Other Assets
160KST held land and conducted a number of businesses in the Solomon Islands. He held 5,000 shares in Solomon's Delite Bakery Limited, which he acquired in January 1973. KST had his main store in the Solomon Islands in Honiara. There were two branch stores in the Malaita Islands and a fourth branch store in Vanikoro in the outer islands. In 1975 Margaret went to the Solomon Islands and negotiated the sale of one of the branch stores in Malaita.
161KST was the subject of an investigation by the Ministry of Finance Inland Revenue Branch in 1975. He was asked about movements on bank accounts he held in the Solomon Islands. In December 1975 the Commissioner of Income Tax served a statement of claim for in excess of $168,000. In February 1976 a warrant issued attaching his real property.
162KST took steps from 1972 to 1975 to move his assets out of the Solomon Islands.
163In 1966 KST had invested $12,000 on a term deposit on account of Plantation Hong Kong Bros Ltd. The money was rolled over from time to time, but it was withdrawn in 1972. Of this amount $8,000 was paid to AH and E Young Ltd, which it can be inferred, was a company in which KST had some interest or control.
164In similar fashion KST had invested in a term deposit of $25,000 in 1971, which was withdrawn in 1972 by bank cheque.
165The investigation by the Ministry of Finance identified drafts in Hong Kong dollars drawn on KST's Honiara accounts in 1972 and 1973.
166There were in evidence two cheques drawn in his favour on Honiara bank accounts he controlled in April 1975. One was for $2,269.02, the other was for $6,000.
167In May 1975, Margaret went to the Solomon Islands and sold a vessel, the "Halamon", for $12,000, which she brought back to Australia.
168The pattern of withdrawal of funds from KST's bank accounts from 1972 indicates a deliberate repatriation of funds from the Solomon Islands. The shops, worth about $80,000, could not be sold because of the warrant.
169There are no records now in existence to indicate where the moneys went. But since a substantial amount went to Hong Kong it cannot be inferred that any amount in excess of $12,000 was used by KST to purchase Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street.
170And the timing of the sale of the Halamon suggests that its proceeds were more likely to have been used in the purchase of WYT and YS on 30 July 1975, and I so find.
171The parties are ad idem with respect to the purchase of WYT and YS. KST's funds were used to purchase YS for $30,000 plus stock of $2,400 but his loan account was credited with only $22,400, $10,000 being classified for accounting purposes as the original contribution of capital on behalf of all the partners
172Likewise with WYT, KST advanced $93,500 but is credited with $83,500, the balance of $10,000 again being classified as the original contribution of capital on behalf of all the partners. Stock was purchased for $57,181.
173KST drained funds from his bank accounts to purchase the businesses, but could not meet the entire purchase price in cash. He paid what he could from time to time and the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) made $60,000 available for WYT and $10,000 available for YS in September 1976.
174KST was a man who acquired property both real and personal for cash. If he had additional readily saleable assets in the Solomon Islands and readily saleable assets in Hong Kong, he would have liquidated them to pay for the businesses.
175When KST left the Solomon Islands he lived with FC Chun, Sunly and Gordon in Hong Kong until they moved to Australia and joined the other part of KST's family in about 1974. In 1976 he sold his Hong Kong apartment for $16,000. He had a bank account or bank accounts in Hong Kong and he owned the issued capital of Plantation Hong Kong Bros Ltd.
176Geoffrey said his firm discovered $430,000 in a Citibank account in Hong Kong in 2002 that was distributed to Margaret, Helen, Sunly and Gordon. It was not a source of funds for the purchase of Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street.
177Mr Williams submitted that it is likely that KST continued to maintain substantial assets in Hong Kong from 1975 up until the date of his death. He was able to send all his children to boarding school in Australia.
178But, again, there is insufficient evidence from which I could infer that Hong Kong assets were available to KST to defray portion of the purchase price of Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street.
179It was submitted that Mr Hill had omitted income from Fairfield in the period 1 July 1978 to 30 November 1978. It was said that if Mr Hill had included that rental income it would have added $10,000 to $15,000 to available funds. But Mr Hill did include rental income for that period in his Table 19 and Appendix H.
180In Appendix J Mr Hill calculated income tax that would have been incurred by members of KST's family and paid by him. For that purpose income was attributed to KST each year during the relevant period. That income totalled $584,360. That figure has not been included in Mr Hill's calculation of funds available to KST. It was submitted that it should have been.
181But Appendix J attributes a notional distribution of net profits of the partnership and net income of the investment properties to KST's family members and calculates the tax on those notional attributions.
182To include the $584,360 in the re-worked Appendix N, which calculates the cash available from the net profits of the businesses and the rental income from the investment properties would be to double count. The net profit has already been taken into account in the re-worked Appendix N and its notional attribution to the members of KST's family is not an additional source of funds.
183Furthermore, the tax on the $584,360 apportioned to KST was $240,533 reducing the notional share of net profits of the partnership after tax to $343,827. But that calculation was made on the basis that members of KST's family held interests in Wiley Park and Fairfield. The tax liability for that rental income treated as KST's liability would have been so much greater.
184KST had, from time to time, investments in building societies, mortgage underwriters, cash deposits, bank bills and bank accounts. Margaret said that her father kept several interest bearing deposits both before and after the purchase of the businesses.
185KST had an account with RSL Permanent that he closed on 5 August 1975 with a balance of $2,951.64. He had another account with Margaret at RSL Permanent that he closed on the same day with a balance of $5,080.16. He had an account with NSW Permanent of $10,650 with Janet that he closed on 1 October 1975 in the amount of $10,727.21. He had an investment account with Australia and New Zealand Savings Bank with Margaret that he closed for $1,052.52. He had another investment account with Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited (ANZ) with Mary that he closed with $12,122.48 in it. He held an account with Permanent of Australia Building Society Limited with Mary that he closed on 1 August 1975 with $8,458.09. He had a savings investment account with CBA with Mary that was paid out on 25 September 1975 in the amount of $5,595.48. He had another savings investment account with Mary that was paid out on 3 October 1975 in the amount of $8,296.96. He had another savings investment account with CBA with Margaret that was paid out on 6 August 1975 in the amount of $5,494.60. He had an account with NSW Permanent Building Society Limited with Mary that was paid out on 31 July 1975 in the amount of $12,150. He had an ANZ interest bearing deposit that he purchased for $10,925.44 in his name and that of Mary to mature on 12 June 1975 when he received $11,444.38. He had another interest bearing deposit with Mary in ANZ to mature on 7 May 1975 when he received $5,237.50.
186The above investments total $97,811.07. The fact that they were cashed out in 1975 means that they were unlikely to have been a source of the purchase price for Haig Street which was purchased three years later.
187The figures also reveal that the investments were all reasonably short term. Most of them were acquired earlier in 1975. As KST had only recently arrived in Australia it is reasonable to infer that the source of these funds were investments in Hong Kong.
188Since the purchase prices of WYT and YS were considerably in excess of $97,811.07, KST must have liquidated other assets in the Solomon Islands or Hong Kong to meet the purchase prices. And as he needed the CBA loan, it is reasonable to infer that he had drained all his readily saleable assets in those countries.
189At the time of his death KST held $31,514.80 in a CBA account; $120,236.19 in a St George Bank account; $117,519.19 in another St George Bank account; $287,138.34 in a St George Bank interest bearing term deposit; and $346,721.67 in a Citibank term deposit.
190These investments fall into the same category as the $430,000 Citibank deposit in Hong Kong. They were investments after the event of acquisition of Haig Street, Maroubra Road and Queen Street.
191But they do demonstrate substantial holdings by KST in bank accounts. What they do not establish is how those moneys were generated.
192Apart from the real property interests in Haig Street, Maroubra Road, Queen Street, Coogee Bay Road (which was a residential acquisition), Wiley Park and Fairfield, at the time of his death, KST held 40,000 shares in Normandy Mining Limited.
193The report of the administrator of May 2002 indicated that the 40,000 Normandy Mining Limited shares were in the possession of Sunly. They were not a source of funds for the acquisition of Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street
194I have already mentioned the commercial bills for $100,000 and $110,000 maturing in October 1981. As they matured well after the purchase of Haig Street and well before the purchase of Maroubra Road there is nothing to connect them with those acquisitions or with the much later purchase of Queen Street.
195They fall into that category of investment in short term bank instruments that characterises KST's investment strategies. But the evidence does not reveal the sources from which the purchase price of the commercial bills was drawn. Having liquidated readily saleable assets in Hong Kong and the Solomon Islands when he came to Australia, the only obvious answer apart from the $16,000 for the sale of the apartment in Hong Kong is Wiley Park, Fairfield and the partnership businesses.
196And the only obvious source of funds to acquire the assets other than Wiley Park and Fairfield held by KST at death, including the $430,000 in Hong Kong, were Wiley Park, Fairfield, Maroubra Road, Queen Street and the partnership businesses.
197FC Chun received monthly payments from KST. She also profited from purchasing grocery items on consignment, purchases of jade, profits from trading blue chip shares and in trading currency. She held bank accounts and shares.
198I reject FC Chun's assets as a source of funds utilised by KST to purchase Haig Street, Maroubra Road and Queen Street. KST had no right to call upon them.
199KST obtained an opinion from Priestley QC in October 1975. Clayton Utz instructed Mr Priestley that KST had assets worth something like $80,000 in the Solomon Islands. But that figure included the land that had been frozen by the warrant.
200The instructions were also that KST had assets in Australia worth in excess of $400,000. That must have been an estimate of the value of WYT and YS, and KST's interest in Wiley Park and Fairfield. It may be an overestimate. KST held no other investments in Australia at that stage as he had drained all his bank accounts to purchase the businesses and they had only commenced to operate in August 1975.
201That is the extent of the evidence proffered by Sunly and Gordon of other sources of funds available to KST for the purchase of Haig Street, Maroubra Road and Queen Street.
202No additional sources of funds have been identified. Scott lists the real estate of KST at death and there are no other properties in the list. KST's individual tax returns included no other rental income than that from Maroubra Road, Queen Street, Wiley Park and Fairfield.
203I find that none of the assets formerly held by KST in the Solomon Islands was a source of funds for the purchase of Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street.
204The proceeds of sale of the apartment in Hong Kong of $16,000 were received two years before the purchase of Haig Street. But I will treat it as a resource that was contributed to that purchase.
205I find that Hong Kong assets other than the $16,000 were not utilised by KST in the purchase of Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street.
206Geoffrey and Mary were criticised for ignoring KST's entitlement to wages and his capital and loan accounts. But those are matters that relate to the taking of accounts or the quantification of equitable contribution. They do not relate to the source of funds used by KST to acquire Haig Street, Maroubra Road and Queen Street.
207Sunly and Gordon identified five principal problems with drawing an inference that partnership profits were involved in the purchase of Haig Street, Maroubra Road and Queen Street.
208First, it was submitted that Mr Hill's report was of little utility because he did not purport to investigate the source of moneys by which the properties were purchased and, further, he assumed the critical issue that there were no funds other than rental property receipts and the partnership profits available to KST.
209Mr Hill identified cash flows available to KST from known sources, the partnership and the investment properties at Maroubra Road, Queen Street, Wiley Park and Fairfield. He did not include cash flows from Hong Kong and the Solomon Islands but I have found that, with the exception of the $16,000 on the sale of the Honk Kong apartment, whatever assets in the Solomon Islands and Hong Kong that were available to KST were not used to purchase Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street.
210Mr Hill did not include moneys invested with financial institutions. But I have found that the resources that KST had when he moved to Australia were invested in the purchase of WYT and YS. Thereafter, he had the proceeds of sale of the unit in Hong Kong of $16,000. The only other sources of funds for investment in financial institutions were the partnership businesses, Wiley Park, Fairfield, Maroubra Road and Queen Street.
211The second problem identified by Sunly and Gordon was their submission that there was no evidence to support the significant amount of partnership profit that would have had to be generated and misappropriated for the three properties to have been purchased wholly or substantially with partnership profits.
212Reference was made to Blatch v Archer (1774) 1 Cowp 64, 98 ER 969. It is authority for the proposition that in determining whether a case has been proved on the balance of probabilities, evidence is to be weighed according to the proof which it was in the power of one party to produce and in the power of the other to contradict.
213But in this case the lapse of time meant that few documents are available and neither party was in a position to adduce more evidence than it did.
214The shortfall is substantial but it is inexorable that the only sources of funds that could have provided the purchase price of Haig Street, Maroubra Road and Queen Street were the rental income and partnership receipts, and KST controlled the receipts of WYT and YS.
215It was submitted, thirdly, that there was considerable evidence of other assets and moneys available to KST. I have dealt with that matter.
216Fourthly, it was said that Geoffrey and Mary had failed to differentiate between the moneys generated by the partnership and those to which they were entitled by way of profit share. It was said that credit was not given to KST for his loan account and moneys advanced for the purchase of the partnership businesses. Nor, it was said, did they give credit for wages received or just allowances that would be allowed to KST on the taking of partnership accounts.
217And that is the point. It is appropriate that these matters be considered in quantifying equitable compensation or in the taking of accounts.
218Partnership profits were taken into account by Mr Hill. They would have been so much the less and the shortfall would have been so much greater if amounts for wages, profits and loan accounts were subtracted from the cash flows. The cash flows of the partnership having been calculated by Mr Hill, KST's entitlements were not a separate source of moneys available for the purchase of Haig Street, Maroubra Road or Queen Street.
219Mr Hill carried out his exercise on the basis that KST had been repaid his contributions towards the acquisition costs of WYT and YS prior to the purchase of Haig Street. That was an assumption in favour of the Active Defendants. If those costs were left as debts of the partnership in Mr Hill's exercise it would have reduced the disclosed funds available to the partnership with consequent increase in the shortfall.
220Fifthly, it was said that Geoffrey and Mary treated the three properties and the available funds on a global basis. I have already dealt with that matter.