Johen Pty Ltd v Lambear Pty Ltd
[1987] FCA 69
•12 Feb 1987
| , J2-L | 64 |
| AND: HELEN MARE | F'RANCES COOPER |
Third Applicant
AND: LAMBEAR PTY. LTD.
First Respondent
| AND: | WALHINJI PTY. LIMITED |
Second Respondent
MINUTES OF ORDER
| JUDGE MAKING ORDER: | PINCUS J. |
| DATE OF ORDER: | 12 FEBRUARY 1987 |
| WHERE MADE: | BRISBANE |
| THE COURT ORDERS THAT: |
| 1. | The application for an interim in~unction | be |
| refused, wlth costs. |
| m: | Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules. |
| Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in |
| IN THE FED= | COURT OF AUSTRALIA | ) |
| QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY | 1 | QLD G12 of 1987 |
| GENERAL DIVISION | ) |
BETEEN: JOHEN PTY. LTD.
First Applicant
AND: JOHN RICHARD COOPER
Second Applicant
| AND: HELEN MARE | FRANCES COOPER |
Third Applicant
| AND: | LAMBEAR PTY. LTD. |
First Respondent
AND: WALHIND PTY. LIMITED
Second Respondent
| PINCUS J. | 12 February 1987 |
EX TEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
There is an application In this Court for a declaration
that the first applicant is entitled to rescind an agreement dated rescind a certain sublease and guarantees, damages under the Trade
| Practices | alt rnative | the | i | and | Act | damages | for |
misrepresentation.
There is also sought an injunction restraining the
| prosecution of two | suits | brought | in | the | District | Court | of |
Queensland at Brisbane, which were instituted in August and
| October last year. There is | an affidavit before me by | Mr. Brian |
Halligan, solicitor for the applicants, and counsel appears today
| i | s | . | 2 . |
| seeking an interim injunction to restrain the prosecution | of |
| applications for summary judgment which have been made in the |
| District Court proceedings | I have mentioned. |
| Mr. | Halligan's affidavit discloses that in District |
| Court proceedings, no. 3192 of | 1986, the defence was filed on | 15 |
October 1986 and in the other suit, no. 3670 of 1986, a defence
| was flled on | 6 November 1986. | The applications for summary |
judgment seem to have been filed rather late. That is, they were
| filed only on | 28 January | 1987 but that | is, no doubt, a matter |
| which the District Court could consider and not really a | matter |
| for me. |
The affidavit of Mr. Halligan explains that the case is
| about a tenancy In a shopping centre at Aspley | called | the |
Pick-N-Pay Hypermarket, which commenced in November 1984. It says that at a meetlng between prospective tenants of the hypermarket
| and representatives | of the developers and landlord | it was said |
that the hypermarket would not compete with the speciality shops and that the turnover was 30 per cent higher for speclality shops adjacent to a hypermarket, or words to that effect.
| Mr. | Halligan's affidavit further indicates that | his |
instructions are that both of these assertions were falsified by
| events, in that | the turnover was unsatisfactory and in that the |
speciality stores located about the hypermarket did not enjoy such
a turnover as had been promised and in that the hypermarket
| actively competed with the speciality shops. | The affidavit goes |
| on to give some small amount | f detail as to the competition. |
3.
Counsel for the applicants has candidly drawn attention
| to the fact that the defences which | I have mentioned, filed in the |
| District | Court, | no | raise | do | h se | suggestions | f |
misrepresentation. They merely rely upon the legal point, about
the validity of which it is not necessary to say anything, that
the leases in question were not registered.
| The application having been filed in this Court It | 1 s | a |
| question, it seems to me, whether | I should | en~oin | the further |
| prosecution of the matters in the District | Court or leave it to |
the Judge of the District Court who hears the applications to
determine whether he should, in the light of the proceedlngs
| having | been | commenced | here, | ad~ourn or proceed | with | the |
| applications for summary judgment. It | is by no means | m every |
| case that a proper exercise of the discretlon of | thls Court to |
grant such an injunction as is sought would requlre the granting
| of an in~unction | merely because a suggestlon | 1 s | made that the |
| matter falls within | s.52 of the Trade Practices Act. |
| I have, desplte the able argument | of Mr. Batch, come to |
| the conclusion that I | should refuse the appllcation and leave | it |
to the District Court to proceed, or not proceed, wlth the
| applications to that court, | as it sees fit. The reasons are | as |
| follows: firstly, and unusually, there | is no suggestion made in |
| the | proceedings | in | the | District | Court | that | there | was | any |
| misrepresentation | made; | secondly, | the | character | the | of |
misrepresentations made, according to the instructions given to
Mr. Halligan, is not such as to generate any great confidence in
| the prospects of success. I appreciate, as Mr. Batch has | pointed |
| e | . |
| c | 4 . |
out, that there has not been time to give much detail, but the
| expectation as to a hiqh | turnover | is | not, prima | facie, a |
representation of anything other than opinion and the statement as
| to competition, on the face of | it, is merely promissory. |
| The case | is one, in my opinion, in which the court |
should not interfere. That is not to say, of course, that if the
application in this Court is pursued it must necessarily fail. It
| does not, on the face of | it, look overwhelmingly promising. |
The order of the court will therefore be that the
application for an interim injunction made orally by counsel today
be refused, with costs.
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