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Learn & Play (Rhodes No 1) Pty Limited as Trustee for Rhodes 1 Childcare Centre Unit Trust v David John Frank Lombe [2011] NSWSC 1506 (1 December 2011)
Last Updated: 13 December 2011
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Case Title:
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Learn & Play (Rhodes No 1) Pty Limited as
Trustee for Rhodes 1 Childcare Centre Unit Trust v David John Frank Lombe
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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29, 30 November, 1 December 2011
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Before:
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Decision:
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Catchwords:
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AGENCY - ostensible authority - requirement for
representation - whether company held person out as having authority - no
representation
- no reliance ESTOPPEL - no representation - no
reliance AGENCY - ratification of acts done without authority - ratification
by silence, acquiescence or inactivity - requirement that principal
be aware of
all material facts - no knowledge of material terms - no ratification or
adoption
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Parties:
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Learn & Play (Rhodes No 1) Pty Ltd - first
plaintiff Learn & Play Early Learning Pty Ltd - second
plaintiff Rhodes 1 Childcare Centre Pty Ltd - third plaintiff David John
Frank Lombe - first defendant Bank of Western Australia Ltd - second
defendant
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Representation
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Counsel: V F Kerr - for the plaintiffs R I
Bellamy - for the defendants
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Courtenay & Co - for the
plaintiffs Gadens Lawyers - for the defendants
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT
Introduction
- The
issue in this case is whether a fixed and floating charge and a guarantee and
indemnity dated 17 June 2008 purportedly given by
the third plaintiff (the
company) in favour of Bank of Western Australia Limited (BankWest) are valid.
Both documents were executed
by a person who was not a director or officer of
the company at the date of execution. He had no actual authority, whether
expressed
or implied, to execute those documents.
- The
defendants contend that the documents should now be treated as if they are valid
on one or more of three legal grounds - ostensible
authority, estoppel and
ratification. I have concluded that the factual basis for each of these defences
is absent. It follows that
the plaintiffs are entitled to the declarations they
seek. A summary of the material facts is as follows.
The Facts
- On
2 April 2008 the company was granted a licence to operate a "Centre Based
Children's Service" from the premises. Ms Poche was the
sole director of the
company and owned or controlled all of its shares. She and Mr Ward were
estranged. On 29 April 2008 BankWest
offered a commercial advance facility of
$1.2 million to Mr Ward to purchase the shares in the company from Ms Poche and
a company
which she controlled. This included $100,000 for a bank guarantee in
respect of the rental bond applicable to the company's premises.
- Also
on 29 April BankWest instructed Gadens to act on its behalf in relation to the
offer of finance to Mr Ward. Later that day Gadens
sent to Mr Ward's solicitor,
Mr Christie, draft financing documents including a guarantee and charge to be
executed by Ms Poche as
the sole director of the company. On 6 May 2008 Gadens
requested Mr Ward's solicitor to provide documents evidencing the transfer
of
the shares in the company from Ms Poche to Mr Ward and the resignation of Ms
Poche as a director of the company. On 9 May 2008
Mr Ward's solicitor sent to Ms
Poche's solicitor the guarantee and charge requiring her execution. On 13 May
2008 Ms Poche's solicitor
informed Mr Ward's solicitor that Ms Poche would not
sign these documents. He returned them.
- On
16 May 2008 Gadens sent to Mr Ward's solicitor revised security documents
including the proposed guarantee and charge from which
Ms Poche's name had been
removed and substituted by Mr Ward's name as sole director of the company. Mr
Ward executed the documents
and dated them 16 May. On the same day a meeting of
the members of the company (Ms Poche), passed a resolution pursuant to Section
260B of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) approving the provision of
financial assistance by granting a guarantee and charge to BankWest to enable Mr
Ward to acquire
the shares in the company. The Explanatory Notes which
accompanied the notice of meeting stated among other things:
The ability of James to acquire the shares in the Company depends on James
being able to (in addition to other matters) raise the
finance to pay out the
National Australia Bank.
It is a condition to the provision of the financial accommodation under the
finance facility that the Company provide:
(a) ...
(b) A first ranking registered fixed and floating charge in favour of
BankWest over all the assets and undertakings of the Company,
to fully support
repayment of the finance facility and to support its liabilities under the
Guarantee and Indemnity.
- On
22 May 2008 Mr Ward's solicitor returned to Gadens executed financing documents,
including the guarantee and charge purportedly
executed by Mr Ward as the sole
director of the company. On 6 June 2008 Mr Ward's solicitor sent to Gadens a
draft Financial Agreement
under Section 90C of the Family Law Act 1975 .
It stated that the business loan was the loan advance of $1.2 million by
BankWest to Mr Ward. Clause 12 provided as follows:
12 DIVISION OF PROPERTY:
(a) Christine shall transfer her two (2) shares in the Company held by her to
James.
(b) Christine shall do all things necessary to effect a transfer to James of
the one (1) share in the Company held by an entity she
solely controls being
VALACAR PTY LIMITED (CAN 072 458 523) (as trustee or otherwise).
(c) On settlement, Christine shall resign as director and secretary of the
Company and James shall accept appointment as to the same.
...
(f) James covenants and agrees that he will not further encumber or impede
the operation of L&P(R) other than for the amount of
$1,200,000 being the
monies provided to him by Bank of Western Australia Limited ("BankWest").
- Clause
13 dealt with Ms Poche's reversionary interest. It provided:
13 REVERSIONARY INTEREST
Always subject to the interest of BankWest whose interest shall take
priority:
(a) The parties agree that the entire legal and equitable ownership of Shares
shall revert to Christine ("the reversionary Interest")
if at any time one or
more of the following events occur:
I the BankWest Business Loan as set out herein is repaid; or
II Christine (either herself and/or a third party) can refinance the balance
of the BankWest Business Loan as set out herein.
(b) Upon transfer of the Shares in clause 13(a), Christine shall withdraw her
caveat in clause 12(d).
(c) James shall ensure that the Shares, the lease of the business premises,
any licence relating to the premises, are preserved to
the full extent and are
not dealt with or encumbered in any way and that the legal and equitable
ownership of the Shares remains
with James strictly in accordance with this
agreement.
(d) James shall ensure that in the event he is a party to a defacto or
marital relationship, a binding agreement as prescribed by
the Property
(Relationships) Act 1984 and the Family Law Act 1975 respectively is entered
into to acknowledge and preserve Christine's reversionary interest herein.
- Also
on 6 June Ms Poche's solicitor sent to Gadens an ASIC notification relating to
the resolution of the company to provide financial
assistance to Mr Ward. The
email stated that Ms Poche would not execute the certificate of solvency
furnished by Mr Ward's solicitor.
On 17 June 2008 Ms Poche and Mr Ward executed
the Financial Agreement and a Supplementary Financial Agreement. Ms Poche also
executed
the transfer of shares in the company in favour of Mr Ward. For reasons
that were never explained, Mr Ward took no steps to register
the transfer of
shares in his favour or to obtain appointment as a director of the company.
Later on 17 June BankWest settled the
financing to Mr Ward and disbursed the
commercial advance facility of $1.2 million in accordance with his directions.
Mr Cormack
- Mr
Cormack was the solicitor for BankWest. He made clear that he was well aware
that Mr Ward was not a director or officer of the
company at the time of
execution of the guarantee and charge. He took a calculated risk on behalf of
BankWest but assumed, not entirely
unreasonably, that in accordance with the
apparent intention of Ms Poche and Mr Ward, Mr Ward would become a director of
the company
on or shortly after 17 June 2008.
- I
should add that to some degree Mr Cormack only has himself to blame. As I have
observed, on 6 May 2008, an employed solicitor working
under his supervision
prudently informed the solicitor for Mr Ward that she required copies of the
documents evidencing the transfer
of shares and the resignation of director, the
minutes of the meeting and the ASIC 484 forms. Settlement of the BankWest loan
occurred
on 17 June 2008 but the bank's solicitors did not continue to insist
upon, and did not receive, these documents at or prior to settlement.
Mr Cormack
was simply content to receive the guarantee and charge executed by Mr Ward on
behalf of the company in escrow. In other
words, he knew that they were
ineffective unless and until Mr Ward became the sole shareholder and director
and caused the company
to ratify them.
The Representation Case
- The
ostensible authority and estoppel defences both depend on proof of a relevant
representation by or on behalf of the company as
to Mr Ward's authority to
execute the guarantee and charge. It is not good enough to show that there was a
representation that Mr
Ward was authorised to execute documents of the same or
similar kind. In fact there was no such representation but the point is that
what must be demonstrated is that Mr Ward was held out by the company to
BankWest as having authority to execute the documents in
question.
- This
has a practical relevance in this case because unknown to Ms Poche, the
documents as executed gave BankWest a legal right to
have the charge secure up
to $5 million against the assets and undertaking of the company. Ms Poche's
expectation was that the charge
would only ever secure $1.2 million. This was a
matter of vital interest to her because of her reversionary interest in the
company
to which she was entitled pursuant to the Financial Agreement.
- None
of this actually matters very much because the effect of Mr Cormack's evidence
is that he knew that Mr Ward was not authorised
to execute the documents on
behalf of the company. No officer of BankWest gave evidence. Mr Cormack's
position, as I have explained,
was that he held the documents in escrow pending
the anticipated resignation of Ms Poche and the appointment of Mr Ward as the
director
of the company in her place.
- Given
that evidence, it is obvious that even if the representation contended for were
made, BankWest did not rely on it. Mr Cormack,
on behalf of BankWest knew the
true facts but assumed that the absence of authority would be cured. BankWest,
through Mr Cormack,
did not therefore rely on any representation that Mr Ward
had authority to execute the documents on behalf of the company. It knew
he did
not have authority at the time that they were executed.
- At
the hearing, the defendants' representation case shifted. They contended for a
representation that was not pleaded. The representation
was said to be to the
effect that Ms Poche, on behalf the company, agreed to the form of the documents
that were executed on 17 June
2008 other than the identity of the person who was
to sign them on behalf of the company. This did not make a lot of sense and
hardly
seemed sufficient to give authority to Mr Ward, even if such a
representation were made to BankWest. But for the reasons that follow
it was not
established at a factual level.
Four Communications
- Four
events and their associated communications are relied upon:
13 May 2008
(a) On 13 May 2008 Ms Poche's solicitor informed Mr Ward's solicitor that she
did not agree to sign the guarantee and charge documents
on behalf of the
company. They were then returned as requested. Nothing arises from these events
and communications . First, the
communications were between the solicitors for
Ms Poche and Mr Ward. It is impossible to construct out of them a representation
on
behalf the company to BankWest. Second, it is equally impossible to see how,
by any rational process of inference, a representation
can be inferred to the
effect that Ms Poche, on behalf of the company, approved the content of the
documents other than the identity
of the person who was to sign them. She simply
refused to sign them and returned them. She did not, by doing so, approve their
content.
She had no obligation even to read them.
28 May 2008
(b) On or about 28 May 2008 Ms Poche's solicitor had a number of
communications with Mr Ward's solicitor about whether Ms Poche would
sign, as a
director of the company, a solvency certificate in connection with the proposed
financial assistance to Mr Ward. She refused
to do so. Among other things, her
solicitor sought confirmation that the loan repayments, so far as the company
was concerned:
Will be the amounts in the loan agreement you forwarded earlier to us (and we
returned to you) and that [the company] is not liable
to BankWest (or any other
lender) for any other debt in relation to this transaction.
Mr Ward's solicitor replied by saying that the company had given a charge
over its assets to a maximum of $5 million. There was no
explanation of this
statement and no response. Once again, this was a communication between the
solicitors for Ms Poche and Mr Ward.
It could not, on any view, amount to a
representation on behalf of the company to BankWest. Furthermore, it is
difficult to see what
relevant representation Ms Poche, let alone the company,
could possibly be regarded as having made on the basis of those communications.
Her solicitor simply asked for a confirmation that he did not get. The bald
statement by Mr Ward's solicitor about the charge and
the absence of a response
does not give the communications a character which they do not bear. They do not
constitute a representation
by the company to BankWest.
6 June 2008
(c) On 6 June 2008 Ms Poche's solicitor informed Mr Cormack that Ms Poche did
not wish to execute the solvency certificate to which
I referred in the
preceding paragraph and which had been provided by Mr Ward's solicitor. In the
same email he attached the ASIC
notification and minutes of the meeting of the
company that had been signed by Ms Poche on 16 May 2008. From Ms Poche's
perspective,
the documents signed by her were predicated on the provision of
security to BankWest over the assets and undertaking of the company
to secure
the proposed business loan of $1.2 million to Mr Ward. This email to Mr Cormack
does not amount to a representation to
BankWest by or on behalf of the company
that Mr Ward was authorised to execute the guarantee and charge documents on
behalf of the
company. That is not the subject matter of the email and no such
inference is indirectly available. Nor for the same reason could
it be construed
as representing that Ms Poche agreed to the form of guarantee and charge
documents that were proposed to be executed,
save as to the identity of the
person who would sign on behalf of the company.
17 June 2008
(d) On 17 June 2008 Ms Poche signed the Financial Agreement and the transfer
of shares. This could not amount to a relevant representation
on which BankWest
could rely. In reality, as I have explained, Mr Cormack actually knew, at the
time of execution of the guarantee
and charge, that Mr Ward was not authorised
on behalf of the company and was not its director. In any event, the Financial
Agreement
was inconsistent with the form of guarantee and charge that were
executed. The Financial Agreement prohibited security being given
over the
company's assets to BankWest in the amount set out in the executed charge and
guarantee. It recorded that Mr Ward was borrowing
$1.2 million from BankWest for
the purpose of acquiring all the shares in the company. By clause 12(f), Mr Ward
covenanted that he
would not encumber the operation of the company's business,
"other than for the amount of $1.2 million being the monies provided
to him by
[BankWest]". The executed guarantee and charge in fact encumbered the company's
business in a far more substantial manner
than was permitted by clause 12(f).
- There
are some further features of the Financial Agreement that I should mention. The
agreement contemplated that security would only
be given over the company's
assets while ever Mr Ward was the sole shareholder and director of the company.
It contemplated that
Mr Ward would replace Ms Poche as the sole director and
shareholder of the company; that while the company was in Mr Ward's control,
its
operations might be encumbered to BankWest for up to $1.2 million; and that
control of the company would revert to Ms Poche when
the business loan was
repaid. While the company was in the control of Ms Poche, it was to be
unencumbered to BankWest. But while
it was in the control of Mr Ward, it was
permitted to be encumbered to BankWest for no more than $1.2 million. That is
antithetical
to the proposition that Ms Poche, on behalf of the company,
impliedly authorised Mr Ward to cause the company to grant security to
BankWest
to secure the sum of $5 million that was in fact covered by the charge that Mr
Ward executed.
- There
is a further problem. The Financial Agreement was executed on 17 June 2008,
approximately one month after Mr Ward executed the
charge and guarantee. To be
effective, actual authority must be conferred on an agent, whether expressed or
implied, before the agent
purports to exercise that authority.
Ms Poche's Credit
- I
should return to one factual matter to which I adverted earlier. I accept Ms
Poche's evidence in relation to her belief and understanding.
She said that she
was not a party to any discussion or agreement with any person that included any
suggestion that BankWest would
be given either a fixed and floating charge to
secure an amount of up to $5 million or an unlimited guarantee and indemnity in
relation
to all monies which Mr Ward owed or may in the future owe to BankWest.
She said she would never have agreed to any charge or guarantee
and indemnity
securing such amounts being given. She said that until late August 2011, she had
no knowledge that Mr Ward had attempted
to bind the company in relation to a
guarantee and indemnity of all monies which Mr Ward owed or would owe to
BankWest or that the
charge secured an amount of up to $5 million. Although she
was aware from June 2008 that a charge had been purportedly given by the
company
to BankWest she had never seen a copy of it. Nor had she seen the guarantee
signed by Mr Ward.
- I
saw no reason to doubt Ms Poche's credibility on these matters. This is
notwithstanding the email sent from Mr Ward's solicitor
on 28 May 2008.
Unadorned and unexplained, and addressed only to her solicitor, it is not enough
to cause me to doubt the truthfulness
of her evidence as to her expectation of
the amount which the charge to BankWest could secure. What is apparent is that
BankWest
relied on its own expectation as to what would happen, not any
representation as to Mr Ward's authority made by or on behalf of the
company
through Ms Poche or her solicitor. For those reasons, there is no factual
foundation for the defences based on equitable
estoppel and ostensible
authority.
Ratification
- Ratification
may be expressed or implied. It will be implied whenever the conduct of the
person in whose name a transaction has been
entered into is such as to show that
the person adopts the transaction. Silence, acquiescence or inactivity may be
sufficient to
demonstrate implied ratification: Taylor v Smith [1926] HCA 16; (1926) 38
CLR 48 at 54 (Knox CJ); Suncorp Finance & Insurance Corp v Milano
Assicurazioni SpA [1993] 2 Lloyd's Rep 225 at 234; Permanent Trustee Co
Ltd v Bernera Holdings Pty Ltd [2004] NSWSC 56 at [53] - [61] (Young CJ in
Eq); Pollard v Wilson [2010] NSWCA 68 at [121]; Victorian Professional
Group Management Pty Ltd v The Proprietors "Surfers Aquarius" Building Units
Plan No. 3881 (1987) 1 Qd R 487 at 496 (Connolly J); Brockway v Pando
[2010] WASCA 192 at [1116] - [117]. If the principal is aware of all the
material facts, takes no steps to disown the transaction within a reasonable
time,
or adopts no means of asserting his rights at the earliest opportunity,
that may, in certain circumstances, amount to sufficient
evidence of
ratification.
- What
is crucial however in any ratification is that it is necessary that the
principal have full knowledge of all the material circumstances
in which the
transaction was purportedly entered into and its material features. There may be
circumstances, probably rare, in which
the principal should be taken as having
intended to ratify and take the risk of the transaction, whatever the
circumstances may have
been: Suncorp Finance & Insurance Corp v Milano
Assicurazioni SpA (supra) at 234. This is not one of those cases.
- I
should also observe that ratification has objective as well as subjective
features. It is not open to a principal who, by his conduct,
appears to the
outside world to have adopted a transaction, to be able to prove subjectively
that he did not intend to approve it.
A principal is not entitled to prove
subjectively that he did not intend to adopt a transaction when he has done an
unequivocal act
to adopt it with full knowledge of its terms and features:
Suncorp Finance & Insurance Corp v Milano Assicurazioni SpA (supra)
at 235.
- On
the other hand, the subjective knowledge and understanding of the principal is
also relevant. It must be shown that the principal
was aware of the material
terms and features of the transaction which he is said to have adopted and
ratified. Without such full
knowledge, there will not be ratification according
to law. I doubt very much whether a principal, who was aware of the material
terms, could successfully contend that he lacked the relevant knowledge because
of his own obtuseness, neglect or failure for some
other reason to appreciate
the significance of those terms. However I need not decide that question in this
case.
- I
have already explained that Ms Poche was not a party to any discussions with
BankWest about the company giving BankWest either an
unlimited guarantee to
secure all of the debts of Mr Ward to BankWest or a charge to secure those debts
up to an amount of $5 million.
And I have found that she would not have agreed
to the company entering into such obligations. She was unaware that Mr Ward had
purported
to do so until late August 2011. That is sufficient to dispose of the
ratification defence. There was not the requisite knowledge
of all the material
facts. Nonetheless, I should set out the subsequent conduct relied upon and
explain why that conduct does not
amount to notification:
(a) On 17 June 2008 Ms Poche entered into two agreements with Mr Ward, the
Financial Agreement and the Supplementary Financial Agreement.
The Financial
Agreement recorded that Mr Ward was borrowing $1.2 million from BankWest. This
comprised a commercial advance facility
of $1.1 million and a bank guarantee
amount of $100,000 provided by BankWest to Mr Ward referred to in the facility
documents.
(b) The Financial Agreement and the Supplementary Financial Agreement then
provided for two relevant matters. First, Mr Ward on lent
$1.1 million from the
BankWest facility to Ms Poche. Second, the future proceeds of the company's
childcare business, after payment
of ordinary business expenses, were to be
applied in reduction of the BankWest facilities.
(c) After 17 June 2008, Ms Poche caused the company to pay $575,235 to
BankWest referable to the BankWest facilities. Those monies
consisted of
$272,735 attributable to interest and $327,500 attributable to principal on the
commercial advance.
- The
fact that Ms Poche caused the company to pay interest to BankWest in conformity
with her obligations under the Financial Agreement
and the Supplementary
Financial Agreement says nothing about whether or not the company adopted the
obligations purportedly imposed
by the guarantee or the charge. Even if the
payment of interest in conformity with the obligations imposed by the Financial
Agreement
was a sufficiently unequivocal act as to ratify other transactions
contemplated by the Financial Agreement, which it is not, it could
not ratify
obligations which are contrary to those contemplated by the Financial Agreement.
Orders
- For
those reasons, the plaintiff is entitled to the declarations and orders set out
in prayers 9 to 15 inclusive of the amended statement
of claim. I will stand
over the proceedings before me on Friday 9 December for the finalisation of
orders and costs.
**********
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