![]() |
[Home]
[Databases]
[WorldLII]
[Search]
[Feedback]
Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 15 July 2011
|
Case Title:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Medium Neutral Citation:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hearing Date(s):
|
|
|
|
|
|
Decision Date:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jurisdiction:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Before:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Decision:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Catchwords:
|
CONTRACTS - Particular Parties - Principal and
Agent - power of attorney - attorney sells mother's house and fails to account
to her
for proceeds of sale - power in form of Sch 7 to Conveyancing Act 1919 -
unnecessary to decide whether s 163B authorised benefit to attorney - attorney
in breach of fiduciary duty under the power
PROCEDURE - Failure to appear - Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005, Pt 29 r 29.7 - when trial called defendant absent - history of non-action when contacted by solicitors and process servers - informed of hearing - exercise of discretion to proceed with trial |
|
|
|
|
Legislation Cited:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cases Cited:
|
Re R [2000] NSWSC 886
In re W (Enduring Power of Attorney) [2000] Ch 343 Sweeney v Howard [2007] NSWSC 852 Spina v Conran Associates Pty Ltd; Spina v M & V Endurance Pty Ltd [2008] NSWSC 326 Tobin v Broadbent [1947] HCA 46; [1947] HCA 46; (1947) 75 CLR 378 Angelina Spina v Permanent Custodians Limited [2008] NSWSC 561 Rayner & Ors v N J Sheaffe Pty Limited & Ors [2010] NSWSC 810 |
|
|
|
|
Texts Cited:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Parties:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Representation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
File number(s):
|
|
|
|
|
|
Publication Restriction:
|
|
"(1) This rule applies when a trial is called on.
(2) If any party is absent, the Court:
(a) may proceed with the trial generally or so far as concerns any claim for relief in the proceedings, or
(b) may adjourn the trial."
"My attorney is only authorised to act as my attorney pursuant to this power in the event that I am either physically or mentally unable or incapable of attending to the activity in which my attorney is proposing to act and I direct that a letter from a medical practitioner stating that one or more of these preconditions exist shall be considered as sufficient evidence of my physical or mental inability or incapacity or as the case may be".
|
Balance of settlement moneys
|
|
$316,709.64
|
|
Deposit
|
$16,750.00
|
|
|
Less agent's commission
|
9,949.50
|
6,800.50
|
|
|
|
$323,510.14
|
|
Less paid by Dr Hughes
|
|
30,000.00
|
|
|
|
$293,510.14
|
"Indeed cases like Re W show that there is a good argument that a person who is given a power of attorney cannot give money away, and in particular cannot give money to themselves."
"In the exercise of the authority conferred on my Attorney by Section 163B of the Conveyancing Act, 1919, my Attorney is authorised to execute an assurance or other document, or do any other act whereby a benefit is conferred on my Attorney."
"Subject to this section, an instrument (whether or not under seal) in or to the effect of the form in Schedule 7 confers on the attorney thereby appointed authority to do on behalf of the person executing the instrument anything the person executing the instrument may lawfully authorise an attorney to do".
"The authority conferred by an instrument referred to in subsection (1) does not include:
...
(b) unless it is expressly conferred by the instrument-authority to execute an assurance or other document, or do any other act, as a result of which a benefit would be conferred on the attorney appointed by the instrument."
"But the cardinal fact of the transaction which it is sought to bring within the power is that the loan was made to Hodgetts, the donee of the power, and not to either of the Tobins, the principals. Hodgetts was the borrower, the loan was for himself, he did not contract it as an agent but he gave the lender his principals' property as security. The question is, therefore, whether the power of attorney extended to authorising Hodgetts to give a security over his constituents' shares for his own debt, not simply whether it authorized him to give a security. You cannot sever the giving of the security from the indebtedness secured. A transaction of security is unintelligible without an identification of the obligation secured. This is not the case of an agent misapplying moneys borrowed in his principal's name on the security of his assets pursuant to an authority covering the borrowing of money on the principal's behalf. If a transaction is ostensibly on the principal's behalf and is of a description that falls within the authority, it is nothing to the point that the agent's purpose was to act for his own benefit and to defraud the principal, that is, unless the opposite party to the transaction had notice.
But here the transaction was the attorney's own, both in form and substance, and the only incident of it concerning the constituents was when the latter's property was drawn in as a support for the loan. Prima facie, a power, however widely its general words may be expressed, should not be construed as authorizing the attorney to deal with the property of his principal for the attorney's own benefit. Something more specific and quite unambiguous is needed to justify such an interpretation. "The primary object of a power of attorney is to enable the attorney to act in the management of his principal's affairs. An attorney cannot, in the absence of a clear power so to do, make presents to himself or to others of his principal's property." Per Russell J. , Reckitt v. Barnett Pembroke and Slater Ltd. (1) a judgment approved in the House of Lords (2). In my opinion, the words of the powers of attorney do not in themselves suffice to confer authority upon Hodgetts to secure a borrowing of his own by a deposit of the plaintiffs' scrip. Such a transaction is in itself beyond the limits of the power."
"82 It seems to me unlikely that the legislature would have intended to overturn this strongly expressed and persuasive approach to the interpretation of powers of attorney that are alleged to permit benefits to be conferred on the attorney. On its proper construction, s 163B does not purport to do so. Subsection (1) says that the attorney has the authority to do "on behalf of the person executing the instrument" anything that the person may lawfully authorise an attorney to do. That language echoes the observation of Russell J that the primary object of the power of attorney is to enable the attorney to act in the management of his principal's affairs. It also reflects the observation of Dixon J, distinguishing the case before him from a case where security is granted pursuant to an authority covering the borrowing of money on the principal's behalf . In my view the language of subsection (1) preserves the reasoning in the cases rather than overriding it. Therefore subsection (1) authorises the use of the power within the scope of the attorney's fiduciary agency, but it does not authorise the power to be used inconsistently with fiduciary duty.
83 Then subsection (2) makes it expressly clear that the general authority conferred by subsection (1) does not extend to action that results in a benefit for the attorney, unless the authority to do so is expressly conferred by the instrument. That is, again, consistent with Dixon J's reasoning. Subsection (2) permits the power of attorney, by express language, to authorise acts that result in a benefit to the attorney, but it does not permit the power of attorney to abrogate the fiduciary limitation implied by subsection (1).
84 My conclusion is that the plaintiff's power of attorney did not confer express actual authority on Michael to execute the mortgage and other supporting documents for the Conran Associates loan and the M & V Endurance loan."
"As a matter of language a person may lawfully authorise another to do something on his or her behalf which is entirely inimical to the first person's interests or entirely in the second's."
"154 The only limitation which s 163B(1) imposes on the agent's authority is that the principal cannot authorise the agent to do what the principal could not lawfully do or what the law would restrict the principal from authorising the agent to do on the principal's behalf.
155 The limitation which his Honour placed on the words blurs the distinction between the extent (or lack) of authority and the abuse of it."
"181 My conclusion says nothing of the fiduciary obligations which would have bound Michael to act in a particular way with respect to his mother when exercising the power she conferred upon him, nor derogates from what might have been a breach by Michael of those obligations.
182 But the plaintiff's case is not that Michael breached his fiduciary duty to her in doing what he did. Her case is that he had no power vis- -vis the defendant to bind her to the contracts".
"The fallacy of that argument is that one has to distinguish carefully between two questions; (a) is the donee of the power of attorney authorised so that as between the donee and a third party the donor would be bound by a transaction? and (b) as between the donor and the donee, is the donee accountable for what he or she has done?"
**********
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nsw/NSWSC/2011/729.html