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Beconwood Securities Pty Ltd v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2009] FCA 131 (19 February 2009)
Last Updated: 20 February 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Beconwood Securities Pty Ltd v Australia
and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2009] FCA 131
CORPORATIONS LAW – winding up –
stay of proceedings – action for rectification – company in
liquidation a necessary party – leave
to proceed
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
s 440D
Craddock Brothers v Hunt [1923] 2 Ch
136
Ogilvie-Grant v East (1983) 7 ACLR 669
Re
Dynamic Corporation of America [1973] 1 WLR 63
Re
International Pulp and Paper Company [1876] 3 Ch Div 594
Re
Sydney Formworks Pty Ltd (in liq) [1965] NSWR 646
Rigg v Standard Bank
of Australia Ltd (1896) 22 VLR 419
Vagrand Pty Ltd (in liq) v
Fielding (1993) 41 FCR 550
Zdrojkowski v Pacholczak
(1959) WN (NSW) 503
BECONWOOD SECURITIES PTY LTD (ACN 005 877 109)
and BECONWOOD LTD (ACN 117 283 996) v AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP
LTD (ACN
005 357 522), OPES PRIME STOCKBROKING LTD (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS
APPOINTED) (ADMINISTRATORS APPOINTED) (ABN 18 086 294 028) and
ANZ NOMINEES LTD
(ACN 005 357 568)
VID 206 of
2008
FINKELSTEIN J
19 FEBRUARY 2009
MELBOURNE
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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BECONWOOD SECURITIES PTY LTD (ACN 005 877 109) First
Plaintiff
BECONWOOD LTD (ACN 117 283 996) Second Plaintiff
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AND:
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AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LTD (ACN 005 357
522) First Defendant
OPES PRIME STOCKBROKING LTD (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED)
(ADMINISTRATORS APPOINTED) (ABN 18 086 294 028) Second
Defendant
ANZ NOMINEES LTD (ACN 005 357 568) Fifth Defendant
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BETWEEN:
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AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LTD (ACN 005 357
522) Cross-Claimant
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AND:
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BECONWOOD SECURITIES PTY LTD (ACN 005 877 109) First
Cross-Respondent
BECONWOOD LTD (ACN 117 283 996) Second
Cross-Respondent
OPES PRIME STOCKBROKING LTD (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED)
(ADMINISTRATORS APPOINTED) (ABN 18 086 294 028) Third
Cross-Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Beconwood
Securities Pty Ltd and Beconwood Ltd have leave to proceed with action
VID 206 of 2008 against Opes Prime Stockbroking
Ltd (in liquidation)
(receivers and managers appointed) (“Opes”).
- Australia
and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd (“ANZ”) have leave to proceed with
a cross-claim against Opes in the form
of the cross-claim filed in Court.
- Neither
Beconwood Securities Pty Ltd, Beconwood Ltd nor ANZ is to take any step to
enforce any judgment for the payment of money (including
costs) that may be
obtained against Opes without the leave of a Judge.
- The
costs of the application for leave to proceed be in the cause.
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 206 of 2008
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BETWEEN:
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BECONWOOD SECURITIES PTY LTD (ACN 005 877 109) First
Plaintiff
BECONWOOD LTD (ACN 117 283 996) Second Plaintiff
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AND:
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AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LTD (ACN 005 357
522) First Defendant
OPES PRIME STOCKBROKING LTD (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED)
(ADMINISTRATORS APPOINTED) (ABN 18 086 294 028) Second
Defendant
ANZ NOMINEES LTD (ACN 005 357 568) Fifth Defendant
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BETWEEN:
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AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LTD (ACN 005 357
522) Cross-Claimant
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AND:
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BECONWOOD SECURITIES PTY LTD (ACN 005 877 109) First
Cross-Respondent
BECONWOOD LTD (ACN 117 283 996) Second
Cross-Respondent
OPES PRIME STOCKBROKING LTD (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED)
(ADMINISTRATORS APPOINTED) (ABN 18 086 294 028) Third
Cross-Respondent
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JUDGE:
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FINKELSTEIN J
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DATE:
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19 FEBRUARY 2009
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PLACE:
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MELBOURNE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- There
is a difference of opinion regarding the purpose of imposing an automatic stay
on proceedings against a company in liquidation.
In England a stay is seen as
the means by which creditors are compelled to come in and prove their claims in
the winding up and
so receive a rateable distribution of the company’s
assets: Re International Pulp and Paper Company [1876]
3 Ch Div 594, 598; Re Dynamic Corporation of America
[1973] 1 WLR 63, 66. Otherwise the winding up would result in a
scramble for assets. In Australia the stay is justified
on the basis that it
prevents a multiplicity of actions against the company which would be expensive,
time consuming and, sometimes,
unnecessary: Ogilvie-Grant v East (1983)
7 ACLR 669, 671–2; Vagrand Pty Ltd (in liq) v Fielding
(1993) 41 FCR 550, 554–5; cf Re Sydney Formworks Pty Ltd (in
liq) [1965] NSWR 646, 649–50. Whatever be the correct rationale, the
circumstances in the case at bar make it appropriate to allow both the action
commenced by Beconwood Securities Pty Ltd and Beconwood Ltd (together
“Beconwood”) against Opes Prime Stockbroking Ltd
(in liquidation)
(receivers and managers appointed) (“Opes”), which began before
Opes’ liquidation, and the proposed
cross-claim by Australia and New
Zealand Banking Group Ltd (“ANZ”) against Opes to proceed.
- Beconwood’s
claim against Opes is complex. For present purposes a brief description will
suffice. Beconwood asserts that it
has an equitable interest in certain shares
which were lodged with Opes as collateral under a margin lending facility. The
shares
were transferred by Opes (or a related company) to ANZ. Beconwood
contends that ANZ took the shares with notice (actual or constructive)
of
Beconwood’s interest in them. It seeks to recover the shares, or the
proceeds resulting from their sale, from ANZ.
- Beconwood
principally grounds its claim in contract; the contract being what it described
as a margin lending facility. The facility
is said to operate as a mortgage
with Opes taking legal title to the shares by way of security and Beconwood
retaining an equity
of redemption. Importantly, Beconwood contends that if the
terms of the facility do not record that the facility is to operate as
a
mortgage of the shares, it ought to be rectified by the addition of terms that
would establish its character as a mortgage with
a corresponding right to
redeem. This, Beconwood says, represents the common intention of the
contracting parties. As an alternative
to its common law rectification claim,
Beconwood relies upon several statutes that empower a court to redraft a
contract. The provisions
are s 87 of the Trade Practices Act
1974 (Cth), s 12GM of the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission Act 2001 (Cth) and s 1101B of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth). For the purposes of the statutory claims, Beconwood seeks
relief based on certain allegedly misleading representations made
by Opes that
induced Beconwood to enter into the facility.
- Beconwood
makes other claims against Opes. They include the following. There is a claim
that it has an equitable charge over the
shares that has priority over
ANZ’s interest, which is based on the margin lending facility agreement.
Beconwood contends
that Opes is estopped from contending that Beconwood does not
have an equitable interest in the shares as a result of representations
made by
Opes, the representations being: (a) Beconwood would retain beneficial ownership
of all shares lodged under the margin lending
facility; (b) all shares lodged
would be held by Opes’ custodian (ANZ Nominees); (c) the transaction could
be reversed at any
time; and (d) any clauses in the margin lending facility
agreement inconsistent with Beconwood’s beneficial ownership in the
shares
were not terms of the margin lending facility agreement. Next, Beconwood claims
that Opes’ transfer of the shares are
vitiated by mistake on the basis
that Beconwood lodged shares with Opes in the belief that it would retain
beneficial ownership in
them. Beconwood also claims that Opes contravened
ss 942B and 953B of the Corporations Act on the basis that a document
entitled Financial Services Guide provided to Beconwood was misleading and
deceptive. The FSG stated
that Beconwood would retain beneficial and economic
ownership of the stock, the transaction could be reversed at any time and all
securities and cash lodged as collateral would be held and settled with the
custodian.
- ANZ
proposes to bring a cross-claim against Opes contending that it is entitled to
indemnity in the event Beconwood is successful
in any claims against the bank.
- According
to the evidence, Opes is hopelessly insolvent. But Beconwood does not bring the
action against Opes for the purpose of
proving in its liquidation. It brings
the claim against Opes as a springboard for its action against ANZ. The
problem, however,
is that relief by way of rectification that Beconwood seeks
cannot be granted in the absence of Opes. It is well settled that a
court will
not order the rectification of a contract in the absence of the parties to that
contract: Rigg v Standard Bank of Australia Ltd (1896) 22 VLR 419,
430–1 (rectification of a charge could not be ordered in the absence of
the contracting parties who “are necessary parties
to the action”);
Zdrojkowski v Pacholczak (1959) WN (NSW) 503, 509 (“If
all necessary parties have been joined, then the original vendors .... might
well have been entitled to have the
transfers rectified”); Craddock
Brothers v Hunt [1923] 2 Ch 136, 153 (“[I]t is quite clear that the
contract cannot be rectified in this action at the instance of the plaintiffs
and in the absence of the vendors”). The same rule should apply to an
action for rectification pursuant to statute.
- On
the question of leave, where the plaintiff is claiming his own property from a
company in liquidation, leave to proceed is granted
as a matter of course:
Re David Lloyd & Co (1877) 6 Ch D 339. This case is
different. Beconwood does not seek to recover its property from Opes. Rather,
as I have explained, it seeks relief
in relation to its agreement with Opes as a
step to establishing its case against ANZ. That is a sufficient reason to grant
leave
under s 440D of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). Perhaps, on
one view, Beconwood could make good its claim against ANZ without rectification
(under common law or statute)
of the facility agreement. But Beconwood does not
want to put all its eggs in one basket. And, in my view, it would be unjust for
the court to require it to do so. Beconwood should be allowed to pursue the
totality of its claims against ANZ, including those
claims that depend upon it
obtaining relief against Opes.
- Once
it is accepted that Beconwood should be given leave to proceed with its
rectification claims, there is no reason to limit the
grant of leave to those
claims. For the most part the facts that Beconwood will need to establish for
its rectification claim will
overlap with the facts to be proven in relation to
its other causes of action. There is no purpose in leaving those other claims
unresolved.
- The
liquidators point out that they have no funds to fight the action and have been
told that the receivers, who were appointed by
ANZ to take possession of
Opes’ assets, do not intend to conduct Opes’ defence. Hence they
say that, for all practical
purposes, the action against Opes will be undefended
and that may result in prejudice to the other creditors.
- In
some instances this may be a sufficient reason to refuse a claimant leave to
proceed with an action against a company in liquidation.
But it is not a
sufficient reason in this case. First of all, the inability of the liquidators
to fund the defence should not stand
as a bar to Beconwood’s claim against
ANZ. Secondly, and in any event, ANZ’s defence of the claim against it
will require
it to put arguments that Opes would rely on if it were defending
the claim. For example, ANZ will contend that the agreement between
Beconwood
and Opes did not leave Beconwood with an equitable interest over the shares. It
will also argue that Beconwood was not
relevantly misled. These are the
principal arguments that Opes would put if it took an active part in the trial.
- For
the foregoing reasons there will be orders granting leave to proceed to each of
Beconwood and ANZ. The costs will be in the cause.
I certify that the preceding eleven (11)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Finkelstein.
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Associate:
Dated: 19 February 2009
Counsel for the Plaintiffs
and First and Second Cross-Respondents:
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Solicitor for the Plaintiffs and First and Second
Cross-Respondents:
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Holding Redlich Lawyers
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Counsel for the First and Fifth Defendants and Cross-Claimant:
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A Archibald QC and P Crutchfield
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Solicitor for the First and Fifth Defendants and Cross-Claimant:
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Minter Ellison Lawyers
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Counsel for the Second Defendant and Third Cross-Respondent:
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T Beltrame
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Solicitor for the Second Defendant and Third Cross-Respondent:
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Mallesons Stephen Jaques
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19 January 2009, 30 January 2009, 6 February
2009
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Date of Judgment:
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2009/131.html