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McCann (in his capacity as liquidator of Australvic Property Management Pty Ltd (in liq)) v Mason [2009] FCA 44 (4 February 2009)
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McCann (in his capacity as liquidator of Australvic Property Management Pty Ltd (in liq)) v Mason [2009] FCA 44 (4 February 2009)
Last Updated: 4 February 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
McCann (in his capacity as liquidator of
Australvic Property Management Pty Ltd (in liq)) v Mason [2009] FCA 44
CORPORATIONS – winding up –
liquidator’s examination – summons to attend – application to
discharge summons –
principles to be applied
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), ss 596B, 596C
Federal Court (Corporation) Rules 2000, r 11.3
Hamilton v Oades [1989] HCA 21; (1989) 166 CLR 486
Hugh J Roberts Pty Ltd (1970) 91 WN (NSW) 537, Re
New Zealand Steel (Aust) Pty Ltd v Burton (1994) 13 ACSR 610
Normans Wines Ltd (Receivers and
Managers Appointed) (in liq); Harvey v Burfield (2004) 88 SASR 541,
Re
Sent v Andrews (2002) 6 VR 317
Southland Coal Pty
Ltd (2005) 189 FLR 297, Re
MICHAEL WESLEY MCCANN (IN HIS CAPACITY AS
LIQUIDATOR OF AUSTRALVIC PROPERTY MANAGEMENT PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION)) v RICHARD
JAMES MASON
VID 790 of 2008
FINKELSTEIN J
4 fEBRUARY 2009
MELBOURNE
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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IN THE MATTER OF AUSTRALVIC PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION)
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MICHAEL WESLEY MCCANN (IN HIS CAPACITY AS
LIQUIDATOR OF AUSTRALVIC PROPERTY MANAGEMENT PTY LTD (IN
LIQUIDATION))Applicant
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AND:
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RICHARD JAMES
MASONRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
application to set aside the summons dated 13 October 2008 for the examination
of Richard Mason before a registrar of the Federal
Court of Australia be
refused.
- Direct
that the said examination be limited to eliciting information in relation to
whether or not there has been a breach of duty
(whether common law or statutory)
by Michael Kyriackou in relation to the affairs of any company in the
Australvic group of
companies.
- Further
direct that without leave of the Court the evidence given by Richard Mason must
not be used, either directly or indirectly,
for or in connection with
proceedings numbered F6133, 2056 of 2007 issued out of the Supreme Court of
Victoria.
4. Each party to bear their own costs in this
application.
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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IN THE MATTER OF AUSTRALVIC PROPERTY MANAGEMENT PTY LTD
(IN LIQUIDATION)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- Mr
McCann is the liquidator of Australvic Property Management Pty Ltd (in
liquidation). On 13 October 2008 Mr McCann obtained an
order under s 596B of
the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) that Mr Mason be summonsed to be examined
about the affairs of Australvic and to produce documents at that examination.
Mr
Mason brought two applications. The first, made pursuant to s 596C, was to
obtain access to the affidavit relied upon by Mr McCann to support his 596B
application. The second was to have the examination
summons discharged. During
the course of the hearing, I directed that Mr Mason be permitted to inspect
the affidavit after
certain deletions had been made. Shortly after the hearing
Mr Mason’s application to set aside the examination summons
was
dismissed. What follows are my reasons.
- The
basis of the application to set aside the examination summons was as follows.
Australvic was the registered proprietor of property
situated in Oakleigh,
Victoria. Perpetual Trustee Company Ltd and Wanstrow Pty Limited each held a
mortgage over the property.
Following a default under the first mortgage,
Perpetual Trustee took possession of the property and sold it by public auction.
The
net proceeds of sale (after deducting the amounts due to both mortgagees)
were $1,410,044.13. Several parties, including Australvic,
claim to be entitled
to this sum. On 13 September 2007 Australvic issued proceedings in the Supreme
Court of Victoria to assert
its title to the proceeds. The defendants, one of
which is Caveat Finance Pty Ltd (in liquidation), are the other claimants.
Perpetual
Trustee paid the net proceeds into the Supreme Court pending the
resolution of the competing claims to the fund.
- Following
his appointment, Mr McCann took over the conduct of the Supreme Court action.
Mr Mason, who is a director of Caveat, says
it is “most likely” he
will be called by Caveat to give evidence at the trial of the action. He
asserts that the reason
Mr McCann obtained the summons was to conduct an enquiry
principally for the purpose of prosecuting the Supreme Court action.
- Mr
McCann disputes this allegation. He deposed that the purpose of the examination
is to investigate whether Mr Kyriackou, a former
director of Australvic, has
breached any fiduciary duties he owed the company. Mr McCann’s concern is
that a considerable
amount of the money that was advanced by Caveat to
Australvic under five loan agreements made between November 2006 and February
2007 appears to have found its way into the hands of Mr Kyriakou. Mr McCann
says he has been unable to properly investigate the
matter because there is a
“conspicuous lack of documentation and information” and he has
received no assistance from
Mr Kyriakou.
- The
relevant legal principles are not in doubt. An examination summons will be
discharged if it is oppressive, unfair, an abuse of
process or has been issued
for an improper purpose: Sent v Andrews (2002) 6 VR 317, 320; Re
Southland Coal Pty Ltd (2005) 189 FLR 297, 303. An examination summons will
not be oppressive, unfair, an abuse of process or improper merely because there
is on foot litigation between a liquidator (or the company in liquidation) and
the proposed examinee. Thus, in Sent at 320, Buchanan JA said:
“Where an examination relates to proposed or current litigation, in
general terms the question is
‘whether the examination is genuinely for
the information of the liquidator to aid him in considering whether there is a
cause
of action upon which he will proceed ...” In Re Southland Coal
at 302-303, Young CJ in Eq said: “It is clear that it is no basic
objection to the issue of an examination summons on the ground
of oppression
that the liquidator may ascertain the strength of the case of a person with whom
the company is involved in litigation”.
- On
the other hand, a liquidator is “not entitled to conduct a dress rehearsal
of the cross-examination in an action or to seek
to damage the opposing parties
case by attacking the credibility of that party’s witness”: Sent
at 320; see also Re Hugh J Roberts Pty Ltd (1970) 91 WN (NSW)
537. In Hamilton v Oades [1989] HCA 21; (1989) 166 CLR 486, 498, Mason CJ put it this
way: “[I]f a liquidator were to conduct an examination directed to compel
the examinee to disclose
defences or to give pre-trial discovery, or to
establish guilt, this examination may be restrained as an abuse of
process”.
It is not, however, enough that “there is a chance that
this will occur”: Re Southland Coal at 303.
- It
is clear that the examination summons was sought to assist Mr McCann in
investigating whether there has been a breach of duty
by Mr Kyriakou.
Mr McCann is not seeking to conduct a dress rehearsal of a possible
cross-examination of Mr Mason. I
accept that, during the course of the
examination, Mr McCann may uncover information that will be of assistance
in the Supreme
Court proceeding. That, however, is not a sufficient reason to
discharge the examination summons.
- Nonetheless,
to safeguard against any improper use of the examination procedure, it was
ordered that: (a) the examination of Mr Mason
be limited to eliciting
information in relation to whether Mr Kyriackou has breached any duties he owed
to Australvic; and (b) the
evidence given by Mr Mason must not be used in the
Supreme Court proceeding without leave of the court.
- I
should say something about the s 596C application. The starting point is that
an affidavit filed in support of an application for an examination summons is
sealed: r 11.3(4)
of the Corporation Rules. The reason for this
rule is so that a liquidator need not disclose to a proposed examinee the
matters upon which the liquidator
wish to examine, thereby defeating the purpose
of the examination: Re Normans Wines Ltd (Receivers and Managers Appointed)
(in liq); Harvey v Burfield (2004) 88 SASR 541, 555. Mr Mason
inspected the affidavit, after certain deletions had been made. The effect of
the deletions meant that Mr Mason
was not in a position to know the questions
Mr McCann proposed to ask during the examination.
- As
each party had a measure of success there was an order that the costs lie where
they fall.
I certify that the preceding ten (10) numbered
paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable
Justice
Finkelstein.
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Associate:
Dated: 4 February 2009
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Goldsmiths
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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P G Cawthorn SC
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Buxton & Associates
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