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Mijac Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 084 820 280) v Graham (No 3) [2009] FCA 1109 (1 October 2009)
Last Updated: 6 October 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Mijac Investments Pty Ltd
(ACN 084 820 280) v Graham (No 3)
[2009] FCA 1109
MIJAC INVESTMENTS PTY LTD
(ACN 084 820 280) v WILLIAM GRAHAM, COSMICK PTY LTD
(ACN 065 356 149) and
MELBOURNE GRAVITY PTY LTD
(ACN 490 584 339)
VID 297 of 2005
GORDON J
1 OCTOBER 2009
MELBOURNE
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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MIJAC INVESTMENTS PTY LTD
(ACN 084 820 280)Applicant
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AND:
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WILLIAM GRAHAMFirst
Respondent
COSMICK PTY LTD (ACN 065 356 149) Third
Respondent
MELBOURNE GRAVITY PTY LTD
(ACN 490 584 339) Fifth Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Leave
be granted for the Respondents to amend their Notice of Motion in the proposed
form filed with the Court on 9 September
2009 (the “Motion”).
- Paragraphs
1 and 2 of the Motion be dismissed.
- The
Respondents pay the Applicant’s costs of and incidental to
paragraphs 1 and 2 of the Motion, such costs to be taxed
in default of
agreement.
- The
hearing of the balance of the Motion otherwise be adjourned to be heard on the
same date as the Notice of Motion dated 28 July
2009.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
eSearch on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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VID 297 of 2005
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GENERAL DIVISION
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BETWEEN:
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MIJAC INVESTMENTS PTY LTD
(ACN 084 820 280) Applicant
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AND:
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WILLIAM GRAHAM First Respondent
COSMICK PTY LTD (ACN 065 356 149) Third
Respondent
MELBOURNE GRAVITY PTY LTD
(ACN 490 584 339) Fifth Respondent
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JUDGE:
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GORDON J
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DATE:
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1 OCTOBER 2009
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PLACE:
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MELBOURNE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
substantive proceeding was heard in February and March of this year.
On 22 July 2009, I dismissed the Applicant’s
application
(para 1 of the Orders), made no order as to costs (para 2 of the
Orders) and published reasons for decision:
Mijac Investments Pty Ltd
(ACN 084 820 280) v Graham (No. 2) [2009] FCA 773 (the
“Reasons for Decision”).
- Now,
by a proposed Amended Notice of Motion (the “Motion”) filed with the
Court on 9 September 2009, the Respondents
seek a number of orders.
I consider the Respondents should be granted leave to rely upon the Motion.
- In
the present application, I am concerned only with the first two orders
sought in the Motion, namely that:
- Paragraph 2
of the order made on 22 July 2009 be set aside pursuant to
Rule 35.07(2)(a) or alternatively pursuant to
the implied jurisdiction of
the Court or Rule 35.07(4).
- An
order that the Applicant pay the Respondents’ costs of the proceeding
including reserved costs.
- The
Applicant opposes these orders. Given the views I have formed that the
Applicant should not be ordered to pay the Respondents’
costs of the
proceeding including any reserved costs, it is unnecessary to resolve the
question whether the Court has power to reopen
paragraph [2] of the orders made
on 22 July 2009. The order has been entered. In those circumstances,
there may very well
be very large hurdles in the way of making an order of the
kind that now is sought. I will, however, put aside any consideration
of those
difficulties and proceed on the assumption (without deciding) that there is
power to make an order of the kind now sought.
- A
Court has a wide discretion to award costs: s 43 of the Federal Court
of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) and DSE (Holdings) Pty Ltd v InterTAN Inc
[2004] FCA 1251; (2004) 51 ACSR 555 at [14]. Although a number of decisions have identified
certain principles to be applied in the exercise of that discretion (see e.g.
Hughes v Western Australian Cricket Association Inc (1986) ATPR 40-748 at
48,136 and Dr Martens Australia Pty Ltd v Figgins Holdings Pty Ltd (No
2) [2000] FCA 602), there are no hard and fast rules.
Why? Because the facts and circumstances of each case are the
relevant guide in the
exercise of the Court’s discretion to award costs.
- As
a result, in the circumstances of this case, acceptance of the “settled
practice” that a successful party in the absence
of special circumstances
should be awarded its costs (see Ruddock v Vadarlis (No 2) (2001) 115 FCR
229 at [11]), does not result in a different costs order from that ordered on
22 July 2009.
- The
Respondents contend that “[t]he Respondents and each of them were
successful”. In my view, that contention
misrepresents the outcome
of the proceedings. It is true that the Applicant’s application was
dismissed. However, it
was dismissed in circumstances which were not to
the advantage of any one of the Respondents for at least the following reasons.
- Mr Graham,
the First Respondent was the sole director and shareholder of the Third
Respondent, Cosmick Pty Ltd (ACN 065 356 149)
(“Cosmick”). Mr Graham initially admitted he was a controller
but, at the conclusion of the hearing, sought to
withdraw that admission to
contend he was not a controller. Mr Graham was: see [143] to
[151] of the Reasons for
Decision. Moreover, his role as the sole director
and shareholder of Cosmick, the mortgagee in possession, cannot be ignored.
Mr Graham was for present purposes its controlling mind.
- Cosmick,
as mortgagee in possession of the assets of Lawrenson Light Metal Die Casting
Pty Ltd (ACN 081 829 790) (“LLMDC”),
had a
mortgagee’s general law duty in relation to its power of sale to act in
good faith and a statutory duty under s 420A of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth): paras [159]-[161] of the Reasons for Decision.
It breached those duties: paras [162]-[166] of the Reasons
for
Decision. The breaches were serious. The facts and circumstances
that resulted in those breaches were less than satisfactory.
To take just
one example, as I said in the Reasons for Decision, “the process of
obtaining the mortgaged property
for sale and selling that property appeared to
ensure a sale to a related entity ...” (emphasis added). Put
another way, on its face the conduct was deliberate.
- The
related entity, in fact, was the Fifth Respondent, Melbourne Gravity Pty
Ltd (ACN 490 584 339) (“Gravity”). Gravity was
a company set up by Mr Graham (the First Respondent) with a
Mr McGregor: see para [122] of the Reasons for Decision.
Mr McGregor was a businessman. But he was a businessman who should
have known better – he previously had been a
chartered accountant
specialising in insolvency – and a businessman who benefited from the
events the subject of these proceedings.
Mr McGregor and Mr Graham
were the controlling minds of Gravity: see para [122] of the Reasons for
Decision. The evidence
also disclosed that Mr McGregor was
instrumental in the steps taken that resulted in the breaches of duty by Cosmick
and the
sale of LLMDC’s assets to Gravity in the circumstances outlined in
the Reasons for Decision.
- It
is in these circumstances that I made no order as to costs.
The history of the facts giving rise to the dispute, the
circumstances
surrounding the sale of assets to Gravity, the conduct of both the Applicant and
the Respondents and the merits of
the parties’ respective positions both
factually and legally were exceptional. To suggest as the Respondents have
recently
done that the trial was primarily concerned with loss and damage, in my
view, seeks to rewrite history. One critical issue
for the Court was
whether Cosmick owed duties to LLMDC, and breached those duties, to LLMDC.
The Reasons for Decision address
the legal principles and facts relevant to
those issues at length, issues about which Cosmick was unsuccessful and in which
each
of the other Respondents was directly involved. Put another way, in
the absence of the involvement of entities and persons
related to Cosmick
– Graham, Gravity and McGregor – the legal and factual issues of
what duties were owed and whether
those duties were breached – could not
be addressed.
- Given
the identity of, and connections between, the Respondents, their joint legal
representation and the facts and circumstances
described in the Reasons for
Decision, there is no basis for a separate costs order in relation to
Mr Graham and Gravity. There
was serious fault and error on the part of
all parties.
- It was,
and remains, my view appropriate in the exercise of the Court’s discretion
to make no order as to costs. That
order, of course, does not deal with any
previous costs orders of the Court in favour of one or other of the parties.
I certify that the preceding thirteen (13)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Gordon.
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Associate:
Dated: 1 October 2009
Solicitor for the
Applicant:
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Lesley Simons & Associates
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Counsel for the Respondents:
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PG Cawthorn SC
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Solicitor for the Respondents:
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B2B Lawyers
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Date of Written Submissions:
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23 September 2009 and 28 September 2009
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Date of Judgment:
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