Section 1324(10) of the Act
139THC seeks damages under s 1324(10) of the Act for the loss it has suffered by reason of the administrators' sale of the 1,367 MT in breach of s 442C of the Act (see [120] above).
140An issue arises as to whether s 1324(10) is available to THC for this purpose.
141Section 1324(1) of the Act provides, relevantly, that where a person engages in conduct in contravention of the Act, the Court may on the application of a person whose interests had been affected by the conduct, grant an injunction restraining the conduct.
142Section 1324(10) provides:
"Where the Court has power under this section to grant an injunction restraining a person from engaging in particular conduct, or requiring a person to do a particular act or thing, the Court may, either in addition to or in substitution for the grant of the injunction, order that person to pay damages to any other person."
143These proceedings were commenced on 19 September 2013 when THC made an ex parte application for injunctive relief to McDougall J. The precise relief sought, and granted, was an injunction restraining CMA "through itself, its servants or its agents (including the administrators appointed to it), from disposing or dealing with" the 1,367 MT. At that stage, THC did not allege a breach by the administrators of s 442C of the Act or identify s 1324(1) of the Act as the source of the Court's jurisdiction to grant an injunction.
144McDougall J granted an order up to 24 September 2013, restraining CMA and the administrators from dealing with the 1,367 MT.
145Unbeknown to THC, the administrators had, eight days earlier, sold all of CMA's plant, equipment and stock (including the 1,367 MT) to Sell & Parker.
146At the return date of the summons on 24 September 2013, and presumably on revelation by the administrators to THC of the sale to Sell & Parker, the injunction granted on 19 September 2013 was dissolved by consent. However, McDougall J's ex tempore judgment on 24 September 2013 reveals that there was argument before his Honour concerning "the proceeds of sale of the scrap metal in question". The administrators, without prejudice and without admissions, offered an undertaking to not "dispose (from the proceeds)...a sum which is the amount [THC] says it paid for the scrap metal in question" (at [10] of the ex tempore judgment). THC sought wider relief. Ultimately McDougall J concluded "that the restraint in respect of the proceeds of sale should go no further than the undertaking offered by the administrators" (at [12] of the ex tempore judgment). Accordingly, McDougall J noted the administrators' undertaking to not dispose of or deal with $371,824 from the Sell & Parker proceeds. That undertaking was in due course continued and, as I have mentioned, $371,824 remains set aside pending the outcome of these proceedings.
147In these circumstances, Mr Nell submitted that, by reason of s 1324(10), I have power to award THC damages against the administrators for the loss it has incurred as a result of the contravention of s 442C.
148It is well established that a claim for damages under s 1324(10) cannot arise if there is "no prospect" that the Court would grant an injunction pursuant to s 1324(1) (GE Capital Australia v Davis [2002] NSWSC 1146; 180 FLR 250 per Byrson J at [60] and Jovanovic v Commonwealth Bank of Australia [2004] SASC 61; 87 SASR 570 at [115] per Besanko J, with whom Mullighan J agreed).
149Mr Mackay submitted that THC had no standing to seek an injunction restraining the administrators from selling its property in breach of s 442C because, at the time proceedings were commenced, the property had already been sold (and thus that THC had "no prospect" of obtaining injunctive relief) and because s 442C(7) of the Act provides that once an administrator disposes of property the subject of a security interest, the disposal extinguishes the security interest.
150In my opinion s 442C(7) is not relevant to this question. THC does not assert a "security interest" in the property. It sought injunctive relief upon the basis that it was the owner of the property.
151It is true that when proceedings were commenced, the sale by the administrators to Sell & Parker had been concluded. It does not follow, however, that THC had "no prospect" of obtaining injunctive relief. When the proceedings were commenced, the administrators retained the relevant proceeds of sale. Those proceeds were, as I have discussed, the subject of argument before, and injunctive adjudication by, McDougall J on 24 September 2013.
152So far as concerns the scope of s 1324(10), Black J observed in In the matter of Colorado Products Pty Limited (in prov liq) [2013] NSWSC 1613 at [41]:
"The scope of [s 1324(10)] and its predecessors has been a matter of considerable controversy in the case law; a wider construction was given to predecessors of s 1324(10) in early case law, before the narrower construction came to prevail...".
153Thus Bathurst CJ recently said in Dungowan Manly Pty Limited v McLaughlin [2012] NSWCA 180:
"...although Cohen J in Permanent Trustee Australia Ltd v Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd (1994) 15 ACSR 722 at 728 held that damages could be awarded even where no injunction is sought under the predecessor to s 1324(10) (s 574(8) of the Companies (NSW) Code, which is in identical terms to s 1324(10)), the predominant view in subsequent cases has been that damages can only be awarded in proceedings where an injunction is actually sought: Executor Trustee Australia Ltd v Deloitte Haskins & Sells [1996] SASC 5874; 135 FLR 314 at 317-318 per Perry J; Waterhouse v Waterhouse (1999) 46 NSWLR 449 at 490-491 per Windeyer J (in which his Honour accepted the remarks of Perry J over those of Cohen J); Artistic Builders Pty Limited v Elliot & Tuthill (Mortgages) Pty Limited [2002] NSWSC 16; 10 BPR 19565 per Campbell J (as his Honour then was)."
154The question has now been the subject of detailed consideration by the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Queensland in McCracken v Phoenix Constructions (QLD) Pty Ltd [2012] QCA 129; [2013] 2 Qd R 27 (handed down several weeks before the hearing in Dungowan).
155In that case, Fraser JA, with whom White and Applegarth JJA agreed, drew attention to the observations of Perry J in Executor Trustee Australia Ltd v Deloitte Haskins & Sells (to which Bathurst CJ referred in Dungowan), that "the focus of the section is upon the power to grant injunctions and its exercise, rather than the creation of rights to damages" (at [24]).
156Fraser JA gave detailed consideration to the question of when the Court's power under s 1324(10) is enlivened. At [30] his Honour said:
"There is no necessary correlation between the liberality of the test in s 1324(1) for standing to apply for an injunction and the entitlement to recover damages under s 1324(10). Although the latter subsection empowers the court to award damages 'to any other person' and does not define the nature of those 'damages', it does not follow that the court might award any measure of damages to any person for any effect upon that person's interests. The very unlikely results of [this construction] may be avoided by taking into account the statutory context, including the conventional function of 'damages' and the expression in s 1324(10) 'either in addition to or in substitution for the grant of the injunction'. In the case of a contravention of the Act, the subsection may be seen as conferring power to award damages only as a substitute remedy, or supplementary remedy, for an injunction to remedy, or partly remedy, to adverse effect upon interests which are protected by the provision of the Act which has been contravened." (emphasis added)
157These are recent, considered, observations of an intermediate appellate court which I consider are binding on me, and "likely to be followed by the Court of Appeal in this State by reason of the importance given to uniformity of decision making in respect of the Act" (per Black J in In the Matter of Colorado Products Pty Ltd (in prov Liq) [2014] NSWSC 789 at [397] to [400] citing his Honour's earlier judgment in In the Matter of Colorado Products Pty Limited (in prov liq) [2013] NSWSC 1613).
158However, I see the facts in this case as being very different from those before the Queensland Court of Appeal in McCracken.
159In McCracken the respondent to the appeal, Phoenix Constructions Pty Ltd, was a builder. It had commenced proceedings against a developer, Coastline Constructions Pty Ltd, of which Mr McCracken was a director. Phoenix had a valid contractual claim against Coastline for damages, evidently arising out of a contract pursuant to which Phoenix agreed to construct a development on a property owned by Mr McCracken's wife. Mr McCracken caused Coastline to, in effect, abandon its contractual interest in the property. Phoenix joined Mr and Mrs McCracken as defendants and sought injunctive relief to compel Mrs McCracken to transfer the property to Coastline.
160Phoenix then sought to bring an action in damages against Mr McCracken alleging a breach by him of his duties to Coastline pursuant to s 182(1) of the Act and claiming that it, Phoenix, had suffered damage as a result of such breach.
161In that context, following his observations set out at [156] above, Fraser JA said:
"In this case, for example, the claimed injunction required Mr McCracken to cause Mrs McCracken to transfer to [Coastline] the real property which was alleged to have been diverted from [Coastline] by Mr McCracken's contravention of the duty he owed [to Coastline] under s 182(1). Such an injunction, if it were effective, would appropriately have remedied the adverse effect upon [Coastline's] interests which are protected by s 182(1)...If the injunction could not be granted, a substitute remedy would be to award damages in favour of [Coastline] by way of compensation for the irretrievably lost property; if only part of the property could be returned to [Coastline] pursuant to an injunction, a supplementary remedy (damages 'in addition' to the injunction) might provide compensation [to Coastline] for the value of that part of the property irretrievably lost as a result of the contravention. An award of damages in favour of [Phoenix] would not be a substitute or supplementary remedy for the claimed injunction in that way."
162For those reasons, amongst others, the Queensland Court of Appeal rejected the trial judge's conclusion that the mere inclusion by Phoenix of a claim for injunctive relief was "sufficient for the purposes of maintaining the claim for damages" by Phoenix against Mr McCracken (see Phoenix Constructions (Queensland) Pty Ltd v Coastline Constructions (Aust) Pty Ltd [2011] QSC 167; 84 ACSR 562 at [56] per Cullinane J).
163On the facts, Fraser JA concluded that the claim for damages made by Phoenix against Mr McCracken could not be regarded as a "substitute or supplementary remedy" for its claim for injunctive relief against Mrs McCracken. That was because there was no direct relationship between the injunctive relief sought and the damages claimed.
164In this case, however, there is a direct relationship between the injunctive relief sought by THC at the outset of these proceedings and the damages now sought. Now that a breach by the administrators of s 442C of the Act can be recognised, THC's application for injunctive relief at the outset of these proceedings can be seen to have had, as one of its bases, s 1324(1) of the Act. As THC did not know that the administrators had sold its 1,367 MT, THC originally sought to restrain disposition of its property. Thereafter, in substance, the administrators offered to preserve the status quo by retaining and segregating the proceeds ($371,824). THC sought wider injunctive relief, albeit without success.
165The claim for damages now made against the administrators by THC under s 1324(10) for breach of s 442C of the Act is in substitution for, or supplementary to, that claim for injunctive relief. In effect, THC seeks compensation from the administrators for the damage it has suffered by reason of the sale of its property (in contravention of s 442C), which it sought to, but was unable to, restrain. In my opinion, I have jurisdiction to make such an award.
166THC has suffered damage by reason of the administrators' contravention of s 442C. Its property has been sold to Sell & Parker. On the face of it, THC is entitled to damages to compensate it for that loss.