A Background and THE INTERLOCUTORY APPLICATION
1 This proceeding, initially commenced against four defendants against the tick-tock of a pending limitation tolling, has not been notable for the vigour and efficiency of its progression.
2 The first plaintiff, Mr Weston, is the liquidator of the second plaintiff (liquidator), Starcom Group Pty Ltd (Starcom) (together, the plaintiffs). Starcom, a business and IT solutions provider, was incorporated in 1981 and became a wholly owned subsidiary of Pisces Group Limited in the financial year ending 30 June 2007. Starcom was one of four subsidiary companies of Pisces Group Limited, which five entities collectively formed the Pisces Group. On 1 August 2011, Starcom was wound up by order of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and Mr Weston was appointed its liquidator.
3 On 8 November 2017, I ordered that the proceeding against the first defendant, Mr Williams, be dismissed. Similarly, on 16 May 2018, the proceeding was dismissed as against the fourth defendant, Mr Thirunavukarasu. The residuum of the case is being maintained against the second and third defendants.
4 The second defendant, Mr Rajan, was appointed as a director of Starcom on 23 October 2006 and was a director of companies within the Pisces Group from 1 July 2005 until it was deregistered; the third defendant, Mr Pathmanaban, was appointed as a director of Starcom on 11 August 2009 and was a director of companies within the Pisces Group from 11 August 2009 to 18 September 2014. The second and third defendants (to whom I will refer to jointly as the defendants) had not ceased being directors of Starcom at the time it went into liquidation.
5 By the current iteration of the application and pleading, the plaintiffs seek declarations that the defendants engaged in conduct in breach of their directors' duties under ss 180, 181 and 588G of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (Act) and compensation orders pursuant to: (a) s 588M(2) for loss resulting from insolvent trading; and (b) s 1317H for damage suffered as a result of identified contravening conduct. In the alternative, the plaintiffs seek equitable compensation or common law damages.
6 The four aspects of the plaintiffs' allegations of present relevance are that: (a) Starcom was insolvent during the period 1 October 2009 to 1 August 2011 (insolvency period); (b) there were reasonable grounds for the directors to suspect that Starcom was insolvent or would become insolvent during the insolvency period; (c) Starcom incurred 23 debts (totalling $2,143,188.17) that were wholly or partly unsecured during the insolvency period; and (d) each of the defendants knew at the time that Starcom incurred these debts that there were reasonable grounds for suspecting that Starcom was insolvent or would become insolvent upon incurring those debts.
7 The defendants joined issue and, in the course of doing so, raised defences which place a positive onus on the defendants, that is: that the defendants had reasonable grounds to expect, and did expect, the company was solvent under s 588H(2); that the defendants had reasonable grounds to believe, and did believe, that a competent and reasonable person was responsible for providing adequate information as to solvency and that that person was fulfilling that responsibility and expected, based on information from that person, that the company was solvent under s 588H(3); and they acted honestly and having regard to the circumstances of the case (and accordingly ought to be relieved from any liability pursuant to s 1317S and s 1318 of the Act).
8 Shortly before a final hearing was to commence, the defendants foreshadowed and later filed, an interlocutory application (interlocutory application) by which they sought an order that the proceeding be permanently stayed. For reasons which are unnecessary to recount in detail, the hearing date was vacated and the interlocutory application was heard. The orders sought were as follows:
1. An order that, pursuant to ss.37M, 37N, 37P(6) and 23 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 and pursuant to the principles generally enunciated in Walton v Gardiner (1993) 177 CLR 378, the proceedings be permanently stayed.
2. An order that, the plaintiffs are to pay the second and third defendants costs on the indemnity basis.
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9 In order to give specificity to the matters to be argued on the stay application, I ordered the defendants (as the moving parties) to file points of claim and for the plaintiffs to file points of defence in response.
10 In the points of claim at [1]-[64], the defendants set out various material facts and, at [65], averred that there are 11 grounds upon which the they are entitled to a permanent stay as follows:
a. the lapse of time since the material events occurred the subject of the amended statement of claim, being events from 1 October 2009;
b. the unavailability since 2012 or 2013 of objective external sources of evidence due to death, liquidation or deregistration, notably Ken Crossman, BDO, Pisces Group Ltd and the 3 other companies in the Group;
c. the unavailability of many of Starcom's and the Groups' books and records due to destruction, disposal or other loss;
d. the failure of the Liquidator to recover and secure all of Starcom's books and records;
e. the failure of the Liquidator to commence these proceedings in 2012;
f. the commencement of these proceedings in 2017 based on the same records available to the Liquidator as he had in 2012;
g. the prejudice caused to the second and third defendants in their defence of these proceedings;
h. the continuation of these proceedings would be manifestly unfair to the second and third defendants;
i. the continuation of these proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute among right-thinking people;
j. the plaintiffs' failure to facilitate the just resolution of the dispute as quickly, inexpensively and efficiently as possible; and
k. the casual approach of the Liquidator to the prosecution of his claim before and after the commencement of the proceedings and in disregard of Part VB of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 and the overarching purpose of civil litigation in the Court.
11 As might be expected, the plaintiffs deny these matters justify a stay and add that the defendants ought to be prevented from taking advantage of their own failure to comply with their statutory obligations "pursuant to s 530" of the Act (this appears to be a typographical error referring to the obligation in s 530A of the Act, for officers to help the liquidator by delivering all books or telling the liquidator the location of the relevant books of the company).
12 It is fair to say that the relevant issues did not emerge with clarity from the defendants' written submissions filed prior to the hearing and, at the conclusion of the oral hearing, I ordered that the plaintiffs and defendants file further submissions in relation to a number of Relevant Topics and ordered that the application be adjourned part-heard for further oral argument. The Relevant Topics were:
(a) the identification, with precision, of the issues of fact and law that will arise for determination if the proceeding were to continue to trial;
(b) the identification of documents or classes of documents that are relevant to the determination of those issues of fact and law and identification by reference to the evidence as to whether those documents or classes of documents remain in existence; and
(c) whether authority exists as to the principled approach to permanent stays in circumstances where the defendant relies on affirmative defences or bears an evidentiary or persuasive onus on a topic, the determination of which is affected by documents which have been destroyed.
13 Upon the filing of further submissions on the Relevant Topics, the parties indicated to my Associate that no party wished to be heard further orally, and I reserved my decision.