Lucas v Zomay Holdings Pty Ltd
[2019] FCA 830
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2019-06-04
Before
O'Callaghan J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (15 paragraphs)
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The parties have liberty to apply. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
introduction 1 This is a dispute about the sale of a pharmacy business in the Eastlands Shopping Centre at Rosny Park, in Tasmania. The shopping centre, Tasmania's largest, is on the eastern shore of the Derwent River and is a part of greater Hobart. The shopping centre has about 100 retail businesses including food stores, fashion stores, and one pharmacy. 2 The pharmacy business, known as Priceline Pharmacy Eastlands, is owned and operated by the first respondent (Zomay). The second respondent (Mr Hampton) is a pharmacist. He is the sole director and the sole shareholder of Zomay. 3 The applicant (Mr Lucas) is also a pharmacist. He is the Tasmanian State Manager of the "Chemist Warehouse/My Chemist Group". 4 Mr Lucas contends that he entered into a legally binding contract for the purchase of the Priceline Pharmacy Eastlands business and he seeks specific performance of it. He also contended that an information memorandum supplied to him during the course of negotiations in respect of the sale on behalf of Zomay was misleading or deceptive because it represented that Mr Hampton, not Zomay, was the vendor of the business. The issue of the correct identity of the vendor was first raised by the solicitors for the respondents in an email dated 22 November 2018, before this proceeding was commenced, in which it was asserted that the agreement was not binding because it wrongly named Mr Hampton, not Zomay, as the vendor. 5 By the end of the trial, counsel for the respondents conceded, as he was bound to, that there was nothing in the point, and that Mr Hampton can be taken to have signed the agreement on behalf of Zomay. 6 Obviously in those circumstances, the court retains jurisdiction to hear the claim for specific performance. See Re Wakim; Ex parte McNally (1999) 198 CLR 511 at 584-588, [136]-[147]. 7 The respondents contend that no binding agreement was entered into and, in the alternative, contend that if there was a binding contract it was repudiated by the applicant's proffer of a draft contract of sale. 8 By the end of the trial, which occupied three days, some of the pleaded issues, and many of the grounds upon which the solicitors for the respondents had originally contended that there was no binding contract, disappeared as a result of appropriate concessions made by counsel for the respondents, Mr Deller. 9 In particular, it was conceded that references in the contract to it being subject to "Pharmacy Board" and "Medicare Australia" approval are to be read as referring to (because the parties intended them to refer to) (respectively): (1) the Tasmanian Pharmacy Authority granting such approvals as may be required to permit the applicant lawfully to conduct a pharmacy at the premises under the Pharmacy Control Act 2001 (Tas); and (2) the secretary of the Department of Health granting such approvals as may be required under the National Health Act 1953 (Cth) to permit the applicant lawfully to supply pharmaceutical benefits at the premises. 10 Counsel for the applicant, Mr C Gunson SC, who appeared with Mr A Walker, took me to the relevant legislative provisions in considerable detail in his opening, when the respondents still maintained their position that the references to "Pharmacy Board" and "Medicare Australia" approval were uncertain and a basis for finding that there was no binding contract. Now that that submission has been jettisoned (quite properly) it is not necessary to set out in detail the relevant statutory provisions. I will however set out the following. 11 In order to be able to dispense medicines that are subsidised under the pharmaceutical benefits scheme of the Commonwealth, a pharmacist must be approved by the Secretary of the Commonwealth Department of Health (the Secretary) to supply pharmaceutical benefits at particular premises under s 90 of the National Health Act 1953 (Cth) (the NHA). The Secretary must refer an application for approval under s 90 of the NHA to the Australian Community Pharmacy Authority (the ACPA) for consideration. Section 99K(1) of the NHA provides that the functions of the ACPA are to consider applications referred to it under s 90 and to make recommendations as to whether an application under s 90 should be approved and whether (and if so, what) conditions an approval should be made subject to. Subsection 99K(2) requires that, in making a recommendation, the ACPA comply with the relevant rules determined by the Minister under s 99L. 12 The Minister has made rules under s 99L: the National Health (Australian Community Pharmacy Authority Rules) Determination 2018 (Cth) (the Rules). The Rules set out the circumstances in which a pharmacy may be approved under s 90. The Rules were designed with the objectives of providing "a sustainable and viable community pharmacy network (which focuses at least as much on the interests of pharmacy owners as on the community) and access to pharmaceutical benefits (which focuses only on the community)". See Walkerden v Wodonga Pharmacy Pty Ltd (2015) 230 FCR 243 at 261, [62] and Stambe v Minister for Health [2019] FCA 43 at [30]. 13 The ACPA does not have a discretion to recommend or not recommend approval of an application under s 90 of the NHA. If an application complies with the Rules, the ACPA must recommend that the applicant be approved, and, if it does not, the ACPA must recommend that the applicant not be approved. 14 The Secretary may only grant approval if the ACPA has recommended approval. However, the Secretary retains a residual discretion to refuse to grant approval under s 90(3B) of the NHA. The Secretary cannot grant approval under s 90 if the ACPA has recommended that approval not be granted, although the Minister has a broad discretion to substitute the Secretary's decision under s 90A, but only in circumstances in which the Secretary has refused to grant approval under s 90 on the basis that the application did not comply with the Rules. 15 In this case, the parties are taken to have accepted that Eastlands Shopping Centre has less than 100 other "commercial establishments" (as defined by s 7 of the Rules), so it follows that only one pharmacy may be approved in the shopping centre. See the Rules, sch 1. 16 The requirement for an application under s 90 of the NHA to be referred to the ACPA does not apply to an application for an approval arising out of a change of ownership of a pharmacy situated at particular premises if the change results or resulted from the sale of the pharmacy, and if the pharmacy is to continue to operate at the same premises. 17 A "pharmacist" is defined in s 4 of the NHA to mean "a person registered as a pharmacist or pharmaceutical chemist under a law of a State or Territory providing for the registration of pharmacists or pharmaceutical chemists, and includes a friendly society or other body of persons (whether corporate or unincorporate) carrying on business as a pharmacist." 18 In Tasmania, pharmacists are registered under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law Act 2009 (Qld) as adopted by the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (Tasmania) Act 2010 (Tas) (the National Law (Tasmania) Act). Both the applicant and the second respondent are registered as pharmacists. Prior to the commencement of the National Law (Tasmania) Act pharmacists were registered under Part 3 of the Pharmacists Registration Act 2001 (Tas) which also continued the Pharmacy Board of Tasmania established under s 3 of the Pharmacy Act 1908 (Tas). 19 When the Pharmacists Registration Act 2001 (Tas) was enacted the requirement to register pharmacy premises was not included. 20 Part 6A was inserted into the Pharmacists Registration Act 2001 (Tas) by the Pharmacists Registration Amendment Act 2005 (Tas) and reimposed the requirement for pharmacy premises to be registered by the Pharmacy Board of Tasmania. 21 The Pharmacists Registration Amendment Act 2010 (Tas) (2010 Amendment Act) was part of the package of legislation associated with the National Law (Tasmania) Act. The title of the Pharmacists Registration Act 2001 (Tas) was amended to be the Pharmacy Control Act 2001 (Tas). The new s 6 established the Tasmanian Pharmacy Authority in place of the Pharmacy Board of Tasmania. Part 5A, which requires approval to hold an interest in a pharmacy business, was also inserted by the 2010 Amendment Act. 22 Under the Pharmacy Control Act 2001 (Tas) it is therefore necessary for a person to obtain from the Tasmanian Pharmacy Authority a certificate deeming the person to be eligible to hold an interest in a pharmacy business. 23 An eligibility certificate applies for multiple pharmacy businesses and a person is not required to hold more than one eligibility certificate, although a person cannot hold an interest in more than four pharmacy businesses. 24 The eligibility of Mr Lucas and both respondents to hold an interest in a pharmacy business is admitted in the pleadings. 25 As set out above, it is also necessary under Part 6A of the Pharmacy Control Act for premises from which a pharmacy operates to be registered by the Tasmanian Pharmacy Authority. The Priceline Pharmacy Eastlands premises are registered by the Tasmanian Pharmacy Authority. 26 The regulatory approvals that Mr Lucas would need to obtain, therefore, to operate a pharmacy business at the current premises of Priceline Pharmacy Eastlands are: approval by the Secretary under s 90 of the NHA (which does not require consideration by the ACPA under the Rules) and registration of the pharmacy business premises by the Tasmanian Pharmacy Authority under Part 6A of the Pharmacy Control Act 2001 (Tas). 27 The process for obtaining those two statutory approvals is straightforward. In the case of approval under the NHA, a form needs to be completed and submitted to the Department of Health. The form seeks approval for a new owner under s 90 and at the same time requests cancellation of the existing approval of the former owner under s 98 of the NHA. In the case of approval under the Pharmacy Control Act 2001 (Tas) a form likewise needs to be completed and submitted to the Tasmanian Pharmacy Authority.