14 Having identified the applicant's argument, I pause at this point to address an application by the respondent to set aside a notice to produce served by the applicant. The arguments on that application were heard simultaneously with the arguments on the substantive application, as they were inter-related. I have come to the view that the notice to produce should be set aside on the basis that the applicant has not demonstrated that the notice to produce has a legitimate forensic purpose (see Seven Network (Operations) Limited v Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited [2023] FCAFC 185; (2023) 418 ALR 284 at 297 to 298 ([37] to [38]) per Wheelahan, Anderson and Jackman JJ). In particular, the notice to produce calls for many documents having no apparent relevance to the issues on the application as formulated in the applicant's argument.
15 I note that counsel for the applicant also submitted that there were discrepancies in the respondent's evidence as to its liability to Merricks as at March 2024, including the correction by Mr Long of evidence upon which the Court had acted in Agrinova (No.1). However, these matters are of little, if any, relevance to the applicant's argument which includes as a premise that the respondent's liability to Merricks as at March 2024 was $41.87 million, in accordance with the statements from Merricks recently provided to the applicant. It is not a legitimate forensic purpose to cast the net wide for documents that might throw doubt upon an earlier position when the applicant has adopted the corrected position in its argument. In any event, the notice to produce should be set aside for the reasons set out in the previous paragraph.
16 Returning to the substantive application, I do not accept the starting point of the applicant's argument, namely the applicant's diminution premise, for the following reasons.
17 First, the affidavit evidence upon which the applicant's submission is founded, being primarily evidence from Mr Long, the respondent's solicitor, does not purport to be - either at March or December 2024 - evidence of the respondent's net asset position. Rather, it was filed in response to applications based upon the foreshadowed sales of particular properties and addresses particular assets (or groups of assets) and liabilities.
18 Secondly, even if the assets and liabilities relied upon by the applicant to establish the respondent's net asset positions were to be taken as the respondent's only (or only material) assets and liabilities, the premises of the argument do not permit the conclusion sought to be drawn. As is apparent from [12] and [13] above, the applicant's submission as to the December 2024 net asset position includes a liability to Thera of $13.25 million, but the applicant's submission as to the March 2024 net asset position does not, recognising it only as an unknown or uncertain amount (i.e., x). The applicant's argument then proceeds on the basis that the respondent's exposure to Thera in March 2024 was zero (i.e., x = 0). No basis for proceeding on this basis has been established.
19 Thirdly, there is evidence suggesting that the respondent's exposure to Thera in March 2024 was not zero, and in particular evidence that:
(1) on 11 September 2020 Agrinova Operations Pty Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of the respondent, and Thera entered into an agreement titled "Master Crops Facility Agreement" (MCFA);
(2) on 20 February 2023, Agrinova Operations and Thera entered into an agreement titled "Master Murabaha Agreement" (MMA);
(3) as at March 2024, the respondent was a guarantor to Thera of the obligations of Agrinova Operations;
(4) on 28 May 2024, Thera issued notices of default and payment demands, in relation to the MMA and the MCFA, which specified events of defaults under those agreements; and
(5) on 16 July 2024, the respondent, Thera and others entered into a deed of forbearance and partial release which recorded that the amount owing by Agrinova Operations under the MCFA and the MMA as at the date of that deed was a total of $14,142,882.42, and pursuant to which Thera agreed to refrain from enforcing its securities over properties owned by the respondent.
20 Fourthly, a more readily available inference is that the respondent's exposure to Thera as at March 2024 was closer to $14.14 million than to zero, in which case the net position in March 2024 was closer to $20.7 million than $34.67 million, and the difference between the March and December 2024 positions is unlikely to be material given the size of the respondent's enterprise.
21 It may be the case that as at March 2024, the respondent's exposure to Thera was a contingent liability, which later crystallised when the guarantee was called upon in May 2024. However, that would not assist the applicant because there is nothing to suggest that such crystallisation occurred otherwise than in the ordinary course of the respondent's business or that it had the effect of frustrating or inhibiting the Court's processes.
22 Thus, I am not satisfied that the applicant's diminution premise has been established. In any event, such satisfaction would have been insufficient to justify the relief sought, for the reasons which follow.
23 Rule 7.35(4) requires the Court to be satisfied that (relevantly) "a prospective judgment will be wholly or partly unsatisfied because any of the following might occur ... the assets of the prospective judgment debtor are disposed of, dealt with or diminished in value" (emphasis added). A past occurrence may inform an assessment of what might occur in the future (see Simmons v Giezekamp [2024] FCA 649 at [21] (Thawley J)), but central to such consideration in the present case would be the nature of the past diminution including whether it occurred as part of the respondent's ordinary course of business. This has not been addressed by the applicant (which has focussed on the applicant's diminution premise) and the applicant has not established the requisite risk.
24 Counsel for the applicant also submitted that the respondent is unable to pay its debts as and when they fall due and that this may prevent the applicant from recovering the full amount of any judgment. The evidence falls well short of establishing this proposition, noting in particular that solvency involves a cashflow test and the evidence, such as it is, concerns assets and liabilities rather than cashflow. In any event, the establishment of impending insolvency or impecuniosity does not provide a basis for the imposition of an order in the nature of a freezing order and such orders are not made so as to provide security to an applicant for a judgment in advance of its execution: see, e.g., Hortico (Australia) Pty Ltd v Energy Equipment Co (Australia) Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 545 at 558 (Young J); Frigo v Culhaci [1998] NSWCA 88 at 6 and 8 (Mason P, Sheller JA and Sheppard AJA); Cardile v LED Builders Pty Ltd [1999] HCA 18; (1999) 198 CLR 380 at 403 to 404 [51] (Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Callinan JJ) and 428 [122] (Kirby J); Finn v Carelli [2007] NSWSC 261 at [5] (Brereton J); and Samimi v Seyedabadi [2013] NSWCA 279 at [74] (McColl JA).
25 If contrary to the above, the applicant had established: (1) the applicant's diminution premise; and (2) the requisite risk of future dissipation, dealing or diminution operating so as to frustrate or inhibit the Court's processes, I would nevertheless have declined to grant the relief sought as a matter of discretion in circumstances where the applicant has not proffered the usual undertaking as to damages.
26 The usual position that an applicant for an order in the nature of a freezing order is required to provide the usual undertaking as to damages is reflected in Practice Notes GPN-FRZG at [2.16] and GPN-UNDR at [2.1], and is well-established: see e.g., Southern Tableland Insurance Brokers Pty Ltd (in liq) v Schomberg (1986) 11 ACLR 337 at 340 to 342 (Young J); and Cardile at 401 [43]. The rationale for requiring the provision of such an undertaking is the protection of the interests of the party the subject of (and third parties affected by) the freezing order: Air Express Ltd v Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd (1981) 146 CLR 249 at 311 to 312 (Gibbs J).
27 Although the applicant, after initially indicating that it would not provide the usual undertaking, did offer to provide an undertaking capped at $50,000, this does not change the position. The usual undertaking is uncapped, consistent with the above-mentioned aim of protecting the interests of the party the subject of (and third parties affected by) the freezing order.
28 Counsel for the applicant submitted that the usual undertaking is not always required, and relied in particular upon Tomlinson v Cut Price Deli Pty Limited (unreported, 23 June 1995, Kiefel J). I accept that there have been occasions when the usual undertaking has not been required, but these have involved exceptional circumstances. This is not an exceptional case. Tomlinson does not assist the applicant as it turns on its own facts.