INTRODUCTION
1 These reasons address the interlocutory process filed on 16 April 2024 by the plaintiffs which was opposed by the two interested parties. These reasons assume familiarity with the primary reasons for judgment delivered on 6 March 2024: Ligon 158 Pty Limited (in liq) v Shield Holdings Australia Pty Limited (de registered) [2024] FCA 144 and adopt the terms defined therein.
2 This application is directed to the appointment of Mr John Sheahan as a special purpose liquidator (SPL) of Shield.
3 For the reasons set out in the primary reasons, I made orders at the instigation of the plaintiffs requiring ASIC to reinstate the registration of Shield and upon its reinstatement, that it be wound up. I made those orders over the opposition of the interested parties, Mr Andrew Binetter, the former sole director of Shield, and Mr Michael Binetter, the sole shareholder of Shield. Shield was deregistered on 1 November 2020 as a result of administrative action taken by ASIC pursuant to s 601AB of the Act following the default of its sole director, Andrew Binetter. Shield was not wound up under an external administrator. I was satisfied that the reinstatement and thereafter winding up of Shield are necessary to enable the investigation and potentially the pursuit of claims available to Shield to effect recoveries for the benefit of the plaintiffs' creditors. The relevant principal external creditor of the corporate plaintiffs is the Commissioner.
4 At that time, I dismissed the plaintiffs' application for orders appointing Mr Sheahan as liquidator of Shield and afforded the plaintiffs the opportunity to identify a liquidator other than Mr Sheahan.
5 The plaintiffs had contended that Mr Sheahan was uniquely placed to act as liquidator of Shield because he has been, and continued to be, actively engaged in investigating the affairs of the corporate plaintiffs and pursuing recoveries. His involvement in such work included tracing the connections between the entities and persons involved in the wider Binetter group and spanned a number of years and included work undertaken in Australia and the United States. Mr Sheahan in his role as liquidator of other entities in the Binetter group has been at the helm of substantial litigation which has resulted in major recoveries. However, he has also been involved in the settlement of some of that litigation including as a party to a deed giving effect to the settlement (the Binetter Entities' Deed, as defined in the primary reasons). The likelihood is that the Binetter Entities' Deed, its effect and whether it is liable to be set aside, will be the subject of controversy. In those circumstances, and for reasons more fully set out in the primary reasons, I was satisfied that it was not appropriate to appoint Mr Sheahan as the liquidator of Shield because of the potential for a conflict including a conflict between his own interests and those of Shield.
6 The impasse in relation to the identity of the liquidator was resolved by the appointment of Mr Alan Walker as liquidator of Shield on 5 April 2024. In order to take any substantive steps in the winding up of Shield, Mr Walker will require funding. The course of the present interlocutory application has been influenced by the steps taken to address the lack of funding available to Mr Walker.
7 The plaintiffs by the present interlocutory application seek to have Mr Sheahan appointed as a special purpose liquidator of Shield (Shield SPL), additional to Mr Walker, who will continue as the general purpose liquidator of Shield. The interested parties oppose the application. The position in relation to potential creditors who may be impacted, whether directly or indirectly via the provision of funding, is that they neither consent nor oppose the application. The only evidence led in relation to such creditors is from the Commissioner and Polczynski Robinson, a firm of solicitors who is a creditor of Ligon 158.
8 The procedural course of this application has been convoluted, having been before the Court now on five occasions. The plaintiffs have recast their position on several occasions in response to unfolding developments in the dealings between the Commissioner, the primary creditor of the corporate plaintiffs, the interested parties and those related to them, and Mr Walker, the liquidator of Shield.
9 The principal variable has been the Commissioner's stance in relation to the relief sought by the plaintiffs. The Commissioner's position is significant because the Commissioner is the principal creditor of the plaintiffs, has agreed to fund the investigations into the affairs of Shield that are proposed and is likely the principal ultimately interested in the winding up of Shield. For these reasons, the Commissioner's attitude to the plaintiffs' application is a material consideration for the Court in the exercise of its discretion.
10 The Commissioner's stance has been influenced by the interested parties' allegation that by supporting the plaintiffs' application the Commissioner is in breach of the Commissioner's Deed (as defined in the primary reasons). The Commissioner's Deed is not in evidence in this proceeding - see primary reasons [77]. In this application, the parties have acted on the basis that the Commissioner's Deed requires those bound by it to engage in specified dispute resolution processes mandated under the deed in the first instance. The dispute resolution process appears to have been engaged in about July 2024 and so far as the Court is aware is ongoing.
11 The second variable has been the approach in relation to whether and if so by whom any application to challenge the validity of the Binetter Entities' Deed will be made. The plaintiffs initially contemplated that Mr Walker may institute proceedings directed to this objective funded by the plaintiffs but when Mr Walker confirmed that he did not intend to do so, the plaintiffs themselves instituted a separate proceeding in the South Australian registry by which they seek to, in effect, set aside the Binetter Entities' Deed. The South Australian proceeding is addressed further below.
12 A final round of written submissions responding to the latest positions taken by the plaintiffs, Mr Walker and the interested parties was provided on the basis that the application would be determined on the papers. The Court acknowledges the pragmatic approach adopted by counsel appearing for the interested parties, who could, on several occasions, have pressed to have the application determined on the evidence as it then stood but did not do so. Had this approach not been taken by counsel for the interested parties, it is likely that there would have been a series of fresh interlocutory applications filed by the plaintiffs responding to the changed circumstances as they materialised which would likely have resulted in additional costs being incurred for no real benefit.
13 As now framed, the plaintiffs seek to have significantly circumscribed powers conferred on Mr Sheahan if they succeed in having him appointed as Shield SPL, compared to those for which they originally agitated. The plaintiffs contend that it is appropriate for the Court to make the orders for which they now contend because it is the best way of preserving the status quo pending the resolution of the dispute between the Commissioner and the interested parties and until the controversy concerning the validity of the Binetter Entities' Deed is resolved. Mr Walker supports the plaintiffs in respect of the relief as now framed. Critically, the Commissioner neither supports nor opposes the plaintiffs' application. The Commissioner suggested when communicating his position to the plaintiffs that because Mr Walker now consented to the appointment of a SPL, that it was no longer necessary for the Commissioner to express a view. The plaintiffs' entreaty to the Commissioner to provide an update as to the dispute resolution process with the interested parties and if possible, to provide an unqualified statement of support for the plaintiffs' application, does not appear to have borne fruit on the basis of the evidence before me. The interested parties oppose the plaintiffs' application.
14 Andrew Binetter has taken the running on the application, with Michael Binetter relying on Andrew Binetter's final submissions.
15 ASIC has been notified of the application and has confirmed that it does not wish to be heard save as to costs.