Solicitors:
TurksLegal (Calliden Insurance Ltd)
MCK Lawyers (Stealth Enterprises Australia Pty Ltd t/as The Gentlemen's Club)
File Number(s): CA 2015/279424
[2]
[Note: The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the Court otherwise orders, a judgment or order is taken to be entered when it is recorded in the Court's computerised court record system. Setting aside and variation of judgments or orders is dealt with by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and 36.18. Parties should in particular note the time limit of fourteen days in Rule 36.16.]
[3]
Judgment
HIS HONOUR: This is an application for a stay of enforcement of orders made by this Court on 5 April 2017 (and varied on 28 April 2017) pending determination of Calliden Insurance Ltd's application for special leave to appeal to the High Court. The application for special leave relates to the judgment of this Court in Stealth Enterprises Pty Ltd t/as The Gentlemen's Club v Calliden Insurance Limited [2017] NSWCA 71. By that judgment, this Court set aside a judgment in favour of Calliden directed by Schmidt J on 3 September 2015 (Stealth Enterprises Pty Limited trading as The Gentleman's Club v Calliden Insurance Limited [2015] NSWSC 1270). This Court subsequently directed the entry of judgment for Stealth in the sum of $648,604.93.
At the material time, Stealth owned and operated a brothel from premises in the Australian Capital Territory. Calliden issued an Adult Industry Insurance Policy to Stealth covering, inter alia, damage caused by fire. Following a fire at the premises on 1 January 2012, Stealth submitted a claim under the policy.
Calliden denied liability on the basis that Stealth had failed to comply in two respects with its duty of disclosure under s 21 of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth). The first matter not disclosed was that Stealth's sole director and its manager were members of the Comancheros bikie gang. The second was that the brothel's registration under the Prostitution Act 1992 (ACT) had lapsed or expired prior to the date of the last renewal of the policy.
The Court held that Stealth had not breached its duty of non-disclosure in the first respect alleged. This is because Calliden had not established that a reasonable person in the position of Stealth could be expected to have known that the subject information was relevant to Calliden's decision whether to accept the risk (s 21(1)(b) of the Insurance Contracts Act). The Court held that Calliden had not in any event established that if the information had been disclosed that it would not have renewed the policy.
Similarly, the Court held that Calliden had not established that if Stealth had disclosed the lapse or expiration of the brothel's registration, Calliden would not have renewed the policy.
The Court's view on the first issue was summarised as follows:
"As Calliden accepted, consistently with the conclusion in [Lindsay v CIC Insurance Ltd (1989) 16 NSWLR 673], the dangers which a reasonable person would expect ordinarily to be attendant on the conduct of a brothel are taken to include '[a]rson, standover tactics, fights, dissatisfied customers'. Moreover, a reasonable person would take into account that Calliden specifically targeted so-called 'adult industries' including brothels. Such a person could reasonably understand that an underwriter not only specialising in the insurance of brothels but actively seeking their business would expect that people with criminal connections, including as members of bikie gangs, were likely to be involved in the use of the premises, including as customers" (per Meagher JA at [52]).
Ward JA agreed with this conclusion but stated that she did so with "some hesitation" (at [77]). Sackville AJA also agreed but observed that "[a]t first blush this may seem a surprising conclusion" (at [81]).
The Court's reasons for concluding that Calliden had not established that disclosure in the first respect (see [3]-[4] above) would have caused it to refuse to renew the policy were summarised as follows:
"I accept the primary Judge's finding that Ms Shepherd [the employee of Calliden who dealt with renewal of Stealth's policy] was a credible witness. Even so, when the evidence is considered as a whole, I do not think that the primary Judge could have been satisfied on the balance of probabilities that Calliden, had it been made aware of Stealth's association with bike gangs, would have declined to renew Stealth's policy" (per Sackville AJA at [97]).
Calliden's Special Leave Application records at [7] the following contentions put to the Court of Appeal, and intended to be pursued before the High Court:
"(i) unlike in respect of an illegal brothel, a reasonable person in the position of the applicant insurer would not assume that those operating a legal brothel would necessarily be criminals or persons likely to be associated with criminals, including members of outlaw motorcycle gangs, although such persons may be involved;
(ii) accordingly, the association of the principals of the respondent with an outlaw motorcycle gang was an additional risk to the risks otherwise associated with or inherent in the operation of a legal brothel;
…
(iv) [the] additional risk of property damage (or of liability for personal injury) for any business operated by persons associated with an outlaw motorcycle gang, whether or not the particular business had similar but lesser risks even if not operated by such persons, was sufficient of itself that a reasonable person in the circumstances could be expected to know that such an association was a matter relevant to the insurer's decision to accept the risk."
In the Application, Calliden submits that the Court of Appeal's judgment was erroneous as a matter of principle "because it depended upon the failure to recognise and accept that a matter which increased the possibility that an otherwise known risk might eventuate was a matter relevant to the decision to increase the risk" (at [19]).
In relation to the Court's findings that disclosure would not have made any difference to Calliden's attitude, Calliden contends that the Court did not properly apply the principles stated in Fox v Percy (2003) 214 CLR 118; [2003] HCA 22. Calliden contends that the Court should have asked itself whether Ms Shepherd's evidence that she would not have written the policy if disclosure had occurred was glaringly improbable (compare Judgment at [97] quoted in [8] above).
For the purpose of its stay application, Calliden attempted to obtain evidence of Stealth's financial position. The evidence it tendered indicated that Stealth has a paid up share capital of $2, has not filed annual returns with the Australian Securities and Investment Commission, and does not own any real property, at least in New South Wales. Stealth did not tender any evidence suggesting that it has any significant assets.
In these circumstances, I conclude that there is a substantial risk that if Calliden now satisfies the judgment against it, Stealth will be unable to repay the amount of the judgment, together with interest accrued on it, in the event that the judgment is set aside by the High Court.
I will not repeat the references I gave in Wu v Ling (No 3) [2016] NSWCA 381 at [2]-[3] to the principal authorities relevant to the grant by this Court of a stay pending an application for special leave to appeal to the High Court. Suffice it to say that a finding that there are substantial prospects of success on the special leave application should be made before a stay is granted.
In my view, such prospects exist in the present case; not in the sense that it can be concluded that the Special Leave Application is likely to succeed, but in the sense that the Application is strongly arguable and has a significant chance of success. As is evident from Ward JA's hesitation expressed in this Court's judgment (see [7] above), different views could reasonably be taken as to the correct outcome of Stealth's proceedings. Further, the principal issue on the Special Leave Application does not turn upon a question of fact as to what Stealth knew at the relevant time, but rather the objective question of what a reasonable person in Stealth's position would have known. If the High Court chooses to address this question, its judgment is likely to provide guidance to practitioners in an important area of insurance law and practice.
As there is a real risk that Stealth would not be able to effect restitution if this Court's judgment is reversed in the High Court, the balance of convenience strongly favours the grant of a stay. In these circumstances, and as the Special Leave Application is strongly arguable, I consider that a stay should be granted.
Calliden's Notice of Motion only sought a stay pending determination of its Special Leave Application. As a result, I shall so confine my order. It follows from my reasoning however that if Calliden's Special Leave Application is successful, it will be entitled to a stay pending determination of its appeal to the High Court.
I make the following orders:
1. Order that the orders of the Court of Appeal in proceedings No 2015/279424 made on 5 April 2017, as varied on 28 April 2017, be stayed pending determination of Calliden's application for special leave to appeal to the High Court of Australia filed on 3 May 2017, being proceedings No S115 of 2017.
2. Order that the costs of this Notice of Motion be paid in the same manner that the costs of the Special Leave Application are ordered to be paid.
[4]
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Decision last updated: 06 June 2017
Parties
Applicant/Plaintiff:
Stealth Enterprises Pty Ltd t/as The Gentlemen's Club