The credit of Mr Boyd
125Counsel for Lavert points to two particular matters, each of which "impacts very poorly on Mr Boyd's credibility" (submissions, paragraph 31).
126The first of these is that Lavert was tricked into making a profit share payment of $80,000 to Mr Boyd on 17 September 2009. Lavert agrees Mr Boyd had made a series of more than six requests for money from Mr Blazevic, but complains that he lied and said he needed the money to buy a house immediately. Mr Boyd had already made a decision, in about June or July 2009, to leave Lavert's employment and to start his own business (see the affidavit of Mr Boyd at paragraph 55), but kept this information from Mr Blazevic, telling him only that he was wanting to buy a house. In addition, he did not purchase a house until December 2010 (affidavit of Mr Boyd, paragraph 156), and in his spare time, while still employed by Lavert, was designing a logo, establishing a company, registering a business name and entering into an agreement with his new business partner concerning the establishment and operation of their business. This new partner was a subcontractor to the Vogue Projects One Group (T 267). Mr Boyd had business cards printed prior to leaving Vogue Projects One Group, although he claimed that "once I resigned, I then had them made" (T 267).
127Essentially what Lavert submits, in both oral and written submissions, is that Mr Boyd was dishonest in giving a false reason for wanting to be paid his profit share. He was not pressing for a profit share payment in order to buy a house, but so that he could use that money to give effect to his secret plan to leave Lavert's employ and start up his own business in competition with Lavert after he finished working for Lavert. Mr Boyd's denial of this assertion at T 275 is seen as further evidence of this dishonesty. It is submitted that Mr Boyd set out to, and did, mislead Mr Blazevic, which must impact very poorly on his credibility.
128Mr Boyd's evidence at T 268-269 was that only as he became increasingly anxious to obtain his profit share, did he say he needed the money to buy a house, and that his plans to resign were made shortly before he told Mr Blazevic:
"Q. What about arrangements between you and your business partner? Were any agreements entered into between you and your business partner before you resigned?
A. In the sense of?
Q. Going into business together.
A. We just - we had an agreement. It was fiftyfifty. It was a verbal agreement.
Q. When was that made?
A. The process occurred a couple - it might have even been the day of the meeting that I had with Mr Blazevic when he advised me that he wasn't going to - which was in July of 2009, June or July 2009. I went to a site meeting that I had that day, and my now business partner said to me, "Are you okay? You look down." And I explained to him at that time, that Ivan had said what he said, and that it looks like I'm going to have to start my own business and I'm, you know, that's something I'm going to do and he said words to the effect, "Let's do it. I'll do it with you," and that was the first time he - we discussed doing it together.
Q. You must have had a number of discussions with him between the date of that first discussion and when you resigned from In Vogue?
A. Yeah, that would have been - we did logos and things like that at night at each other's houses.
Q. The business you started, essentially the day after you finished with In Vogue, Momentum Built, in that business you do fitout work, don't you?
A. Not so much. We have
Q. Do you do fitout work?
A. We have done some fitout work but mostly construction, new construction.
Q. And you are based in Sydney?
A. Yes, based in Caringbah.
Q. Sorry?
A. Caringbah.
Q. And for many years before 2009 you had ambitions of being a business owner. That's right, isn't it?
A. That's correct. Yeah, when Mr Blazevic first raised directorship with me, I can't remember the date - I know it's in there. Maybe it was in 2007 or somewhere along those lines, maybe a little bit earlier. When he first raised that directorship with me I'd said to him, "Well, I've got ambitions to start my own business so if it's not with you it will be by myself," so he's known for a long that was on the cards for me.
Q. And you say that it was about July 2009 that Mr Blazevic told you that if you wanted to become a part owner of the business, you'd need to buy in.
A. Yeah, my understanding prior to that
Q. Well, just
A. That's correct. So that is correct.
Q. Thank you. And you say you were extremely disappointed when he told you that.
A. Yes, that disappointment was because
Q. No, just
A. Sorry, I thought you were asking me there
Q. No, you answered the question.
HER HONOUR
Q. Well, the answer is, yes, you were disappointed.
A. Yes, I was disappointed."
129Mr Boyd said he did not take other significant steps prior to resigning. He said at T 267-268:
"Q. Okay, so you say you had your business cards made after you resigned?
A. Yes.
Q. You had the logo. Did you develop the logo yourself or did somebody do it for you?
A. No, I did it myself.
Q. And you did that before you resigned?
A. Yes.
Q. When? How long before you resigned?
A. Within a week or two before my resignation, maybe a month.
Q. What other steps did you take, before you resigned, to set up your new business?
A. Not many. When I started my business it was operating out of my place of residence at the time, so there wasn't much to do. I didn't undertake any marketing or anything like that until - the first bit of marketing I did was the day I finished, and so it was really just to set up things like the licence, business cards.
Q. What licence?
A. The - sorry, the Momentum Built Pty Ltd, sorry.
Q. What, the registration of that company?
A. The registration of the business name, sorry, I meant to say.
Q. What about a builder's licence?
A. I have my own builder's licence already, and then I did obtain a contractor's licence. I couldn't tell you when that was though.
Q. Did you make steps towards obtaining your contractor's licence before you resigned?
A. I couldn't answer that question, sorry. I couldn't recall, sorry. It would have been around the time or just after."
130Mr Boyd's subterfuge about buying a house needs to be seen in context. He had been running Lavert's business with very little assistance from Mr Blazevic for five years. Over almost the entirety of that period he had been owed substantial sums in terms of profit share, his superannuation had not been paid, and what he saw as a promise to take him on as a director, which had been a significant incentive for him to work in the business under these conditions, had been made subject to his buying into the business. He was very disappointed about this.
131Mr Boyd should not have needed to remind Mr Blazevic to pay his profit share, or give any excuse or reason. Nor should he have had to repeatedly remind Lavert to comply with the statutory obligations requiring it to contribute superannuation. He repeatedly sought to remind both Mr Blazevic and the accounting staff about these issues. The picture that is painted of Mr Blazevic, by reason of his ignoring these requests, gives a very clear picture of the kind of person Mr Boyd was dealing with, namely a person without the business morality to pay the hardworking employee who was effectively running the business for him.
132In addition, Mr Blazevic's increasingly hostile reaction when Mr Boyd did resign (see the emails set out above) would not have been unexpected by Mr Boyd. Mr Blazevic had for years failed to pay the superannuation, or unpaid annual leave and leave loading, although these are statutory obligations which should be attended to without constant reminders. A superannuation payment has now been made, approximately two years after this litigation was commenced, and Lavert concedes that there should be verdict and judgment for the cross-claimant on the cross-claim in the sum of $11,500 for unpaid annual leave plus interest. All this is money which should have been paid to Mr Boyd long ago. Mr Blazevic's vengeful attitude is the principal reason for this, from my observation of Mr Blazevic's angry demeanour in the witness box. In those circumstances, Mr Boyd's use of an excuse, such as wanting to buy a house to obtain his profit share, is understandable and does not detract from his credit.
133A second matter raised in relation to Mr Boyd's credibility is that, on the day he resigned from his employment with Lavert, he secretly sent confidential and commercially sensitive financial statements, the property of Lavert, to his personal email address and took hardcopies of other confidential and commercially sensitive information with him from Lavert's office (plaintiff's outline of submissions, paragraph 32).
134What were these documents? These were documents which are in fact emails relating to Mr Boyd's entitlement to be paid a profit share, long service leave and superannuation. Mr Boyd said at T 277:
"Q. Now, there's no coincidence that that's the day before you resigned, is there?
A. No coincidence at all.
Q. No, it's because what you were doing on the day before you resigned was sending to your home email address financial information concerning Lavert, weren't you?
A. I wanted - I would have sent wanting to know that - wanting to make sure - I knew that I was going to be starting my business. As to the exact timing at that stage, I didn't know, but I knew that it was important that I had copies of financial information to make sure that Mr Blazevic paid me what was due.
Q. This is after you've had $80,000, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. Yes, and you say you wanted to be sure
A. I think you'll find on 21 September
Q. Just wait for the question, please. You say you wanted to be sure that Mr Blazevic would pay you what you were owed. Is that what you say?
A. Like, any person is going to protect their own interest. If you've got an agreement in place, you want to have the information - it's the same as the emails that formed the agreement of profit share. I wasn't going to not keep a copy of that email for myself when I was leaving.
Q. This email that you talk about - you see in the subject matter of the email it says "financials" and then it has an attachment "lavert060606". You see, the attachment to it starts on page 86, doesn't it?
A. That's correct. " (T 277)
135He was asked at T 278-280:
"Q. What else did you send to your home email address before you resigned, by way of information about Lavert?
A. Emails with regards to the profit share agreement.
Q. Any other financial information concerning Lavert?
A. The financial information that I've put forward, I would have had a copy of that with me.
Q. So every bit of financial information we see in this affidavit, annexed to this affidavit, is something that you forwarded to your personal email address before you resigned? Is that right?
A. Either that or I had a paper copy that I took with me, yes.
Q. You took with you?
A. Yep.
Q. From Lavert's office?
A. Yes.
Q. Now, you understood before you resigned that the financial information exhibited to your affidavit, which you either took in hard copy or sent off to your home email address, was not your property, didn't you?
A. Well, I have a right to the knowledge of it.
Q. You understood at the time you took it out in your hand, out of the office, or sent it to your home email address, that it was not your property, didn't you?
A. No, I don't - I feel that I have access to that information, because it's part of the agreement that I had in place with Mr Blazevic.
Q. You seriously tell her Honour that you thought you had a right to the financial statements of Lavert, to take home yourself or to send to yourself at home, before you resigned?
A. Yes. I may not know the law, but that was my understanding.
Q. Now, look at page 85, please. Look at page 85, please.
A. Sorry.
Q. In the middle of the page there, there's an email from Mr Blazevic to you dated 26 July 2006. Do you see that?
A. I do.
Q. You see in the second paragraph - well, the first paragraph. It says, "Paul, these are the figures for the banks and Commerce." He says, "Please PDF them and email the PDF to me and delete from your end's computer." Do you see that?
A. Yes.
Q. You didn't delete them from your computer, did you?
A. No.
Q. You kept them on your computer all the way from July 2006 up until you sent them to your home email address in September 2009.
A. Yes.
Q. You directly contradicted what you'd been told to do by Mr Blazevic, didn't you?
A. Yes.
Q. And you did it for your own purposes.
A. I did it to protect my own interests.
Q. You did it for your own purposes.
A. My own interests, yes.
Q. See, when you sent this information to your home email address and when you took it out the door before you resigned, you weren't doing that for any workrelated task, were you?
A. No, it was purely for the profit share agreement.
Q. Purely for your own personal self-interest? Correct?
A. Yes, because the profit share was duly mine. It's part of the agreement.
Q. Did you ever, at any other time, refuse to comply with a request from Mr Blazevic to delete information from your computer?
A. I couldn't answer that question. Mr Blazevic and I had our disagreements at times, on different and varying things, but I couldn't answer that question. I don't recall Mr Blazevic asking me to delete an item other than
Q. You recall this email, don't you, where he asked you to delete it?
A. That's what I said. I said "other than that one". You might not have heard.
Q. And you made a conscious decision not to do so?
A. That's correct.
Q. And you see the sensitivity on the email he sent to you on 26 July 2006. It was confidential, wasn't it?
A. Yes.
Q. You knew the information he was providing to you and asking you to send off to the bank was confidential information, didn't you?
A. It wasn't to the bank.
Q. You knew it was confidential information, didn't you?
A. Yes. I didn't share it with anybody.
Q. Sorry?
A. I didn't share it with anybody, other than these proceedings." [emphasis added]
136Mr Boyd would not be the first employee who retained copies of documents for the purpose of proceedings in order to produce them to the court to assist the court in the determination of actual issues in dispute. He has produced those documents in the course of discovery and/or for the purpose of these proceedings. Perhaps he feared, from his knowledge of Mr Blazevic, that they would not otherwise be produced. I decline to make an adverse finding against Mr Boyd on this basis.
137An additional matter (raised in oral submissions) relates to the circumstances in which Mr Boyd sought payment of his outstanding superannuation to himself, asked for credit to be given (whether for profit share as claimed by Mr Boyd or as part of his outstanding superannuation as claimed by Mr Blazevic) in the form of home renovations, and showed a degree of disregard for the role of statutory superannuation generally.
138Reading through the correspondence between the parties as a whole, it becomes apparent that Mr Blazevic ignored repeated requests from Mr Boyd over a period of years to pay monies which were due and owing to him and that he also failed to comply with his statutory obligations in relation to superannuation. Mr Boyd developed methods of cajoling money out of Mr Blazevic by giving concrete examples of what he wanted to use the monies for, namely home renovations, buying a boat, buying a home and other plans for the future. Looking at the correspondence in context, it is not hard to see an employee who is trying to charm an arrogant employer into paying monies in circumstances where legitimate demands had been ignored over an extended period of time.
139Mr Boyd gave evidence in a frank and straightforward manner. He was not caught out in any lies. He has explanations for his conduct which I accept. I am not prepared to make an adverse credit finding against him. Where his evidence contradicts the evidence of Mr Blazevic, I shall accept the evidence of Mr Boyd.
140The plaintiff also relied upon the evidence of Mr Bridges, the accountant who prepared the plaintiff's annual returns and taxation documentation.