REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(REVISED FROM THE TRANSCRIPT)
1 This is an application under s 479(3) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) made by an interlocutory process filed on 28 September 2007. Initially, the interlocutory process was filed by the first defendant, BGR Corporation Pty Limited (In Liq). At today's hearing the liquidator, Mr Kerr, has been joined as a party to the application. The application arises in the winding up of BGR, which was ordered in these proceedings earlier this year. It involves, in part, issues that arose between the parties in giving effect to judgments and orders which I delivered and made at the time of resolving the substantive dispute in the principal proceedings.
2 Originally, the interlocutory process sought a number of declarations. These concerned the amounts due under declarations made earlier this year. The amounts were due to BGR by the second defendant, The Triad Health Products Group of Companies Pty Limited, and the third defendant, Cordado Partners Services Pty Limited. During the course of argument today, the applicants on the motion, BGR and Mr Kerr, have indicated that they seek the following substantive relief:
(1) a judgment or order that Triad and Cordado Partners Services pay to BGR $476,695.04, being 90% of the costs which the liquidator has ascertained as due and payable, together with interest, pursuant to order 1 made on 28 February 2007 as varied by the order made on 29 March 2007;
(2) directions in terms of prayers 10, 11 and 12 of the interlocutory process filed on 28 September 2007, namely:
'10. A direction as to whether the Liquidator is authorised to cause BGR Corporation Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) to issue a statutory demand to:
(a) [Triad]; or
(b) [Cordato Partners Services]; or
(c) both
and, if so, in what amount or amounts.
11. A direction as to whether the Liquidator is authorised to cause BGR Corporation Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) to apply to appoint a receiver to the affairs of:
(a) [Triad];
(b) Cordato [Partners Services]; or
(c) both.
12. An order that [Triad] and [Cordato Partners Services] pay the costs of this application (on an indemnity basis).'
3 Following his appointment, Mr Kerr had his solicitors, Gadens, write to the solicitors for Triad and Cordado Partners Services seeking, among other things, payment of three different liabilities due by them to BGR that were the subject of final orders in the principal proceedings, namely:
(1) consultancy fees overpaid to Triad of $311,550.86;
(2) dividends overpaid to:
(a) Triad of $340,000;
(b) Cordado Partners Services of $40,000;
(3) the amount of 90% of the costs paid by BGR for or in respect of the legal costs and disbursements of Triad and Cordado Partners Services as defendants in the proceedings, which was due by them jointly and severally. At that stage that sum had not been quantified by the liquidator.
4 The liquidator's correspondence with each of Triad and Cordado Partners Services commenced on 13 March 2007. Cordato Partners Services acknowledged the claim on 30 March 2007 indicating that it would forward a detailed reply by 2 April 2007. However, as events turned out, no such reply was ever sent. The solicitors for Triad responded on 5 April 2007. They asserted that:
· the liquidation of BGR was proceeding as a solvent winding up and that Triad would become entitled at the conclusion of the process to a substantial liquidation dividend proportionate to its shareholding;
· in making orders relating to Triad:
'[t]he Court's plain intention was that the amounts found to have been overpaid by way of consultancy fees ($311,550.86), and by way of dividends ($340,000.00), should be restored to BGR, and the orders made by the Court appropriately reflect the extent to which Triad's entitlement to participate in the proportionate distribution of the surplus assets of BGR will be affected by adjustments identified in those orders.' (The meaning of that assertion is not particularly clear to me.)
· the liquidator had, as they understood it, substantial cash resources from a realisation of the assets of BGR with which to proceed with the liquidation;
· there could hardly be any real advantage in Triad paying over to the liquidator the funds in question at that time and that those funds were not required to support the conduct of the winding up;
· Triad had an entitlement to be paid out of the assets of BGR consultancy fees amounting to approximately $1.165 million, including interest. (Earlier today I rejected Triad's application to amend order 6 made on 12 February 2007 in which it had sought to reflect its assertion of an entitlement to those consultancy fees: Food Improvers Pty Ltd v BGR Corporation Pty Ltd (No 6) [2007] FCA 1812. Nonetheless, when the correspondence was engaged in, the claim of Triad to consultancy fees was being advanced by Triad's solicitors.)
· Triad's solicitors were preparing a formal proof of debt setting out what was due to Triad and said:
'In our view, until such times as the final accounts between Triad and BGR are prepared which will reflect the totality of the adjustments to be made, it is inappropriate for your client to demand payment from our client of discrete amounts of monies such as referred to in your letter dated 13 March 2007.
In light of the above, you should assume that the unspecified steps which you have foreshadowed to recover the amounts referred to in your above-mentioned letter, may need to be resisted. To press these claims at this time will undoubtedly occasion considerable expense both to our client and to BGR. As the majority shareholder in BGR, our client will object most strenuously to the Liquidator being allowed any costs, fees expenses or remuneration needlessly incurred in relation to any proceedings instigated for that purpose. Such expenses would not be "properly incurred" within the meaning of Section 5561(a) or (dd) of the Corporations Act.'
5 On 24 July 2007 Gadens responded to Triad's solicitors' letter of 5 April 2007. They noted that BGR then had $571.20 in its bank account, but anticipated receiving some moneys from some tax refunds, the entitlement to which arose before the liquidator's appointment. In a letter also sent that day, Gadens pressed Triad for payment of the two outstanding sums due in respect of overpaid consultancy fees and the overpaid dividend, together with their then quantification of the 90% of legal costs. A similar letter was sent to the solicitors for Cordado Partners Services seeking payment of the overpaid dividend and the then quantification of the legal costs.
6 On 7 August 2007 Triad's solicitors wrote back to Gadens and asserted that:
· they assumed the winding up of BGR was proceeding as a solvent winding up and that their client would be entitled to a substantial liquidation dividend;
· the outcome of Triad now making any payment to BGR in liquidation, assuming on the balance of accounts that it was liable to do so, would simply cause unnecessary financial disruption to Triad in circumstances where any such liability could properly be accounted for in the liquidator's final statement of account;
· BGR and the liquidator should assume that any recovery action instigated by them:
'… [i]s likely to be vigorously resisted by our client and any such action will of course occasion considerable expense both to out client and to BGR.'
· if the liquidator declined to defer recovery action, they may have to institute proceedings on behalf of Triad, including to apply to the Court for a stay of the orders made in the principal proceedings.
7 The solicitors for the liquidator and BGR later responded denying Triad's assertions.
8 On 7 August 2007 Cordato Partners Services also responded to Gadens' letter of 24 July 2004. That response dealt with a number of matters and raised the assertion that there were offsets which were conceived to be available to it in respect of the amounts claimed. On that basis, it said that it would not be appropriate for BGR or the liquidator to make a demand at that time.
9 Earlier this week Cordato Partners Services paid $40,000 to BGR in respect of the overpaid dividend. Shortly afterwards, when the amount of interest claimed was quantified, it also paid the agreed amount of interest. The only currently relevant outstanding amount which may be due by Cordato Partners Services under the orders made in February 2007 is in respect of the repayment of 90% of legal costs paid by BGR for the benefit of Triad and Cordato Partners Services.