"Permitted by Law": A Duty to Disclose a Copy of the Documents?
48 It was to confront the prospect that the Deed and/or the Constitution may be construed in the manner being urged on behalf of Mr Rickus that the Trustee separately urged that the Cross-Claim should be dismissed upon the basis that Mr Rickus was under an obligation to disclose to it the documents he in fact provided to the Authority.
49 If there was such an obligation, the Trustee contended that Mr Rickus was under "a liability owed to the company" within the meaning of s 199A(2)(a) of the Corporations Act.If there was such a "liability", s 199A(3)(a) of that Act would preclude any indemnity extending to the recovery of legal costs incurred in respect to defending a proceeding seeking to enforce that "liability". Mr Rickus put in issue the proposition that, if he was required to produce to the Trustee a copy of the documents, such a requirement was a "liability" for the purposes of s 199A; he further put in issue whether or not he was under a requirement to produce the documents at all.
50 Both the breach of the asserted obligation or duty and the source of any such obligation or duty were matters which Senior Counsel for Mr Rickus quite properly sought to have clarified. In that respect:
(a) the breach of duty was said to be the failure on the part of Mr Rickus to provide to the Trustee, upon a request being made, a copy of the documents he had produced to the Authority pursuant to the statutory demand; and
(b) the source of that duty was variously expressed, varying from a fiduciary duty to disclose, to a duty to act in the best interests of the company or agency, and an assertion of a right of property.
The Trustee "left its options open" as to the source of the duty or obligation.
51 No authority was cited that specifically addressed the duty owed by a director (or chairman) of a company when served with a notice such as that served upon Mr Rickus under s 255 of Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act.
52 The very existence of any such duty and - if any such duty existed - the content of the duty had thus to be addressed as a matter of general principle. As a matter of general principle it was common ground that:
(a) the duty owed by a director to his company is fiduciary in character (eg, Australian Growth Resources Corp Pty Ltd v Van Reesema (1988) 13 ACLR 261 at 268 per King CJ);
(b) the duty includes a duty to act bona fide and in the best interests of the company (eg, Darvall v North Sydney Brick & Tile Co Ltd (1989) 16 NSWLR 260 at 270 per Kirby P; Allen v Gold Reefs of West Africa Ltd [1900] 1 Ch 656 at 671);
(c) the discharge of that duty may involve a right on the part of a director to inspect those documents relevant to the discharge of the duty (eg, Edman v Ross (1922) 22 SR (NSW) 351; Molomby v Whitehead (1985) 7 FCR 541 at 550 per Beaumont J);
(d) the discharge of the duty involves a director becoming familiar with how the company conducts its business (eg, Daniels v Anderson (1995) 37 NSWLR 438 at 500-1); and
(e) a director who occupies the position of chairman may have additional rights and duties, including a duty of selecting documents to be placed before the board for its consideration and keeping the board fully informed (cf Woolworths Ltd v Kelly (1991) 22 NSWLR 189 at 225 per Mahoney JA).
Reference should also be made to ss 180 to 184 of the Corporations Act and to Ford's Principles of Corporations Law at [8-010] and [8-065]-[8-090] (13th ed, 2007). The statutory duties imposed by ss 181 and 182 reflect, and to some extent refine, corresponding obligations on directors under the general law: Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Maxwell [2006] NSWSC 1052 at [99], 59 ACSR 373 at 397. See also: Austin R, Ford H and Ramsay I, Company Directors: Principles of Law and Corporate Governance (2005) at [7.4]. Beyond recognition of these general principles, the potential existed in the present proceeding for submissions to descend to a level of unnecessary abstraction.
53 In some circumstances, for example, it has been said that it is "the duty of the general manager and (possibly) of the chairman to go carefully through the returns from the branches, and to bring before the board any matter requiring their consideration": Dover v Cory [1901] AC 477. There being addressed was the responsibility of a director to inform himself as to the records of the company as opposed to the reliance he could place upon a chairman or a general manager in identifying those matters requiring his consideration. Lord Davey concluded as follows (at 492-3):
In this state of the evidence, my Lords, I ask whether the course of business at the board meetings, as described by the respondent, was a reasonable course to be pursued by the respondent, and other directors, or whether the knowledge which might have been derived from a careful and comparative examination of the weekly states and quarterly returns from the different branches of the bank ought to be imputed to the respondent, or (alternatively) whether he was guilty of such neglect of his duty as a director as would render him liable to damages. I do not think that it is made out that either of the two latter questions should be answered in the affirmative. I think the respondent was bound to give his attention to and exercise his judgment as a man of business on the matters which were brought before the board at the meetings which he attended, and it is not proved that he did not do so. But I think he was entitled to rely upon the judgment, information, and advice of the chairman and general manager, as to whose integrity, skill, and competence he had no reason for suspicion. I agree with what was said by Sir George Jessel in Hallmark's Case [(1878) 9 Ch D 329],and by Chitty J. in In re Denham & Co. [(1883) 25 Ch D 752], that directors are not bound to examine entries in the company's books. It was the duty of the general manager and (possibly) of the chairman to go carefully through the returns from the branches, and to bring before the board any matter requiring their consideration; but the respondent was not, in my opinion, guilty of negligence in not examining them for himself, notwithstanding that they were laid on the table of the board for reference. ...
In other circumstances it has been said that a "chairman has the primary responsibility of selecting matters and documents to be brought to the board's attention": AWA Ltd v Daniels (1992) 7 ACSR 759 at 867. More recently, in Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Rich [2003] NSWSC 85 at [51]-[72], 174 FLR 128 at 141-7, Austin J has reviewed the authorities and considered the duties owed by a chairman of a listed company. See also: Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Vines [2003] NSWSC 1116, 182 FLR 405.
54 Mr Rickus sought to confront the more generally framed argument in the present proceeding, that he was under a duty to produce a copy of the documents to the Trustee as had previously been provided to the Authority, by contending that:
(a) given the discontinuance of the proceeding in July 2008, the Trustee was now precluded from contending that Mr Rickus was under such a duty;
(b) if the Trustee was not precluded from advancing such a contention, the Trustee should not be permitted to now raise the contention because of the prejudice to which Mr Rickus would be exposed; and
(c) there was no such duty.
55 The contention that s 199A of the Corporations Act denied any entitlement to an indemnity was expressly raised by the Defence to the Cross-Claim. Notwithstanding the express reliance upon s 199A(2) and (3) in that Defence, the submissions advanced on behalf of the Trustee as to the source of the duty to produce a copy of the documents caused some procedural difficulties.
56 One difficulty was that the Authority sought an opportunity to itself make submissions. The Authority had previously been joined as the Second Respondent, in November 2007. But it had taken no real part in the present proceeding thereafter. Its participation was substantially confined to the related proceeding: Motor Trades Association of Australia Superannuation Fund Pty Ltd v Australian Prudential Regulation Authority [2008] FCA 828. The Authority's renewed interest in the present proceeding occurred during the course of submissions in reply being advanced on behalf of Mr Rickus. The Authority, it was said, had an interest in being heard as to whether a person upon whom a notice had been served under s 255 of the 1993 Act thereafter came under a duty such as that now sought to be espoused by the Trustee. Notwithstanding the lateness of its expressed interest, the opportunity for the Authority to file written submissions confined to that issue was not opposed by Senior Counsel on behalf of the Trustee. Directions were made for the filing of written submissions and for submissions in reply by both Mr Rickus and the Trustee.
57 Any contention that, by seeking leave to discontinue its claims as against Mr Rickus, the Trustee was thereby precluded from resisting the Cross-Claim is to be rejected. The abandonment of a claim pursued as an applicant is not considered to be the abandonment of any defence that an applicant may otherwise have to a cross-claim. By seeking leave to discontinue, the Trustee was simply contending that it no longer wished to pursue its own claim for relief - for whatever reason. The Trustee's decision to seek leave to discontinue the Application in July 2008 may well have been influenced by the fact that it had already obtained copies of most of the documents previously produced to the Authority by Mr Rickus, or by the stage reached in relation to the inquiries being pursued by the Authority. But, whatever the reason which motivated the Trustee, leave was given to discontinue. It thereafter remained a matter for Mr Rickus to decide whether he wished to pursue his Cross-Claim or whether he too would seek to discontinue that action. If the Cross-Claim was to be pursued, the Cross Respondent was entitled to rely upon whatever issues had been legitimately raised in the Defence as filed. A discontinuance of an applicationis not to be construed in some way as some implied amendment of a defence as filed to a cross-claim.
58 But it was the further contention of Mr Rickus as to prejudice that had the potential to occasion greater procedural difficulty. It was his contention that, had the source of the duty been more fully articulated at the outset of the hearing of the Cross-Claim, there would have been cross-examination of a number of witnesses in order to establish facts that were not otherwise considered to be relevant. A number of such outstanding facts were immediately articulated by Senior Counsel during the course of oral submissions. None of those facts then expressed were seen by Senior Counsel on behalf of the Trustee to be contentious and such as could not be the subject of agreement. A short adjournment was thus granted to enable Senior Counsel for Mr Rickus to more fully consider his position and to determine whether additional facts were also considered to be necessary. That short adjournment, however, provided insufficient time in which to properly consider the matter and the proceeding was adjourned to the following morning.
59 Of concern were two considerations, namely the paramount importance of ensuring that Mr Rickus was extended a proper opportunity in which to advance his case and also the importance of ensuring that the proceeding was brought to conclusion as expeditiously as was consistent with a proper determination of all issues presented for resolution. If there was to be agreement as to the outstanding facts, that was to be encouraged; if there was to be no agreement, the adjournment of the proceeding to the following morning accommodated the prospect that Senior Counsel for Mr Rickus could then apply even at that stage to cross-examine such witnesses as he saw fit.
60 Whether or not Senior Counsel for Mr Rickus should have cross-examined witnesses at the outset may be left to one side. The fact that the Trustee had "left its options open" as to the source of the duty imposed upon Mr Rickus may possibly have left his Senior Counsel in a state of uncertainty as to the case he had to meet. The importance of the Cross-Claim to Mr Rickus' position however was obvious; and the importance of the duty upon persons in his position when served with a notice by a regulator was also considered to be of more wide-ranging importance than the personal interests being propounded by Mr Rickus and the Trustee. The presentation of all facts relevant to a resolution of those issues, no matter how late they may have been raised, was obviously desirable - if not essential.
61 This difficulty potentially confronting Mr Rickus, however, resolved itself. Senior Counsel on his behalf, after he had been given an opportunity to consider his position, advised that he did not wish to cross-examine further witnesses or reach any further agreement beyond that reached during the course of submissions.
62 The position was thus reached that it was open to the Trustee to place reliance upon both s 199A of the Corporations Act and upon the manner in which it was said that Mr Rickus owed "a liability to the company". If he did, the Trustee was not "permitted by law" to confer an indemnity in respect to the legal costs incurred by Mr Rickus in resisting the claim made for a copy of the documents to be produced.
63 Section 199A of the Corporations Act provides as follows:
Indemnification and exemption of officer or auditor
Exemptions not allowed
(1) A company or a related body corporate must not exempt a person (whether directly or through an interposed entity) from a liability to the company incurred as an officer or auditor of the company.
When indemnity for liability (other than for legal costs) not allowed
(2) A company or a related body corporate must not indemnify a person (whether by agreement or by making a payment and whether directly or through an interposed entity) against any of the following liabilities incurred as an officer or auditor of the company:
(a) a liability owed to the company or a related body corporate;
(b) a liability for a pecuniary penalty order under section 1317G or a compensation order under section 1317H or 1317HA;
(c) a liability that is owed to someone other than the company or a related body corporate and did not arise out of conduct in good faith.
This subsection does not apply to a liability for legal costs.
When indemnity for legal costs not allowed
(3) A company or related body corporate must not indemnify a person (whether by agreement or by making a payment and whether directly or through an interposed entity) against legal costs incurred in defending an action for a liability incurred as an officer or auditor of the company if the costs are incurred:
(a) in defending or resisting proceedings in which the person is found to have a liability for which they could not be indemnified under subsection (2); or
(b) in defending or resisting criminal proceedings in which the person is found guilty; or
(c) in defending or resisting proceedings brought by ASIC or a liquidator for a court order if the grounds for making the order are found by the court to have been established; or
(d) in connection with proceedings for relief to the person under this Act in which the Court denies the relief.
Paragraph (c) does not apply to costs incurred in responding to actions taken by ASIC or a liquidator as part of an investigation before commencing proceedings for the court order.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (3), the outcome of proceedings is the outcome of the proceedings and any appeal in relation to the proceedings.
This section is effective as from 1 July 2005. The evolution of s 199A, it may be noted, has been helpfully traced by Her Honour Justice Bergin in Whitlam v National Roads and Motorists' Association Ltd [2006] NSWSC 766 at [40]-[56], 202 FLR 153 at 165-71.
64 In the absence of any constraint sought to be imposed upon Mr Rickus by the Authority in respect to the disclosure to the Trustee of those documents embraced by the s 255 notice, the contention advanced on behalf of the Trustee was that it was incumbent upon Mr Rickus to make available to the Trustee copies of those documents provided by Mr Rickus to the regulator - at least upon a request being made. It was contended that a duty to act in the best interests of the company was a duty which embraced the obligation to keep the Trustee informed as to those matters which may be of relevance to the position of the regulator. In the absence of any statutorily imposed obligation of confidence, or perhaps an obligation of confidence sought by the regulator by agreement, the contention of the Trustee was that Mr Rickus was to keep the board fully informed as to those matters which had been placed before the regulator so that the board could properly respond to such concerns as may be raised by the regulator and even modify its own practices - even in the absence of any concern being raised by the regulator.
65 Indeed, in the absence of further explanation, it would seem surprising if a director was not obliged to bring to the attention of his board a request (for example) made of him by the present Authority to produce documents of immediate relevance to the affairs of his company; a request made of him by the Commissioner of Taxation for access to books pursuant to s 263 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cth); or a request made of him by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission pursuant to s 155 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) for the production of documents. An exercise of such statutory powers may be the precursor to a regulator imposing upon a company a variety of sanctions perceived by the regulator to be warranted. A company may wish to challenge the validity of a statutory demand made upon one of its directors. Even if no challenge is to be made, a company may wish to consider whether any further documents should also be provided to a regulator to assist it in the discharge of its responsibilities or to make submissions in respect to that material already in the possession of a regulator. In the absence of knowing the terms of any notice requiring the production of documents and having a copy of documents produced, it is difficult to see how a company could properly address such concerns as a regulator may have.
66 All of these statutory provisions confer an authority which is a serious intrusion into the affairs of a company. If a director or other officer of a company is to yield to a lawful statutory demand, it would seem surprising that the fact of a demand should not be made known to the company and the company fully informed as to the demand and that which had been produced. Unless fully disclosed, the decision as to the response to be made to the exercise of statutory power (or further response) may be transferred from the company to an individual director. Although the obligation to respond to a statutory demand may fall upon an individual director, a decision as to whether the lawfulness of the demand should be reviewed may in some cases be made more appropriately by the company than its director.
67 But no such generally expressed conclusion need be made in the present case.
68 In the circumstances of the present case it is considered that Mr Rickus was under a duty to fully inform the Trustee as to his response to the s 255 notice - and that included a duty to provide to the Trustee a copy of that which had been given to the Authority. His position has been considered upon the basis that he was a director. The circumstance giving rise to the duty include the very request made for the production of the documents, the manner in which the notice was addressed and the documents sought to be produced. The circumstances also include the review being undertaken by the Authority, the stage which that review had reached, the legal advice obtained by the Trustee and the need for the Trustee to be informed as to the documents provided to the regulator so that it could properly respond to the regulator. The circumstances also include the commitment of the Trustee to use the documents, if produced, only for the purposes of the Trustee's dealings with the Authority. Given the constraint upon the use to which it would put the documents, it is not considered that there remained any good reason why a copy of the documents could not have been produced by Mr Rickus when the request was made. No claim (for example) for legal professional privilege was sought to be made out on behalf of Mr Rickus.
69 The source of Mr Rickus' duty to produce to the Trustee a copy of the documents provided to the regulator was his duty to act in the best interests of the Trustee. As was made apparent to Mr Rickus, both in correspondence and at the board meeting in November 2006, the Trustee needed to be put in the position of having those copies so that the Trustee could properly address the matters being pursued by the Authority. That was what the Trustee told him and Senior Counsel to his knowledge had observed that he could not provide "definitive advice" without himself being given copies. Whatever may be the subtleties involved in other cases as to identifying that which is in the bests interests of the company (see: Sealy L S, 'Directors' "Wider" Responsibilities - Problems Conceptual, Practical and Procedural' (1987) 13 Mon Univ L Rev 164), in the present proceeding no submission (not surprisingly) was advanced that it was not in the interests of the Trustee to properly address the matters being pursued by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority.
70 A more generally expressed submission advanced by the Trustee that it was a part of the fiduciary duty owed by a director to make full disclosure is rejected. "The strong weight of judicial authority is that fiduciary duties are proscriptive rather than prescriptive; accordingly, a fiduciary does not have a positive duty to disclose information": Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Citigroup Global Markets Australia Pty Ltd (No 4) [2007] FCA 963 at [375], 160 FCR 35 at 88 per Jacobson J.Reference may also be made to one of the authorities there referred to by His Honour, namely Breen v Williams [1995] HCA 63, 186 CLR 71. Gaudron and McHugh JJ there observed (at 113):
In this country, fiduciary obligations arise because a person has come under an obligation to act in another's interests. As a result, equity imposes on the fiduciary proscriptive obligations - not to obtain any unauthorised benefit from the relationship and not to be in a position of conflict. If these obligations are breached, the fiduciary must account for any profits and make good any losses arising from the breach. But the law of this country does not otherwise impose positive legal duties on the fiduciary to act in the interests of the person to whom the duty is owed. If there was a general fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of the patient, it would necessarily follow that a doctor has a duty to inform the patient that he or she has breached their contract or has been guilty of negligence in dealings with the patient. That is not the law of this country.
Gummow J concluded (at 137-8):
Fiduciary obligations arise (albeit perhaps not exclusively) in various situations where it may be seen that one person is under an obligation to act in the interests of another. Equitable remedies are available where the fiduciary places interest in conflict with duty or derives an unauthorised profit from abuse of duty. It would be to stand established principle on its head to reason that because equity considers the defendant to be a fiduciary, therefore the defendant has a legal obligation to act in the interests of the plaintiff so that failure to fulfil that positive obligation represents a breach of fiduciary duty.
See also: Pilmer v Duke Group Ltd [2001] HCA 31 at [74] (per McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ) and [127] (per Kirby J), 207 CLR 165 at 197-8 and 214; P & V Industries Pty Ltd v Porto [2006] VSC 131 at [12]-[25], 14 VR 1 at 4-6 per Hollingworth J; Dempsey G and Greinke A, 'Proscriptive fiduciary duties in Australia'(2004) 25 Aust Bar Rev 1.
71 The rejection of such a generally expressed duty, however, does not preclude a conclusion that in the circumstances of the present proceeding Mr Rickus was under a duty to produce a copy of the documents to the Trustee - at least when a request to do so was made of him by the Trustee. The Trustee was aware that a statutory demand for the production of documents had been given to Mr Rickus and, indeed, had paid for the independent legal advice provided to Mr Rickus in respect to that demand. The Trustee had also reasonably formed the view that the regulator had most probably used at least some of the information provided by Mr Rickus in forming conclusions reached. There was a legitimate basis upon which the Trustee could make a request that it be provided with a copy of that which had been provided to its regulator. The duty imposed upon Mr Rickus in such circumstances is not considered to be some generally expressed duty to disclose that which was previously not known or the imposition of some "positive obligation"; rather it is a duty to place the board in the position whereby it can respond to an investigation being pursued by a statutory regulator and respond to that information provided by Mr Rickus. Having complied with a statutory demand and produced documents relevant to the matters being pursued by the regulator, it is not considered that Mr Rickus could thereafter withhold and thereby deny to the Trustee information potentially relevant to a meaningful response by the Trustee to the findings as were being made contrary to (or potentially contrary to) the Trustee's interests.
72 Rather than the obligation being the imposition of a "positive obligation", it was his obligation not to withhold information from the board. The "obligation"was to accede to the request made of him to provide the documents. It would not be "in the best interests of thecorporation" (Corporations Act, s 181(1)(a)) to not produce to it a copy of that which had been provided to its regulator. Replying to a request properly made of him cannot properly be characterised as the imposition of any "positive obligation".