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Amalia Investments Ltd v Virgtel Global Networks NV [2009] FCA 39 (30 January 2009)
Last Updated: 2 February 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Amalia Investments Ltd v Virgtel Global
Networks NV [2009] FCA 39
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – ex
parte application for freezing order – circumstances where freezing
order appropriate – whether order would prevent frustration
or abuse of
process
Held: Application dismissed.
Federal Court Rules O 25A
Bridges Financial Services Pty Ltd v Brown
[2008] FCA 992 cited
Elderslie Finance Corporation Ltd v Newpage Pty Ltd
(No 4) [2007] FCA 500 cited
Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky [2006] QSC 66
cited
Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky [2006] QSC 241 cited
Virgtel Ltd v
Zabusky [2008] QSC 213 cited
Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky (No 2) [2008]
QSC 316 cited
AMALIA INVESTMENTS LTD, AMALIA ZABUSKY and HARVEY
ZABUSKY v VIRGTEL GLOBAL NETWORKS NV, HENDRIK VAN LEEUWEN, MARIA ANTONIA
JOSEPHINA
ADRIANA VAN LEEUWEN-VAN HAL and VISCAYA ARMADORA SA
QUD 3 of 2009
COLLIER J
30 JANUARY 2009
BRISBANE
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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AMALIA INVESTMENTS LTDFirst
Applicant
AMALIA ZABUSKY Second Applicant
HARVEY ZABUSKY Third Applicant
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AND:
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VIRGTEL GLOBAL NETWORKS NVFirst
Respondent
HENDRIK VAN LEEUWEN Second Respondent
MARIA ANTONIA JOSEPHINA ADRIANA VAN LEEUWEN-VAN HAL Third
Respondent
VISCAYA ARMADORA SA Fourth Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Paragraphs
B(1), (2), (3) of the Application be dismissed.
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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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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QUD 3 of 2009
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BETWEEN:
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AMALIA INVESTMENTS LTD First Applicant
AMALIA ZABUSKY Second Applicant
HARVEY ZABUSKY Third Applicant
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AND:
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VIRGTEL GLOBAL NETWORKS NV First Respondent
HENDRIK VAN LEEUWEN Second Respondent
MARIA ANTONIA JOSEPHINA ADRIANA VAN LEEUWEN-VAN HAL Third
Respondent
VISCAYA ARMADORA SA Fourth Respondent
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JUDGE:
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COLLIER J
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DATE:
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30 JANUARY 2009
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PLACE:
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BRISBANE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- Before
me is an application filed 7 January 2009 seeking both permanent and
interlocutory relief. The matter is listed on the docket
of his Honour Greenwood
J, however it came before me ex parte this morning as duty judge in
relation to the interlocutory relief sought. The applicants have submitted that
resolution of their
claims for interlocutory relief is urgent.
- The
applicants are, respectively, an unregistered foreign corporation incorporated
in the British Virgin Islands, Mrs Amalia Zabusky,
and Mr Harvey Zabusky. They
are not legally represented. Order 4 r 14(2) provides that, except as
provided by or under
any Act, a corporation may not, without the leave of the
Court, commence or carry on any proceeding otherwise than by a solicitor.
Mr Zabusky has sought the leave of the Court to represent the first
applicant with the assistance of Mrs Zabusky. This
morning I granted leave
for Mr Zabusky to represent the first applicant for the purposes of
today’s hearing only.
- The
interlocutory relief sought by the applicants is as follows:
- An
order restraining the Respondents, whether by their servants or agents or
howsoever otherwise, until further order from doing the
following acts:
- Removing,
or causing or permitting to be removed or taking any steps to remove, any of
their assets out of the jurisdiction of this
Court; or
- Disposing,
transferring, charging, dissipating or diminishing or in any way dealing with
their assets within the jurisdiction.
Whether in the case of the Second and Third Respondents, by the Second and Third
Respondents personally or by the Second and Third
Respondents’ servants or
agents or any of them or otherwise; and whether in the case of the First and
Fourth Respondents, by
their directors, officers, servants or agents or any of
them or otherwise.
- Without
limiting the generality of paragraph 2, the assets of the Respondents within the
jurisdiction include:
- Four
Cost Orders in the amount of $282,307.19 in case 6547 of 2005 before the Supreme
Court, Brisbane Registry or any future Costs
Orders in the above Court
proceedings;
- The
sum of $650,000 deposited with James Conomos Lawyers of Level 16, 215 Adelaide
Street, Brisbane, QLD 4001.
- An
order requesting the Respondents and each of them within seven days of the
service of this order upon them to make and serve on
the Applicants an affidavit
disclosing with full particularity:
- The
full value of their assets whether within or without the jurisdiction of the
Court
b. The nature of all such assets
- Whether
those assets are held in their own names or held jointly or held by nominees or
otherwise on their behalf or on behalf of
any of them
- The
identity of all bank and other accounts in their sole names or jointly held by
nominees or otherwise on their behalf and the sums
standing to their credit in
those accounts
- Any
real estate or other assets, money or goods owned by them or any of them within
or without the jurisdiction of the Court and the
whereabouts of the same and the
names and addresses of all persons who have or may have possession, custody or
control of any such
assets, money or goods at the date of service of this order;
and
- Full
statement of all transactions made in all assets of all transactions made in all
assets listed in subparagraphs (a) to (e) from
1 November 2000 until the date of
service of this order.
- An
order granting leave to service documents on the Respondents by email to James
Conomos Lawyers email address James@jcl.com.au and/or
the Respondents email
addresses hvl@broadnetcommunications.co.uk and/or dokeb@skynet.be and/or
global.agt@tiscali.nl and/or rgcbv@worldonline.nl.
- An
order granting leave to represent Amalia Investments Ltd to the third Applicant
assisted by the Second Applicant.
BACKGROUND
- On
14 January 2009 Mr Zabusky filed a lengthy affidavit – some 303
paragraphs – in support of the interlocutory
application. The affidavit
sets out in some detail Mr Zabusky’s evidence as to the background of
these proceedings. No
evidence has been filed by other witnesses in respect of
these proceedings.
- I
have already noted the identity of the applicants. The first respondent is a
company incorporated and registered in the Netherlands;
the second respondent is
director of both the first and fourth respondents, and the third respondent is
the wife of the second respondent.
In summary, the applicants claim that,
notwithstanding a shareholder protocol executed on 20 October 2000 between
the first
applicant and the fourth respondents, shares of the first applicant in
the first respondent were fraudulently misappropriated as
a result of actions of
the second, third and fourth respondents in 2003 and 2004.
- The
second and third applicants and the first respondent to these proceedings have
already been parties to extensive litigation in
the Supreme Court of Queensland
in respect of matters arising from the breakdown in relations between the
parties: Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky [2006] QSC 66, Virgtel Ltd v
Zabusky [2006] QSC 241, Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky [2008] QSC 213 and
Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky (No 2) [2008] QSC 316.
FREEZING ORDERS
- Provision
for freezing orders – more traditionally known as Mareva orders – is
found in O 25A Federal Court Rules. In particular, O 25A
r 2 and r 5 provide, inter alia, as
follows:
2(1) The Court may make an order (a freezing order), upon or
without notice to a respondent, for the purpose of preventing the frustration or
inhibition of the Court’s process
by seeking to meet a danger that a
judgment or prospective judgment of the Court will be wholly or partly
unsatisfied.
2(2) A freezing order may be an order restraining a respondent from removing any
assets located in or outside Australia or from disposing
of, dealing with, or
diminishing the value of, those assets.
...
5(1) This rule applies if:
(a)...
(b) the applicant has a good arguable case on an accrued or prospective cause
of action that is justiciable in:
(i) the Court; or
(ii) in the case of a cause of action to which subrule (3) applies –
another court
...
5(4) The Court may make a freezing order or an ancillary order or both against a
judgment debtor or prospective judgment debtor if
the Court is satisfied, having
regard to all the circumstances, that there is a danger that a judgment or
prospective judgment will
be wholly or partly unsatisfied because any of the
following might occur:
(a) the judgment debtor, prospective judgment debtor or another person
absconds; or
(b) the assets of the judgment debtor, prospective judgment debtor or another
person are:
(i) removed from Australia or from a place inside or outside Australia;
or
(ii) disposed of, dealt with or diminished in value.
...
5(6) Nothing in this rule affects the power of the Court to make a freezing
order or ancillary order if the Court considers it is
in the interests of
justice to do so.
- Federal
Court of Australia Practice Note 23 issued 5 May 2006 supplements O 25A and
addresses the Court’s usual practice
relating to the making of a freezing
order. In particular, the Practice Note provides that, inter alia:
- the purpose of a
freezing order is to prevent frustration or abuse of the process of the Court,
not to provide security in respect
of a judgment or order (para 5);
- a freezing order
should be viewed as an extraordinary interim remedy because it can restrict the
right to deal with assets even before
judgment, and is commonly granted ex
parte (para 6);
- the duration of
an ex parte freezing order should be limited to a period terminating on
the return date of the motion, which should be as early as practical
(usually
not more than a day or two) after the order is made, when the respondent will
have the opportunity to be heard. The applicant
will then bear the onus of
satisfying the Court that the order should be continued or renewed (para
9);
- the order should
exclude dealings by the respondent with its assets for legitimate purposes, in
particular payment of reasonable legal
expenses (para 12);
- as a condition
of making a freezing order, the Court will normally require appropriate
undertakings by the applicant to the Court,
including the usual undertaking as
to damages. If it is demonstrated that the applicant has or may have
insufficient assets within
the jurisdiction of the Court to provide substance
for the usual undertaking as to damages, the applicant may be required to
support
the undertaking by providing security (para 16 and para 17);
- the applicant
for a freezing order should, inter alia, provide information about the
cause of action including the basis of the claim for substantive relief, the
amount of the claim,
and, if the application is made without notice to the
respondent, the applicant’s knowledge of any possible
defence.
SUBMISSIONS OF THE APPLICANTS
- The
submissions of the applicants in support of their claims for ex parte
interlocutory relief are relatively brief. In summary:
- the applicants
claim loss and damages resulting from the alleged theft of the first
applicant’s shares in a telecommunications
company in Nigeria by the
respondents;
- the respondents
are foreign corporations and individuals;
- the only assets
of the respondents in Australia are:
- the
proceeds of four successful costs orders following the successful outcome for
the respondents (against the applicants) in proceedings
in the Supreme Court of
Queensland (BS 6547 of 2005); and
- the sum
of $650,000 held in the trust account of the first respondent’s
solicitors, which sum the applicants submit represented
the amount ordered by
the Supreme Court of Queensland to be paid by the first respondent as security
for costs and undertaking for
costs and damages in relation to BS 6547 of
2005;
- the second,
third and fourth respondents have assets overseas;
- because the
respondents are foreign, they can disappear at will with those assets;
- once the assets
are out of Australia, the Court has no jurisdiction over them;
- the parties are
also involved in litigation in Nigeria;
- the reasons for
the ex parte application are to prevent the respondents removing the
assets in Australia precipitously, and because Mr Zabusky fears physical
harm from the second respondent.
CONSIDERATION
- I
am not satisfied on the evidence before me that an ex parte order
freezing assets of the respondents is warranted. I form this view for the
following reasons.
- First,
in my view, even assuming for the moment that the applicants’ substantive
case against the respondents is such that
there is a serious question to be
tried, there is no evidence before me of a danger that a judgment in the
applicants’ favour
would be wholly or partly unsatisfied because the
respondents or any of them might abscond, or that assets within Australia would
be removed, disposed of, dealt with or diminished in value. It is clear from the
affidavits of Mr Zabusky and his submissions
in Court this morning that the
key events from which the applicants’ claims arise occurred between 2000
and 2004. There is
no evidence of any more recent developments which suggest
that assets currently held by the respondents in Australia or overseas
are at
risk of dissipation.
- Other
than the claims of the applicants as to the conduct of the respondents in 2003
and 2004, which are not substantiated otherwise
than in the affidavits of
Mr Zabusky, this is not a case where, for example, there is compelling
evidence that funds previously
have been inappropriately dissipated (cf
Elderslie Finance Corporation Ltd v Newpage Pty Ltd (No 4) [2007] FCA
500, Bridges Financial Services Pty Ltd v Brown [2008] FCA 992). No
evidence has been produced to me that the respondents are in any way at risk of
disappearing or dissipating their assets, other
than the suspicions of the
applicants. Indeed in his affidavit sworn 30 January 2009 and filed in Court
this morning, Mr Zabusky
identified extensive properties in Europe and
Africa, including real properties, which he submitted were assets of the
respondents
potentially available to satisfy a judgment against the respondents.
I am fortified in this conclusion by the fact, as demonstrated
both by the
submissions of the applicants and the publicly-available decisions of the
Supreme Court of Queensland in related litigation,
the respondents have
submitted themselves to the Supreme Court of Queensland over a period of several
years (as is clear from such
decisions as Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky [2006]
QSC 66, Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky [2006] QSC 241, Virgtel Ltd v
Zabusky [2008] QSC 213 and Virgtel Ltd v Zabusky (No 2) [2008] QSC
316); have, I understand from the submissions of the applicants, paid
significant sums of money into the trust account of their solicitors
as ordered
by the Supreme Court; and currently retain solicitors in Queensland.
- Second,
the assets of the respondents which are the subject of the applicants’
claims include moneys ordered by the Supreme
Court of Queensland to be paid to
the first respondent by the applicants in related litigation: Virgtel Ltd v
Zabusky [2006] QSC 66. I need make no findings at this stage as to the
overlap (if any) between issues raised in the substantive proceedings in this
Court
and the litigation conducted in the Supreme Court of Queensland. However
to the extent that an order of this Court can potentially
frustrate a costs
order made by another Court, no submissions have been made which suggest that
such an order by this Court is either
necessary or desirable. I do not accept
that there is anything sinister associated with what I understand from
Mr Zabusky’s
submissions to be the intention of the first respondent
to transfer the proceeds of its successful costs orders from Australia –
indeed this strikes me as unexceptional given that it is likely the costs orders
merely reimburse the first respondent for legal
costs already paid.
- Further,
although Mr Zabusky submitted in Court that the applicants’ debt to
the first respondent in respect of costs
constituted an asset which could be the
subject of a freezing order, I am not persuaded on these facts that it is an
asset which
could be the subject of such an order within the terms of
O 25A. I make this observation particularly in light of the ex parte
nature of the application before me.
- In
any event, I note the proposition advanced in the Practice Note that a freezing
order should exclude dealings by the respondent
with its assets for legitimate
purposes including payment of reasonable legal expenses. Any monies paid by the
applicants to the
first respondent in respect of legal costs incurred in respect
of related litigation in my view falls into the category of assets
used by the
respondents to pay “reasonable legal expenses”, and prima
facie should not be the subject of a freezing order. The fact that the
applicants may suffer financial difficulties conducting the litigation
in this
Court once they have paid the first respondent the monies ordered by the Supreme
Court is not germane to the grant of a freezing
order within the terms of
O 25A.
- Third,
I understand from the submissions of Mr Zabusky that the assets of the
respondents which are the subject of the applicants’
claims include
$650,000 ordered to be paid by the Supreme Court of Queensland into the trust
account of the first respondent’s
solicitor in support of an undertaking
by the first respondent as to costs and damages. In my view it would not be
appropriate for
this Court to make an order affecting with those monies in the
absence of clear information identifying the circumstances surrounding
the
deposit of those monies.
- Fourth,
the fact that the respondents are foreign corporations and foreign individuals
does not automatically warrant an order freezing
their assets pending a
successful claim by the applicants to these proceedings. As the Practice Note
states, an application for a
freezing order is not to be confused with an
application for security for costs. In my view the terms of the application
before me
are suggestive of a security for costs application pursuant to
O 28 Federal Court Rules rather than a claim for a freezing
order.
- As
stated in the Practice Note, a freezing order is an extraordinary interim
remedy. It should only be granted in exceptional circumstances.
In my view the
circumstances of this case do not warrant such an order.
- Finally,
this morning the applicants did not press their claim under para B(4) of the
Applicant. Accordingly I make no order in relation
to this aspect of the
claim.
I certify that the preceding nineteen (19)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Collier J.
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Associate:
Dated: 30 January 2009
Counsel for the First
Applicant:
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The Third Applicant appeared
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Counsel for the Second Applicant:
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The Second Applicant appeared in person
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Counsel for the Third Applicant:
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The Third Applicant appeared in person
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Counsel for the First, Second, Third and Fourth Respondents:
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The First, Second, Third, Fourth Respondents did not appear
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