THE PLASTER PLUS TRANSACTIONS
13 Dealing then with the first series of transactions done on 8 June 2003, it seems that the first document signed by the applicant was a resolution of himself as director of Netscar to call an extraordinary general meeting of members at 10:30 am on that day. At 10:20 am, acting in his capacity as director of Clearmink, the applicant signed an acknowledgment of having received notice of that meeting. The general meeting of Netscar was duly held at 10:30 am, the applicant being the only person present. Two resolutions of substance were carried. First, it was resolved to amend the constitution of Netscar in a number of ways, including by the insertion of a new clause 127(b) as follows:
Upon a reduction of capital or winding up of the Company:
….
(b) The said "B" class shares shall as regards return of capital be entitled to the amount paid up on those shares and shall rank pari passu inter se with all other shares in the capital of the company and in the surplus assets and profits.
Secondly, it was resolved to consent to the conversion of the shareholding of Clearmink in Netscar to "A" Class shares. The meeting closed at 10:45 am. At 10:50 am, there was a meeting of the board of Netscar, constituted by the applicant, in which it was resolved to classify the Clearmink shareholding as "A" Class shares.
14 By a document headed "Application for Shares", addressed to the directors of Netscar and dated 8 June 2003, Denburrow applied for 1,700 "B" Class shares in Netscar, with a nominal value of $1,000 per share, payable as to $1 per share upon allotment and as to the balance upon call on seven days' notice. There was no evidence as to the time, on 8 June, when that document was executed. The document was accompanied by a bearer promissory note in the sum of $1,700. At a meeting of the board of Netscar held at 11:00 am on 8 June 2003, attended only by the applicant as director, the receipt of the Denburrow share application was noted, and it was resolved to issue the shares on the basis set out in the application, and to accept the bearer promissory note in satisfaction of the amount payable at allotment. The applicant signed a share certificate recording that Denburrow was the holder of 1,700 "B" Class shares in Netscar.
15 At 11:10 am on 8 June 2003, there was a further meeting of the board of Netscar, attended by the applicant as director. The share allotment to Denburrow was noted. It was resolved to make the call for the balance of the price of the "B" Class shares. The applicant signed a "Notice of Call" addressed to Denburrow, in which the latter was required to pay the sum of $1,698,300, being the balance due in respect of Denburrow's "B" Class shares, on or before the expiration of eight days from the receipt of the notice.
16 At 11:30 am on 8 June 2003, a meeting of the board of Denburrow was held. Messrs Collie and Hart attended as directors. It was resolved to sell to Plaster Plus the 1,700 "B" Class shares "at market value, namely, $1,700". It was noted that that sum represented the amount paid up on the shares, that the amount of $1,698,300 remained subject to call, and that the constitution of Netscar made Plaster Plus, as the new owner of the shares, liable for the call. It was also noted that a call had in fact been made by Netscar. The directors of Denburrow also resolved to accept delivery of a Plaster Plus promissory note in the sum of $1,700 as a payment for the shares. That promissory note was in evidence, and was signed by the applicant on behalf of Plaster Plus on 8 June 2003, but there is no evidence as to the timing of that event. The directors of Denburrow resolved also to deliver the Plaster Plus promissory note to Netscar "in satisfaction of the promissory note for the same amount previously drawn and delivered by [Denburrow] and to seek the return of that note".
17 At 11:40 am on 8 June 2003, there was a meeting of the board of Plaster Plus, attended by the applicant as director. It was resolved to purchase from Denburrow the 1,700 "B" Class shares which the latter then held in Netscar "at market value, namely, $1,700.00 to be paid by delivery of a bearer promissory note for that amount". It was noted that that sum represented the amount paid up on the shares, that the amount of $1,698,300 remained subject to call, and that the constitution of Netscar made Plaster Plus, as the new owner of the shares, liable for that call. The making of the call by Netscar was noted.
18 On 8 June 2003, there was an agreement for sale made between Denburrow as vendor and Plaster Plus as purchaser with respect to the 1,700 "B" Class shares in Netscar. In the recitals to that agreement, it was noted that the shares were paid up to $1 per share, with $1,698,300 at call, and that the holder of the shares was liable to meet the call. Although there is no evidence as to the time at which this agreement was executed (in the case of Plaster Plus, by the applicant), as a matter of sequence it most probably came after the events referred to in the previous paragraph. A share transfer was executed (the applicant signing on behalf of Plaster Plus) on the same day. As director of Netscar, the applicant signed a share certificate stating that Plaster Plus was the holder of the 1,700 "B" Class shares.
19 The next thing that appears to have happened on 8 June 2003 was the signing of a promissory note addressed to Netscar by the applicant on behalf of Plaster Plus. By it, Plaster Plus promised to pay Netscar the sum of $1,698,300 on presentation of the note. At 11:50 am on 8 June, there was a meeting of the board of Netscar, attended by the applicant as director. It was noted that Plaster Plus, which had acquired the shares originally issued to Denburrow, had delivered an "on demand" promissory note to meet the call. It was resolved to accept the promissory note as meeting the call. It was also resolved to accept from Denburrow the delivery of the Plaster Plus bearer promissory note in the sum of $1,700 in satisfaction of the promissory note previously drawn and delivered by Denburrow for that amount, and to return the latter to the drawer.
20 At this point, the shareholding in Netscar was as follows. Clearmink held the only two "A" Class shares issued. It held them as trustee of the Clearmink No. 1 Trust. Plaster Plus held the 1,700 "B" Class shares. It had acquired them from Denburrow, to whom they had originally been issued. As to $1 per share, it had paid Denburrow by way of a bearer promissory note which was subsequently delivered to Netscar. As to $999 per share, it had paid for them by an "on demand" promissory note addressed to Netscar itself.
21 At 12:10 pm on 8 June 2003, the board of Netscar, constituted by the applicant as director, resolved to call an extraordinary general meeting at 12:45 pm that day. It was proposed to amend to constitution of Netscar by replacing clause 127(b), set out in par 13 above, with the following:
The said "B" shares shall as regards return of capital be entitled only to $1.00 per share but shall not carry the right to any further participation in any surplus assets or profits of the company.
The notice was received by each of Clearmink and Plaster Plus at 12:20 pm. The applicant, as the only shareholder in Plaster Plus, signed a consent to that amendment. At 12:30 pm, the board of Plaster Plus, constituted by the applicant as director, noted that consent, and resolved to consent to the amendment. Plaster Plus then executed a formal form of consent to the amendment, signed by the applicant. At 12:40 pm on 8 June 2003, the board of Clearmink, constituted by the applicant as director, resolved to consent to the proposed amendment to the constitution of Netscar. A formal form of consent was executed by Clearmink, signed by the applicant. At 12:45 pm on 8 June 2003, an extraordinary general meeting of the shareholders of Netscar was held. Clearmink and Plaster Plus were both present, by their director, the applicant, in each case. It was unanimously resolved to amend the constitution of Netscar in the form proposed in the notice of meeting.
22 At some time on 8 June 2003, presumably subsequent to the amendments just mentioned, the board of Netscar, constituted by the applicant as director, resolved to advance the sum of $1,698,300 to Clearmink, as trustee for the Clearmink No. 1 Trust, by way of loan. This was to be done, and was in fact done, by the delivery of a bearer promissory note in that sum. The note was executed by the applicant as director of Netscar; and the receipt of the note by Clearmink was acknowledged by a receipt signed by the applicant as director of that company.
23 The accounts for the Clearmink No. 1 Trust as at 30 June 2003 were in evidence. On the balance sheet, the trust is shown to have current assets of $1,700,008. The $8 was cash (presumably the difference between the settlement sum of $10 and the cost of buying two $1 ordinary shares in Netscar). The remaining current assets, $1,700,000, were said to be "promissory note outstanding". On the evidence, the only promissory note that had been delivered to Clearmink, to be held for the Clearmink No. 1 Trust, was the Netscar promissory note (by way of loan) in the sum of $1,698,300. The balance sheet makes no reference to a promissory note in that sum. Rather, as I have indicated, it does refer to a promissory note in the sum of $1,700,000 as to the existence of which there is no other evidence. There is in evidence a letter from Mr Collie to the applicant dated 22 July 2003, in which the former referred to an "earlier letter" (which is not in evidence) and said that "[p]ending cash flow between the various entities, the transaction can be recorded in accordance with … [a document provided under separate cover - not in evidence] namely…":
3.1 Plaster Plus (Vic) Pty Ltd
3.1.1 Share purchase
- debit assets $1,700.00
- credit loan from Netscar Pty Ltd $1,700.00
3.1.2 Payment of Call
- debit assets $1,698,300.00
- credit loan from Netscar Pty Ltd $1,698,300.00
2.2 Netscar Pty Ltd
2.2.1 Loan to Plaster Plus (Vic) Pty Ltd
- debit assets $1,700,000.00
- credit issued capital $1,700,000.00
2.2.2 Loan to Clearmink Pty Ltd
- debit assets $1,700,000.00
- credit loans $1,700,000.00
2.3 Clearmink Pty Ltd
2.3.1 Loan to "shareholder/associates"
- debit assets $1,700,000.00
- credit loan to Netscar Pty Ltd$1,700,000.00
It is possible that the entries on the balance sheet of the Clearmink No. 1 Trust reflect the advice so tendered by Mr Collie. They do not appear to reflect what actually occurred on 8 June 2003. If they reflect other transactions carried on before 30 June 2003 but not on 8 June, there is no other evidence of them; and, if they did, it would leave the actual promissory note delivered by Netscar to Clearmink unrepresented on the balance sheet.
24 The balance sheet of Clearmink No. 1 Trust showed non-current assets of $3,028,926, made up as follows. First, there was the sum of $1,700,002. The $2 represented the cost value of the shares held by the trust in Netscar. The $1,700,000 was said to be "provision for increase in value". It was common ground, and I would find, that this entry was supposed to represent the increase in value in Clearmink's two shares in Netscar, brought about by the alteration of the participation rights of the "B" class shareholders effected by the substitution of cl 127(b) of the constitution on 8 June 2003. Again, there was no explanation as to why the sum was $1,700,000, rather than $1,698,300, since the sum of $1,700 would still have been due to the "B" class shareholders on liquidation. However that minor anomaly may be, this entry on the balance sheet of the Clearmink No. 1 Trust relates to a central feature of the first series of transactions on 8 June; the result of the alteration of the participation rights of "B" class shareholders in Netscar was that the "A" class shareholder, Clearmink, received a gain by way of a substantial increase in the value of the two shares which it held.
25 Next, the non-current assets of the trust as at 30 June 2003 included the sum of $1,328,924, which had two components. The first was a loan to Lauravale in the sum of $428,924, and the second was a loan to the applicant and his wife in the sum of $900,000. Save for these accounts, there was no direct evidence of the making of those loans. However, it was common ground that I should treat the loans as existing as at 30 June 2003. Additionally, I would note two further things about these loans. First, taken together, they correspond exactly to the accumulated profits of Plaster Plus as at 30 June 2002 (and, I infer, as at 7 June 2003). Secondly, the loan to the applicant and his wife is in the same amount as the loan which had been advanced to them by Plaster Plus in the 2002 year. Later in these reasons (see par 70 below) I refer to evidence from which it should be inferred that the 2002 loan was repaid to Plaster Plus on 8 June 2003. It was submitted on behalf of the Commissioner that the loan of $900,000 from Clearmink put the applicant and his wife in funds such as permitted the repayment of the 2002 loan. I accept that submission. It follows, and I would infer, that the Clearmink loan was made to the applicant and his wife no later than, and most probably on, 8 June 2003.
26 The balance sheet for Clearmink No. 1 Trust as at 30 June 2003 showed also current liabilities of $1,700,000. This was said to be a loan from Netscar. I note that, on the evidence, Netscar had lent the trust a sum of $1,698,300, and that the unexplained variation in the liability section of the balance sheet from this sum corresponds with, and balances, the apparent misstatement as to the face value of the Netscar promissory note referred to as one of the current assets of the trust.
27 As non-current liabilities, the balance sheet showed the sum of $1,328,924. This was said to be a non-secured loan from Plaster Plus. I note that this sum corresponds precisely with the total of the loan said to be made by the trust to the applicant and his wife, and to Lauravale, as described above.
28 The accounts for the Clearmink No. 1 Trust also set out the "trust capital and reserves". This amounted to the sum of $1,700,010, of which $10 was the settlement sum and $1,700,000 was a capital profit reserve, constituted by the provision for the increase in value of the two shares held in Netscar.
29 In the accounts for Plaster Plus for the year ended 30 June 2003, an extraordinary loss item of $1,698,300 was shown in the profit and loss statement. This was said to be a provision for the diminution in value of the shares held in Netscar. When set against the retained profits at the beginning of that financial year, this provision had the effect of causing Plaster Plus to record a loss of $332,079 in that year.
30 In its balance sheet as at 30 June 2003, Plaster Plus showed the value of its shareholding in Netscar at $1,700,000, less provision for diminution in value in the amount of $1,698,000. The value of the shareholding was, therefore, $1,700. Also recorded as a non-current asset was the sum of $1,382,206, said to be an unsecured loan to the Clearmink No. 1 Trust. At the same time, the accounts showed that non-current assets which had existed on 30 June 2002 no longer existed, namely, a loan to Lauravale in the sum of $1,004,796 and the loan to the applicant and his wife in the sum of $900,000 mentioned in par 25 above.