Duties were not owed to Mr Seaman by the administrators
35 Even if the applicant overcame the difficulties of pleading the content of a duty of care and a pure economic loss claim against the administrators, he would still face some insurmountable difficulties. The main one is that his claims are necessarily founded upon the assumption that the administrators might owe statutory duties or a duty of care to Mr Seaman in his capacity as a creditor, director or shareholder. That proposition is not sustainable. Whilst both parties before the Court referred to the decision of Kourakis CJ in Viscariello v Macks [2014] SASC 189; (2014) 103 ACSR 542, neither referred to the decision of the Full Court (Lovell J, Corboy and Slattery AJJ) on appeal from that decision: Macks v Viscariello [2017] SASCFC 172. The failure of the parties to address the Court on this important authority was somewhat startling. Notably that Full Court decision overturned a number of the conclusions of law reached by Kourakis CJ, although, it must be said, not necessarily in relation to matters which are relevant to the present application. In the course of the Full Court's reasoning, it concluded that an administrator does not owe duties either under statute or at common law to individual creditors of a company. This was emphatically expressed in paragraphs [192]-[193]:
192. It is to be noted that the passages cited above from the judgments of Gleeson JA in Correa v Whittingham and Barrett J in Blundell v Macrocom identified the fiduciary relationship as subsisting between an administrator and the company in administration. We do not think that their Honours were merely defining the relationship in a general sense. Rather, we consider that the Primary Judge was right to reject, albeit tentatively, the proposition that an administrator owes a duty to individual creditors. In our view, an administrator does not owe statutory or general law duties to individual creditors. Absent a statutory entitlement, a creditor has no personal right of action against an administrator for damages or compensation. The directors of a company, including a company that is nearly insolvent, do not owe duties to individual creditors and we are unable to discern any basis for reaching a different conclusion for administrators.
193. There is no duty generally owed by an officer of a corporation to creditors (Spies v The Queen (2000) 201 CLR 603) and any action for remedies for breach of ss 180, 181 or the general law duties from which those provisions are derived is ordinarily to be commenced by the company.
36 The Full Court also identified that a liquidator's duty of care in realizing a company's assets could not be equated with the liquidator's fiduciary duty when exercising their powers in the winding up of insolvent companies. It was observed (at [200]) that the scope and the nature of those duties were entirely different. Whilst the Full Court doubted the observations of Debelle J in Mills v Sheahan (2007) 99 SASR 357 and the observations of Vickery J in Perpetual Nominees Ltd v McGoldrick (No 3) (2017) 317 FLR 227 in relation to the alleged existence of a duty of care of a liquidator when realising an insolvent company's assets, it held that no duty of care was owed by the administrator to creditors in the management of the company's business affairs, including the sale of some or all of its assets, the compromising claims for and against it and the negotiations of a DOCA. Their Honours agreed with the observations of Kourakis CJ at first instance where the Chief Justice said (at [94]):
However, the imposition of a duty to individual creditors in making decisions as to the re-arrangement of the company's finances, the proportionate payment of debt in accordance with a DOCA, or whether the company should go into liquidation, would compromise the statutory scheme to which I have referred. In my view, this factor alone decisively tells against the imposition of a duty to individual creditors with respect to that part of an administrator's responsibilities.
37 The Full Court further agreed with the observations of the Chief Justice where he said (at [95]):
It is manifestly inconsistent with the statutory regime of the Corporations Act regulating the duties of voluntary administrators to superimpose upon it a common law duty of care owed by the administrator to individual creditors, directors or shareholders to protect them from financial loss by the exercise of reasonable care in discharging his or her statutory powers affecting the form in which the company will continue to operate or, alternatively, whether it will be wound up. That inconsistency is at its greatest when an administrator must form an opinion and frame a recommendation to the creditors, about whether to trade on, enter into a deed of company arrangement, sell the business and/or wind up the company.
38 It also agreed with the observations of Barrett J stated in Hausmann v Smith (2006) 24 ACLC 688 at [12] to the effect that duties owed by administrators (and liquidators) are not duties owed to shareholders or to creditors. The duties are owed to the company in administration even if, when performing those duties, attention must be paid to the interests of creditors.
39 As mentioned, neither counsel in the matter before the Court referred to this important decision even though it is somewhat determinative of many of central issues in the application. Given that the Full Court's decision is one of an intermediate Court of Appeal on national scheme legislation it is binding upon me. Even if it were not, I agree with the substance of the decision and it is far from being "plainly wrong". It is plainly right.
40 The above is sufficient to dispose of the allegations with respect to negligence although it could be added that the failure to adequately plead a causative connection between the negligence and the loss would also justify the rejection.
41 It should also be observed that no allegation is made in the new Statement of Claim that the administrators owed a duty of care to the Company. The only allegation is that such a duty was owed to Mr Seaman in his various capacities.