The first alleged non-disclosure
98 Mr Jane submitted that the Liquidator's affidavit did not draw the attention of the Court to the existence of a "substantive dispute" concerning the ownership of certain shares in Bob Jane Properties. It was submitted that the Liquidator's affidavit did not convey to the Court "the fact that Bob Jane Properties maintains that its shares are, and have always been, held by" the corporate trustee of the Mimulus Trust. Mr Jane's submission was essentially that the Liquidator should have prominently conveyed to the Court the position that was set out in a letter to the Liquidator from Mr Jane's solicitors, HWL Ebsworth Lawyers, dated 5 November 2015 (5 November 2015 Letter).
99 However, this should not be accepted as a material non-disclosure, for the following reasons:
(1) As to the examinable affairs of Last Lap, the Liquidator's affidavit stated that the matters set out in his affidavit were based on his review of Last Lap's books and records and the Liquidator's investigations of Last Lap's affairs since his appointment (Liquidator's Affidavit, [6]).
(2) The Liquidator's affidavit stated that the Liquidator was "informed by [the 5 November 2015 Letter], that Bob Jane Properties asserts that its shares were held beneficially by the Mimulus Trust" (Liquidator's Affidavit, [7]; emphasis added). Mr Jane emphasised the use of the word "were" in this sentence. Mr Jane said this should have at least said "were and are" or perhaps "were, are and always have been" and then set out the other disclosures set out above which Mr Jane says were necessary for proper disclosure.
(3) However, the sentence immediately succeeding the sentence Mr Jane seeks to impugn reads as follows: "[n]ow produced and shown to me and marked "BARS-5" is a true copy of [the 5 November 2015 Letter] containing inter alia a copy of a declaration of trust in respect of the shares in Bob Jane Properties dated 31 December 1989" (ibid). That is, the Liquidator's affidavit immediately referred the reader of the affidavit to the 5 November 2015 Letter.
(4) Mr Jane says that was too oblique a reference and the letter should not have been, it was submitted, buried in a voluminous affidavit. There is, in the abstract, some force to that submission. Liquidators and their advisors will need to exercise judgment to ensure matters are properly brought to the Court's attention in these types of applications. However, in the context of this affidavit, the submission should not be accepted for the following reasons.
(5) The first annexure to the affidavit are copies of the draft summonses. That is required by Corporations Rules, r 11.3(3). No criticism can be levelled at the Liquidator for annexing those documents first. The second annexure is the Liquidator's curriculum vitae which is a reasonably formal matter. The third annexure is an ASIC search of Last Lap and it is necessary for it be established that the relevant company is properly registered. That document also provides the usual historical information concerning Last Lap. The fourth annexure is an ASIC search of Bob Jane Properties. This is again a document which should be included in the affidavit.
(6) The fifth and first substantive annexure is the 5 November 2015 Letter, being the letter referred to at [7] of the Liquidator's affidavit. The position put in the 5 November 2015 Letter is the position which Mr Jane says should have been given more prominence in the Liquidator's affidavit.
(7) However, given this letter appears as the fifth annexure after four annexures which essentially record formal matters, it should not be accepted that it was referred to merely obliquely or in a manner that was insufficiently direct or candid: it is the first substantive annexure annexed to the Liquidator's affidavit and it was referred to expressly by the Liquidator's affidavit.
(8) Moreover, the position put by the 5 November 2015 Letter was clear from its terms. A reader of the 5 November 2015 would be in no doubt as to Mr Jane's position concerning the ownership of the relevant shares in Bob Jane Properties.
(9) In this respect, it should also be noted that a position contrary to the 5 November 2015 Letter is not "speculative, far-fetched or misconceived" (Kimberley Diamonds at [104] (per Foster, Wigney and Markovic JJ)). Indeed, on closer inspection, the 5 November 2015 Letter appears to contain a potential internal inconsistency. The letter first sets out a document which purports to be a basis for a purported transfer of shares and then states that there is "no evidence" for that purported transfer. However, either there is a document which supports the purported transfer or there is "no evidence" to support that transfer - prima facie, both of those positions cannot be true. Evidently, what might have been intended by the 5 November 2015 Letter was that, in Mr Jane's view, the evidence which exists for the purported transfer should not be accepted or it should be accepted that evidence contrary to that purported transfer outweighs, or should be accepted in priority to, the evidence for the purported transfer.
(10) In any event, the alternative course the Liquidator might have taken was to summarise or extract part of the 5 November 2015 Letter into the body of the Liquidator's affidavit (as opposed to annexing that letter to the Liquidator's affidavit). However, if the Liquidator had taken that course, the Liquidator would have been open to the potential criticism that the Liquidator had selectively disclosed the position conveyed by the 5 November 2015 Letter or otherwise placed an unwarranted gloss on it. In the circumstances, the 5 November 2015 Letter speaks for itself and it was appropriate that it was annexed in its entirety as the first substantial annexure.
100 In the circumstances of this case, that position discharged the Liquidator's disclosure obligations in relation to the matter Mr Jane complains about. I am not persuaded that there was a material non-disclosure. Like the liquidator's affidavit in Sutherland, the position in the 5 November 2015 Letter was "fully disclosed" by the Liquidator annexing it to the Liquidator's affidavit as the first substantive annexure (see Sutherland at [47]-[48]; [52]-[54]).
101 Mr Jane also says that the Liquidator's affidavit should have conveyed to the Court that, if the position in the 5 November 2015 Letter is accepted, there would be an effect on the scope of the "examinable affairs" of Last Lap. However, even if that contention can be accepted, two matters should be noted.
102 First, for the reasons set out earlier in this judgment, the concept of "examinable affairs" is broad and, even if the position in the 5 November 2015 Letter is accepted, it is not sufficiently clear that there would be a material effect on the "examinable affairs" of Last Lap. By way of example, the purported transfer which is referred to in the 5 November 2015 Letter would still be an "act or thing done … in relation to" Last Lap "at a time when" Last Lap is being wound up.
103 Second, even if the Liquidator had conveyed to the Court that there is a dispute as to the ownership of the shares in Bob Jane Properties and that might impact the scope of Last Lap's "examinable affairs", the proper course is to do precisely what the Registrar did, namely issue the summonses in order to investigate the dispute. The Court has powers to conduct the examination (see Corporations Act, s 597) and there are cost consequences if a summons is "obtained without reasonable cause" (Corporations Act, s 597B). But those are matters for the conduct of the examination - in this case, they were not material to whether the summonses should have been issued.