You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Federal Court of Australia - Full Court >>
2011 >>
[2011] FCAFC 79
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Bruton Holdings Pty Limited (In Liq) v Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCAFC 79 (17 June 2011)
Last Updated: 21 June 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Bruton Holdings Pty Limited (In Liq) v
Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCAFC 79
|
Citation:
|
Bruton Holdings Pty Limited (In Liq) v Commissioner of Taxation [2011]
FCAFC 79
|
|
|
|
Appeal from:
|
|
|
|
|
Parties:
|
BRUTON HOLDINGS PTY LIMITED (IN LIQ) v
COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION
|
|
|
|
File number:
|
NSD 1195 of 2010
|
|
|
|
Judges:
|
STONE, JACOBSON & EDMONDS JJ
|
|
|
|
Date of judgment:
|
|
|
|
|
Catchwords:
|
TRUSTS AND TRUSTEES – appeal –
whether trustee entitled to indemnification out of trust fund for litigation
expenses – bare trustee
contested invalid notice of assessment issued by
Commissioner of Taxation – whether trustee acting for authorised purpose
–
consideration of duties of bare trustee – powers of trustee
limited to those under general law or statute – bare trustee
has
obligation to protect and maintain trust property and refrain from active
management – active duties of bare trustees include
actions necessary to
protect trust property – held primary proceeding necessary to protect
trust property against unauthorised
appropriation and invalid exercise of power
– appeal allowed – declarations set aside
CORPORATIONS – whether trustee entitled to indemnification out
of trust fund for expenses incurred in litigation pursuant to s 556(1)(a)
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) – not necessary to decide
|
|
|
|
Legislation:
|
|
|
|
|
Cases cited:
|
Jacobs’ Law of Trusts in Australia
7th ed, LexisNexis Butterworths, Australia
2006 McPherson J “The Insolvent Trading Trust” in
Essays in Equity, PD Finn (ed), 142
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Place:
|
Sydney
|
|
|
|
Division:
|
GENERAL DIVISION
|
|
|
|
Category:
|
Catchwords
|
|
|
|
Number of paragraphs:
|
|
|
|
Counsel for the Appellant:
|
N Cotman SC with R Glasson
|
|
|
|
Solicitor for the Appellant:
|
ERA Legal
|
|
|
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
ML Brabazon SC with RL Seiden
|
|
|
|
Solicitor for the Respondent:
|
Australian Government Solicitor
|
|
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
|
|
|
|
|
ON APPEAL FROM THE
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
|
BRUTON HOLDINGS PTY LIMITED (IN
LIQ)Appellant
|
|
AND:
|
COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATIONRespondent
|
|
|
STONE, JACOBSON & EDMONDS JJ
|
|
DATE OF ORDER:
|
|
|
WHERE MADE:
|
|
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal be allowed.
- The
orders made on 3 and 9 September 2010 be set aside.
THE COURT
DECLARES THAT:
- Bruton
Holdings Pty Ltd (in liq) is not disqualified from indemnification by
exoneration out of the property of the Bruton Educational
Trust for costs and
expenses incurred in proceedings NSD 966 of 2007 or the appeal (including the
application for special leave and
the appeal to the High Court) therefrom.
- The
respondent pay the costs of this appeal and of the proceeding before Graham J on
9 and 10 February 2010 and the application before
Nicholas J on 9 September
2010.
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
|
|
|
NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
|
|
|
GENERAL DIVISION
|
NSD 1195 of 2010
|
|
ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
BETWEEN:
|
BRUTON HOLDINGS PTY LIMITED (IN LIQ) Appellant
|
|
AND:
|
COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION Respondent
|
|
JUDGES:
|
STONE, JACOBSON & EDMONDS JJ
|
|
DATE:
|
17 JUNE 2011
|
|
PLACE:
|
SYDNEY
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Background
- The
parties appeal from a declaration and orders made by Graham J on 3 September
2010: Commissioner of Taxation v Bruton Holdings Pty Limited (in Liquidation)
[2010] FCA 978; (2010) 188 FCR 516. Justice Graham retired from the Court on 5 September
2010. On 9 September 2010 Nicholas J made an additional declaration on the
basis that if Graham J’s reasons were correct the additional declaration
should also be made: Commissioner of Taxation v Bruton Holdings Pty Limited
(in Liquidation)(No 2) [2010] FCA 998. Given the circumstances in which the
declaration by Nicholas J was made it is not necessary in these reasons to
differentiate between
the basis for that declaration and the declaration made by
Graham J. Being based on the same reasons, the declarations stand or
fall
together.
- The
facts relevant to this appeal are not in dispute. The following account is
largely taken from the reasons of the Graham J.
In 1997, by deed of trust, the
appellant (Bruton) was appointed as trustee of the Bruton Educational
Trust (educational trust). On 10 October 2005, Bruton applied to the
respondent (Commissioner) for endorsement as a tax exempt entity as from
1 July 2006. The application was refused, as was Bruton’s objection to
the
Commissioner’s decision. An appeal from the Commissioner’s
decision (objection appeal) was also dismissed.
- Piper
Alderman was the solicitor for Bruton in the objection appeal. Between October
2005 and February 2007 it was paid $470,000
by Bruton to be held in its trust
account in respect of costs and disbursements of the proceedings including the
endorsement application
to the Commissioner. On 28 February 2007 administrators
were appointed to Bruton and on 30 April 2007 the company’s creditors
resolved that it should be wound up. By virtue of ss 513B(b) and 513C(b)
of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) the winding up was taken to have
commenced on 28 February 2007.
- Clause
10.2(b) of the educational trust deed provided that the office of the trustee
was “immediately terminated and vacated”
if the trustee went into
liquidation. Accordingly, from 28 February 2007 Bruton ceased to be the trustee
of the educational trust
and became the bare trustee of the assets comprising
the trust fund (Fund). As a consequence Bruton was no longer entitled to
exercise any power including the investment, management or payment of trust
monies arising from the educational trust deed. Its powers were limited to
those that under the general law or statute are the powers
of a bare
trustee.
- On
26 March 2007, the Commissioner issued a notice of assessment directed to the
trustee calling for payment in the amount of $7,715,873.73
in respect of tax and
the Medicare levy for the 2004 income year. Furthermore, after Bruton was wound
up, the Commissioner lodged
a Proof of Debt with the liquidators of Bruton for
the amount stated in the notice of assessment. On 8 May 2007, the Commissioner
issued a notice to Piper Alderman pursuant to s 260-5 of Schedule 1 of the
Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth) requiring the firm to pay
$447,420.20 which it held in its trust account on account of the educational
trust to the Commissioner.
- On
30 May 2007 Bruton instituted proceedings in this Court (primary proceeding)
seeking a declaration that the s 260-5 notice was void by virtue of
s 500(1) of the Corporations Act. On 2
November 2007 Allsop J declared the notice was void (see Bruton Holdings Pty
Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 244 ALR 177). On 23 November
2007, his Honour made further orders including an order that Piper Alderman pay
the $477,420.20 held in its trust
account to the liquidators. The liquidators
were to pay that money into an interest-bearing bank account and were restrained
from
spending that money except, inter alia, to pay expenses incurred by Bruton
in respect of the primary proceeding and the appeal proceeding.
His Honour
ordered the Commissioner to pay Bruton’s costs as well as those of Piper
Alderman.
- An
appeal from Allsop J’s judgment to the Full Court was allowed and Allsop
J’s judgment was set aside (see Commissioner of Taxation v Bruton
Holdings Pty Ltd (in liq) [2008] FCAFC 184; (2008) 173 FCR 472. Bruton was granted special
leave to appeal to the High Court. The High Court allowed the appeal with costs
(see Bruton v Commissioner of Taxation [2009] HCA 32. It set aside the
orders of the Full Court and in their place ordered that the appeal to the Full
Court be dismissed with costs.
- A
dispute followed between the Commissioner and the liquidators concerning whether
the shortfall between the amount of Bruton’s
solicitor and client costs
and the amount of its party and party costs referable to the primary proceeding,
the Full Court appeal,
the application for special leave and the appeal in the
High Court should be paid out of the Fund. This dispute over the payment
of
costs was the subject of the proceeding before Graham J (costs
proceeding) and is the issue in the present appeal.
The costs proceeding
- The
costs proceeding was initiated by the Commissioner who sought a declaration that
Bruton was not entitled to indemnification for
the shortfall in costs by
exoneration or recoupment out of the trust property. Justice Graham found that
even without reference
to the Deed, Bruton had rights of exoneration from the
trust assets in respect of all obligations incurred by it in the administration
of the educational trust. However, as bare trustee of the trust assets as from
28 February 2007, it was not part of Bruton’s
functions to institute the
primary proceeding and the costs were therefore not ‘properly
incurred’ by Bruton in the administration
of the Fund. Although Bruton
was ultimately successful, it was not acting as a trustee in discharge of its
then trust obligations.
Consequently, his Honour declared that Bruton was not
entitled to indemnification by exoneration or recoupment out of the property
of
the Fund for the relevant expenses after 28 February 2007.
This appeal
- In
this appeal the liquidators seek to set aside the declarations made on 3 and 9
September 2010. They also seek a declaration that
would uphold their right to
be paid the costs shortfall however there was some vagueness about the exact
terms of the declaration
sought. This is discussed later in these reasons.
The liquidators submit that Graham J erred in:
(1) holding that
Bruton did not have a right of exoneration, indemnity or recoupment out of the
Fund for expenses incurred in the
primary proceeding and the appeals from it;
(2) holding that Bruton had not incurred the expenses in the administration
of the trust and/or in proper performance of its duties
or exercise of its
powers; and
(3) failing to hold s 556(1)(a) of the Corporations Act entitled
Bruton to indemnity for the expenses.
- The
parties provided very comprehensive submissions, however both agree that the
issue in the proceeding is limited to a discrete
legal point concerning whether
the obligations of Bruton, as a bare trustee of the Fund, extended to opposing
by litigation the action
of the Commissioner in issuing a notice to Piper
Alderman pursuant to s 260-5.
- It
was not in contention, indeed it could hardly be doubted, that a bare trustee
has an obligation to protect and maintain the trust
property. Most recently the
High Court has held so in CGU Insurance Limited v One.Tel Limited (in liq)
[2010] HCA 26; (2010) 268 ALR 439.
- The
case concerned the position of a trustee appointed under a Deed of Arrangement
with John Huyshe Greaves pursuant to Part X of the Bankruptcy Act 1966
(Cth). Mr Greaves was a former director of One.Tel Limited. He was liable
under a judgment in proceedings brought against him
by Australian Securities and
Investments Commission (ASIC) to pay compensation to One.Tel in the
amount of $20 million. Mr Greaves assigned to the trustee, inter alia, his
rights under an
insurance policy issued by CGU Insurance (CGU) from whom
he claimed indemnity for his liability to ASIC. It was accepted that the
assignment was valid although whether at law
or in equity, it was not necessary
to decide.
- In
October 2006 the trustee commenced proceedings in the New South Wales Supreme
Court in respect of a $20m claim under the insurance
policy. On 30 November
2007 the Deed of Arrangement expired by effluxion of time. Subsequently the
summons in the Supreme Court
proceeding was changed so that the plaintiff was no
longer identified as trustee under the Deed of Arrangement but merely as David
Patrick Watson. The primary judge in the Supreme Court proceeding held that as
the Deed of Arrangement had terminated Mr Watson
had no power to continue the
proceeding. The NSW Court of Appeal allowed an appeal from the primary
judge’s order.
- On
appeal to the High Court CGU argued that the assignment did not give Mr Watson
the power to continue the proceeding. The High
Court held that after the
termination of the Deed of Arrangement the trustee continued to hold the chose
in action as trustee and
that, even if after termination of the Deed the trustee
held the chose in action on a bare trust, it “had an obligation to
continue ... to vindicate the rights associated with the trust property”.
At [36]-[37] of its reasons the High Court made
the following statements about
the position and obligations of a bare
trustee:
The trustee of a bare trust has no interests in the trust assets other than
those which exist by reason of the office of trustee
and the holding of legal
title. Further, the trustee of a bare trust has no active duties to perform
other than those which exist
by reason of the office of trustee, with the result
that the property awaits transfer to the beneficiaries or awaits some other
disposition
at their direction. One obligation of a trustee which exists by
virtue of the very office is the obligation to get the trust property
in,
protect it, and vindicate the rights attaching to it. That obligation exists
even if no provision of any statute or trust instrument
creates it. It exists
unless it is negated by a provision of any statute or trust instrument. Here no
provision of the Act or the
Deed negates it. Mr Greave’s equitable
assignment of his right to sue CGU under the Policy gave the Trustee the duty to
vindicate
that right. ... Even assuming in favour of CGU that, after termination
of the Deed, the Trustee no longer held the chose in action
on the trusts of the
Deed, the Trustee did remain a trustee, and did have an obligation to continue
the process of complying with
the duty to vindicate the rights associated with
the trust property.
It does not follow from CGU's contention that the Trustee had no entitlement to
continue the proceedings which could be derived from
the Deed once it had
terminated that the Trustee did not have an entitlement to continue the
proceedings after the Deed terminated
which derives from a source other than the
Deed. The latter entitlement derives from the duty and power of trusteeship.
The Deed
created a trusteeship with express duties. The termination of the Deed
caused the Trustee to have duties and powers outside the
Deed. Here the duty of
the Trustee to vindicate the rights connected with the trust property related to
a chose in action being
enforced in the Trustee proceedings. The hoped-for
fruits of those proceedings lay in an order for damages. Discontinuance by the
Trustee with a view to letting some other person enforce the chose in action by
starting a new action may have run the risk that
the new action might be
statute-barred, and would certainly have involved a waste of costs. In these
circumstances the only way
of protecting the chose in action, vindicating the
rights attached to it and getting in its fruits was for the Trustee to continue
the proceedings.
- It
has long been accepted that what a bare trustee must do in discharge of its
obligations will vary with the nature of the trust
property and whatever might
threaten it. In the absence of any challenge to the property a bare trustee may
remain passive however
as Meagher JA (with whom Samuels JA agreed) said in
Corumo Holdings Pty Ltd v C Itoh Ltd (1991) 24 NSWLR 370 at 398,
“almost no situation can be postulated where a trustee cannot in some
circumstances have active duties to perform”.
In Chief Commissioner of
Stamp Duties v ISPT Pty Ltd (1998) 45 NSWLR 639 at 651 Mason P said that
though active and bare trusts were generally distinguished by the presence of
active duties of management
in the former and not the latter, “[i]t is
equally clear that some active duties, though not of management, are imposed on
some, but not all, bare trustees”. Those active duties will, at the very
least, include actions necessary to protect the trust
property.
- The
Commissioner submits that, despite the notice issued under s 260-5 being
void, the actions of Bruton in this case were not necessary to protect the Fund
because, ultimately the assets of the Fund
were available to the Commissioner in
payment (in part) of the educational trust’s tax debt. Accordingly the
Commissioner
submitted that Bruton’s actions were futile.
- Before
the High Court the Commissioner emphasised that Bruton’s tax debt had not
been paid so that its right at best was to
exoneration not recoupment from the
Fund. The Commissioner claimed to be subrogated to the exercise of that right
and that there
was no prospect of any excess being left for Bruton. The High
Court, at [51], said:
It is unnecessary to rule upon those submissions. This is for several reasons.
The first is that for the reasons given above which
concern the construction of
the Administration Act, the remedy available to the Commissioner on the facts of
this case was that under
the regime for liquidations (s 260-45), not the
garnishee regime provided by s 260-5. Secondly, the Commissioner takes
inconsistent
positions in making the above submissions. The garnishee regime,
in its terms, only applies if the third party owes money to the
taxpayer
(s 260-5(2), (3)), yet the Commissioner denies that the third party,
[Bruton], had any "property" within the broad meaning
of "property" for the
operation of s 500(1) of the Corporations
Act.
- There
are two responses we would make in relation to the Commissioner’s
submission that Bruton’s actions were unnecessary.
First, while it may be
that, as the Commissioner contends, it is entitled to the whole of the balance
of the Fund and there are
no competing interests, at least none with priority
over the interest of the Commissioner (such as a secured interest), no evidence
has been put to us on the point and no submissions (as distinct from
unsubstantiated assertion) have been made. The appeal papers
disclose the
existence of at least one other possible creditor because the index to Part B
refers to a proof of debt apparently lodged
by a claimant. The document was not
reproduced and we are therefore unaware of the nature or amount of the debt. In
the previous
proceedings in this Court and in the High Court there has been no
finding to the effect that there is an absence of competing interests.
- Subdivision
260-B of Schedule 1 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (Cth)
provides for the collection and recovery of tax-related liabilities from
liquidators. As the High Court pointed out, this
subdivision provides the
appropriate regime for the Commissioner to seek a remedy in respect of the
unpaid liabilities of Bruton,
either on its own behalf or as trustee of the
educational trust; s 260-45. It was not for a bare trustee to comply with
an invalid
claim on the Fund on the basis that the invalidity should be ignored
because the Commissioner could have obtained his remedy in another
way. Once
Bruton fell into insolvent administration, the question of who had access to the
assets of the educational trust, and
in what amount, was to be determined within
the four corners of the liquidation: In Re Suco Gold Pty Ltd (in liq)
(1983) 33 SASR 99 at 102.
- Second,
it is relevant to consider the high standard of conduct to which all who have
fiduciary obligations have long been held:
Keech v Sandford (1726) 25 ER
223; Boardman v Phipps [1966] UKHL 2; [1967] 2 AC 46. This high standard has many
facets but all require that a trustee be diligent in discharging its duties and
obligations. A trustee
must discharge the duties of the trust, give careful
consideration to the exercise of discretions under the trust and refrain from
acting beyond the authorisation given by the trust deed and any relevant statute
or other legal authority. A bare trustee has a
duty to maintain and protect the
trust property and to refrain from active management that does not fall within
this duty. In determining
this appeal it is not necessary for us to decide
whether, if Bruton had complied with the invalid notice, it would have been in
breach
of trust – and we do not do so.
- The
question here is whether the proposition that Bruton, in refusing to comply with
an invalid notice, was acting outside its authority
as bare trustee or, as was
put by the Commissioner, had not incurred the relevant expenses in the
administration of the trust and/or
in proper performance of its duties: see
Suco Gold at 105. However, that begs the question as to whether, as a
bare trustee, rather than as the former trustee of the educational trust
under
the terms of that instrument, Bruton was acting for an authorised purpose.
There is no authority directly in point to which
the Commissioner was able to
refer. Conversely, the comments of the High Court quoted above at [15] above
are plainly apposite.
We do not regard the fact that in CGU Insurance
the trustee’s proceedings had commenced before the deed of arrangement
terminated as a basis for holding that the general observations
of the High
Court are not relevant here.
- Nor
can the decision in CGU Insurance be distinguished upon the other bases
suggested by the Commissioner. The relevant asset in the present case was a
debt owed to Bruton
by a third party. Litigation was not essential to its
realisation but when the Commissioner sought to invoke the garnishee regime
there would appear to have been no other way of protecting the asset against an
invalid exercise of power. The primary proceeding
was essentially a defensive
action in response to the Commissioner’s impermissible attempt to
garnishee the debt: Putney Group Pty Ltd v Royal Rehabilitation Centre Sydney
[2009] NSWSC 424 at [46]- [51]. In our opinion, this was sufficient
to amount to an action that was necessary to protect the trust property against
unauthorised appropriation.
- The
Commissioner sought to rely upon the remarks of the Full Court in Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v Bruton Holdings Pty Ltd (in liq) [2008] FCAFC 184; (2008) 173 FCR
472 at [79]. There the Full Court said that, given the limited role of Bruton,
it was unlikely that the liquidator’s costs and expenses
were all
attributable to the performance of the duties of a bare trustee. Their Honours
also said that it was difficult to see how
the liquidators could be justified in
incurring costs and expenses in prosecuting the proceeding whilst resisting
payment of the
tax debt which gave rise to Bruton’s entitlement to
indemnity.
- The
short answer to this seems to us to be that the Full Court’s remarks were
obiter and in any event there is some tension between those remarks and
the observations of the High Court in the passage set out at [15]
above. It is
true that the High Court did not rule upon the Commissioner’s submission
that there was no prospect of any excess
for Bruton but once it is accepted that
the proper regime for the Commissioner’s remedy is the regime for
liquidations, we
do not see how the Full Court’s remarks at [79] can have
any continuing application.
- Bruton
argued the appeal on an alternative ground, namely that the primary judge erred
in failing to hold that s 556(1)(a) of the Corporations Act 2001
(Cth) entitled it to indemnity for the expenses incurred in the proceedings.
The effect of Bruton’s submission was that the
litigation expenses
incurred by Bruton as a bare trustee were “properly incurred” in
preserving the property of the company
within s 556(1)(a).
- Since
we have come to the view that the primary judge was in error in finding that it
was no part of Bruton’s functions as
a bare trustee to institute the
primary proceeding it is unnecessary for us to determine the alternative ground
of appeal. We observe
however, that a difficulty arises as to whether
s 556 governs the order of priority where trust assets are insufficient to
meet the claims of all trust creditors. The learned authors
of Jacobs’
Law of Trusts in Australia 7th ed, LexisNexis
Butterworths, Australia 2006 are of the view, at [2115], that s 556
addresses only the distribution of assets beneficially owned by an insolvent
company. See also the remarks of McPherson J “The Insolvent Trading
Trust” in Essays in Equity, PD Finn (ed), 142 at
154.
ORDERS
- As
Mr N Cotman SC acknowledged, issues concerning rights of indemnity and
exoneration have, necessarily embedded in them, factual
issues which were not
encompassed in the appeal. We are therefore not prepared to make the omnibus
form of declaration sought by
Bruton in its notice of appeal. In our view it is
sufficient for us to order that the appeal be allowed, that the orders and
declarations
made by Graham J and Nicholas J be set aside.
- We
would also make a declaration in the following
terms:-
Bruton Holdings Pty Ltd (in liq) is not disqualified from indemnification by
exoneration out of the property of the Bruton Educational
Trust for costs and
expenses incurred in proceedings NSD 966 of 2007 or the appeal (including the
application for special leave and
the appeal to the High Court)
therefrom.
- We
would also order the Commissioner to pay the costs of this appeal and of the
proceeding before Graham J and the application before
Nicholas J.
I certify that the preceding thirty (30)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justices Stone, Jacobson & Edmonds.
|
Associate:
Dated: 17 June 2011
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCAFC/2011/79.html