Perpetual Trustee Company Ltd v Moussa
[2013] NSWSC 131
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Supreme Court of NSW
Decision date
2011-07-01
Before
McCallum J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
Judgment 1These are proceedings under s 60 of the Real Property Act 1900 for possession of a property in Arncliffe in the State of New South Wales. The proceedings were commenced by Perpetual Trustee Company Ltd on the strength of defaults in the payment of interest under a loan agreement allegedly secured by a registered mortgage over the property. However the defendant, Mrs Mariam Moussa, who is the sole registered proprietor of the property, claims that the signatures attributed to her on both the loan agreement and the mortgage were forged by her son and that the mortgage was granted to Perpetual without her knowledge or consent. 2Perpetual accepts that, if the signatures were indeed forged, the mortgage (on its proper construction) does not secure the unpaid interest relied upon by way of default or indeed any amount owing under the loan agreement. In those circumstances, without abandoning its primary claim, Perpetual amended its pleading to seek possession on the alternative premise that Mrs Moussa may be liable to make restitution for the amounts advanced by Perpetual, since those amounts were applied to discharge an earlier mortgage to the National Australia Bank (also alleged by Mrs Moussa to have been forged) and otherwise for Mrs Moussa's benefit. An aspect of the alternative claim is the further premise that any such amount Mrs Moussa may be liable to pay by way of restitution is secured by the mortgage, notwithstanding the alleged forgery. 3Recognising the complexity and breadth of the issues raised by those contentions, Perpetual seeks an order for the preliminary determination of a separate question. As will be apparent, the application raises questions of some legal and logical difficulty. Perpetual's intention is to obtain a ruling as to whether, if forged, the mortgage secures the payment of any amount Mrs Moussa may be liable to pay by way of restitution. However, Perpetual accepts that any liability to pay restitution remains to be determined at a further hearing. There was accordingly extensive debate at the hearing as to whether any separate question could appropriately be formulated. 4Perpetual ultimately proposed a separate question as follows: Are some or all of [the amounts paid by Perpetual] on or about 16 September 2005 capable of being amounts owing as defined in the Perpetual Mortgage Memorandum with the consequence that each or all of them are secured by the Perpetual mortgage? 5The parties agreed that, if the order for separate determination of that question were made, I should proceed to answer the question without further hearing. 6For the reasons that follow, I have determined that the order for separate decision of that question should be made and that the answer to the question is "no". Circumstances in which the application was brought 7For the purpose of Perpetual's application, Perpetual and Mrs Moussa submitted agreed and assumed facts. After the conclusion of the hearing, Mrs Moussa filed a cross-claim against the Registrar General, who then sought to be heard on the application. The proceedings were re-listed for further hearing for that purpose. The Registrar General was not in a position to agree to the "agreed facts" but was content for the Court to proceed on the basis that all of the propositions submitted by Perpetual and Mrs Moussa could be treated as assumed facts for the purpose of Perpetual's application. The following summary is based on that material. 8Mrs Moussa was originally one of two registered proprietors of the property together with her former husband. They were registered as joint tenants of the property. In 2002, a mortgage to RAMS Mortgage Corporation Ltd was registered on the title. In April 2004, Mrs Moussa's former husband consented to sell his interest in the property to Mrs Moussa. Mrs Moussa asserts that her signature was forged on both the RAMS mortgage and that agreement for sale. She alleges that her son, Mr Ali Moussa, then forged her signature on a loan agreement and mortgage with the National Australia Bank ("NAB"). For the purposes of the present application only, Perpetual accepts that Mrs Moussa signature is repeatedly forged, as alleged by her. 9The NAB paid out the RAMS mortgage (approximately $100,000), $280,000 to one E Moussa, stamp duty and various related settlement expenses, totalling $394,720.16. It debited the mortgage account in the amount of $420,000 and credited $23,340.69 to a second NAB account in Mrs Moussa's name. As at 17 June 2004, Mrs Moussa was the sole registered proprietor and NAB was the first registered mortgagee on the title. 10The Perpetual loan agreement and mortgage were purportedly entered into by Mrs Moussa in September 2005. Again, for the purposes of the present application, Perpetual was content to assume that Mrs Moussa had no knowledge of those transactions and that her signature on the relevant documents was forged by her son. 11On 16 September 2005, Perpetual advanced $451,741.17 to discharge the NAB mortgage; $112,755.18 by bank cheque in favour of Mrs Moussa and $2,150.00 to other parties in respect of the settlement. The claim in restitution is based on Perpetual's payment of those amounts (referred to in the pleading as the PTCL Amounts). The bank cheque in favour of Mrs Moussa was deposited into a Westpac account in her name. She denies that she was in substance or fact the customer on that account. As at 6 October 2005, Perpetual was the first registered mortgagee on the title to the property. 12Repayments on the loan from Perpetual were evidently made for some period. The original statement of claim filed by Perpetual on 4 March 2010 relies upon a default in repayment on 30 November 2009. The pleading asserts that Perpetual served on Mrs Moussa notices pursuant to s 57(2)(b) of the Real Property Act and s 80 of the Consumer Credit Code requiring her to pay $7,744.05 on or before 19 February 2010, being the amount of two alleged missed interest payments and enforcement expenses. The only relief sought in the original statement of claim was an order for possession. 13By her amended defence filed 13 August 2010, Mrs Moussa admits the existence of the loan agreement and the mortgage but denies signing those documents, asserting that the signatures attributed to her were forged by her son without her knowledge or consent. The defence asserts on that basis that the loan agreement is therefore void and, accordingly, that the mortgage (although registered) secures no debt. 14On 15 July 2011, Perpetual filed an amended statement of claim seeking, in the alternative and conditional upon Mrs Moussa succeeding in establishing that the loan agreement and mortgage were not signed by her, a declaration that she owes Perpetual the PTCL Amounts in restitution and an order that she pay those amounts. The proposed separate question does not purport to determine Perpetual's entitlement to that relief. Reasons for determining that the question should be decided separately 15Rule 28.2 of the UCPR states: The court may make orders for the decision of any question separately from any other question, whether before, at or after any trial or further trial in the proceedings. 16The principles relating to the determination of separate questions under that rule are conveniently summarised in the judgment of Hallen AsJ (as his Honour then was) in Southwell v Bennett [2010] NSWSC 1372 at [15]. Relevant to these proceedings are the following principles there stated: (e) As a general rule, the discretionary power to order separate determination of a question should be approached with caution: Perre v Apand Pty Ltd [1999] HCA 36; (1999) 198 CLR 180 at [436], per Callinan J; Tepko Pty Limited v The Water Board [2001] HCA 19; (2001) 206 CLR 1, at [168]-[170] per Kirby and Callinan JJ: Commonwealth Bank v Clune [2008] NSWSC 1125 at [6], per Johnson J; Bailey and Bailey v Director-General Department of Energy Climate Change and Water and Ors [2010] NSWSC 979 at [4] per Studdert AJ. (f) In exercising its discretion, the overriding purpose of the Civil Procedure Act 2005, namely the just, quick and cheap resolution of the real issues in the proceedings (s 56) must be given effect. (g) Generally, all questions of fact and law should be determined at the one time: Tallglen Pty Ltd v Pay TV Holdings Pty Ltd (1996) 22 ACSR 130 at 141-42; SPI Spirits (Cyprus) Ltd v Diageo Australia Ltd [2006] FCA 14. If the Court is to depart from that position, the party seeking the separate determination of a question must satisfy the Court that it would be 'just and convenient' for that order to be made: Reading Australia Pty Ltd v Australian Mutual Provident Society [1999] FCA 718 at [8]-[9], see also Energy Australia v Australian Energy Limited [2001] FCA 1049. (h) While it may appear attractive, superficially, to order the trial of a separate question, experience often shows that it will not be so, for example, because of the complications that can arise in relation to appeals, or to overlapping factual issues, or to questions of credit, if the same witnesses have to give evidence in relation to a question that is separated and those questions that are not: Idoport Pty Ltd v National Australia Bank Ltd [2000] NSWSC 1215 at [7(6)] per Einstein J.; Owners Corporation Sp 70672 v Trustees of Roman Catholic Church [2010] NSWSC 946 at [16] per Ball J. (j) Before a question is to be separately determined, it must be possible to clearly see that it will facilitate the quicker and cheaper resolution of the proceedings: Tallglen v Pay TV Pty Ltd at 142, per Giles CJ in Comm D; Parramatta Stadium Trust v Civil and Civic Pty Ltd; Century Medical v THLD (NSWSC, 27 August 1996, unreported). (n) It may be appropriate to determine a separate question, even if it will not resolve all the issues, provided that there is a strong prospect that the parties will agree upon the result when the core of the dispute has been decided, or if the decision will obviate unnecessary and expensive hearings of other questions: City of Swan v Lehman Brothers Australia Ltd [2009] FCA 784; (2009) 73 ACSR 86 at [27] per Rares J. The determination of the one question should enable a sensible reassessment of litigation risks, which is generally likely to encourage some form of settlement discussions. (r) Each case will have its own dynamics that dictate the relative importance of various factors to be considered in exercising the discretion conferred. 17Mrs Moussa and the Registrar General opposed the separate decision of the question propounded by Perpetual. It was submitted on behalf of the Registrar General that, notwithstanding the comprehensive agreed and assumed facts submitted for the purpose of the application, there remained some uncertainties, the significance of which could not be known. In my assessment, any uncertainty as to the factual premises of the separate question is inconsequential for present purposes. The critical issue sought to be raised is the proper construction of the mortgage on the assumption that both it and the loan agreement were forged without Mrs Moussa's knowledge or consent. That is an issue which can be determined regardless of the concerns identified on behalf of the Registrar General. 18It was further submitted that the question itself is poorly articulated in that it fails to formulate a precise legal question. Whilst reasonable minds can always differ on such matters, I am satisfied that the question is apt to capture a legal question of sufficient precision. As already noted, Perpetual accepts that, on the assumption that the transaction documents were forged without Mrs Moussa's knowledge and consent, the wording of the mortgage is such that it does not secure repayment of the loan. The issue Perpetual seeks to have determined is whether it can nonetheless salvage its claim for possession, without proceeding down the path of a lengthy hearing of the forgery issues, by resting on its alleged entitlement to an order for restitution. That is the only context in which the issue of the "capacity" of the PTCL Amounts to be secured by the mortgage is raised on the pleadings. In effect, Perpetual seeks a ruling as to whether, as a matter of law, its alternative basis for seeking possession must also fail (on the proper construction of the mortgage and on the assumed premise that the relevant documents were forged). 19A more difficult issue is the utility of the separate determination. Perpetual acknowledged that, even if the question were answered in the affirmative, it would remain to be determined, at a further hearing, whether Mrs Moussa was in fact liable to make restitution as alleged. Perpetual suggested that this should occur at a further, separate hearing, again so as to avoid the need for a lengthy hearing on the fraud defences, which would almost certainly involve the joinder of additional parties and the engagement of handwriting experts. 20Plainly, there would be real difficulties with that course. Most significantly, as submitted on behalf of Mrs Moussa and the Registrar General, it may entail requiring Mrs Moussa to be cross-examined twice. Further, Mrs Moussa's cross-claims in the proceedings may require determination of the fraud allegations in any event. As submitted on her behalf, the effect of the alleged forgery of the NAB documents and her denial that she had the benefit of the funds deposited in the account in her name are matters that would have to be determined as an aspect of Perpetual's restitution claim. Accordingly, the joinder of additional parties and the need for a lengthy hearing of the allegations of fraud would not necessarily be avoided by a positive determination of the separate question. 21In my view, however, the determination of the question has real utility. The proposition that the mortgage would secure any amount payable by way of restitution is novel and is an important premise of Perpetual's present strategy. Perpetual submitted that an adverse determination on that issue would prompt it to re-assess its position and that a determination either way would promote the resolution of the proceedings. Bearing in mind that it was Perpetual that brought forward the application, that submission should not lightly be disregarded. I am satisfied that the determination of the separate question should enable a sensible reassessment of litigation risks, which is likely to encourage settlement discussions. 22For those reasons, I am satisfied that the order for separate determination should be made.