Feldman v Blake Napier Ltd

Case

[2022] NSWSC 1255

09 September 2022

No judgment structure available for this case.

Supreme Court


New South Wales

Medium Neutral Citation: Feldman v Blake Napier Ltd [2022] NSWSC 1255
Hearing dates: 9 September 2022
Decision date: 09 September 2022
Jurisdiction: Equity - Duty List
Before: Meek J
Decision:

Dismiss plaintiff’s claims with costs

Catchwords:

REAL PROPERTY — Plaintiff and husband former registered proprietors of land — Almost 19 years later the plaintiff lodges caveat claiming that the defendant fraudulently transferred the land from the plaintiff consequent upon entry into various Deeds — Defendant serves lapsing notice — Caveat lapses before orders made ex parte extending operation of caveat — Plaintiff subsequently seeks order permitting the lodgement of another caveat

ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION — Plaintiff seeks orders directing non-party ‘defendants’ to attend a ‘Jewish Court of Law Arbitration’

Legislation Cited:

Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW), s 98

Evidence Act 1995 (NSW), s 136

Real Property Act 1900 (NSW), ss 74J, 74O

Cases Cited:

Breskvar v Wall (1971) 126 CLR 376

Texts Cited:

Ritchie's Uniform Civil Procedure NSW

Shannon Lindsay, Caveats Against Dealings in Australia and New Zealand (1995, Federation Press)

Category:Principal judgment
Parties: Pnina Feldman (Plaintiff)
Blake Napier Ltd (Defendant)
Representation:

Counsel:
In person (Plaintiff)
S D Lloyd (solicitor) (Defendant)

Solicitors:
Arnold Bloch Leibler (Defendant)
File Number(s): 2022/267213

Ex Tempore Judgment

  1. HIS HONOUR: The application before the Court is a notice of motion filed by the plaintiff in Court this afternoon, 9 September 2022.

  2. The application came before the Court today in a context in which the plaintiff had earlier approached myself as Equity Duty Judge ex parte on 7 September 2022.

  3. On that occasion the plaintiff sought leave to file in Court a summons and an affidavit that was said to have been affirmed by her but was not affirmed before any Justice of the Peace or other person authorised to take an affidavit.

  4. I permitted the plaintiff to file the summons upon the plaintiff providing to the Court an undertaking to pay the applicable filing fee.

  5. Because the affidavit had not been properly attested, I had my Tipstaff administer to the plaintiff an affirmation, which affirmation the plaintiff gave affirming the details in the affidavit.

  6. The affidavit did not contain a copy of any caveat or other document apart from the contents in the body of the affidavit.

  7. I asked the plaintiff whether there was a copy of the caveat. She produced a copy of the caveat and that was marked exhibit P1 on that application.

  8. The plaintiff on that occasion and today appeared before me by audio visual means from the ground floor of the Hospital Road Courts in a context in which she was not completely vaccinated and for that reason under Court policy was not permitted to attend in the courtroom.

  9. On 7 September 2022 I made the following orders:

“1.   Upon the plaintiff Pnina Feldman providing to the court an undertaking to pay the applicable filing fee, grant leave to file in Court a Summons and the affidavit of Pnina Feldman that has been affirmed via AVL in the form initialled by Meek J, dated and placed with the papers.

2.   Subject to the notation in order 8, order that the operation of caveat no AS[xxx]38 if that be the correct number or in any event the caveat lodged by the plaintiff in respect of the property bearing the title reference 2/[xxx] be extended up to and including 5:00pm Friday, 9 September 2022.

3.   Direct the time for service of the Summons, the affidavit of Pnina Feldman and a copy of these orders be abridged to 10:00am tomorrow, 8 September 2022 with service to be effected upon Blake Napier Limited at the registered office of the company at 68 Blake Street, Dover Heights or such other location as they may be able to be served at by that time.

4.   Order the Summons are returnable before the Equity Duty Judge by 10am on Friday 9 September 2022.

5.   Costs reserved.

6.   Order these orders are to be entered forthwith.

7.   Order that these orders are without prejudice to the defendant applying to the Court upon notice to the plaintiff to alter the extension of the caveat prior to 10am on Friday, 9 September 2022.

8.   Notes the operation of the caveat is extended on the basis that the plaintiff has given to the Court the usual undertaking pursuant to r25.8 of the Uniform Procedure Rules.

  1. It is approximately 4.07pm and the plaintiff has (for religious observance reasons noted below) terminated her connection to the Court.

  2. The type of claim was described as caveat extension. On the second page of the summons under the heading Relief Claimed there was no detail.

  3. The affidavit in support of the application which was affirmed by the plaintiff by means of audio visual link in Court on 7 September 2022 contains the following paragraphs:

“1    #I am [role of deponent].

plaintiff. Caveator.

2    I am over the age of 16 years. ✓

3    On [date] at [place], I served [name of person served] with the following documents [describe documents served. If the document served is a filed document include the date the document was filed in the description eg statement of claim filed (dated). Do not attach a copy of any document already filed.]

4    I served the documents by [method of service]. through my solicitor

Blake Napier Ltd was served with a caveat by Eddy Neumann Law Pty Ltd ABN 23122507056

Eddy Neumann Lawyers

ELND Subscriber Number: [xxxxx]

Customer Account Number: [xxxxxx]

Date 12/07/2022

Land title reference 2/xxxxxxx

Estate/interest claimed - Estate in Fee Simple

Caveat AS[xxx]438

Summary of Claim: The current owner has fraudulently transferred ownership of the property from the previous owner – a charitable trust – with specific purpose that has been changed by the current "owner/s" for personal gain - the key "offenders" being Joseph Gutnick, Richard Scheinberg and Michael Moss.

5    #At the time of service [name of person served] stated [record what, if anything, the person served said].”

  1. The summons under the orders made on 7 September 2022 was returnable before myself as Equity Duty Judge at 10am this morning, 9 September 2022.

  2. Today the plaintiff appeared and Mr Lloyd, solicitor for the defendant, appeared.

  3. The case was amongst a number of other cases in the list and initially this morning I addressed the parties briefly to establish the nature of the application to be sought.

  4. At least at that point of time, there was some dispute as to whether the caveat had been properly extended or not.

  5. Mr Lloyd asserted that the caveat had lapsed.

  6. The plaintiff asserted that the caveat had been effectively extended.

  7. I indicated to the parties that if an order was sought to extend the operation of the caveat I would need some clarity as to whether the caveat had in fact lapsed or been extended effectively.

  8. At that stage the plaintiff indicated to me that there was potentially another application which she might wish to make pursuant to the provisions of s 74O of the Real Property Act 1900 (NSW). Mr Lloyd indicated to me that there was another application that he may wish to make.

  9. I stood the matter down to until 2pm enable the parties to formulate whatever applications they wished to make and to prepare whatever evidence or to provide whatever evidence they wished to adduce on any such application.

  10. Because of the exigencies of the Court List I sat through the luncheon period until approximately 1.55pm to deliver judgment in another matter.

  11. As my staff and the Court Reporter had not had any break, I adjourned the Court indicating that I would resume at approximately 2.20pm.

  12. On resumption of the matter the plaintiff and Mr Lloyd indicated that they were ready to proceed with the application.

  13. The plaintiff indicated to me that she wished to proceed on a form of notice of motion.

  14. She provided to the Court the form of notice of motion. It sought the following orders:

“1 That the Honourable Judge gives orders on behalf of the Supreme Court to enable me to immediately place another caveat over Blake Napier Ltd in accordance with s 74O of the Real Property Act, 1990, whereby a Supreme Court order may grant leave for the lodgment of a further caveat. When a caveat has lapsed, a further caveat in respect of the same estate or interest in land may only be lodged by means of a Supreme Court order.

2    That the Honourable Judge order that the defendants, four of whom are Orthodox Jews, attend a Jewish Court of Law ARBITRATION (Beis Din) before disputing in Court, as is required by Torah law. If the defendants wish to dispense with this part of their religious obligations, then the following order is sought

3    That the Honourable Judge set another date for a hearing on this matter, to allow time for the plaintiff to (adequately) state her case”

  1. On the basis of the plaintiff giving an undertaking to pay the applicable filing fee in relation to that, I permitted the notice of motion to be filed in Court.

  2. Mr Lloyd informed me that he did not wish to proceed with the applications that he had foreshadowed earlier.

  3. Having received the notice of motion, Mr Lloyd, who had not prior to then had an opportunity to see it, was given an opportunity to review its contents.

  4. Mr Lloyd indicated to me that he opposed the relief sought in the notice of motion but was content for me to proceed to hear the notice of motion.

  5. On the notice of hearing of the notice of motion the plaintiff relied upon the affidavit that she had affirmed on 7 September 2022.

  6. Mr Lloyd for his part relied upon an affidavit of himself affirmed on 9 September 2022.

  7. Both parties had some objections to parts of the respective affidavits.

  8. I made rulings in respect of those objections, including rulings in respect of relevantly the part of paragraph 4 of the plaintiff's affidavit under the heading "Summary of Claim", which was admitted on a basis pursuant to s 136 of the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW) that it was limited to her beliefs.

  9. Each party sought to rely upon some additional evidence in the form of documents to be tendered.

  10. For the plaintiff's part, the process of identifying the documents she sought to rely upon was somewhat disjointed and the documents she sought to rely upon were during the course of the hearing presented in a somewhat piecemeal way.

  11. Nonetheless the documents which were eventually tendered by the plaintiff were the following documents:

  1. Exhibit P1 being Articles of Association of the Sydney Talmudical College dated 18 April 1961 (unsigned);

  2. Exhibit P2 which is a Deed of Settlement dated 14 December 2003;

  3. Exhibit P3 which is a copy of ‘The Blake Napier Property Trust’ stamped on 19 March 2004 (Blake Napier Property Trust);

  4. Exhibit P4 which is a Deed made 12 August 2007;

  5. Exhibit P5 which is a bundle of correspondence more particularly described:

  1. A letter from DSM Austin Solicitor, on behalf of the plaintiff, to Blake Napier Ltd dated 20 November 2007 stating the plaintiff’s willingness to arrange a suitable charitable entity to purchase the property and requesting assurance within 7 days that a sale of the property will not take place without the plaintiff having an opportunity to “match the terms available”;

  2. A letter from DSM Austin Solicitor, on behalf of Rabbi Sholom Feldman, to Blake Napier Ltd dated 20 November 2007 raising what were described as “a number of issues of concern as to the management and governance of the Blake Napier Trust”;

  3. A letter from Schetzer Brott & Appel Lawyers & Consultants dated 7 June 2007 to Rabbi Samuel Gurewicz;

  4. A letter from Meir Moss to “Carl and Ian” dated 10 May 2007;

  5. A letter from Kesser Torah College to addressed to parents dated 23 March 2007 (with handwritten annotations).

  1. Mr Lloyd for his part tendered a number of documents. These were:

  1. Exhibit D1 which is a letter from Eddy Neumann Lawyers dated 4 August 2022;

  2. Exhibit D2 which is a bundle of documents comprising:

  1. A letter from ABL to Eddy Neumann Lawyers dated 10 August 2022 requesting that the Feldmans remove the caveat;

  2. Signed counterparts of a letter dated 8 March 2007 recording an agreement between Lubavitch Mazal Pty Ltd and Nelvet Pty Ltd;

  3. Minutes of meeting of directors dated 13 March 2007 (signed);

  4. Deed of Variation between Blake Napier Ltd and the President of the Jewish Communal Appeal of New South Wales, the President of the New South Wales Jewish Board of Deputies and the President of the Kesser Torah College Ltd relating to the Blake Napier Property Trust dated 13 March 2007 (signed); and

  5. Resignation of Director dated 12 April 2007 signed by Joseph Gutnick.

  1. The plaintiff objected to certain of the material in the documents. I permitted the documents to be admitted.

  2. Although there was no clear evidence as to when the defendant became the registered proprietor of the property, I asked the parties when that occurred.

  3. I was informed by Mr Lloyd that it occurred approximately in 2003.

  4. The plaintiff did not appear to demur from that indication.

  5. The caveat is dated 12 July 2022. The caveators being the plaintiff and Pinchus Feldman, who I understand is the plaintiff's husband.

  6. The caveat is said to be based on a claim to an estate or interest in the land specified.

  7. The action prohibited by the caveat contains four sentences numbered 1, 2, 4 and 7:

“1.    The recording in the Register of any dealing other than a plan affecting the estate or interest claimed by the Caveator.

2.    The registration or recording of any plan other than a delimitation plan affecting the estate or interest claimed by the Caveator.

4.    The granting of any possessory application with respect to the land in the Torrens Title referred to above.

7.    The recording in the Register of a Writ affecting the estate or interest claimed by the Caveator.”

  1. The estate or interest claimed is an estate said to be by virtue of an agreement between Pinchus Feldman and Pnina Feldman and Blake Napier Limited pursuant to a Deed dated 12 August 2007, a Deed of Settlement dated 14 December 2003.

  2. Beneath that reference is a part of the caveat which is on the first page, the second, the penultimate box:

“The Caveator, to the best of the knowledge of the Subscriber identified in the execution of this Caveat document, has a good and valid claim to the estate or interest claimed as specified in this Caveat.

This Caveat, to the best of the knowledge of the Subscriber identified in the execution of this Caveat document, does not require the leave of the Supreme Court.

This Caveat, to the best of the knowledge of the Subscriber identified in the execution of this Caveat document, does not require the written consent of the Registered Proprietor Of Estate or possessory applicant (as applicable) for the purposes of section 74O Real Property Act 1900.

The Caveator, to the best of the knowledge of the Subscriber identified in the execution of this Caveat document, has provided the correct address of the Registered Proprietor as specified in this Caveat.”

  1. The plaintiff informed me both on the occasion of her first appearance before me on 7 September 2022 that she and her husband were the former registered proprietors of the property.

  2. In dealing with the matter today, that still appeared to be the plaintiff's assertion and I have proceeded on that basis.

  3. On 14 July 2022 the New South Wales Land Registry Services (Land Registry) sent the defendant a notice that the plaintiff and Pinchus Feldman had lodged a caveat over the property.

  4. A title searched obtained on 26 July 2022 reveals that the caveat was then recorded on the title, being the last of 24 notifications in the second schedule of the computer folio certificate.

  5. In the period from 3 August 2022 to 12 August 2022 the defendant's solicitors (ABL) and Eddy Neumann Lawyers exchanged correspondence in relation to the caveat in which essentially the defendant denied that the plaintiffs had any caveatable interest in the property and demanded that the caveat be removed.

  6. However, that correspondence is not before the Court other than in the form of the letter which is exhibit D1.

  7. On 3 August 2022 the defendant lodged an application for the preparation of a Lapsing Notice with the Land Registry.

  8. On 10 August 2022 the Land Registry issued to the defendant a notice pursuant to s 74J of the Real Property Act.

  9. On 16 August 2022 the defendant’s solicitors caused the lapsing notice to be served on the address specified in the caveat being the offices of Eddy Neumann Lawyers.

  10. There was an issue in relation to the Land Registry not accepting the statutory declaration of the employee of ABL Ms McCunn.

  11. However, that issue was eventually rectified.

  12. On the basis that the lapsing notice was served on 16 August 2022, the caveat would have lapsed on 6 September 2022 in accordance with the 21 day period specified in the lapsing notice.

  13. There was some vacillation in the position of the plaintiff during the course of the hearing as to whether or not the caveat had in fact lapsed prior to the making of the orders that I had made on 7 September 2022.

  14. Eventually the plaintiff's position, as will be recorded in the transcript, was that the caveat had in fact lapsed at 2.30pm on 7 September 2022.

  15. The evidence discloses before me that there was a title search of the land conducted at 6.21pm on 7 September 2022.

  16. The caveat is not included amongst the notifications on that search.

  17. A further search was conducted at 5.33pm on 8 September 2022. The caveat is not recorded amongst the notifications on that title search.

  18. In those circumstances it is certain that in fact the caveat did lapse.

  19. I am dealing with the matter in circumstances where: (a) the caveat is not recorded on the title search to the property; (b) the lapsing notice was served on 16 August 2022; (c) the plaintiff asserts that the caveat had lapsed at 2.30pm on 7 September 2022; (d) the plaintiff proceeded on the basis that the caveat has lapsed and there is no application or basis for me to further extend the operation of the caveat.

  20. Indeed if it is true that the caveat had lapsed at 2.30pm, with the benefit of hindsight, though not known to me at the moment, the caveat had in all likelihood lapsed by the time that the plaintiff had first approached the Court on 7 September 2022, which the record of proceedings shows were heard by me commencing at 3.34pm.

  21. I was informed by the plaintiff on that occasion, when I asked her, that to the best of her knowledge and belief the lapsing notice had been received on 17 August 2022. It was on the basis of that assertion that I extended the operation of the caveat.

  22. Section 74O of the Real Property Act is in the following terms:

74O      Restrictions on lodgment of further caveats if earlier caveat lapses or is withdrawn

(1)     This section applies if a caveat lodged under a provision of this Part in respect of any particular estate or interest in land or any particular right arising out of a restrictive covenant—

(a)     subsequently lapses, or

(b)     is, after an application is lodged with the Registrar-General for the preparation of a notice under section 74C (3), 74I (1) or (2), 74J (1) or 74JA (3), withdrawn under another provision of this Part, or

(c)     is withdrawn or lapses under section 74MA,

and the same caveator lodges a further caveat with the Registrar-General in respect of the same estate, interest or right and purporting to be based on the same facts as the first caveat.

(2)     A further caveat to which this section refers has no effect unless—

(a)     the Supreme Court has made an order giving leave for the lodgment of the further caveat and the order or an office copy of the order accompanies the further caveat when it is lodged with the Registrar-General, or

(b)     the further caveat is endorsed with the consent of the primary applicant or possessory applicant for, or the registered proprietor of, the estate or interest affected by the further caveat.”

  1. On hearing of the application for the relief sought in paragraph 1 of the notice of motion, the plaintiff did not refer me to any specific principles in relation to the application of s 74O.

  2. Mr Lloyd for his part submitted that the relevant principles were those akin to an interlocutory injunction and submitted that for an order to be made there must be a serious question to be tried and there must be shown to be a present entitlement to an interest in the land.

  3. Further, although not referred to in the submissions, on the basis that the interlocutory injunction principles apply, there would also ordinarily be consideration of the balance of convenience.

  4. The plaintiff, in seeking an order to lodge a further caveat in respect of the same estate, interest or right and purporting to be based on the same facts as the first caveat, did not provide me with any form of caveat to be approved.

  5. In those circumstances I can only proceed on the basis that the application in substance was an application to lodge a further caveat in the terms of the caveat lodged dated 12 July 2022 as referred to above.

  6. When one considers the terms of that caveat, the details supporting the claim are said to be a Deed dated 12 August 2007 and the Deed of Settlement dated 14 December 2003.

  7. The plaintiff on the hearing of the application made a number of assertions regarding the documents. In particular she said that the Deed of Settlement was signed in a context of there being fraudulent representations, duress and blackmail.

  8. The plaintiff vacillated between positions during the hearing as to whether the documents were valid or not.

  9. As I understood her ultimate position she asserted that the Deed of Settlement dated 14 December 2003 and the Blake Napier Property Trust were invalid documents.

  10. In relation to the Deed dated 12 August 2007, the plaintiff asserted that there were issues in relation to that Deed as well and that her brother Joseph Gutnick did not have the rights asserted to in that Deed.

  11. The plaintiff (in submissions) did not specifically take me to the parts of the various documents which she tendered and became exhibits although did at an earlier point indicate that there were some highlighted bits of the documents to which I ought to have regard.

  12. In the Deed of Settlement in the Table of Contents, clauses 3 and 6A being respectively Dover Heights Contract and Sale of Dover Heights have been highlighted. Clause 3 of the Deed is also highlighted and the heading in clause 3 of the Deed is highlighted and subclause 5 of clause 3 is highlighted. The clause is relevantly in the following terms:

3. DOVER HEIGHTS CONTRACT

(5)    Newco represents and warrants to RDW and the Yeshiva Property Companies and each of them that Newco will immediately prior to the date of the Dover Heights Contract:

(a) be eligible for exemption under section 275(b) of thy Duties Act 1997; and

(b)    be a company or trust established for charitable or benevolent purposes; and

(c)    the transfer of Dover Heights will be for charitable or benevolent purposes namely for the promotion of Jewish education.”

  1. Clause 6A is highlighted:

6A SALE OF DOVER HEIGHTS

If completion of the Dover Heights Contract occurs and any mortgage remains registered on the title to Dover Heights (including the Lenderco Mortgage) on the date 32 months after the date of completion of the Dover Heights Contract, Newco must do all things to prepare a contract for sale for Dover Heights (on terms approved by Lenderco if the Lenderco Mortgage remains in force at that time), list Dover Heights for sale with a real estate agent and at a price approved by Lenderco (if the Lenderco Mortgage remains in force at that time) and enter into a contract for sale of Dover Heights no later than the date 36 months after the date of completion of the Dover Heights Contract. Newco will ensure that such contract for sale is completed no later than the date 37 months after the date of completion of the Dover Heights Contract.”

  1. No other part of that Deed of Settlement is highlighted.

  2. The document which is described as the Blake Napier Property Trust contains some highlighting.

  3. In the Table of Contents clause 3.8 “Termination” is highlighted. In the body of the Trust Deed clause 3.9 “Termination” is highlighted:

3.9 Termination

The Trustee will terminate the trust on the earlier of the following:

(a)    30 June 2004 or such later date as Meriton shall agree, unless Meriton is repaid the Meriton Advance prior to that date or such later date;

(b)    31 December 2006, unless:

(i)    Lenderco is repaid prior to that date or such later date as Lenderco shall agree; or

(ii)    the College is Operational.”

  1. I pause to note that there seems to be some misnumbering in the contents which describes clause 3.8 as "Termination" whereas in the actual body of the document the clause headed "Termination" is in fact clause 3.9. No other part of the property trust document is highlighted.

  2. The Deed dated 12 August 2007 is not highlighted. However, because it was referred to by the plaintiff, I set out the terms of the Deed as follows:

“RECITALS

A.    JIG is a director and shareholder of Lubavitch Mazal Pty Ltd (ACN 067 617 065) (LM)

B.    Under the terms of the Trust Deed of the Blake Napier Property Trust (Trust) and associated documentation (that represent all of the rights JIG and LM are entitled to exercise in relation to the Trust). (Trust Documents). JIG and LM are entitled to exercise certain rights and has entered into agreements in connection with the Trust and its affairs (LM Rights).

C.    JIG has agreed to take all steps available to him and to LM to irrevocably enable PF to exercise the LM Rights.

D.    JIG and PF acknowledge that there are no outstanding claims or disputes between them and/or their associated entities.

OPERATIVE PROVISIONS

1.    AGREEMENT IN PRINCIPAL [sic]

a)    JIG and LM agree irrevocably to take all steps available to them to the extent permitted by law or under any existing agreement to transfer the LM Rights to PF or if a transfer is not permitted by law or under any agreement, to enable PF to exercise the LM Rights including, but not limited to any existing right to nominate and appoint a representative to the Blake Napier Trust in place of any existing representative appointed by LM an/or JIG.

b)    PF agrees that in the exercise of the LM Rights, PF will not make any representation or warranty or otherwise take any action that will or will have the effect of binding JIG and/or LM to any liability or obligation (including any financial obligation) or directly or indirectly bring JIG or LM into disrepute. PF will indemnify JIG (including LM and any nominee of LM and any directors or officers of LM or any associated entity) without set off or deduction against any liability arising from any actual or threatened claims arising directly or indirectly from the exercise of any LM Rights by or on behalf of PF.

c)    JIG and PF acknowledge that there are no outstanding claims or disputes between them and/or their associated entities and release each other (including each other’s associated entities) from any claims.

2.    PREPARATION OF FORMAL DOCUMENTS

JIG, LM and PF agree:

a)    that the obligations and undertakings of the parties expressed in this Deed are enforceable under Victorian Law; and

b)    to prepare and execute formal legally binding agreements under Victorian Law which may be more detailed but will be a restatement of the legally binding obligations and undertakings of the parties expressed in this Deed.”

  1. No submission was made to me by the plaintiff regarding the terms of the Articles of Association and I was not taken to any provision of the Articles of Association.

  2. The plaintiff made some reference to the bundle of correspondence from DSM Austin, which is in exhibit P5 and also within exhibit P5 the letter from Schetzer Brott & Appel.

  3. The assertion of the plaintiff was that it was obvious from some of that correspondence that Joseph Gutnick had certain rights.

  4. Conceptually a former registered proprietor of property may have a caveatable interest on the basis that registration of the transfer to the current registered proprietor was procured by fraud: see, for example, Shannon Lindsay, Caveats Against Dealings in Australia and New Zealand (1995, Federation Press) at page 141 citing inter alia Breskvar v Wall (1971) 126 CLR 376 and other cases.

  5. Having regard to the terms of the caveat, the claimed interest is of an estate in fee simple by virtue of the agreement between the plaintiff and Pinchus Feldman on the one hand and Blake Napier, the defendant on the other, and said to be supported by the Deed dated 12 August 2007 and the Deed of Settlement dated 14 December 2003.

  6. I am entirely unpersuaded on the evidence before me, which includes the very serious allegation that the Deed was procured by fraudulent representations, duress and blackmail, that there is a proper basis for the order sought pursuant to s 74O of the Real Property Act.

  7. In any event the evidence leaves entirely unexplained why seemingly there has been no action taken to set aside the Deed, or if there has been any such action taken, there are no details regarding that.

  8. On 7 September 2022, the plaintiff informed the Court that there had been some proceedings taken in 2007 or at some time in respect of the matter by her, which proceedings were not persisted in.

  9. I do not know and the plaintiff did not inform me today whether that is something that has any further relevance bearing upon the matter.

  10. Nonetheless, the position is that the defendant has been registered proprietor of the property since approximately 2003, which is a period of 19 years.

  11. It is in the above context that I decline to make order 1 on the notice of motion.

  12. In relation to order 2 of the notice of motion the order sought is misconceived.

  13. The defendant in the proceedings is the company Blake Napier Ltd.

  14. Order 2 seeks an order that I order “defendants” who are not identified in the notice of motion but are described in the terms, "four of whom are Orthodox Jews", to attend a Jewish Court of Law Arbitration (beis din).

  15. The simple fact of the matter is that there are no natural persons who are defendants to the proceedings. Only a company is the defendant to the proceedings.

  16. There is no basis for me to make such an order.

  17. In those circumstances, I decline to make that order.

  18. Order 3 sought in the notice of motion is an order that I set another date for the hearing of this matter to allow time for the plaintiff to adequately state her case.

  19. In the context of the approach before me on 7 September 2022 and in the hearing which proceeded today, that was the opportunity for the plaintiff to state her case.

  20. The plaintiff earlier in the day informed me that for reasons of religious observance she had limited time to attend today and would need to leave the court by 4pm to go home for the purpose of the Sabbath.

  21. As the matter was being heard I attempted on a number of occasions to remind the plaintiff of the limited time that she had and to attempt to assist her to focus on presenting her case efficiently within the time available so as to permit a proper presentation of her application.

  22. In doing that the plaintiff made a number of choices regarding what she would do.

  23. During the course of the hearing, in particular after 3pm, I asked the plaintiff whether she wished to persist with the application this afternoon or whether she wished to seek to adjourn the application and proceed at another time.

  24. The plaintiff made an informed choice to proceed with the application.

  25. In the above circumstances Mr Lloyd made the submission that there was no proposal put forward by the plaintiff other than dealing with the application which the plaintiff made this afternoon.

  26. As a consequence of the plaintiff proceeding on the application there is no occasion for me to make the relief sought in order 3 of the notice of motion.

  27. It is for the above reasons that I dismissed the relief sought in the notice of motion.

  28. The summons in its terms sought the relief that I have outlined above.

  29. Whilst the summons did not in the part of the (prescribed) form contain any details of relief claimed, I proceeded on the basis that the words, "Caveat Extension", under the heading "Type of Claim" on the first page of the summons was essentially the relief sought.

  30. As the caveat has lapsed (a fact eventually accepted by the plaintiff) and as no further relief was sought in the summons and no application was made before me to further amend the summons, I determine to dismiss the summons.

  31. On the question of costs Mr Lloyd submitted that the plaintiff should pay the costs of the defendant on the indemnity basis.

  32. Ordinarily there must be some specific reason to do so.

  33. The Court has power to order costs be paid on an indemnity basis under s 98 Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW).

  34. This is not the occasion to recite all the circumstances in which indemnity costs might be awarded.

  35. In some circumstances indemnity costs may be awarded where a party has misled the Court or maintained proceedings in circumstances where they should have known that there was no real prospect of success or abandoned claims or maintained the proceedings for an ulterior purpose or by their conduct inappropriately extended the proceedings: see, for example, the commentary in Ritchie's Uniform Civil Procedure NSW at [r 42.5].

  36. Mr Lloyd referred to the prior correspondence that had happened that had been exchanged between his firm and Eddy Neumann Lawyers. Whilst his affidavit refers to correspondence in the period from 3 August 2022 to 12 August 2022 the only actual letters before the Court between the firms is that dated 4 August 2022 and the letter dated 10 August 2022 from ABL to Mr Neumann.

  37. Mr Lloyd also referred to the general conduct of the case by the plaintiff.

  38. The correspondence from ABL to Eddy Neumann Lawyers dated 10 August 2022, which is part of exhibit D2, addresses the contention in the letter from Eddy Neumann Lawyers to ABL dated 4 August 2022.

  39. Whilst I am mindful of the fact that I have determined that there is no sufficient basis for me to make the order sought in paragraph 1 of the notice of motion, on balance I am not positively persuaded that an order for indemnity costs is appropriate in the circumstances of this case. For that reason I order that the plaintiff pay the defendant's costs on the usual ordinary basis.

  40. At or very close to 4pm after the hearing of the application had concluded I informed the parties of my decision to dismiss the relief in the notice of motion and gave them a brief opportunity to address on the question of costs which occurred.

  41. I made that determination mindful of the fact that the plaintiff informed me that she needed to leave the court at approximately 4pm of shortly thereafter to attend to her religious observance.

  42. I considered it appropriate in those circumstances to make the decision promptly and to inform the parties, including the plaintiff, of the decision made so that in the event that she left the court she did so in a context in which she understood the orders that I had made.

  43. The plaintiff asked if a copy of the orders could be provided to her. I indicated that my Associate would prepare a formal record of proceedings and that each of the parties would be provided with a copy of the orders made.

  44. I then proceeded to deliver these reasons for judgment ex tempore. I did that for at least some period of time before the plaintiff disconnected the connection, which occurred approximately 4.07pm this afternoon.

  45. The plaintiff asked me if a copy of the reasons could be provided to her.

  46. I informed her of the usual procedure regarding the preparation of transcripts of judgments delivered ex tempore and indicated that once the transcript had been prepared and approved the transcript of the reasons for judgment would be provided to her.

  47. Finally, the plaintiff also asked me for return of the documents that she had tendered.

  48. I indicated that I would make an order returning the exhibits after the reasons for judgment had been transcribed and approved and provided to the parties.

  49. I will do that as I have indicated.

  50. The orders of the Court are as follows:

  1. Upon the plaintiff Pnina Feldman providing to the Court an undertaking to pay the applicable filing fee in respect of the Notice of Motion, grant leave for the plaintiff to file in court the Notice of Motion, in the form initialled by Meek J, dated and placed with the papers.

  2. Order the Notice of Motion dated 9 September 2022 be dismissed the with costs payable by the plaintiff on the ordinary basis.

  3. Order the Summons dated 7 September 2022 be dismissed.

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Decision last updated: 16 September 2022

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Breskvar v Wall [1971] HCA 70
Breskvar v Wall [1971] HCA 70