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[2011] NSWCA 259
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Bullabidgee Pty Ltd v McCleary [2011] NSWCA 259 (2 September 2011)
Last Updated: 1 November 2011
This decision has been amended. Please see the end
of the decision for a list of the amendments.
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Case Title:
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Bullabidgee Pty Ltd v McCleary
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Before:
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Allsop P at 1 Basten JA at 86 Young JA at
87
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Decision:
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On or before 23 September 2011 the parties place in
the Court of Appeal submissions box and serve any submissions on the form of
orders
including costs, having on or before 16 September 2011 served on each
other draft submissions. [Note: The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005
provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the Court otherwise orders, a judgment or order
is taken to be entered when it is recorded in the Court's computerised
court
record system. Setting aside and variation of judgments or orders is dealt with
by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and 36.18. Parties should in particular note the
time limit of fourteen days in Rule 36.16.]
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Catchwords:
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TRADE AND COMMERCE - Fair Trading Act 1987 (NSW) -
misleading and deceptive conduct - representations concerning matters connected
with purchase of rural land - and (second)
as to reliability of valuations in
existence - reliance on Act not waived. TRADE AND COMMERCE - Fair Trading
Act 1987 (NSW) - causation and relief - tortious analogue of loss not to be
applied - misleading and deceptive conduct affected price negotiations
- proper
form of relief in circumstances - appropriate to order return of
deposits. CONTRACT - election - affirmation - no affirmation in
circumstances where purchasers sought to enforce rights as qualified by
statutory
remedies.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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J D Heydon Cross on Evidence (8th Aust Ed 2010)
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Category:
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Parties:
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Bullabidgee Pty Ltd (First Appellant) Towool Pty Ltd
(Second Appellant) Towool West Pty Ltd (Third Appellant) Towool Water Pty Ltd
(Fourth Appellant) Warrawool Pty Ltd (Fifth Appellant) Warrawool North Pty Ltd
(Sixth Appellant) Warrawool Water Pty Ltd (Seventh
Appellant) MHD Echuca Pty Ltd
(Eighth Appellant) Ian Tayles (Ninth Appellant) Brian John McCleary &
Peter Joseph Rae (First Respondent) JP & M Kerr (Billabidgee) Pty Ltd
(Second Respondent) Bullatale Pastoral Pty Ltd (Third Respondent)
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Representation
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R S Angyal SC, A D Justice (Appellants) B A
Coles QC, S Galitsky (Respondents)
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- Solicitors:
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Maurice Blackburn Commercial Lawyers, Melbourne
(Appellants) Francis Kelly & Grant, Deniliquin (Respondents)
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File number(s):
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Decision Under Appeal
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- Court / Tribunal:
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- Before:
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- Date of Decision:
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- Citation:
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- Court File Number(s)
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1813 of 2008; 2244 of 2008
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT
- ALLSOP
P: This is an appeal from orders made by a judge in the Equity Division
giving judgment for cross-claimants (being vendors of farmland
near Deniliquin)
against cross-defendants (being purchasers of the land) in the sum of
$319,767.67, refusing to order the return
of the deposit paid by the purchasers,
and dismissing the claims brought by the purchasers against the vendors under
the Fair Trading Act 1987 (NSW), as in force in 2007. (See Bullabidgee
Pty Ltd v McCleary; McCleary v Bullabidgee Pty Ltd [2010] NSWSC 145.)
- For
the reasons that follow, the appeal succeeds in part, but the Court will hear
further submissions on relief.
The nature of the dispute
- The
primary judge succinctly summarised the circumstances of the dispute at [1] of
his reasons, as follows:
"The ninth plaintiff in proceedings 1813/08, Ian Tayles, is the sole director
of the eight plaintiff companies, who together are the
purchasers - under three
contracts for sale of land made on 1 June 2007 - of three aggregations of land
called Billabidgee, Towool
and Warrawool near Deniliquin, and also - under a
separate contract made on the same day - of the chattels located on them, from
the first defendants Messrs McLeary and Rae who are trustees for sale of those
properties - which were formerly in the ownership
of the Kerr family, who are
the beneficiaries - pursuant to an order of the Court made in earlier
proceedings. The eighth plaintiff,
MHD Echuca, as purchaser under the contract
in respect of the chattels, paid the purchase price specified in that contract
in full
on 8 June 2007. On the same day, in accordance with the provisions of
the land contracts, upon payment of the deposits, the Purchasers
went into
occupation and commenced to farm the properties, but they did not pay the
balance purchase price on the specified completion
date, namely 30 November
2007, nor at all. The Vendors claim declarations that they terminated the land
contracts on 12 March 2007
(for failure by the Purchasers to complete on 7 March
2007 in accordance with Notices to Complete given between 14 and 20 February
2007), and that they are entitled to the crops grown and harvested by the
Purchasers since then; and judgment for possession, damages
for trespass, and
damages for breach of contract. The Purchasers originally resisted the Vendors'
claim for possession and sought,
pursuant to the (NSW) Fair Trading Act
1987, s 72, an order varying the contract by reducing the purchase price and
requiring the Vendors to complete at such reduced price. However,
the Purchasers
now accept that they cannot establish that they are ready, willing and able to
complete, and claim - pursuant to Fair Trading Act, s 72 - an order
declaring the contracts void ab initio , and damages; alternatively -
pursuant to (NSW) Conveyancing Act 1919, s 55(2A) - discretionary return
of the deposit."
The factual background and an outline of the relevant claims of the
purchasers
- In
early May 2007, Mr Tayles, the principal of the purchaser companies read two
advertisements in two publications, The Land and Stock & Land
, for the sale of the land in question. The two advertisements are set out
at [2] and [4] of the primary judge's reasons. Each advertisement
contained an
inaccuracy: that "around" 7,000 acres was "available to farm", including "the
irrigation layouts". It was accepted at
trial that the total acreage available
to farm or "croppable" was in the order of 5,325 acres. Each advertisement
contained a disclaimer
in the following terms:
" DISCLAIMER: The printed information has been supplied to us by the
Vendor. We do not accept responsibility to any person for its accuracy and
do no
more than pass this information on. Interested parties should make and rely on
their own inquiries in order to determine whether
or not this information is in
fact accurate."
- The
first part of the purchasers' case was that the representation as to acreage
(referred to in the proceedings as the "first representation"
or "first
misrepresentation") was, in the circumstances, conduct that was misleading or
deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive
in contravention of the Fair
Trading Act , s 42 (in the form that it appeared prior to its amendment by
the Fair Trading Amendment (Australian Consumer Law) Act 2010 (NSW), Sch
1) upon which the purchasers, through Mr Tayles, relied to enter into the
relevant contracts. No proceedings were taken
against the agent.
- In
early May 2007, after seeing the advertisements in The Land and Stock
& Land , Mr Tayles was sent by one of the trustees for sale the special
conditions of the contracts which included cll 3.3 and 8 as follows:
"3 Acceptance of improvements, encroachments and area ... 3.3 The
purchaser has entered into this contract following his detailed inspection of
the property and acknowledges that there
shall be no reduction in price should
it be found that the area of the property is less than that area set out in the
description
of property or in the Crown and other plans attached to this
contract. ... 8 Written contract constitutes whole agreement (a) This
contract will supersede any and all prior agreements, understandings,
arrangements, promises, representations and warranties
of any form or nature
whatsoever, whether oral or in writing and whether explicit or implicit, which
may have been entered into prior
to the execution hereof between the parties,
their officers, directors, or employees as to the subject matter hereof. (b)
Neither
of the parties hereto has relied upon any oral representation or oral
information given to him by any representative of the other
party. (c) No
warranties shall be deemed to have been given or implied, as to any matter or
thing relating to the subject property,
from any map, advertisement brochure or
any written or oral statement otherwise than is written herein. (d) No amendment
of this
contract shall be valid unless made in writing and duly executed by the
parties hereto."
- At
[5] of his reasons, the primary judge described Mr Tayles' investigation of the
property in May 2007, as follows:
"On 11 May, Mr Tayles travelled to Deniliquin and inspected the properties,
in the company of Mr Macleod and Mr Greg Kerr. In the
course of this inspection,
he obtained from Greg Kerr further details of the croppable area of each of the
paddocks, which he noted
on a plan of the property. On 26 May, Mr Tayles
inspected the properties a second time, spending the best part of a day doing
so,
this time unaccompanied."
- What
Mr Tayles did and what was said to him (and by whom) in May is of some
importance. There was a dispute in this Court about it.
I will return in a
little more detail to this at an appropriate time in the narrative.
- At
[6] of his reasons, the primary judge described what Mr Tayles did in the
evening of 31 May 2007, before the auction on 1 June
2007:
"Based on information provided to him by Greg Kerr during the first
inspection, and on further information provided to him by the
agent, and on
inquiries made of another agent as to the selling price of comparable lands, Mr
Tayles on 31 May made an assessment
of the value of the property. He did so on
the basis that there were 1,145 acres of irrigation paddocks, to which he
attributed a
value of $400/acre; 1,200 acres of eaten out lucerne, to which he
attributed $300/acre; 4,500 acres of dry cropping, to which he
attributed
$300/acre; and 2,271 acres of bush, roads, channels, yards and partly cleared
land, to which he attributed $100/acre.
These calculations totalled 9,116 acres,
of which 6,845 were croppable (close enough to the 7,000 referred to in the
advertisements),
and a total value of $2,395,100 - to which he added $745,150
for the water rights and $300,000 for the buildings, to derive a total
value of
$3,440,250. He wrote in his journal '$3.44m' to remind him at the following
day's auction."
- It
is to be noted at this point that the assessment of value carried out by Mr
Tayles was by reference to croppable acreage, together
with the value of water
licences, thus revealing a direct relationship, to him, between croppable
acreage and land value. I should
add that Mr Tayles gave his evidence about this
assessment undertaken on 31 May 2007 by reference to a document created for the
purpose
of the case, said to be a reconstruction of what he did on the evening
of 31 May. He was not cross-examined upon it. It was submitted
on appeal by Mr
Coles QC, who, with Mr Galitsky, appeared for the respondents, that we should
pay little regard to this document
and this evidence in support of any
conclusion that croppable acreage was an important (or at least relevant)
consideration for Mr
Tayles' decision on behalf of the purchasers as to whether
to buy the land and at what price. Plainly from [6] of his reasons, the
primary
judge accepted that Mr Tayles had carried out this exercise. There is no appeal
from these findings. They should be accepted.
- At
[7]-[9] of his reasons, the primary judge conveniently summarised what occurred
on 1 June 2007 at the auction:
"[7] The auction took place on 1 June 2007. Mr Tayles was the only person
bidding. He opened bidding with a bid of $3.44 million.
There were no further
bids. The Vendors bid $4 million and the properties were passed in to them.
[8] Negotiations ensued. Initially, Mr Tayles maintained his position that
the property should be sold to him for $3.44 million in
the absence of any
higher bidder. Mr Macleod maintained that the starting point was the Vendors'
bid of $4.0 million. There was a
stalemate, until Mr Macleod said "We have two
sworn valuations which give the value of the property as $4.28m", later
explaining
that one was at $4.28 million and the other at $4.15 million.
Although Mr Tayles emphasised that no one at the auction thought it
was worth
anything like that, Mr Macleod maintained that the Vendors would not sell for
less than $4.28 million. Mr Tayles asked
what else could be thrown in on a
"walk-in walk-out" basis. The Vendors sought $550,000 for the plant and
equipment on the property.
After inconclusive negotiations on that topic, an
all-in price was discussed. Mr Tayles was eager to reach a resolution, so that
he could commence sowing the rest of the crop the following week; otherwise it
would be too late to do so. On a walk-in walk-out
basis, inclusive of plant and
equipment, Mr Tayles raised his bid to $4.3 million and then to $4.4 million;
this was influenced by
his acceptance that there were sworn valuations at $4.15
million and $4.28 million. Then, the Vendors proposed to apportion only
the
depreciated value of the plant and equipment to the chattel contract, and the
remainder of their value across the land contracts.
Eventually, the parties
agreed upon a total price of $4.488 million for the land and chattels, of which
$120,000 was apportioned
to the chattel contract. Mr Macleod and Mr Tayles
agreed that certain of the chattels on the properties would be excluded from the
sale and Mr Macleod made a list of the excluded chattels.
[9] Mr Tayles proposed, and the Trustees agreed, that instead of one
contract, there should be a separate contract for each property.
Three separate
land contracts were exchanged, for $830,000 for Billabidgee, $1,970,000 for
Towool, and $1,568,000 for Warrawool.
They included special conditions, which
were amended at Mr Tayles' request, but they continued to include the special
conditions
3.3 and 8 set out above."
- It
is convenient at this point to recount evidence of My Tayles (that was not the
subject of cross-examination) about the post-auction
negotiations. The following
discussion was recounted by Mr Tayles in his affidavit of 14 July 2008 (Blue
Book Vol 3 pp 2-3) as having
been had with the agent, Mr Macleod:
"During these negotiations, I repeatedly maintained my position that the
property should be sold to me for $3.44m since there were
no higher bidders.
Macleod maintained the starting price for negotiation was his vendors' bid of
$4.0m. This stalemate persisted
until Macleod and I had a conversation with
words to the following effect:
Macleod: 'We have two sworn valuations which give the value of the property
as $4.28m.'
Tayles: 'They're not relevant. They're superseded by my bid of $3.44m. This
morning you had a room full of people at a well advertised
auction, and no one
bid higher than $3.44m. That's the new valuation. It's a more current valuation
than your two valuations.'
Macleod: 'Peter and Brian [the trustees] are acting under a court order. They
can't sell it for less than the valuation.'
Tayles: 'You said you had two valuations. If one was $4.28m, what was the
other one?'
Macleod: '$4.15m.'
Tayles: 'Can I see the valuations?'
Macleod: 'You can believe me.'
Tayles: 'I'd like to see them.'
Macleod: 'You can trust me. You can see them after you buy it.'
Tayles: 'I've got to convince a lender of the value. Not just myself. No one
else there today thought it was worth $4.28m, $4m or
even $3.5m.'
Macleod: 'They won't sell it for less than $4.28m. They've got a sworn
valuation saying that's what it's worth.'"
- The
trustees most certainly had two valuations: one from Riverlink Valuers as at 13
February 2007 for $4,150,000 (with a "value range
for sale purpose" identified
as $3,700,000 to $4,500,000); and one from HMC Valuers Pty Ltd as at 16 May 2007
for $4,280,000. Both
valuations assumed a farmable or croppable acreage in the
order of 7,000 acres (though expressed in hectares). Both valuations ascribed
a
value per hectare of croppable area as a central consideration in reaching
value.
- The
exchange between Mr Tayles and Mr Macleod showed that what could be called a
stand-off or stalemate in the negotiations was ended
by the evident importance
of the valuations to the trustees. As the primary judge found, the raising by Mr
Tayles of his bid to $4.3m
and then to $4.4m was influenced by his acceptance
that there were sworn valuations at $4.15m and $4.28m.
- The
second part of the purchasers' case relevant to the appeal concerned the
valuations and their deployment. The purchasers pleaded
that the trustees for
sale impliedly represented, through the conversation between their agent, Mr
Macleod, and Mr Tayles, in all
the circumstances, that the sworn valuations were
soundly based. That representation was, it was argued, inaccurate and thus
misleading
or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive by reason of the
incorrect assumption and valuation integer that there were 7,000 croppable
acres
on the land, when in fact there were 5,325.
The primary judge's rejection of the purchasers' claims
- The
two parts of the purchasers' case at trial failed. The first failed because the
primary judge concluded that Mr Tayles did not
rely upon the advertisements in
purchasing the land for the price he did. This was so, it should be appreciated,
notwithstanding
that the primary judge accepted that the price he bid and the
higher price that he agreed to pay was influenced by a belief that
the property
comprised a total of 7,000 croppable acres. That belief, his Honour found, came
from other information.
- The
second failed because the primary judge concluded that the implied
representation was not made in the circumstances. His Honour
found, at [40] of
his reasons, that Mr Macleod said that the vendors had two sworn valuations
(which was true), and that this "amounted
to no more than that the valuations
had been obtained by the vendors and expressed opinions" as to the value of the
property.
- The
primary judge concluded that in any event no loss had been suffered in the
purchase of the land, because he said there was no
evidence that the land was
worth less than the purchasers paid for it.
- Further,
the primary judge concluded that even if the purchasers had relied on
contravening conduct in entering into the contracts,
they elected to affirm the
contracts and lost thereby, by their conduct, the right to complain about and
seek relief in respect of
contravening conduct.
- Having
rejected the purchasers' claims, the primary judge made orders on 19 April 2010
consequent upon what he found to be effective
termination of the contracts by
the trustees: (a) damages by way of unpaid interest on the contracts, unpaid
rates and unpaid water
charges and interest thereon ($319,767.67); (b) damages
for trespass after the lawful termination, though these were eliminated by
setting-off the value to the trustees of the crops grown on the land during that
period; and (c) the refusal to order the return
of the deposit.
The appeal
- The
appellants (purchasers) submitted that the primary judge committed six errors in
his conclusion that Mr Tayles did not rely upon
the first representation, being
the relevant advertisements in The Land and Stock & Land
newspapers. The Court refused leave to the purchasers to argue the sixth of
those grounds, that Mr Greg Kerr (one of the beneficiaries
of the trust property
for sale) had been fraudulent in passing on information about croppable acreage.
Fraud had not been pleaded,
particularised, run at the trial (in the
cross-examination of Mr Kerr or otherwise) or referred to in the written
submissions in
this Court. There was no foundation to allow this to be relied
upon in these circumstances. For these reasons, the Court refused
to permit
fraud to be argued on appeal.
- The
purchasers submitted that his Honour should have found that the second (implied)
representation was made.
- The
purchasers further submitted that there was evidence of loss and damage and that
there was no relevant operative affirmation of
the contracts.
- On
appeal the purchasers limited their claims to relief to avoidance of the
contracts and return of the deposit moneys.
- Resolution
of the appeal concerning reliance upon the first representation and concerning
the so-called affirmation of the contracts
and relief generally requires close
examination of the findings of the primary judge and the evidence. It is to be
recognised at
the outset of, and at all times during, the analysis that the case
was one in which credit was important.
The reliance or not on the first representation
- The
primary judge accepted that Mr Tayles entered into the contracts influenced by a
belief that there were 7,000 croppable acres:
[46] and [53] of his reasons. Mr
Coles QC submitted that this finding fell short of material reliance. I reject
that submission.
Croppable acreage was a key integer in Mr Tayles' assessment of
the value of the land on 31 May. It was a key integer of both valuations.
As the
primary judge said at [45] of his reasons, the area of croppable land was,
objectively, obviously highly material to a potential
purchaser.
- Mr
Tayles was cross-examined to the effect that the croppable acreage was not a
relevant consideration to him in entering the contracts.
(See for example Black
Book pp 61(13)-62(10) and 126(30-35).) The primary judge's findings can be
understood to be a rejection of
that attack. The croppable acreage was a
relevant factor to Mr Tayles. The primary judge found, however, that the belief
that the
property comprised 7,000 croppable acres came from sources other than
the advertisements in The Land and Stock & Land .
- The
primary judge dealt with the question of reliance on the first representation at
[44]-[53]. At [44], the primary judge noted that
orders under the Fair
Trading Act , s 72, such as under s 72(5)(a) depended on the Court finding
that a person has sustained, or is likely to sustain, loss or damage by the
contravening conduct. At
[45], his Honour noted that, ordinarily, contravening
conduct in the form of a misrepresentation will not be productive of loss or
damage unless "the recipient acts in reliance upon it". His Honour then
explained the importance of the disclaimer at [45] as follows:
"The Stock & Land advertisement was no doubt calculated to arouse
interest in the properties. The area of croppable land was, objectively,
obviously
highly material to a potential purchaser. It could have induced an
erroneous belief that the property comprised 7,000 croppable acres.
However, it
also included the disclaimer, set out above, which told readers to make and rely
on their own inquiries in order to determine
whether or not the information in
the advertisement was in fact accurate. Mr Tayles did just that. He checked the
areas of the allotments.
He checked and validated other matters important to
him. During his inspection of the property, he sought and obtained from Mr Kerr
information as to the size and croppable area of each of the paddocks, which he
recorded on a map. It was on the basis of that information,
rather than the
advertisement in Stock & Land , that he proceeded to prepare his
assessment of value, which informed his bid at the auction, and his starting
point for the subsequent
negotiations."
- The
primary judge continued at [46]:
"It needs to be borne in mind that the relevant conduct is not any
statement calculated to arouse or confirm a belief that the properties
comprised 7,000 croppable acres, but the specific statements
in Stock &
Land - no other statement is pleaded as relevant contravening conduct. The
advertisement may have aroused his interest in the property, but
while I accept
that the price that he bid - and the (higher) price that he eventually agreed to
pay - was influenced by a belief
that the property comprised a total of 7,000
croppable acres, that belief was ultimately based on the information provided by
Mr
Kerr rather than on the contents of the advertisement, containing as it did
the disclaimer. Because of the disclaimer, this is to
be distinguished from a
case in which the original representation persisted along with subsequent
representations [cf Morton v Black 183-4]; here, the later information
superseded that in the advertisement."
- At
[53] of his reasons, the primary judge said:
"I accept that Mr Tayles entered into the contracts influenced by a belief
that there were 7,000 croppable acres available. However,
although that belief
was initially generated by the advertisements in The Land and in Stock
& Land , Mr Tayles knew that he had to rely on his own inquiries, and by
the time of the auction his relevant belief was founded on what
he had
ascertained by inquiry from Mr Kerr and Mr Macleod and by inspection. Moreover,
he believed from the contractual provisions
that he was not entitled to rely on
representations dehors the contract, and that he did not do so is
confirmed by the absence of complaint on his part until the completion date -
despite his
discovery that there was a shortfall against his expectations as
early as June 2007, and despite his having raised all other manner
of complaints
with the Vendors. He did not rely on the contravening conduct complained of in
the proceedings, namely the advertisement
in Stock & Land , and that
conduct was therefore not productive of loss or damage."
- A
number of elements are present in this ultimate conclusion as to a lack of
reliance by Mr Tayles:
(a) the disclaimer in the advertisements in both The Land and Stock
& Land that interested parties had to rely on their own inquiries;
(b) the draft contractual provisions (special conditions 3.3 and 8) that he
was not entitled to rely on representations dehors the contracts;
(c) the making of his own inquiries, being what Mr Kerr and Mr Macleod told
him and what he saw on, and appreciated from, his own
inspection;
(d) the lack of complaint about any shortfall in croppable acreage after June
2007, in circumstances where complaints about other
matters were made; and
(e) an assessment of the evidence of Mr Tayles and necessarily, to a degree,
a finding rejecting his evidence that he entered the
contracts relying on the
first representation.
- The
passages from [46] and [53] set out above, in particular [46], appear to contain
a finding that Mr Kerr told Mr Tayles in May
2007 that the land comprised 7,000
croppable acres. The oral evidence of Mr Kerr (Black Book pp 105 and 106 (in
cross-examination)
and in particular 107 (in re-examination)) is support for
such a finding. Mr Coles, in re-examination, elicited the evidence that
in all
likelihood Mr Kerr told Mr Tayles that the land comprised 7,000 croppable acres,
he having (one can see from the cross-examination)
provided that information to
Mr Macleod (the agent) and the valuers. Yet, before this Court, Mr Coles
submitted that there was no
evidence that Mr Kerr said this to Mr Tayles and
that from an analysis of Mr Tayles' affidavit (to which I will come) he was told
other things about acreage (not being a complete description of the acreage) and
land quality, which was the sole basis for Mr Tayles'
deciding (on behalf of the
purchasers) to buy the land. An acceptance of this submission would, it seems to
me, have placed the respondents
in the more vulnerable position of there being
only one source of information to Mr Tayles of the 7,000 croppable acres - the
two
advertisements. Given that the primary judge in fact found the belief in
7,000 croppable acres materially relevant to the purchasers,
that would or may
have been sufficient to overturn the primary judge's conclusion as to reliance.
In my view, however, there is no
reason to conclude that the primary judge did
not mean what he said in [46] and that (in accordance with Mr Kerr's own
evidence,
led by Mr Coles) Mr Kerr told Mr Tayles in May 2007 that there were
around 7,000 croppable acres on the land.
- It
is to be noted at this point that no case was sought to be run at trial or on
appeal that the vendors were in any way legally responsible
for Mr Kerr (who
managed the properties) in what he said to Mr Tayles, or to the land agent who
placed the advertisements about croppable
acreage: cf Janssen-Gilag Pty Ltd v
Pfizer Pty Ltd [1992] FCA 437; (1992) 37 FCR 526 at 529.
- The
reference to information obtained by Mr Tayles from Mr Kerr and recorded on a
map was based on the affidavit of Mr Tayles of 10
July 2008. Mr Tayles did not
refer in his affidavit to all the paddocks, but rather some with an acreage
totalling more than in the
order of 1,000 acres. In inspecting the property with
Mr Macleod and Mr Kerr, Mr Tayles asked many questions and was given information
about the attributes of various paddocks and aspects of the property such as the
growing capacity of the land. Whilst Mr Tayles'
affidavit did not refer to Mr
Kerr telling him on this occasion that there were 7,000 croppable acres, there
was a finding that he
did and that (as I have already said) is supported by Mr
Kerr's evidence. Mr Tayles' affidavit (of 10 July 2008) at para 52 also
recounts
a conversation on the telephone with Mr Macleod on 14 May 2007 in which the
following exchange took place:
"Tayles: 'Please ask them anyway. I still haven't got enough on the
production figures. What can you tell me? How much can the property
earn? How
much rice can you grow on 400 acres?'
Macleod: 'At 4 tonnes per acre, that's 1600 tonnes at $300, that's $480,000,
plus stubble $140 per tonne, 2-1/2 bales to the tonne,
say 1000 tonnes at $140,
that's $140,000. Pump bore water from October to March at a cost of $150,000,
there's other costs, say $300,000
net. From 1500 sheep get say $20 per head for
wool. 3000 acres of dry crop at 1 tonne per acre, plus irrigation on top of
that. Lambs
normally get 2500, based on 100%, no, make that 80% twin lambs.
They're white Suffolk. Ultrasound scan them to confirm they're in
lamb, say sell
2000 at $70 per head. From 150 cows & calves you'll get say 140 weaners,
sell them at $400 per head.'
Tayles: 'You're ad says 7,000 acres in one place and 7,500 acres in another.'
Macleod: 'That's a typographical error.'
Tayles: 'How much does the property earn a year? What would you get off the
dry land crops?'
Macleod: 'I'll be conservative. 3000 acres at 1 tonne per acre at $250 per
tonne for wheat on farm gives $750,000. 2000 lambs at $60
gives $120,000. 100
yearlings at $400 gives $400,000. Rice 4 tonnes per acre at $200 per tonne, 400
acres gives $320,000, less the
cost of the water. They get 20" rainfall down
there. What does that come to?'
Tayles: '$1.23 million, gross, less water costs.'"
A contemporaneous note of Mr Tayles of the conversation was in evidence (Blue
Book Vol 2 pp 336-337). Mr Tayles was not cross-examined
to the effect that this
conversation did not take place.
- On
21 May 2007, Mr Tayles also received from Mr Macleod a facsimile which
identified the production capacity of the then current cropping
programme for
dry land crops as 3,000 to 4,500 acres. (This did not include lucerne or
irrigation paddocks.)
- The
conclusion as to lack of reliance was in part based on an adverse finding of
credit made against Mr Tayles. Most crucially, this
involved an episode in the
evidence that concerned special conditions 3.3 and 8 of the contracts. He was
cross-examined about his
knowledge of these clauses before entry into the
contracts. The purpose of this was to found the submission that Mr Tayles knew,
before the contracts were entered into,
that he had to make his own inquiries
and obtain his own information about the property, and that because he knew he
could not legally
rely on the advertisements, he thus, as a matter of fact, did
not rely on their contents. Parts of this cross-examination are set
out at [47]
of the primary judge's reasons.
- In
re-examination by his own counsel, Mr Tayles gave important evidence. He was
asked the following questions and answered as follows:
"Q. What impact, if any, did the reading of the contract have in your mind on
the truth or any other aspect of the reliability of
the statements in the
advertisement about acreage? ... Q. Is that question clear to you? I will put it
again if it is not? A. I believed
from the contract I had to make my own
inquiries and I believed that having done so I couldn't complain about things in
ads or said
to me by the vendors."
- The
following day the appellants were given leave to adduce further evidence from Mr
Tayles about what was said to be an error in
that evidence. The further evidence
was as follows:
"2 When I gave that answer I assumed that I was being asked about my state of
mind when, after I signed the contract but before I
obtained legal advice, I
first realised that the plaintiffs had been sold land containing less than 7000
croppable acres. My answer
related to that point in time, and not to the point
in time when I agreed to buy the land and signed the contracts on 1 June 2007.
3. On 1 June 2007 although I had read the contract, it did not occur to me that
what I had learned about available cropping acreage
on the land from the
advertisement might be something upon which I should not rely or on which it
might be unwise to rely. ... 5.
When, shortly after I signed the contract, I
first ascertained that the land contained less than 7000 croppable acres, I
re-read
the contract and formed the view that because of its terms, I could not
complain about the fact that less than 7000 croppable acres
existed on the land.
That is why I gave the answer at T71 referred to above."
- Mr
Tayles was then cross-examined, at some length. The primary judge set out that
cross-examination over four pages at [50] of his
reasons. Part of that
cross-examination was to repeat the question I have set out at [37] above. To
that question the following answer
was now given:
"I believed the advertisements."
- The
discussion by the primary judge about this evidence was set out in [51]-[52] of
his reasons, before his conclusion in [53], which
I have earlier set out:
"[51] I do not accept Mr Tayles' belated attempt to suggest that he did not
understand the impact of the special conditions on pre-contractual
representations when he first read the contract, yet did so when he read it a
second time after exchange. He was an uncommonly careful
and cautious witness,
who took great care to ensure that he understood questions before answering
them. As the further cross-examination
showed, the context of the question and
answer that he later sought to qualify was quite clear; the timeframe to which
it was addressed
was plainly pre-auction, when he first read the contract; and
there is no possible basis on which it could have been misunderstood,
as Mr
Tayles later claimed, as being referable to a second post-contractual reading of
the contract. Moreover, his original cross-examination,
which naturally preceded
the answer in re-examination which he sought to explain away, contained similar
statements plainly referable
to a time before he executed the contracts ...
Accordingly, I conclude that Mr Tayles entered into the contracts believing that
he
was not entitled to rely on pre-contractual representations dehors the
contract.
[52] Mr Tayles suspected that there was a shortfall in croppable land as
early as 5 June 2007, but he said nothing of it; he kept
his thoughts to
himself. Indeed, he effectively told the Vendors that the only impediment to
settlement was the chattels dispute.
He did not raise complaint about any
shortfall of croppable land, despite agitation of other matters with the
Vendors, until 10 March
2008, the date due for completion under the notice to
complete - he says because only then did he receive legal advice that under
the
Trade Practices legislation he might be entitled to raise the matter
notwithstanding the special condition. Yet he had not refrained from advancing
all manner of other complaints, ill-conceived or not, and it is quite remarkable
that they contained no word about the shortfall
in croppable acres. Although he
claimed that this was because he thought he was precluded by the contract from
doing so, he felt
no inhibition in raising the alleged "oral" deal in respect of
plant and equipment, and his protestation that he did not raise the
issue of
croppable land because he thought he was precluded by the contract from doing so
is not credible."
- This
evidence and these conclusions should not be misunderstood. The primary judge
was not saying as a matter of legal syllogism that
knowledge of the effect of
special conditions 3.3 and 8 meant that as a fact Mr Tayles could not have
relied on the first representation.
Rather, his Honour was dealing with the
late-given (and contradictory) evidence that Mr Tayles did not appreciate the
effect of the
contractual terms before he entered the contracts. That was
rejected on credit. That meant that Mr Tayles knew (or thought - there
being an
error of law underlying his belief) he could not rely on or complain about the
advertisements. That formed the foundation
for the primary judge's conclusion,
as a matter of fact, that Mr Tayles knew (or thought) he had to be otherwise
satisfied of any
relevant matter (one of which was the area of croppable land)
from sources other than the advertisements.
The criticisms of the primary judge's conclusion of non-reliance on the
first representation
- The
five criticisms made about the conclusion as to reliance and the reasoning
underpinning it were as follows:
(a) the finding was inevitably infected by an adverse view of Mr Tayles'
credit from evidence that he gave about the chattels contract
and which was
wrongly formed, in that it was illogical and in conflict with the evidence;
(b) the finding was affected by an incorrect treatment of the disclaimer in
the advertisements that the effect of the advertisements
could not persist;
(c) the primary judge misapplied the fact that Mr Tayles had read and
understood special conditions 3.3 and 8 in concluding from that
that Mr Tayles
did not rely on the first representation. That involved, it was submitted, a non
sequitur: he knew he could not sue
on, therefore he did not rely on, the
representation;
(d) the primary judge wrongly concluded that the information from Mr Kerr and
his own inspection supplanted the effect of the first
representation; and
(e) the primary judge wrongly concluded that, after he entered into
possession of the property and came to suspect that there was
a shortage of
croppable land, Mr Tayles did not complain, when in fact he did.
- These
arguments are inter-related. The part played by the primary judge's view of Mr
Tayles' evidence was important. The first of
the above criticisms involved
revealing that the credit finding about the chattel issue (which was otherwise
substantially irrelevant
to the resolution of the dispute - a "non-issue", as
the primary judge called it in [34] of his reasons) was flawed. That finding
did, as the primary judge said at [34], inform a judgment about Mr Tayles'
credit. We were taken to evidence (the precise and exhaustive
detail of which
need not be traversed) that revealed the basis for the formulation of the
purchase prices in the contracts for the
sale of land and chattels. There was
some evidence that the vendors perceived the market value of the chattels to be
in the order
of $500,000. The recorded value of the chattels in schedules
relevant to taxation was, however, in the order of $120,000. Sale at
$500,000
might have produced a taxable profit. This perception led to apportionment of
$120,000 to the chattels contract as described
in [8] of the primary judge's
reasons (see [11] above).
- Mr
Tayles was cross-examined about the chattels and their price. At [35] of his
reasons the primary judge dealt with what he referred
to as Mr Tayles' "attempt
to explain the apportionment of consideration between the land and chattels
contracts" as "artificial in
the extreme", and his Honour said:
"...he was well-familiar with the concept of apportioning consideration to
separate contracts, and in this respect his evidence involved
ex post facto
invention."
- The
argument was that Mr Tayles' cross-examination, set out at length at [35] of his
Honour's reasons, was in fact in accordance with
his earlier findings. The
answers in cross-examination were to the effect that the $120,000 (the
documented value) being the whole
of the expressed consideration in the chattel
contract was only a partial payment for the chattels. It was this explanation
that
the primary judge found unsatisfactory.
- There
are at least two answers to this argument. First, the primary judge did not
misunderstand or forget his earlier findings. Rather,
the sophistication of Mr
Tayles' experience and his demeanour assisted in the conclusion that he well
knew that the written down
value was the whole of the price for the
chattels, even if the vendors thought them to be worth more. Secondly, even if
the evidence revealed a misunderstanding
only allowing more gentle conclusions
as to Mr Tayles, it cannot be shown that this would have materially affected the
primary judge's
ultimate conclusions about reliance, to the extent that they
were based on the assessment of Mr Tayles' evidence. From the reasons
and the
transcript, there are other occasions in which Mr Tayles' evidence and manner of
approach to his answers probably gave ample
foundation for the primary judge's
view of Mr Tayles' lack of reliability; in particular, for instance, the
evidence discussed above
about when Mr Tayles appreciated the effect of special
conditions 3.3 and 8. Thus, any error has not been shown to have had a material
effect on the operative conclusions reached by the primary judge about reliance
on the advertisements.
- It
should be said that at no place in his reasons did the primary judge say that
because of his adverse view of Mr Tayles' credit,
he did not accept Mr Tayles'
evidence that he relied on the representation. That conclusion, however, was
implicit in the reasons
and conclusions (see especially [53]); both parties
approached the appeal on that basis; the cross-examination of Mr Tayles was
conducted
on the basis that he should not be believed.
- The
other four criticisms ((b) - (e) in [42] above) are interconnected. Important to
the assessment of these criticisms are [45],
[46], [51], [52] and [53] of the
primary judge's reasons that have been set out above.
- The
second and fourth criticisms ((b) and (d) in [42] above) involve the treatment
of the disclaimer. The disclaimer was no doubt
intended to protect the agent, by
stating that the agent was not the source of the information and did not purport
to do anything
more than pass the information on: Butcher v Lachlan Elder
Realty Pty Ltd [2004] HCA 60; 218 CLR 592 at 609 [51]. The disclaimer also
asserted that the information came from the vendor. Importantly, however, the
reader was told to make his or
her own inquiries. The purpose of these
statements was, of course, the protection of the agent. Mr Tayles did make his
own inquiries.
The primary judge found that what Mr Tayles in fact relied on was
what he was told by Mr Kerr, in the course of his inspection of
the property.
The primary judge thus gave significant weight to the effect, and understanding
by Mr Tayles, of the exhortation to
find independent verification. It might be
thought that this was nothing more than a confirming, rather than supplanting,
role for
the evidence of Mr Kerr as to croppable area. This is especially so
since the disclaimer effectively told the reader to go to the
source of the
information and that the agent was only passing on information from that source.
This is, in effect, what Mr Tayles
did, speaking to Mr Kerr, who ran the
properties. In that context, one view of the events may have been that Mr Tayles
was confirming
with the source of the information, the information in the
advertisements. Nevertheless, the primary judge drew the conclusion of
non-reliance, implicitly in part, on the basis of his evaluation of Mr Tayles'
evidence and credit.
- The
third criticism ((c) in [42] above) was that Mr Tayles' belief (wrong in law as
it happened) that if he relied on the advertisements
he could have no legal
remedy did not mean that he did not rely in fact on the advertisements, but
rather that he could not complain
about it. Thus, the lack of complaint said to
be confirmation of non-reliance in the sentence beginning with "Moreover" in
[53],
may be consistent with in fact relying on the advertisement, but believing
that complaint would be futile, rather than not relying
at all on the
representation in the advertisements. I would not attribute to the primary judge
a logical fallacy in his fact finding
that because Mr Tayles believed he had no
legal ground to sue he could not, as a matter of fact, have relied on the
information about
croppable area in the advertisements. Nevertheless, his
Honour's expression of reasons, especially in [53], is troubling.
- As
to the fifth complaint ((e) in [42] above), the lack of complaint, even if
correct, is difficult to reconcile with other findings.
If Mr Tayles thought he
could not complain about the advertisements, a lack of complaint conforms to
that assumption; but he would
have complained, one would have thought, about
what Mr Kerr told him. The lack of complaint might perhaps be seen as more
potently
relevant to an assertion that he did not rely on croppable acreage at
all. Yet the primary judge, correctly, found that consideration
to be highly
relevant. Also relevant is the fact that the precise acreage from photographic
mapping was not available until some
time in late 2007 or early 2008.
- Ultimately,
however, there was a finding based implicitly on credit as to what Mr Tayles
relied on. Whilst troubled by the reasoning
of the primary judge, I would not
allow the appeal on this basis. The finding of lack of reliance was one of fact,
partly based on
demeanour and credit. It has not been demonstrated that his
Honour was wrong in that conclusion.
The second representation
- The
primary judge concluded that the second and implied representation that the
valuations were soundly based was not made in the
circumstances.
- I
respectfully disagree with that conclusion. There is no doubt that Mr Macleod
was acting for the vendors. His part of the conversation
referred to at [12]
above carried the clear inference that the valuations were reliable. He called
them "sworn valuations". This
was to give weight to their formality, detail and
reliability. The whole content of the discussion implied the reliability of the
valuations. In my view, the implied representation was made. The
characterisation of conduct as misleading or deceptive is to be
taken from all
the circumstances: Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd [2009] HCA
25; 238 CLR 304 at 318-319 [24]- [25] (French CJ) and 341-342 [101]-[102] (Gummow
J, Hayne J, Heydon J and Kiefel J). The conduct of Mr Macleod in this
conversation was
misleading in that it carried a representation as to the
fundamental reliability of the valuations. In fact both were crucially flawed
by
reference to incorrect assumptions about there being 7,000 croppable acres.
- There
is no doubt from the uncontested events that the existence of and reference to
valuations brought about a significant increase
in price that Mr Tayles was
willing to pay. In that respect, the conduct was clearly relied upon.
- The
primary judge found that in any event no loss was shown because of a lack of
evidence that the land was worth less than the contract
price. Yet, as the
appellants submitted, there were two valuations in evidence - the
contemporaneous valuations from which one could
infer that, in the view of those
valuers, the land would have had a significantly lower value if the croppable
area was in the order
of 5,325 acres. Parts of the land had different values
ascribed to them per hectare by the valuers. The Riverlink valuation land
values
ranged from $650 per hectare to $1,200 per hectare. Given the acreage, something
in the order of $750 per hectare as an average
can be taken. That could lead to
a variation in calculated value of something in the order of $500,000 or more. A
slightly higher
figure can be derived from the HMC valuation.
- One
can thus readily infer that had the valuations been about $500,000 lower, Mr
Tayles may not have had to pay much more than he
had bid at the auction. Mr
Macleod would have had to put lower figures than he did to seek to extract a
higher price from Mr Tayles.
However, the nature of the misleading conduct was
not a representation about value or about croppable acreage, but rather about
the
existence of reliable valuations. If the misrepresentation about having
reliable valuations had not been made and no explanation given for why
the vendors were refusing to budge from their bargaining position above
$4m it
is unclear what would have happened. There was evidence (from what Mr Macleod
said) that the vendors would not go below the
valuation sums. In these
circumstances, it is problematic whether the contracts would have proceeded. Mr
Tayles did not prove affirmatively
one way or the other what would have
occurred. Some evidence of a hypothetical character was rejected by the primary
judge. (See
Black Book p 3(36-45).) No complaint was made about this ruling. The
Court was not shown the rejected affidavits. What can be said,
however, is that
the misleading conduct deprived Mr Tayles of the bargaining opportunity to argue
for a lower price or to abandon
the negotiation, without having his appreciation
of the negotiation affected by the second (misleading) representation. One would
need an evidential basis for any conclusion or even assumption that Mr Tayles
would have paid significantly above the price he was
offering, which was, in
fact, not far off the valuers' (adjusted and imputed) views of full value.
- It
will be necessary in due course to say something more about loss and damage. It
suffices to say for the present that it would be
a curious conclusion that
parties which had relied on misleading or deceptive conduct to enter valuable
commercial contracts in circumstances
where the conduct that was misleading or
deceptive affected the negotiation of the price in a material way had not
suffered loss,
because it had not been shown on the balance of probabilities
what would have happened in the negotiations had there been no misleading
or
deceptive conduct. Nevertheless, the proceeding was not conducted on the basis
that the purchasers were entitled to recompense
for the loss of that chance or
commercial opportunity. Rather, as finally articulated at the hearing and on
appeal, the purchasers
sought the rescission of the contracts for the sale of
land and the return of the three deposits, totalling $436,800.
- The
primary judge further found that as a matter of discretion no relief should be
given because the purchasers had affirmed the contracts.
At [57]-[60] of his
reasons, the primary judge said the following:
"[57] As to discretion, it is well-established that, although affirmation may
not necessarily be fatal to a claim for statutory avoidance
under Trade
Practices Act, s 87, and its equivalents, nonetheless the equitable
principles concerning rescission provide safe if not exclusive guidance as to
the
exercise of the discretion given by that section [ Yorke v Ross Lucas Pty
Ltd (No 2 [1982] FCA 180; (1982) 45 ALR 299; (1982) 69 FLR 116, 134-5;
Myers v Transpacific Pastoral Co Pty Ltd (1986) ATPR 40-673; Crisp v
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (1994) ATPR 41-294 41,942; Henjo
Investments Pty Ltd v Collins Marrickville Pty Ltd [1988] FCA 40; (1988) 39
FCR 546, 564-5; [1988] FCA 40; (1988) 79 ALR 83, 102-3; Munchies v Belperio
, 705, 714].
[58] Assuming that reliance had been established, then - had a claim for
avoidance been brought unequivocally, and before termination
of the contracts -
it may have been on strong ground. However, the Purchasers advanced no such
claim before termination. To the contrary,
far from rescinding the contracts
when they discovered the shortfall in croppable land compared to what they had
expected, they repeatedly
affirmed them. Having gone into possession, they
remained in possession, and asserted that they were entitled so to do. They
cultivated
the land, harvested the crops, and asserted that they were entitled
to their proceeds. They lodged a caveat claiming an interest
in the land. They
sued for specific performance of the contracts (albeit at a reduced purchase
price). They first mentioned rescission
only much later, in their opening
address at the final hearing on 16 March 2009; until then they maintained that
they were ready,
willing, able and entitled to complete the contracts.
[59] In that context, the Purchasers must be taken to have elected to affirm
the contracts and sue for any damages occasioned by the
misrepresentation -
which, as already mentioned, are prima facie the difference between the
contract price and the true value of the subject matter. It would be
inappropriate now to permit rescission, in circumstances where it would
properly be characterised as not being for the purposes of avoiding the
consequences
of the contravening conduct, but for the purposes of avoiding the
consequences of a default attributable not to the misrepresentation
but to the
Purchasers' inability or refusal to complete, in accordance with their terms or
at all, the contracts that they had elected
to affirm.
[60] As I am not prepared to make an order avoiding the contract, it follows
that the prima facie entitlement of the Vendors to terminate is
sustained. Other than the relief sought under the Fair Trading Act , no
basis was advanced on which the Vendors might not be entitled to terminate. It
follows that the Vendors have validly and effectively
terminated the contracts
for default by the Purchasers, and have forfeited the deposits (subject to the
claim for relief against
forfeiture under s 55(2A), addressed below."
- There
is no doubt (and the contrary was not argued) that equitable principles provide
guidance to exercising the discretion given
by the Fair Trading Act , s
72. No detailed legal discussion of that proposition in the circumstances is
thus required. A central consideration is that of restitutio in integrum
.
- The
purchasers first took a view that they wished to enforce the contracts as varied
under the Fair Trading Act at a reduced price. At all relevant times in
the dispute the purchasers claimed a right to a price reduction as part of the
measure
of their damage, by the misleading or deceptive conduct. The primary
judge's statement that the purchasers repeatedly affirmed the
contracts is not,
with respect, entirely correct. They did not seek to affirm the contracts
unqualified by enforcement of statutory
rights given by the Fair Trading Act
. Rather, they sought a remedy under that legislation. At the commencement
of the trial, they changed their minds as to the remedy
they wished to pursue
under that Act. They sought avoidance of the contracts, damages and return of
the deposits. At no time did
they waive or abandon their rights under the Act;
nor did they affirm the contracts, without the legal affectation of a remedy
under
the Act.
- The
relief now sought is the avoidance of the contracts and return of the deposits,
which were $83,000, $197,000 and $156,800, totalling
$436,800.
- It
is first necessary to say something about causation under the Fair Trading
Act before turning to relief.
Causation under the Fair Trading Act
- Whether
or not any, and if so what, relief should be given depends in significant part
on the proper answer to the question as to
what, on the evidence, is the loss or
damage of the purchasers by the misleading and deceptive conduct of the vendors
through their
agent Mr Macleod. The relief sought was avoidance of the contracts
and an order for the return of the deposits. The vendors resist
that claim
submitting that no loss or damage has been shown to have been caused by any
misleading or deceptive conduct. Rather, they
submitted, building on the
findings of the primary judge regarding affirmation, the purchasers until the
first day of the hearing
of the case wanted to buy the land (albeit at a reduced
price). They were unable to do so, it was submitted, for reasons unconnected
with any misleading or deceptive conduct - that is their apparent inability
(presumably financial) to complete.
- It
is first necessary to say something of the causal question embedded within the
phrase "by conduct" in the Fair Trading Act , ss 68 and 72 (and the
equivalent provisions of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), as then in
force.
- In
Wardley Australia Ltd v Western Australia [1992] HCA 55; 175 CLR 514
Mason CJ, Dawson J, Gaudron J and McHugh J stated that the Trade Practices
Act , s 82(1) (the equivalent of the Fair Trading Act , s 68(1))
should be understood as taking up the common law practical or common sense
concept of causation discussed in March v Stramare (E & MH) Pty Ltd
[1991] HCA 12; 171 CLR 506. One aspect of that case which remains
uncontentious is that causation in terms of legal responsibility does not
require the impugned
cause to be the sole cause; it must be a cause: March v
Stramare at 509. The same obtains in respect of the causation question
embedded in the phrase "by conduct" in the provision under consideration:
Henville v Walker [2001] HCA 52; 206 CLR 459 at 469 [14] (Gleeson CJ),
480 [59]-[60] (Gaudron J), 493-494 [106]-[109] (McHugh J), 509 [163] (Hayne J)
and 507 [153] (Gummow J, agreeing with
McHugh J and Hayne J).
- In
all causal inquiries, the legal framework that gives rise to the question is
critical: Environmental Agency v Empress Car Co (Abertillery) Ltd [1998]
UKHL 5; [1999] 2 AC 22 at 29 and 31 (Lord Hoffmann); Chappel v Hart
[1998] HCA 55; 195 CLR 232 at 238 [7] (Gaudron J), 255-256 [62]-[64] (Gummow
J) and 285 [122] Hayne J; Travel Compensation Fund v Tambree (t/as R Tambree
& Associates) [2005] HCA 69; 224 CLR 627 at 642-643 [45] (Gummow J and
Hayne J); Kuwait Airways Corporation v Iraqi Airways Co (Nos 4 and 5)
[2002] UKHL 19; [2002] 2 AC 883 at 1091 [70]- [71] (Lord Nicholls of
Birkenhead); Rosenberg v Percival [2001] HCA 18; 205 CLR 434 at 460-461
[83]- [85] (Gummow J); and see Campomar Sociedad, Limitada v Nike
International Ltd [2000] HCA 12; 202 CLR 45 at 83-84 [98] and 85 [103]
(Gleeson CJ, Gaudron J, McHugh J, Gummow J, Kirby J, Hayne J and Callinan J) and
Elbourne v Gibbs [2006] NSWCA 127 at [74]. The legal context and relevant
rule of responsibility direct one to the relevant legal policy and purpose of
the causal question,
thus affecting the evaluation of the extent of the required
factual involvement of the impugned act or omission in assessing legal
responsibility for the loss. An example of the relevance of the content of the
rule of responsibility is the duty of a doctor to
warn a patient of material
risk inherent in proposed treatment. The causal conclusion of Gummow J in
Chappel v Hart was founded upon the nature and purpose of the duty
concerning the right to know of the risks in order to make an informed choice
at
258 [70], as were the views of the majority in Chester v Afshar [2004]
UKHL 41; [2005] 1 AC 134 at 146 [24] (Lord Steyn), 153 [55] and 154 [59] (Lord
Hope of Craighead) and 163 [91] (Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe).
- These
are not new concepts. They can be seen to be encompassed within the value
judgments and policy considerations referred to by
Mason CJ in March v
Stramare ; and see also Barnes v Hay (1988) 12 NSWLR 337 at 353
(Mahoney JA) and Fitzgerald v Penn [1954] HCA 74; 91 CLR 268 at 278
(Dixon CJ, Fullagar J and Kitto J).
- The
relevance of these considerations to the provisions providing for relief under
the Trade Practices Act and its State and Territory companion
legislation, such as the Fair Trading Act , can be appreciated from the
fact that such legislation is "fundamentally remedial and protective
legislation" giving effect to "matters
of high public policy"; and is thus to be
construed so as to give the fullest relief which the fair meaning of the
legislation will
allow: Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd [1998] HCA 69;
196 CLR 494 at 528-529 [99]- [103]. These descriptors of the legislation are apt
because the legislative purpose is to promote, in the broad sphere of Australian
economic
activity (trade and commerce), informed commercial activity, not based
on misinformation, but rather on accurate information. That
purpose goes beyond
honest dealing in good faith.
- In
this context, the High Court has been clear that common law analogues for the
understanding of application of Acts such as the
Fair Trading Act cannot
be imposed: Marks v GIO at 503-504 [15]-[17] (Gaudron J), 510 [38]
(McHugh J, Hayne J and Callinan J), 528-529 [99]-[103] (Gummow J) and 549 [152]
(Kirby
J); Henville v Walker at 501-502 [130]-[131] (McHugh J); I
& L Securities Pty Ltd v HTW Valuers (Brisbane) Pty Ltd [2002] HCA 41;
210 CLR 109 at 124-125 [42]- [48] (Gaudron J, Gummow J and Hayne J) and Murphy
v Overton Investments Pty Ltd [2004] HCA 3; 216 CLR 388 at 407 [44] (Gleeson
CJ, McHugh J, Gummow J, Kirby J, Hayne J, Callinan J and Heydon J), though cf
Campbell v Backoffice Investments at 341 [102]. One cannot argue from
common law premises to a conclusion of the construction or application of
relevant provisions
of the Act. Earlier cases such as Gates v City Mutual
Life Assurance Society Ltd [1986] HCA 3; 160 CLR 1, Wardley and
Kizbeau Pty Ltd v WG & B Pty Ltd [1995] HCA 4; 184 CLR 281 must be
viewed in the context and light of the later cases.
- The
inquiry is for a sufficient and direct link between the conduct and the
consequences: see McCarthy v McIntyre [1999] FCA 784 at [48] (Hill J,
Sackville J and Katz J) in order that the purpose and policy of the legislation
be vindicated. That policy can be seen to
be the upholding of the norm of
conduct laid down in s 42, as fundamental and protective legislation.
Relief
- As
the primary judge said, relief under the Fair Trading Act is premised
upon there being a causal connection between the misleading or deceptive conduct
and loss or damage, actual or anticipated.
- The
respondents submitted that the use of the contemporaneous valuations to impute a
lower value was piecemeal and inadequate to prove
the true value of the land at
the time of entry into the contracts. Without such valuation evidence there
could be no conclusion
that the land that had been acquired had not been worth
what the purchasers paid for it. That was the approach of the primary judge.
With respect, this is too narrow a view of loss and damage and it imposes upon
the Fair Trading Act a tortious analogue of damage. The misleading
conduct affected the price negotiations to assist in the persuasion of Mr Tayles
to
offer more for the land, which he did. That he may have got something worth
what he paid does not gainsay the imposition of the misleading
conduct on his
negotiation and the real likelihood that either he would not have entered into
the contracts or would not have been
persuaded to pay what he did for the land.
In Marks v GIO at 514 [48] McHugh J, Hayne J and Callinan J said that:
" A party that is mislead suffers no prejudice or disadvantage unless it
is shown that the party could have acted in some other way
(or refrained from
acting in some way) which would have been of greater benefit or less detriment
to it than the course in fact adopted.
" (Emphasis added.)
- Once
it has been shown that, in reliance on the misleading conduct, Mr Tayles raised
his price and entered into the contracts, it
was for the respondents to raise
the issue and bring evidence, at least to discharge an evidential onus, that
even had the misleading
conduct not taken place, the purchasers would have
entered into the contracts for the price they did: see generally J D Heydon
Cross on Evidence (8 th Aust Ed 2010) at 311-313 [7210]-[7215]. The
primary judge made no findings on this question. Nor was it put to him that he
should
so find.
- It
is unrealistic to attempt to unravel what would have happened in any such
different negotiations. Although a loss of commercial
opportunity case was not
run, one can at least conclude ( Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL [1994]
HCA 4; 179 CLR 332) that the inability to prove what would have happened in
those negotiations does not cause the purchasers here to fail for having
not
proved any loss or damage.
- There
was evidence that Mr Tayles had a desire to subdivide the land, which reflected
a potential for increased value. The purchasers
remained in occupation of the
land even after they became aware of the perceived misrepresentations. The doubt
about the croppable
area arose in Mr Tayles' mind shortly after the auction in
mid 2007. He became aware of the precise croppable area in late 2007 or
early
2008. He nevertheless wished to continue with possession and use of the land,
but pressed for a reduction of price. These were
commercial decisions made with
due regard for self interest in circumstances of knowledge of what was viewed as
the existence of
misrepresentations.
- The
contracts contained special condition 20 providing for payment of 1 per cent
interest per month from 31 August 2007 monthly in
arrears on the balance of the
outstanding purchase price. By special condition 23 the purchasers agreed to
meet all outgoings in
respect of the subject properties from 1 June 2007.
- These
sums were calculated by the primary judge as follows. First, as to interest, he
calculated the sums owing under each contract
for the period 1 September 2007 to
12 March 2008 when the contracts should have been completed. These sums totalled
$251,089.55 and
that sum carried interest from 13 March 2008. (See [76] of the
primary judge's reasons.)
- Secondly,
various sums by way of outgoings in the form of council rates totalling
$12,109.68 were not paid and carried interest from
1 September 2008.
- Thirdly,
there was a sum of $4,048.35 for water usage with interest thereon from 13 March
2008.
- The
claim for trespass from the period after 20 March 2008 to cessation of
occupation of the properties on 6 April 2009 was provided
for by an award of
damages using as a measure the rental value of the land; but it was agreed, and
noted by the primary judge in
his orders, that the value to the vendors of the
crops grown on the land during the period March 2008 to April 2009, which his
Honour
declared the vendors entitled to retain, exceeded those damages.
Therefore no amount was ordered to be paid by the purchasers in
respect of the
trespass.
- In
this context what relief should be given?
- Though
the misleading conduct affected the entry into the contracts, the entry into
possession, remaining in possession (after becoming
aware of the perceived
misrepresentations) and the farming of the land can be seen to a greater or
lesser degree to flow from the
commercial desire to occupy and employ the land.
The misrepresentation went fundamentally to price, through its effect on
negotiation.
Special conditions 20 and 23 were bargained for and acceptable. The
misleading conduct did not affect them. It is entirely just that
a fee be paid
for occupation of the land. The bargain for that was agreed as referable to the
purchase price. It is also just that
the outgoings and water used be paid for.
It might be thought that an increment of interest should be deducted, being that
reflecting
what might be seen to be the increment of extra price that the
misleading conduct brought about. On balance, I think that kind of
precise
refinement is unnecessary. This is especially so in circumstances in which the
evidence of value of the land (imputed from
the two contemporaneous valuations)
was not the subject of direct evidence or cross-examination. An increment of
monthly interest
paid on the purchase price would be commercially fair and in
accordance with the bargain of the parties.
- Thus,
in my view, an appropriate exercise of discretion would be to make an order for
the return of the deposit, but not otherwise
interfere with the orders of the
primary judge. Though return of the deposit was approached at trial on the basis
of the operation
of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW), s 55(2A), the use of
the Fair Trading Act to achieve the same result is conformable with the
conduct of the case and the appeal. If the judgment sum of $319,767.67 has not
been paid, the $436,800 can be set-off. Interest should run on the return of the
deposit from 14 July 2008 being the date of the
filing of the amended statement
of claim, first claiming its return.
- Though
the parties addressed the Court on relief, the form of relief that I have
suggested was not addressed by either side. I would,
therefore, make orders to
give the parties an opportunity, to be taken within 21 days, to make submissions
as to the appropriate
orders and as to costs, having served on each other draft
submissions within 14 days. The submissions on relief and costs should
be no
longer than five pages for each side and, subject to the views of the Court and
any application that might be made, the remaining
issues can be dealt with on
the papers.
- BASTEN
JA: I agree with the orders proposed by Allsop P and with his Honour's
reasons therefor.
- YOUNG
JA: I agree with Allsop P.
- It
is often useful, though not always so, to test statutory unfairness with the
parties' rights under general principles of equity.
- Before
it was clear that the purchaser could not finance the purchase even at a reduced
price, it sought specific performance with
compensation.
- It
is doubtful whether this claim would have succeeded under general equitable
principles (see eg Abraham v Mallon (1975) 1 BPR 9157) as there was no
defect in title in view of the way the property being sold was described in the
contract.
- However,
I would have thought that there was a good claim here for return of the deposit
under s 55(2A) of the Conveyancing Act 1919.
- The
primary judge in [98] of his reasons said:
"There is no injustice or unconscionability in the Vendors retaining the
deposit, in circumstances where they will incur holding costs,
it is not
apparent that they will receive a windfall, and the Purchasers, knowing of the
misrepresentation of which they complain,
elected to affirm the contracts, but
thereafter defaulted in completion, and have not established that they would
have suffered any
loss on completion. I therefore decline to order return of the
deposit, in whole or in part, under s 55(2A)."
- Although
there was a challenge to the decision, little was actually put with respect to
it.
- It
is trite law that to succeed under s 55(2A), the purchaser must establish that
it would be unjust or inequitable to allow the vendors to retain the deposit.
The discretion under
the section is a broad one. I agree, with respect, with the
observations as to its scope and application made by Ball J in Baird v
Chambers (2010) 15 BPR 28337 at [12] et seq.
- Here
as disclosed in the reasoning of the learned President there was unfairness
which flowed from the vendor's camp. This unfairness
seriously affected the
purchaser. Even taking into account the factors mentioned by the trial judge,
there was a good case for return
of the deposit.
- However,
as the point was not strongly argued, I would merely join in the President's
analysis based on the statutes.
***********************
Amendments
07 Sep 2011 grammatical Paragraphs: 71
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