in mid-August 2022.
16 Also on 25 October 2022, One T commenced proceedings in the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, seeking leave to appeal against the order winding up ENA on 27 January 2022, the judicial directions given to the Liquidator as part of the Trust Proceedings as to ENA having the beneficial interest in the Homebush Property and certain other assets, and the grant of possession to the Liquidator of that property (the 2022 Appeal Proceedings). Leave to appeal was granted on 8 February 2023, but the appeal was dismissed on 2 June 2023: One T Development Pty Ltd v Krejci [2023] NSWCA 120. On 17 February 2023, One T filed a notice of motion seeking a stay of the judicial directions, which was dismissed by Macfarlan JA on 20 February 2023.
17 On 26 October 2022, Mr Sebie commenced proceedings in the Federal Court (the Sebie Federal Court Proceedings), seeking, amongst other things, orders for the termination of the winding up of ENA. A number of claims for relief in that originating process were the same as those sought by Mr Jemmott in the First Jemmott Federal Court Proceedings, which in turn were the same as those sought in the mid-August 2022 applications in the Supreme Court of New South Wales. Mr Sebie then filed an interlocutory process in those proceedings, seeking a stay of the winding up of ENA and other relief. That interlocutory process was dismissed on 2 November 2022. The originating process was dismissed on 16 November 2022, and Mr Sebie was ordered to pay the Liquidator's and ENA's costs on a party and party basis up to 2 November 2022, and thereafter on the indemnity basis.
18 On 11 November 2022, following an application by the Liquidator for possession of the Homebush Property, the Supreme Court of New South Wales issued a writ of possession in respect of that property.
19 On 6 December 2022, Mr Sebie filed an interlocutory process in the Federal Court seeking a stay and review of the orders dismissing his interlocutory and originating processes, together with further relief. That application was heard on 13 February 2023, and directions were made for the filing of any further application following determination of the proceedings in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia. Those proceedings still await determination. In dismissing Mr Sebie's interlocutory process, Lee J observed that the evidence currently before the Federal Court was manifestly deficient: Sebie v ENA Development Pty Ltd (in liq) (Receiver Appointed) (No 2) [2023] FCA 141 at [23]. Lee J also referred to "the orgy of litigation which seems to have arisen in relation to the liquidation of ENA": at [2].
20 From 22 December 2022, Mr Sebie, Mr Jemmott, One T, Enterprise INT and Enterprise ICT filed applications in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, and the Court of Appeal, seeking orders to the effect that there be a stay of the exercise of the writ of possession in respect of the Homebush Property, then scheduled to be executed on 9 January 2023. An application filed by Mr Jemmott, One T and Enterprise INT (in which Mr Sebie sought to appear) in the Supreme Court of New South Wales was heard and dismissed on 6 January 2023. That evening, Mr Sebie approached Goodman J, sitting as duty judge in the Federal Court, and sought a stay of the winding up of ENA. That application was dismissed, with Goodman J noting that the application was in substance a second attempt to obtain a stay of the writ of possession, albeit by different means: Sebie v ENA Development Pty Ltd (in liq) (Receiver Appointed) [2023] FCA 2 at [22].
21 Notwithstanding the dismissal of the application for a stay in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, and the application seeking similar relief in the Federal Court, Messrs Sebie and Jemmott, together with Enterprise INT, Enterprise ICT and One T, made a number of further applications, both formally and informally, seeking to have that application relisted. Attempts to that end were made on 16, 18, 19, 20 and 21 January 2023. Ultimately, an application for an adjournment made by the solicitor then appearing for those parties was refused, and no attempt was made to move on the amended motion seeking a stay.
22 On 20 January 2023, Mr Jemmott commenced further proceedings in the Federal Court (the Second Jemmott Federal Court Proceedings) seeking relief which was, at least in part, substantially the same as that sought in his earlier proceedings in the Federal Court, the mid-August motions in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, and the Sebie Federal Court Proceedings. Those proceedings were heard on 8 February 2023, and were dismissed as an abuse of process, with Mr Jemmott ordered to pay costs on the indemnity basis in a fixed sum. Mr Sebie was present in Court, and appeared to be the person primarily providing instructions to the solicitor then appearing for Mr Jemmott. On 6 March 2023, Mr Jemmott commenced an application for extension of time and leave to appeal against those orders (the Federal Court Appeal Proceedings).
23 What I have set out above is an abbreviated summary of proceedings brought by the respondents. As the Liquidator has set out in his affidavit, in each of those proceedings there were a number of other interlocutory appearances, steps taken or applications filed. The Liquidator gives evidence that since May 2022, 17 costs orders have been made against one or more of the respondents in those proceedings, none of which has been paid. The Liquidator also refers to the fact that Mr Sebie is subject to the following vexatious proceedings orders:
(a) Henderson J made an order pursuant to the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) prohibiting Mr Sebie from instituting proceedings under that Act without first having been granted leave: Munayallan v Scott (No 5) [2021] FedCFamC1F 284; and
(b) Rothman J in the Supreme Court of New South Wales made an order pursuant to the Vexatious Proceedings Act 2008 (NSW) (the VP Act) prohibiting Mr Sebie from instituting proceedings relating to or in any way connected to the sale of a property in Chiswick: Sebie v Bresic Whitney Balmain Pty Ltd [2022] NSWSC 816.
24 Most importantly, on 15 May 2023, Williams J in the Supreme Court of New South Wales made orders pursuant to the VP Act against the current respondents which are substantially similar to the orders sought against the same parties in these proceedings. I turn next to that topic.