[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
The second appellant, Ali Itawi, had been engaged in a business relationship with the second respondent, Orlando Fonseca, since 1997. In the years that followed, Ali, in his capacity as a manager at various property services companies, routinely engaged businesses owned by Orlando for the provision of cleaning and maintenance work.
In 2001, Ali purchased a property in Bardwell Valley, NSW ("the Bardwell Property"). In 2003, Ali transferred the Bardwell Property to Orlando. In 2015, Orlando transferred the Bardwell Property to a third party, in exchange for the release of mortgages over properties belonging to Orlando and his family (including his son, Jeffrey, his wife, Vilma, and his daughter, Joselyn, the first, third and fourth respondents respectively).
The first appellant, The Cleaning Doctor NSW Pty Ltd ("Cleaning Doctor"), was incorporated in 2009, with Ali as the sole director and shareholder. A bank account was established in the name of Cleaning Doctor ("the CD Account") in 2009, with Ali as the sole signatory. Ali provided Orlando with a signed debit card and a book of signed blank cheques. Ali subsequently provided Orlando with two further books of signed blank cheques.
The appellants commenced proceedings in the Equity Division seeking relief in respect of two claims. The first claim, which concerned the CD Account, alleged that Orlando and Jeffrey, among others, withdrew the sum of $2,695,078.51 from the CD Account without authorisation. The appellants sought an account of that money, which they claimed was stolen or obtained by fraud, deceit, or misleading and deceptive conduct. It was also the basis for a restitutionary claim for money had and received. In so far as the withdrawals were made by the cashing of cheques, the appellants also brought a claim in tort for conversion of the cheques by the first and second respondent.
The second claim, which concerned the Bardwell Property, alleged that Ali had transferred the Property to Orlando pursuant to an agreement that Orlando would hold the Property on trust for Ali, and that Orlando's transfer of the Property to a third party in 2015 was in breach of that trust. Alternatively, the appellants claimed that the Bardwell Property was subject to a resulting trust in Ali's favour, on the basis that its transfer to Orlando was a sham, and it was sold for "false consideration". The appellants sought relief on various bases, including that the traceable proceeds of the 2015 sale of the Bardwell Property were held on constructive trust for Ali.
The primary judge rejected the evidence of both Orlando and Ali on disputed matters, including as to the circumstances surrounding the transfer of the Bardwell Property and the creation and use of the CD Account, save for where it was supported by documentary evidence or corroborated by credible witnesses. Her Honour described both men as highly unsatisfactory witnesses who lied if it served their interests and gave inconsistent evidence. Her Honour ultimately dismissed both claims on the basis that the appellants had failed to discharge the burden of proof.
In this Court, the appellants challenged the primary judge's conclusion in respect of both claims. As to the Bardwell Property claim, they contended that her Honour erred in failing to find that the Bardwell Property was held on trust for Ali. They also contended that her Honour erred in otherwise failing to find that Orlando's transfer of the Property to a third party, to release mortgages over properties belonging to the respondents, impressed those properties with trusts in Ali's favour.
As to the Cleaning Doctor claim, the appellants contended that the primary judge incorrectly applied the burden of proof and therefore failed to find that Jeffrey and Orlando were not authorised to withdraw money from the CD Account. The appellants also contended that the primary judge mischaracterised the respondents' case as involving a claim that Jeffrey and Orlando had general authority to withdraw money when that was not pleaded, and her Honour erred in determining the claim on that basis. The appellants further alleged that the primary judge failed to decide their money had and received claim and their claim of conversion of cheques. In so far as the primary judge found that the money in the CD Account did not legally or beneficially belong to Cleaning Doctor, the appellants argued that neither party raised this as an issue and her Honour should not have made that finding.
The respondents filed a cross-appeal and a notice of contention. By their cross-appeal, they argued that the primary judge erred in refusing leave to amend their defence to rely on the Cheques Act 1986 (Cth) in answer to the Cleaning Doctor claim. The notice of contention advanced two arguments in relation to the Bardwell Property claim which the primary judge found it unnecessary to decide, the first relying on s 44 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) and the second relying on a deed of release and loan documentation in the context of the transfer of the Bardwell Property to a third party.
The Court (Mitchelmore JA, Brereton JA and Simpson AJA agreeing) held:
As to the Bardwell Property claim:
(1) The primary judge did not err in concluding that Ali did not discharge the burden of proof necessary to establish that Orlando held the Bardwell Property on trust for Ali, in the sense that she did not have a sense of actual persuasion of that fact after taking into account all of the relevant evidence: [133]. Ali failed to prove that his explanation for the transfer of the Bardwell Property to Orlando was any more probable than other potential explanations which did not involve the Property being held on trust for him: [6]-[8].
John Holland Pty Ltd v Kellogg Brown & Root Pty Ltd [2015] NSWSC 451 considered.
(2) The primary judge did not accept the evidence of Ali on any disputed matter, including the circumstances surrounding the purchase and subsequent transfer of the Bardwell Property, except where that evidence was corroborated by documentary evidence or a reliable witness. In circumstances where that finding was not challenged on appeal, Ali could not rely in the appeal on evidence which her Honour rejected at least in part on that basis : [2], [114]-[120], [132].
(3) The primary judge also did not err in failing to find that Orlando's transfer of the Bardwell Property to a third party to secure releases of mortgages over properties belonging to the Fonseca family impressed those properties with trusts in Ali's favour: [133].
As to the Cleaning Doctor claim:
(4) The primary judge did not err in concluding that the onus was on the appellants to establish that Jeffrey and Orlando made unauthorised withdrawals from the CD Account, and that they failed to discharge the necessary burden of proof in that regard: [14], [17]-[20], [155]-[159].
Coshott Family Pty Ltd v Lyons [2022] NSWCA 216 applied; David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1992) 175 CLR 353; [1992] HCA 48; Currie v Dempsey (1967) 69 SR (NSW) 116 considered.
(5) The appellants' case as to the limited scope of authority conferred on Orlando and Jeffrey rested primarily on the uncorroborated evidence of Ali, which was inherently improbable, contrary to objective evidence, and impacted by the adverse credibility findings. The respondents made no concession, express or implied, as to lack of general authority: [17], [151]-[153].
(6) The conclusion that the appellants had failed to discharge their onus of proving that the withdrawals from the CD Account were made without authority was determinative of the money had and received claim and the claim in conversion. Her Honour's conclusion in that regard did not involve a reversal of the burden of proof, or a mischaracterisation of the respondent's case: [15], [160].
As to the cross-appeal and the notice of contention:
(7) Given the conclusions reached in respect of the Bardwell Property claim and the Cleaning Doctor claim, it was not necessary to determine the cross-appeal or the notice of contention: [134], [161].