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Quotila Pty Ltd v South Australian Marine Products Industries Pty Ltd (No 2) [2011] FCA 29 (28 January 2011)
Last Updated: 28 January 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Quotila Pty Ltd v South Australian Marine
Products Industries Pty Ltd (No 2) [2011] FCA 29
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Citation:
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Quotila Pty Ltd v South Australian Marine Products Industries Pty Ltd (No
2) [2011] FCA 29
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Parties:
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QUOTILA PTY LTD (ACN 005 763 502) v SOUTH
AUSTRALIAN MARINE PRODUCTS INDUSTRIES PTY LTD (ACN 107 786 201), CHARLES JOHN
FRANCHINA
and TERRY STEPHEN ROMARO
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File number:
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SAD 131 of 2010
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Judge:
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BESANKO J
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Date of judgment:
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Place:
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Adelaide
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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No catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Plaintiff:
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Solicitor for the Plaintiff:
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Jenkins Anderson
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Counsel for the Defendants:
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Mr K A Dundo
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Solicitor for the Defendants:
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Q Legal
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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QUOTILA PTY LTD (ACN 005 763
502)Plaintiff
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AND:
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SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MARINE PRODUCTS INDUSTRIES PTY
LTD (ACN 107 786 201)First Defendant
CHARLES JOHN FRANCHINA Second Defendant
TERRY STEPHEN ROMARO Third Defendant
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
defendants’ notice of motion dated 19 January 2011 be dismissed.
- The
defendants pay the plaintiff’s costs of the said notice of motion.
- The
proceeding be listed for further directions on 9 May 2011 at 9.15 am.
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
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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SAD 131 of 2010
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BETWEEN:
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QUOTILA PTY LTD (ACN 005 763 502) Plaintiff
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AND:
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SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MARINE PRODUCTS INDUSTRIES PTY LTD (ACN 107 786
201) First Defendant
CHARLES JOHN FRANCHINA Second Defendant
TERRY STEPHEN ROMARO Third Defendant
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JUDGE:
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BESANKO J
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DATE:
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28 JANUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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ADELAIDE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- This
is an application by the defendants to a proceeding before this Court for an
order directing that the proceeding be continued
in the Western Australia
District Registry of this Court. The order is sought under s 48(1) of the
Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth).
- The
claims made by the plaintiff against the defendants are summarised in my reasons
for judgment on an application by the plaintiff
for an interlocutory injunction:
Quotila Pty Ltd v South Australian Marine Products Industries Pty Ltd
[2010] FCA 1141. I will not repeat what I said in those reasons.
- On
the present application the defendants rely on an affidavit sworn by the second
defendant on 19 January 2011. In that affidavit,
the second defendant states
that the first defendant conducts a business at Port Lincoln in South Australia.
The registered office
of the first defendant is an address in Burswood, Western
Australia, and it has a place of business for the purpose of its administrative
functions in Fremantle, Western Australia. The second defendant states that the
first defendant has a working capital deficiency
and requires financial support
which, at this time, is provided by FishTrade International Pty Ltd
(‘FishTrade’). The
second defendant states that without
FishTrade’s financial support, the first defendant would not be able to
meet its debts
as and when they fall due. The first defendant’s accounts
as at 31 December 2010 show a working capital deficiency of $545,139,
and
outstanding trade creditors of $219,108. The second defendant states that the
witnesses to be called on behalf of the defendants
at the trial of this
proceeding will be himself, the third defendant and Daniel McRorie, all of whom
are resident in Western Australia.
He believes that the plaintiff may call Mr
Peter Lombardo as a witness and he states that Mr Lombardo is a resident of
Western
Australia. The second defendant refers to the fact that the relevant
directors’ meeting of the first defendant was held in
Western
Australia.
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plaintiff relies on an affidavit of its solicitor, dated 24 January 2011. In
that affidavit the solicitor deposes to the fact
that Mr Peter Laughton, the
director of the plaintiff, is resident in South Australia. He also deposes to
the fact that his firm
is located in Port Lincoln, South Australia. He states
that his firm does not have an office or any ‘affiliates’ in Western
Australia. The plaintiff’s counsel is a member of the South Australian
bar. The solicitor states that Mr Laughton will be a
witness at trial, but, at
this stage, no decision has been made as to other witnesses. The solicitor
states that he has been informed
by counsel that the trial will occupy one to
two days.
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relevant principles are clear. They are set out in the decision of the Full
Court of this Court in National Mutual Holdings Pty Ltd v The Sentry
Corporation (1988) 19 FCR 155. The Court said (at
[162]):
A party commences a proceeding by filing an application in a particular registry
of the Court. If that party or another party wishes
to have the proceeding
conducted or continued in another place he may apply to the Court for an order
under s 48 or O 10, r 1(2)(f) or O 30, r 6 as the case may be. There is no onus
of proof in the strict sense to be discharged by the party seeking
to conduct or
continue the proceedings elsewhere. It should be noted that the Court may
exercise its powers under O 30, r 6 either
on the application of a party or of
its own motion. The Court must, however, be satisfied, after considering all
relevant matters,
that there is sound reason to direct that the proceeding be
conducted or continued elsewhere. Its starting point is that the proceeding
has
been commenced at a particular place. Why should it be changed? On the one hand,
if the party who commenced the proceeding chose
that place capriciously the
Court would be justified in giving no weight to the choice of place. At the
other end of the scale, a
proceeding may have continued for some time at the
place of commencement with many steps having been taken there, for example,
filing
of pleadings and affidavits, discovery and inspection. Due weight would
be given by the Court to such matters before directing that
the proceeding
should continue at a different place.
The balance of convenience is important, but its weight must vary from case to
case. Ultimately the test is: where can the case be
conducted or continued most
suitably bearing in mind the interests of all the parties, the ends of justice
in the determination of
the issues between them, and the most efficient
administration of the Court. It cannot and should not, in our opinion, be
defined
more closely or precisely.
- The
parties also referred me to Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v
Pauls Ltd [2002] FCA 71 (‘Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission v Pauls’); Vasta v Tuni Engineering Pty Ltd [2006]
FCA 1780 and Rafferty v Time 2000 West Pty Limited [2008] FCA 1925;
Mortimer v Opes Prime Stockbroking Limited (ACN 086 294 028)
(Administrators Appointed) (In Liquidation) [2009] FCA 227. I have also
had regard to the passages from the reasons for judgment of Gummow J sitting as
a member of this Court in Cycles and Wheelman Pty Ltd v Beltech Corporation
Ltd (1988) 80 ALR 279 referred to by O’Loughlin J in Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission v Pauls.
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trial of this proceeding will not be a long one. The estimate of one to two days
may be optimistic, but I think that on the evidence
presently before me the case
is likely to be completed within days rather than weeks. Evidence may be given
by video link although,
having regard to the nature of the issues, I think that
I should proceed on the basis that the second and third defendant will give
evidence in person rather than by video link. However, it may be possible for Mr
McRorie to give evidence by video link. That means
there are two witnesses who
would have to travel from Western Australia to South Australia if the
defendants’ application is
unsuccessful, or one witness who would have to
travel from South Australia to Western Australia if it is successful. While it
is
true that the registered office of the first defendant is in Western
Australia and it has an administrative office in Western Australia,
the
principal operating business of the first defendant is conducted from premises
in South Australia. It is also true that the impugned
resolution of the
directors was passed at a directors meeting held in Western Australia. At the
same time, the proceeding involves
the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and
the fiduciary obligations of directors, and I do not understand it to be
suggested that there is any chance the law to
be applied may differ according to
the venue.
- I
place little weight on the location of the plaintiff’s solicitors and
counsel as there is no reason to think that the plaintiff
cannot be adequately
represented if the trial proceeds in the Western Australia District Registry. It
is true that the defendants
are likely to incur additional costs if the trial is
conducted in this Registry, but the trial is likely to be a relatively short
one
and there is no reason to think that the defendants will not be able to conduct
a defence of the proceeding at a trial in this
Registry.
- The
plaintiff’s choice of venue is not a capricious one and there must be a
sound reason to transfer the proceeding. Although
at this stage the balance of
convenience in terms of the location of witnesses favours an order for transfer,
that matter is not
a sufficiently weighty matter when considered with the other
matters I have identified to persuade me that there is a sound reason
to order a
transfer of the proceeding.
- The
defendants’ notice of motion must be dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding ten (10) numbered
paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable
Justice
Besanko.
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Associate:
Dated: 28 January 2011
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