Participation in management (grounds 7, 8, 9, and 10)
- The primary judge's conclusion that Mr Snell did participate in management was founded on findings that Mr Snell:
1. although finding it increasingly difficult to make contact with Mr Ireland, nevertheless did succeed in contacting him, and did discuss the Company's affairs with him; [32]
2. on two occasions learned that the Company owed substantial amounts to the Commissioner, and made arrangements for payments to clear those liabilities; [33]
3. in so doing, dealt on the Company's behalf with the Company's accountants, and with officers of the Commissioner; [34]
4. negotiated an oral agreement with Mr Ireland to cease to do business together ("the Separation Agreement"), to the intent that Mr Ireland would take over the management of the restaurant and thereafter be solely responsible for the discharge of its liabilities (including its liabilities to the Commissioner), while Mr Snell would do the same with respect to their jointly operated boat business, but certain valuable land in Queensland ("the Garners Beach Land") would remain an asset of the Company; [35] and
5. did not cease his involvement in the affairs of the company, but deliberately determined to remain a director of the Company, in order to safeguard his interest in the Garners Beach Land. [36]
- The appellant submitted that, in the context of s 269-35(1) and having regard to the objects of Div 269, the notion of taking part in the management of the company should be confined to those aspects of a company's affairs that cause the company to incur an obligation to the Commissioner, and that steps taken by a director to bring about the discharge of taxation obligations should not count as taking part in management. On that basis, it was submitted that the matters relied on by his Honour as evidencing participation in management ought to have been excluded from consideration.
- That submission is misconceived, for two reasons. The first is that the focus is participation in the "management of the company", a concept which connotes policy and decision-making relating to the business affairs of the corporation as a whole, [37] and the plain words of which refer to the company, not any particular business it might operate. At the core of the concept is participation in governance of the company, whether formally (at meetings of directors) or informally. The various matters relied on by the primary judge are essentially indicia of participation in management from which that conclusion was ultimately drawn. The second is that there is no basis for distinguishing between "acts of management" that are within the concept of "taking part in management" and acts of management which are not. In particular, there is no reason to disregard the steps taken by Mr Snell to procure payment of the Company's taxation liabilities in considering whether Mr Snell was not taking part in management. The act of engaging with the Australian Taxation Office on behalf of a company was considered to evidence participation in management of the company in Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v Lister, [38] in which Williams JA (with whom Davies and Jerrard JJA agreed), said:
[14] But it is equally clear that during the earlier time that the other amounts became due he also took part in the management of the company. During the course of argument in this court the male appellant's attention was drawn to material exhibited to affidavits filed on behalf of the respondent which showed that on at least 21 October 1998, 2 December 1998, 3 December 1998, 23 June 1999, 27 July 1999 and 27 August 1999 he was in contact with officers of the Australian [Taxation] Office with respect to the company's obligations pursuant to the ITAA. Ultimately the male appellant conceded that during the period he was in Brisbane he was the director of the company responsible for dealings with the Australian [Taxation] Office. In those circumstances it is not arguable that he "did not take part in the management of the company" during that material time and it is also not arguable that he "took all reasonable steps to ensure that the directors complied with" their obligations, particularly the obligation pursuant to s 222AOB.
- The appellant submitted that the primary judge erred in having regard to his participation in the boat business, and erroneously assumed that it was an asset of the Company (ground 8). However, his Honour made no such assumption, observing that - in distinction to the Garners Beach Land - its ownership was "opaque". The relevance of the boat business was twofold: first, that the act of negotiating the Separation Agreement, which included provision as to the future conduct of the Company's affairs, was evidence of participation in management; and secondly, that ongoing participation in the boat business was inconsistent with illness precluding participation in business activity and thus weighed against it being unreasonable to expect Mr Snell to attend to his directorial duties notwithstanding his illness.
- The appellant submitted that negotiation of the Separation Agreement, with a view to disengaging from the Company's business, was not evidence of participation in management, as it was "a commercial step taken by him to divest his interest in the sole Company asset that was the cause of the Company incurring obligations to the Commissioner", and that as he "ensured it was a term of the Separation Agreement that a company controlled by Mr Ireland would purchase the Restaurant Business from the Company and the new company would take steps to discharge the Company's unpaid liabilities to the Commissioner", the ultimate object of the Separation Agreement was to cause the Company to discharge its obligations to the Commissioner (ground 9). However, while it contemplated that the Company would divest itself of the restaurant business, the Separation Agreement did not involve Mr Snell disengaging from management of the Company; to the contrary, it involved him remaining not only a shareholder but also a director of the Company, and the issue is participation in management of the Company, not of any particular aspect of its business. The Separation Agreement was evidence of ongoing participation by Mr Snell in management of the Company, because by it, he participated in making arrangements in respect of the ongoing conduct of the Company's affairs.
- The appellant submitted that Mr Snell's decision to remain a director in order to safeguard his interest in the Garners Beach Land was not evidence of participation in management (ground 10). This submission was founded on the notion that in the absence of evidence that the Garners Beach Land formed part of any income earing business of the Company, or that its ownership involved decision-making related to the "real business affairs" of the Company, it did not evidence participation in the management of the Company. To the contrary, however, a deliberate decision to remain a director, in order to retain influence over the Company in respect of a valuable asset, evidences ongoing participation in management. The issue is participation in management of the Company, not of its restaurant business. That ownership of the land may have had no PAYGW or SGC consequences does not mean that decisions about it were not an aspect of management of the Company.
- The appellant submitted that it was erroneous to rely on Mr Snell's decision to remain a director, because otherwise the only option available to a director to avoid liability would be to resign, which is not what the section requires. However, it is not the mere circumstance that Mr Snell did not resign that was significant; it is that in the context of negotiating the Separation Agreement, he made a deliberate decision, for sound commercial reasons, to remain a director - and thus to remain involved in management. That, with the other matters to which reference has been made, contributed to the conclusion that he had not ceased to participate in management. This is manifest from the following excerpt from Mr Snell's evidence, which was cited by his Honour: [39]
[136] By September 2013, I had lost complete confidence in Jim Ireland's ability to manage the affairs of the Company. Therefore, to avoid leaving Jim Ireland in control of the Company's assets without any oversight from me, I entered into the Separation Agreement rather than resign as a director of the Company. I did not consider that winding up the Company was an appropriate course of action.
[137] As discussed above, part of the Separation Agreement involved Jim Ireland transferring the assets of the Restaurant Business into a separate company. Therefore, by remaining a director, I believed that this would ensure that Jim Ireland would consult with me, particularly given that I would be required to sign all necessary sale documentation.
[138] Further, I could use my position as a director to encourage Jim Ireland to honour the obligations to the ATO and other creditors otherwise he would have had total management responsibility but without the absolute intent to meet his responsibilities.
[139] Since April 2008, the Company had owned a part interest in land at address, Lots 1 and 3 The Esplanade, Garners Beach, Queensland (Garners Beach). Garners Beach was bought for a purchase price of approximately $4.5 million.
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[141] I considered that if I resigned as a director of the Company, I would lose the ability to have a say in the management of Garners Beach, a significant asset of the Company. Further, my resignation could leave Jim Ireland in control of the Garners Beach asset. This, in my mind was untenable given my loss of confidence in his ability to manage the affairs of the Company.
- Significantly, the appellant did not challenge his Honour's conclusion that although he found it increasingly difficult to make contact with Mr Ireland, Mr Snell nevertheless did succeed in contacting him, and did discuss the Company's affairs with him. This was sufficient of itself to support the conclusion that Mr Snell continued to participate in management; it is not only through formal meetings of directors, but also through informal discussions between directors, that management is conducted.
- Accordingly, in my view, there was no error in the primary judge's conclusion that Mr Snell continued to participate in management of the Company during the period between 2013 and its ultimate winding-up. That conclusion was of itself fatal to the "illness" and "other good reason" defences.