The deed proceedings
94TCA relies on the general words in cl 5. 1 of the Deed, and to a lesser extent, in cl 3.1(b), read with cl 9, as barring the JT Act Proceedings. Clause 5 provides:
5.1 Release by the Council
The Council releases and discharges TIDC from all actions, suits, claims, demands, causes of action, costs and expenses (including any existing unsatisfied costs orders), legal, equitable, under statute and otherwise, and other liabilities of any nature (whether or not the parties were or could have been aware of them) which the Council:
(a) now has;
(b) at any time had;
(c) may have; or
(d) but for this Deed, could or might have had, against TIDC in any way related to the Proceedings or the circumstances recited in this Deed or allegations or circumstances arising out of or in any way connected or related to the Proceedings the circumstances recited in this Deed, or anything in any way related to them except for the purposes of enforcing this Deed.
5.2 Inclusions
For the avoidance of doubt, the general release set out in clause 5.1 applies, without limitation in respect of:
(a) the Acquisitions;
(b) any facts, matters or circumstances in any way related to the Acquisitions;
(c) the acquisition and/or extinguishment of the Interests;
(d) any losses, damages, costs, expenses, claims, demands, interest or other liabilities that have been or may be occasioned by reason of the Acquisitions;
(e) without limiting clause 5.2(d) above, any legal or other experts' fees incurred by the Council and/or TIDC in connection with or related to the Acquisitions; and
(f) the negotiations which have resulted in the settlement of the Proceedings and the Council's claims.
95Clause 3 provides:
3. Settlement
3.1 Acknowledgment
The Council acknowledges that the payment of the Agreed Sum pursuant to clause 2.1 of this Deed, will be in full and final satisfaction of the Council's claim for compensation in respect of, inter alia:
(a) the Acquisitions;
(b) any facts, matters or circumstances in any way related to the Acquisitions;
(c) the acquisition and/or extinguishment of the Interests;
(d) any losses, damages, costs, expenses, claims, demands, interest or other liabilities which have been or may be occasioned by reason of the Acquisitions; and
(e) without limiting clause 3.1(d) above, any legal or experts' fees incurred by the Council in connection with or related to the Acquisitions.
3.2 Disposal of the Proceedings
(a) The Council must do immediately all things necessary to dispose of the Argyle Street Proceedings and the Darcy Street proceedings, including, without limitation, attending to the filing of Notices of Discontinuance.
(b) TIDC must do immediately all things necessary to dispose of the Court of Appeal Proceedings, including, without limitation, attending to the filing of a Notice of Discontinuance.
96Clause 9 provides:
9. Bar to further proceedings
This Deed may be pleaded as a full and complete defence by either party to any action, suit, or proceedings commenced, continued or taken by the other party or on its behalf in relation to any of the matters referred to in this Deed.
97The recitals in the Deed are as follows:
Background
A. TIDC served on the Council a Proposed Acquisition Notice under section 11 of the Acquisition Act in respect of TIDC's proposal to acquire the Argyle Street Land for the purposes of the Parramatta Transport Interchange.
B. TIDC served on the Council a Proposed Acquisition Notice under section 11 of the Acquisition Act in respect of TIDC's proposal to acquire the Darcy Street Land for the purposes of the Parramatta Transport Interchange.
C. On 21 May 2004 TIDC effected the Acquisitions by the publication of the Acquisition Notices in accordance with the provisions of the Acquisition Act.
D. On 2 July 2004 TIDC gave to the Council the Compensation Notice in respect of the Darcy Street Land.
E. On 14 July 2004 TIDC gave to the Council the Compensation Notice in respect of the Argyle Street Land.
F. The Council commenced the Argyle Street proceedings and the Darcy Street Proceedings.
G. The Advance Payments have been procured and received by the Council.
H. The Council and TIDC jointly engaged Ian Blackall of BEM Property Valuers and Consultants and agreed that his valuation of the Interests would be the amount of compensation payable for the Acquisitions.
I. Mr Blackall's valuation is in a report dated 23 June 2006, valuation number 06-1397, and the amounts specified in that report in respect of each of the Acquisitions are collectively expressed in this Deed as the Agreed Sum.
J. The parties have agreed to settle the Proceedings and the Council's claim in relation to the extinguishment/acquisition of the Interests and other matters related to the Acquisition on the terms set out in this Deed.
98Expressions used in the above provisions and recitals are defined in cl 1.1 of the Deed. None were referrable to the Roads with the argued exception of "Argyle Street Proceedings". The definitions included the following:
1.1 Definitions
In this Deed:
" Acquisitions " means the acquisitions of the Interests by TIDC by compulsory process pursuant to the terms of the Acquisition Act.
" Acquisition Act " means the Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991.
" Acquisition Notices " means the notices published in the New South Wales Government Gazette No 87 dated 21 May 2004 by which the Acquisitions were effected.
" Advance Payments " means the amounts of $3,789,000 for the Argyle Street land and $32,490 for the Darcy Street Land, being a total of $3,821,490 inclusive of GST.
" Agreed Sum " means the total of the Argyle Street proceedings Agreed Sum and the Darcy Street Proceedings Agreed Sum.
" Argyle Street Land " means the land comprised in Lot 2 in Deposited Plan 857877.
" Argyle Street Proceedings " means proceedings No 31234 of 2004 in the Class 3 jurisdiction of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales.
" Argyle Street Proceedings Agreed Sum " means the amount of $3,920,00 (exclusive of GST).
" Compensation Notices " means the notices given by TIDC to the Council dated 2 July 2004 (in respect of the Darcy Street Land) and 14 July 2004 (in respect of the Argyle Street Land) and advising the Council of the amounts of compensation determined by the Valuer-General as payable to the Council in respect of the acquisition of the Interests.
" Court of Appeal Proceedings " means proceedings No 40045 of 2006 in the Court of Appeal of New South Wales.
" Darcy Street Proceedings " means proceedings No 31283 of 2004 in the Class 3 jurisdiction of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales.
"Darcy Street Proceedings Agreed Sum " means the amount of $291,000 (exclusive of GST).
...
"Interests" means:
(a) the beneficial freehold interest of the Council in the Argyle Street Land; and
(b) the beneficial leasehold interest of the Council in the Darcy Street Land.
...
" Proceedings " means collectively:
(a) the Argyle Street Proceedings;
(b) the Darcy Street Proceedings;
(c) the Court of Appeal Proceedings; and
(d) proceedings No 40835 of 2005 commenced by TIDC against the Council in the Class 4 jurisdiction of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales.
99It is common ground that the Court numbers for the "Argyle Street Proceedings" and the "Darcy Street Proceedings" were mistakenly reversed in those definitions.
100The question of construction is whether the parties intended the extravagant result that the Council gave up a claim for compensation for the Roads under the JT Act which neither it, nor TCA, knew that it had.
101General words in a release do not extend to a liability of the releasee of which the releasor was unaware: Grant v John Grant and Sons Pty Ltd [1954] HCA 23 at [14]-[15], 91 CLR 112 at 129-130. Dixon CJ, Fullagar and Kitto JJ said:
From the authorities which have already been cited it will be seen that equity proceeded upon the principle that a releasee must not use the general words of a release as a means of escaping the fulfilment of obligations falling outside the true purpose of the transaction as ascertained from the nature of the instrument and the surrounding circumstances including the state of knowledge of the respective parties concerning the existence, character and extent of the liability in question and the actual intention of the releasor.
The facts stated in the third replication if true would show that the plaintiff company did not know of the defendant's liability it now seeks to enforce, did not intend to release it as part of the transaction and did not know of any intention on the part of the defendant that it should be released.
102In determining whether the terms of a general release should be treated as qualified, the "true purpose of the transaction" as determined in the manner identified in Grant is critical: Marinchek v Cabport Pty Ltd [2010] NSWCA 334 at [48].
103Consistently with this principle, cl 3.1(b) of the Deed does not extend, in my opinion, to TCA's liability to pay compensation for the Roads under the JT Act because the Council was unaware of that liability when the Deed was executed. Neither was TCA, according to the common ground between the parties.
104Let it be assumed, as TCA submits, that the Grant principle is inapplicable to cl 5.1 because it says that the release is of all liabilities "whether or not the parties were or could have been aware of them".
105The question remains whether cl 5.1, on its proper construction, released TCA's liability to the Council to pay compensation for the Roads under the JT Act .
106The construction of a written contract is to be undertaken by an examination of its text in the context of the surrounding circumstances known to the parties, or the surrounding circumstances that can be reasonably assumed were known to the parties at the time of execution. It is not necessary to find an ambiguity in the words before the Court can look at surrounding circumstances as an aid to construction. The use of recitals to aid in the construction of the operative provisions of a deed is not restricted to circumstances in which those provisions are ambiguous. Recitals can be used as an aid to construction of operative provisions, as a means by which the surrounding circumstances and purposes of the transaction can be ascertained: Franklins Pty Ltd v Metcash Trading Ltd [2009] NSWCA 407, 264 ALR 15 at [14], [42] - [43], [63], [305], [322].
107It is permissible to have recourse to the context, including the history, in which the Deed takes its meaning for the purpose of identifying the subject matter, that is the disputes and claims, to which the Deed was intended to relate. One of many statements is that of Gleeson CJ in International Air Transport Association v Ansett Australian Holidays Ltd [2008] HCA 3, 234 CLR 151 at [8], as follows (omitting citations):
In giving a commercial contract a businesslike interpretation, it is necessary to consider the language used by the parties, the circumstances addressed by the contract, and the objects which it is intended to secure. An appreciation of the commercial purpose of a contract calls for an understanding of the genesis of the transaction, the background, and the market. This is a case in which the Court's general understanding of background and purpose is supplemented by specific information as to the genesis of the transaction. The Agreement has a history; and that history is part of the context in which the contract takes its meaning.
Applied in Marinchek v Cabport Pty Ltd [2010] NSWCA 334.
108There is no conceptual limit to what can be regarded as "background", provided it is relevant. The background is not confined to the factual background but can include the state of the law (for example, one can take into account that the parties are unlikely to have intended to agree to something unlawful or legally ineffective) or common assumptions that were quite mistaken : Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA v Ali [2002] 1 AC 251 at 269 per Lord Hoffmann. Relevantly, TCA submits, the "Proceedings" were "the Argyle Street Proceedings".
109The relevant background to the Deed included the following:
(a)The JT Act guaranteed, and imposed on an acquiring authority a liability to pay, compensation which was not less than market value.
(b)TCA's compensation notice to the Council had made a single offer of compensation for both Lot 2 and the Roads purportedly under the JT Act . The notice told the Council that it could accept that single offer or object to the Court, in which case TCA would pay the Council 90 per cent of the offer upon being notified of the institution of the proceedings.
(c)TCA's compensation notice to the Council and the Valuer-General's enclosed Notice of Determination had wrongly represented that compensation for the Roads, including market value, had been determined under, and constituted an offer under, the JT Act .
(d)In fact, the Valuer-General had determined compensation for the Roads under the Roads Act and not the JT Act . No objection to an offer of compensation determined under the Roads Act lay to this Court.
(a)In contrast, the Valuer-General had determined compensation for Lot 2 under the JT Act . An objection to an offer of compensation determined under the JT Act lay to this Court.
(b)The 2004 Proceedings were expressed in the originating Application to be under the JT Act . They could not legally have included an objection to an offer of compensation for the Roads made under the Roads Act and not under the JT Act .
(c)The 2004 Proceedings were conducted through the points of claim and defence as limited to an objection to an offer of compensation for Lot 2 only.
(d)The subsequent settlement negotiations, valuation and recitals in the Deed included Lot 2 and excluded the Roads.
(a)As the compensation notice invited it to do, the Council lodged an objection at least to Lot 2 in the 2004 Proceedings and requested and obtained payment of 90 per cent of the amount of the single offer of compensation in the compensation notice.
110The main hinge of TCA's cl 5.1 case is its reference to "the Proceedings". TCA submits that cl 5.1 released its liability for the Roads under the JT Act because the liability was "related to the Proceedings...or circumstances arising out of or in any way connected or related to the Proceedings".
111Clause 2.1 of the Deed shows that the payments to be made by TCA to the Council were linked only to the compulsory acquisition of Lot 2 and Darcy Street:
2.1 Agreed Sum
(a) TIDIC will pay to the Council...the Agreed Sum in connection with the Acquisitions.
(b) The Council acknowledges and agrees that it has received the Advance Payments from TIDIC and that such payments constitute part payment of, and will be off-set against, the payment of the Agreed Sum under cl 2.1(a).
112Under the Deed, the amount payable (and subsequently paid) by TCA to the Council was $389,510.00. This is calculated, by reference to cl 2.1 of the Deed and the definitions, by taking the "Agreed Sum" totalling $4,211,000 and deducting the "Advance Payments" of $3,821,490. The "Agreed Sum" and the "Advance Payments", as defined, related only to Lot 2 and the Darcy Street Leasehold. On TCA's construction, the parties intended by the Deed to settle for a consideration of $389,500 not only the two matters specified therein, but (inter alia) the Roads claim. The Roads claim is for a much larger area which had never been determined as required by the JT Act , and which is potentially worth much more.
113The specific matters listed in cl 5.2 of the Deed do not make any specific reference to the Roads. But that is of little significance because the chapeau of cl 5.2 employs the familiar drafting language "without limitation", which prevents the listed matters effecting a narrowing of the ambit of cl 5.1.
114The Council suggests that the Deed cannot be as wide as TCA contends because (a) if it were, it would have released TCA's liability for its later acquisition in April 2007 of the Council's Darcy Street Freehold; and (b) the parties did not treat the Deed as being that wide because TCA's liability for that acquisition became the subject of a deed of compensation in May 2007 under which more than $2,000,000 was paid. This submission addresses post contractual conduct. Conduct after the date of a contract is inadmissible to interpret the contract. However, such conduct is admissible, and may be entitled to significant weight for the purpose of identifying the subject matter of the contract: County Securities Pty Ltd v Challenger Group Holdings Ltd [2008] NSWCA 193 at [18] - [24]. The post-deed conduct to which the Council refers does not assist me because liability for the Darcy Street Freehold arose after the date of the Deed and on no view can the subject matter of the Deed be construed as including a liability arising after the date of the Deed.
115"Proceedings" are defined in cl 1.1 to include the "Argyle Street Proceedings", which is in turn defined as proceedings No 31234 of 2004. These proceedings were treated in the Deed as comprising or including an objection to the compensation offered for Lot 2. TCA's submission is that the "Argyle Street Proceedings" also included an objection to an offer of compensation for the Roads. On that premise, TCA seeks to draw some comfort from cl 3.2(a), which requires the Council to discontinue the Argyle Street Proceedings, thereby discontinuing the Roads objection. Even if this premise is correct (which is in issue), it is not dispositive.
116The cl 5.1 words "in any way related to the Proceedings or circumstances arising out of or in any way connected or related to the Proceedings" are wide, but they are capable of releasing TCA of its obligation only insofar as the term "the Proceedings" can be taken to include the Roads. If "the Proceedings", and more particularly the "Argyle Street Proceedings", were not intended in the Deed to include proceedings for the Roads, those words cannot bring such proceedings within the scope of the cl 5.1 release.
117The "Argyle Street Proceedings" are defined in cl. 1.1 to mean "proceedings No 31234 of 2004 in the Class 3 jurisdiction of the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales." No further definition is provided. Thus, the Deed and the circumstances surrounding it must be looked at as a whole to determine what, precisely, the parties meant by the term "Proceedings".
118I have earlier held, when considering the Council's s 66(3) motion, that the 2004 proceedings, on a textual analysis of the originating Application, did not include an objection to an amount of compensation offered for the Roads: see [79] - [88] above. On this logic, the Roads did not form part of the proceedings.
119But, the question of construction in relation to the term "Argyle Street Proceedings" is not what was the nature of the 2004 Proceedings as disclosed merely by a textual analysis of the originating Application. The question is what would the Deed convey by its use of that term, in the context in which it was used, to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge reasonably available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the Deed.
120The recitals and definitions suggest that the parties had specifically agreed to settle only the Argyle Street proceedings insofar as they related to Lot 2 and the Darcy Street Leasehold proceedings, and to settle the Council's claim in relation to the acquisition of Lot 2 and the Darcy Street Leasehold - but not the Roads. The defined term "Argyle Street Proceedings Agreed Sum" is the recent Blackell assessment of compensation for Lot 2 only. The "Argyle Street Land" and "Argyle Street Proceedings Agreed Sum" are concerned only with Lot 2. "Interests", "Acquisitions", "Advance Payments" and "Compensation Notices" are concerned only with Lot 2 and the Darcy Street Leasehold.
121In striking contrast, there is no mention of the Roads in the recitals or the definitions, even where one would expect them to be mentioned if they were within the contemplation of the parties: for example, in the definition of "Interests" and "Compensation Notices" and in the amount referred to in "Argyle Street Proceedings Agreed Sum".
122In my opinion, the Deed would convey to a reasonable person, having all the background knowledge, that its reference to "Argyle Street Proceedings" was not meant to include an objection to an offer of compensation for the Roads.
123That conclusion is not affected by the Council's letter of 21 October 2004 (on which TCA places some reliance) stating that the Council had lodged an objection on the "offer of compensation" in the compensation notice and requesting a 90 per cent advance payment: see [37] above. Any objection had to be to the "offer of compensation" in the compensation notice because the compensation notice made only one offer of compensation for both parcels of land in the sum of $4,215,000.00. The letter did no more than TCA's compensation notice invited it to do when that notice said: "If you lodge an objection with the Land and Environment Court you will be paid 90 per cent of $4,215,000 within 28 days after notice of institution of proceedings is given to [TCA]": see [25] above.
124Alternatively, TCA submits, perhaps faintly, that an objection to the amount offered for the roads is, in terms of the foot of cl 5.1, a "circumstance" which must be regarded as being "in any way connected or related to...the circumstances recited" in the Deed, because those recitals included publication of the acquisition notice and the compensation notice for Lot 2, which (as it happened) also referred to the Roads. I do not accept the submission. The issue is whether those words are wide enough to include TCA's liability to pay compensation for the Roads under the JT Act . The recitals show every sign of having been carefully drafted in order to refer only to the circumstances of the acquisition and compensation for (relevantly) Lot 2 and to exclude the Roads. The mere fact that TCA elected to use one acquisition notice and one compensation notice when it could have used two, does not mean that TCA's liability to pay compensation for the Roads under the JT Act was "connected or related to" recited circumstances concerning Lot 2 only, within the meaning of cl 5.1.
125For these reasons, in my opinion, the Deed does not apply to the Roads. Consequently the Deed does not bar the 2010 JT Act Proceedings. Insofar as the summons also seeks a declaration that the Deed applies to the 2004 Proceedings relating to Lot 2 and the Darcy Street Leasehold Proceedings, that has never been in dispute between the parties and it would be inappropriate make that declaration.
126Accordingly, TCA's summons should be dismissed.