25 The picture of Mrs Steele-Smith presented by Mr Trevor Steele was of a lady who, at the time of the relevant transactions, was elderly, frail, sick, dependent on a pension, unable to understand or deal with business transactions, and vulnerable to coercion. A considerable body of documentary evidence to the contrary was tendered by the Defendants. The evidence was produced by the process of issuing subpoenas to a variety of persons and institutions. None of this evidence was contradicted by the Plaintiffs. A considerable part of the evidence emerges from a Statement of Claim filed in proceedings 11540 of 2003 in the Common Law Division of this Court, in which Mrs Steele-Smith is the Plaintiff. The facts alleged in the Statement of Claim were verified by Mrs Steele-Smith in accordance with the Supreme Court Rules .
26 Having regard to the evidence tendered by the Defendants, I make the following findings of fact.
27 For a number of years prior to August 2001, Mrs Steele-Smith was the proprietor of four businesses which provided marketing and promotional services to an electricity utility, North Power, which later became Country Energy.
28 From May 1997 to August 2001, Mrs Steele-Smith was engaged by North Power to procure the design, manufacture and distribution of various goods promoting North Power. Between May 1997 and July 2001, Mrs Steele-Smith rendered invoices to North Power for goods and services provided by her businesses in a total amount of $5,085,076 and she received payments totalling $3,712,576.
29 From May 1997 until 28 March 2000, Mrs Steele-Smith was an undischarged bankrupt. How, in the face of s.116 of the Bankruptcy Act 1996 (Cth), Mrs Steele-Smith could have carried on a large business enterprise and received payments of about $3M directly into her own bank account while an undischarged bankrupt has not been explained. Nevertheless, banking records and invoices clearly show that this is what happened.
30 In August 2001, Country Energy, the successor in title to North Power, purported to terminate the services of Mrs Steele-Smith. Mrs Steele-Smith claimed that Country Energy was indebted to her for the balance of amounts invoiced to North Power, namely, $1, 372,500. On 24 June 2003, she commenced proceedings against Country Energy in the Common Law Division of this Court to recover the alleged debt, as I have earlier noted.
31 It is against this background that the evidence relating to Mrs Steele-Smith's capacity to enter into transactions with the Defendants must be seen.
32 A Memorandum of Transfer dated 27 February 2001 shows that Unit 1/151 Bowman Street, Swansea, was purchased in the name of Mr Tony Steele for $144,000. The evidence of Mr Tony Steele and Dr Manners makes it clear that Mr Tony Steele has for many years been incapable of working and has been receiving a disability benefit. Where the money to purchase this unit came from is not explained by the Plaintiffs. The Defendants suggest that the money came from the profits of Mrs Steele-Smith's business. It will be necessary to return to this point shortly.
33 On 22 January 2002, Mr Trevor Steele became registered as the proprietor of a business name, "Country Power Newspapers".
34 On 20 February 2002, Mrs Steele-Smith's husband of many years died. Dr Manners says, and I accept, that her husband's death caused Mrs Steele-Smith great emotional stress.
35 On 24 February 2002, Mrs Steele-Smith began receiving a war veteran's pension.
36 On 16 May 2002, Mrs Steele-Smith borrowed $23,000 from the Companion Credit Union of New South Wales. How this transaction came about and how the borrowed monies were used has not been explained by the Plaintiffs.
37 On 21 May 2002, Ms Denise Robinson, Mrs Steele-Smith's daughter, executed a Deed of Trust whereby she declared that she held one share in Maxwell Developments on trust for Mr Tony Steele.
38 On 6 June 2002, Mrs Steele-Smith borrowed $25,000 from the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. How this transaction came about and how the borrowed money was used has not been explained by the Plaintiffs.
39 There is no suggestion by the Plaintiffs that Mrs Steele-Smith's borrowings from the Companion Credit Union and the Commonwealth Bank had anything to do with Mr Mahommed and Vestecorp or that Mrs Steele-Smith was suffering from any mental or physical incapacity at the time of these borrowings.
40 Mr Mahommed's evidence is that, on 17 June 2002, Mr Trevor Steele rang him in response to an advertisement which Vestecorp had placed in the newspapers stating that private loan funds were available. Mr Trevor Steele said that he and his mother were starting up a new business and were enquiring as to the availability of loan funds. According to Mr Mahommed, later that day Mrs Steele-Smith rang him and said that she wanted to borrow $35,000 urgently for a new business and had real property available as security.
41 Mr Mahommed says that later that day he went to see Mrs Steele-Smith and Mr Trevor Steele at Mrs Steele-Smith's home at Caves Beach. Mrs Steele-Smith told him that she and her family had set up a new business called Country Power Newspapers and were in the process of obtaining a contract to supply marketing services to Country Energy. She said that she was going to organise the marketing and promotion of the business.
42 According to Mr Mahommed, Mrs Steele-Smith told him that her business had previously had a turnover in excess of $5M, that a contract had been terminated, and that she was arranging for a new contract in the name of her son, Trevor. She said that Trevor and Mr Tony Steele would operate the new business and that that was the reason that she needed a loan of $35,000.
43 Mr Mahommed says that he prepared the loan information based on information given to him at this meeting by Mrs Steele-Smith and Mr Trevor Steele. He returned to Mrs Steele-Smith's home the following day, met Mrs Steele-Smith and Mr Trevor Steele, went through the loan application with Mrs Steele-Smith and explained it to her before obtaining her signature to it.
44 It is of particular significance that, according to Mr Mahommed, Mr Trevor Steele was present and participated in the meetings which generated the first loan application. Although Mr Trevor Steele presented the case for the Plaintiffs on their behalf, he himself did not give any evidence during the trial. In particular, he did not deny Mr Mahommed's account of these meetings. Indeed, he did not even dispute Mr Mahommed's account of these meetings from the Bar Table.
45 Mr Mahommed says that shortly after this meeting, Mrs Steele-Smith requested him in a telephone conversation to arrange for the increase of the loan from $35,000 to $50,000. Mr Mahommed said that the lender would need a letter from Mrs Steele-Smith's accountant confirming that the borrowed funds were required for business purposes. Mrs Steele-Smith told him that her accountant was Mr Allan McKeown and that she would ring Mr McKeown to instruct to provide the necessary confirmation.
46 Mr McKeown was called by the Plaintiffs to give evidence. He said that he had met Mrs Steele-Smith socially on a number of occasions but had never acted for her as her accountant. He says, however, that in June 2002 Mrs Steele-Smith made an appointment to come to see him to discuss a business which she proposed to establish. At a meeting in his office she asked whether Mr McKeown's firm would act as her accountants and tax agents. Mr McKeown agreed. Mrs Steele-Smith explained what she had in mind and said that she would need working capital to buy various items of equipment and requested that Mr McKeown send a letter to Liberty Financial confirming that a loan was required for business purposes. In accordance with that request, Mr McKeown provided a letter to Mr Mahommed dated 1 July 2002.
47 On 4 July 2002, Mr Mahommed attended at Mrs Steele-Smith's home and procured her execution of the loan agreement and mortgage for a loan of $50,000 from Liberty Funding.
48 I accept the evidence of Mr Mahommed as to the circumstances in which the first loan to Mrs Steele-Smith was made and as to what was said by Mr Mahommed in the course of his discussions with Mrs Steele-Smith. It is corroborated by contemporaneous documents; to a certain extent, it is corroborated by Mr McKeown, particularly in regard to Mrs Steele-Smith's stated intention of borrowing funds to start a new business; there is no evidence to the contrary from Mrs Steele-Smith; Mr Trevor Steele, who could easily have given evidence denying that account of events if he had wished, did not do so.
49 According to Mr Mahommed, on 4 August 2002 Mrs Steele-Smith rang him and asked if he could arrange a loan of a further $40,000 for the business. On 5 August Mr Mahommed visited Mrs Steele-Smith at her home and she signed a loan application form. On 12 August 2002, Mrs Steele-Smith executed a loan agreement for a loan from Liberty Funding of $90,000, which was a consolidation of her previous loan of $50,000 with the additional loan of $40,000.
50 On 14 August 2002, Mrs Steele-Smith wrote a letter to Country Energy concerning the outstanding amount which she claimed Country Energy owed to her pursuant to her agreement with North Power. That letter is written in clear and businesslike terms. In the letter Mrs Steele-Smith states:
"Further to our previous phone conversations regarding outstanding accounts payable for invoices submitted to North Power. I have finalised a schedule showing invoices and receipts/bank deposits for the term of my appointment with North Power.