THE SECTION 87 ARGUMENT
26 AECOM submitted that the most obvious reason why cross-claims for contribution are appropriate is that, to the extent that the RCM applicants seek an award of damages pursuant to s 87 of the TPA, the proportionate liability regime does not apply, and it would be open to the Court to order AECOM to meet the entirety of the RCM applicants' loss, even though it may take the view that other companies or individuals also contributed to that loss in a causative way. AECOM also referred to differences in the operation of s 82 and s 87 which, it was said, might produce significantly different outcomes in the circumstances of this case. In particular, it submitted that there may be a difference between outcomes because, unlike the RCM applicants' claims under s 82, their claims under s 87 might not be reduced to take account of any findings of contributory negligence which would result in a reduction of any amount recoverable by the RCM applicants under s 82. Accordingly, AECOM submitted that it should be permitted to cross-claim for contribution from the RCM applicants and other cross-respondents against the possibility that the RCM applicants might recover damages under s 87 free of any deduction for proven contributory negligence or concurrent wrongdoing that would have to be made if damages are or were also assessed under s 82.
27 It was also submitted by AECOM that the RCM applicants' claims against it under s 82 might be time barred and yet the RCM applicants might still recover under s 87. On this basis, AECOM submitted that it should be permitted to seek contribution from the RCM applicants against the possibility that the RCM applicants might not recover under s 82 but still obtain an award of damages under s 87.
28 In support of its submission that a claim under s 87 might not be an apportionable claim AECOM relied upon two decisions of this Court. The first is the decision of Finkelstein J in BHPB Freight Pty Ltd v Cosco Oceania Chartering Pty Ltd (No 2) [2008] FCA 1656 (BHPB Freight). The matter to which his Honour's judgment relates concerned a proposed cross-claim for damages under s 82 or s 87 for an alleged contravention of s 52, and damages for negligent misstatement and breach of warranty of authority. In its defence to the applicant's claim against it, the respondent (Cosco) relied upon s 87CD of the TPA and s 24AI of the Wrongs Act 1958 (Vic). His Honour refused to permit Cosco to seek by way of cross-claim an order that its liability be limited pursuant to s 87CD of the TPA. His Honour said at [9] that the only claim brought against Cosco under the TPA that was an apportionable claim under Pt VIA was the claim for damages pursuant to s 82 for a contravention of s 52. His Honour said that the claim under s 87 did not fall within the scope of Pt VIA as it was not a claim for damages under s 82. His Honour concluded, at [13], that he could see no reason why a claim for contribution in respect of the s 87 claim should not be permitted to be made.
29 BHPB Freight involved an application for leave to issue a cross-claim for contribution to any amount of compensation under s 87 which was resisted on the basis that it was not arguable. Finkelstein J's reasons make clear that he was not willing to reject such a claim on that basis. The matter appears to have been heard on the papers and, as best one can tell from his Honour's reasons, no contrary argument based upon the meaning and effect of s 87CB(2) was considered. Further, it does not appear to have been argued that, even if the claim under s 87 was not an "apportionable claim", claims for contribution would be bound to fail because under s 87 the applicant could not recover from the respondent seeking contribution any amount of damages or compensation greater than that which would be recoverable by the applicant under s 82.
30 The other decision upon which AECOM placed reliance was the decision of Reeves J in Bennett v Elysium Noosa Pty Ltd (in liq) (2012) 202 FCR 72 (Bennett). Reeves J said at [274]-[276]:
[274] The background history to the introduction of Pt VIA outlined by Finkelstein J in BHPB demonstrates that it was introduced for a particular purpose, viz professional indemnity claims where the proportionate culpability of the professionals concerned was relatively small, but their capacity to pay was relatively large. Consistent with this purpose, the language used in s 87CB is very specifically confined to particular claims for damages for particular contravening conduct. Whether or not the legislature has hit its intended target with this language is a matter that I do not need to determine in this case.
[275] However, for present purposes, I consider it is plain that s 87CB does not apply to claims for damages made under s 87(1A), or to claims where the damages are caused by false or misleading representations in contravention of s 53A(1) of the TPA. If the legislature had intended that s 87CB was to apply to all claims for loss or damage under the TPA, it could very easily have done that by omitting the words "made under s 82" from that section. It has not chosen to do so. Similarly, if the legislature had intended s 87CB to apply to any claim for conduct in contravention of any of the provisions of Pt V of the TPA, it could very easily have done that by referring to that Part, rather than specifically referring to "a contravention of s 52". Again, it has not chosen to do so.
[276] Taking into account these aspects of the purpose, context and language of s 87CB, I do not therefore consider it applies in this case, insofar as it involves claims under s 87(1A) for a contravention of s 53A. In other words, neither of those components of the claims in this case is an apportionable claim under s 87CB(1) of the TPA.
It is apparent from [275] of his Honour's reasons that he was of the view that a claim for damages or compensation under s 87(1A) for economic loss caused by conduct in contravention of s 52 was not an apportionable claim.
31 Subsequent to the hearing of these applications, on 30 May 2014, a Full Court handed down judgment in Wealthsure Pty Ltd v Selig [2014] FCAFC 64 (Wealthsure) and, on 6 June 2014, a different Full Court handed down judgment in ABN AMRO Bank NV v Bathurst Regional Council [2014] FCAFC 65 (ABN AMRO).
32 In ABN AMRO, the Full Court (Jacobson, Gilmour and Gordon JJ) disagreed with the majority decision in Wealthsure (Mansfield and Besanko JJ, White J dissenting). Both Full Court decisions concerned the operation of the proportionate liability provisions of the Corporations Act and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth) (ASIC Act). Both cases focused on the meaning and effect of Part 7.10 Div 2A (ss 1041L - 1041S) of the Corporations Act entitled "Proportionate liability for misleading and deceptive conduct".
33 Section 1041L(1) of the Corporations Act provides:
This Division applies to a claim (an apportionable claim) if the claim is a claim for damages made under section 1041I for:
(a) economic loss; or
(b) damage to property;
caused by conduct that was done in a contravention of section 1041H.
Each of subss (2)-(5) of s 1041L is in identical, or near identical, terms to subss 87CB(2)-(5) of the TPA.
34 In ABN AMRO the Full Court held that only those claims made by the applicants under s 1041I for economic loss caused by conduct in contravention of s 1041H were apportionable. Other causes of action arising under (inter alia) s 1041E, upon which the applicants also relied, were not apportionable.
35 In their written submissions, the RCM applicants and Portigon did not dispute that a claim under s 87 cannot be an apportionable claim. However, in oral submissions, Mr Bannon SC supported the submissions advanced by other cross-respondents including, in particular, those made by Mr Smith SC for Mr Hicks and Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd, to the effect that the RCM applicants' and Portigon's claims against AECOM for damages or compensation under s 87 were apportionable claims.
36 The crux of Mr Smith's argument was that s 87CB(2) can pick up both apportionable and non-apportionable claims for the same loss and damage. This is the same argument that was advanced in relation to s 1041L(2) of the Corporations Act in ABN AMRO and Wealthsure. It was accepted by the majority in Wealthsure but rejected by the Full Court in ABN AMRO.
37 In Wealthsure, Mansfield J referred to s 1041L(2) and (3) of the Corporations Act and said at [10]-[11]:
[10] In my view, those provisions tend to indicate that the appropriate focus is upon whether the claim or claims made in a particular matter, in this case the claims of the Seligs, are in respect of the same loss or damage. The focus is upon the nature of the loss or damage for which relief is sought, rather than upon the nature of the cause of action or causes of action which give rise to the entitlement to that loss or damage. That is fortified by the parenthesised words in s 1041L(2) which contemplates that the causes of action giving rise to the same loss or damage need not be of the same kind. Section 1041L(3) then defines a 'concurrent wrongdoer' in relation to a claim as one or more of the persons whose acts or omissions caused the loss or damage which is the subject of the apportionable claim. The combination of those two subsections, in my view, indicates a legislative intention that an apportionable claim is one where a claim for damages for economic loss caused by a contravention of s 1041H succeeds. Provided that there is a separate cause or other causes of action against the person or persons who have contravened s 1041H, if that other or those other causes of action have caused the same damage, the claim maintains its character as an apportionable claim. Provided there is another cause or other causes of action against that person or other persons, that person or other persons will be a concurrent wrongdoer if that person's acts or omissions caused the same loss or damage. Indeed, for the purposes of this appeal, it is not necessary to go quite so far. That is because each of Mr Norton and Mr Townley (as well as Wealthsure and Mr Bertram) were found to have contravened s 1041H as well as other provisions, and by their respective contraventions of s 1041H to have caused or contributed to causing the same loss and damage.
[11] Consequently, in my view, even though the primary judge found (and it has been maintained on appeal) that both Wealthsure and Mr Bertram contravened s 728, and that the contraventions of ss 945A and 945B amounted to conduct in relation to a disclosure document or statement within the meaning of s 953A, their conduct amounting to those contraventions does not preclude the operation of s 1041N because their claim involved an apportionable claim because it included a claim under s 1041H(1) in respect of the same loss or damage. The primary judge made the point in his reasons that the Seligs claim for loss and damage was the same in relation to the various causes of action against both Wealthsure and Mr Bertram, and indeed against the other groups of defendants.
Besanko J reached a similar conclusion at [84].
38 In ABN AMRO the Full Court expressed a preference (at [1573]) for the view of s 1041L(2) taken by White J in Wealthsure (at [346]-[347]) that the words "the claim for the loss and damage is based on more than one cause of action (whether or not of the same or a different kind)" refer only to causes of action that are themselves apportionable claims.
39 Of particular relevance for present purposes is the Full Court's approval in ABN AMRO of the decision of Finkelstein J in BHPB Freight. The Full Court said at [1586]:
Finkelstein J, correctly in our view, when considering the proportionate liability scheme under Pt VIA of the then TPA in BHPB Freight Pty Ltd v Cosco Oceania Chartering Pty Ltd (No 2) [2008] FCA 1656, accepted that an "apportionable claim" was limited to one brought for damages pursuant to s 82 TPA for a contravention of s 52. This reflects the confined language of s 87CB(1) of the TPA in the same vein as s 1041L of the Corporations Act limits an apportionable claim to one made under s 1041I for conduct in contravention of s 1041H.
40 It does seem odd that a claim for damages for conduct in contravention of s 52 brought under s 82 might be an apportionable claim, but that a claim that relies upon precisely the same contravention of s 52, and giving rise to precisely the same loss and damage, would not also be an apportionable claim if brought under s 87. If that is the effect of the relevant provisions then the mischief which Pt VIA was intended to avoid as discussed in BHPB Freight, Bennett and ABN AMRO, will not be avoided except in so far as the discretion to award damages or compensation conferred on the Court by s 87 is exercised in accordance with the same considerations that inform the assessment of damages under s 82(1) by reason of s 82(1B) and Pt VIA of the TPA.
41 Be that as it may, the Full Court in ABN AMRO has clearly approved Finkelstein J's reasoning in BHPB Freight. In the circumstances, and even if the Full Court's observations in relation to the relevant provisions of the TPA were not necessary to the decision in that case, I consider that I must proceed on the basis the views of Finkelstein J and Reeves J in relation to the operation of s 87CB are correct. This necessarily entails rejecting the submission put by Mr Smith SC and other counsel on behalf of the cross-respondents to the effect that the RCM applicants' and Portigon's claims against AECOM for damages under s 87 are apportionable claims.
42 However, it does not follow that the cross-claims for contribution should be allowed to proceed. The RCM applicants and Portigon submitted that, even if their claims under s 87 are not apportionable claims, the claims for contribution lack utility and have no prospects of success. In particular, they submitted that there is no prospect of AECOM being ordered to pay damages under s 87 in an amount greater than that which each of the RCM applicants and Portigon could recover under s 82 having regard to their own responsibility for their loss and damage (s 82(1B)) or the responsibility for such loss and damage of any other cross-respondent (Part VIA).
43 AECOM's submissions assume that it would be open to a judge, in the proper exercise of his or her discretion, to award damages or compensation in favour of the RCM applicants and Portigon pursuant to s 87 without making any allowance for the responsibility of any of the alleged concurrent wrongdoers to the loss and damage suffered. AECOM emphasised in its submissions the broad discretion available to the Court under s 87(1) of the TPA and relied, in particular, on the reasons of Mason P in Akron Securities Ltd v Iliffe (1997) 41 NSWLR 353 at 364-367.
44 It is useful to begin a consideration of this argument in light of the reasons that AECOM advanced for having filed its cross-claims seeking contribution from the various cross-respondents. AECOM submitted as follows:
[17] It is not difficult to envisage why the Applicants have brought an alternative claim under s 87 of the TPA, especially in circumstances where they have chosen to sue, in effect, a sole respondent. It may be that they would ultimately seek to confine their claim to one under s 87 if, for example, as the trial progressed, it appeared likely that any liability of AECOM Australia under s 82 would be significantly reduced by reason of the contribution of the Applicants, cross-respondents and/or others to the loss. In making this submission, AECOM Australia does not concede that it would be open to the Applicants to abandon their claim for damages under s 82. AECOM Australia also does not concede that it would not be open to the Court, in considering a claim for s 87 damages, to take into account the proportionate liability regime in the exercise of any discretion it had in the awarding of damages pursuant to s 87 of the Act.
[18] For the above reasons, and whilst the Applicants maintain their claims for damages under s 87 of the TPA, there is no inconsistency or technical "embarrassment" in AECOM Australia seeking contribution by way of cross-claim against the possibility that it is fixed with a liability for 100% of the Applicants' damages pursuant to s 87, in circumstances where other parties bear a share of responsibility for that loss and damage. If, for example, it was the fact that one of the cross-respondents bore 50% of responsibility for the loss in respect of damages awarded pursuant to s 87, it would be a manifest injustice if AECOM Australia was not permitted to seek contribution from that party in these proceedings.
(footnotes omitted)
45 AECOM's position is that it would be unjust to order AECOM to pay any excess of its proper share of the loss suffered by the RCM applicants and Portigon as a consequence of AECOM's contravention of s 52 unless AECOM is permitted to seek contribution from the cross-respondents for any such excess. However, whatever else might be said as to the likelihood of the Court making such an order, AECOM's submission assumes that the RCM applicants and Portigon would seek to recover damages or compensation under s 87 in an amount that exceeds that which would be available by way of damages awarded pursuant to s 82.
46 The forensic strategy which AECOM suggests the cross-claims are intended to outflank, has been expressly disclaimed by both the RCM applicants and Portigon. They have stated that they have no intention of seeking to require AECOM to pay any more than AECOM's proper share of the loss suffered by them after making due allowance for proven concurrent wrongdoing. The RCM applicants and Portigon have sought to make that clear in submissions and correspondence, and by means of an undertaking which they have proffered which would confine the measure of their recovery under s 87 to that which would be recoverable under s 82 after all necessary allowances are made for any proven contribution which the various cross-respondents may have made to the RCM applicants' and Portigon's loss and damage.
47 The RCM applicants' stated position (the RCM Applicants' Position) as defined for the purposes of the undertaking which they have proffered to the Court, and the undertaking itself (the Undertaking), are in the following terms:
1. The RCM Applicants' Position is that, where an applicant establishes a contravention of s 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (TPA) by a respondent, and in respect of that contravention:
(a) makes a claim for damages pursuant to s 82 of the TPA; and
(b) in addition or in the alternative, seeks an order for compensation pursuant to s 87 of the TPA,
then, in the exercise of the discretion to make orders pursuant to s 87 to compensate an applicant "in whole or in part for the loss or damage" suffered, the Court would take into account any reduction applicable to an award of s 82 damages pursuant to the proportionate liability regime for misleading and deceptive conduct provided by Part VIA of the TPA.
2. The RCM Applicants undertake to the Court that:
(a) they will adopt and not argue to the contrary of the RCM Applicants' Position in this proceeding;
(b) if the Court determines that there:
(i) should be a percentage reduction to any award of s 82 damages against AECOM Australia Pty Ltd (AECOM) pursuant to the proportionate liability regime for misleading and deceptive conduct provided by Part VIA of the TPA; or
(ii) if s 82 damages were to be awarded to [sic] AECOM, there would be a percentage reduction to an award of s 82 damages against AECOM pursuant to the proportionate liability regime for misleading and deceptive conduct provided by Part VIA of the TPA
(the Reduction), they will:
(c) not oppose the Court applying the Reduction to any s 87 award of monetary compensation in their favour; and
(d) if the Court does not or cannot apply the Reduction to any s 87 award of monetary compensation in their favour, not seek to recover from AECOM any award of monetary compensation in their favour pursuant to s 87 of the TPA in excess of the total amount awarded pursuant to that section, less the Reduction.
Portigon also offered to give an undertaking to the Court to the same effect in the Portigon Proceedings.
48 The RCM applicants and Portigon have also offered to make amendments to their originating applications which are intended to make it clear that the damages sought pursuant to s 87 are for an amount not exceeding that which each of them would receive if their claims for damages under s 87 were apportionable claims. Referring to the claim for damages under s 82 and/or s 87 of the TPA in prayer 1 of their originating applications, the RCM applicants and Portigon propose to include an additional paragraph 5 in each of the originating applications in the following terms:
In relation to the relief sought under prayer 1 above, and to the extent Part VIA of the TPA does not apply to an award of compensation under section 87 of the TPA, or is not taken into account in the exercise of the Court's discretion pursuant to section 87 of the TPA, the Applicant seeks damages and/or compensation pursuant to section 87 of the TPA in an amount not exceeding that which it would receive were Part VIA of the TPA to apply to the making of a compensation award under section 87.
49 It is apparent from what I have already said that the RCM applicants and Portigon have gone to some lengths in terms of the undertakings and amendments to which they are willing to submit to avoid a situation in which the proceedings commenced by them are enlarged or complicated by the joinder of additional parties whose presence might not be justified were it not for the existence of what are arguably non-apportionable claims for damages or compensation under s 87. It is true that the whole issue of apportionment in the context of the s 87 claims could have been avoided by the RCM applicants and Portigon simply abandoning their claims for damages or compensation under that section. However, as Mr Bannon SC pointed out, his clients cannot be compelled to adopt that course.
50 In one sense the question is whether the RCM applicants and Portigon can have it both ways ie., should they be permitted to pursue what is, or at least may be, a non-apportionable claim and at the same time resist the filing of the RCM/Portigon cross-claims on the basis that there will never be any occasion for the Court to make orders for contribution. It is desirable at this point to explain the RCM applicants' and Portigon's reasons, as stated by Mr Bannon SC, for wanting to maintain their claims under s 87.
51 The first reason is that there are limitation defences that have been pleaded in answer to the s 82 claims. The RCM applicants and Portigon may wish to contend that if the limitation defences relied upon by AECOM for the purposes of s 82 are successful, then they are still able to recover damages or compensation under s 87. This contention was not developed in argument. In particular, it was not suggested how, for the purposes of a claim under s 87(1), the Full Court decision in Mayne Nickless Ltd v Multigroup Distribution Services Pty Ltd (2001) 114 FCR 108 could be overcome (noting, unlike that case, there is here no claim for relief under s 80 of the TPA), or how, for the purposes of s 87(1A), the effect of s 87(1CA) could be avoided.
52 The second reason why the RCM applicants and Portigon rely on s 87, according to Mr Bannon SC, is that it might permit the making of an order for the making of payments to third parties (eg. the Hopkins applicants and/or group members in the Class Action) as part of a wider resolution of all the claims made against AECOM. This may have some attraction in circumstances where the RCM applicants are in receivership, presumably insolvent, and indebted to secured creditors for very substantial amounts.
53 The third reason referred to by Mr Bannon SC concerns a number of statements suggesting that there may be some circumstances in which a party might be unable to recover all or any of its loss and damage under s 82 but still be able to recover some part of such loss and damage under s 87: see Elna Australia Pty Ltd v International Computers (Aust) Pty Ltd (No 2) (1987) 16 FCR 410 at 419 (Elna) per Gummow J. The relevant passage in Elna was extracted and considered by Callinan J in I & L Securities Pty Limited v HTW Valuers (Brisbane) Pty Limited (2002) 210 CLR 109 (I & L Securities). After referring to Henville v Walker (2001) 206 CLR 459 (Henville) Callinan J said at [216]:
Whilst the respondent accepted that that case holds, indeed reiterates, that the contravening deceptive conduct need not be the sole cause of loss for the claimant to recover, it argued that if there has been another quite independent cause for which the claimant itself is responsible, it becomes appropriate to inquire what is the amount of loss or damage resulting directly from the contravention. The respondent referred in particular to what was said by Gaudron J in Henville [(2001) 206 CLR 459 at 483 [70]-[72]], that such an inquiry can sometimes be answered by establishing that the plaintiff 's conduct actually produced particular, that is to say, severable, components of the loss. The respondent argued that a similar approach should, by analogy, be adopted in a case of this kind, by attributing a proportion or percentage of the loss only to the contravening conduct, and that in substance this is what the trial judge properly set out to do. The argument is attractive. Its acceptance would produce a fair and just result. It cannot, in my opinion however, be accepted. The types of situations to which Gaudron J was referring, and to which McHugh J (with whom Gummow J agreed) also referred in Henville [(2001) 206 CLR 459 at 506-507 [145]-[148]], were quite different from this one. Their Honours' observations were directed to cases in which discrete amounts, or indeed discrete types of loss, were caused by, and could readily be attributed to, discrete acts or omissions by or on the part of the parties. More than a hint of such an approach had been given by Gummow J in an earlier case, Elna Australia Pty Ltd v International Computers (Aust) Pty Ltd [No 2] [(1987) 16 FCR 410 at 419] in which his Honour said:
"It is clear that the conduct in contravention of a provision of Pt IV or Pt V of [the Act] need not be the only cause of the 'loss or damage' (within the meaning of s 82(1)) which may be recovered: Milner v Delita Pty Ltd [(1985) 61 ALR 557 at 572]. The presence of other operative causes thus is not necessarily fatal to the applicant's claim. However, it may be that, whilst the facts constituting the contravention of a provision of Pt IV or Pt V of [the Act] are, with other causes, necessary preconditions of the 'loss or damage', in the circumstances of the particular case it is those other causes which are properly to be treated as the real, essential, substantial, direct, or effective cause of the loss or damage [cf Stapley v Gypsum Mines Ltd [1953] AC 663 at 681-682, 687-688]. Such a case might arise for consideration where those other causes involved acts or omissions on the part of the applicant, which were in breach of a legal, equitable or other statutory duty owed by the applicant to the respondent or to third parties. In such a case the court might treat those other causes as the essential or effective cause of the loss or damage and hold there was no right to damages under s 82. A question might then arise as to whether some more limited relief under some other provision of Pt VI was appropriate."
Callinan J went on to observe at [217] that the appellant's lack of care in I & L Securities could not be "… treated as the essential or effective cause of the loss or damage or a discrete part of it such as to disqualify the appellant from recovering, or recovering its damages in full." See also McHugh J in I & L Securities at [98].
54 As the Full Court in Khoury v Sidhu [2011] FCAFC 71 (Stone, Jacobson and Collier JJ) observed, Henville and I & L Securities were both decided before s 82(1B) and Pt VIA were inserted into the TPA. At that time the Courts were grappling with the problem of how a plaintiff's own contribution to his or her loss or damage, or the contribution of concurrent wrongdoers, should be reflected, if at all, in an award of damages pursuant to s 82 of the Act.
55 It is not possible for me to say whether the RCM applicants or Portigon might be permitted to rely on s 87 to recover some part of their loss and damage not recoverable under s 82 as foreshadowed, at least as an arguable possibility, by Gummow J in Elna. Nor is it possible for me to say how the total loss and damage claimed for the purposes of s 82 might be disentangled into particular components, some of which may be recoverable under s 87 but not s 82. These matters were not explored in submissions.
56 Dr Bell SC submitted on behalf of AECOM that the purpose of the undertakings that have been proffered is to "accommodate" the fact that the s 87 claims are not, or at least may not be, apportionable claims. That is plainly correct, but it does not answer the proposition that the cross-claims are otiose in circumstances where the claims for relief under s 87 are to be limited in the way proposed. In my opinion there is no reason why an applicant for relief under s 82 in relation to what is accepted to be an apportionable claim might not confine any additional or alternative claim for damages or compensation under s 87 in this way. And if the RCM applicants' and Portigon's claims under s 87 are confined in this way, it is impossible to see how there could be any occasion for making orders for contribution.
57 Of course AECOM will submit at the trial that the Court is bound to make due allowance for proven concurrent wrongdoing in the proper exercise of its discretion under s 87. The prospect that the Court would not accept and give effect to that submission in light of the RCM applicants' and Portigon's proffered undertakings, and their proposed amendments to the originating applications, is in my view fanciful.
58 There is one final matter arising out of the proposed undertakings and amendments that I should raise. The argument before me proceeded on the footing that each of the RCM applicants and Portigon accept, as I understand to be the case, that its claim for damages under s 82 is an apportionable claim to which s 87CC does not apply. In my view the proposed undertaking should make each applicant's acceptance of this proposition clear.