Arbitrability
124 In this section of my Reasons, I address the question of whether the "matters" which I have identified as being involved in the present proceeding are arbitrable. The issue of arbitrability goes beyond the scope of an arbitration agreement. It involves a consideration of the inherent power of a national legal system to determine what issues are capable of being resolved through arbitration. The issue goes beyond the will or the agreement of the parties. The parties cannot agree to submit to arbitration disputes that are not arbitrable.
125 The question of whether a dispute is arbitrable is to be determined by the application of the nation's domestic law alone (Comandate at 97-98 [200]-[201] per Allsop J).
126 As submitted by the plaintiffs, Allsop J in Comandate observed that there was a common element to those categories of dispute that engaged the notion of non-arbitrability (at 97-98 [200]). That common element was, according to the plaintiffs, that there was a "sufficient element of legitimate public interest in the subject matters making the enforceable private resolution of disputes concerning them outside the national court system inappropriate".
127 His Honour's observation as summarised in the plaintiffs' submissions to which I have just referred was approved by the NSW Court of Appeal in Rinehart v Welker [2012] NSWCA 95 at 166 in the judgment of the Chief Justice (with whom McColl JA and Young AJA agreed).
128 As submitted by the plaintiffs, it is uncontroversial that some disputes cannot be the subject of private arbitration. Examples cited by the plaintiffs were: criminal offences; divorce; custody of children; property settlement; wills; employment grievances; some intellectual property disputes; competition law disputes; and bankruptcy and insolvency.
129 As I have already mentioned, the plaintiffs submitted that the present proceeding should be regarded as one "matter" for the purposes of s 7(2) of the IAA. I have already rejected that contention. However, the plaintiffs also submitted that, even if several matters are involved in the present proceeding, none of those matters is arbitrable.
130 The plaintiffs submitted that the public policy of the domestic law or the legitimate public interest of that law against arbitrability of particular disputes may arise in a number of ways. They argued that matters may not be arbitrable because they are uniquely the subject of government authority; because they affect a person's legal status; because they affect interests of third parties in a manner which cannot be considered in an arbitration; or because there is a public interest in seeing matters determined in public (that is to say, in open Court).
131 Although the plaintiffs accepted that some claims for relief under the Corps Act are arbitrable, including claims for purely inter partes relief under s 233 (ACD Tridon Inc v Tridon Australia Pty Ltd [2002] NSWSC 896 (ACD Tridon) at [192] per Austin J; Robotunits at 325-330 [55]-[69]; Re 700 Form Holdings Pty Ltd [2014] VSC 385; and Brazis v Rosati (2014) 102 ACSR 626), they nonetheless submitted that a claim for a winding up order is not arbitrable at all. In support of this ultimate proposition, the plaintiffs advanced a number of arguments:
(a) An order for winding up affects the legal status of a person. It also has serious consequences for the future of the company in question and those who have been charged with the responsibility of managing it;
(b) An order for winding up affects a number of third parties. Transactions involving the shares in the company being wound up are restricted; dispositions of property are constrained; the company's freedom to act in litigation is constrained; and the company's creditors are affected in a number of different ways;
(c) The creation and dissolution of an artificial legal entity such as a company is a matter uniquely the subject of governmental authority; and
(d) There is a public interest in ensuring that the procedural steps by which a company is placed into liquidation are governed by the Court's processes and determined publicly, not in private by an arbitral tribunal.
132 The plaintiffs went on to submit that the public interest as evidenced by the above matters is reflected in the need for the plaintiff in a winding up action to advertise the filing of its Originating Process and to lodge notice of the filing of that Process with Australian Securities and Investments Commission.
133 Ultimately, the plaintiffs submitted that the legislative structure of Pts 5.4, 5.4A and 5.4B of the Corps Act proceeds upon the basis that the winding up of a company should be subjected to a public process throughout the proceeding and be actively publicised so that people with an interest in the proceeding can attend, make submissions and even apply to be substituted as the plaintiff in the proceeding.
134 The plaintiffs also submitted that, as a matter of Australian authority, the position is perfectly clear. They relied upon A Best Floor Sanding Pty Ltd v Skyer Australia Pty Ltd [1999] VSC 170 (A Best Floor Sanding); ACD Tridon; Rinehart v Welker; and Tanning.
135 In their submissions, the plaintiffs sought to distinguish several overseas authorities upon the basis that those authorities did not represent the law in Australia and lacked persuasive reasoning in any event. The authorities sought to be distinguished in this fashion were Fulham Football Club (1987) Ltd v Richards [2012] Ch 333 (Fulham Football Club), Tomolugen Holdings Ltd v Silica Investments Ltd [2015] SFGA 57 (Tomolugen), Re Quiksilver Glorious Sun JV Ltd (2014) 4 HKLRD 759 (Quiksilver) and other authorities relied upon by Woolworths.
136 Tanning is authority for the proposition that, in appropriate circumstances, s 7(2) of the IAA will apply to a proceeding to reverse a liquidator's rejection of a proof of debt. Whether, in fact, s 7(2) of the IAA does so apply in any given case depends upon the nature of the grounds relied upon by the liquidator to reject the relevant proof of debt.
137 At 339 in Tanning, in their joint judgment, Brennan and Dawson JJ said that the principles that determine the enforceability of the liability to which a proof of debt relates are, in the main, the same as the principles which would be applied in an action brought directly against the company to enforce that liability. Their Honours went on to say that that general rule is qualified. The liquidator may have special grounds peculiar to his position which may entitle him to reject the proof. If the ground or grounds relied upon are no different from those which could have been relied upon by the company, then there is no impediment to an arbitrator determining whether or not those grounds are valid.
138 In Tanning, there was no special ground relied upon by the liquidator which was not available to the company itself. The real issue in the proceeding was whether or not the company was indebted to the creditor as the creditor claimed and, if so, in what amount. In that event, Brennan and Dawson JJ said (at 342-343):
If the creditor and the company are bound by an international arbitration agreement applicable to the claim, there is no reason why the claim should not be determined as between the creditor and the liquidator in the same way as it would have been determined had no winding up been commenced. To exclude from the scope of an international arbitration agreement binding on a company matters between the other party to that agreement and the company's liquidator would give such agreements an uncertain operation and would jeopardize orderly arrangements: see Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co. ((1974) 417 U.S. 506, at pp.516-517). But it is otherwise if the liquidator supports his rejection of a proof of debt in reliance on a ground which allows him, and him alone, to go behind the judgment, account stated, covenant or estoppel on which the company's liability is founded. The entitlement of a liquidator to go behind a judgment, account stated, covenant or estoppel is unaffected, either substantially or procedurally, by the existence of an international arbitration agreement binding on the company. To stay proceedings which involve only matters outside the scope of an international arbitration agreement would be to frustrate the provisions for winding up. Thus the application of s. 7(2) to proceedings for the reversal of a liquidator's rejection of a proof of debt must depend on the ground or grounds on which the liquidator seeks to support his rejection of the proof of debt. By attributing such a discriminatory operation to s. 7(2), conflict is avoided between the attainment of the objects of the Act and the procedures appropriate to a winding up.
139 Their Honours went on to hold that, in the circumstances of Tanning, the Court's decision on the challenge to the rejection of the proof of debt by the liquidator would inevitably follow the determination of the questions of whether the debt was truly due and, if so, in what amount.
140 All of the Justices in Tanning held that the question of whether the debt was due and, if so, in what amount, was arbitrable notwithstanding that it was raised in a context which directly involved the application of the relevant corporations legislation and notwithstanding that the ultimate decision in respect of the creditor's application to reverse the liquidator's rejection necessarily had to be made by the Court.
141 I have already referred to the joint judgment of Deane and Gaudron JJ.
142 At 353, Deane and Gaudron JJ remarked that the operation of s 7(2) of the IAA was not confined to proceedings in which the parties seek the same relief as might have been sought in arbitration proceedings. They held that the section has a wider operation.
143 Justice Toohey agreed with the judgment of Brennan and Dawson JJ.
144 Tanning makes clear that the arbitrability of certain matters raised in any given proceeding under the Corps Act (or its predecessors) will usually depend upon the nature of those matters. Blanket propositions in support of the proposition that all claims in a Corps Act proceeding are not arbitrable will not usually find favour with the Court. See also Rinehart v Welker at [170]-[171].
145 At [167]-[168] in ACD Tridon, Austin J held that one group of claims made in that proceeding fell within the wording of the relevant arbitral agreement but that four other categories of claims made in that case did not fall within the arbitral agreement. At [110]-[111], his Honour had earlier held that each of the five groups of claims identified by Tridon in its Written Submissions involved a "matter" for the purposes of s 7(2)(b) of the IAA.
146 At [178]-[204], Austin J then considered whether the claims made were in any event arbitrable. His Honour's views in these paragraphs are, strictly speaking, obiter dicta.
147 At [189]-[194], his Honour said:
189 The second kind of limitation was described by MJ Mustill & SC Boyd, Law and Practice of Commercial Arbitration in England (second edition, 1989), p 149. After stating the general principle that any dispute or claim concerning legal rights which can be the subject of an enforceable award is capable of being settled by arbitration, and noting that the general principle was subject to some reservations, the authors proceeded to explain the reservations, including the following:
"Second, the types of remedies which the arbitrator can award are limited by considerations of public policy and by the fact that he is appointed by the parties and not by the state. For example, he cannot impose a fine or a term of imprisonment, commit a person for contempt or issue a writ of subpoena; nor can he make an award which is binding on third parties or affects the public at large, such as a judgment in rem against a ship, an assessment of the rateable value of land, a divorce decree, a winding-up order or a decision that an agreement is exempt from the competition rules of the EEC under Article 85 (3) of the Treaty of Rome." [footnotes omitted]
190 In the Metrocall case, the Industrial Relations Commission in Court Session applied these observations to hold that a disputed claim to relief under s 106 of the Industrial Relations Act 1996 (NSW) is not capable of settlement by arbitration. The Commission drew attention to the specialist nature of the jurisdiction and powers of the Commission in Court Session (52 NSWLR at 25), and the nature of the considerations required to be taken into account. They emphasised that those considerations include matters relating to the industrial relations system and the public interest.
191 In A Best Floor Sanding Pty Ltd v Skyer Australia Pty Ltd [1999] VSC 170, the parties to a joint venture agreement agreed to arbitrate any dispute, difference or question touching, inter alia, the dissolution or winding up of the "association" which was their joint venture entity. Warren J declined an application for an order staying a winding up proceeding, under the Victorian commercial arbitration legislation, on the ground that the arbitration clause was null and void because it had the effect of "obviating the statutory regime for the winding up of a company" (at paragraph [18]). Her Honour's decision was partly based on public policy considerations surrounding the process of winding up a company pursuant to court order. An additional ground seems to have been that a winding up order operates to affect the rights of third parties, not merely the rights of the parties to the arbitration clause.
192 In my opinion, the latter ground is a strongly persuasive one, in keeping with the general observations by Mustill & Boyd. I accept, as well, that public policy considerations operate against referring to arbitration a determination to wind up a company on the grounds upon which a court may order that a company be wound up. However, I would not regard these public policy considerations as preventing parties to a dispute from referring questions to arbitration merely because those questions arise under the Corporations Act. I see nothing special about the Corporations Act that would distinguish it, as a whole, from other legislation such as the Trade Practices Act. This seems to be the position reached by United States courts: see Dean Witter Reynolds Inc v Byrd 470 US 213 (1985); Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc v Wagoner 944 F 2d 114 (2nd Cir 1991); also Pick v Discover Financial Services Inc 2001 No.Civ.A 00-935-SLR (D) Del Sept 28, 2001.
193 The statutory powers of a Court under the Corporations Act are, generally speaking, comparable to the powers exercised by a court under the general law (the power to make a winding up order being an exception to this proposition). They are generally not special powers to be exercised having regard to specialist public interest criteria.
194 Specifically, the public policy considerations held by Warren J to be applicable to a disputed claim to wind up a company do not seem to me to prevent the parties from referring to arbitration a claim for some merely inter partes relief under the oppression provisions of the Corporations Act, or for access to corporate information under s 247A. However, the "in rem" nature of an order for rectification of the share register of a company may prevent reference of that power to an arbitrator.
148 His Honour then considered whether a Pt 72 SCR reference should be ordered and other matters concerning appropriate relief.
149 It seems to me that his Honour accepted (as he ought to have done) that not all Corps Act matters were not arbitrable. Nonetheless, when considering A Best Floor Sanding, his Honour did seem to place considerable weight upon the proposition that a winding up order operates to affect the rights of third parties, not merely the rights of the parties to the arbitration clause. There is no doubt, however, that his Honour also took the view that oppression claims which were truly being litigated on an inter partes basis were arbitrable.
150 In A Best Floor Sanding, Warren J (as her Honour then was) said the following (at [13]-[18]):
13 The application to stay the winding up application on the basis of an arbitration agreement between the joint venture parties raises a fundamental principle of corporations law. To state the very obvious, a company is a corporation in the common law sense formed by registration under Pt 2A.2 of the Corporations Law or under corresponding earlier legislation. In the words of Ford, Austin & Ramsay in Ford's Principles of Corporations Law (at p1061): "a corporation (or body corporate in the common law sense) is a legal device by which legal rights, powers, privileges, immunities, duties, liabilities and disabilities may be attributed to a fictional entity equated for many purposes to a natural person ... The fictional entity acquires rights and liabilities by the acts of persons behind it." Upon incorporation, the Corporations Law applies to the new entity. Its company directors and management are subject to regulation under the Corporations Law. The Corporations Law contains provisions relating to the company's constitution, general meetings of members, management of the company, the company's dealings with other parties, the company's financing, the handling of its affairs when it is subject to a financial crisis and, most significantly for present purposes, its winding up and dissolution. The Corporations Law controls by statutory force the creation and demise of the company; it oversees the birth, the life and death of the company. Such matters cannot and ought not be subject to private contractual arrangement.
14 Chapter 5 of the Corporations Law is concerned with the winding up of companies. A company may be wound up in various circumstances, more often than not, as a result of insolvency. S59P allows an application to be made to the court for a company to be wound up on the basis of insolvency by the company, a creditor, a contributory, a directory, a liquidator or provisional liquidator of the company, ASIC or an agency prescribed under the legislation. A company may be wound up on grounds other than insolvency under s461 of the Corporations Law. The section is concerned with a range of circumstances but those most generally arising are when directors act in the affairs of the company in their own interests rather than in the interests of the members as a whole or in a manner unfair or unjust to other members or where the affairs of the company are conducted in a manner that is oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or unfairly discriminatory against another member or in a manner that is contrary to the interests of the members of the company as a whole. In addition, s461(1)(k) contains the broad discretionary ground vested in the court whereby a company may be wound up if the court is of the opinion that it is just and equitable to do so.
15 Throughout Chapter 5 of the Corporations Law there exists a statutory structure setting out the manner in which applications for the winding up of a company are to be made, the persons or parties who are permitted under the Law to make an application for the winding up of a company and, most significantly, the effect of a winding up order on creditors and contributories. A major aspect of the control by the court of the winding up of a company is the fact that the court appoints an official liquidator to be liquidator of the company. In this respect the Corporations Law sets out the powers and duties of a liquidator or a provisional liquidator of the company in the course of the winding up of that company. Indeed, the order of the court for the winding up of the company does not in effect wind up that company. Rather, the effect of the court order is that it directs that the process of liquidating the assets of the company and the winding up of its affairs should begin (see Re Crust 'n' Crumbs Bakers (Wholesale Pty Ltd) (1992) 2 Qd R 76, 78; (1991 5 ACSR 70). Upon a court ordering a winding up and so long as the winding up of the company remains unterminated no further order can be made by a court with respect to that company (see Commonwealth v Emanuel Projects Pty Ltd (1996) 21 ACSR 36; Dewina Trading Sdn Bhd v Ion International Pty Ltd (1996) 141 ALR 317; 22 ACSR 352).
16 It is, of course, contemplated by the Corporations Law that a company can be wound up on a voluntary basis. However, voluntary windings up differ from compulsory windings up in that they are initiated by the members rather than the court. A members' voluntary winding up is possible for solvent companies only, and the winding up by the liquidator is subject to the control of the members. If the company is insolvent, a voluntary winding up must be a creditors' voluntary winding up. Although it is voluntary in the sense that the members initiate it, the liquidator is subject to control by the creditors.
17 As observed by Ford, Austin & Ramsay in Ford's Principles of Corporations Law (at p27,065):
"If debtors have insufficient property to discharge their liabilities, a procedure to ensure an orderly and rateable distribution of that property among the creditors is needed. In the case of an individual that procedure is a bankruptcy administration. In the case of a company it is a winding up.
Achievement of an orderly and rateable distribution requires:
• collection of all the debtor's property not claimable by secure creditors;
recovery for addition to the debtor's estate of property previously transferred when the debtor was insolvent;
• a stay of proceedings against the debtor;
• a process by which claims against the debtor can be asserted and quantified;
• a scale of priorities for distribution of the property.
Bankruptcy administration in respect of natural persons has a social function - to give the debtor a discharge from debts and a new start. Winding up a company has no similar aim. At the end of the winding up the company is dissolved."
18 The application by AB Floor to stay the winding up application strikes at the very heart of the corporation structure enshrined in the Corporations Law. The arbitration clause in the joint venture agreement is null and void insofar as it purports to subject the parties to an arbitration with respect to the dissolution or winding up of the company. The provision is null and void because it has the effect of obviating the statutory regime for the winding up of a company. Moreso, the arbitration clause, if adhered to, would frustrate the contributory, Skyer Australia in its efforts to seek relief from the court under the winding up provisions of the Law. In essence, the arbitration clause in the joint venture agreement is contrary to the provisions of the Corporations Law and cannot be applied.
151 The views expressed by her Honour must be understood against the terms of the relevant arbitral agreement in the case with which her Honour was dealing. By that agreement, the parties had endeavoured to repose in an arbitrator the capacity to dissolve or wind up the relevant joint venture vehicle. Her Honour took the view that the parties could do no such thing and declared the arbitral agreement to be null and void insofar as it purported to subject the parties to an arbitration with respect to the dissolution or winding up of the relevant corporate entity.
152 The present case differs somewhat from the facts of A Best Floor Sanding. Here, it is Woolworths' contention that the determination of the legal and factual disputes adumbrated by the plaintiffs in their Originating Process, the Concise Statement and the affidavits filed in support of their claims for relief, can all be subject to determination by arbitration while leaving to the Court the ultimate decision as to whether or not the matters determined in that manner and any other facts and propositions of law not determined by arbitration are sufficient to persuade the Court to form the necessary opinion which is a precondition to the making of the winding up order sought.
153 Fulham Football Club and Tomolugen and the other cases relied upon by Woolworths support the proposition that the matters involved in the present proceeding which Woolworths contends should be referred to arbitration are, in fact, arbitrable.
154 In Fulham Football Club, the English Court of Appeal distinguished A Best Floor Sanding. The leading judgment was given by Patten LJ. Lord Justice Longmire and Rix LJ agreed with the reasons of Patten LJ. At 354 [74], Patten LJ observed that many (but not all) aspects of the corporations law regime in England and Wales for the liquidation by court order of a company are immune from interference by the members of the company whether by contract or otherwise. In particular, his Lordship focussed on the overriding importance of the legislative regime in cases of insolvency.
155 At 355 [76]-[77], his Lordship said of A Best Floor Sanding:
76 Warren J was, I think, right to regard the arbitration clause she had to consider as unenforceable in so far as it included within the scope of the reference the question whether the company should be wound up. Such an order lies within the exclusive jurisdiction of the court and the discretion as to whether or not to make that order is for the court, not the arbitrator to exercise. But I part company with her if and in so far as she suggests in para 18 of her judgment that there can be no resort to arbitration in respect of the dispute between shareholders or the company which forms the grounds upon which such relief may be sought.
77 The determination of whether there has been unfair prejudice consisting of the breach of an agreement or some other unconscionable behaviour is plainly capable of being decided by an arbitrator and it is common ground that an arbitral tribunal constituted under the FAPL or the FA rules would have the power to grant the specific relief sought by Fulham in its section 994 petition. We are not therefore concerned with a case in which the arbitrator is being asked to grant relief of a kind which lies outside his powers or forms part of the exclusive jurisdiction of the court. Nor does the determination of issues of this kind call for some kind of state intervention in the affairs of the company which only a court can sanction. A dispute between members of a company or between shareholders and the board about alleged breaches of the articles of association or a shareholders' agreement is an essentially contractual dispute which does not necessarily engage the rights of creditors or impinge on any statutory safeguards imposed for the benefit of third parties. The present case is a particularly good example of this where the only issue between the parties is whether Sir David has acted in breach of the FA and FAPL rules in relation to the transfer of a Premier League player.
156 His Lordship then reviewed ACD Tridon and In re Peveril Gold Mines Ltd [1898] 1 Ch 122 and, in respect of the latter, at 357-358 [82]-[84], said the following:
82 The decision is therefore limited to the narrow point of whether the articles of a company can effectively restrict or re-model the conditions for the presentation of a petition under what would now be section 122 of the Insolvency Act 1986. It does not suggest that an agreement to resolve a dispute between shareholders which might justify a winding up order on just and equitable grounds would either infringe the statute or be void on grounds of public policy. In fact it suggests the opposite.
83 It is therefore open to us to decide whether the provisions of section 994 are to be construed as restricting the resolution of unfair prejudice disputes to the exclusive jurisdiction of the court free of any binding authority. I have already set out my own reasons for preferring the view that disputes of this kind which do not involve the making of any winding up order are capable of being arbitrated. Although not necessary for the resolution of this appeal, I also take the view, as Austin J did in the ACD Tridon case [2002] NSWSC 896, that the same probably goes for a similar dispute which is used to ground a petition under section 122(1)(g) to wind up the company on just and equitable grounds. In those cases the arbitration agreement would operate as an agreement not to present a winding up petition unless and until the underlying dispute had been determined in the arbitration. The agreement could not arrogate to the arbitrator the question of whether a winding up order should be made. That would remain a matter for the court in any subsequent proceedings. But the arbitrator could, I think legitimately, decide whether the complaint of unfair prejudice was made out and whether it would be appropriate for winding up proceedings to take place or whether the complainant should be limited to some lesser remedy. It would only be in circumstances where the arbitrator concluded that winding up proceedings would be justified that a shareholder would then be entitled to present a petition under section 122(1)(g). In these circumstances the court could be invited to lift any stay imposed on proceedings imposed under section 9(4). In much the same way, it would, I think, be open to an arbitrator who considered that the proper solution to a dispute between a shareholder and the company was to give directions for the conduct of the company's affairs to authorise the shareholder to seek such relief from the court under section 994. But such cases are likely to be rare in practice. If the relief sought is of a kind which may affect other members who are not parties to the existing reference, I can see no reason in principle why their views could not be canvassed by the arbitrators before deciding whether to make an award in those terms. Opposition to the grant of such relief by those persons may be decisive. Similarly if the order sought is one which cannot take effect without the consent of third parties then the arbitrators' hands will be tied.
84 But, as explained earlier in this judgment, these jurisdictional limitations on what an arbitration can achieve are not decisive of the question whether the subject matter of the dispute is arbitrable. They are no more than the practical consequences of choosing that method of dispute resolution: see Société Commerciale de Réassurance v ERAS (International) Ltd (formerly Eras (UK)) [1992] 1 Lloyd's Rep 570 and Wealands v CLC Contractors Ltd (Key Scaffolding, Third Party) [1999] 2 Lloyd's Rep 739.
157 There may be a flaw in his Lordship's reasoning at 357 [83] if, as appears to be the case, part of that reasoning included the proposition that parties to an arbitral agreement might agree amongst themselves not to present a winding up petition unless and until the underlying dispute had been determined by way of arbitration.
158 In Tomolugen, the Singapore Court of Appeal followed Fulham Football Club and Quiksilver. Quiksilver is a case directly in point. In that case, despite the fact that it was agreed on all sides that a winding up order could not be made by an arbitrator, the Court nonetheless stayed the legal proceedings. At [21], the Court said:
The determinative issue … is whether or not the substantive dispute between the parties is arbitrable. By substantive dispute I mean the commercial disagreement, which they wish to have resolved. This is not the same as the relief that one party seeks.
159 Other cases in Canada, New York, the British Virgin Islands and Ireland cited by Woolworths were to the same effect as Quiksilver, although some of those cases were decided before Quiksilver.
160 The plaintiffs criticised the reasoning in Fulham Football Club, Tomolugen and Quiksilver. They submitted that the reasoning in those cases reflected different legislative regimes in respect of corporations from that which applies in Australia and, for that and other reasons, the cases failed to pay sufficient regard to the very public nature of a winding up proceeding. They went on to submit that the solution proffered by the English, Singaporean and Hong Kong Courts is unsatisfactory because it deprives the Court of its essential function, leaving it to implement, in a mechanical way, the decision of the arbitrator.
161 In substance, the present case is a dispute between the sole shareholders of Hydrox involving the way in which those shareholders performed their contractual and other obligations inter partes. In truth, there is no substantial public interest element in the determination of these parties' disputes. At the present time, it is not suggested that Hydrox is insolvent. Indeed, there is evidence to the effect that Woolworths has provided letters of comfort to the directors of Hydrox in order to allay any concerns that they may have as to the solvency of Hydrox. No creditor has attended any Court hearings or has sought leave to participate in the proceeding. This is despite the fact that it has been advertised as required under the relevant regulatory regime and despite the fact that the dispute between the plaintiffs and Woolworths has received considerable press coverage.
162 In my judgment, the mere fact that a winding up order is sought does not alter the characterisation of the real controversy between the parties in this proceeding as being an inter partes dispute. Of course, it is for the Court, and the Court alone, to decide whether such facts and propositions of law as may ultimately be presented at the hearing of the plaintiffs' winding up application constitute sufficient proof and persuasion entitling the plaintiffs to the declaration and winding up order which they seek.
163 For all of the above reasons, I see no difficulty in all of the matters identified at [116] above being referred to arbitration and for further steps in this proceeding to be stayed until such time as those matters have been determined by arbitration.
164 With the exception of that part of the present proceeding which involves the Court forming an opinion as to whether the plaintiffs are entitled to a winding up order, the questions of fact and law which mark out the substantive controversy between the parties in this proceeding are all matters which are capable of resolution by arbitration. Any award or awards which determine those matters will be taken into account when the Court comes to consider whether a winding up order should be made. If, at the end of the arbitral process, the award or awards do not address satisfactorily or comprehensively all of the grounds relied upon by the plaintiffs in support of their claims for relief made in the present proceeding, then it will be open to them to supplement or explain the terms of the relevant award or awards by evidence. The process by which that would be done is the everyday process of applying the law of evidence.