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Supreme Court of the ACT Decisions |
COURT
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORYCATCHWORDS
Mareva Injunction - Application made before action could be begun - Whether Court has jurisdiction to grant injunction.Barclay-Johnson v. Yuill (1980) 1 WLR 1259; (1980) 3 All ER 190
Siskina (Owners of Cargo Lately Laden on Board) & Others v. Distos Compania Naviera S.A. [1983] UKHL 5; (1979) AC 210
Barisic v. Topic (1981) 37 ACTR 1
Szentessy v. Woo Ran (Australia) Pty Ltd (1985) 64 ACTR 98
Construction Engineering (Aust) Pty Ltd v. Tambel (Australasia) Pty Ltd (1984) 1 NSWLR 274
Riley McKay Pty Ltd v. McKay (1982) 1 NSWLR 264
McAndrew v. The Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1956] HCA 62; (1956) 98 CLR 263
Faith Panton Property Plan Ltd v. Hodgetts (1981) 2 All ER 877
Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, s.177(1)
HEARING
CANBERRADECISION
By amended assessments issued under the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (the Act) on 11 May 1988 for the income years ended 30 June 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985 and 1986 the plaintiff assessed the defendant Gay Frances Sharp to additional tax totalling $224,807.01 payable on 14 June 1988. On the same day the plaintiff issued amended assessments in respect of the same years against the defendant Ian Robert Sharp assessing him to additional tax for those years in a total of $232,224.21 payable also on 14 June 1988.2. On 9 June 1988 the plaintiff moved ex parte for Mareva injunctions seeking orders restraining the defendants from removing from the jurisdiction or otherwise disposing of or dealing with any of their assets within the jurisdiction and in particular land known as Block 22, Section 28 Mackellar.
3. When the matter came before me counsel for the plaintiff pointed out that no writ had issued in either matter because the period allowed for payment of the assessments had not elapsed. The applications therefore raised a point which has not, so far as I am aware, been decided in this Territory, namely, whether a Mareva injunction may go at the suit of a person alleging that he or she is a creditor where no action has been or can be commenced because the debt said to be due is not immediately payable.
4. The evidence established that, on the balance of probabilities, there was a prima facie case that there was a real risk that the defendants might remove their assets from the country and so stultify any judgment which the Court might give in any action brought by the plaintiff on the assessments. Barclay-Johnson v. Yuill (1980) 1 WLR 1259; (1980) 3 All ER 190 at p 1264; 194 per Megarry V-C.
5. Standing in the path of the plaintiff was a dictum of Lord Diplock in
Siskina (Owners of Cargo Lately Laden on Board) & Others
v. Distos Compania
Naviera S.A. [1983] UKHL 5; (1979) AC 210, where his Lordship, with whom all their Lordships
agreed, said at p 256:-
"A right to obtain an interlocutory
injunction is not a cause of action. It6. Mareva injunctions have been granted by this Court. See, for example, Barisic v. Topic (1981) 37 ACTR 1 and Szentessy v. Woo Ran (Australia) Pty Ltd (1985) 64 ACTR 98.
cannot stand on its own. It is dependent
upon there being a pre-existing cause of
action against the defendant arising out of
an invasion, actual or threatened by him, of
a legal or equitable right of the plaintiff
for the enforcement of which the defendant is
amenable to the jurisdiction of the court.
The right to obtain an interlocutory
injunction is merely ancillary and incidental
to the pre-existing cause of action. It is
granted to preserve the status quo pending
the ascertainment by the court of the rights
of the parties and the grant to the plaintiff
of the relief to which his cause of action
entitles him, which may or may not include a
final injunction."
7. In Construction Engineering (Aust) Pty Ltd v. Tambel (Australasia) Pty Ltd
(1984) 1 NSWLR 274, Clarke J (as he then was) held
that the Supreme Court of
New South Wales had jurisdiction to grant a Mareva injunction where there was
no pending proceeding before
the Court and where the party seeking the
injunction did not propound a cause of action but was claiming moneys in
pending arbitration
proceedings. At pp 277-8, he said:-
"The question then arises whether this CourtAt p 279, his Honour said:-
has jurisdiction to grant a Mareva injunction
when there is no primary proceeding before it
and the plaintiff does not propound a cause
of action. Mr Bathurst, who appeared for the
plaintiff, submitted that the court was
empowered to grant injunctive relief whenever
a litigant was exposed to the risk that his
opponent would dissipate his assets and
deprive him of the fruits of victory. He
said that there was no reason in principle
why the court should distinguish between
arbitral proceedings and those instituted in
this Court. On the contrary there was every
reason why such a person should obtain the
same protection as a litigant propounding a
claim in the courts.
In particular machinery is provided for the
enforcement of arbitration awards by the
courts. The Arbitration Act 1902, s 14,
provides for the granting of leave for the
enforcement of an arbitration award in the
same manner as a judgment or order of the
court. Alternatively, a successful party in
an arbitration can sue at law upon the
award. Therefore, according to the
plaintiff, any dissipation of assets by a
party would operate effectively to stultify
and render ineffective any arbitral award in
respect of which the successful party would
use the court's processes, just as a
successful plaintiff would, for enforcement.
If this is so why then, the plaintiff asks,
is the court not entitled to adopt the same
procedures in an endeavour to ensure that
enforcement is fruitful.
In my opinion there is no reason in principle
why the jurisdiction of the court to grant
Mareva injunctions should not apply where the
party seeking the order is claiming moneys in
an arbitration as well as when he is
propounding a claim in the courts.
Riley McKay (Riley McKay Pty Ltd v. McKay
(1982) 1 NSWLR 264) instructs that,
whilst the jurisdiction should be exercised
with caution, its whole purpose is to prevent
conduct inimical to the administration of
justice. This appears from a passage (at
276) which reads:
'Assuming that the jurisdiction is exercised
with due caution, it seems to us that it is
necessary for the administration of justice
in this State that the court should have
power to prevent a defendant who would
otherwise have assets to satisfy a judgment
from setting the court and its procedures at
naught by making sure that its judgment will
be a mere brutum fulmen. The whole sense and
purpose of the inherent powers, as well as
the powers which s23 confers, are to ensure
the effective administration of justice. . . .
The reported decisions show that a "Mareva"
injunction will be granted where necessary to
ensure that justice is effectively
administered.'
Equally the jurisdiction is available to
ensure that an arbitral award, which may as
the result of the grant of leave be enforced
by court process, is not a 'brutum fulmen'."
"I am aware that his Lordship was dealing8. It is clear from p 276 of his Honour's judgment that there was a "Scott v. Avery clause" (Scott v. Avery (1856) 5 HLC 811; 10 ER 1121) in the contract in accordance with which the arbitration proceedings were commenced. Under such a clause, of course, it is necessary that a party to the contract obtain an award in an arbitration before he or she may commence an action in court for the recovery of the amount said to be due.
with a case where a defendant sought, and was
granted, a stay of proceedings to enable the
resolution of the dispute by arbitration.
But I see no reason why a distinction should
be drawn in this regard between an
arbitration proceeding which is instituted
without any prior attempt to commence court
proceedings and one instituted consequent
upon a stay of court proceedings. I do not
consider the jurisdiction to grant the
injunction depends, or in principle ought to
depend, on whether a party has, contrary to a
Scott v Avery clause, sought to litigate its
dispute in the courts. Accordingly, I
conclude that the court has jurisdiction to
grant the injunction, notwithstanding that
the plaintiff has not commenced the primary
proceedings in this Court."
9. In Riley McKay (supra) the Court of Appeal of New South Wales said, at pp
276-7:-
"As has been made clear by judgments in10. Counsel for the plaintiff informed me that the Supreme Court of New South Wales had granted three Mareva injunctions at the suit of the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation when no action in respect of the relevant assessment had been or could have been properly commenced because they were not immediately payable.
England, the jurisdiction is still the
subject of development on a case by case
basis. It is, accordingly, undesirable to
undertake the formulation of general tests or
boundary-lines which might, in their very
generality, preclude or distort the useful
development of this new remedy. These
observations are made with particular
reference to a question which was mentioned
in the course of argument but which it is not
necessary for present purposes to decide.
That question is whether the plaintiff must
have a vested and accrued cause of action
before commencing proceedings. The
observations of Lord Diplock in The Siskina
[1983] UKHL 5; (1979) AC 210, at p 254 postulate as an
indispensable prerequisite the existence of a
vested and accrued cause of action for which
substantive final relief can be immediately
granted. See also the passage in the
judgment of Acknew LJ, in A J Bekhor & Co Ltd
v. Bilton (1981) 2 WLR 601, at p 616; (1981)
2 All ER 565, at p 577. It was suggested in
argument that a plaintiff holding an
unmatured thirty-day bill ought to be able to
approach the court for a 'Mareva'
injunction. In a cognate sense, reference
was made to a guarantee situation in which,
prior to formal default by the principal
debtor, the guarantor is feared likely to
spirit away his assets. The point originally
had significance in the present case in that,
at the date of the commencement of the
present proceedings, the plaintiff company
was in the hands of a provisional liquidator,
a winding up order not having been made. One
of the claims advanced by the plaintiff in
respect of which the protection of a 'Mareva'
injunction was sought was the liability of
the second defendant to repay the amount of a
preference which it was said to have
received. Such a claim would not be
cognizable until a winding up order had been
made. In the events which have happened, the
winding up order has now been made and it is
accordingly unnecessary to decide whether or
not this particular claim at the date of
inception of the proceedings fell within the
permissible scope of the protection of the
injunction granted."
11. Counsel said that he could give only the names of the cases in which, apparently, no reasons for judgment were handed down. In none of the cases did it appear that any difficulty arose because action had not been commenced. But I note that counsel did not suggest that the point in question in this case had been raised in any of the three cases.
12. The first of them was The Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v. Rowell. There a notice of assessment issued for tax payable in due course. A Mareva injunction was granted before the tax was due for payment but a Statement of Claim began proceedings for recovery of the assessed tax before the due date for payment. On 1 August 1986 Grove J struck out the Statement of Claim, leaving, therefore, no action on foot. Nevertheless he continued the injunction to 8 August 1986 for further argument. On 8 August, after further argument to do with unrelated points, his Honour continued the injunction indefinitely.
13. The second was The Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v. Waterhouse. An assessment was notified, apparently on 20 May 1987, since the tax was payable within 30 days of that date. At Mareva injunction was granted on 22 May 1987.
14. The third was The Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v. Verner Pty Limited. An assessment was notified, apparently on 28 September 1987, since the tax was payable 30 days from that date. A Mareva injunction was granted on 30 September 1987.
15. It seems to me that special circumstances obtain when the Commissioner of Taxation seeks a Mareva injunction in respect of an assessment which has issued but is not immediately payable because the time which must be allowed for the payment of the assessment has not elapsed. Such a debt has peculiar characteristics attaching to it because of the legislation which gives rise to it. Section 204 of the Act provides that, subject to the provisions of Part VI in which it appears, any income tax assessed shall be due and payable by the person liable to pay the tax on the date specified in the notice as the date upon which tax is due and payable, not being less than 30 days after the service of the notice, or, if no date is so specified, on the 30th day after the service of the notice. By s.177(1) the production of a notice of assessment or of a document under the hand of the Commissioner, a Second Commissioner, or a Deputy Commissioner, purporting to be a copy of a notice of assessment, shall be conclusive evidence of the due making of the assessment and (except in proceedings on appeal against the assessment) that the amount and all the particulars of the assessment are correct.
16. The High Court stated in McAndrew v. The Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1956] HCA 62;
(1956) 98 CLR 263 at p 270 that it was the policy of the legislation:-
"on the one hand to give to the taxpayer full17. It follows, in my opinion, that a peculiar quality attached to a debt claimed as a result of an assessment made under the Act. All that the Commissioner need do to establish conclusively the existence of the debt is to produce the appropriate notice of or copy of the notice of assessment. The debt is not payable in presenti but is a debt in existence - debitum in presenti, solvendum in futuro. In these circumstances it seems to me that the Commissioner is entitled to pray in aid the injunctive power of the Court when he establishes that prima facie there is a real risk that the taxpayer will so deal with his assets as to render useless in whole or in part the judgment to which the Commissioner would be conclusively entitled upon the mere passage of time. If an order might properly be made in Construction Engineering (Aust) Pty Ltd v. Tambil (Australasia) Pty Ltd (supra) as, with respect, I think it was, it seems to me that there was even greater reason why the Court should have granted an injunction in this case where the existence of the debt was not a matter of uncertainty, depending upon the result of other extra-curial proceedings which had not yet reached the point where an action might be instituted in this Court.
opportunity on objecting to his assessment of
contesting his liability in every respect
before a court or before a board of review
but on the other hand to require that in
proceedings for the recovery of the tax the
taxpayer will be concluded by the assessment
and will not be entitled to go behind it for
any purpose."
18. It seemed to me that no injustice would be done the taxpayers in these circumstances. The tax to which they had been assessed would have been payable in any event a relatively short time after injunctions could have been granted even if they were sought before the actions in respect of the assessed tax could have been commenced. If the injunctions had caused difficulty to the taxpayers because the proper and reasonable disposal of any of their assets in accordance with obligations, contractual or other, which they had undertaken, was prevented, application could have been made to the Court for immediate relief in that regard. Indeed, in this case the original Mareva injunctions were varied when the matter came before the Court on their return date to enable the taxpayers to deal with their major asset left in Australia but in such a fashion that proceeds from its disposal could not be dealt with to defeat the plaintiff's recovery of the amount assessed.
19. Counsel for the plaintiff made reference to Faith Panton Property Plan
Ltd v. Hodgetts (1981) 2 All ER 877. In that case an order
for costs had been
made against the defendant but the costs had not been taxed and the plaintiffs
were therefore unable to enforce
judgment for them. The defendants by their
ambivalent conduct indicated that they might divest themselves of their assets
and make
themselves bankrupt. The plaintiffs applied for an injunction to
restrain the defendants from assigning or otherwise disposing of
a copyright,
some moulds and a patent. The Court of Appeal held that, on analogy with the
pre-Mareva practice whereby the Court had
power to enforce an order for costs
which had not been taxed by appointing a receiver of the property of a person
liable for the
costs, the Court had power under s.45(1) of the Supreme Court
Adjudicature (Consolidation) Act 1925 to protect a party in whose favour
an
order for costs had been made by granting, before taxation, an injunction
restraining the other party from disposing of his assets.
In the circumstances
the Court exercised its discretion under s.45(1) which read:-
"The High Court may grant a mandamus or20. Section 26(1) of the Australian Capital Territory Supreme Court Act 1933 is in almost exactly similar terms.
injunction or appoint a receiver, by an
interlocutory order in all cases in which it
appears to the Court to be just or convenient
so to do."
21. That case is authority for the proposition that an injunction may go in respect of a debt presently in existence but not payable until a future date because not quantified. But it is clearly distinguishable from this matter because action had already been brought and judgment obtained.
22. Nevertheless, it seems to me that, where, as in this case, there is undoubtedly a debt owing even if it cannot immediately be the subject of an action and where the granting of the injunction would work no injustice, particularly when the debt may in any event be sued for within a very short time, which may be only a matter of days and at most a period of 30 days, a Mareva injunction may be granted. Such an injunction should, of course, be returnable at the shortest possible notice. Should it prove that it was made in ignorance of facts which would establish either that there would be exceptional hardship in respect of transactions already properly entered into or that the taxpayer had no intention of dealing with his or her assets in such a way as to defeat the Commissioner's claim, it may readily be discharged.
23. In reaching the conclusion that the injunctions should be made, I proceeded with what I hope was the caution enjoined by the Court of Appeal of New South Wales in Riley McKay. In a developing jurisdiction where advances must be made step by step, it seems to me that the dictum of Lord Diplock in The Siskina ((1979) AC 210) earlier quoted must be viewed as one factor only in what now seems to me to be the developed rule that a Mareva injunction may be made where there is a real risk that a debtor may deal with his or her assets before judgment against him or her so as to stultify that judgment when obtained. It is noteworthy that the House of Lords did not, in The Siskina, take the opportunity to deny the existence of the rule which came into being in apparent contradiction of the older rule that the High Court of England had no power to grant an interlocutory injunction except in protection or assertion of some legal or equitable right which it had jurisdiction to enforce by final judgment. North London Railway Co v. Great Northern Railway Co (1883) 11 QBD 30, at pp 39-40, per Cotton L.J., referred to by Lord Diplock at p 256.
24. For these reasons I granted the injunctions sought on 9 June 1988.
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