Appropriate relief
66 Having accepted the plaintiffs' primary contention, it is not necessary to deal with their alternative contention.
67 However, it is necessary to consider whether the Court should grant the relief sought by the plaintiffs.
68 The plaintiffs sought to rely upon s 1322 of the Corporations Act which provides relevantly:
Irregularities
(1) In this section, unless the contrary intention appears:
(a) a reference to a proceeding under this Act is a reference to any proceeding whether a legal proceeding or not; and
(b) a reference to a procedural irregularity includes a reference to:
(i) the absence of a quorum at a meeting of a corporation, at a meeting of directors or creditors of a corporation, at a joint meeting of creditors and members of a corporation or at a meeting of members of a registered scheme; and
(ii) a defect, irregularity or deficiency of notice or time.
(2) A proceeding under this Act is not invalidated because of any procedural irregularity unless the Court is of the opinion that the irregularity has caused or may cause substantial injustice that cannot be remedied by any order of the Court and by order declares the proceeding to be invalid.
(3) A meeting held for the purposes of this Act, or a meeting notice of which is required to be given in accordance with the provisions of this Act, or any proceeding at such a meeting, is not invalidated only because of the accidental omission to give notice of the meeting or the non-receipt by any person of notice of the meeting, unless the Court, on the application of the person concerned, a person entitled to attend the meeting or ASIC, declares proceedings at the meeting to be void.
…
(4) Subject to the following provisions of this section but without limiting the generality of any other provision of this Act, the Court may, on application by any interested person, make all or any of the following orders, either unconditionally or subject to such conditions as the Court imposes:
(a) an order declaring that any act, matter or thing purporting to have been done, or any proceeding purporting to have been instituted or taken, under this Act or in relation to a corporation is not invalid by reason of any contravention of a provision of this Act or a provision of the constitution of a corporation;
…
and may make such consequential or ancillary orders as the Court thinks fit.
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(6) The Court must not make an order under this section unless it is satisfied:
(a) in the case of an order referred to in paragraph (4)(a):
(i) that the act, matter or thing, or the proceeding, referred to in that paragraph is essentially of a procedural nature;
(ii) that the person or persons concerned in or party to the contravention or failure acted honestly; or
(iii) that it is just and equitable that the order be made; and
(b) in the case of an order referred to in paragraph (4)(c)--that the person subject to the civil liability concerned acted honestly; and
(c) in every case--that no substantial injustice has been or is likely to be caused to any person.
69 By s 21 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth), the Court may in civil proceedings in relation to a matter in which it has original jurisdiction, make binding declarations of right, whether or not any consequential relief is or could be claimed. For example, the Court has power under s 21 to declare invalid a resolution passed by shareholders: Young v Sal Mar Enterprises Lot Pty Ltd [2005] FCA 1853 at [27]. In that case, Young J also concluded that s 1322(2) was a source of power to declare the relevant resolution invalid. See also Jenkin v Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain [1921] 1 Ch 392.
70 By s 23 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth), the Court has power, in relation to matters in which it has jurisdiction, to make orders of such kinds as the Court thinks appropriate. That power includes the power to grant an injunction. In Scottish & Colonial Ltd v Australian Power & Gas Co Ltd [2007] NSWSC 1266; (2007) 65 ACSR 313, Bryson AJ of the Supreme Court of New South Wales granted a permanent injunction restraining the consideration of resolutions for the removal of directors where a general meeting was requisitioned but the procedure for removal of directors of a public company set out in s 203D was not followed.
71 The defendants did not submit that the plaintiffs were disentitled to the relief sought by reason of delay.