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Friend v Brooker [2009] HCA 21 (28 May 2009)
Last Updated: 28 May 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON AND BELL JJ
NICHOLAS MACARTHUR FRIEND APPELLANT
AND
FREDERICK CLARKSON BROOKER & ANOR RESPONDENTS
Friend v Brooker [2009] HCA 21
28 May 2009
S475/2008
ORDER
1. Appeal allowed.
2. First respondent to pay the costs of the appellant.
- Set
aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
entered 25 June 2008 and, in lieu thereof, order
that the appeal to that Court
be dismissed with costs, including the costs of the application for recall of
reasons.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of New South Wales
Representation
C R C Newlinds SC with H S Packer and B R Kremer for the appellant (instructed
by Bull, Son & Schmidt)
B W Walker SC with M S White for the first respondent (instructed by Levitt
Robinson Solicitors)
No appearance for the second respondent
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Friend v Brooker
Equity – Doctrine of contribution – "Co-ordinate liability" –
Appellant and respondent company directors –
Respondent personally
borrowed money which was on-lent to the company – Company ceased trading
– Respondent sought funds
from appellant to repay personal loan –
Whether fiduciary relationship existed between the two – Whether
co-ordinate
liability existed so as to require equitable contribution from
appellant.
Words and phrases – "common design", "community of interest", "co-ordinate
liability", "equitable contribution".
- FRENCH
CJ, GUMMOW, HAYNE AND BELL JJ. This appeal is brought by Mr Friend from
the decision of the New South Wales Court of
Appeal (Mason P and
McColl JA; Basten JA
dissenting[1])
which allowed an appeal by the first respondent (Mr Brooker) and set aside
the orders of the primary judge (Nicholas J)
dismissing a suit in the
Equity Division of the Supreme Court of New South
Wales[2]. The
appeal should be allowed and the orders of the primary judge restored.
- The
appeal raises for consideration by this Court fundamental questions respecting
the nature and scope of the equitable doctrine
of contribution. These are
precipitated by the decision of the Court of Appeal which proceeded from
considerations first raised
by the President in the course of argument and not
advanced to the trial judge.
- The
matter is further complicated by the circumstance that in various respects
findings of fact were made or assumed by the Court
of Appeal and in this Court
the appellant vigorously challenged the procedure adopted by the Court of
Appeal, in going beyond the
findings made by Nicholas J when disposing of
the quite different case presented at trial. However, it will be possible to
decide the appeal in favour of the appellant even assuming many of the factual
findings and assumptions of which the appellant complains.
The equity suit
- The
suit was tried upon the fifth amended statement of claim. Mr Brooker
sought a declaration respecting the existence between
May 1977 and January 1995
of a partnership or of an agreement (identified in his pleading as "the Joint
Venture") between him and
Mr Friend for them to carry on jointly the
conduct of a building and construction business. Mr Brooker contended that
the second respondent, Friend & Brooker Pty Ltd ("the Company"), had been
the "corporate vehicle" for the conduct of the partnership
or joint venture
agreement. In his reasons for judgment, Nicholas J recorded that
Mr Brooker also claimed that there had
been a fiduciary relationship
between the partners or joint venturers.
- Mr Brooker
(hereafter "the respondent") sought an order for the taking of a full account of
the partnership or the Joint Venture
and recovery for loss suffered by him by
reason of the alleged refusal of Mr Friend (hereafter "the appellant") to
make equal
contribution to the repayment of his personal borrowings for the
purpose of the business.
- Apparently
for good measure, in par 24 of his pleading Mr Brooker alleged that
Mr Friend had been unjustly enriched
at his expense as a result of his
being "materially benefited" to the extent of expenditure of those borrowings
upon repayment of
debts and payment of expenses of the Joint Venture or
partnership and as a result of the failure of Mr Friend to make a
contribution
to or to account to Mr Brooker for his share of the benefit to
the Joint Venture or partnership. The failure of the case respecting
the
existence of the Joint Venture or partnership made it unnecessary for
Nicholas J to enter upon any issue of unjust enrichment
raised by
par 24.
- The
joint reasons in Lumbers v W Cook Builders Pty Ltd (In
Liq)[3]
contain two propositions which are relevant here. The first is that, in
general, the bare fact of the conferral of some benefit
upon another does not
suffice to establish an obligation to repay the expenditure in providing that
benefit[4]. The
second proposition is that while the concept of unjust enrichment may provide a
link between what otherwise appears to be a
variety of distinct categories of
liability, and it may assist, by the ordinary processes of legal reasoning, in
the development
of legal principle, the concept of unjust enrichment itself is
not a principle which can be taken as a sufficient premise for direct
application in a particular
case[5].
- In
this Court, Mr Brooker expressly disavowed any reliance upon a cause of
action framed as a case of unjust enrichment. However,
he did rely upon
par 24 as supplying sufficient foundation for the application of the
equitable doctrine of contribution in
his favour by the Court of Appeal, and for
the further formulation of that doctrine which he advanced in this Court in
support of
the outcome in the Court of Appeal.
- The
Company ceased to trade in about July 1990 and was deregistered on 26 July
1996. It played no active part in the litigation.
The Company may be taken to
have been insolvent at least since the time it ceased to trade.
Mr Brooker's success in the Court
of Appeal was based on the proposition
that the dealings over some years between him and Mr Friend referable in
particular to
a certain loan transaction generated a right to contribution in
his favour. The parties are in dispute in this Court, among other
matters, as
to whether the effect of the relief granted to Mr Brooker by the Court of
Appeal is to disrupt what otherwise would
be the established system for the
insolvent administration of the Company, which the parties had jointly
controlled.
The facts
- As
already noted, many matters of fact were still in dispute before this Court.
Had Nicholas J ordered the account sought by
Mr Brooker, various
aspects of the dealings affecting the parties would have been for resolution on
the taking of the full account.
But, in the event, no such order was obtained
from the trial judge.
- However,
some basic facts were largely undisputed. In about May 1977, Mr Brooker
and Mr Friend resigned from their employment
as engineers with John Holland
Constructions Pty Ltd, with the intention of establishing an engineering and
construction business.
The Company was incorporated on 18 July 1977. In
1979 the scope of the business of the Company was expanded to include the
purchase and development of land.
- With
respect to the incorporation of the Company, Nicholas J made an important
finding respecting the subsistence thereafter
of any partnership. He found:
"What happened was that from the time of incorporation the partnership ceased,
just as the parties intended. The effect of incorporation
changed the basis
upon which the business had been conducted since May 1977, not only with
regard to third parties, but also
as between themselves. Thereafter their
relationship was as co-directors of the company, and the assets and liabilities
associated
with the business were the company's."
- Mr Brooker
and Mr Friend were the directors of the Company and the shareholding was
controlled equally by a complex of
their respective family companies and trusts.
The trial judge recorded that to finance the activities of the Company funds
were obtained
by loans from third parties to the Company and from time to time
by separate personal borrowings from family and friends by Mr Brooker
and
Mr Friend; these funds then were lent to the Company and reflected in the
loan accounts of the directors as unsecured loans.
In this Court,
Mr Brooker accepted that the loan accounts were not matched between the two
directors, but fluctuated from time
to time depending upon which of them had
been tapping available sources of funds.
- In
January 1984 the Company entered into a contract with the Eurobodalla Shire
Council ("the Council") for the construction of sewerage
reticulation works at
Narooma for a sum in excess of $2.5m. The contract reached practical completion
in September 1985, but in
April 1986 the Council rejected the Company's claim
for payment of a sum of about $1m. This placed the Company in extreme financial
difficulty and it was in these circumstances that further finance was obtained
in circumstances disputed before the primary judge.
It may be accepted for the
purposes of these reasons that the indebtedness of the Company at this period
comprised loans from Trade
Credits Ltd, Mr and Mrs de Bakker, and
Alcon Investments Pty Ltd; that the second and third loans were secured by
mortgages
over Brooker properties, and the first loan by mortgages over
properties owned by Mr Friend and by Mr Brooker; and that
the moneys
advanced had been used for the purposes of the business of the Company.
- Nicholas
J found that in November 1986, SMK Investments Pty Ltd ("SMK") acting by its
director Mr Graham Peterson ("Mr Peterson")
agreed to lend $350,000 to
Mr Brooker "and/or his wife" ("the SMK loan"). Mr Peterson was a
long-time friend of Mr Brooker.
Mr Peterson gave evidence but
unsurprisingly, given the scope of the suit as tried by Nicholas J, SMK was
not joined as
a party to the suit. Had it been a party, then when
Mr Brooker made good in the Court of Appeal his claim to contribution by
Mr Friend, its order could have provided, by appropriately crafted orders,
for a discharge to Mr Friend by direct payment
of his share to
SMK[6].
- The
term of the SMK loan does not appear explicitly from the evidence. Interest on
the SMK loan was fixed initially at 19.5% with
a reduction to 18.5% for prompt
payment and subsequently at 2% above the Westpac investment loan rate. Interest
payments which were
not made were capitalised. The loan was secured by a first
mortgage over the Brooker family home at Mosman, owned by Mr Brooker's
wife, and by a second mortgage over land at Artarmon jointly owned by
Mr Brooker and his mother. The mortgage of the Mosman
property was
supported by a guarantee from Mr Brooker.
- Mr Peterson's
position in his evidence was that the rights of SMK to recovery of the loan were
against Mr Brooker and not
the Company or Mr Friend. In the course of
his cross-examination, Mr Peterson responded to questions asking why he was
not presently "going after" Mr Brooker to recover moneys due and owing but
unpaid by saying that he was a friend of Mr Brooker
and was not interested
in throwing him out of his house. There appears to have been no submission, and
no finding was made, that
Mr Brooker had borrowed as trustee for himself
and Mr Friend or that the indebtedness of the Company to Mr Brooker
was held, as to any part, upon trust for himself and Mr Friend.
- The
trial judge accepted evidence that Mr Friend had been told by
Mr Brooker that the SMK loan had been proposed by Mr
and Mrs Peterson
and Mr Friend had responded "Well then, we should do it". There was no
evidence that he knew of the interest
rate or other terms of the loan.
Nicholas J dealt with the paucity of evidence as
follows[7]:
"There is also no evidence that Mr Friend agreed to be jointly liable for,
or to contribute to, the repayment of the SMK loan.
It is difficult to accept
that, if in truth he held the belief that Mr Friend was equally liable for
this loan, Mr Brooker
proceeded with the borrowing, and procured the
securities from his wife and his mother, without first obtaining
Mr Friend's
acceptance of such liability. That there is no evidence that
there was even discussion as to liability is remarkable having regard
to the
financial difficulties then facing the company, and the likelihood that it may
have been unable to repay Mr Brooker the
monies which he had on-lent to it.
The absence of evidence as to these matters is, in my opinion, further
indication that there was
no agreement to the effect claimed in these
proceedings. This doubt is reinforced by the delay until about October 1994
when Mr Brooker
first claimed that Mr Friend was equally liable for
the loan."
- On
8 November 1986, $20,000 was paid to Mr Brooker in advance of
settlement of the loan. The balance of $330,000 appears
to have been applied at
settlement on 23 December 1986 towards the discharge of the indebtedness of
the Company to the three
parties mentioned above and to pay Mr Brooker
$37,183.95. His evidence was that the latter sum was used by him to pay small
unsecured debts and to reimburse him for other expenses of the business
previously paid by him. All these moneys were treated in
the accounts of the
Company as having been lent to it by Mr Brooker. However, in this Court,
Mr Friend did not accept
that all the proceeds of the SMK loan had been
applied to the benefit of the Company; the matter had not been pursued at trial
because
all such questions were to be left for the taking of the account were
that remedy to be ordered.
- There
was a protracted dispute with the Council which extended over many years and
various sums were received by the Company from
the Council. On
19 September 1994, pursuant to a Deed of Release the Council paid the
Company the final sum of $900,000. Nicholas J
found that Mr Friend
and Mr Brooker then fell out over the application of that sum to repay the
balance of the SMK loan
and interest. Mr Brooker claimed that the SMK loan
had been made jointly to him and to Mr Friend, and that Mr Friend
also
was liable to SMK. By December 1995 the total debt on the SMK loan was
approximately $1.1m. Of that $750,000 was interest.
- Further
disputes ensued over the years that followed concerning the state of the
accounts of the Company and the loan accounts of
Mr Brooker and
Mr Friend. Mr Brooker contends that in all he has paid $575,000 to
SMK from his own funds. However,
between 24 August 1995 and 3 March
1998, Mr Brooker received from the Company an amount of $345,000,
apparently by
way of loan, which was used for his personal expenses and which he
was not in a position to repay the Company.
The trial
- The
Supreme Court suit was commenced by Mr Brooker in 2000. The case went to
trial in December 2004 and the suit was dismissed
on 29 April 2005. The
primary judge received affidavit and oral evidence from Mr Brooker and
Mr Peterson. Mr Peterson
deposed that at 8 November 2004 the
amount outstanding on the SMK loan was $1,349,423.48. Affidavits by
Mr Friend were
not read and he gave no oral evidence. Counsel for
Mr Friend emphasised in this Court that what would have been contested
issues
of fact were put aside in the presentation of his case at trial, on the
understanding that they would be pressed only if and when
Mr Brooker
succeeded in obtaining the order for a full account.
- Nicholas J
recorded that it was common ground that no partnership accounts had been kept.
Nor, it may be added, was there any
evidence of the filing of partnership income
tax returns. His Honour also
said[8]:
"It seems to me that the parties, with the benefit of professional advice,
incorporated their business because it was commercially
advantageous to do so in
that it protected the personal position of each. Mr Brooker impressed me
as an experienced businessman
well aware of what was required for the protection
of his interests. It is reasonable to expect that there would have been some
record of an agreement intended to operate outside the corporate structure
whereby the parties preserved the risk of personal liability
for the debts of
each other where the proceeds were on-lent to the company. The absence of such
evidence suggests that there was
in fact no such
agreement."
- The
critical finding by the trial judge which led to the dismissal of the suit was
as
follows[9]:
"In my judgment Mr Brooker has utterly failed to prove any agreement
pursuant to which the existence of a fiduciary relationship
with Mr Friend
was established after the incorporation [of] the [Company]. I reject the
submission made on his behalf that
the relationship between the parties in the
conduct of the business was that of a common law partnership, or a joint
venture, or
some other relationship which gave rise to an entitlement to an
accounting from each other of all contributions by and payments to
them to
ascertain what, if anything each must pay to the other so that the ultimate loss
of the business is shared equally between
them."
The appeal to the Court of Appeal
- Mason P
concluded (with the apparent agreement of
McColl JA[10])
that the trial judge had correctly held that Mr Friend was not jointly
liable at law to SMK to repay the SMK loan, because
(leaving aside the situation
of the wife and mother of Mr Brooker) Mr Brooker was the only
borrower[11].
- The
Court of Appeal unanimously rejected the claim for a general accounting spanning
the period from 1977 onwards. That outcome
appears to have been reached on the
footing that the SMK loan was the only third party indebtedness which had arisen
by reason of
the activities of the Company and which remained outstanding.
However, having regard to what was seen to be the course of conduct
of the
parties with respect to the SMK loan, by majority the Court of Appeal granted
declaratory and consequential relief referable
to the outstanding indebtedness
on the SMK loan. The Court of Appeal declared that Mr Friend:
"is required to contribute so as to equalise the burden borne by
[Mr Brooker] since 1995 of [his] obligations under the borrowing
of
$350,000.00 from [SMK] made in 1986".
The Court of Appeal also referred for determination by the Equity Division "the
conditions under which it is just that [Mr Friend]
should be ordered to pay
to [SMK] the sum found to be due by him". This order was made notwithstanding
the absence of SMK from the
parties to the suit, as noted earlier in these
reasons.
- For
the reasons which follow, the appeal to this Court should be allowed. It is
convenient first to say something more respecting
the course of the litigation
in the Court of Appeal.
The reasons of the Court of Appeal
- The
appeal was heard on 13 March 2006 and reasons for judgment were delivered
on 20 December 2006. On 23 February
2007 Mr Friend moved the
Court of Appeal to recall the whole of the reasons of Mason P and five
paragraphs[12]
of the reasons of McColl JA. The motion was heard on 29 November
2007. On 7 May 2008 Mason P and McColl JA
delivered reasons
refusing that relief and Basten JA affirmed his original (and dissenting)
reasons. After hearing further
argument on 21 May 2008, on 29 May
2008 the Court of Appeal delivered reasons for the making of the orders
supported by
the
majority[13].
The orders of the Court of Appeal were entered on 25 June 2008. Those
orders included a stay of the implementation of the
orders which remains in
force pending the outcome of the present appeal by Mr Friend to this
Court.
- At
the hearing of the recall application, Mr Friend had submitted that the
Court of Appeal should not have entertained submissions
by Mr Brooker which
singled out the SMK loan for specific relief, having regard to the pleadings and
the conduct of the trial.
The majority rejected that submission.
Basten JA did not embark upon this controversy.
- Mason P
said:
"Issues in dispute are often refined as litigation progresses. Arguments are
recast. Particular factual and legal propositions
that once were in dispute
become common ground. The obligation to afford procedural fairness requires the
court to remain focussed
upon the arguments put to it. To go beyond them will
usually entail unfairness to one or both of the parties. But to refine and
confine them is of the essence of an adversary system that includes an oral
hearing. The proposal to restrict relief to the SMK
transaction to the extent
that moneys were outstanding by Mr Brooker was raised and addressed during
the hearing of the appeal
and in the supplementary submissions filed after
judgment in the appeal was reserved."
- In
his notice of appeal, Mr Brooker had pressed his case for the relief sought
at trial, in particular, for the taking of a
full account. His counsel (not
counsel appearing in this Court) maintained that position in the Court of
Appeal. The grounds of
appeal were not amended. In written submissions filed
after intervention by the bench during oral argument, counsel had gone no
further than submitting:
"If it were minded to do so, the Court could fashion relief directed at
compensation relating only to the circumstances of the [SMK
loan]."
- In
his first set of reasons, Mason P saw the decisive issue as being whether
the facts
disclosed[14]:
"a broader arrangement that, consistently with the formal structures and
contracts, generated an obligation in conscience requiring
[Mr Friend] to
contribute towards exonerating [Mr Brooker] from the plight he finds
himself in at the end of the venture".
- The
President referred to the holding in Burke v LFOT Pty
Ltd[15]
that to found a claim to contribution there must be a "common obligation", but
also emphasised that "an equitable principle such
as contribution is not
confined by legal structures" and that "the right of contribution rests upon
matters of substance not
form"[16].
- Mason P
appears to have seen the equity to contribute as the product of the
circumstances that (i) the Company lacked the
means to fund repayment of
the SMK loan, (ii) the Company had applied the funds, borrowed from
Mr Brooker, for the purposes
of its business, in particular to meet
indebtedness on the three third party loans, and (iii) Mr Friend had
refused to
contribute to any further payment by Mr Brooker of indebtedness
on the SMK loan.
- In
his dissenting reasons, Basten JA held that even if Mr Brooker and
Mr Friend were to be treated as liable on equitable
principles of
contribution of the kind applicable to co-sureties, relief should be denied
because of the absence over a long period
of any imminent threat by SMK to
recover from Mr Brooker. In this Court the appellant relies upon the
reasons of Basten JA
on this issue. It will be necessary to return to the
subject later in these reasons.
- McColl JA
supported the outcome favoured by Mason P. However, she considered that
there had been a fiduciary obligation
which required each director to meet an
equal share of capital contributions. This was a fiduciary obligation with a
positive rather
than a proscriptive content. The respondent relies upon the
reasons of McColl JA in submissions to this Court and it will be
necessary
to return to this aspect of the litigation.
- Something
more now should be said respecting the doctrinal basis upon which the respondent
supports the application by the Court
of Appeal of the equitable doctrine of
contribution.
The equitable doctrine of contribution
- With
a claim to contribution, as is the position generally with the intervention of
equity to apply its doctrines or to afford its
remedies, the plaintiff must show
the presence of "an equity" founding the case for that
intervention[17].
The "natural justice" in the provision of a remedy for contribution is the
concern that the common exposure of the obligors (or
"debtors") to the obligee
(or "creditor") and the equality of burden should not be disturbed or be
defeated by the accident or chance
that the creditor has selected or may select
one or some rather than all for
recovery[18].
Were equity not to intervene, then it would remain within the power of the
creditor so to act as to cause one debtor to be relieved
of a responsibility
shared with
another[19].
Equity follows the law in the sense that it does not seek to direct the manner
of exercise of the rights of the creditor, but equity
does make an adjustment
between the debtors. Thus equity does not interfere with the action of the
creditor but seeks to ensure
the sharing of the burden between those subjected
to it[20].
- The
equity to seek contribution arises because the exercise of the rights of the
obligee or creditor ought not to disadvantage some
of those bearing a common
burden; the equity does not arise merely because all the obligors derive a
benefit from a payment by one
or more of
them[21]. As
explained in United States
authority[22],
contribution is an attempt by equity to distribute equally, among those having a
common obligation, the burden of performing it,
so that without that common
obligation there can be no claim for contribution.
- Hence
the basic characteristics of the doctrine were identified, with reference to
long established authority, in Burke as requiring contribution between
parties sharing co-ordinate liabilities or a common obligation to make good the
one loss, where
the liabilities were of the same nature and to the same
extent[23]. In
that case, the purchaser, who had bought retail premises under a
misrepresentation concerning the sitting tenants, recovered
damages from the
vendor for contravention of s 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974
(Cth); the purchaser also had been negligently advised on the matter by its
solicitor but the vendor failed to recover contribution
from that solicitor.
The liabilities were not of the same nature and extent. Further, McHugh J
emphasised that to enable the
vendor to diminish the consequences of its
contravention of s 52, by obtaining contribution, would be contrary to the
policy of the
legislation[24].
- It
was said in Burke, with reference to authority, that the doctrine is
"usually expressed" in terms of "co-ordinate liabilities" or "common
obligation"[25].
The terminology of "co-ordinate liabilities" is to be preferred to that of
"common obligation", which it subsumes, as indicative
of the class of
circumstances in which the equity arises.
- No
"common design" between the debtors is required before an equity for
contribution may arise. Thus, it is no answer to a claim
for contribution that
co-ordinate liabilities which are of the same nature did not arise from the one
instrument or at the same time
or that those which arose later were incurred
with knowledge of the earlier liabilities, or that different "causes of action"
lay
to enforce
them[26].
- Equitable
contribution thus is to be contrasted with contribution sought by a common law
claim for money paid by the plaintiff to
the use of the defendant, where the
plaintiff incurs, partly to the benefit and at the request of the defendant, a
liability to pay
money[27]. In
the latter case, mutual relations of the parties are essential to obtain
contribution[28].
- There
are significant distinctions between the bases of recovery in an equity suit and
in an action at common law. The matter was
explained by Vaughan
Williams LJ in Bonner v Tottenham and Edmonton Permanent Investment
Building
Society[29]
as
follows[30]:
"There is a common law principle of liability, and also a principle of liability
in equity, and these two principles differ. The
common law principle requires a
common liability to be sued for that which the plaintiff had to pay, and an
interest of the defendant
in the payment in the sense that he gets the benefit
of the payment, either entirely, as in the case of the assignee of a lease,
or
pro tanto, as in the case of a surety who has paid, and has his action for
contribution against his co-surety. The principle
in equity seems wide enough
to include cases in which there is community of interest in the subject-matter
to which the burden is
attached, which has been enforced against the plaintiff
alone, coupled with benefit to the defendant, even though there is no common
liability to be sued."
His Lordship explained the common law position by reference to the form of the
action for money paid to the use of the defendant
at his request, the defendant
being under a personal liability to pay the money the plaintiff has paid for
him.
- But
what, in equity, is sufficient "community of interest" in the subject matter to
which is attached a burden which is borne by
the claimant for the benefit of the
claimant and defendant? In Whitham v
Bullock[31],
the English Court of Appeal referred to the above passage in Bonner when
considering the situation where the lessee of land had assigned the lease as to
part of the land to X and part to Y. The
result was that the lessor could
distrain against either X or Y for the whole of the rent but could sue to
recover from each only
the proportionate part of the rent. Was there an equity
in X to recover contribution from Y where, under threat of distraint by
the
lessor by reason of the failure of Y to pay its proportion, X paid the whole of
the rent? In giving an affirmative answer, Clauson LJ
said that although X
was not liable to be sued directly for all of the rent, the equity of X arose
from payment under stress of legal
process; having in its premises chattels of a
value amply sufficient to satisfy a distress, X had saved the chattels by
meeting Y's
share of the rent. There was a sufficient "community of interest"
in the two plots of the leased land; the attached common burden
of liability to
distress for the whole of the rent had been shouldered by X to the relief of
Y.
- What,
however, is presently significant is that the community of interest had its
source in the assignment of the lease as to part
of the land to X and part to Y
and that the attached common burden was imposed by the law respecting distraint.
The equity in favour
of X to recover the share of the rent from Y had
arisen from the operation of the law upon their situation, not by some looser
notion of economic interest which disregards or supersedes the legal framework
within which the parties chose to have their dealings.
- In
that sense it is true to say that here, as elsewhere, equity looks to substance
and not merely to legal form when it fixes upon
the legal situation of the
parties and requires that the exercise of legal rights produce a result which
conforms to equitable doctrine.
But that is not to adopt the wider statement
made in the present case by Mason P that the equitable doctrine of
contribution
"is not confined by legal
structures"[32].
That view of the jurisdiction provides a framework of analysis at too high a
level of abstraction, and risks a result discordant
with accepted principle and
the general coherence of the
law[33]. In a
case such as the present, to proceed in this way may too easily produce an
outcome in a given case which is no more than an
idiosyncratic exercise of
discretion.
- So
it is, as French J put it, that rights of contribution are not attracted to
obligations "merely because they are owed to
the same party and related to the
same transaction or otherwise connected in time or
circumstance"[34].
In
Burke[35]
McHugh J referred to
authority[36]
which indicated that the doctrine is not enlivened merely because the claimant's
payment operates to the financial benefit or relief
of the other party.
- The
eighteenth century decision most frequently cited in cases dealing with
contribution is that on the equity side of the Court
of Exchequer in Dering v
Earl of
Winchelsea[37].
There, by way of illustration of the proposition that there need be no contract
or privity between sureties, Eyre LCB referred
to the "case of average of
cargo" where the requirement to contribute was "the result of general justice
from the equality of burthen
and
benefit"[38].
The burden, at least as then understood in maritime
law[39], lay in
the exercise of the power and authority given by maritime law to the master of
the ship for the protection and care of the
cargo, a matter explained by
Lord Stowell (then Sir William Scott) in The
Gratitudine[40].
That authority, with many others, was cited by Gray J when delivering the
decision of the Supreme Court of the United States
in Ralli v
Troop[41].
Judge Learned Hand later spoke of the sacrifice being made for the joint venture
and directed by the person then in control of
that
venture[42].
Thus, and contrary to what was suggested in oral submissions for
Mr Brooker, the law respecting general average was not prayed
in aid in
Dering in any fashion which provides an exception to the requirement of a
common burden imposed by the law.
- The
requirement of a common legal burden presents a major difficulty for any
application of the doctrine of equitable contribution
between the appellant and
the respondent with respect to the liability of Mr Brooker on the loan to
him by SMK. In particular,
SMK had not contracted with Mr Friend and
Mr Brooker had not contracted with SMK as trustee for himself and
Mr Friend.
- The
respondent, Mr Brooker, seeks to outflank this obstacle and to support the
outcome in the Court of Appeal by setting up
a category of contribution based
upon "common design". The appellant responds by denying the existence of such a
category, and also
by relying upon the evidence of Mr Peterson that having
regard to Mr Brooker's financial straits he is not presently proposing
to
claim against him for payment of the SMK loan.
No imminent threat?
- In
McLean v Discount and Finance
Ltd[43]
Starke J explained that at common law an action for contribution cannot be
maintained in advance of actual payment of more than
the just proportion of the
principal obligation; on the other hand, equity acts quia timet where the
apprehended over-payment appears sufficiently imminent. Starke J referred
to In re
Anderson-Berry[44],
in which Sargant LJ used the expression "clear threat" and opined that "the
origin of quia timet may be an illustration of
the rule that prevention is
better than
cure"[45].
That which is prevented in this way may be seen as the situation whereby the
co-obligor's obligations are discharged in circumstances
where the plaintiff is
left with the chance that the action at law the plaintiff then brings against
the co-obligor for money paid
is unfruitful.
- But
was there a "clear threat" posed by SMK? The appellant points to the evidence
of Mr Peterson respecting his friendship
with the respondent and his wish
not to see him thrown out of his house. This, with the failure of the
respondent to counter the
effect of that direct evidence as to the attitude of
SMK, is said to show error on the part of the majority of the Court of Appeal.
The appellant draws support from the dissenting reasons of Basten JA that
the respondent must fail for lack of evidence to
support the existence of "a
real possibility" that he would be required to pay and be able to pay more than
one half of the moneys
due and owing on the SMK loan but
unpaid[46].
Basten JA referred to the discussion of supporting authorities respecting
the quia timet jurisdiction by the New South Wales Court of Appeal in
Harpley Nominees Pty Ltd v
Jeans[47].
- It
will never be possible to lay down exhaustively detailed criteria marking out
the limits of the power of equity to act quia timet. However, were it
not for recent decisions which appear to relax the strength of the requirement
for imminent threat, the situation
disclosed by the evidence of Mr Peterson
in particular would support the conclusion reached by Basten JA.
- Some
care is required here in distinguishing the relationship of surety and principal
debtor and that between co-sureties. The surety
who discharges the principal
obligation is regarded as having paid money to the use of the principal debtor
and may recover indemnity
by means of an action against the principal debtor for
money paid[48].
The principal debtor must indemnify and save harmless the guarantor. Such is
the tenderness of equity for the surety that the surety
may obtain an order
directing the principal debtor to pay to the creditor a definite sum of money
that has become payable, even though
the creditor has made no demand for
payment[49].
It is said to be unreasonable that such a cloud should hang over the
surety[50].
- In
Stimpson v
Smith[51],
reference was made in the English Court of Appeal to the view expressed in the
Supreme Court of Queensland by Williams J in
Moulton v
Roberts[52]
that the principles developed respecting the exoneration of the surety by the
principal debtor were "equally apposite" to the relations
between co-sureties.
In Stimpson v
Smith[53],
Peter Gibson LJ accepted that it was enough that the creditor could enforce
the guarantee for more than the surety's rateable
share.
- On
the other hand, in Woolmington v Bronze Lamp Restaurant Pty
Ltd[54],
Needham J, whose opinion in such matters deserves great weight, said that
as the authorities then stood, none had gone to the
length of deciding that the
plaintiff surety could maintain an equity suit for contribution without either
having paid at least the
amount due by the plaintiff under the guarantee or
being under a liability by judgment to pay the full amount. However,
Needham J
was prepared to go so far as to make a declaration and order for
contribution in favour of a surety who satisfied the court that
he was willing
able and prepared to pay at least his share of the principal
debt[55]. In
the case before him, this was not so and relief was refused.
- In
his written submissions, the respondent relied upon Moulton v
Roberts[56]
as authority for the proposition that it is sufficient for equity to grant
quia timet relief that his liability to SMK is fixed, accrued and
ascertainable albeit there is no immediate jeopardy or demand by SMK. Several
points should be made here.
- The
first is that the correctness for Australian law of Stimpson v Smith
and Moulton v Roberts need not be decided in this appeal. There was
common obligation in those authorities by reason of liability on a guarantee,
but
in the present case the only obligation to SMK, and the only exposure to
action by it, was that of Mr Brooker.
- The
second point is that in oral submissions Mr Brooker emphasised that while
there was no common obligation of Mr Friend
to SMK, the "common design"
principle for which he contended attracted equitable intervention in his favour
simply because of his
risk of expense. But even making (without deciding) such
an assumption in favour of Mr Brooker, for him to seek equity it would
be
necessary for him to do equity. This, consistently with the reasoning of
Needham J in Woolmington v Bronze Lamp Restaurant Pty
Ltd[57],
would require him, in seeking contribution, to have satisfied the trial judge
that he was ready, willing and able to pay at least
one half of the indebtedness
to SMK. Given what the trial judge identified as Mr Brooker's financial
straits[58],
this probably could not be realistically attempted.
- These
considerations make this appeal an inappropriate occasion to resolve any
uncertainties in the case law respecting the scope
of the quia timet
power of courts of equity in contribution suits.
- The
appeal should be disposed of on the broader ground urged by the appellant, the
rejection of the alleged principle of "common
design".
"Common design"
- In
his reasons Mason P referred to the judgment of Cooper J given in the
Full Court of the Federal Court in Cummings v
Lewis[59].
The case appears not to have been cited in oral argument or in the written
submissions presented to the Court of Appeal. However,
in this Court
Mr Brooker relies upon the analysis of the authorities by Cooper J to
support the relief he obtained in the
Court of Appeal. This is said properly to
obviate the need in the present case for exposure to a common legal obligation,
by reliance
upon "common design".
- In
oral submissions counsel for Mr Brooker developed his written submissions
apparently beyond what had been decided by the
Court of Appeal, with a
reformulation of what was identified as the "common design" principle for
equitable contribution. This was
said to be a distinct principle, where the
equity is found not in the relationship of obligee and co-obligors, but simply
in commonality
of benefit from the operation of that design. The final
formulation by counsel of the suggested principle was as follows:
"Contribution will be enforced where the party seeking it has, by reason of and
in reliance on a common design with the party from
whom contribution is sought,
undertaken a risk or expense which:
(a) was undertaken with the knowledge and assent of that other party;
(b) was undertaken in order to effectuate or facilitate the common purpose or
benefit which was the object of their common design;
(c) in light of the parties' relationship and the nature of their common design,
could not fairly be expected to be borne as a burden
alone by the party
undertaking it;
and there is no contract to the contrary."
- There
are significant obstacles to the respondent making out such a case given the
state of the evidence and the conduct of the trial.
Paragraph (c)
highlights the point. It was not open to the Court of Appeal, had it been
invited to do so, and it is not open
now to this Court, to attempt any finding
as to whether Mr Brooker could not "fairly be expected" to bear alone the
burden of
the SMK loan, in the light of what is said to have been the
relationship of the parties and their common design.
- Further,
and as an additional ground of decision, the suggested principle is not the law
of Australia.
Cummings v Lewis
- It
is convenient to begin with a consideration of the origin of the respondent's
proposition in the decision of Cooper J to
which the Court of Appeal
referred and upon which the respondent relies. This will disclose an infirm
foundation for what is now
advanced in this Court.
- Cooper J
concluded that it was not always essential that there was exposure to a common
obligation or
risk[60]; it
would be
sufficient[61]:
"that the persons involved were all parties to a common design to achieve a
common end and that in furtherance of the attainment
of the common end one party
has with the knowledge and concurrence of the others done an act which has
resulted in that person incurring
expense or suffering
loss".
- Several
things should be said immediately respecting that statement of principle. The
first is that Cooper J held that the
facts in Cummings failed to
attract its application; the race horses in question had been purchased by
Mr Cummings in his own right and the indebtedness
to the sellers was not a
burden undertaken by Mr Cummings for the benefit of Mr Cummings and
those defendant accountants
who were to market syndicates for "tax effective"
purposes. As Sheppard and Neaves JJ put it, there was no more than a
"loose"
arrangement under which Mr Cummings would acquire horses and two
firms of accountants would prepare and market the tax
schemes[62].
Their Honours concluded that the parties to that arrangement each brought a
separate expertise and skill and
said[63]:
"These were to be combined for the benefit of each of the parties, not in the
sense that each would share profits from a common enterprise
or a common benefit
such as a separate utilisation of a single product or service produced by the
combined efforts of the two, but
in the sense that each would, as a result of
his interest in the project, take to his own business undertaking the advantages
and
benefits to which we have referred. On no basis does such an arrangement
impose obligations on one party to contribute to the losses
of the
other."
- The
second matter is that Cooper J saw the equitable doctrine as an application
of the same underlying principle as that of
general average contribution in
maritime law. This was that he who enjoys the benefit ought also to bear the
burden; the property
of one co-adventurer to a maritime adventure had, in the
necessitous circumstances that arose on the voyage, been sacrificed to preserve
the property of the other
co-adventurers[64].
However, as pointed out earlier in these reasons, that sacrifice was an exercise
of the power and authority of the master, to which
the co-adventurers were
subjected by maritime law. There was in these cases common liability to
compulsion of law.
- The
third matter is that the authorities in equity on which Cooper J relied do
not support a proposition of the width and generality
which his Honour drew from
them. The cases are Re Direct Birmingham, Oxford, Reading and Brighton
Railway Co (Spottiswoode's
Case)[65];
Ashhurst v
Mason[66]
and Jackson v
Dickinson[67].
- Spottiswoode's
Case comes from the Railway Age, in a period before limited liability was
established by the legislation leading up to the Companies Act 1862
(UK)[68] and
the distinctions between the corporate and partnership business structure were
not yet clearly marked out. For example, in 1856
Lord Cranworth LC said of
the solvent shareholders in the winding up of a joint stock company that they
were bound to make up
the sum due to creditors because of "the general rules of
law [that] every partner is liable to the whole of the demands on the
partnership"[69].
This was also at a time when equity was extending its reach into the law of
corporations by the treatment of directors as
"trustees"[70],
albeit this was before trustees in whom title was vested were clearly
distinguished from fiduciaries
generally[71].
- The
Joint Stock Companies Act 1844
(UK)[72]
provided for the provisional registration by the promoters of joint stock
companies and for membership of managing committees to
act in the formation of
the companies (s 4). The project for the construction of the railway from
Birmingham to Oxford and
thence to Reading and Brighton collapsed before the
attainment of complete registration under s 7 of the statute.
Mr Spottiswoode
was a member of the managing committee and an allottee of
20 shares. Deposits on 4295 shares had been paid and engineering
and
other expenses were incurred. Funds were provided by various members of the
managing committee and applied to repay the deposits
of the allottees. The
company was wound up on 21 December 1849 under the new winding-up
legislation and disputes arose as to
the settlement of the list of contributors
by the Master in Ordinary of the Court of Chancery. Section 3 of the
Winding-up Act 1848
(UK)[73]
defined "contributory" for this purpose as including members of the company and
"every other person liable to contribute to the Payment
of any of the Debts,
Liabilities, or Losses" of the company.
- The
House of Lords ruled in 1852 that Mr Bright, who had been a committee
member with Mr Spottiswoode, was not liable as
a contributory within the
meaning of the statute because he lacked the necessary active involvement in the
conduct of the projected
company[74].
The committees were not partnerships so that it could not be said on the ground
of partnership that each member was bound by the
acts of the
others[75].
- However,
in 1855 Turner LJ (Knight Bruce LJ concurring) dismissed the motion by
which Mr Spottiswoode sought to vary
a report by the Master in respect of
his liability as a contributory for calls made in the winding-up.
Turner LJ treated the
dispute as determined by the general principles of
equity respecting contribution between co-directors. Each had to bear the
burden
of each other's acts so far as they acted together or adopted each
other's acts. Mr Spottiswoode's activities answered that
description[76].
- The
general proposition was that directors who entered into an ultra vires
transaction were liable to indemnify the company against any loss caused by the
breach of duty, and as between themselves, as Turner LJ
put it, "they must
bear equally the burthens consequent upon their
acts"[77].
- Turner LJ
referred[78] to
Dering v Lord Winchelsea for the general proposition, which he said
applied to directors of companies:
"that where persons are joined together for one common end or purpose, they must
bear equally the expenses incident to the attainment
of that end or
purpose".
- That
general statement must be read with the earlier rejection by Lord Brougham of
the submission made in Norris v
Cottle[79]
that "a party joining others in an adventure or other concern, may become liable
in equity to them, though not liable at law either
to them or to third parties".
Lord Brougham considered and dismissed as follows an illustration which counsel
put of the application
of that
proposition[80]:
"The case was ingeniously put in the argument here, of a joint or common
adventure, as of a voyage in which one agrees to find the
ship, another the
cargo, and a third the stores, and the ship-owner recovers the price of the ship
against the one who purchased
it; then, it is said, the others are liable for
their share, unless each furnished his quota to the common adventure, the
one the stores, the other the cargo. If they are so liable in respect of the
price recovered by the
ship-owner, it can only be because they have made
themselves liable to their companions by an express contract to pay unless they
furnish their quota, or by an implied contract to the same effect, and
thus they are legally liable for breach of that contract, or they may be
compelled
in equity to perform it."
- The
next authority relied upon is Ashhurst v
Mason[81].
The plaintiff obtained a decree that he and other directors of the English
Assurance Company, then in liquidation, were jointly
and severally liable to
contribute to and make good calls made and to be made upon certain shares.
Pursuant to an ultra vires board resolution by the directors, the shares
had been purchased and placed in the names of the plaintiff and the manager
Mr Leyland
as trustees for the company. It was no answer to the claim by
the plaintiff for contribution that the other directors, not being
registered
holders of the shares, could not themselves be liable on the calls. The
successful argument by Mr Kay QC was
that[82]:
"the right of contribution is not affected by the circumstance that these
shares, for which they all became liable as trustees for the company,
were, as a matter of convenience, transferred into the names of one of
themselves (the Plaintiff), and Leyland as their servant or agent".
(emphasis added)
Bacon VC described the placement of the shares in the names of the
plaintiff and Mr Leyland as the resort to a "piece of
machinery"[83].
With that in mind, this case may be seen as an illustration of the
disinclination of equity to prefer form to substance. However
that may be, the
case was treated by
Lindley[84]
primarily as authority for different propositions. These were that the
directors must bear the loss upon an ultra vires transaction, unless the
company ratifies what has been done, and that one director will be entitled to
contribution from the other
directors with whose knowledge and consent he acted.
The directors were assimilated to the position of trustees in respect of the
ultra vires activity, in the sense explained above in dealing with
Spottiswoode's Case.
- There
remains Jackson v
Dickinson[85].
The two trustees of a settlement made an unauthorised investment in partly paid
shares in Cheque Bank, Limited. One of the trustees
died and the bank recorded
the shares in the sole name of the surviving trustee, the plaintiff. Thereafter
the plaintiff paid a
call on the shares and successfully sought from the estate
of the deceased trustee contribution, not only in respect of the loss
sustained
to the trust fund by the fall in value of the unauthorised investment, but also
in respect of the call. This case is taken
as authority for the proposition
that the death of a trustee does not exonerate his estate from making
contribution in respect of
breaches of duty in which that trustee participated
whilst
alive[86].
- The
reasoning of Swinfen Eady J may also have proceeded on the footing that the
surviving trustee in whose name the shares were
recorded held them not as the
survivor of joint owners but as a tenant in common holding the title on trust
for himself and the estate
of the deceased trustee; if so, then in substance the
call was a burden imposed on property in which both parties shared the
beneficial
ownership[87].
- However
the basis for the decision in Jackson be understood, the case does not
support the respondent's case.
- The
result is that the authorities relied upon do not provide any foundation for the
decision of the Court of Appeal or for the refinement
attempted by the
respondent in this Court.
The fiduciary duty
- McColl
JA held that Mr Brooker and Mr Friend were subject to a fiduciary
obligation "to be equally and personally liable
to each other for losses flowing
from personal
borrowings"[88].
In this Court, the appellant correctly emphasises that such a formulation of
fiduciary duty went beyond the imposition of proscriptive
obligations, a
limitation emphasised in decisions of this
Court[89].
- The
respondent seeks to meet this apparent failure to observe the settled doctrine
of fiduciary law in Australia by recasting the
duty. This is not a duty to the
Company as a director but a duty to Mr Brooker which is imposed upon
Mr Friend and obliges
him not to prefer his own interests to those of
Mr Brooker in managing the disbursement of the funds of the Company to
repay
loans to the Company made possible by Mr Brooker's personal borrowing
from third parties, including from SMK. This duty then
is said to have been
broken by Mr Friend preventing the funds of the Company from being used to
reduce the burden of the borrowing
by Mr Brooker. The appellant responds
with the submission that this attempted reformulation was neither pleaded nor
run at
trial.
- The
appellant also submits that equity does not impose fiduciary duties between the
parties to a deliberate commercial decision to
adopt a corporate structure in
which they would owe duties, but to the corporation and as directors. Why, it
is asked, should equity
intervene in such a fashion when the Company, by which
Mr Brooker and Mr Friend carried on the business, failed and, in
the
result, their personal losses will not be in equal amounts? That submission is
to be accepted.
Conclusions
- The
findings by the trial judge show that over many years Mr Friend and
Mr Brooker each utilised their connections with
family and friends to
obtain loan funds then to be advanced to the Company. The moneys were advanced
by these third parties to Mr Friend
or Mr Brooker, as the case may be,
then lent to the Company, and its indebtedness then appeared in the loan
accounts of the
directors. But Mr Friend, as appellant, submits that it was not
an incident of this relationship that each of them bore in equity
any personal
responsibility to the other to carry half the burden of repayment of the loans
to the other party.
- The
appellant develops that submission by emphasising the significance of the
selection by him and Mr Brooker of the corporate
structure as the vehicle
for their business enterprise. The appellant submits that the equitable
doctrine of contribution should
not be extended to outflank the consequences of
the selection by the parties of the corporate structure. We agree. That
selection
brought with it the attendant legal doctrines of corporate personality
and limited personal liability. Moreover, at the time of
the incorporation of
the Company, the Companies Act 1961 (NSW) was in force and this (and the
successor legislation) provided for the breakdown of relations between the
controllers
of closely held companies by such provisions as those for winding up
on the just and equitable ground under
s 222(1)(h)[90]
and for oppression suits under
s 186[91].
- Further,
the attempts by the respondent in this Court to enlist doctrines and remedies
respecting contribution and fiduciary obligations
seek to avoid the consequences
of the undisturbed findings of fact and law by the trial judge. The appellant
and the respondent
were not, after the formation of the Company in 1977, in a
relationship of partnership. Nor were their business dealings pursued
pursuant
to any agreement in the nature of a joint venture.
- To
speak of a "common design" is to fix attention at a level of abstraction which
is well above the endeavour of the parties to derive
equal profit for their
respective family shareholdings by the conduct of the business of the Company.
On the case pleaded the trial
judge held that there was no partnership between
Mr Friend and Mr Brooker, no joint venture, and no other relationship
which gave rise to an entitlement to an accounting between
them[92].
Unless those findings were to be upset by the Court of Appeal that ought to have
been the end of the litigation.
Orders
- The
appeal should be allowed and the costs of the appellant paid by the first
respondent. The orders of the Court of Appeal entered
25 June 2008 should
be set aside and in place thereof the appeal to that Court should be dismissed
with costs, including the
costs of the application to that Court for recall of
reasons.
- HEYDON
J. The orders proposed by French CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Bell JJ should be made
for the reasons given by them in relation to
the "common design"
point[93] and
the "fiduciary duty"
point[94]. But
those orders should also be rested on an additional and independent ground of
decision. It relates to an allegation of what
the appellant called a denial of
procedural fairness and Mason P called a "process irregularity". The allegation
underlay the following
ground in the notice of appeal:
"The majority erred in holding that it was open to the Court of Appeal to make a
declaration of liability for equitable contribution,
or any final relief
restricted to a single transaction involving the parties, given the way the
first respondent conducted the trial
and the appeal to the Court of
Appeal."
The expression "equitable contribution" in that ground refers to the "common
design" doctrine which was relied on by the Court of
Appeal majority, advocated
by the
respondent[95]
in this Court, but rejected by French CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Bell JJ.
- The
appellant contended that reliance by the Court of Appeal majority on the "common
design" doctrine was a denial of procedural
fairness. The appellant said that
the point had never been pleaded. He said it had not been argued before the
trial judge. He
said it had never appeared in the respondent's notice of appeal
before the Court of Appeal. He said it had never been advanced in
the
respondent's submissions to that Court. For those reasons the appellant filed a
notice of motion seeking recall of Mason P's
reasons for judgment and of the
paragraph in McColl JA's reasons for judgment in which she agreed with
Mason P's discussion
of the "common design"
doctrine[96].
- The
Court of Appeal majority rejected that "procedural irregularity" complaint for
reasons stated by Mason P and agreed in by McColl
JA. All of the appellant's
propositions were rejected. The Court of Appeal majority asserted that the
matter was pleaded. It said
the point was argued in written final address
before the trial judge and was dealt with by the trial judge. It said that the
point
was in part the subject of the notice of appeal to the Court of Appeal.
It said that after having "emerged" in an "even narrower
focus", the point was
"raised and addressed" during the hearing of the appeal and in supplementary
written submissions filed after
judgment was
reserved[97].
- Thus
the Court of Appeal majority concluded that the proceedings before it had been
conducted in a procedurally impeccable fashion.
The submissions of the
respondent in this Court defended that conclusion. Those of the appellant
flatly denied it. There is some
importance, not limited merely to this
particular case, in examining whether the Court of Appeal's conclusion was
correct. With
respect, it was not.
Pleading
- Allegations
of material fact. The Court of Appeal majority responded to the appellant's
complaint that the "common design" case had not been pleaded in this way.
It
pointed out that the fifth amended statement of claim was divided into five
parts. The fourth, headed "Failure to Account",
pleaded, in pars 13-24, various
matters of fact relating to the SMK loan. The fifth set out the 15 orders
sought. Mason P quoted
10 of the paragraphs – pars 13-15, 17-19 and 21-24
– headed "Failure to Account". Before doing so, he said:
"It is necessary to set out the references to the SMK loan in the pleading. They
show to my satisfaction that the SMK transaction
was being singled out as an
alternative free-standing claim that, if accepted, could result in relief
falling short of a general
accounting arising out of the entire 'joint venture'
or 'partnership'. Paras 21 and 22 relate to the claim for a general accounting,
but their terms are presently relevant because of the opening words of para 23
('In the further alternative')." (emphasis in
original)
Paragraphs 23 and 24 of the fifth amended statement of claim alleged:
"23. In the further alternative, [the respondent] incurred liability to repay
the SMK loans personally with the knowledge and consent
of [the company and the
appellant] for the purposes of the joint venture or partnership and disbursed
the loan moneys to or for the
benefit of the joint venture or partnership and
thereby for the benefit of [the appellant].
- To
the extent that the SMK loans were expended by [the respondent] to repay debts
and pay expenses on behalf of the joint venture
and partnership, the SMK loans
were expended on liabilities jointly owed by [the appellant and the respondent]
as joint venturers
or partners, or on items from which the Joint Venture or
partnership, and therefore also [the appellant], has materially benefited,
and
for all of which [the appellant] has not recouped [the respondent], or made
contribution to or accounted to [the respondent],
for his share of the liability
or benefit to the Joint Venture or partnership, as a result of which [the
appellant] has been unjustly
enriched at the expense of [the respondent]."
- The
problem is that even if it is concluded (contrary to the facts) that the SMK
transaction was singled out as an alternative free-standing
claim capable of
supporting a grant of relief short of a general accounting, the respondent did
not plead any matters of fact which
would suggest to the appellant that that
claim and that relief rested on a case based on the "common design" doctrine.
French CJ,
Gummow, Hayne and Bell JJ have shown that there is in reality no
"common design" doctrine. Of course the respondent was entitled
to argue for
its existence in the courts below (although he did not) and in this Court (as he
did). But, even on the respondent's
submission in this Court, at best the basis
of support in authority for the doctrine can only be described as thin and
sparse. Even
if it existed, it must be regarded as little-known and
little-understood. That was demonstrated by the numerous permutations which
the
respondent's attempts to state it in argument in this Court went
through[98].
In those circumstances, a case based on it would have to be pleaded with some
clarity and specificity if the appellant were not
to be caught by surprise. The
respondent submitted, and the appellant denied, each at considerable length,
that par 24 pleaded a
case based on the "common design" doctrine. It certainly
does not. That conclusion does not call for elaborate demonstration.
It is
sufficient to make a simple comparison of par 24 with what Cooper J said in
Cummings v
Lewis[99],
with what the Court of Appeal majority, in reliance on that case,
said[100],
and with the final form of the "common design" doctrine propounded by the
respondent to this Court as his justification for the
Court of Appeal majority
conclusion on the
matter[101].
Paragraph 24 does not allege all the material facts necessary to invoke the
supposed
doctrine[102].
- Prayers
for relief. Mason P also said:
"Most of the prayers for relief were referable to the wider (ultimately
unsuccessful) claim for a general accounting. However, paras
31, 32, 34 and 35
provided:
'31. An order that the [appellant] pay to the [respondent] such amount as may
be found due by the [appellant] to the [respondent].
32. Damages or alternatively equitable compensation.
...
34. An order that the [appellant] pay restitution to the [respondent].
...
35. Such further and other orders and directions as may be
appropriate.'"
- The
answer to this point is that it is the joinder of issue on allegations of fact
which creates triable issues. The four prayers
for relief quoted by the Court
of Appeal majority are entirely consistent with remedies to be granted after the
general accounting
had taken place. They do not point to the SMK loan as a
"free-standing claim". And they certainly do not point to the SMK loan
as
raising a claim based on the "common design" doctrine.
- It
follows that the appellant is correct in his contention that the point on which
the Court of Appeal majority decided the case
against him was not pleaded. But,
although it is the better practice for the parties in litigation involving
pleadings to ensure
that the pleadings maintain consistency with the issues
between the parties and are amended as those issues change, it is, of course,
possible for the issues between the parties to widen beyond those articulated in
pleadings. Did that happen in this case?
The structure of the trial
- The
respondent submitted to this Court that (a) a "claim for contribution was
referred [to] in submissions at trial"; (b) a "claim
for equitable compensation
was also emphasised"; (c) the "claim" was referred to in the
respondent's statement of issues; and
(d) the appellant responded to it.
These submissions may be disposed of as follows. Submission (a) is not correct.
As to submission
(b), no basis was advanced for the award of equitable
compensation. And near the end of his final address at the trial, counsel
for
the respondent said that the distinction between an account and equitable
compensation "may very well end up a distinction without
a difference because at
the end of the day, the exercise is the same." As to submission (c), the
respondent's statement of issues
did no more than raise the question whether he
should receive from the appellant "any amount (and if so what amount) by way of
restitution."
No basis on which that amount might be ordered was assigned. As
to submission (d), the appellant simply said: "Nothing gives rise
to any claim
for indemnity or equitable contribution."
- In
addition to the four submissions made by the respondent, the Court of Appeal
majority said: "Written submissions filed on behalf
of [the respondent] at
trial included claims referable to the SMK loan in isolation". A reference was
given to pars 31-38 of the
respondent's "Outline of Plaintiff's Submissions"
used at the end of the trial. But those paragraphs said nothing about any
"common
design" point. They were directed to a contention that the SMK loan was
made to the appellant and the respondent jointly. That
contention was rejected
by the trial judge, who found that the loan was made "to [the respondent] and/or
his wife". The respondent
did not complain about that finding in his notice of
appeal to the Court of Appeal, and Mason P said that the finding was correct.
- There
is a further answer to these points. Even if, contrary to what has just been
said[103], a
"common design" case had been pleaded or raised, however obscurely, outside the
pleadings, the way that the trial was conducted
by the parties meant that the
trial judge was under no obligation to deal with that "common design" case.
Shortly before, and at
the start of, the trial, the parties came to an
agreement. It was reflected in correspondence, at a directions hearing, and in
the
opening address of counsel for the respondent. It had the approbation of
the trial judge. They agreed that it would not be necessary
to tender an
expert's report, because the trial should be devoted to one topic –
whether the respondent had made out a claim
to have accounts taken. The parties
further agreed that if the respondent made that claim out, the detailed factual
investigation
of the parties' dealings would take place before a Master. That
position did not change during the trial. In closing address counsel
for the
respondent adhered to the proposition that the relief sought was an order that
there be a full accounting.
- The
statement by the Court of Appeal majority that the respondent's written
submissions at the trial included claims referable
to the SMK loan in isolation
is true to a limited extent. It is true to the extent that pars 31-38 of
the respondent's "Outline
of Plaintiff's Submissions" referred to above
concluded in a claim in par 38 that "the ultimate liability for the repayment of
the
SMK loan and the interest thereon should be borne equally by
[the appellant] and [the respondent]." That section, headed "The
third SMK
Investments loan", was the fourth section of the document. It followed three
other sections headed "Acceptance of Mr Brooker's
evidence", "The agreement to
share losses" and "The fiduciary relationship". The fourth section was followed
by a single paragraph,
par 39, under the heading "CONCLUSION":
"The only mechanism suitable for such 'equalization' of the loss is an order for
the taking of accounts. It is submitted that the
taking of accounts should be
referred to a referee."
The word "equalization" refers back to the words "should be borne equally" in
par 38. The conclusion in par 39 referred to the totality
of the arguments
which had preceded it in the four sections of that document. Thus the
respondent did not depart in his written
submissions at the end of the trial
from the position that he had adopted throughout it. That position had two
aspects. One was
that no claim for relief referable to any particular
transaction was made any more than it had been made in the fifth amended
statement
of claim. The other aspect was that the only relief sought was the
taking of accounts. In final address the respondent did refer
to equitable
compensation. But the respondent never asked the trial judge to make the kind
of order, specific to the SMK loan, which
the Court of Appeal made at the end of
its third judgment. And he never urged the trial judge to identify and act on
the "common
design" doctrine.
The trial judge and the "common design" doctrine
- The
Court of Appeal majority quoted pars 75 and 76 of the trial judge's reasons
for
judgment[104].
According to the Court of Appeal majority, these paragraphs "addressed and
rejected a claim that focussed upon a claim for contribution
referable only to
the SMK loan."
- Paragraph
75 commences with the statement that there was "no evidence that [the appellant]
agreed to be jointly liable for, or to
contribute to, the repayment of the SMK
loan." That in part repeats and relates back to the trial judge's earlier
finding that the
loan was not a loan jointly to the appellant and the
respondent, but to the respondent and/or his wife. Paragraphs 75 and 76 appear
just before the trial judge stated his conclusion in par 77 that when the
company was incorporated the partnership between the parties
ceased[105].
Paragraphs 75 and 76 appear at the end of a lengthy discussion by the trial
judge of the significance of conversations between
the appellant and the
respondent before the incorporation of the
company[106].
Paragraphs 75 and 76 were included as a response to the following oral
submission advanced on behalf of the respondent and quoted
by the trial
judge:
"[T]here is a basic agreement between these two men that whatever ultimately
comes out of it, be [it] a gain, be it [a loss,] will
ultimately end up equal in
their pockets. If that weren't the case ... one would imagine that neither of
them would be prepared
to borrow money off friends and close relatives and [in]
large amounts, such as the 350 thousand, risk their own exposure, risk,
in
effect, their family's assets, unless each of them believed that the other would
be equally liable to assist in compensating or
in reimbursing those people."
The reference to "350 thousand" was a reference to the SMK loan which was made
in 1986 in an amount of $350,000. The principal of
SMK Investments Pty Ltd, Mr
Peterson, was an old friend of the respondent's. The oral submission was that
the conduct of the parties
in relation to the SMK loan pointed towards a shared
belief that a particular type of agreement – a "Joint Venture or
partnership"
– existed between the appellant and the respondent. The
fifth amended statement of claim alleged that the "Joint Venture
or
partnership" was "oral and was made" in 1977 and "also arises during a course of
dealings" from 1977 to 1996. It was alleged
to call for an overall sharing of
gains and losses. The trial judge rejected the oral submission for a reason
stated in the second
sentence appearing in par 75:
"It is difficult to accept that, if in truth he held the belief that
[the appellant] was equally liable for this loan, [the
respondent]
proceeded with the borrowing, and procured the securities from his wife and his
mother, without first obtaining [the
appellant's] acceptance of such liability."
A little later in par 75 the trial judge said: "The absence of evidence as to
these matters is ... further indication that there
was no ['Joint Venture or
partnership'] agreement". In the second last sentence of par 76, after dealing
with the agreement between
the appellant and the respondent that on 30 June 1993
their company should repay SMK $250,000 in partial repayment of the loan, the
trial judge said: "There is no evidence that the issue of joint liability was
raised. This occasion provides no support for the
existence of the ['Joint
Venture or partnership'] agreement."
- The
position shortly stated then, contrary to the opinion of but with respect to the
Court of Appeal majority, is that the trial
judge could not be said to have
"addressed and rejected a claim that focussed upon a claim for contribution
referable only to the
SMK loan." Rather, the trial judge was responding to a
submission using the supposed events surrounding the making of the SMK loan
in
1986 and its partial repayment in 1993 as evidence for the "Joint Venture or
partnership". A fortiori, the trial judge did not
address any claim referable
only to the SMK loan which was based on the "common design" doctrine.
- There
was in this respect a divergence between the Court of Appeal majority and the
respondent's submissions in this Court. The
Court of Appeal majority said that
the trial judge dealt with a claim for contribution referable to the SMK loan.
On the other hand,
the respondent repeatedly submitted that the trial judge had
"failed" to address the topic of contribution based on the common design
doctrine. It is the respondent who is correct, in the sense that the trial
judge did not deal with that subject. But the pejorative
undertones in the word
"failed" must be rejected. The trial judge is not to be criticised for not
dealing with the "common design"
doctrine, because the parties did not place
that issue before him.
- Since
the only pleading claimed to support the "common design" doctrine consisted of
pars 23 and 24 of the fifth amended statement
of claim, once the trial judge
took the step of rejecting the allegation on which pars 23 and 24 rested, namely
that there had been
a "Joint Venture or partnership" – a step with which
the Court of Appeal did not disagree – there was no basis on which
the
trial judge could have gone further.
The respondent's notice of appeal before the Court of
Appeal
- The
Court of Appeal majority said that grounds 11 and 12 of the respondent's notice
of appeal to the Court of Appeal were "referable
to the SMK matter in
isolation." Grounds 11 and 12 were as follows:
"11. The trial Judge erred in paragraph [75] and following in finding that
there was no evidence of any conversation between the
parties in which the
[appellant] agreed to accept liability for the SMK
loan.
- The
trial Judge should have found that the unchallenged evidence was that the
[respondent] had obtained the [appellant's] agreement
to the SMK loan, and that
the [appellant's] said agreement was on [the] basis that he would contribute
equally to any loss personally
incurred by the [respondent] by reason
thereof."
With respect, that is not the better reading of those grounds. The reference to
"paragraph [75] and following" is a reference to
pars 75-77. Paragraphs 75
and 76 were quoted by the Court of Appeal and have just been
discussed[107].
In par 77, quoted
above[108],
the trial judge stated his conclusion rejecting the allegations that a "Joint
Venture or partnership" agreement existed. The passages
to which the grounds of
appeal are directed thus dealt with the evidence about the SMK loan as a
possible source for a favourable
finding about the "Joint Venture or
partnership" agreement. The passages are not directed to the "SMK matter in
isolation". And
the two paragraphs of the notice of appeal were not directed to
the "common design" point. That is so because the written submissions
of the
respondent in the Court of Appeal in support of those two grounds of appeal were
directed to the quite distinct question of
a fiduciary relationship between the
parties.
The hearing in the Court of Appeal
- In
his written submissions filed before the hearing in the Court of Appeal the
respondent did not argue for a "common design" doctrine
of the kind eventually
found by the Court of Appeal majority. Nor did he do so orally. That is why
the Court of Appeal majority
said only that the point "emerged", and was "raised
and addressed", during the hearing of the appeal. Those words were carefully
chosen. But were they accurate?
- In
this Court the appellant submitted:
"[I]t is true that a separate case based on the SMK loan was in play in the
Court of Appeal. That proposition is true if you accept
that a court determined
to decide the case upon a basis that it is determined to decide the case [on],
notwithstanding the ways the
parties are conducting it, forces a party to adopt
a case really against their wishes."
The submission was that the Court of Appeal forced the respondent to adopt a
case against his wishes. It continued by saying that
counsel for the respondent
"valiantly resisted accepting the invitation" of the Court of Appeal. It
concluded with the contention
that "perhaps understandably" counsel's will was
overborne when "in the most lukewarm way" in a written submission put in after
the
conclusion of oral argument counsel embraced the Court of Appeal's point.
- The
appellant's submission is correct. Counsel for the respondent before the Court
of Appeal said that the SMK loan was an example
of loans made to each of the
appellant and the respondent, all of which the respondent wanted brought into
account. A little later
Mason P said:
"Why didn't you propound a claim based on the events of November 1986 using the
1977 discussion as background which might have led
to just concentrating just on
the equities arising out of this one transaction [ie the SMK loan] which seems
to have been rather
unique."
He did not say what the particulars of the claim might be, or what the specific
equities were. Counsel for the respondent answered
by repeating that while the
SMK loan was the largest part of the respondent's claim, it was not the only
part. On numerous occasions
thereafter Mason P suggested that the respondent
should claim specific relief limited to the SMK loan rather than a general
accounting.
This was, incidentally, a stand at odds with the Court of Appeal
majority's statement in the second judgment that four of the
prayers for
relief in the fifth amended statement of claim related to that
loan[109].
However, contrary to what the respondent submitted to this Court, an examination
of the oral argument as transcribed reveals no
reference to equitable
contribution or the "common design" point. It also reveals that counsel for the
respondent did not act on
the judicial hints. While on one occasion a similar
judicial hint was made to counsel for the appellant during his address to the
Court of Appeal, it was not accompanied by any exposition of how contribution
based on "common design" could be justified. At the
close of oral argument
counsel for the appellant was directed to put in a written submission about a
piece of evidence, and counsel
for the respondent was directed to reply to it.
Both sides appear to have gone rather beyond the terms on which leave was
granted.
In the course of his supplementary submissions the appellant, perhaps
scenting an impalpable danger which in due course materialised,
stressed that
the primary relief sought at trial was "a full account as to all ...
contributions and receipts" and submitted that:
"having regard to the express way that the case was run below and the obvious
forensic decisions which were made by the [appellant]
in that regard, the
[respondent] should not be allowed to seek or obtain alternative relief on
appeal."
In the course of the respondent's supplementary submissions, he stated:
"If it were minded to do so, the Court could fashion relief directed at
compensation relating only to the circumstances of the 1986
SMK Investments
loan. Allegations specific to the SMK investments [sic] were made in paragraphs
23 and 24 of the fifth amended statement
of
claim."
That submission said nothing about "equitable contribution" or the "common
design" point. That submission did not indicate how the
relief might be
fashioned. Above all, that submission did not indicate on what grounds the
relief was to be fashioned. In those
circumstances, when, over nine months
later[110],
the Court of Appeal came to deliver its first judgment, the appellant must have
been surprised to read that in the second paragraph
of his reasons for judgment
Mason P said that the "claim ultimately pressed on behalf of the
[respondent] was for contribution
by [the appellant] with respect to all or part
of the outstanding balance of the SMK loan". With respect, the respondent did
not
press any such claim. Instead counsel for the respondent was pressed to
make some claim about the SMK loan. The basis on which
he was to make that
claim was not clarified. Nor was the basis on which he actually made it.
- The
respondent submitted in this Court that the Court of Appeal majority was
entitled to proceed as it did because:
"an appellate court is not restricted in its ultimate conclusions by the
formulations of the parties in argument and indeed has a
responsibility to
determine the law applicable to the case and cannot be precluded from doing so
because a party fails to address
a case open on the pleadings or raised in
argument".
The "common design" case was not open on the pleadings and was not raised in
argument. Putting these considerations aside, is the
submission sound? In
support of it, the respondent cited two passages from Autodesk Inc v Dyason
[No 2][111].
They do not support it. In the first passage, Brennan J
said[112]:
"A court should not pronounce a judgment against a person on a ground which that
person has not had an opportunity to argue. However,
a sufficient opportunity
to argue a ground is given when the ground is logically involved in a
proposition that has been raised in
the course of argument before the court or
is to be considered by the court as an unconceded step in determining the
validity of
a conclusion for which one of the parties contends. Of course, the
precise ground which a court or judge assigns for a decision
will frequently be
formulated in terms different from the terms of a submission by counsel but,
provided the ground has arisen in
one of the ways mentioned, the court or judge
may properly proceed to judgment without requiring the case to be relisted for
further
argument and without inviting supplementary submissions to be
made."
The "common design" point was not logically involved in any proposition raised
in the course of argument before the Court of Appeal.
Nor was it an unconceded
step in determining the validity of a conclusion for which the respondent
contended: the respondent could
scarcely be said to have contended for an order
limited to the SMK loan, and the "common design" point was not an unconceded
step,
but an unknown one. In the other passage relied
on[113],
Dawson J said nothing which would justify deciding the case against the
appellant in reliance on the "common design" point without
notice to the
appellant that this might happen.
- The
following words of Mason CJ and Brennan J in Pantorno v The
Queen[114]
apply to this appeal:
"When the parties to an adversarial proceeding agree on a proposition of law and
conduct their cases on that basis, their agreement
does not bind the trial
judge. If the judge determines the law to be different, he may apply the law as
he determines it to be,
but he must inform the parties of the view he has formed
when that is necessary to give them an opportunity to address new issues
arising
from the judge's departure from the proposition of law on which the case was
conducted."
Here the parties were in agreement that whatever propositions of law applied,
they did not include the "common design" point: there
is no reason to suppose
that they or their advisers had adverted to it. Once the Court of Appeal
majority perceived that it was
material, the parties should have been informed
before that perception was acted on.
- A
more specific aspect of this point arises from the Court of Appeal majority's
handling of authority. In the first judgment, while
giving reasons for deciding
the case as he did, Mason P discussed several authorities on contribution, and
also referred to Cummings v
Lewis[115].
That case was heavily relied on by the respondent in this Court, and so were the
cases discussed in it. Cummings v Lewis was not, however, a case which
the respondent relied on, either before the trial judge or in the Court of
Appeal. And it was not
a case which any member of the Court of Appeal drew to
the attention of counsel either during or after argument.
- In
Rahimtoola v Nizam of
Hyderabad[116]
Viscount Simonds concluded his speech with these words:
"My Lords, I must add that, since writing this opinion, I have had the
privilege of reading the opinion which my noble and learned
friend, Lord
Denning, is about to deliver. It is right that I should say that I must not be
taken as assenting to his views upon
a number of questions and authorities in
regard to which the House has not had the benefit of the arguments of counsel or
of the
judgment of the courts below."
The other members of the House, apart from Lord Denning, associated themselves
with those
observations[117].
Lord Denning's speech concluded as
follows[118]:
"My Lords, I acknowledge that, in the course of this opinion, I have considered
some questions and authorities which were not mentioned
by
counsel[[119]].
I am sure they gave all the help they could and I have only gone into it further
because the law on this subject is of great consequence
and, as applied at
present, it is held by many to be unsatisfactory. I venture to think that if
there is one place where it should
be reconsidered on principle – without
being tied to particular precedents of a period that is past – it is here
in this
House: and if there is one time for it to be done, it is now, when the
opportunity offers, before the law gets any more enmeshed
in its own net. This
I have tried to do. Whatever the outcome, I hope I may say, as Holt CJ once did
after he had done much research
on his own: 'I have stirred these points, which
wiser heads in time may
settle.'[120]"
What Lord Denning said did not deal with or excuse the "elementary
error"[121]
of failing to draw the attention of the parties, particularly the losing party,
to the basis on which the losing party was to lose.
- In
days when the reservation of judgments was rarer than now, and when indeed it
was quite common for judgments to be delivered immediately
on the close of oral
argument, courts commonly adhered to a practice of not referring in reasons for
judgment to any point or authority
not raised in argument. Non-adherence to
that practice would run the risk of immediate and well-justified protest from
the losing
party. Some think the practice remains correct practice. Does it?
Points are one thing. Authorities are perhaps another. The
practice must be
good for points, at least points which are decisive, or materially influential,
in the
outcome[122].
Any other system would institutionalise constant denials of natural justice.
But the practice may be too extreme in relation to
authorities. There may well
be many occasions on which it is legitimate for a court to refer to authorities
not relied on by the
parties – for example, where the leading case in a
line of authorities has been raised with the parties, but not others. However,
the present appeal involved a doctrine – assuming, contrary to the
actuality, that it existed – which was little-known
and little-understood.
It was propounded in this Court on the strength of one decision in the Full
Federal Court relying on three
relatively old and not well-known English cases.
The obscurity of the supposed doctrine is revealed by the fact that its
formulation
and the meaning of the authorities said to expound it were questions
debated in this Court for hours, and over many pages of written
submissions. It
was therefore incumbent on the Court of Appeal majority to draw the details of
the doctrine, and the primary authority
on which it supposedly rested, to the
attention of the parties, either during the oral argument if the details of the
doctrine and
the authority were then present to their minds, or whenever they
became present during the nine month period during which judgment
was reserved.
This duty was not complied with. The doctrine was used by the Court of Appeal
majority to solve a problem narrower
than, and distinct from, that propounded by
the respondent during the appeal. The problem in question was not raised with
counsel
for the appellant at all. At best it could be said that only the most
general of allusions to it were made in debate with counsel
for the respondent.
The making of those allusions was not, with respect, a compliance with the
duty.
[1] [2006] NSWCA 385.
[2] [2005] NSWSC 395.
[3] (2008) 232 CLR 635; [2008]
HCA 27.
[4] (2008) 232 CLR 635 at 663-664
[80]. See also the remarks of Lord Esher MR (then Brett MR) in
Leigh v Dickeson (1884) 15 QBD 60 at 64-65.
[5] (2008) 232 CLR 635 at 665
[85].
[6] See Wolmershausen v Gullick
[1893] 2 Ch 514 at 528-529; Andrews and Millet, Law of
Guarantees, 5th ed (2008) at 493-494.
[7] [2005] NSWSC 395 at [75].
[8] [2005] NSWSC 395 at [74].
[9] [2005] NSWSC 395 at [79].
[10] [2006] NSWCA 385 at
[163].
[11] [2006] NSWCA 385
at [6].
[12] Pars 152, 155, 156, 162
and 163.
[13] [2008] NSWCA 118.
[14] [2006] NSWCA 385
at [27].
[15] (2002) 209 CLR 282; [2002]
HCA 17.
[16] [2006] NSWCA 385 at
[34]-[35].
[17] See The Commonwealth v
Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 434-435; [1990] HCA 39;
Australian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208
CLR 199 at 216 [8], 233 [64], 259 [138]; [2001] HCA 63.
[18] Tombs v Roch (1846) 2
Coll 490 at 499 [63 ER 828 at 832]; Duncan Fox & Co v
North and South Wales Bank (1880) 6 App Cas 1 at 12-14;
Scholefield Goodman and Sons Ltd v Zyngier [1986] AC 562
at 570-571; Mahoney v McManus (1981) 180 CLR 370
at 387-388; [1981] HCA 54.
[19] Story, Commentaries on
Equity Jurisprudence, 3rd Eng ed (1920), §493.
[20] Pomeroy's Equity
Jurisprudence, 5th ed (1941), vol 2, §§406, 411.
[21] Mahoney v McManus (1981)
180 CLR 370 at 387.
[22] Nova Information Systems Inc
v Greenwich Insurance Co [2004] USCA1 197; 365 F 3d 996 at 1006 (2004); Corpus Juris
Secundum (2007 ed), vol 18, "Contribution", §5.
[23] (2002) 209 CLR 282 at
292-293 [15] per Gaudron A-CJ and Hayne J, 303 [50] per
McHugh J, 332 [138]
per Callinan J.
[24] (2002) 209 CLR 282 at
308-309 [66]; cf with respect to anti-trust litigation in the United States,
Texas Industries Inc v Radcliff Materials Inc 451 US 630 (1981).
[25] (2002) 209 CLR 282 at
292-293 [15].
[26] Street v Retravision (NSW)
Pty Ltd (1995) 56 FCR 588 at 597.
[27] See, for example, Batard v
Hawes (1853) 2 El & Bl 287 at 296 [118 ER 775
at 778]; Leigh v Dickeson (1884) 15 QBD 60 at 64.
[28] See Lumbers v W Cook
Builders Pty Ltd (In Liq) (2008) 232 CLR 635 at 666 [89], 674
[126].
[29] [1899] 1 QB 161.
[30] [1899] 1 QB 161 at
174. See also the reasons of Bray CJ in Floreani Bros Pty Ltd v
Woolscourers (SA) Pty Ltd (1976) 13 SASR 313 at 320-321.
[31] [1939] 2 KB 81.
[32] [2006] NSWCA 385 at
[34].
[33] See Lumbers v W Cook
Builders Pty Ltd (In Liq) (2008) 232 CLR 635 at 661-663
[75]-[78].
[34] Re La Rosa; Ex parte Norgard
v Rodpat Nominees Pty Ltd (1991) 31 FCR 83 at 91.
[35] (2002) 209 CLR 282
at 301-302 [44]-[46].
[36] Ruabon Steamship Co v London
Assurance [1900] AC 6 at 12; Cockburn v GIO Finance Ltd (No 2)
(2001) 51 NSWLR 624 at 633-641. See also the remarks of Brennan J in
Mahoney v McManus (1981) 180 CLR 370 at 387.
[37] (1787) 1 Cox Eq Cas 318
[29 ER 1184]; White and Tudor's Leading Cases in Equity, 9th ed
(1928), vol 2 at 488.
[38] (1787) 1 Cox Eq Cas 318
at 322-323 [29 ER 1184 at 1186].
[39] In modern times, with improved
communications, the general average act may be that of the shipowner:
Australian Coastal Shipping Commission v Green [1971] 1 QB 456 at
480-481, 485, 486-487. But such cases apart, it is unsettled whether under the
York-Antwerp Rules 1924 the
general average act may be the act of a stranger to
the adventure: Lowndes and Rudolf, The Law of General Average and the
York-Antwerp Rules, 13th ed (2008) at 83-86. See also Marine Insurance
Act 1909 (Cth), s 72.
[40] (1801) 3 C Rob 240
at 257-258 [165 ER 450 at 456].
[41] 157 US 386 at 397-398
(1895).
[42] The Moran No 16
40 F 2d 466 at 468 (1930).
[43] (1939) 64 CLR 312 at 341;
[1939] HCA 38.
[44] [1928] Ch 290.
[45] [1928] Ch 290
at 307.
[46] [2006] NSWCA 385 at
[202].
[47] [2006] NSWCA 176.
[48] Israel v Foreshore
Properties Pty Ltd (In Liq) (1980) 54 ALJR 421 at 423-424; 30
ALR 631 at 636.
[49] Holden v Black (1905)
2 CLR 768 at 782-783; [1905] HCA 40.
[50] Ranelaugh (Earl) v Hayes
(1683) 1 Vern 189 at 190 [23 ER 405 at 406]; Thomas v
Nottingham Incorporated Football Club Ltd [1972] Ch 596 at 606;
Abigroup Ltd v Abignano (1992) 39 FCR 74 at 81-82.
[51] [1999] Ch 340 at 349-350,
352-353.
[52] [1977] Qd R 135
at 138.
[53] [1999] Ch 340 at 350.
[54] [1984] 2 NSWLR 242
at 245.
[55] [1984] 2 NSWLR 242
at 245.
[56] [1977] Qd R 135.
[57] [1984] 2 NSWLR 242 at
245.
[58] [2005] NSWSC 395 at
[59].
[59] (1993) 41 FCR 559;
Sheppard and Neaves JJ were the other members of the Full Court.
[60] (1993) 41 FCR 559
at 594.
[61] (1993) 41 FCR 559
at 598.
[62] (1993) 41 FCR 559
at 562.
[63] (1993) 41 FCR 559 at
563.
[64] (1993) 41 FCR 559 at
593-594.
[65] (1855) 6 De G M &
G 345 [43 ER 1267].
[66] (1875) LR 20
Eq 225.
[67] [1903] 1 Ch 947.
[68] 25 & 26 Vict c 89. See, as
to the attainment of limited liability, the account by Professor Gower in
The Principles of Modern Company Law, 3rd ed (1969) at 44-50.
[69] Robinson's Executor's
Case (1856) 6 De G M & G 572 at 587 [43 ER 1356
at 1362].
[70] Exemplified by the discussion
in Lindley on Partnership and Companies, 4th ed (1878), vol 1 at
758, 773-774. See also Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Linter Textiles
Australia Ltd (In liq) (2005) 220 CLR 592 at 604 [25]; [2005]
HCA 20; Mulkana Corporation NL (In liq) v Bank of New South Wales
(1983) 8 ACLR 278 at 278-279, 282-285.
[71] See Sealy, "Fiduciary
Relationships", [1962] Cambridge Law Journal 69 at 70-72.
[72] 7 & 8
Vict c 110.
[73] 11 & 12
Vict c 45.
[74] Bright v Hutton (1852)
3 HLC 341 [10 ER 133].
[75] This had been settled by the
House of Lords in 1850 in Norris v Cottle (1850) 2 HLC 647 [9
ER 1238]. See Formoy, The Historical Foundations of Modern Company
Law, (1923) at 83-86.
[76] (1855) 6 De G M &
G 345 at 372 [43 ER 1267 at 1277].
[77] (1855) 6 De G M & G
345 at 372 [43 ER 1267 at 1277].
[78] (1855) 6 De G M & G
345 at 371-372 [43 ER 1267 at 1277].
[79] (1850) 2 HLC 647
at 670 [9 ER 1238 at 1246].
[80] (1850) 2 HLC 647 at 672
[9 ER 1238 at 1247].
[81] (1875) LR 20
Eq 225.
[82] (1875) LR 20 Eq 225
at 232.
[83] (1875) LR 20 Eq 225
at 233.
[84] Lindley on Partnership and
Companies, 4th ed (1878), vol 1 at 760, 773-774.
[85] [1903] 1 Ch 947.
[86] Underhill and Hayton, Law
Relating to Trusts and Trustees, 16th ed (2003) at 940; Mitchell, The Law
of Contribution and Reimbursement, (2003) at 261; Jacobs' Law of Trusts
in Australia, 7th ed (2006) at 581; Goff and Jones, The Law of
Restitution, 7th ed (2007) at 417.
[87] [1903] 1 Ch 947
at 951. His Lordship also remarked that there had been an express
agreement between the trustees to contribute
equally to any liability arising
from the investment: [1903] 1 Ch 947 at 951.
[88] [2006] NSWCA 385
at [154].
[89] Breen v Williams (1996)
186 CLR 71 at 113 per Gaudron and McHugh JJ. See also at 93-94 per
Dawson and Toohey JJ, 135-137 per Gummow J;
[1996] HCA 57, and
see further Pilmer v Duke Group Ltd (In liq) (2001) 207 CLR 165 at
197-198 [74] per McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ; [2001]
HCA 31.
[90] See Ebrahimi v Westbourne
Galleries Ltd [1973] AC 360.
[91] See In re Jermyn Street
Turkish Baths Ltd [1970] 1 WLR 1195; [1970]
3 All ER 57.
[92] [2005] NSWSC 395 at
[79].
[93] At [63]-[83] and at
[87]-[90].
[94] At [84]-[86].
[95] By "the respondent" is meant
the first respondent, Mr Brooker, and by "the company" is meant the second
respondent, Friend &
Brooker Pty Ltd. The second respondent took no part in
the proceedings: see [4] and [9] above.
[96] The notice of motion also
sought recall of some other paragraphs of her reasons for judgment, but that
course was taken for reasons
other than the "procedural irregularity"
complaint.
[97] See the passage quoted above at
[30].
[98] For the sake of clarity, it
should be said that senior counsel for the respondent in this Court did not
appear in the courts below,
and senior counsel for the appellant in the Court of
Appeal and in this Court did not appear at the trial. To note that fact is
not
to suggest any criticism either of them or of any other counsel who have
appeared at any stage in the proceedings.
[99] (1993) 41 FCR 559 at 598
(quoted at [68] above).
[100] See [63] above.
[101] See [64] above. That form
had been preceded by different formulations in oral argument.
[102] See [65] above.
[103] At [97]-[100] above.
[104] Paragraph 75 is quoted at
[18] above.
[105] Paragraph 77 is quoted at
[12] above. See also the trial judge's finding in par 79, quoted at [24]
above.
[106] Paragraph 74 is quoted at
[23] above.
[107] At [105]-[106].
[108] At [12].
[109] See above at [98].
[110] Cf Direct Birmingham,
Oxford, Reading and Brighton Railway Co (Spottiswoode's Case) (1855) 6 De G
M & G 345 at 364 [43 ER 1267 at 1274] (after less than three months'
reservation, Turner LJ said: "This case has
stood for judgment longer than has
been usual with us"); Rolled Steel Products (Holdings) Ltd v British Steel
Corporation [1986] Ch 246 at 310; Bishopsgate Investment Management Ltd
(in liq) v Maxwell (No 2) [1994] 1 All ER 261 at 263; Goose v Wilson
Sandford and Co [1998] TLR 85; R v Maxwell (1998) 217 ALR 452 at
462-463; Laminex (Australia) Pty Ltd v Smeeth [1999] NSWCA 462 (Mason P,
Meagher and Beazley JJA); Boodhoo v Attorney General of Trinidad and
Tobago [2004] UKPC 17; [2004] 1 WLR 1689; Expectation Pty Ltd v PRD Realty Pty Ltd
[2004] FCAFC 189; (2004) 140 FCR 17; Mount Lawley Pty Ltd v Western Australian Planning
Commission [2004] WASCA 149; (2004) 29 WAR 273 at 283-287 [30]- [40]; Monie v Commonwealth
of Australia [2005] NSWCA 25; (2005) 63 NSWLR 729.
[111] (1993) 176 CLR 300; [1993]
HCA 6.
[112] [1993] HCA 6; (1993) 176 CLR 300 at 308
(footnotes omitted).
[113] [1993] HCA 6; (1993) 176 CLR 300 at
317.
[114] [1989] HCA 18; (1989) 166 CLR 466 at 473;
[1989] HCA 18.
[115] (1993) 41 FCR 559 at 593.
[116] [1958] AC 379 at 398.
[117] [1958] AC 379 at 404 per
Lord Reid and 410 per Lord Cohen and Lord Somervell of Harrow.
[118] [1958] AC 379 at
423-424.
[119] One of the counsel concerned
was Richard Wilberforce QC.
[120] Coggs v Bernard
[1790] EngR 371; (1703) 2 Ld Raym 909 at 920 [92 ER 107 at 114].
[121] Paterson, The Law
Lords, (1982) at 39n.
[122] See, for example, Spring
v Guardian Assurance Plc [1994] UKHL 7; [1995] 2 AC 296 at 316.
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