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[2011] NSWSC 1289
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Syndication Capital Group Pty Limited v MDR Cornish Investments Pty Limited [2011] NSWSC 1289 (6 October 2011)
Last Updated: 1 December 2011
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Case Title:
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Syndication Capital Group Pty Limited v MDR
Cornish Investments Pty Limited
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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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Equity Division - Duty
List
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Before:
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Decision:
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Caveat extended until further order.
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Catchwords:
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REAL PROPERTY - Application to extend operation of
caveat - caveator must show claim has or may have substance - test akin to that
for interlocutory injunctions - caveator claims interest described as 'equitable
fee simple as purchaser of exchanged contract for
sale' and as beneficiary of a
constructive trust - seriously arguable that contracts exchanged and/or
circumstances give rise to
constructive trust exist - caveat said to be
defective in form as deals with interest in four lots whilst contract pertained
to only
one lot - possible for plaintiff to obtain relief relating to whole of
subject land - caveat also allegedly defective as misdescribes
contract - defect
overlooked under (NSW) Real Property Act 1900, s 74L - plaintiff has seriously
arguable claim - balance of convenience factors include defendant being unable
to obtain finance and incurring
interest costs - plaintiff and plaintiff's
principal proffer undertaking as to damages - Court will only allow caveator's
priority
to be jeopardised in rare circumstances - caveat extended.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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Syndication Capital Group Pty Limited (plaintiff)
MDR Cornish Investments Pty Limited (defendant)
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Representation
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Counsel: Dr B Glennon (plaintiff) Mr W Young
(defendant)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: David H. Cohen & Co Solicitor
(plaintiff) Bransgrove Lawyers (defendant)
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT (EX
TEMPORE)
- HIS
HONOUR: On or about 21 July 2011 the plaintiff Syndication Capital Pty Limited
lodged a caveat in respect of land of which the
defendant MDR Cornish
Investments Pty Limited is the registered proprietor, comprised in folio
identifiers X/XXXXXXX, X/XXXXXXX,
X/XXXXXXX and X/XXXXXXX, which together
comprise a development site at Ryde. The caveat prohibits the actions described
in item 1
of schedule 2, namely, the recording in the register of any dealing
other than a plan affecting the estate or interest claimed by
the caveator and
set out in schedule 1. The estate or interest claimed by the caveator is
described as follows:
1. Equitable fee simple as purchaser under an exchanged contract for sale of
the land;
2. The Caveatee had consented to the registration of a caveat by the
caveator, arising from a letter sent by the Caveator [ sic ] - possible
Caveatee, dated 20 December 2010;
3. Beneficiary of a constructive trust, by virtue of the following facts:
(a) By words and conduct the Registered Proprietor expressly and by necessary
implication represented to the Caveator that there was
a common intention
between the parties to provide the Caveator with a future interest in the
property.
b) By reason of such words and conduct the Caveator worked for the Caveatee
as a project manager of the Caveatee's development on
a block of units situated
at unit XX/XXX-XXX Blaxland Road, Ryde in excess of 18 months when the Caveator
rendered a Tax Invoice
for $495,000 but in lieu of payment the Caveatee agreed
to transfer Lot 16 in an unregistered strata plan to the Caveator.
(c) On or about 23 December 2010 the parties exchanged the Contract for Sale
of Land for the transfer of Lot 16 in an unregistered
Strata Plan from the
Caveatee to the Caveator.
- On
or about 30 August 2011, solicitors acting for the defendant served a lapsing
notice. By summons filed on 16 September 2011, the
plaintiff claims, amongst
other things, an order extending the operation of the caveat until further
order, and final relief to the
effect that the defendant transfer unit 16 in the
development to the plaintiff and a declaration that the defendant holds unit 16
upon trust for the plaintiff. On 19 September 2011, an order was made by Rein J
extending the operation of the caveat until tomorrow.
- There
is an extensive factual dispute between the parties which extends to the nature
of the plaintiff's retainer to work for the
defendant in connection with the
Ryde property and the circumstances in which the documents which give rise to
the plaintiff's claim
for an equitable interest in the land came to be executed.
If the defendant's version is ultimately accepted, then it may well be
that the
plaintiff has no interest in the land. But on an application such as the present
for an order extending the operation of
a caveat, the Court's approach is
analogous to that which applies on an application for an interlocutory
injunction. In short, the
caveator must show that its claim has or may have
substance [see (NSW) Real Property Act 1900, s 74K(2)], which imports the
test of a seriously arguable case for final relief. In addition, it is
well-established that on such an application,
even where the caveator's claim
has or may have substance, the Court may decline to extend the operation of the
caveat having regard
to circumstances pertaining to the balance of convenience.
That said, it is a rare case in which the Court will, on balance of convenience
considerations, allow an otherwise sustainable caveat to lapse if the
consequence of doing so would be to jeopardise or detrimentally
affect the
priority of the caveator's claim to an interest in the land. Cases in which the
balance of convenience can be determinative
include, for example, where a caveat
is preventing a sale by an encumbrancee entitled to higher priority than the
caveator, and where
the caveat is preventing a refinancing the consequences of
which would be to leave the caveator in no worse position than the present
position.
- I
turn first to the issue of whether the caveator's claim may have substance. The
caveator puts its claim on three alternative bases:
first, that it is the
purchaser under contracts exchanged on 23 December 2010; secondly, that if
contracts were not exchanged, nonetheless
it has an equitable interest as a
result of having continued to render services to the defendant on the assumption
that such contracts
had been exchanged; and thirdly, that in any event the
defendant, by letter of 20 December 2010, agreed that the plaintiff should
have
a caveatable interest in the land.
- The
evidence establishes that there are counterpart front pages of a contract for
sale of unit 16 in an unregistered residential strata
plan of the land (the
counterpart signed by the vendor having been dated 23 December 2010 apparently
by a solicitor who, at the time,
seems to have been acting for both parties but
certainly for the defendant/vendor). A copy of the counterpart cover sheet
signed
by the vendor was handed to the purchaser.
- It
is said that this is curious in the extreme, in that there is no suggestion that
it was accompanied by other terms and conditions.
Further, it is said that if
there were a contract, it must be implied that its conditions were those in the
standard form 2005 edition
of the contract for sale of land, of which it was the
cover page.
- I
am not at all sure that this is so. (NSW) Conveyancing Act 1919, s 57,
and, more particularly, s 60, stipulate the conditions that are to be imported
into a contract for sale of land, subject to any other terms on which the
parties
may agree. It seems to me at least seriously arguable that in the
absence of any other term or special condition, the terms and conditions
are to
be found in s 57, s 60, and the third schedule to the Conveyancing Act,
as imported by s 60.
- Secondly,
it seems at least seriously arguable, from the circumstance that an executed
copy of the front page was dated by the defendant's
solicitor and handed to the
purchaser, that contracts were exchanged at that time. There is a factual
dispute as to what happened
and, in particular, as to whether the solicitor said
to the purchaser at the time "contracts have now been exchanged". It is neither
necessary nor appropriate to resolve that dispute now, but the facts (1) that
the vendor's executed counterpart was provided by the
vendor's solicitor to the
purchaser; (2) that the letter addressed to the Office of State Revenue signed
by both directors of the
vendor and purportedly witnessed by their solicitor
refers to "when the off the plan contract of sale was exchanged with the
purchaser";
and (3) that the letter of 20 December 2010 asserts that the
defendant has "signed ownership of unit 16...to Benjamin Cryer or nominee"
all
lend support to the proposition that there was an exchange of contracts at that
time. It is sufficient for me to conclude that
it is seriously arguable that
there was.
- In
any event, on the plaintiff's version, the defendant, by both its directors, on
20 December 2010 executed a letter in the following
terms:
I Douglas Ross Cornish and Pamela Rose Cornish of X Sanctuary Close Tea
Gardens NSW 2324, Director and Secretary of MDR Cornish Investments
Pty Ltd have
signed ownership of Unit XX/XXX-XXX Blaxland Road Ryde NSW to Benjamin Cryer or
Nominee (Please refer to signed and
dated contract and invoice for the amount of
$450,000.00).
This has been signed for consideration of the work carried out by Benjamin
Cryer and Associated Companies for his contribution to
project coordination of
the above mentioned development previous to 20/12/2010 and to completion of the
project and registration
of all titles of the development.
No other commission will be due and payable for work carried out on the
project as of the 21/12/2010 and signing of this letter. Any
funds lent to or
paid by Douglas Ross Cornish Pamela Rose Cornish or MDR Cornish to Benjamin
Cryer or Associated companies after
the signing of this agreement are to be
repaid Paid [ sic ] within 28 days of title being registered for them.
If the project does not proceed through to completion and title registration
is not achieved for all units in the development project
due to any circumstance
not related to Benjamin Cryer or Associated Companies then all monies due and
payable to Benjamin Cryer or
Associated companies will then become due and
payable upon sale of the development site as a whole.
We also give Benjamin Cryer and Associated Companies the right to place a
caveat on the Development Property to guarantee payment
if the development is
not to proceed or fails to complete due to any factors not related to Benjamin
Cryer or Associated Companies.
- Mr
Douglas Cornish, a director of the defendant, denies that he signed that letter
and says that so far as he knows his wife did not
sign it. There is evidence
from Carol Cryer and from her son, Jake Portelli, that they attended on Mr and
Mrs Cornish and saw them
both sign the letter in question. The letter found its
way to their solicitor - as it seems, with the other documents - by the hand
of
the plaintiff. After the suggestion was raised that it was a forgery, the
plaintiff has had a copy of it forensically examined
and the forensic examiner
has expressed, albeit at this early stage on a qualified basis, a view that the
signatures on the letter
are very likely to be the signatures of the people who
signed the specimen Douglas Cornish and Pamela Cornish on documents the
authenticity
of which appears at this stage to be not readily disputable.
- On
that basis, it seems to me that there is a seriously arguable case that the
plaintiff has a beneficial interest in the subject
land. Mr Young argued that
this seemed an improbable arrangement, given the quantum of fees to which the
plaintiff would have been
entitled at that time and the unlikelihood of a
solicitor preparing and exchanging contracts in those circumstances. There may
be,
objectively, elements of improbability looked at alone, but the documents
themselves raise a significant case to the contrary.
- Objection
was taken to the form of the caveat. It will be observed that the caveat claimed
an interest in four lots, whereas the contract
refers only to unit 16 in an
unregistered plan of subdivision of the whole site. The claim in the caveat
refers to a contract for
the sale of "the land" - which, on its face, is a wider
claim than the caveator's case could sustain; but that needs to be seen in
the
context of the elaboration of the facts set out in the schedule and the annexure
to it, which makes tolerably clear that the
contract for sale in question
related to lot 16 in an unregistered plan in the subdivision and not to the
whole of the land.
- Although
under the contract the plaintiff's claim would be to lot 16 alone once the
unregistered plan is registered (if ever) it does
not follow that a caveat that
claims an interest in the whole of the land is too wide. Often, a caveat
forbidding dealing with the
whole of the parcel of land when the interest
supporting it can affect only part of it will be too large [see: Re Paul;
(1912) 19 WN (NSW) 114; Queensland Estate Pty Ltd v Co-Ownership Land
Development Pty Ltd (1969) Qd R 150; and Roclin Investments Pty Ltd v
Makris (1974) 7 SASR 485]. But these cases depend upon the position being
that the interest claimed is an interest in only part of the land. In Re
Henderson's Caveat (1998) 1 Qd R 632, the situation was explained by
Macrossan CJ and Demack J in the Queensland Court of Appeal in the following
terms (at 638):
As to the issues raised in paragraph (5) we do not think that the caveat
should be defeated on the basis that in claiming an interest
in the whole of
Portion 69 it is too wide. If the parties had agreed or evidence had been
presented which at this stage established
that the caveat should be amended to
refer to a similar parcel of two acres precisely identified, that would be one
thing, but the
two acre area has not yet been subdivided nor does it have its
boundaries exactly established by any decision of the Court on firm
evidence
agreed between the parties. The Court therefore should not hold that the caveat
is too wide and attempt to order its restriction
or amendment in some fashion.
Until precision is established it seems correct to accept that at the caveat
stage that the respondent
has an equitable interest sufficiently applicable to
all of Portion 69.
- Davies
JA said, on the same topic (at 642), after referring to in Re Paul and
some of the other cases in this area:
With respect, I cannot agree with the reasoning in these cases. In cases such
as the present, equitable relief would be available,
either in the form of an
injunction or a limited decree for specific performance, to ensure that the
registered proprietor deals
with the larger parcel of land only in a manner
consistent with subdivisional approval being obtained for the excision of the
claimed
portion. Any such order for relief would be expressed to extend to the
registered proprietor's dealings with the larger parcel. In
this respect, I
agree with the views expressed by Hodgson J in Locke (at 11,690-11,691).
See also Kuper at 427-432. In my opinion, therefore, equity recognises
the respondent's interest as extending the whole of Portion 69 until
subdivisional
approval is obtained. Consequently I think the respondent has an
equitable interest in the whole of Portion 69.
- In
Fitzibbbons v Shaftsbury Pty Ltd [2011] NSWSC 525, I applied the
reasoning in those cases, observing (at [18]):
In my opinion, these observations are precisely applicable to this case.
Assuming that the plaintiff's interest may ultimately be
defined as the cottage
and the 200 acres surrounding it, it is not yet so defined: there is not as yet
any proposed, let alone approved,
Subdivision; and remedies are available to the
plaintiff in respect of the whole of the land, including, for example, an order
that
it be subdivided to that effect, or an order imposing a charge over it, or
a declaration that the plaintiff has a beneficial interest
in it. Accordingly,
in my view the caveat is not too wide.
- Thus,
I do not think the caveat is bad for claiming an interest in respect of the
whole of the development site, because the plaintiff
could obtain relief
directed to the whole of it, at least unless and until a plan of subdivision is
registered. If, for example,
no such plan is ever registered, then it is at
least arguable that the plaintiff would have a charge or other equitable
interest
in respect of the whole of the subject land.
- That
said, it is true, as Mr Young submits, that the precise claim, in asserting an
equitable fee simple as purchaser under an exchanged
contract for sale of the
land, is inaccurate. Precisely, it should be framed as "under an exchanged
contract for sale of part of
the land." But Real Property Act, s 74L,
provides that:
If in any legal proceedings a question arises as to the validity of a caveat
lodged under a provision of this Part, the court shall
disregard any failure of
the caveator to comply strictly with the requirements of this Part, and of any
regulations made for the
purposes of this Part with respect to the form of the
caveat.
- In
my view, the absence of the words "part of" from the description of the nature
or interest claimed, in the context of this case,
is a formal defect which I
overlook under s 74L. Accordingly, I am satisfied that the caveator's claim may
have substance.
- I
turn to the balance of convenience. On this, the essential issue is that if the
caveat is wrongly maintained, there is a risk that
the defendant will not be
able to obtain further finance for the development, that the development will be
delayed and that, as a
result, the defendant will incur substantial interest
costs. The evidence establishes that the defendant at present incurs interest
of
about $3,000 per day. There is some evidence that a financier has declined to
proceed while the caveat issue remains unresolved,
but that evidence would have
been more convincing had it come from the financier who has himself sworn an
affidavit in the proceedings
but which is silent on that issue.
- The
offer of finance was made and apparently accepted before any caveat was lodged,
yet does not appear to have been pursued in the
meantime. Significantly, the
proceeds of the additional finance of some $1.2 million are to be applied, so it
seems, to existing
creditors of the defendant, in payment in instalments to the
defendant or its directors amounts approximately equal to the interest
payments,
and substantially to a variation or extension (rather than completion) of the
development.
- Against
that, while the plaintiff has offered an undertaking as to damages, the
plaintiff's financial statements, tendered by the
defendant having obtained them
on notice to produce, would tend to show that that undertaking is worthless. The
plaintiff's principal,
Mr Cryer, has now also offered an undertaking as to
damages, which moderates that difficulty to some extent, but in the context that
the defendant has had no opportunity to explore Mr Cryer's undertaking it cannot
be said that has much more value than that of the
defendant itself.
- In
a caveat case, as I have foreshadowed, once it is established that the caveat
may have substance, the Court will allow the caveator's
priority to be
jeopardised only in rare circumstances. In my view, if the plaintiff has a valid
claim to an interest in the land,
then it ought not be permitted to be
jeopardised by permitting the defendant to obtain additional finance and secure
it on the land
in priority to the plaintiff's claim. If, on the other hand, the
defendant can show that it can obtain additional finance without
prejudice to
the plaintiff's claim, then the Court would be inclined to permit or require the
caveat to be withdrawn to permit such
further finance to be obtained, and then
re-lodged. Indeed, one would expect the plaintiff to consent to such a dealing
to avoid
the necessity for an application to the Court.
- But
at this stage, far from showing that additional finance would not prejudice the
plaintiff's position, the evidence tends to show
that it would indeed prejudice
the plaintiff's position. Mr Cornish, in his affidavit, attributes to Mr
Silverman, the proposed financier,
the statement:
We are not convinced that there remains enough equity in the project due to
the claim by Cryer and are concerned about a priority
dispute with the caveator.
- It
seems to me that if the potential financier is concerned as to whether there
remains enough equity, concerns by the plaintiff to
the same effect, must be
equally valid.
- I
am therefore not prepared to allow the caveat to lapse, having regard to the
balance of convenience. As I have foreshadowed, if
at a later stage the
defendant can show that additional finance can be secured without prejudice to
the plaintiff's interests, then
the Court would give close consideration to
requiring the caveat to be withdrawn temporarily to permit that to be done. If
the defendant
is able to inform the court that Mr Cryer's own undertaking was
worthless, that might contribute to such an outcome. But, as the
evidence
stands, it seems to me that the operation of the caveat should be extended.
- Upon
the plaintiff and upon Benjamin Cryer, by their counsel, giving to the Court the
usual undertaking as to damages, I order that
the operation of caveat AGXXXXXX
in respect of the land comprised in folio identifiers X/XXXXXXX, X/XXXXXX,
X/XXXXXX and X/XXXXXX
be extended until further order of the Court.
- I
order that costs of the interlocutory application be the plaintiff's costs in
the proceeding.
**********
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