The breadth of the releases
13 Initially, the Settlement Deed included a release in the following terms:
Upon Final Settlement Approval, and subject to the other provisions of this Deed,
…
the Applicant, on its own behalf and on behalf of all Group Members, releases and discharges the Respondents, the Insurers and their Related Parties or any of them jointly and severally from any Claims which they have now or in the future may have against the Respondents.
It also included a covenant not to sue on behalf of class members, in similar terms.
14 "Claim" was defined in the Settlement Deed to mean:
…all claims, actions, demands, debts, causes of action, liabilities, allegations, losses, suits or proceedings for damages, compensation, interest and legal and administrative costs, expenses and disbursements (present and future) of any description, debt, restitution, equitable compensation, account, interest, injunction, specific performance, judgments, decisions and orders or any other remedy, whether arising at common law, in equity or under statute or otherwise (whether known or unknown as at the date of this Deed) including any cost orders in the Proceeding.
15 Under that release, read literally, the applicant and class members would release the respondents, the Insurers and their Related Parties from any present or future claims of any kind which they have or may have against them. The release concerned all present and future claims of the applicant and class members, regardless of whether they bore any relation to the subject matter of the proceeding.
16 Such a release would, however, extend beyond the scope of the common issues that were the subject of the proceeding, into claims for which the applicant has no representative authority under the Act: see Timbercorp Finance Pty Ltd (in liquidation) v Collins; Timbercorp Finance Pty Ltd (in liquidation) v Tomes [2016] HCA 44; (2016) 259 CLR 212 at [53]-[54]; Santa Trade Concerns Pty Limited v Robinson (No 2) [2018] FCA 1491 at [18]-[23].
17 The fact that the release went too far was recognised by the applicant's legal representatives. The applicant's solicitors proposed the Variation Deed to the respondents, to which the respondents agreed. Under the Variation Deed the release is amended, as follows:
…the Applicant, on its own behalf and on behalf of all Group Members, releases and discharges the Respondents, the Insurers and their Related Parties or any of them jointly and severally from the Applicant and Group Members' Claims.
18 "Applicant and Group Members' Claims" is defined to mean:
…the Claims made by the Applicant on its own behalf and/or on behalf of any Group Member in the Proceeding, as well as any Claim that the Applicant could have raised, pursuant to section 33C of the Act, on behalf of Group Members against a Respondent in the Proceeding arising out of or in connection with the Claims the subject of the Proceeding.
19 By virtue of the variation to the Settlement Deed I am satisfied that the releases provided under the proposed settlement are appropriately confined to common claims related to the subject matter of the proceeding.