Objective facts and circumstances
34 VRM forms part of a group of companies referred to by Mr Bellamy as the "VRM Group". Mr Bellamy refers to himself as the president of the VRM Group. At all relevant times the Chief Executive Officer of one of the companies in the VRM Group was Ms Walters. Companies within the VRM Group operate a business for the research and production of agricultural products and technologies, including environmentally resistant food produce and animal feed.
35 In late 2021, Mr Bellamy entered into discussions with the Matchetts about investing in Savannah.
36 In January 2022 Savannah became a licenced distributor and manufacturer of VRM products pursuant to a licence agreement with another company in the VRM Group, VRM International Pty Ltd. Then, on 8 February 2022, an agreement was entered into having two components, referred to in the evidence as the Cash Flow Agreement and the Share Option Agreement.
37 The relevant features of the transaction were as follows:
(1) VRM would purchase 500 ordinary shares in Savannah from each of the Matchetts for a total purchase price of $360,000.00;
(2) Savannah would issue a further 250 allotted shares to VRM at a capital value of $220,000.00;
(3) Savannah would appoint a VRM nominee as a third director of its Board;
(4) VRM would transfer 100 ordinary shares to Ms Kate Fabian (a founding employee of Savannah) at no cost;
(5) VRM would fund a salary for Mr Matchett (Management Payments), an obligation expressed at clause 4 of the Cash Flow Agreement in the following terms:
VRM to provide Cash Flow support totalling $120,000.00 to offset the cost of a salary for Anthony Matchett. It is agreed that this element is satisfied by VRM making 12 monthly payments of an amount equivalent to the Net Salary applicable for a Gross Salary of $10,000.00 per month to Anthony Matchett and 12 monthly payments of an amount equivalent to the tax payable for a Gross Salary of $10,000.00 directly to the Australian Taxation Office all on behalf of Savanah Ag Research Pty Ltd. The date of commencement of these payments is the date of this agreement.
(6) VRM would pay superannuation and tax with respect to the Management Payment;
(7) VRM would purchase $125,000.00 of Savannah product;
(8) VRM would pay $50,000.00 for the cost of consultancy fees paid to Ms Fabian;
(9) VRM granted to the Matchetts an option (exercisable within 10 years) to buy a certain portion of VRM's shares at an agreed price to effect a reduction of VRM's shares to less than majority holding;
(10) VRM granted Savannah an option to buy back a 150 of VRM's shares at an agreed price with the effect that VRM would no longer hold the majority of shares;
(11) VRM would provide accounting and record keeping support for Savanah with Savannah assisting with the provision of sales, pricing, inventory and client management information;
(12) VRM and Savannah would mutually assist each other in marketing; and
(13) VRM would provide other "in kind" support including the use of storage facilities, farm equipment and vehicles.
38 Following the transaction, Savannah's 2250 issued shares were held:
(1) 1150 by VRM;
(2) 500 by Mr Matchett;
(3) 500 by Mrs Matchett; and
(4) 100 by Ms Fabian.
39 The money personally received by the Matchetts in consideration for the sale of their shares was expended in a way that meant that it was no longer available to them over the months that followed. They did not otherwise have sufficient personal funds to cause Savannah to buy back a portion of VRM's shares in accordance with the Share Option Agreement.
40 On 8 February 2022 Ms Walters was appointed as a director of Savannah as VRM's nominee.
41 Following VRM's share acquisition, relations between the Matchetts and VRM (particularly Mr Bellamy) rapidly soured.
42 A critical event occurred in March 2022 when VRM defaulted on its obligation to make the monthly Management Payment then due under the Cash Flow Agreement. Only one such payment had been made at that time and no further payments were ever made. VRM did not put forward a positive case that its failure to make the monthly payments from March 2022 was not in breach of the Cash Flow Agreement. There is otherwise nothing in the evidence to show that the cessation of the payment was justified as a matter of law. My reference in these reasons to a breach of the Cash Flow Agreement should be understood as referring to a belief on the Matchetts' part that VRM was in breach. Whilst this is not a trial founded in breach of the contract I am satisfied for the purposes of this proceeding that the Matchetts' belief was correct.
43 In her affidavit Ms Walters described the management and directors fees as being one of Savannah's "key expenses". That is an apt description. The failure of VRM to comply with is contractual obligations to Savannah in this respect resulted in directors payments owing to Mr Matchett being paid directly out of Savannah's resources.
44 A further critical feature of the relationship was Mr Bellamy's assumed entitlement to dictate the day to day business judgment decisions of the Board of Savannah. Mr Bellamy was not a director of Savannah. Whilst VRM had a contractual right to have a director appointed to the Board, that director was Ms Walters. She alone could not pass a resolution affecting the company's day to day operations or its financial affairs. VRM had voting rights as a shareholder of Savannah, sufficient to remove the Matchetts as directors, but those rights were not in fact exercised before the administrators were appointed. In closing submissions VRM asserted that the situation was one in which VRM exercised "practical" control, requiring the Matchetts' to "dance to the tune" of Mr Bellamy. I accept that VRM (particularly by Mr Bellamy) exercised practical control over Savannah.
45 Although Mr Bellamy was not a member of the Board of Savannah his evidence and conduct disclose a belief that he could and should dictate Savannah's business plan and general direction in direct dealings with the Matchetts and that he could cause VRM to possess and control Savannah's assets, and that is what he did in fact. His opinion as to the management of the affairs of Savannah differed from those of Mr Matchett including in respect of commercial matters affecting Savannah's future profitability. Again, it is unnecessary for the Court to determine whether Mr Bellamy's position in that conflict is correct. It is sufficient to identify that Mr Matchett and Mr Bellamy were at odds over matters concerning fundamental aspects of the business including development, production, planting, storage and sale of seed. At all times during that conflict the Matchetts had a duty to act in the best interests of Savannah, which in circumstances of solvency equated to the best interests of all of the shareholders (not just VRM). In circumstances of insolvency or near insolvency, the duty was to act in the best interests of creditors and to otherwise comply with the Act.
46 The relationship between VRM and the Matchetts deteriorated to the point where Mr Bellamy accused Mr Matchett of acting against the best interests of Savannah in particular transactions, accusations that Mr Matchett denied. The existence, nature and intensity of the business-related disputes is relevant to the Matchetts' subjective assessment of Savannah's financial position as identified later in these reasons. At this juncture, it is sufficient to mention two issues that were the cause of some conflict.
47 The first may be referred to as the 'Mareeba Issue'. It arose when VRM insisted on Savannah's seed stock being moved from a storage facility in Mareeba to a facility in Townsville that it owned and operated. The owner of the facility at Mareeba (Mr Santoscoy) would not release the seed until a payment had been made for use of the facility. Mr Matchett informed VRM that the money was in fact owed by Savannah to the facility owner pursuant to a memorandum of understanding and because the owner had suspended payments under that arrangement since December of the previous year. Mr Bellamy was dissatisfied, including because a liability owing to the owner of the Mareeba facility had not been disclosed in the financial records provided by Savannah to VRM prior to VRM acquiring its shares. Mr Matchett was directed to sort the problem out himself.
48 The second may be referred to as the 'Rossi Issue. It arose in a context where Mr Matchett and Mr Bellamy were in dispute about payments that should be made to seed growers to recompense them for use of products known as catalyst and groundswell. Mr Matchett had previously operated the business on a model where Savannah made those payments and bought back the crops for resale at a profit. Mr Bellamy's view was that growers should cover those costs and that there should be no buy-back of crops. That fundamental difference between them was apparent from about March or April 2022. On 9 April 2022, Mr Bellamy sent a text/WhatsApp message to Mr Matchett demanding that he be provided with an invoice sent to a grower named Rossi. He followed up with the terse message: "this is not a casual request". The messages indicate a level of distrust on the part of Mr Bellamy as to whether Mr Matchett would operate in accordance with VRM's demands on the issue. On 10 April 2022 Mr Matchett generated an invoice for Rossi and provided a copy to Mr Bellamy. He did not tell Mr Bellamy that he had agreed with Rossi that the expenses of the catalyst and groundswell would be met by Savannah. He asked Rossi to issue an invoice addressed to the Matchetts personally to cover the costs of the catalyst and groundswell. The Matchetts paid that invoice from their own funds. Mr Matchett reasoned that after the payment and the buy-back of crops there would be a significant profit to be made for Savannah. Mr Matchett told the Court that he knew that Mr Bellamy would disapprove of the transaction and so sought to conceal it from him.
49 By 7 April 2022 Mr Matchett was expressing his frustrations in writing, including his concerns about Savannah's revenue streams, paths to market and budget assumptions. In an email sent on that day he expressed the view that the entire business model needed to be addressed because he could not see revenue paths that would contribute income to the business.
50 On 13 or 14 April 2022 Ms Walters attended at a branch of Savannah's bank together with the Matchetts where they signed forms to enable Ms Walters to become a signatory to Savannah's bank accounts. As at 9 May 2022 their requests had not been processed by the bank.
51 That day Mr Bellamy, Ms Walters and the Matchetts attended a meeting at VRM's Brisbane premises (9 May meeting). At that meeting, Mr Bellamy demanded that Ms Walters become a signatory to Savannah's bank accounts. Mr Bellamy alleges that he insisted upon her becoming a signatory as a condition of VRM reinstating the Management Payments under the Cash Flow Agreement. I have already observed that VRM was in breach of the Cash Flow Agreement by withholding the Manager Payments and I am satisfied that Mr Bellamy had no legal entitlement to make demands concerning access to Savannah's bank accounts as a precondition to the reinstatement of the payments. As explained elsewhere in these reasons, I have concluded that at the time of the Resolution, the Matchetts proceeded on a reasonable assumption that there was no prospect of the Manager Payments resuming. I would arrive at that conclusion whether or not the bank signatories demand was made as a condition of their restoration.
52 The conflict between Mr Bellamy and Mr Matchett concerning Savannah's business plan was also the subject of a heated conversation between the two of them at the 9 May meeting.
53 When Mr Matchett attempted to remove himself from the meeting Mr Bellamy said words, in an aggressive tone, to the effect:
Your next decision is a very important one. If you choose now to leave this room, I will destroy you. The next correspondence you get will be from my lawyer, and he will take you for everything.
54 Mr Matchett's evidence as to the content and tone of that statement was not challenged and I accept it.
55 Following the 9 May meeting, Mr Bellamy insisted that he too become a signatory to Savannah's bank accounts.
56 On 10 May 2022 Mr Matchett sent an email to both Mr Bellamy and Ms Walters advising that he had received a call from Savannah's bank confirming that "2 director authentication" could be set up for transactions on Savannah's accounts, however the bank could not specify that Ms Walters be a necessary signatory. Mr Matchett asked Mr Bellamy and Ms Walters whether they wanted to follow the issue up for themselves, or whether the issue should be "managed internally". He did not receive a response. Mr Matchett did not otherwise take steps to make Mr Bellamy an additional signatory to Savannah's accounts. In cross examination he said that he did not consider that Mr Bellamy had any right to be a signatory in circumstances where he was not a director of Savannah.
57 I reject assertions by both Mr Bellamy and Ms Walters that the Matchetts had failed to take all steps necessary to make Ms Walters a signatory on Savannah's bank accounts (assuming for present purposes they had any legal entitlement to insist upon it). It was within their power to follow up with Savannah's bank both in respect of the forms signed by Ms Walters in mid- April 2022 and in relation to the issue raised in Mr Matchett's email of 10 May 2022. Ms Walters gave evidence to the effect that she was concerned that there was inadequate transparency with respect to Savannah's banking. That evidence is difficult to reconcile with her acceptance that the Matchetts attended with her at the bank in April 2022 to complete the necessary forms, and with the failure by her and Mr Bellamy to respond to Mr Matchett's email of 10 May. I accept Mr Matchett's evidence that when Mr Bellamy complained at the 9 May meeting that Ms Walters had not been made a signatory, Ms Walters remained mute notwithstanding that she had by that time signed forms with the bank with the Matchetts' cooperation.
58 Ms Walters deposed that it remained within Savannah's responsibility and control to oversee seed planting to ensure revenue streams. That evidence is contradicted by the contemporaneous correspondence and I do not accept it. On 18 July 2022 Mr Matchett sent an email to Ms Walters asking her how many hectares of a list of 11 seed and grain products had been planted and the crop locations because he needed to know what the supply would be available for customers. The correspondence is consistent with Mr Matchett's claim that he had been denied transparency of stock because it had been brought under VRM's physical control in Townsville. Ms Walters did not respond in terms that the question was unusual or unnecessary. Instead, she briefly stated in an email dated 19 July 2022 that there had been some sunnhemp and mustard seed planted and noted their locations. Mr Matchett otherwise told the Court that the majority of Savannah's seed stock had been earlier relocated to a storage facility in Townsville controlled by VRM which limited his physical access to it and information about it.
59 On 16 July 2022 Mr Matchett complained that VRM's accounting records relating to Savannah were incorrect, including because they made no provision for VRM's broken commitment to make the Management Payment and associated superannuation. He complained that the accounting services provided by VRM were "far from supportive". He stated that Savannah would be reverting to its own Xero accounting system from 1 July 2022 and would submit monthly reports prepared by a book keeper "to bring efficiency back to accounting for Savannah".
60 On 21 July 2022, Mr Matchett emailed a letter to Mr Bellamy (copying Ms Walters) in the following terms:
We refer to our ongoing discrepancies over Savannah AG and how the company is to progress.
As you know Kate, William, Catherine and I ran the company prior to you coming on as an investor. We ran the company with a vision in mind and believed that you shared that same vision for the company.
However, recent events have led us to believe that there is no shared vision for the company and you seek a different outcome. Examples of those events include that you have rejected our business plans and stopped us from engaging with our grower suppliers.
You have also not met your obligations in respect of the purchase of the shares in Savannah which required a contribution equal to my wage and superannuation. That payment was made in the first month, but there has been no payment of that amount since. That is despite VRM contributing funds towards Kate's wage.
With that in mind, Catherine and I have come to the conclusion that we need to look towards an amicable separation.
Please let us know your proposal to overcome this impasse.
We look forward to receiving your response by 26 July 2022.
61 No response was received.
62 On 1 August 2022 Mr Matchett made arrangements for the return to VRM of a vehicle provided to Savannah for its use under the Cash Flow Agreement. In the days following he made arrangements for the return of some bulk containers containing a variety of VRM products owned by Savannah to VRM's Townsville premises. Ms Walters deposed that the products in the returned bulk containers could instead have been sold by Savannah for a profit of $18,000.00 but did not state the time frame in which that might have been achieved nor whether such a sale would have been commended or facilitated by VRM.
63 Ms Walters resigned as a director on 3 August 2022. There is no evidence that her asserted reasons for her resignation were conveyed to the Matchetts at any time prior to the Resolution.
64 On 8 August 2022, Mr Matchett sent an email to Ms Walters stating that Savannah wished to terminate the licence agreement with VRM International Pty Ltd.
65 At some time prior to 9 August 2022 Mr Bellamy determined that the Matchetts should be removed as directors. His intention was not communicated to the Matchetts at that time.
66 In the week prior to 15 August 2022 Mr Matchett contacted investors with a view to attracting them to invest in Savannah. I will consider his motivations for making those approaches and their outcomes in due course.
67 From 15 August 2022, Mr Matchett obtained legal advice. He told the Court (and I accept) that his lawyer arranged for him to meet with a representative of SV Partners (the office of the administrators) and with Ms Cheryl Stainsby of Your Directors Advocate Pty Ltd, a consultancy business trading as Strategic Solutions.
68 The administrators' declaration of independence (adduced on VRM's case) confirms that Mr Adam Thorpe of SV Partners met with Mr Matchett and Ms Stainsby on 15 August 2022. The purpose of that contact was stated to be:
To discuss the status of the Company and outline its need for assistance.
To discuss a potential appointment and to obtain sufficient information about the financial position, solvency potential risks, unique stakeholders or circumstances that would affect any formal appointment over the Company.
To obtain sufficient information about the Company and related entities to assess any conflicts of interest or potential future conflicts of interest.
To clarify and explain the various options available to the Company and the nature and consequences of an insolvency appointment including potential actions available to a Liquidator against a director of an insolvent company.
Providing relevant documentation to allow the appointment of the Voluntary Administrator.
69 On the same day, Ms Stainsby sent an email in these terms to Mr Matchett:
Hi Tony
It was good to talk to you today and Nicole it was good to speak with you again as well.
I look forward to seeing the financials once they are available and I will organize a zoom conference to discuss further one [sic] I have had a chance to review them.
In the meantime if there are any developments with the other party or you would like catch up sooner, please give me a call on Mobile [redacted] and we can move things forward.
70 On the morning of 16 August 2022 Mr Matchett forwarded to Ms Stainsby and other recipients copies of Savannah's financial reports for 2020 and 2021 and asked if there was anything more he needed to do. Later that day Ms Stainsby advised Mr Matchett by email that a company search identified that Ms Walters remained recorded as a company director of Savannah. The email stated "she may have resigned but the ASIC search has not been updated to reflect that and that would be the fly in the ointment to any strategies we discussed yesterday". Mr Matchett responded to the effect that he would update the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) record.
71 By a further email exchange on the same day, Ms Stainsby asked whether Mr Matchett had a stocktake and Mr Matchett said that he would undertake one on the following day. Ms Stainsby also requested that Mr Matchett provide a listing of staff, as well as documents from Savannah's bookkeeping systems namely aged payables and receivables reports, profit and loss statements and a balance sheet.
72 On the following day Mr Matchett emailed to Ms Stainsby a staff list as well as two attachments, being reports taken from book keeping systems concerning aged payables, aged receivables and profit and loss. The attached documents are generated from the QuickBooks or "Intuit" system operated by VRM as well as reports generated from Xero which Mr Matchett said 'we have reverted too [sic] going forward".
73 Insofar as they are relevant to conclusions that follow, the Xero reports indicate:
(1) a net loss for the 2021/2022 financial year of $218,033.07;
(2) a net loss to date (that is, to 17 August 2022) for the 2022/2023 year of $36,846.32;
(3) trading income declining from 477,872.06 in the 2020/2021 financial year to $269,558.46 in the 2021/2022 financial year to -$4,174.00 for the financial year 2022/2023 to date;
(4) aged receivables as at 17 August 2022 of less than $1,000.00;
(5) current and long term assets of $129,923.68, including about $100,000.00 cash in the bank; and
(6) current liabilities of $68,281.75.
74 On 18 August 2022 Mr Matchett sent an email to his accountant concerning the updating of ASIC records to reflect the resignation of Ms Walters as a director. He asked the accountant to advise when the record had been updated "so we can continue to action our separation strategy".
75 The ASIC record was updated on the following day.
76 On the morning of 18 August 2022 Mr Matchett sent further documents to Ms Stainsby including the Cash Flow Agreement, Share Option Agreement and Savannah's constitution.
77 That evening, Mr Bellamy sent this WhatsApp message to Mr Matchett:
You have acted illegally to cancel a subscription owned by VRM Biologik. You are formally on notice.
78 Mr Matchett forwarded the WhatsApp message to Ms Stainsby with the following email:
This has just been received by me from ken via Whatsapp.
I think he is referring to me closing and cancelling the subscription (that savannah pays for) to Quickbooks that was requested by VRM to align our financials with VRM.
This was cancelled so as bank feeds stopped going through to VRM's financial team, but we advised them of this service being far from 'supportive' and that it was to be cancelled back in mid‐July, and had zero response since then until now.
79 Mr Matchett later clarified that the cancelled subscription was an Intuit subscription that had been paid for by VRM and added that he had probably acted illegally by cancelling it.
80 ASIC records show that on Friday 19 August 2022 a company named Sustainable Foods Australia Pty Ltd (SFA) was incorporated, having Mr Matchett as the sole director and shareholder.
81 Later that afternoon Ms Stainsby sent to Mr Matchett a copy of her letter of engagement and an invoice and requested that they return the signed agreement and a receipt for the invoice payment. The consulting agreement names Your Directors Advocate Pty Ltd as the service provider and Mr Matchett, Mrs Matchett and Savannah as clients. The consulting services covered by the agreement are defined to include:
1.1 "Consulting Services" means providing the following services and such other consulting services as may be required and agreed from time to time:
- Initial consultation to obtain instructions including all relevant documentation;
- Assessment of business and asset position;
- Assistance in negotiating with creditors;
- Assistance in negotiating with financiers including banks;
- Liaising with accounting and legal advisors and review of and where necessary, summarising and explaining the advice provided;
- Review of Client guarantee position;
- Mediating with third parties;
- Review of personal taxation position.
82 The scope of work is then described as follows:
Scope of Work: Consulting Assistance with the Pre-positioning of Savannah AG Research PL, Appointment of a Voluntary Administrator and subsequent DOCA or CVL. Assistance with lodgement of Paperwork, all correspondence with Administrator or Liquidator and Sale of Business.
The timeframe allowed for completion of work as outlined above is 3 to 6 months.
Additional works outside of the initial agreed scope of work, being external costs will incur either a supplementary quote or a revision of the original quote.
Services will commence upon receipt of the fee charged by YDA, which are due and payable in full, prior to the commencement of work on the Client's file.
83 Ms Stainsby also sent an email to Mr Thorpe asking him to "send undated VA Docs". She stated "we are trying to get this in for next week".
84 Mr Thorpe of SV Partners responded later on 19 Friday 2022, attaching forms providing for his appointment as administrator. His email relevantly stated:
Please ensure that the Director has the $30‐40k in the account for us if appointment is happening early next week. Otherwise I will provide the trust details.
85 The attachments to Mr Thorpe's email include a letter addressed to the directors of Savannah referring in its opening line to the proposed voluntary appointment of administrators to the company. The attachments to Mr Thorpe's email included a draft resolution for the appointment of administrators with provision for signatures to be applied by the Matchetts. The wording of the draft resolution is the same as that later made by the Matchetts and includes an expression of opinion that "in the opinion of the Directors, the Company is insolvent or is likely to become insolvent at some future time, and an administrators [sic] of the Company should be appointed". The attachments also included advice concerning the appointment of administrators and a schedule of fees.
86 Mr Matchett returned the signed agreement to Ms Stainsby by email sent at 8.30am on Monday 22 August 2022. The signatures of the Matchetts are dated 19 August 2022 and it has not been suggested by them that they were applied at a later time.
87 In his email Mr Matchett said that he would provide Ms Stainsby with an asset and liability worksheet "asap". Mrs Matchett was copied in that response.
88 At 8.43 am Ms Stainsby sent an email to Mr Matchett as follows:
Thanks Tony,
I am in meetings most of the day today so Sue will be collating all of the urgent information I have requested so far … can you please copy her into all correspondence always in case I do not see an email come through.
She will also be requesting the information for the Management Agreement today. We aim to get you into Voluntary Administration this week early as possible.
If you have any urgent queries leave me a voicemail and I will get back to you as soon as I can.
89 By email sent at 11.16am, VRM's solicitor sent an email to Mr Matchett attaching a notice for the convening of an EGM (EGM Notice). It contained no proposed resolution. The agenda items were set out under the heading "General business" as follows:
(a) Address items of general governance of the company.
(b) To consider any other business as may be lawfully put forward in accordance with the Constitution of the Company.
90 The EGM Notice stated that the EGM was scheduled to take place at 11.00am on the following day if members holding at least 95% of votes agreed, or (absent such agreement) at 11.00am on 9 September 2022. Mr Matchett forwarded the covering email and its attachment to Ms Stainsby within about half an hour.
91 At 12.41pm an employee of Strategic Solutions sent to Mr Matchett an email with the subject heading including the words "Management Agreement Information" seeking Mr Matchett's confirmation of the accuracy of information contained in an attached table. The attachment refers to Savannah as vendor and SFA as manager. The first column includes the question:
How is stock to be dealt with:
- is there a stocktake and when does that occur?
- does the manager buy the stock upfront or pay for it as it is sold?
92 The "Answer" column states "TBA" and a "Comments" column refers a stocktake of 22 August 2022 recorded in a spreadsheet and the phrase "can go as consignment stock". Another row refers to employees of Savannah being taken over by the manager, including Mr Matchett at the same rate of pay as that of the Manager Payments.
93 At 1.03pm an employee of Strategic Solutions emailed to Mr Matchett the documents that had been provided by SV Partners to facilitate the appointment of voluntary administrators. That email asked that Mr Matchett arrange for both Mr Matchett and Mrs Matchett "to sign and date (today's date and time where applicable) the forms where indicated and return same to our offices as soon as possible".
94 In cross examination Mr Matchett said (and I accept) that he drove from Cairns to Mrs Matchett's workplace in Palm Cove and that he and Mrs Matchett had a brief meeting at which the Resolution was passed. The Resolution states that it was made at a meeting held at 1.45pm.
95 Mr Matchett then returned the signed documents to Strategic Solutions by email at 2.10pm.
96 The EGM Notice was later amended so as to schedule the meeting at 11.00 am on 12 September 2022 (if there was no agreement for the meeting to be scheduled for the following day). The amended notice was sent by email between 2.08 and 2.09pm. At that time, VRM had not been made aware that the Resolution had been made. The Matchetts later informed VRM's solicitors that they would not attend the meeting following the appointment of administrators.
97 At 3.18pm, Mr Matchett forwarded an "assets/liabilities workbook with sheets for different categories" to Ms Stainsby and stated that he would go to the bank to set up accounts for SFA.
98 On 23 August 2022 Mr Thorpe of SV Partners sent an email to Ms Stainsby and Mr Matchett confirming the appointment of Mr Stimpson and Mr Kersey as administrators of Savannah. The email proposed a meeting to discuss seed stock and leased properties. It concluded:
We can also discuss the management agreement, however I am ok to allow this to continue in principle (so as to continue trading) based on terms largely outlined in the draft until the deed is finalised.
99 Mr Bellamy deposed that the EGM could not occur on 23 August 2022 because of the appointment or purported appointment of the administrators. That is not entirely correct. The EGM did not occur on 23 August 2022 because VRM had no entitlement to conduct an EGM at short notice on that day without the consent of 95% of shareholders, which was not forthcoming.
100 By letter sent on 24 August 2022, VRM's solicitor gave the Matchetts and the administrators notice of an EGM to be held on 14 September 2022. The correspondence was to the effect that VRM would exercise its voting rights at that EGM to remove the Matchetts as directors. An agenda for the EGM set out proposed resolutions to that effect. The Matchetts were otherwise invited to resign and they were provided with pro forma resignation notices to achieve that end. Neither of them accepted the invitation to resign.
101 Mr Matchett continued to provide Ms Stainsby with records relating to Savannah's business following the appointment of the administrators, including a spreadsheet identifying its assets and liabilities.
102 VRM later asserted its contractual right under the Cash Flow Agreement to appoint a director to Savannah. It advised the administrators that Mr Bellamy had been appointed as a director and that ASIC would be advised of that appointment on the following day. The administrators were also notified of the VRM's challenge to the validity of their appointment culminating in the institution of these proceedings on 6 September 2022.
103 By orders made on 9 September 2022 Downes J granted an application for an interlocutory injunction made on the application of VRM and supported by undertakings as to damages given by it and by Mr Bellamy in his personal capacity. The order restrains the administrators from:
(a) calling or convening a meeting of the company's creditors under section 439A(1) of the Act;
(b) disposing of, or otherwise diminishing or altering any interest that the First Respondent has in any intellectual property rights, licenses, permits or authorisations;
(c) otherwise disposing of, or otherwise dealing with the assets of the First Respondent other than in the ordinary course of business;
(d) except insofar as is reasonably necessary to preserve the assets of the First Respondent, taking any further steps in the administration of the First Respondent, including by:
(1) undertaking any further investigations pursuant to section 438A of the Act; and
(2) exercising any powers or providing any consents pursuant to sections 437A(1)(b), 437A(1)(c), 437A(1)(d), 437D, 437F of the Act.
104 At the EGM held on 14 September 2022, VRM exercised or purported to exercise its voting rights as majority shareholder to pass resolutions providing for the removal of the Matchetts as directors of Savannah.
105 On 31 August 2022 Mr Matchett signed a Report on Company Affairs and Property (ROCAP), identifying the Matchetts as creditors in an amount of $68,015.00.