The freezing orders and the defendants' access to funds
4 The plaintiffs are the trustees of the bankrupt estate of the fifth defendant, Tom Karas. The proceeding has a long history. The relevant background to it is set out in Rambaldi (Trustee) v Meletsis (2022) 157 ACSR 652; [2022] FCA 73 (Davies J). On 17 February 2022, Davies J made final orders in the proceeding including, relevantly, entering judgment for the plaintiffs against Mr Meletsis and Hallmark. As at 1 March 2022, the judgment debts owed by the defendants had yet to be finally determined and paid to the plaintiffs.
5 The defendants filed five affidavits of Mr Meletsis, sworn on 6, 7, 12 and 17 March, and 13 April 2022, in relation to the orders they sought before me at various stages. Westpac also filed an affidavit of Thi Thuy Vi Nguyen affirmed 21 April 2022, pursuant to a direction I made at the hearing on 14 April about the issue of costs. I have extracted the excerpts of correspondence between the parties and Westpac below from these affidavits.
6 On 1 March, the plaintiffs made an urgent ex parte application for interim freezing orders. After a hearing that afternoon, I ordered, among others, that freezing orders be made against the first and second defendants, relevantly in the following terms:
TO: NICK MELETSIS and HALLMARK GROUP (AUST) PTY LTD (ACN 053 243 995)
This is a 'freezing order' made against you on 1 March 2022 by the Honourable Justice O'Callaghan at a hearing after the Court was given the undertakings set out in Schedule A to this order.
The Court orders:
…
FREEZING OF ASSETS
6. (a) You must not remove from Australia or in any way dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of any of your assets in Australia ('Australian assets') up to the unencumbered value of $4,200,000 (the Relevant Amount).
(b) If the unencumbered value of your Australian assets exceeds the Relevant Amount, you may remove any of those assets from Australia or dispose of or deal with them or diminish their value, so long as the total unencumbered value of your Australian assets still exceeds the Relevant Amount.
(c) If the unencumbered value of your Australian assets is less than the Relevant Amount, and you have assets outside Australia ('ex-Australian assets'):
(i) You must not dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of any of your Australian assets and ex-Australian assets up to the unencumbered value of your Australian and ex-Australian assets of the Relevant Amount; and
(ii) You may dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of any of your ex-Australian assets, so long as the unencumbered value of your Australian assets and ex-Australian assets still exceeds the Relevant Amount.
7. For the purposes of this order:
(a) Your assets include:
(i) all your assets, whether or not they are in your name and whether they are solely or co-owned;
(ii) any asset which you have the power, directly or indirectly, to dispose of or deal with as if it were your own (you are to be regarded as having such power if a third party holds or controls the asset in accordance with your direct or indirect instructions); and
(iii) for the first defendant, the following property assets in particular (and if any of those assets have been sold, the net proceeds of the sale):
[The order described two property assets.]
(iv) For the second defendant, the following property assets in particular (and if any of those assets have been sold, the net proceeds of the sale):
[The order described seven property assets.]
…
EXCEPTIONS TO THIS ORDER
10. This order does not prohibit you from:
(a) for the first defendant, paying $2,000 per week on your ordinary living expenses;
(b) paying up to $25,000 on your reasonable legal expenses;
(c) dealing with or disposing of any of your assets (which have not vested in your bankruptcy) in the ordinary and proper course of your business, including paying business expenses bona fide and properly incurred; and
(d) in relation to matters not falling within (a), (b) or (c), dealing with or disposing of any of your assets in discharging obligations bona fide and properly incurred under a contract entered into before this order was made, provided that before doing so you give the applicants, if possible, at least two working days written notice of the particulars of the obligation.
11. You and the applicants may agree in writing that the exceptions in the preceding paragraph are to be varied. In that case the applicants or you must as soon as practicable file with the Court and serve on the other a minute of a proposed consent order recording the variation signed by or on behalf of the applicants and you, and the Court may order that the exceptions are varied accordingly.
…
PERSONS OTHER THAN THE APPLICANT AND RESPONDENT
14. Set off by banks: This order does not prevent any bank from exercising any right of set off it has in respect of any facility which it gave you before it was notified of this order.
15. Bank withdrawals by the respondent: No bank need inquire as to the application or proposed application of any money withdrawn by you if the withdrawal appears to be permitted by this order.
…
7 The orders also contained a penal notice, in the usual terms, as follows:
TO: NICK MELETSIS and HALLMARK GROUP (AUST) PTY LTD (ACN 053 243 995)
IF YOU (BEING THE PERSONS BOUND BY THIS ORDER):
(A) REFUSE OR NEGLECT TO DO ANY ACT WITHIN THE TIME SPECIFIED IN THIS ORDER FOR THE DOING OF THE ACT; OR
(B) DISOBEY THE ORDER BY DOING AN ACT WHICH THE ORDER REQUIRES YOU NOT TO DO,
YOU WILL BE LIABLE TO IMPRISONMENT, SEQUESTRATION OF PROPERTY OR OTHER PUNISHMENT.
ANY OTHER PERSON WHO KNOWS OF THIS ORDER AND DOES ANYTHING WHICH HELPS OR PERMITS YOU TO BREACH THE TERMS OF THIS ORDER MAY BE SIMILARLY PUNISHED.
8 The freezing orders were made substantially in the form set out in Annexure A to the Freezing Orders Practice Note (GPN-FRZG) including, as noted in the orders, the undertakings given to the court by counsel for the plaintiffs. The proceeding was otherwise adjourned to 7 March.
9 The next morning, Deniz Dostol Berk of Frenkel Partners, the legal representatives for the plaintiffs, emailed Westpac, attaching a copy of the 1 March orders by way of service, and identifying a Westpac bank account that the plaintiffs understood to be conducted by Hallmark. About two hours later, George Kanon, a Risk Analyst at Westpac, responded to Mr Berk, confirming receipt and that the request was "being looked at as a priority".
10 On 3 March, David Phillips, the legal representative for the defendants, emailed Westpac requesting urgent access by Mr Meletsis to $2,000 for living expenses and $25,000 for legal expenses, as provided for in the orders. Mr Phillips noted that Mr Meletsis needed the funds "to pay for his family's basic needs given that the immediate effect of the Freezing Orders has been to deny him access to everything", and the legal fees were "desperately needed" to confirm counsel's engagement for the next hearing on 7 March. Mr Phillips' email also requested that the $2,000 in living expenses be first drawn from Mr Meletsis' personal account and, if there were insufficient funds in that account, that Westpac transfer the required funds into Mr Meletsis' personal account from an account in the name of Genesis Holdings (Aust) Pty Ltd (Genesis), an entity of which Mr Meletsis was the sole director and shareholder.
11 On the same day, Westpac sent a letter to Mr Meletsis, relevantly in the following terms:
As Westpac Banking Corporation has been put on notice of the Freezing Order, Westpac Banking Corporation has placed withdrawal restrictions on the following account(s) to ensure it does not permit or facilitate a breach of the Freezing Order:
[The letter identified four accounts.]
(Together, the Relevant Accounts)
What this means for you - you will need to attend your local branch to conduct all permitted withdrawals
Westpac Banking Corporation has placed withdrawal restrictions on the Relevant Accounts so any withdrawals can only occur at the branch. This is because Westpac Banking Corporation has no ability to monitor the Relevant Accounts unless the withdrawal restrictions are in place.
…
Until the Freezing Order is no longer in effect you will need to go into your local branch to conduct any withdrawals on the Relevant Accounts permitted under Freezing Order. You can email legalnotices@westpac.com.au to advise of the transactions you wish to conduct and we will confirm whether the withdrawals are permitted under the Freezing Order before you attend the branch. Please note that withdrawal requests may not be completed on the same day so we recommend that you email the withdrawal request through to us at least 1 - 2 business days beforehand, together with any supporting documents required, so we can confirm the withdrawal is permitted under the Freezing Order.
Westpac Banking Corporation has taken the above steps to ensure that the Bank is compliant with the Freezing Order that have been served on Westpac Banking Corporation and to ensure that Westpac Banking Corporation is not helping, permitting or assisting with a breach of the Freezing Order.
Westpac Banking Corporation is unable to remove the withdrawal restrictions on the Relevant Accounts until we receive:
(i) A further order from the Court stating that the Freezing Order are no longer in place; or
(ii) If you provide us with written consent from all the parties named in the Court proceedings which states that Westpac Banking Corporation is not required to monitor … one or all of Relevant Accounts.
12 Westpac also sent letters in similar terms to the entities controlled by Mr Meletsis that day.
13 On 4 March, Mr Berk emailed Mr Kanon requesting urgent confirmation that Westpac had taken "all necessary action in accordance with the freezing order". Mr Kanon responded about ten minutes later, confirming that Westpac had "actioned the orders accordingly".
14 Several hours later, Mr Kanon responded to Mr Phillips' 3 March email, relevantly as follows:
We have sent correspondence to your clients … regarding the process for requesting payments for expenses and how the branch staff can assist.
In relation to the $2000 withdrawal for living expenses as per Order 10(a), Mr Meletsis is only able to withdraw those funds from personal accounts held in his name. You can seek amended orders that allow Mr Meletsis to withdraw funds in relation to 10(a) from business accounts that he has authority to or provide written consent from all parties in this matter to allow this. If you obtain amended orders to allow for this, then please provide us with a copy and we will make arrangements for your client.
In relation to the $25,000 withdrawal/transfer for Legal expenses as per 10(b), we require a tax invoice/s to be sent and reviewed before permitting payments of this nature.
15 Mr Meletsis deposed that, as at 6 March, he had "yet to be able to obtain access to the $2,000 living allowance for ordinary expenses".
16 The parties returned before the court on 7 March. After that hearing, I made orders varying the freezing order. This included amending paragraph 7(a)(ii) to include in the definition of "assets" the Genesis bank account identified in Mr Phillips' 3 March email, and varying the exceptions to the freezing order, specified in paragraph 10, including to:
(1) remove existing paragraph 10(a) (the general exception for Mr Meletsis to pay $2,000 per week on his ordinary living expenses);
(2) add new paragraphs to order 10 to allow withdrawals from specific business accounts (including the Genesis account) for various payments, the nature and amounts of which were specified in the order;
(3) remove existing paragraph 10(b) (the general exception for the defendants to pay up to $25,000 on their reasonable legal expenses) and replace it with a paragraph permitting the drawing of $165,000 from the Genesis account to be paid to Mr Phillips' trust account, on the condition that it could only be used for payment of the first and second defendants' legal fees and disbursements in the proceeding and in any appeal for work performed on or after 1 March 2022; and
(4) add a new paragraph providing for the permitted withdrawals from the Genesis account to be deposited into Mr Meletsis' personal account, then to be drawn to meet the permitted payments.
17 The proceeding was then adjourned to 18 March.
18 Mr Berk sent a copy of the 7 March orders to Mr Kanon that evening via email. In that email, Mr Berk noted that the orders allowed "restricted and specific withdrawals" to be made from the Genesis account.
19 On 8 March, Mr Phillips emailed Mr Kanon, referring to the 7 March orders and noting that:
(1) the permitted payments set out in the 7 March orders were entitled to be made;
(2) a tax invoice setting out the defendants' legal fees was not necessary to permit payment of the defendants' legal expenses, as the permitted payment of $165,000 provided in the orders as varied was to be paid into Mr Phillips' trust account "to be dealt with in accordance with the Order - nothing to do with the bank"; and
(3) the business account for State Securities Pty Ltd was to be left open and available for Mr Meletsis to operate, as permitted by the order.
20 On 9 March, Mr Phillips again emailed Mr Kanon, setting out at length nine permitted payments, requesting that the permitted payments be made, and attaching a copy of Exhibit NM-5 to an affidavit of Mr Meletsis sworn 6 March which set out the list of current liabilities of himself personally and his entities, as well as overdue payments. The email also said "if the Bank does not act in accordance with the above, my clients have little alternative other than to make an ex parte application to the Court to compel the bank to make the Court ordered payments. Should that be necessary, this email will be produced in support of an Order for indemnity costs".
21 Westpac did not respond to either of Mr Phillips' 8 or 9 March emails, and on the evening of 12 March, Mr Phillips emailed Westpac, copying Mr Berk, attaching by way of service an interlocutory application and supporting affidavit of Mr Meletsis of the same date. The first and second defendants, by that interlocutory application, sought the following orders:
1. The discharge of the Freezing Order made 1 March 2022 and varied on 7 March 2022 (Freezing Orders).
2. Further or in the alternative, an interim mandatory injunction requiring Westpac Banking Corporation Ltd to allow withdrawals in accordance with the Freezing Orders.
3. Orders permitting the 1st and 2nd Defendants to give security in lieu of a Freezing Order pursuant to Order 12(a)(iii) of the Freezing Orders.
4. Pursuant to Rule 36.05 of the Federal Court Rules 2011, an order extending the time within which the 1st and 2nd Defendants may file a notice of appeal to the judgment and orders of Justice Davies made 17 February 2022 in VID1279/2017.
5. Costs[.]
6. Such further or other orders as the Court considers appropriate.
22 On 14 March, Mr Kanon emailed Mr Phillips in response to the "breakdown of the 9 payment requests as per the updated order" of 7 March, relevantly in the following terms:
Our usual process for allowing payments to be made in accordance with court orders is for the customer to come into branch to facilitate these in accordance with branch process and account authorities.
Could you please advise which Westpac branch and which day this week your client is able to attend to process the 9 payments. Upon your response we will reach out to the selected branch and confirm with you your client's attendance to complete the payments.
23 On 15 March, Mr Kanon emailed staff at Westpac's Fitzroy branch to advise that Mr Meletsis would be attending shortly to conduct the nine transfers identified in Mr Phillips' 9 March email, and requesting that the transfers be completed "as per your branch procedure". The email continued:
If any further withdrawals or transfers are requested by the customer, please notify our team and we will have to review them to see if they can be approved. Do not allow any withdrawals/transfers from any account/s Mr Meletsis has authority to without first seeking our approval.
24 Mr Phillips spoke with Allison Strickland, a lawyer at Westpac, during the course of the day. That same day, Ms Strickland emailed Mr Phillips, and relevantly set out the following process for making additional payments:
Please … let us know if there are any other expenses Mr Meletsis would like to conduct that fall within the scope of the Court Orders by providing details of the proposed payment, the relevant category these expenses fall into and any invoices to support payment.
Once we have the relevant invoices and details of the transfers, we can then review and work with the branch. We will then let you know a suitable time for Mr Meletsis to attend the Fitzroy branch to facilitate payments.
25 Mr Phillips responded the evening of 16 March, setting out a number of payments which Mr Meletsis sought to be made from his accounts and enclosing copies of tax invoices in support of those payments. These payments included various utility bills, interest payments, and the like.
26 On 17 March, Mr Meletsis attended the Fitzroy branch, but was informed by the Branch Manager, Anil Dhingra, that the contents of Mr Phillips' 16 March email had not been processed. Mr Meletsis had previously spoken to Ms Strickland, and Mr Meletsis deposed that both Ms Strickland and Mr Dhingra advised him that, while the permitted payments could be transferred into his personal account and the various Westpac accounts of his entities pursuant to the freezing orders (as varied), Westpac considered that the orders did not allow him to use those accounts to make the permitted payments.
27 Mr Meletsis also deposed that, as at 17 March, Mr Phillips had not received the permitted payment of $165,000 into his trust account.
28 Ms Strickland and Mr Phillips exchanged further emails on 17 March, and arranged for Mr Meletsis to attend the Fitzroy branch at 9:30am on 18 March to conduct the payments set out in Mr Phillips' 16 March email. Ms Strickland also noted that the branch advised that it was unable to pay invoices via the "BPay" system, but could instead issue cheques.
29 Mr Phillips also confirmed that Westpac's attendance at the resumption of the hearing the next day was not required, as follows:
As discussed I have spoken with the Associate requesting that the matter be stood down tomorrow morning until 2.15pm to enable the payment process to be completed and that your attendance is not required at this time.
30 As was arranged between Mr Phillips and Ms Strickland, Mr Meletsis attended the Fitzroy branch on the morning of 18 March. Mr Meletsis' evidence was that it took over two hours to process 34 payments, and that, in the following weeks, he spent about 25 hours ensuring that the payments had been received by the intended recipients. Mr Meletsis deposed as to numerous difficulties with these payments, including that:
(1) some electronic funds transfers made on 18 March did not contain any details or information from which the recipient could determine who made the payment;
(2) he believed that the provider of his life insurance only accepted payments by direct debit or credit card, and not via cheque as was provided by the bank; and
(3) a local telegraphic transfer had not been received by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission.
31 The parties attended a further hearing on 18 March. At that hearing, I made orders further varying the 1 March orders, relevantly:
(1) providing that the Commonwealth Bank of Australia account in the name of Mr Meletsis' mother (which, Mr Meletsis deposed, had also been frozen) was not subject to the freezing orders;
(2) adding a new order 10A which stated that the freezing orders did not prohibit the transfer of money between specified accounts operated by Mr Meletsis and his companies;
(3) adding a new order 10B which stated that the freezing orders "did not prohibit direct debits and similar automatic debits that were in place on each of the accounts listed in paragraph 10A prior to 1 March 2022 from being given effect for the purpose of enabling payments permitted by these orders"; and
(4) amending the list of permitted payments, including to provide for monthly withdrawals of the permitted payments.
32 For reasons which are not entirely clear, and I mean no criticism of any party by this, my chambers were not provided with a draft form of order reflecting the precise form of the variations until six days later, on 24 March. A sealed copy of those orders was made available to the parties on 25 March.
33 On 25 March, Mr Phillips sent a copy of those orders to Ms Strickland via email, and relevantly stated:
Would you please adhere to the variations made noting that the new paragraph 10B does not prohibit direct debits and similar automatic payments that were in place on each of the accounts listed in paragraph 10A prior to 1 March 2022 from being given effect for the purposes of enabling payments permitted by these Orders. You will further note that that there is no prohibition on the transfer of money between any of the accounts listed in 10A for the purpose of payments permitted by these Orders. There are a number of direct debits that await processing as well as the bank addressing payment (the bank may need to reprocess) previous direct debits that have been dishonoured since 1 March 2022.
Given the variations to these Orders, my client now has access to all of the accounts listed in 10A of the varied Orders for the purpose of making the permitted payments. My client now has the obligation to adhere to the Freezing Orders to make the permitted payments which are all fully disclosed and transparent. If this requires transfer of funds between accounts, he is able to do so as per Order 10A with no bank involvement.
34 Ms Strickland responded to Mr Phillips on 28 March, relevantly in the following terms:
I understand from your email that you would like [Westpac] to remove restrictions that have been placed on your client's accounts.
It is Westpac's position that it is unable to remove the restrictions on your client's accounts based on the recent Court Orders as the accounts listed in paragraph 10A of the Court Orders are still subject to the freezing order. In particular, the Court Orders amended paragraph 7(a)(ii) of the freezing order to exclude a listed Commonwealth Bank account but did not exclude the bank accounts held with Westpac. As a result, it is Westpac's position that the operation of the freezing order still applies to the Westpac accounts.
…
… Westpac is still required to maintain restrictions on your client's accounts as it has been served with copies of these Court Orders. It cannot otherwise monitor transactions (including direct debits previously set up) that are not between the accounts listed in paragraph 10A without the current restriction on the accounts. As previously advised, Westpac requires clear orders from the Court confirming that they are not required to monitor the accounts. Alternatively, if the parties to the proceeding agree clearly in writing that these accounts do not need to be restricted and monitored by Westpac, we would be prepared to consider this.
Westpac would be happy to assist your client with conducting any transactions permitted by the abovementioned paragraphs in accordance with its usual practice of informing legalnotices@westpac.com.au via email of the transactions to be conducted in advance. The Legal Notices team will advise when your client can attend a branch. Please note that if there are many transactions that it may take some time for this to be organised.
35 Mr Meletsis again attended the Fitzroy branch on 7 April to withdraw $2,000 in cash for living expenses. However, he was told by Mr Dhingra that he could not make the withdrawal and that such payment would require the written authority of Ms Strickland. Mr Meletsis also deposed that monthly direct debits on his bank accounts for April 2022 for permitted payments had been dishonoured by Westpac.
36 On 12 April, Mr Phillips sent a letter to Ms Strickland, via email, detailing the various difficulties that Mr Meletsis had had with accessing his accounts for permitted payments, requesting that Westpac enable Mr Meletsis to access and operate his accounts for the permitted purposes under the freezing orders, and that, absent such action, he would commence an urgent application and seek indemnity costs.
37 On 13 April, Mr Phillips forwarded his 12 April email and letter to Esther Nelson, a Senior Lawyer at Westpac, having received an out of office response from Ms Strickland. Ms Nelson responded that afternoon, relevantly as follows:
As discussed, in accordance with our usual processes for dealing with Court freezing orders relating to our customers that Westpac is served with:
• Westpac places restrictions on the customers' accounts which prevents any withdrawals being made unless they are conducted at the branch. This is because Westpac has no ability to monitor the customer's accounts unless the withdrawal restrictions are in place. Westpac takes this approach to ensure it is compliant with the court freezing orders it is served with to ensure that Westpac is not helping, permitting, or assisting with a breach of the court freezing orders.
• When a withdrawal restriction is placed on an account this means that:
(i) No withdrawals including electronic withdrawal transactions are permitted. This includes any direct debits that have been set up.
(ii) Deposits (including any electronic credits) will still be accepted into the account but cannot be withdrawn.
(iii) Any redraw facilities on loans will be restricted
• Until the Court Freezing Orders are no longer in effect the customer will need to conduct any withdrawals through their preferred branch. The process is that the customer can email legalnotices@westpac.com.au to advise of the transactions they wish to conduct, and Legal Notices will confirm whether the withdrawals are permitted under the freezing orders before the customer attends the branch. We generally recommend the customer provide at least 1- 2 business days' notice of the withdrawal, together with any supporting documents required, so the branch withdrawal is relatively smooth.
From our conversation I understand that your client has raised concerns about his ability to access funds in his restrained accounts for his living expenses and also to enable him to run his business. As discussed, if you are able to provide Westpac with written agreement from the parties in the proceedings that states that Westpac is not required to monitor your client's accounts in accordance with the Court Freezing Orders then Westpac will remove the restraints over those accounts. As set out above, Westpac has no ability to monitor or place limitations on accounts, so this agreement needs to be absolute. Alternatively if further orders are made by the Court to that affect, Westpac will comply with them.
38 Following receipt of that email, Mr Phillips contacted my chambers via email, copying (among others) Mr Berk and Ms Nelson and seeking a hearing for the following day. My chambers responded shortly thereafter, telling the parties that a hearing would take place the following day. I also directed that Mr Phillips notify the legal department at Westpac, including the general counsel, that a legal representative of Westpac was required to attend the hearing.
39 At the hearing the next morning, Ms S Farrugia of HWL Ebsworth, the solicitors for Westpac, appeared on its behalf. Ms Farrugia put Westpac's position this way:
The bank's position is, quite simply, the bank can only either block the account in accordance with the freezing order or not block the account. The position of the bank is set out in an email from Ms Nelson to Mr Phillips.
…
So the bank's systems do not permit a partial block on the accounts to enable those transactions to occur. That also applies to the direct debits which are mentioned in order 10(b) but not identified. So it's unable to permit those transactions to occur without removing all the restrictions which are on those relevant accounts. Now, if Westpac were to remove those restrictions on the relevant accounts to enable those transactions contemplated by the freezing orders to occur, then it may unwittingly assist or otherwise facilitate a breach of the freezing orders. Now, in those circumstances, Westpac has maintained the restrictions on the relevant accounts.
40 In response to a question I asked about what part of the order Westpac said would make it liable for facilitating a breach of the freezing orders by Mr Meletsis, Ms Farrugia accepted that there was "no specific order". After Mr AA Segal, junior counsel for the plaintiffs, in the course of his submissions identified that the only orders applicable to the bank were orders 14 and 15, Ms Farrugia put the bank's position in the following terms:
I think the concern is because of order 15, which does provide if the withdrawal appears to be permitted by the order the bank, without the blocks in place, if there are direct debits which are not listed in the order - with those direct debits having been previously stopped because of the block - this is not about the bank wanting to play some sort of monitoring role, as my learned friend Mr Galvin made a submission. This is about the bank wanting to comply with the orders.
41 That is, Westpac was "concerned" that order 15, which provided that "[n]o bank need inquire as to the application or proposed application of any money withdrawn by you if the withdrawal appears to be permitted by this order", imposed some obligation upon Westpac to be satisfied that any such withdrawal did, in fact, appear to be permitted by the freezing orders.
42 After a brief adjournment to enable Ms Farrugia to obtain instructions, Westpac agreed that if order 15 were amended to remove the words "if the withdrawal appears to be permitted by this order", then it would lift the restrictions on Mr Meletsis' accounts. With some reluctance, I made that order so that Mr Meletsis could have access to necessary funds as soon as possible. I say "with some reluctance" because I did not understand then, and for reasons I set out below, I do not understand now, why the alteration to the standard form freezing orders was necessary. I also directed that Westpac file and serve an affidavit in response to Mr Meletsis' affidavit sworn 13 April, including an explanation of the circumstances in which the first and second defendants' applications to vary the freezing orders heard on 18 March and 14 April became necessary to be made, and reserved the question of whether Westpac should pay the plaintiffs' and first and second defendants' costs of those applications on an indemnity basis.
43 Westpac prepared and filed an affidavit of Thi Thuy Vi Nguyen accordingly on 21 April. I then invited the parties and Westpac to file and serve submissions on the question of costs, which they duly did.