Has Mr Nawar identified a valid claim?
55 Mr Nawar, as a former shareholder, has standing to bring a claim for misleading and deceptive conduct. However, for the reasons that follow, I am satisfied that Mr Nawar has no reasonable prospects of successfully prosecuting a claim in misleading and deceptive conduct on the facts disclosed in the ASOC.
56 First, Mr Nawar has not identified the statements by which the alleged representations are said to have been conveyed. The factual basis for Mr Nawar's misleading and deceptive conduct claim is not clearly identified in the ASOC. The only apparent foundation for the alleged representations on which Mr Nawar relies is a statement allegedly made during a presentation given by Mr Robinson summarising Newcrest's interim earnings in 2013. Mr Nawar says that Mr Robinson said that "[i]t would be hard for the gold miners if the price of gold dropped under US$1400 per ounce". The evidence upon which Newcrest relies includes ASX releases and the transcript of the presentation given by Mr Robinson on 8 February 2013. That material does not include a statement of the kind alleged by Mr Nawar. There are no other public statements of Mr Mercer, Mr Robinson or any other representative of Newcrest which have been identified that are capable of conveying the alleged representations. Mr Nawar's pleaded case does not, beyond mere assertion, identify how the impugned statements (if made) convey the alleged representations. In failing to do so, Mr Nawar has not delineated the factual foundation for his claim that Newcrest engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct: Dowling at [57]; Devon v Thirteenth Kaysan Pty Ltd [2016] FCA 357 at [31] (Davies J); Mulhern v Bank of Queensland [2015] FCA 44 at [60] - [61] (Gleeson J). Based on the ASOC, the evidence on this application and the submissions I am satisfied that Mr Nawar does not have reasonable prospects of establishing misleading representations in the form he alleges were made by Newcrest.
57 Secondly, I am satisfied that in substance Mr Nawar's complaint is in respect of, or relating to, the subject matter of the Newcrest Class Action and as such, attracts the bar that was put in place as part of the resolution of those proceedings. Mr Nawar's misleading and deceptive conduct case is concerned with representations made by former directors about the gold price and the purported detrimental impact of those statements on Newcrest. It is true that there appears to be a distinction in the case brought in the Newcrest Class Action and that brought by Mr Nawar in the present proceedings. In the Newcrest Class Action, the lead applicant relied on the declining gold price to contend that Newcrest misleadingly understated or did not adequately take into account the impact of the declining gold price in its forecasting processes. In the present proceedings Mr Nawar appears to rely on the declining gold price to argue that Newcrest misleadingly overstated the causative impact of the declining gold price on Newcrest's share price. Notwithstanding this difference, Mr Nawar also complains about Newcrest's missed production forecasts in the ASOC. Another area of overlap between the two proceedings is the claim for misleading and deceptive conduct based on the impairment of the carrying value of the Lihir mine. Similarly there is an overlap in the measure of loss. The measure of loss claimed in the ASOC is asserted to be calculated by reference to the difference in the share price between acquisition and disposal. This overlaps with one of the four loss methodologies pleaded in the Newcrest Class Action. Doing my best to follow the ASOC, I am satisfied that notwithstanding the different way in which Mr Nawar articulates his complaints, the subject matter of his misleading and deceptive conduct claim is so intertwined with the conduct which was the subject of the Newcrest Class Action that it is caught by the procedural bar. That bar against bringing proceedings applies to any subsequent claim by a group member (including an eligible group member) in respect of, or relating to, the subject matter of the Newcrest Class Action.
58 Thirdly, Newcrest has available a limitation defence in respect of the misleading and deceptive conduct claim which Mr Nawar seeks to pursue. An "action" for recovery of loss or damage caused by conduct in contravention of s 1041H must be "begun" within 6 years of the day on which the cause of action arose: s 1014I(2). A cause of action for damages for contravention of misleading and deceptive conduct statutory provisions accrues on the date when damage is first suffered: City Pacific Ltd (in liq) v CBRE (V) Pty Ltd [2021] NSWSC 456 at [548] (Walton J) citing Deane J in Hawkins v Clayton [1988] HCA 15; 164 CLR 539 at 587 - 588; Wardley Australia Ltd v Western Australia [1992] HCA 55; 175 CLR 514 at 525 (Mason CJ, Dawon, Gaudron and McHugh JJ). An action is only brought when an originating process is sealed by the Court's Registry: Cameron v National Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd (No 2) [1992] 1 Qd R 133 at 136 (McPherson SPJ). The bringing or commencement of an action halts the running of time only for the purposes of the action in question; it does not preclude time running vis-à-vis other actions: Re Idylic Solutions Pty Ltd; Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Hobbs [2012] NSWSC 1276 at [2437] (Ward J, as her Honour then was), citing Terence Prime and Gary Scanlan, The Law of Limitation (Oxford University Press, 2nd ed, 2001) and Leferve v White [1990] 1 Lloyd's Rep 569.
59 Mr Nawar pleads that he bought a number of parcels of shares between 2012 and 2015, selling his last parcel of shares on 26 August 2015. In these circumstances, and assuming for present purposes that Mr Nawar could establish he suffered a loss on the sale of his shares, it appears that the latest date Mr Nawar's cause of action in misleading and deceptive conduct could have expired is 26 August 2021. Mr Nawar did not file an originating process until 27 October 2021. Further, the first time he pleaded a claim under s 1041H of the Act in a pleading accepted for filing by the Court was 4 January 2022. It follows that he is out of time. This is another reason why I am satisfied that Mr Nawar does not have reasonable prospects in respect of the claim for misleading and deceptive conduct.
60 The final issue in relation to Mr Nawar's misleading and deceptive conduct claim is that Mr Nawar has not pleaded, in a meaningful way, a causal link between the alleged conduct and his alleged loss. He has asserted that Newcrest's alleged misleading conduct has deflated the value of his shareholding insofar as he sustained a loss upon selling his shares in August 2015. There are a number of problems with this part of Mr Nawar's claim. First, a shareholder is not entitled to recover damages for a diminution in the value of their shareholding which merely reflects the loss suffered by a company: Colin Lockhart, The Law of Misleading or Deceptive Conduct (LexisNexis, 5th ed, 2018) 430 citing Groeneveld Aust Pty Ltd v Nolten [2010] VSC 249 at [36] (Ferguson J); see also Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v Newman Industries Ltd (No 2) [1982] 1 Ch 204 at 222 (Cumming-Bruce, Templeman and Brightman LJJ); Thomas v D'Arcy [2005] QCA 68; 1 Qd R 666 at [18] - [21] (McPherson JA (Williams JA and White JA agreeing)). Secondly, the evidence reveals that the majority of Mr Nawar's dealings in Newcrest shares (on his own behalf and jointly with his wife) occurred during the period from 15 March 2012 to 26 August 2015. Newcrest submits that Mr Nawar's contention that he was misled into acquiring Newcrest shares does not withstand scrutiny in circumstances where Mr Nawar's trading behaviour reveals he was, and continued to be, a "high volume trader" even after the drop in Newcrest's share price in late 2013. The evidence demonstrates that Newcrest's share price fluctuated between September 2012 and December 2013 but otherwise generally increased from 11 December 2013 to 26 August 2015 (when Mr Nawar sold his last parcel of shares). Mr Nawar continued to buy and sell shares well after the December 2013 share drop. Mr Nawar would have difficulty in establishing that the alleged representations caused him loss given the lengthy period in which he continued trading in Newcrest shares after 10 December 2013.