Manolakis v Carter
[2009] FCA 483
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2009-05-15
Before
Besanko J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (6 paragraphs)
- The applicant to have access to all the records of Kenurios and Thomiki immediately. 6. That the respondents be served immediately and without further delay by the court at the courts cost 7. That the applicant be provided free of charge transcripts of each hearing free of costs. …" 15 The grounds upon which the above orders were sought were as follows: "1. That there has been a Breach of Duty by the Liquidator of 'Carter' and trustee 'Macks' as liquidator and trustee, their, duty of care and their fiduciary duty to creditors, shareholders and employees.
- That 'Carter' and 'Macks' defrauded the Superannuation fund of Anastasios Manolakis and (sic) illegally withholding assets of Anastasios Manolakis. 3. That 'Carter' and trustee 'Macks['] mislead and defrauded the genuine shareholders of 'Kenurios' and 'Thomiki'. 4. That 'Carter' and 'Macks' mislead and defrauded the genuine creditors of 'Kenurios' and 'Thomiki' and the applicant. 5. That 'Carter' and 'Macks' allowed fraud to be committed against the named companies, 'Kenurios' and 'Thomiki' by Constantinos Asclepinos, this [presumably intended to be 'his'] wife, Nancy Asclepinos, Louis and Vivian Langanis, Amanda Forrest and others in association with [a State Magistrate] and the illegal intervention of [the Chief Justice of a State Supreme Court] to stop an investigation into [the State Magistrate]. 6. Costs against the Liquidator and Trustee both in their official capacity and individual capacity 7. Other Grounds to be lodged at a later date and 8. Other matters to be raised in oral submissions." 16 I turn now to refer to certain events which have occurred since the present proceeding was commenced. 17 On 6 December 2008, Mr Manolakis went to Mr Carter's home. Neither Mr Carter nor his wife were at home and Mr Manolakis gave documents to Mr Carter's daughter. He took a photograph of Mr Carter's daughter with his telephone. Mr Manolakis alleges that, shortly after this incident, Mr Carter made a telephone call to him and used certain language in the course of that call. 18 On 16 December 2008, Mr Carter's solicitors wrote to Mr Manolakis, referring to the Full Court decision and inviting Mr Manolakis to withdraw the present proceeding. On 17 December 2008, Mr Manolakis made a telephone call to Mr Barrett. He told Mr Barrett that he did not care about the Full Court decision because it was a decision of "three stooges". Mr Manolakis told Mr Barrett that Mr Carter should not be making threats against him of the types which he said were in the letter. He referred to Mr Barrett as a "dickhead" and terminated the telephone call. 19 On 18 December 2008, there was a directions hearing in relation to this proceeding. Mr Barrett appeared on Mr Carter's behalf. After the hearing, Mr Manolakis spoke to Mr Barrett and Mr Barrett's summary (in his affidavit) of Mr Manolakis' assertions is as follows: "4.1 that Mr Carter was a paedophile and that I knew that to be the case; 4.2 that I was in some way protecting him; 4.3 there was a general cover up of what he described as paedophilic activities; 4.4 that my firm would be 'up shit creek' in acting in the matter; 4.5 that he would attack my firm as well; 4.6 that I was a criminal and I was also engaged in paedophilic activities; …" 20 Mr Barrett said that Mr Manolakis also talked about a recent incident in Victoria where a young boy had been shot by the police and he said that was a tragedy and the public should be demonstrating at length about that, and he continued to talk generally about the evil of paedophilic activities in Australia. 21 Mr Carter submits that the proceeding is vexatious or an abuse of process, or both. In his affidavit, he states that he has never had in his possession personal property of Mr Manolakis or assets of his superannuation fund. He states that as liquidator of Kenurios Zoi Pty Ltd and Thomiki Pty Ltd he was under no obligation to lodge tax returns or group certificates for the applicant. He states that he had no involvement with Mr Manolakis' companies prior to his appointment as liquidator and was unaware of any alleged fraud committed against the companies.