Kolevski v Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd

Case

[2025] NSWSC 487

16 May 2025



Supreme Court

New South Wales

Case Name: 

Kolevski v Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd

Medium Neutral Citation: 

[2025] NSWSC 487

Hearing Date(s): 

24, 25, 26, 27, 28 February; 7 March 2025

Date of Orders:

16 May 2025

Decision Date: 

16 May 2025

Jurisdiction: 

Equity

Before: 

Hmelnitsky J

Decision: 

[265]

Catchwords: 

CONTRACTS — Formation — Agreement – Whether parties entered into a binding oral agreement – Whether agreement was in the nature of a mortgage - Whether either of the parties breached the agreement
 
CONTRACTS — Formation — Contracts requiring written evidence — Statute of frauds — Where parties entered into written contracts for the sale of two properties — Whether the doctrine of part performance applied to concurrent oral agreement —
 
MORTGAGES AND SECURITIES — Mortgages — Duties, rights and remedies of mortgagor — Equity of redemption — Whether parties have ever exercised redemption
 
ESTOPPEL — Proprietary estoppel — Encouragement — Whether defendant’s alleged representations gave rise to an estoppel — Whether plaintiffs detrimentally relied on defendant’s alleged promises

Legislation Cited: 

Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) ss 23C, 23E, 54A
Residential Tenancies Act 2010 (NSW) ss 8(1), 40

Cases Cited: 

Abigail v Lapin [1934] AC 491; (1934) 51 CLR 58
Ciaglia v Ciaglia [2010] NSWSC 341; 269 ALR 175
Currey (Registrar of Titles) v The Federal Building Society (1929) 42 CLR 421; [1929] HCA 28
Douglas v Mikhael & Ors [2023] NSWSC 979
Fuller v Albert [2021] NSWCA 88
G.A. Investments Pty Ltd v Standard Insurance Company Limited [1964] WAR 264
Gurfinkel v Bentley Pty Ltd (1966) 116 CLR 98; [1966] HCA 75
Highfields Australia Pty Ltd v Advanced Motor Dealers Group Pty Ltd [2023] NSWSC 1458
Hoyt’s Pty Ltd v Spencer (1919) 27 CLR 133; [1919] HCA 64
Hudson v Arap 1 (NSW) Pty Ltd [2015] NSWCA 126
John Holland Pty Ltd v Kellogg Brown & Root Pty Ltd [2015] NSWSC 451
Li v Tao (2023) 113 NSWLR 131; [2023] NSWCA 310
Lincoln v Wright (1859) 4 De G & J 16; 45 ER 6
Maybury v Atlantic Union Oil Co Ltd (1953) 89 CLR 507; [1953] HCA 89
McMahon v National Foods Milk Ltd (2009) 25 VR 251; [2009] VSCA 153
Morris Finance Ltd v Free [2017] NSWSC 1417
Pipikos v Trayans (2016) 265 CLR 522; [2018] HCA 39
Touma v Highfields Australia Pty Ltd [2024] NSWCA 160
Turner v Richards [2025] NSWCA 83
Watson v Foxman (1995) 49 NSWLR 315

Texts Cited: 

B Edgeworth, Butt’s Land Law (7th ed, 2017, Thomson Reuters)
ELG Tyler, PW Young and C Croft, Fisher & Lightwood’s Law of Mortgage (3rd Australian edition, 2014, LexisNexis Butterworths)

Category: 

Principal judgment

Parties: 

Nikolce Kolevski (First Plaintiff/First Cross-Defendant)
Lena Kolevski (Second Plaintiff/Second Cross-Defendant)
Cameron Kolevski (Third Plaintiff)
Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd (Defendant/Cross-Claimant)

Representation: 

Counsel:
M Maconachie (Plaintiffs/Cross-Defendants)
A McInerney SC/D Southwood (Defendant/Cross-Claimant)

Solicitors:
Kells (Plaintiffs/Cross-Defendants)
Stanton & Stanton (Defendant/Cross-Claimant)

File Number(s): 

2022/25474

Publication Restriction: 

Nil

JUDGMENT

  1. On 2 July 2015, Nikolce (Nick) and Lena Kolevski (the first and second plaintiffs) exchanged standard form contracts for the sale of two residential properties in New South Wales with Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd (Timber Creek, the defendant). Nick and Lena were the vendors. Timber Creek was the purchaser. One of the properties was the Kolevskis’ family home in Shell Cove. The other was a home in Port Kembla occupied by Lena’s elderly parents. Timber Creek was a company associated with the Kolevskis’ friend, Ken Stevens. I will adopt the naming convention used by the parties and refer to Mr Stevens and the members of the Kolevski family by their first names.

  2. Settlement occurred on 21 July 2015, whereupon Timber Creek became the registered proprietor of each property.

  3. To an outside observer, the distinctive feature of these otherwise unremarkable transactions was that the price paid by Timber Creek for each property was well below market value. As at 21 July 2015, the Shell Cove property had a market value of $1,025,000 but the purchase price was $400,000. The Port Kembla property had a market value of $320,000 but the purchase price was $222,000. The total purchase price for the two properties was almost exactly equal to the amount required to discharge mortgages held by the ANZ Bank over the properties.

  4. The Kolevskis have continued to live in the properties since the sale to Timber Creek. During the whole of the time that Timber Creek has owned the properties, the Kolevskis, including their son Cameron (the third plaintiff), have made monthly payments of $3,600 to Timber Creek, as well as some other payments to which I will refer in due course.

  5. The plaintiffs say that Nick and Lena, on the one hand, and Ken on behalf of Timber Creek, on the other, reached an oral agreement in May or June 2015 by which Timber Creek agreed to lend Nick and Lena $620,000 at 6.5% interest per annum in order to pay out the ANZ Bank mortgages and that the properties would be conveyed to Timber Creek in order to secure repayment. They say their regular monthly $3,600 payments have always been by way of loan repayment.

  6. The plaintiffs’ principal case is that the transaction considered as a whole (that is, the oral agreement plus the contracts for sale and the transfers) was akin to a loan and mortgage transaction. They say that they have performed all of their obligations under the arrangement save for repayment and that they are now ready, willing and able to repay what is owing in order to recover title to the properties.

  7. However, these claims are subject to two important and related qualifications. First, the plaintiffs do not say that the Court should order the properties to be conveyed to Nick and Lena as mortgagors. Rather, they say it was always an aspect of the oral loan agreement that Cameron could pay out the loan and have the properties conveyed to him. Secondly, although they plead that Nick and Lena are ‘ready, willing and able to repay the Loan Amount to Timber Creek’, Nick and Lena have never tendered an amount by way of repayment and there is no evidence that they are able to do so now. Rather, they say that Cameron is ready, willing and able to repay the loan. Thus, the orders they seek are, in substance, that ‘upon payment into Court’ of the sum of $322,943.17 (an amount I will say more about in due course) the properties should be conveyed to Cameron ‘or such other or others of the plaintiffs as they may elect’.

  8. The defendant’s principal case is that there was no agreement between the parties apart from the standard form contracts to convey the properties. Ken says that he (on behalf of Timber Creek) agreed to acquire the properties in order to assist the Kolevskis, who were old family friends and who were in financial difficulty at the time. I note that on any view of the evidence, Nick told Ken in about June 2015 that the ANZ Bank was threatening to take the properties. Ken says he agreed to purchase the properties outright to ensure that the Kolevskis did not lose their homes. Ken says he was willing to allow the Kolevskis to continue to live in the properties as lessees and that he was also prepared to reconvey the properties to them provided they were ‘back on their feet’ within a short amount of time. However, Timber Creek says that this never occurred. That is, Nick and Lena did not get ‘back on their feet’ within a short amount of time. Timber Creek says that none of these matters ever became the subject of a binding contractual commitment in any event.

  9. Timber Creek says in the alternative that even if there was an oral agreement and if Nick and Lena are in a position akin to equitable mortgagors, they have never tendered payment to exercise their equity of redemption and they are demonstrably unable to do so now. It also says that even if there was an oral agreement between the parties, it did not include a term that would allow Cameron to obtain title to the properties on repayment.

  10. This general description of the parties’ principal positions leaves out much relevant detail. It does however serve to identify the major factual issue in dispute, namely the content of the key discussions in June 2015 between Nick and Ken during which the alleged oral agreement is said to have been reached.

The facts

  1. Because so much turns on disputed accounts of discussions that took place almost 10 years ago, it is appropriate to bear in mind the inherent fallibility of human memory: Watson v Foxman (1995) 49 NSWLR 315 at 319 per McLelland CJ in Eq. This is especially so where the differences between the witnesses’ accounts, although contested and although they lead to very different legal outcomes for the parties, are in fact quite small and sometimes little more than matters of nuance. It is necessary to pay particular attention to the surrounding facts, most of which are objectively verifiable, and to the inherent commercial probabilities of how persons in the position of the witnesses would speak and act in those circumstances: Highfields Australia Pty Ltd v Advanced Motor Dealers Group Pty Ltd [2023] NSWSC 1458 at [113]-[115] per Richmond J, which was cited with approval in Touma v Highfields Australia Pty Ltd [2024] NSWCA 160 at [18] per Basten AJA with White and Adamson JJA agreeing.

  2. The following description of the background facts is derived largely from the considerable volume of documentary material tendered by the defendant and from aspects of Nick and Lena’s evidence that were not really in dispute. Where my findings have required me to deal with evidence that was in serious dispute, I will indicate why I have reached my conclusion.

The Kolevskis

  1. Lena and Nick were married in 1992. At the time of the hearing, Nick was 59 years old and Lena was 53 years old. Their first son, Cameron, was born in 1992. Their second son, Lachlan, was born in 1998.

  2. Lena and Nick acquired the Shell Cove property as a vacant block on 19 February 2001 for $162,000. To fund the purchase and subsequent construction of their home, they borrowed approximately $230,000 from the ANZ Bank, who took a mortgage over the property. Lena and Nick also contributed about $180,000 from their savings towards the costs of construction.

  3. The members of the Kolevski family have lived in the Shell Cove property since it was built. Since February 2021, Cameron’s wife Jessica has also resided at the property.

  4. Lena’s mother is Nadezda Laskovski. She is currently about 79 years old and lives at the Port Kembla property. She has lived at that property since September 1970 together with her late husband (Lena’s father), Simon Laskovski until his death.

  5. Lena and Nick bought the Port Kembla house from Lena’s brother George Laskovski in 2007 for the sum of $215,000. There was no evidence as to how or why George ever came to own it. To fund the purchase, they borrowed about $129,000 from the ANZ Bank and contributed about $86,000 of their own savings. The ANZ Bank registered a mortgage over this property as well to secure repayment of the borrowings.

  6. In about 2010, Lena and Nick redrew funds on the loan secured by the Shell Cove property to finance working capital for their businesses. They did not say how much they drew down for this purpose, but Nick said that, following the redraw, their repayments on the Shell Cove loan were about $2,215 per month. He also said that they redrew funds on the loan for the Port Kembla property from time to time.

The Shellharbour station

  1. For many years prior to the 2015 transactions, Nick and Lena operated service stations in the Illawarra region south of Sydney. One was located at 256-260 Shellharbour Drive, Warilla. The other was located at 92 Lakeside Drive, Kanahooka.

  2. The Warilla station operated under the name ‘Advance Fuel Barrack Heights’ but it was mostly referred to in the evidence as the Shellharbour station. The property on which it was located was referred to as the Barrack Heights property.

  3. The Barrack Heights property was owned by Pinebai Pty Ltd (Pinebai). Nick and Lena were the shareholders of Pinebai. Another company, Ebacarb Pty Ltd (Ebacarb), carried on the service station business at that site (that is, at the Shellharbour station). Nick and Lena were also the shareholders of Ebacarb.

  4. The major supplier of fuel to the Kolevskis’ service stations was Park Pty Ltd (Park), a company controlled by the brothers Nick and Brett Fletcher. Fuel was supplied on a consignment basis and was subsequently paid for by the retailer (in the case of the Shellharbour station, Ebacarb) from the proceeds of sale of the fuel.

The Kanahooka Station

  1. The other service station operated under the name ‘Advance Fuel Kanahooka’ but it was generally referred to as the Kanahooka station. The land on which it was located was referred to as the Kanahooka property.

  2. Ebacarb Kanahooka Pty Ltd (Ebacarb Kanahooka) carried on the service station business at the Kanahooka station. Nick and Lena were the shareholders of Ebacarb Kanahooka. Ebacarb Kanahooka leased the Kanahooka property from an unrelated party. Park was also the major supplier of fuel to Ebacarb Kanahooka.

Shellharbour station financial difficulties

  1. By early 2014, the Kolevskis were experiencing financial difficulty in connection with, at the very least, the Shellharbour station. Ebacarb was placed into administration on 24 February 2014. The first meeting of creditors took place on 6 March 2014. The minutes of a subsequent meeting of creditors on 31 March 2014, identified the following creditors:

    “Deputy Commissioner of Taxation - $606,806

    BDJ Partners - $25,200

    Lena Kolevski - $172,529

    Nick Kolevski - $172,529

    Park Pty Limited - $785,466

    Pinebai Pty Limited - $210,000”.

  2. A deed of company arrangement was entered into by the creditors other than Nick, Lena and Pinebai on 17 April 2014. The final report to creditors dated 3 September 2014 identified three unsecured creditors with debts totalling $1,477,302.18. These included the debts owed to Park and the ATO.

  3. Ebacarb ultimately went into liquidation on 9 February 2015. It was wound up on 30 June 2015.

  4. In circumstances that were not explained in the evidence, a new company associated with Nick and Lena began operating the Shellharbour station business in the period following the voluntary administration of Ebacarb. This company was called Dexter Global Pty Ltd (Dexter Global). Its shareholders and directors were also Nick and Lena.

Financing for the service stations

  1. By some point in the first half of 2015, Pinebai was indebted to Park in a sum in excess of $850,000. Park had apparently obtained security interests in the Barrack Heights property, the Shell Cove property and the Port Kembla property to secure repayment of the amount owing. To protect its position, Park lodged caveats over each of these properties on 18 May 2015. The caveats described the caveatable interest asserted by Park as follows:

    “The Caveator has an equitable interest in the Land by virtue of an agreement between the Caveator and the Registered Proprietor for the supply of fuel.”

  2. By the first half of 2015, Pinebai also had a liability to Westpac in a sum of almost $750,000. Westpac had a registered first mortgage over the Barrack Heights property and had taken various other forms of security. Among these were personal guarantees granted by Nick and Lena.

Queensland properties

  1. In the years immediately prior to the 2015 transactions, Nick and Lena had ownership interests in three residential apartments at 3400 Surfers Paradise Boulevard on the Gold Coast in Queensland. Some interests were held directly. Others were held through Calasy Pty Ltd (Calasy), a company of which, at least in the period immediately prior to 25 June 2015, Nick and Lena were directors and shareholders.

  2. The units were as follows:

    (1)Unit 2101. This unit had been acquired in 1999 or 2000 by Calasy, Jenny Saveski and Vidan Saveski (the Saveskis). Title was held in common between Calasy and the Saveskis, with Calasy as to 50%.

    (2)Unit 2406. This unit was acquired in 2005 or 2006 and was owned by Nick, Lena, the Saveskis, Massimo Gaetani and Terri-Anne Gaetani.

    (3)Unit 3304. This unit was acquired in 2010 and was owned directly by Nick and Lena.

Home mortgages

  1. As already mentioned, Nick and Lena had granted mortgages over each of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties to ANZ Bank.

The Solarium business

  1. For some period leading up to the middle of 2015, Lena operated a tanning salon known as ‘Body Brilliance’ from premises at Warilla. The business was owned and operated by LAWACCOUNT Pty Ltd, the shareholders of which were Cameron, Nick, Lena, Brent James Mathein and Kelly Hanna Mathein.

  2. Regulations introduced in about early 2015 had an impact on the profitability and viability of the business and so Lena decided to close it down. It ceased to trade on 30 June 2015.

Nick and Lena dispose of assets

  1. In June and July of 2015, Nick and Lena disposed of a number of assets.

  2. So far as the Queensland properties were concerned, the following occurred:

    (1)On 25 June 2015, Nick and Lena transferred their shares in Calasy to Cameron. This had the consequence that Cameron was now the indirect owner of a 50% share in Unit 2101.

    (2)Unit 2406 was sold on 15 July 2015 to unrelated purchasers for $552,000. The contract was not in evidence but it must have been executed about four to six weeks prior. Of the sale proceeds, a substantial amount (either $415,000 or $515,000) was applied to discharge the mortgage.

    (3)Unit 3304 was transferred to Nick’s cousin, Lillyan Batkov and her husband Tony Batkov, on about 6 July 2015. The price paid was $288,000, which was slightly less than Nick and Lena’s outgoing mortgage of $296,000 on the property.

  3. On 1 July 2015, Pinebai entered into a contract with Nicbrett Trading Pty Ltd (Nicbrett Trading), a company associated with the Fletcher family, to sell the Barrack Heights property for the sum of $1.63 million. Settlement occurred on or shortly after 7 July 2015. Payment of the purchase price was directed as follows. The slight discrepancy between the consideration noted on the transfer, and the total as directed at settlement, was not explained.

Payee

Cheque Amount

Shellharbour City Council (bank/trust chq)

$3,991.57

Sydney Water (bank/trust chq)

$177.93

Westpac Banking Corporation (bank chq)

$728,530.83

Park Pty Ltd (bank chq)

$861,937.85

Lena Kolevski (bank chq)

$31,624.78

Good Legal (bank/trust chq)

$3,365.68

Excess bank chq allowance

$10.00

TOTAL

$1,629,638.64

  1. The sale of the Barrack Heights property enabled Pinebai to repay its creditors. Dexter Global, which ran the business at Barrack Heights, sold the business to Nicbrett Trading for $1 on 1 July 2015. Dexter Global went into liquidation in the latter half of 2015. At that point, it had the following creditors: Ebacarb Kanahooka as to $97,545.91; Pinebai as to $136,000; Nick and Lena as to $223,000. In cross examination, the plaintiff could not recall that any of these creditors received anything from the winding up of Dexter Global.

  2. It is also relevant to note that by the first half of 2015, Nick was in poor physical health. He was suffering from a number of medical issues including diabetes, obesity, anxiety and sleep apnoea. He believed that these conditions were seriously impacting his ability to run the service station businesses.

Ken Stevens

  1. Ken Stevens was born in 1948 and was 76 years old at the time of the hearing. He is now retired. For many years, Ken had been involved in a marine and transport business which was conducted by Yallawadegra Investments Pty Ltd (Yallawadegra), a company controlled by him. Among other things, Yallewadegra supplied wholesale fuel to service stations, with a customer base largely in the Illawarra and Shoalhaven areas of New South Wales.

  1. Ken came to know Nick because for many years Nick acquired fuel from Yallawadegra for his service stations. They had a good working relationship and Ken came to know Nick’s family.

  2. As at June 2015, the Kolevskis’ service station businesses owed about $7,000 to Yallawadegra.

  3. Ken was an experienced businessperson. He had been involved in a number of businesses and ventures over the years, including a brickworks. He had caused Timber Creek to be incorporated for the benefit of his children. It had various investments and, from time to time, had engaged in mortgage lending.

The key discussions

  1. Ken and Nick had two discussions in June 2015 at Lena’s tanning salon, Body Brilliance. Their accounts of these conversations differ in some important respects, although there is much that is common in their recollections. Because so much turns on them, I will set out their competing accounts in full.

  2. Nick’s recollection is that the first discussion took place in early June 2015 and that only he and Ken were present. He says their conversation was to the following effect:

    “[Nick]: I don’t know what to do Ken. I’m worried that I won’t be able to keep going with the businesses. If I can[’]t keep them open I might lose my properties. The bank has been breathing down my neck. I need to make sure my family is looked after if anything happens to me.

    [Ken]: I might be able to help Nick. What is the amount you owe the bank?

    [Nick]: About $620,000 all up. It’s approximately $400,000 for Shell Cove and $220,000 for Port Kembla at the moment. I’m barely keeping afloat and ANZ is breathing down my neck. Lena isn’t working and I’m barely making enough from the fuel to keep going.

    [Ken]: I understand times are tough. What if one of my companies Timber Creek Holdings paid out the bank for you and held both properties as security? You could then make monthly repayments to it until the loan is repaid or until you and the family get back on your feet and can pay it back to me sooner? That way you wouldn’t have the threat of the bank hanging over your head and once I’m paid back I will hold both titles in the meantime and then transfer both back to the family.

    [Nick]: That would work Ken. We would be very grateful.

    [Ken]: I’m not using this as a means to make money. I am able to help a friend navigate a hard time in his life.”

  3. He then says that there was a second discussion at Body Brilliance shortly thereafter, at which Lena was also present. On this occasion, according to Nick, they had the following discussion:

    “[Ken]: The terms of the loan will be my company Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd will lend you $620,000 to be paid straight to ANZ to pay off your loans. Then you will pay me $3,600 per month which is made up of $2,400 for Shell Cove and $1,200 for Port Kembla as well as interest at the rate of 6.5% capitalised per annum. You will also need to pay council rates, water, gas and insurance of course. If you can afford to pay back the debt earlier, then I will transfer the properties back earlier. Otherwise, I will keep holding them until the whole loan balance is repaid to me.

    [Nick]: Ok Ken. When the loan is repaid I might not want the properties in my name. I might tell you to transfer them to Cameron because I don’t know where my health issues will leave me well into the future. Also, if for some reason we can’t pay you back, please sell the Shell Cove house first. Please don’t ever put the Port Kembla house on the market. My [mother/mother in law] lives there and shouldn’t be affected by all this.

    [Ken]: Should anything ever happen Nick, I won’t sell the Port Kembla house. I’ll put the Shell Cove house on the market to recover any lost monies first. Once I’m paid back I will transfer the properties back as directed.

    [Nick]: Thank you again Ken. What you are doing for the family is very much appreciated and is a weight off my shoulders in terms of the bank and the protection of my family.”

  4. On Nick’s account, the next thing that happened was that he received a letter from Ken’s solicitor, Pauline Betts of Pottenger & McGhee, Nowra, which attached transfers for the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties, together with instructions for them to be completed. He says that he and Lena signed the transfers and returned them to Pottenger & McGhee.

  5. Ken recalls things rather differently. In his recollection there were two discussions in June 2015, both of which occurred at Body Brilliance. He says that his former wife, Elne, was present for at least some of the first discussion, as was Lena. He recalls that the first discussion was to the following effect:

    “[Ken]: Nick you need to settle your account, you owe us $7,000.

    Nick: I’m not going to pay the bill.

    [Ken]: Why not?

    Nick: I’ve lost everything.

    [Ken]: What do you mean everything? The house?

    Nick: Yes, and Simon’s house. ANZ are putting pressure on us.

    [Ken]: Why don’t I buy your houses? You can rent it from me. My kids have a family company which I am the director of. I will talk to the children to see if we can make an arrangement, so you don’t lose your home.

    [Ken]: You and Lena can buy it back, but I’m not going to sell it to your mates and I won’t sell Simon’s house.

    Nick: Anything you can do would be great.

    [Ken]: Aside from the ANZ, is there anyone else out there we need to be worried about?

    Nick: Yes, I have creditors who are pressuring me. I need to pay them immediately.

    [Ken]: What are the numbers?

    Nick: We owe a fair bit to the ANZ, we owe about $420,000 on our Shell Cove property and there is about $200,000.00 owing on Simon’s [the Port Kembla Property].

    [Ken]: So it’s about $620,000 or thereabouts.

    Nick: That’s right. But I need some money straight up to pay creditors.

    [Ken]: OK. I’ll talk to the children and think about how we will do it.”

  6. Ken specifically denies that there was any discussion at this stage about paying the ‘ANZ amounts’ or about any particular loan transaction.

  7. Ken was aware at the time that there was a risk involved in acquiring property from a person with unpaid creditors. He believed that there may be ‘potential issues’ with Nick’s and Lena’s creditors if Timber Creek were to acquire the properties in circumstances where they had creditors who had not been paid. He did not explain in detail what he believed these issues to be, but they will have been obvious to an experienced businessperson such as Ken.

  8. Ken also denies Nick’s account of the second discussion at Body Brilliance. He does however agree that there was such a discussion, and that Lena was also present on this occasion. Ken recalls that the second discussion at Body Brilliance was to this effect:

    “[Ken]: To prevent you and Simon [Nick’s father-in-law] being kicked out, what I will do is I’ll look at purchasing your house and Simon’s house, and renting both of them back to you at $3,600.00 a month plus outgoings including Land Tax so you can stay in the properties.

    Nick: Yes Ken, I understand.

    [Ken]: I will send the properties back to you when you are back on your feet, but if I sell it back, I’ll only sell it back to you and Lena, not to your mates.

    Nick: So if I can sort out my financial problems, can I buy the properties back?

    [Ken]: Only if you are actually back on your feet in a short period and only back to you and Lena. Not to your mates. However, we have to get a 6.5% return. Even if we don’t get the 6.5% return and you can’t get back on your feet, we will sell the Shell Cove Property. We will not sell the Port Kembla property so as to keep Simon with a roof over his head.

    Nick: It’s only going to be a short turn around. I’ll get the money from selling my Queensland properties and will buy them back. I just need to work out the Queensland properties and Kanahooka service station. It will take me about 3 months to sort out my finances. Lena and I will trade our way out of it by putting in the work at Kanahooka [which is a service station] as well. If we can’t buy it back, who will you sell the properties to?”

    [Ken]: A third-party for market price.”

  9. Ken’s evidence was that he understood the expression ‘back on their feet’ to mean that they did not have creditors chasing them. He understood that the reference to the ‘Queensland properties’ was a reference to the three Gold Coast units. He says that he was well aware even at this early stage that Timber Creek could become liable for land tax if it were to acquire the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties. I accept that he was aware of this at the time.

  10. The main differences between the accounts of what was said are as follows:

    (1)On Nick’s account, there were references to a ‘loan’ of $620,000 and to a resulting ‘debt’. There was a reference to the properties being transferred as ‘security’. There was also a clear reference to the prospect of the properties being transferred to Cameron once the ‘loan’ was repaid.

    (2)On Ken’s account, there was no reference to a ‘loan’ at all. Rather, the transaction would be a purchase of the properties which the Kolevskis would then rent back. There was discussion about the properties being ‘sold’ back to the Nick and Lena, but not to Cameron, within a relatively short period using the proceeds of sale of the Queensland properties. Ken also said that Timber Creek would not sell the properties back to Nick and Lena unless they were ‘back on their feet’.

  11. It is also relevant to notice the areas of general agreement between their accounts. Leaving aside the finer points of how these matters were expressed, it is clear that the substance of their discussions included at least the following:

    (1)Nick told Ken that he was in serious financial difficulty and that the ANZ Bank was threatening to foreclose on both their homes, being the Shell Cove property and the Port Kembla property.

    (2)Once the properties were transferred to Timber Creek, Nick and Lena would continue to live in them and to pay a base amount of $3,600 per month.

    (3)Nick and Lena would pay at least some outgoings, such as rates, water and insurance. There is dispute about whether they would pay land tax.

    (4)There was discussion about a rate of 6.5% per annum. On the plaintiffs’ case, this was an amount of ‘interest’ payable on the ‘loan’ of $620,000. On the defendant’s case, this was the ‘return’ that it required on any funds outlaid to acquire and hold the properties.

The contracts for sale and the transfer of the properties

  1. Following their initial conversations, the parties then engaged lawyers who prepared and exchanged standard form contracts for the sale of land, asked and answered requisitions on title, and then arranged for the execution and registration of transfers for each property. Neither the amended statement of claim nor the evidence in chief of the plaintiffs made any mention of these events. As noted at paragraph [48] above, Nick’s evidence was that he and Lena simply received transfers from Timber Creek’s solicitor, which they duly executed and returned.

  2. Nick’s evidence was that after the second discussion at Body Brilliance and the execution of transfers, the mortgages were discharged (he did not say how) and that he then ‘set about seeking to sell the Kanahooka station and the [Shellharbour] station’ in order to ‘free up cash for [his and Lena’s] retirements and to repay the loan to Ken’.

  3. I cannot accept Nick’s evidence about these matters. It does not accord with facts that are otherwise quite clear from contemporaneous records. I find that the following things occurred in connection with the transfer of the properties.

  4. By no later than 9 June 2015, Nick and Lena instructed their solicitor, Mr Danny Lagopodis of Good Legal, to act for them in connection with the sale of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties to Timber Creek. Mr Lagopodis had acted for them in connection with other transactions, including the proposed sale of the Barrack Heights property which was already underway at the time he was instructed to act on the residential property sales.

  5. On 13 June 2015, Mr Lagopodis sent a letter to Timber Creek’s solicitors, Pottenger & McGhee, stating that he acted ‘for the vendors in this matter’ and enclosing a draft contract. The letter was Mr Lagopodis’ standard first letter to the purchaser of residential property. It stated that the vendors would require a certificate under s 66W of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW). It contained usual statements about exchange and the payment of a deposit.

  6. I infer from other correspondence that he must also have sent an identical letter in relation to the sale of the Port Kembla property.

  7. Ms Pauline Betts of Pottenger & McGhee responded to both letters on 17 June 2015. She raised a series of matters, including about proposed special conditions, an acknowledgement that the deposits had already been paid, s 149 certificates and other routine matters in connection with the proposed transaction. Ken had arranged to pay the deposits, being 10% of the purchase price for each property, at about this time in cash.

  8. Mr Lagopodis replied on 26 June 2015. He enclosed s 149 certificates and otherwise replied to Ms Betts’ queries in the usual way.

  9. At around this same time, Nick arranged for valuations of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties to be done ‘for stamp duty purposes’. Those valuations came in at $630,000 and $300,000 respectively. The need to obtain these valuations would have been obvious to both Nick and Ken, because they both knew that the properties were not being sold at their market values.

  10. Contracts for the sale of the properties, including the negotiated special conditions, were exchanged on 2 July 2015. On that day, Mr Lagopodis acknowledged receipt of the purchaser’s signed contracts and forwarded duly signed counterparts to complete the exchange. He noted that settlement was required to occur by 23 July. However, on that same day, he wrote to ANZ Bank to inform them of the contracts and that settlement was expected to occur on 12 July. It is not entirely clear why he said settlement would occur on 12 July. It was not until several days after exchange that the idea of bringing the date of settlement forward was raised between the solicitors and, even then, it was only brought forward to 21 July. I don’t think anything turns on this. The reference to 12 July was probably a typographical error. Mr Lagopodis asked ANZ Bank to prepare discharges of mortgages and to advise him of the amount required for discharge at settlement.

  11. On 3 July 2015, Ms Betts wrote to Mr Lagopodis. She raised requisitions on title to both properties using the Standard Form Requisitions on Title published by the Law Society of New South Wales. Question 3(a) was ‘What are the nature and provisions of any tenancy or occupation?’ Ms Betts also enclosed transfers signed by the purchaser.

  12. On 7 July 2015, Mr Lagopodis wrote to Nick and Lena in relation to the proposed settlement. He enclosed the transfers and gave them instructions about how to execute the documents.

  13. Mr Lagopodis responded to the requisitions on title of both properties by letters dated 9 July. In each case, he answered question 3 as follows: ‘N/A – Vacant possession’. Ms Betts replied the following day. In relation to the Port Kembla property, she wrote:

    “We understand from our client that Mr Kolevski’s parents will be remaining in the property and renting same back from our client. Would you please confirm.”

  14. In relation to the Shell Cove property, she wrote:

    “We understand from our client that the Vendors will be renting the property back from our client.”

  15. There seems to have been no reply to Ms Betts’ requests for confirmation about the rental arrangements.

  16. The parties brought settlement forward to 21 July. The parties corresponded with one another about settlement statements and cheque directions. Mr Lagopodis gave directions to pay the balance of settlement money for each property by bank cheque to Wollongong City Council, Sydney Water, Good Legal, and the ANZ Bank in amounts which he specified. Settlement took place at the venue arranged by the solicitors on 21 July.

  17. Transfer duty was paid on the contracts on the basis of the valuations obtained by Nick.

  18. At no stage in 2015 did Nick or Lena say to Mr Lagopodis that they had agreed with Timber Creek (or Ken) that the $620,000 paid at settlement, adjusted in accordance with the provisions of the contracts, was a loan or that the transfers of the Shell Cove property and the Port Kembla property were by way of security for a loan.

  19. In cross examination, Nick said that he did mention these things to Mr Lagopodis at the time, but even his own counsel said that I could not accept this evidence. I find that neither he nor Lena mentioned the alleged oral agreement to Mr Lagopodis in 2015, nor did they tell him that the properties were conveyed as security for a loan. I reach this conclusion for several reasons. The first is that in his final affidavit sworn 20 June 2023, Nick tacitly acknowledged that he had engaged Mr Lagopodis, having not otherwise mentioned this fact in his evidence, but said ‘[n]o instructions were given in relation to the loan agreement and no advice was received in respect of it.’ In fact, he said that he did not give instructions to or receive advice from ‘any’ solicitor in relation to those matters at the time.

  20. The second thing is that Lena says nothing at all about this matter. She said she left these kinds of things to Nick. I am confident she did not mention it to Mr Lagopodis.

  21. The third and most significant thing is that Mr Lagopodis said that he was not told about the purported loan agreement or the purported security arrangement in 2015. His evidence, which I accept entirely, is that he first learned about the purported loan agreement in 2021. There is no prospect that Mr Lagopodis would have allowed Nick and Lena to enter into and complete the 2015 contracts for sale of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties if he had been told that the parties had agreed that the transfers were intended only to be security for a loan and that this portion of the agreement was not in writing.

  22. It follows from all of this that Nick’s description of how the transfers occurred is not only incomplete but is entirely inaccurate. So too is his evidence that he ‘set about seeking to sell the Kanahooka Station and the [Shellharbour] Station’ only after the ANZ Bank debt had been paid. By the time of settlement of the two residential properties, Nick had already entirely divested himself of any interest in these businesses. He and Lena had transferred their shares in Ebacarb Kanahooka to Cameron on 25 June 2015. The contract to sell the Barrack Heights property had been entered into on 1 July 2015 and settlement occurred on 7 July 2015. The Shellharbour station business had also been sold on 1 July 2015 to Nicbrett Trading. Nick and Lena also no longer had any interest in the Queensland properties: see paragraph [37] above.

The Kolevskis pay $3,600 per month

  1. The Kolevskis have paid the sum of $3,600 to Ken every month since settlement. Until early 2016, Nick says he paid in cash. From early 2016, he says that Cameron made these payments. Payments have occasionally been late, but Timber Creek does not dispute that all have been made eventually.

  2. Timber Creek has treated all such payments as rent for accounting and tax purposes.

  3. Since early 2016, payments have usually been made by Cameron by way of electronic funds transfer. On some occasions, he labelled the payments ‘rent’. He was asked about this in cross examination. His attempt to explain how and why the transfers came to be labelled ‘rent’ was dubious. He said that he had chosen the description of the payment from a drop-down menu in the banking app which he used to make the transfers and that ‘rent’ was the only vaguely relevant description available. This seems highly doubtful. Even so, Cameron struggled to explain why he chose to call the payments rent instead of using another descriptor or no descriptor at all. In the scheme of things, nothing much turns on whether Cameron sometimes labelled these payments as ‘rent’. It is a detail that sheds almost no light on the real issues in dispute. But Cameron’s blanket and almost comical refusal to make very obvious concessions about this issue in the witness box was not to his credit.

The 2016 proposal to repurchase the properties

  1. At some point in 2016, Nick spoke with Ken’s son, James, about Cameron purchasing the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties from Timber Creek. Nick told James that Cameron ‘had finance approved from the Suncorp Bank to pay out the loan and take the transfer of the properties’. James raised this prospect with his father, Ken, who was not prepared to entertain the idea. Ken and Nick spoke about the proposal. Ken was adamant that he wanted no part of a transaction whereby the properties he had acquired from Nick and Lena at an undervalue were, in turn, transferred to a third party for an undervalue. It was obvious to Ken that such a dealing would expose Timber Creek to having to meet a potential liability to Nick and Lena’s creditors. He was justified in reacting in that way. It is one thing to acquire an asset at an undervalue from a financially distressed vendor and to hold the asset; it is another thing entirely to dispose of the asset to a third party for other than an arm’s length price.

  2. Nick’s proposal in early 2016 was for Cameron to purchase the properties, not Nick and Lena. Even leaving aside the question of whether this was ever part of the agreement, the evidence does not demonstrate that Cameron had ‘finance approved’ to acquire the properties (as he claimed) in 2016. Nick’s evidence was that Cameron had obtained borrowing approval from Suncorp-Metway Bank Ltd (Suncorp) but a subpoena to Suncorp produced no written record of any such approval. Cameron’s evidence was that he believed had approval from RAMS Home Loans (RAMS) but documents from RAMS do not corroborate this. Nor did the plaintiffs tender any documents to suggest that finance had been approved in 2016.

  3. Cameron says that in early 2016 he was in a financial position to borrow to acquire the properties, but I cannot accept that he could have done so. At this stage, he was 23 years old and had recently completed university studies. He had just taken a job at Coles. His taxable income for the 2016 year was $66,957 and his taxable income for the 2017 year was $56,416. He was not in a position to borrow the amount necessary to acquire the two properties, neither of which would have been income producing.

Land tax

  1. Timber Creek received assessments of land tax for the 2016 and subsequent land tax years which included amounts for the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties. Bank records show that the Kolevskis paid amounts on account of land tax to Timber Creek starting in 2016. For example, Cameron made numerous payments by electronic funds transfer in the 2016 and 2017 calendar years which he labelled as ‘Cameron Kolevski land tax’ or some similar descriptor.

  2. The payments for land tax seem to have been fairly irregular. In early 2017, Ken spoke to Nick and told him that he would start to charge interest on arrears of land tax at the rate of 10% per annum. A ledger kept by Timber Creek shows that by 2023, the amount of land tax plus interest at 10% came to $127,903.07.

  3. The Kolevskis have not made any contribution to land tax since 3 April 2017.

The 2018 proposals

  1. The Kolevskis made two offers to repurchase the properties from Timber Creek in late 2018.

  2. The first offer was made by Nick in a telephone discussion with Ken in October or November. He said that ‘Cameron is again able to get himself a loan for what you are owed.’ Cameron, for his part, says that on 18 October 2018 he obtained a ‘further finance approval’ from Suncorp to ‘take a transfer’ of the properties. He also says that he made two successful applications for finance from RAMS in 2018.

  3. Ken did not specifically respond to this evidence but there is no doubt he would at this point have refused to entertain any offer by Cameron to acquire the properties at other than a market price.

  4. Cameron’s offer does not really take matters very far in any event. Cameron did not have any binding ‘further finance approval’ from either Suncorp or RAMS in 2018.

  5. So far as RAMS was concerned, he only made a single application for finance, although the amount he proposed to borrow changed from $685,000 to $680,000. His application was highly misleading. It claimed that he had net business income from Ebacarb Kanahooka of $250,000 which was completely false. Cameron seems to have received ‘conditional approval’ for finance, but subject to documentation and a signed acknowledgement of the accuracy of the information provided. The application to RAMS was withdrawn on 4 July 2018.

  6. So far as Suncorp was concerned, Cameron made an application for finance on 10 September 2018 in which he claimed to live at his grandparents’ address (when he clearly did not – he lived at the Shell Cove property) and in which he claimed that the purpose of the loan was to purchase the Shell Cove property. He listed among his assets an item of ‘Residential Property’ with a current value of $600,000. In cross examination, he conceded that this was a reference to ‘something that’s not there’ and that it was a false statement.

  7. Cameron did receive a preliminary approval for a loan amount of $651,024.80 on 26 October 2018, but this was subject to further documentation.

  8. Timber Creek submitted that there was no prospect that Suncorp would have finalised this arrangement and actually advanced funds, because it would have become very obvious very quickly that Cameron did not own a property worth $600,000, as he falsely claimed in his application for finance. I agree. The loan was subject to further documentation, no official letter of offer had yet been sent and it is probable that Suncorp would have become aware of the deception fairly early on. However, even if they didn’t, the loan was only available to Cameron for the purpose of acquiring the Shell Cove property. There is no suggestion that the bank would have lent funds to Cameron to give to his parents to acquire property in their names.

  9. There was a further offer to acquire the properties in about December 2018. On that occasion, Nick told Ken that a relative was able to provide finance to the family to allow Cameron to repurchase the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties. The relative in question was Mr Batkov, who is married to Nick’s cousin.

  10. I assume that Nick’s offer was for Cameron to pay around $650,000 for the properties. The evidence does not demonstrate that Mr Batkov was in a position to lend that sum, at least readily, at the end of 2018. He gave evidence that he would have sourced the funds from a longstanding line of credit with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia which, he said, had $800,000 ‘credit available’ at the end of 2018. However, documents produced by the bank show that his available credit was only $550,000 at that time, not $800,000. I do not doubt that Mr Batkov was willing to assist the Kolevskis to reacquire the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties in late 2018 and that he was willing to use his line of credit to do so. He seems to have been genuinely concerned about the Kolevskis and willing to help them. But I am unable to conclude that his pledge of support was such as to put Nick and Lena in a position of being ready, willing and able to complete a purchase transaction, which is how they put their case. He certainly did not place Nick and Lena in funds such that they were able to tender the sum of $650,000 to discharge the ‘loan’.

  11. In any event, Ken was not willing to sell the properties to Cameron.

  12. At about this time, Ken obtained a credit report in relation to Nick and various entities associated with him. The report noted that Nick had an outstanding debt owed to ANZ Bank and that this debt had been assigned to a credit agency for collection. It concluded:

    “There seem to be a number of credit issues associated with Mr Kolevski and his associated business entities which we strongly recommend that you should not become involved with. To our mind, to do so may be seen as an act of collusion in the act of avoidance of financial obligations of Mr Kolevski.”

The 2019 proposal

  1. Cameron says that he ‘obtained a further finance approval from Suncorp-Metway Bank’ on 27 June 2019 so that he could ‘take a transfer of the properties’. Soon thereafter, in late June or early July, Ken, Nick and Cameron met at the Coffee Club café in the Stockton Shellharbour Shopping Centre to discuss a further proposal by Nick and Cameron for Cameron to pay Timber Creek out and to ‘take a transfer’ of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties.

  2. According to Nick, Ken said:

    “OK. Cameron, go ahead with the finance and we will start discussing what price you will pay me to have both properties.”

  3. Cameron’s recollection of this discussion in his own affidavit is in identical terms. In fact, many significant discussions to which both Cameron and Lena depose in their affidavits are in identical terms, or near identical terms, to the language in Nick’s affidavit. Given the frequency with which this phenomenon occurred in their affidavits, I am cautious about accepting either Cameron’s or Lena’s evidence about what was said in any discussion in relation to which the witness (or more likely their solicitor) has merely copied and pasted text from Nick’s affidavit about the same discussion. I will say more about this in due course.

  4. Ken does not deny that this discussion occurred. He seems to have been willing at this point to entertain an offer by Cameron at an arm’s length price or something close to it.

  5. The plaintiffs say that the making of this proposal for Cameron to purchase the properties in June or July 2019 demonstrates that the plaintiffs were again ready, willing and able to perform the oral loan agreement.

  6. However, Cameron did not obtain a ‘further finance approval’ in 2019. The evidence shows that on 11 June 2019, he and his de-facto partner made a joint application to Suncorp in which they claimed to be the equal owners of the Port Kembla property. This must have been false to their knowledge at the time. In cross examination, Cameron accepted that he did not believe he had ever received an official letter of offer from Suncorp in respect of this application in any event.

The 2020 interactions and the spreadsheet

  1. Nick’s attempts to contact Ken after the 2019 Coffee Club meeting were unsuccessful. When they did finally speak in early May 2020, Ken asked him to put something to him for his consideration. Nick prepared a spreadsheet showing a ‘total debt’ as at 30 June 2020 of $626,849. This amount was made up of an opening balance as at 30 June 2019 of $595,805, plus interest at 6.5% per annum added for each of July, August and September 2019, plus interest at 5% per annum added for each subsequent month up to June 2020, less payments of $3,600 per month, plus an amount for land tax and interest on land tax. The change in the rate from 6.5% to 5% reflects that Timber Creek reduced its rate of required return because its own cost of funds had fallen. This seems to have occurred unilaterally. There is an unexplained discrepancy in the documents as to when this occurred. The spreadsheets produced by Ken to which I will shortly refer record that the rate fell to 5% in June 2018.

  2. Nick sent his spreadsheet under cover of a letter which was as follows:

    “Dear Ken,

    I refer to our chat earlier this week.

    I have attached to this letter, my workings of total debt due to you as of end of June 2020. We calculate debt on loan to you to be at $626,849.

    I do not know what the applicable capital gain rate to your business is. Can you please confirm this?

    The properties were ‘sold’ at a rate far below market value. This was discussed over the phone this week. You confirmed your explanation and reasoning should anybody ask.

    Shell Cove was transferred at $400,000

    Port Kembla was transferred at $220,000

    Applying the same principle, i.e. buy cheap to help an associate and then sell cheap to an associates son, I think we can justify a very much sales reduced contracted price.

    Based on borrowing limitations, a contracted price of $700,000 is sought. That is a 13% increase on purchase price and is justifiable by you, should any questions arise.

    Stamp duty will be paid on the appraised value of the properties, exactly how it was done on your acquisition.

    We wish to get properties back as you have also indicated your desire to offload them. We do not wish land tax to keep accumulating.

    All of this is subject to approval of bank application that we are yet to submit. As stated previously there is a limit to what can be borrowed by Cameron.”

  3. A further meeting between them followed in early July 2020, again at the Coffee Club. On this occasion, Ken handed Nick some spreadsheets. The first spreadsheet and a later iteration of it assumed enormous significance in the plaintiffs’ case. The document was entitled ‘Trading Acc plus costs not included yet Closing 30/6/2020’ and contained a table of transactions. Each row recorded a date, a description of a transaction (being a payment, receipt, debit or credit), an amount, and a running total. The entries for the first 12 transactions were as follows:

6/7/15

Unpaid fuel

7071.00

7071.00

9/7/15

Anz drawdawn

2011.00

9082.00

9/7/15

Bank\gov fees

4535.8

13617.8

21/7/15

Sixth ave

200105.37

213723.17

21/7/15

Dampier street

360442.81

574165.98

21/7/15

Sixth ave s/duty

9010.00

583175.98

21/7/15

Damp st s/duty

23860.00

607035.98

21/7/15

Sixth ave legal

2060.00

609095.98

21/7/15

Damp st legal

1920.00

611015.98

21/7/15

wgong agent

110.00

611125.98

21/7/15

6.5% interest

39723.18

650849.17

29/7/15

payment

3600

647249.17

(errors in original)

  1. As mentioned, the interest rate used in the table changed to 5% on 21 June 2018. There was occasionally an entry for interest on late payments. The running total as at 20 May 2020 was $595,317.01.

  2. Other documents provided by Ken at the July 2020 Coffee Club meeting showed workings for additional costs associated with Timber Creek’s ownership of the properties, such as land tax, interest on land tax, bank fees and so on.

  3. On 10 August 2020, Nick, after taking the spreadsheets home and reviewing them, sent Ken a letter by way of response. The substance of the letter was as follows:

    “Ken,

    Thank you for your recent correspondence.

    Your figures differ obviously from what we have, and knowledge of charging interest on the 100 days of overdue payments is rather remarkable if not excessive. The charging of interest for same has only been brought to light recently. From memory the nominal late payments were several years ago.

    Land Tax figures differ notably from previous advices received, and we are unable to determine why.

    At last conversation, we proposed you selling properties to Cameron for an agreed figure. That figure needs to be acceptable for both parties as you have been advised there is only a certain borrowing limit Cameron is hamstrung to.

    At present borrowing can cover what we determine is owed to you. Obviously we will have to meet and thrash out the final figure.

    If Cameron is unable to meet the full contracted price for both properties, a mortgage will be allowed to you to justify sale.

    Example: agreed sale price $1m, Debt to T.C Holding $650k, shortfall = $350k

    Mortgage will be given to you for $350k. As this ‘debt’ is only a paper debt a discharge of mortgage will be held by Cameron from you.

    This should satisfy any questions that may be asked in the future, as it is perfectly legal.

    We are in no position to fund any land tax and want this matter resolved immediately. Surely we can compromise and go forward?

    Please respond ASAP so we may work out figures acceptable and submit loan applications accordingly.”

  4. Ken did not respond to this letter.

The 2021 interactions

  1. There was another meeting at the Coffee Club on 20 February 2021, this time attended by Nick, Lena, Ken and Ken’s daughter, Megan. Megan is and was a director of Timber Creek. The impetus for the meeting was that Ken wanted Nick and Lena to pay land tax, which by this point had been outstanding for some years. Ken handed Nick a copy of a rental ledger and a land tax ledger. I had some difficulty identifying which of the various land tax ledgers in evidence was actually handed to Nick at this meeting, but I do not think this matters.

  2. There was a further inconclusive discussion. None of it took the issue any further along the path to resolution. As Ken said:

    “Nick I’ve told you before a 1000 times, I’m not getting involved in any transaction which involves Cameron buying the properties.”

  3. Nonetheless, Ken agreed by the end of the meeting that he would obtain some market appraisals for the properties. It appears that he did not do so until August 2021. I refer to these appraisals later in these reasons. 

  4. Throughout the early part of 2021, Ken and Cameron were becoming more and more keen to find a way to reacquire the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties. There was a telephone discussion between Ken and Nick on 25 March 2021. Cameron was also apparently ‘on the line’ listening in, but neither he nor Nick disclosed that he was doing so. I have not found any of the evidence about this meeting to be relevant to the outcome of this dispute.

  5. In May 2021, Nick wrote a letter to Ken imploring him to consider a sale of the properties at ‘market value’ to Cameron. He advised that he had located a valuer who was willing to say that the market value of the Shell Cove property was $800,000 and that the market value of the Port Kembla property was $400,000. He continued:

    “In our meetings and previous correspondence, we have outlined that any monies on paper, which are over and above the debt owing to you, will be covered by a stamped mortgage to Timber Creek Holdings. A discharge will be held by our solicitor, as this ‘debt’ only exists on paper.

    This proposal is our only realistic option as;

    1. Cameron has no additional funds other than what will be borrowed

    2. Vendor finance, as no doubt you are aware of, is a constant source of finance for many.

    Upon your go ahead, we will seek finance from banking sources. This will now be the fourth time that such finance will be sought. Given the current credit rules, borrowing will be much harder to obtain, the longer this process drags on.

    We have never hidden the fact that payment of land tax is an impossibility by this family. We find it bewildering and are saddened that your comments that we need to, in order to avoid ‘drastic’ action by yourself.

    My question to you is, does any loyalty by this family to you in the past have any meaning? Despite many overtures from various suppliers in the past, loyalties have always remained with you. That had never waivered one iota. When you needed things done, we accommodated without question. Why? Because you needed it done. We now need this deal done. I expect the same thoughts will be given by you to accommodate.

    The stress induced over the above mentioned issues and more, has been quite frankly rather horrific and unwelcomed. Given finances were already approved multiple times, then we were placated with various road blocks and not offered a realistic compromise, is absolutely confusing to say the least.

    Despite this, we wish to proceed on the basis mentioned above.

    Our valuations are from a registered valuer. They are not simply figures we have dreamt of, and plucked out of thin air.

    Please confirm via email, that we can proceed with above, as we will then be sending contracts subject to finance approval. No deposit will be paid.

    Please confirm.” (emphasis in original)

  6. As may be appreciated, and as Ken well knew, a sale of property on terms that part of the ‘price’ is to be funded by a ‘debt’ from the vendor that ‘only exists on paper’ is one that does not reflect an arm’s length dealing, regardless of whether the nominal ‘price’ is the market price. Ken did not respond directly to the proposal, nor to a follow up letter sent in June 2021.

  7. A further follow up letter sent on 19 July 2021 did finally elicit a response from Timber Creek’s solicitors. On 29 July 2021, Pottenger & McGhee wrote to Nick and Lena. It is appropriate to set the letter out in full. In doing so, I will add paragraph numbers, just as Cameron later did for the purpose of preparing instructions to Mr Lagopodis.

    “Dear Mr Kolevski,

    21 DAMPIER CRESCENT SHELL COVE NSW 2529

    We act for Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd.

    1. We are aware that in 2015, our client purchased both your Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties to assist you in a time of financial difficulties. It was agreed you could remain in the properties and rent them from our client for $3,600.00 a month and pay all outgoings.

    2. We understand you were intending to sell your three Queensland properties which you had anticipated would be in 2 to 3 months of the date of purchase. Our client had agreed it would then sell the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties back to you and your wife at the original price provided you were out of financial difficulties.

    3. Our client informs us that it was approached by you in 2018 with a request to purchase the properties. Due to your financial difficulties in 2015, our client carried out due diligence to ensure that it would not be seen to be participating in an act of collusion to avoid your financial obligations. As it became clear that there were a number of credit issues, our client, on legal and financial advice, would not agree to sell the properties to you at the original purchase price.

    4. It is now some six years since the purchases and the opportunity for you to buy back the properties at the original price has now passed. Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd will not be selling the properties to you on that basis.

    5. However, our client understands that your son, Cameron Kolevski may wish to purchase Shell Cove. To that end, our client is willing to obtain a market appraisal for that property and also to offer Cameron a discount on the price. Should Cameron be interested in purchasing Shell Cove, would you kindly have him contact this office within 14 days of the date of this letter.

    6. For clarity, our client will not be selling the Port Kembla property.

    7. At this point of time the current rent will remain and be reviewed on 30 June 2022. We note you have not been paying the land tax.

    8. Please be aware that Mr Ken Stevens is [no] longer a director or shareholder with Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd. All correspondence for the company should come to this office.”

  1. Cameron forwarded this letter, together with a set of instructions setting out the Kolevskis’ reaction to the letter, to Mr Lagopodis of Good Legal on 2 August 2021. The instructions were as follows:

    “1. Indeed, properties were sold, so as to save the assets from possible creditor action.

    2. At no point were properties in Queensland were to be sold to fund the purchased properties back from Timber Creek Holdings. There was no discussion on this matter. The then director of Timber Creek Holdings was fully aware of the debts in the form of bank loans associated with the properties.

    3. The whole purpose of ‘selling’ the properties to Timber Creek Holdings was to protect assets. Mr Stevens was fully aware of possible creditor activity at the time of ‘purchase’, to claim that, in 2018, that declining sale back to Cameron Kolevski, due to ‘being made aware of financial obligations’ is a complete falsehood. Indeed, Cameron’s first approval (of 3) was completed in approximately 2017 (again, in Cameron’s name) to pay out the debts owing to Timber Creek Holdings. However, sale was refused, on the basis that it was apparently not ‘at arms length’.

    4. Throughout all discussions in the past 3-4 years, it was put to the Director of Timber Creek Holdings that the only person to be able to obtain credit to ‘re-purchase’ to properties was Cameron Kolevski. The then Director was fully aware of Nick & Lena Kolevski’s ongoing credit histories. How then, can it be said, that the properties were ever intended to be sold to Nick & Lena only?

    5. Under separate cover, we will forward to you correspondence to Timber Creek Holdings, with proposals put forward by Cameron Kolevski, and later Cameron & Jessica Kolevski, to ‘purchase’ both properties. Indeed, we instruct you to advise Timber Creek Holdings that Cameron & Jessica wish to proceed with ‘purchase’. Based on our most recent offer, we do not know what discount will be. Accordingly, we do not know what to approach lending institutions with, in order to obtain necessary funding. Either way, we see this as critical, and request your immediate action, in order to commence proceedings with ‘purchase’.

    a. At a meeting some 3-4 months ago, at Coffee Club Shellharbour, attended by Mr Stevens, his daughter Kim, Nick & Lena Kolevski, it was agreed for Nick & Lena Kolevski to obtain a registered valuer’s opinion on both properties. This was done so, by John Dignam, through the assistance of Good Legal Lawyers. We do not understand why Timber Creek Holdings now say, they will enlist a registered valuer, when at the noted meeting, Mr Stevens advised he did not wish to hand over ‘good money after bad’, for this purpose.

    b. All proposals were put to Timber Creek Holdings by Cameron Kolevski. Why is it, that correspondence from Pottenger & McGhee solicitors was addressed to Nick Kolevski?

    6. Why won’t their client not be ‘selling’ Port Kembla? The ongoing situation has always been a ‘package deal’ on both properties. Mr Stevens was, and always has been aware, the property originally belonged to the parents of Lena Kolevski. How does Timber Creek Holdings propose to return Port Kembla property, once all debt has been repaid to Timber Creek Holdings?

    7. The difficulty in meeting land tax has been expressed in writing to Timber Creek Holdings for approximately 3-4 years. The director accepted the situation, and added it to our loan account statement, at the charge of 10% in interest annually.

    8. It would appear, whilst Mr Stevens is no longer a director of Timber Creek Holdings, it is he who is still calling the shots and pulling the strings.

    Going forward, we want to obtain our properties back. By that, and with reference to our latest proposal, that was sent to Timber Creek Holdings, this can be done in a gentlemanly manner. Mr Stevens has always indicated that he would not be profiteering from this venture. We now ask Timber Creek Holdings to honour their commitments to us as had been outlined. Once again, please proceed to obtain proposed structure of sale, incorporating valuation figures from John Dignam, and what funding Cameron & Jessica need to obtain. Contracts may be prepared and exchanged with the proviso of funding approval.” (errors in original)

  2. Both Cameron and Nick accepted that these instructions represented their beliefs at the time they were sent to Mr Lagopodis.

  3. Mr Lagopodis received Cameron’s letter on 3 August 2021. This was the first he had heard about an oral agreement. Mr Lagopodis then had a telephone discussion with Nick, of which he prepared a careful note. He explained that he had not been instructed about an oral agreement at the time and that if there was to be a dispute about this, Nick would need to engage other lawyers. Nick asked if Mr Lagopodis could at least call Pottenger & McGhee to ‘enquire as to what the bottom line is regarding the sale to Cameron and why they don’t want to sell Port Kembla’.

  4. Mr Lagopodis then spoke with Ms Betts. She did not say anything to suggest that either she or her client considered there to have been either a loan agreement or a buy-back agreement at the time. As to the reason why Timber Creek was not willing to discuss the sale of the Port Kembla property, she said that Nick had indicated to Ken that he would ‘kick the mother out’, which was a reference to Lena’s mother who continued to live at the Port Kembla property.

  5. The only really noteworthy aspect of what Ms Betts said (as reflected in Mr Lagopodis’ note) is that the properties had been sold in 2015 at their market values, which they clearly had not been. I do not understand why Ms Betts would have held this view in 2021, but I do not find this to have any bearing on the issues in dispute. As to the proposal concerning the Shell Cove property, Ms Betts informed Mr Lagopodis that she would get a valuation and would revert to him in a day or so.

  6. Mr Lagopodis called Nick back and relayed to him what Ms Betts had said. Mr Lagopodis reiterated his position that he could not act for the Kolevskis in the matter and that they would need to find other representation.

  7. Following these interactions, Ken obtained various market appraisals for the Shell Cove property. After considering these, it appears Ken came to a value of $1,350,000. By letter dated 27 August 2021, Timber Creek made an offer to sell the property to Cameron at that price. The letter included the following:

    “Whilst our client could put the Shell Cove property on the open market, it does not choose to do so. However, our client does wish to formalise the tenancy arrangement with your parents and/or yourself by way of a Residential Tenancy Agreement for a longer period if required.

    With relation to the property at Port Kembla, our client is not intending to sell the property and certainly not whilst Simon’s widow resides in it. However, our client would like to come to a satisfactory arrangement to protect her tenancy.”

  8. There followed some further inconclusive correspondence.

  9. It was at about this time that the plaintiffs engaged solicitors in connection with the dispute. Their solicitors, Kells, who are their solicitors in these proceedings, conducted various searches on behalf of the Kolevskis. Those searches revealed that Timber Creek had granted a mortgage over the Shell Cove property in July 2018 to secure a loan from Westpac.

  10. On 29 November 2021, Nick and Lena caused caveats to be lodged over each of the properties. The details supporting the claim were as follows:

    “Equitable interest in the land by virtue of a verbal Debt Purchase Agreement entered into between the caveators and the registered proprietor in or about June/July 2015.”

  11. It was also during this period that Timber Creek retained a real estate agent to manage the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties.

  12. On 12 January 2022, Pottenger & McGhee sent to Nick copies of lapsing notices it had lodged in respect of the caveats the Kolevskis had lodged against title to the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties. This step prompted proceedings and on 1 February 2022, the caveats were extended until further order of the Court.

Valuations

  1. The parties each filed and served expert valuation evidence in relation to the properties. The valuers prepared joint reports in which they reached agreement as to the market value of each property at particular points in time. Their joint position in relation to the Shell Cove property was as follows:

    “1 July 2015   $1,025,000

    1 July 2016   $1,125,000

    1 July 2017    $1,300,000

    1 July 2018   $1,300,000

    1 July 2019   $1,300,000

    1 July 2020   $1,400,000

    1 July 2021   $1,700,000

    1 July 2022   $1,875,000

    1 July 2023   $1,875,000”.

  2. Their joint position in relation to the Port Kembla property was as follows:

    “1 July 2015   $320,000

    1 July 2016   $385,000

    1 July 2017    $435,000

    1 July 2018   $460,000

    1 July 2019   $480,000

    1 July 2020   $480,000

    1 July 2021   $520,000

    1 July 2022   $620,000

    1 July 2023   $620,000”.

Accounting evidence

  1. The defendant relied on evidence from their own accountant, Anthony Pickham, in relation to their general practice of lending and the nature of their financial reports and how the relationship with the Kolevskis was reflected therein. There was no dispute about this evidence. It shows that Timber Creek has always treated the payments from the Kolevskis as rent. It also shows that Timber Creek’s usual lending practice was to advance loans that generally had a term on 12 months.

  2. Further evidence from Ken, Megan and Ms Betts indicated that these loans usually had interest rates of 10% or 11%, were interest only until the repayment of the principal sum and were secured by mortgages over the borrowers’ property.

The parties’ claims in more detail

The amended statement of claim

  1. The plaintiffs’ central contention is that Nick, Lena and Ken had the discussions set out in Nick’s affidavits and that, as a result, the parties entered into an oral loan agreement on the following express terms:

    “(a) a company then controlled by Ken, Timber Creek Holdings Pty Ltd (Timber Creek) would lend Nick and Lena the sum of $620,000 (Loan Amount);

    (b) the Loan Amount was to be applied to discharging the mortgages on each of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla Properties (together the Properties);

    (c) the Properties would be transferred to Timber Creek as security for repayment of the Loan Amount, and interest;

    (d) Nick and Lena would repay the Loan Amount to Timber Creek in the sum of $3,600 per month, plus interest at 6.5% per annum. The $3,600 per month being attributable as follows:

    (i) $2,400 in respect of the $400,000 portion of the Loan Amount referable to the discharge of the mortgage over the Shell Cove Property; and

    (ii) $1,200 in respect of the $220,000 portion of the Loan Amount referable to the discharge of the mortgage over the Port Kembla Property;

    (e) Nick and Lena would pay all council rates, water, and gas charges in respect of the Properties;

    (f) Nick and Lena would keep both Properties insured;

    (g) Nick and Lena would remain in full possession of both Properties, such that:

    (i) Nick and Lena would continue to live in the Shell Cove Property with whomever else they desired; and

    (ii) Lena’s mother would continue to live in the Port Kembla Property;

    (h) Nick and Lena would continue to repay the Loan Amount in the monthly instalments plus annual interest until the Loan Amount was repaid in full;

    (i) Nick and Lena could repay the outstanding Loan Amount in full at any time;

    (j) in the event that Nick and Lena were unable to meet their obligations under the Loan Agreement Timber Creek would sell the Shell Cove Property in order to repay the then outstanding Loan Amount;

    (k) the Port Kembla Property would not be sold unless any proceeds of sale of the Shell Cove Property were insufficient to pay out the Loan Amount;

    (l) upon repayment of the Loan Amount Timber Creek would transfer the Properties to any nominee of Nick and Lena.”

  2. The plaintiffs further contend that, by necessary implication, it was a term of the loan agreement that the properties would be held as security for the loan amount as outstanding from time to time, free of any encumbrance.

  3. The plaintiffs contend that there have been numerous breaches of the loan agreement by Timber Creek. These were as follows:

    (1)Timber Creek breached the loan agreement by granting a mortgage over the Shell Cove property to Westpac on 2 July 2018.

    (2)Timber Creek breached the agreement when it ‘refused to accept funds for the Loan transfer’ from Nick or Cameron, presumably in 2018.

    (3)In June 2019, Timber Creek further agreed to accept payment from Cameron but breached this term by failing to ‘engage with’ the plaintiffs or to ‘accept payment of the Loan Agreement and to transfer the Properties to Cameron’.

    (4)On 25 March 2021, Timber Creek ‘again refused to accept payment of the Loan Amount and transfer the Properties to Cameron’ in breach of the agreement.

  4. The plaintiffs next contend that by reason of the principle in Lincoln v Wright (1859) 4 De G & J 16; 45 ER 6, Timber Creek holds the properties as constructive trustee. Its contention in this respect is as follows:

    “By reason of the principle in Lincoln v Wright (1859) 4 De G & J 16; 45 ER 6, the parties’ entry into the Loan Agreement, and by reason of Nick and Lena executing the transfers and providing them to Timber Creek, Timber Creek holds each of the Properties on constructive trust for Nick and Lena, subject to payment by Nick and Lena of so much of the Loan Amount as remains outstanding to Timber Creek.”

  5. They contend that they are ready, willing and able to repay the loan amount and that they have ‘completely performed their obligations’, save for repayment. They seek orders for the properties to be transferred to Cameron ‘or to such of the plaintiffs as they may elect’. They also seek the orders which I described at paragraph [7] above which include an order that the Kolevski’s pay $322,943.17 into Court.

  6. The figure of $322,943.17 was not really explained. If, as the plaintiffs say, Timber Creek was entitled to repayment of the purchase price of $622,000 plus stamp duty plus interest since 2015, then it is very difficult to see why the plaintiffs would now owe only $322,943.17, even taking into account ten years of monthly payments of $3,600. It may be that the figure of $322,943.17 represents the amount that would be repayable if interest were to stop running after some time in 2016, being a time at which the plaintiffs say they were first ready, willing and able to discharge the loan.

  7. Next, the plaintiffs bring a case based on proprietary estoppel. This aspect of the case is factually closely aligned with the case based on contract and was poorly articulated. The plaintiffs say that Nick and Lena were induced by Ken to enter into the loan agreement or alternatively that they relied on his representations that he would hold the property as security. They say that when offering the loan agreement, Ken knew that it would be to Nick and Lena’s detriment. They say they entered into the loan agreement in reliance on the expectation that Timber Creek would adhere to the pleaded terms of the agreement. Specifically, they allege that:

    “Nick and Lena executed the transfers of each of the Properties in accordance with the July 2015 instructions from Pauline Betts of Pottenger & McGhee Solicitors, upon the expectation that Timber Creek would adhere to the terms of the loan agreement and transfer the properties back to them, or to their nominee, in accordance with the terms of the loan agreement.”

  8. They say it is unconscionable for Timber Creek to refuse to transfer the properties back to them or to their nominee ‘in accordance with the principles of equitable proprietary estoppel by encouragement’.

  9. The last of the claims maintained by the plaintiffs is pleaded under the heading ‘Trust’. It is as follows:

    “By reason of the parties’ entry into the Loan Agreement, and by reason of Nick and Lena executing the transfers and providing them to Timber Creek, and pursuant to the principle in Lincoln v Wright (1859) De G & J 16; 45 ER 6, Timber Creek holds each of the Properties on constructive trust for Nick and Lena, subject to payment by Nick and Lena of so much of the Loan Amount as remains outstanding to Timber Creek.”

  10. The plaintiffs said next to nothing about this claim in their submissions but it seems not to be materially different to their principal claim that Nick and Lena were, in effect, equitable mortgagors.

The amended defence and cross claim

  1. The defendant’s principal contention is that there was no oral agreement among the parties. It contends that the transfer of each property was by way of absolute conveyance and that it thereby received indefeasible title to each property. It pleads and relies on ss 23C and 54A of the Conveyancing Act. It also pleads and relies on a defence under s 14(1) of the Limitation Act 1969 (NSW), either directly or by analogy, as well as laches although I note that both of these had seemingly fallen away by the time of the hearing, there being no reference to them in any submissions.

  2. Timber Creek pleads in the alternative and without admission that if the parties did enter into an oral agreement, it was to the following effect:

    “(a) Nick and Lena agreed to sell, and Ken agreed Timber Creek would buy, the Shell Cove Property, with title to the Shell Cove Property to transfer from Nick and Lena to Timber Creek at the price of $420,000, to discharge Nick and Lena’s obligations as mortgagor to their mortgagee, ANZ;

    (b) Nick and Lena agreed to sell, and Ken agreed Timber Creek would buy, the Port Kembla Property, with title to the Port Kembla Property to transfer from Nick and Lena to Timber Creek at the price of $200,000, to discharge Nick and Lena’s obligations as mortgagor to their mortgagee, ANZ;

    (c) If Nick and Lena were financially back on their feet within 3 months, following the sale of their Gold Coast properties, Timber Creek would be prepared to sell them the Shell Cove Property and the Port Kembla Property at market value;

    (d) Timber Creek would permit Nick and Lena to rent, and remain in possession of the Shell Cove Property and the Port Kembla Property, at a rental calculated on a rate of return of investment to Timber Creek of 6.5% per annum calculated on the cost of Timber Creek of the purchase of the Shell Cove Property and the Port Kembla Property;

    (e) Nick and Lena would be liable for, and be required to pay;

    (i) All outgoings in respect of the Shell Cove Property and the Port Kembla Property, including all council rates, water charges, and gas charges;

    (ii) All Land Tax for which Timber Creek was liable to pay, or had paid, in respect of the Shell Cove Property and the Port Kembla Property.”

  3. Timber Creek alleges that since 3 April 2017, the plaintiffs have breached the agreement by failing to pay any monies for Timber Creek’s land tax liability in respect of the properties.

  4. By way of further alternative pleading, Timber Creek says that if, contrary to its primary case and the alternative just mentioned, the parties did have a loan agreement, it was on terms that included the following:

    (1)Nick and Lena would repay the principal amount plus interest, which they have failed to do.

    (2)Nick and Lena would pay amounts for land tax, which they have failed to do.

    (3)Nick and Lena would pay an occupation fee at a reasonable market rental, which they have failed to do.

Cross Claim

  1. Timber Creek also brings a cross claim. It seeks judgment for all amounts owing in respect of land tax and a reasonable occupation fee for the properties. It also seeks orders for possession and for sale of the properties.

Reply

  1. The plaintiffs have filed a reply in which, relevantly, they reply to Timber Creek’s defence based on the statute of frauds. In relation to both s 23C and s 54A, they said that for Timber Creek to rely on these sections of the Conveyancing Act would be a fraud on the statute of the type considered in Ciaglia v Ciaglia [2010] NSWSC 341; 269 ALR 175 (Ciaglia). They also say that s 23C is inapplicable to their constructive trust claim by reason of subsection (2) and that s 54A is inapplicable to their claim, by reason of the doctrine of part performance.

  1. However, the terms of the oral agreement which I have found to exist were somewhat different. They presupposed the entry into later contracts for sale of land and, in my view, were not inconsistent with them. The main inconsistency to which Timber Creek pointed was the promise to convey free and clear title to the properties which, they submitted, could not stand with the retention of interest as mortgagor. However, the fact that title to Torrens title land is transferred is not necessarily inconsistent with the proposition that the transferor may continue to have an equity of redemption, as was the case in Abigail v Lapin.

  2. In my view, the oral agreement supplemented the terms of the contracts for sale in the sense that it made provision for matters not otherwise dealt with in those contracts, namely the use of the properties after sale and their possible repurchase by the Nick and Lena: see McMahon v National Foods Milk Ltd (2009) 25 VR 251; [2009] VSCA 153 at [36]-[39] (Nettle JA).

Does the statute of frauds apply?

  1. Sections 23C, 23E and 54A of the Conveyancing Act are as follows:

    23C   Instruments required to be in writing

    (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act with respect to the creation of interests in land by parol—

    (a) no interest in land can be created or disposed of except by writing signed by the person creating or conveying the same, or by the person’s agent thereunto lawfully authorised in writing, or by will, or by operation of law,

    (b) a declaration of trust respecting any land or any interest therein must be manifested and proved by some writing signed by some person who is able to declare such trust or by the person’s will,

    (c) a disposition of an equitable interest or trust subsisting at the time of the disposition, must be in writing signed by the person disposing of the same or by the person’s will, or by the person’s agent thereunto lawfully authorised in writing.

    (2) This section does not affect the creation or operation of resulting, implied, or constructive trusts.

    (3) For the purposes of this section, a requirement for writing may be satisfied in electronic form and a requirement for writing to be signed may be satisfied by electronic signature.

    23E Savings in regard to secs 23B, 23C, 23D

    Nothing in section 23B, 23C, or 23D shall—

    (a) invalidate any disposition by will, or

    (b) affect any interest validly created before the commencement of the Conveyancing (Amendment) Act 1930, or

    (c) affect the right to acquire an interest in land by virtue of taking possession, or

    (d) affect the operation of the law relating to part performance.

    54A Contracts for sale etc of land to be in writing

    (1) No action or proceedings may be brought upon any contract for the sale or other disposition of land or any interest in land, unless the agreement upon which such action or proceedings is brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, is in writing, and signed by the party to be charged or by some other person thereunto lawfully authorised by the party to be charged.

    (2) This section applies to contracts whether made before or after the commencement of the Conveyancing (Amendment) Act 1930 and does not affect the law relating to part performance, or sales by the court.

    (3) This section applies and shall be deemed to have applied from the commencement of the Conveyancing (Amendment) Act 1930 to land under the provisions of the Real Property Act 1900.

    (4) A contract referred to in subsection (1) is not invalidated or rendered unenforceable only because it has been created in electronic form and electronically signed or attested.

  2. An interesting question arises as to which of s 23C and s 54A is engaged here: cf Ciaglia at paragraphs [50] and following. The parties did not address me on this issue. Rather, they proceeded on the footing that s 23C would apply to prevent Nick and Lena from asserting an interest in the property as equitable mortgagor, subject to whether the doctrine of part performance leads to a different result. I will approach the issues in that way.

  3. The doctrine of part performance was explained in Pipikos v Trayans (2016) 265 CLR 522; [2018] HCA 39. At paragraphs [51] and [53], Kiefel CJ, Bell, Gageler, and Keane JJ said (with emphasis in the original):

    “[51] It is significant in this respect that Lord Selborne expressly adopted the statement of Sir James Wigram V-C in Dale v Hamilton that it is in general of the essence of an act of part performance:

    ‘that the Court shall, by reason of the act itself, without knowing whether there was an agreement or not, find the parties unequivocally in a position different from that which, according to their legal rights, they would be in if there were no contract.’

    [53] In Burns v McCormick, Cardozo J explained the essential requirement this way:

    ‘There must be performance “unequivocally referable” to the agreement, performance which alone and without the aid of words of promise is unintelligible or at least extraordinary unless as an incident of ownership, assured, if not existing.

    “An act which admits of explanation without reference to the alleged oral contract or a contract of the same general nature and purpose is not, in general, admitted to constitute a part performance.”…

    What is done must itself supply the key to what is promised. It is not enough that what is promised may give significance to what is done.’”

  4. As Kirk JA further explained in Li v Tao (2023) 113 NSWLR 131; [2023] NSWCA 310 at [56]:

    “Where the doctrine is invoked, ‘the logical order … is first to determine whether the acts performed establish the equity and then, and only then, to refer to the terms of the parol agreement in order to ascertain the terms in which the equity is to be enforced’: Pipikos at [55], see also [99]. Thus one does not begin with the contract and then identify acts which are referable to it. Rather, one focuses on the acts to consider if they are ‘consistent only with partial performance of a transaction of the same nature as that which the plaintiff seeks to have completed’: at [54]. Further, ‘payment of money alone is not a sufficient act of part performance because it is an equivocal act not in itself indicative of a contract concerning land’: Pipikos at [89] per Nettle and Gordon JJ.”

  5. The plaintiffs relied on two matters in support of the proposition that there had been part performance of an oral agreement: (a) the transfer of the properties in 2015 and (b) the numerous ‘offers’ to repay the ‘debt’ and repurchase the properties.

  6. In relation to the second category, the offers to pay back the amount owing were not acts of part performance. They involved no change in position whatsoever in relation to the subject matter of the contract and in any event the plaintiffs were never and are not now in a position to pay the total amount that is owing, even on their case.

  7. The original transfers of the properties do however constitute sufficient acts of part performance. The distinctive feature of the transfers, as I noted at the very outset, was that they took place at an undervalue. One possible explanation for the sale on those terms is that Nick and Lena were desperate to sell the properties. But that is an altogether unsatisfactory explanation. They were not desperate to sell and they could easily have sold the properties for their market values otherwise. The far more likely explanation for the transfers is that, as Nick and Lena claim, they did so as part of an arrangement that would entitle them to recover the properties at some future date at essentially the same undervalue, plus Timber Creek’s return. This is exactly what the oral agreement provided for. In my view, there were sufficient acts of part performance of the oral agreement such that s 23C(1) does not apply.

Have Nick and Lena breached the oral agreement?

  1. A key term of the oral agreement was that Nick and Lena would pay rent of $3,600 per month together with outgoings, including land tax. Nick and Lena have paid rent and some outgoings, but they have not paid or even contributed to land tax since April 2017.

  2. Although not pleaded, the plaintiffs submitted in final submissions that the oral agreement was a residential tenancy agreement within the meaning of the Residential Tenancies Act 2010 (NSW) and that Timber Creek was not entitled to require Nick and Lena to pay land tax: s 40. In their submission, Timber Creek was therefore not entitled to rely on the non-payment of land tax as a breach of the agreement.

  3. Senior counsel for Timber Creek resisted this new case on the basis that the defendant would have conducted its case differently if this point had been taken. He submitted that the point was neither pleaded nor identified in written submissions and indicated that he would have cross examined differently had he known that this point would be taken. I accept this submission. I do not consider that it was open to the plaintiffs to raise this issue so late in the piece.

  4. But I would not have accepted the plaintiffs’ submission in any event. Section 8 of the Residential Tenancies Act is entitled ‘Agreements to which this Act does not apply’. It relevantly provides:

    (1)  This Act does not apply to the following agreements—

    (f) an agreement for the sale of land that confers a right to occupy residential premises on a party to the agreement,

    (g) an agreement that arises under a term of a mortgage and confers a right to occupy residential premises on a party to the mortgage,

  5. In Hudson, Bathurst CJ held at [28] that for a residential tenancy agreement to be within the scope of s 8(1)(f), ‘the right to occupy must be conferred by the contract for the sale of land itself’. Emmett JA and Bergin CJ in Eq agreed at [54]-[56] and [57] respectively. In the light of that conclusion, I would not find that the oral agreement for the Kolevskis to rent the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties was exempt from the operation of the Residential Tenancies Act by reason of s 8(1)(f).

  6. However, Bathurst CJ found that the arrangement did give rise to a mortgage within the meaning of s 8(1)(g) of the Residential Tenancies Act, as already explained. His Honour found that Hudson’s lease was therefore not within the scope of that Act. I would have reached the same conclusion here.

  7. In my view, the plaintiffs have been in longstanding breach of the oral agreement by reason of their failure to pay land tax.

  8. I consider the question of whether Timber Creek breached the oral agreement at [248]-[251].

Have the plaintiffs ever been ready willing and able to discharge the mortgage?

  1. My conclusion that the overall arrangement was in the nature of a mortgage means that it is necessary to consider the plaintiffs’ submission that they were ready, willing and able to perform their obligations under the arrangement at numerous points.

  2. The difficulty with this submission is that in order to redeem the mortgages, Nick and Lena were required not just to be ready, willing and able to repay; they were required to tender the amount owing. The position is stated in ELG Tyler, PW Young and C Croft, Fisher & Lightwood’s Law of Mortgage (3rd Australian edition, 2014, LexisNexis Butterworths) at [32.40]-[32.48]. In particular, at [32.41] the authors say:

    “There must be an actual tender of the money due: Bishop v Church (1751) 2 Ves Sen 371; 28 ER 238. An assertion of willingness to pay is not enough: Devon Nominees Ltd v Hampstead Holdings Ltd [1981] 1 NZLR 477.”

  3. Where there is no fixed date of redemption and where the loan is repayable on demand, a mortgagor will be able to redeem at any time so long as they give the mortgagee enough notice to receive the money and bank it: G.A. Investments Pty Ltd v Standard Insurance Company Limited [1964] WAR 264 (Wolf CJ, Jackson and Hale JJ); Fisher & Lightwood’s Law of Mortgage at [32.6] and [32.36]. The tender must be unconditional and the money in question should be produced: Fisher & Lightwood’s Law of Mortgage at [32.46] and [32.47].

  4. Redemption of these mortgages would require the tender of an amount representing the total amount outlaid by Timber Creek to acquire the properties, plus outgoings and taxes (including transfer duty and land tax) plus a return of 6.5% per annum to Timber Creek reducing to 5% from 21 June 2018, less the monthly payments of $3,600.

  5. Payment of such an amount has never been tendered. Nor, for that matter, does the evidence demonstrate that Nick and Lena were ever or are now ready, willing and able to redeem the mortgages.

  6. At its highest, the evidence shows only that Cameron – not Nick or Lena – received conditional loan approvals, but those approvals were never actually accepted or acted upon. Furthermore, as I have found, no bank would actually have lent sufficient funds to Cameron at any point in an amount sufficient to redeem the mortgages. Every application for finance he made involved serious misrepresentations as to his financial circumstances. And in any event, even if he had found access to sufficient funds, he does not ever appear to have been willing to lend those funds to his parents so as to enable them to redeem the mortgages.

  7. There is no evidence that Cameron is currently ready, willing and able to redeem the mortgages. The evidence is that he believes he is able to do so, but he has not demonstrated a reasonable basis for that belief.

Has Timber Creek breached the agreement?

  1. I cannot accept the submission that Timber Creek breached the oral agreement in the ways described in (b), (c) and (d) of paragraph [137] above. I have found that Nick and Lena were not ever ready willing and able to perform the contract but, more to the point, neither they nor anyone else has ever tendered payment to discharge the mortgage. I have also found that the agreement did not contemplate that the property would be sold to Cameron.

  2. As to the submission that Timber Creek breached the agreement by mortgaging the property to Westpac, the plaintiffs have referred me to no clause of the agreement or to any statement of principle that would prevent Timber Creek from raising money against the security of the properties. One of the main reasons why parties enter into arrangements of the kind now in dispute is that the mortgagee is able to deal with the property as an owner, including by using the property as security for borrowings.

  3. A question could arise as between Nick and Lena, on the one hand, and Westpac, on the other, as to whose interest has priority. However, that is an issue I do not need to resolve.

  4. I find that Timber Creek has not breached the agreement.

Proprietary estoppel

  1. Before stating my conclusions on the issues addressed thus far, it is necessary to consider the plaintiffs’ alternative claim based on proprietary estoppel.

  2. Although pleaded, this claim was not developed in submissions in any kind of structured way. Even giving the plaintiffs the benefit of considerable doubt about what their case was in this respect, I cannot see a basis on which they are entitled to succeed by reference to the principles of proprietary estoppel.

  3. There is no doubt that Ken did make promises on Timber Creek’s behalf concerning the properties. But my findings as to what was said in the relevant discussions mean that I cannot accept that he made the promises on which this aspect of the plaintiffs’ pleaded case depends.

  4. I am also unable to find that Timber Creek has departed in any way from the promises that I found to have actually been made by Ken in 2015. So far as I can tell, Timber Creek has entirely kept its end of the bargain. In fact, at considerable cost to itself, it has refrained from exercising the right to sell even in the face of Nick and Lena’s continuing failure to contribute to the cost of land tax.

Conclusions

  1. I summarise my conclusions as follows:

    (1)I have all but rejected the plaintiffs’ account of Nick’s discussions with Ken in May and June 2015. However, even on Ken’s account, which I have almost entirely accepted, the parties did enter into a binding oral agreement.

    (2)The agreement, although not expressed as such, was in the nature of a loan and mortgage arrangement. It involved an assignment of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties as security for repayment of funds outlaid by Timber Creek to acquire, hold and sell the properties.

    (3)The oral agreement included a term that Nick and Lena would rent the properties for a total of $3,600 per month and that they would pay all outgoings and land tax.

    (4)Timber Creek was entitled to earn a return of 6.5% per annum on all funds advanced, including initial costs and transfer duty. From 21 June 2018, Timber Creek reduced this to 5% per annum.

    (5)The oral agreement was not evidenced in writing. However, I have found that the parties intended it to be binding, that it survived the entry into the written contracts for sale, and that the doctrine of part performance applies to it.

    (6)Redemption of the mortgages requires the tender of an amount representing the total amount outlaid by Timber Creek to acquire the properties including transfer duty, plus outgoings and land tax plus the return of 6.5% per annum (as modified to 5% per annum), less the monthly payments of $3,600 actually made to the date of redemption.

    (7)Nick and Lena have never tendered and do not now tender an amount sufficient to redeem the mortgages. If it matters, they have also never been ready, willing and able to discharge the mortgages because they have at all relevant times lacked the financial means to do so.

    (8)Nick and Lena are in longstanding and continuing breach of the oral agreement because they have not paid land tax, which they were required to do.

Is Timber Creek entitled to judgment and orders on its cross claim, including for possession and sale?

  1. It is appropriate in all of these circumstances for the Court to order possession of the Shell Cove and Port Kembla properties and for the properties to be sold. This conclusion is warranted by the fact that Nick and Lena are in breach of the agreement by reason of their ongoing failure to pay land tax. It would also be warranted if Timber Creek had not made its required return on the funds outlaid in any event. However, the parties did not specifically address me as to the calculation of the return which Timber Creek has actually made. My conclusion that Nick and Lena are in breach means it is not necessary for me to consider Timber Creek’s alternative argument that it is in any event entitled to give Nick and Lena notice to vacate the properties and for the properties to be sold. Had it been necessary to consider that question, I would have found that Timber Creek was entitled to do so. The oral agreement did not contemplate an open-ended arrangement under which Nick and Lena could remain in possession for 10 years without discharging the mortgage. It was explicitly intended to be a short-term arrangement. Whatever that expression may mean, it did not mean 10 years.

  2. Timber Creek submitted that both properties should be sold. The plaintiffs submitted that even if Timber Creek succeeds, it should not be entitled to sell the Port Kembla property because Lena’s elderly mother still lives there and because Ken promised that Timber Creek would not do so. The difficulty, however, is that I have found the Kolevskis to be in default of the agreement. Timber Creek’s only opportunity to recoup its outgoings is from a sale of the properties.

  3. The agreed valuations suggest that the price at which the Shell Cove property might sell will probably be sufficient to recoup all of Timber Creek’s outgoings in relation to both properties. If that is the case and if Nick and Lena are willing to pay the costs and transfer duty to recover the Port Kembla property, then they should have an opportunity to do so. However, if the proceeds of sale of the Shell Cove property are insufficient to discharge the total amount owing on the ‘mortgage’, or if Nick and Lena are unwilling to pay to have the Port Kembla property transferred back into their names, it will be necessary for that property also to be sold.

  1. I will therefore make an order for the sale of both properties but I will stay the order in relation to the Port Kembla property until such time as the Shell Cove property has been sold. If the funds produced by the sale of the Shell Cove property are sufficient also to discharge the mortgage over the Port Kembla property, then that is what should occur.

  2. Because I have found that Nick and Lena do have an equity of redemption, they will be entitled to exercise that right until immediately prior to the sale of the properties. Even though I have found that they were not ready, willing and able to redeem the mortgages on the basis of the evidence before me, it remains open to them to tender payment up until the point of sale.

  3. The Court may make an order for possession as an ancillary order to an order for judicial sale: Morris Finance Ltd v Free [2017] NSWSC 1417 at [124] (Ward CJ in Eq). It is appropriate to make such an order here, although I will also stay the order for possession of the Port Kembla property until such time as it becomes necessary to sell that property. To be clear, the order for possession will not take effect unless and until it is clear that the proceeds of sale of the Shell Cove property are insufficient to discharge the mortgage over the Port Kembla property and that the property therefore needs to be sold.

  4. I will also make an order setting aside the order made on 4 April 2022 which extended the caveat over the properties.

Orders

  1. Even though the plaintiffs have had a measure of success in the proceedings in that I have found that there was a binding oral agreement and that Timber Creek holds the properties as mortgagee, it is not appropriate for the Court to grant any of the relief sought in the amended statement of claim. The agreement I have found to exist is almost entirely as pleaded in the alternative in the defence and it is Nick and Lena, not Timber Creek, who are in breach of it. I have also found that Timber Creek is entitled to the relief sought in its cross claim, namely orders for possession and sale.

  2. I will therefore make orders as follows:

    (1)The amended statement of claim is dismissed.

    (2)An order for possession of the land comprised in Certificate of Title, Folio Identifier 3111/1006783, being the land situated at and known as 21 Dampier Crescent, Shell Cove NSW 2529 (the Shell Cove Property) be made in favour of the defendant/cross-claimant.

    (3)An order for possession of the land comprised in Certificate of Title, Folio Identifier 434/14939, being the land situated at and known as 7 Sixth Avenue, Port Kembla NSW 2505 (the Port Kembla Property) be made in favour of the defendant/cross-claimant.

    (4)An order for the sale by the defendant/cross-claimant of the Shell Cove Property.

    (5)An order for the sale by the defendant/cross-claimant of the Port Kembla Property.

    (6)Orders 3 and 5, being the orders for possession and sale of the Port Kembla Property, be stayed until 30 days after the completion of the sale of the Shell Cove Property (pursuant to Order 4 above).

    (7)The proceeds of sale of the properties are to be applied in the following way:

    (a)To the defendant/cross-claimant, up to an amount representing the total amount outlaid by Timber Creek to acquire, hold and sell the properties including any taxes and duties, plus a return of 6.5% per annum (as modified to 5% per annum as of June 2018) in relation to such outgoings, less any payments actually made by or on behalf of the first and second plaintiffs up to the date of sale; and

    (b)The balance to the first and second plaintiffs/ cross-defendants.

    (8)Grant liberty to apply to the defendant/cross-claimant in respect of any further orders or directions that may be appropriate to give effect to the orders for possession and sale.

    (9)Direct the parties to make submissions on costs as follows:

    (a)The plaintiffs to file and serve any submissions and evidence on the question of costs on or before 28 May 2025;

    (b)The defendant to file and serve any submissions and evidence on the question of costs on or before 4 June 2025; and

    (c)The plaintiffs to file and serve any submissions and evidence in reply on the question of costs on or before 11 June 2025.

    (10)Set aside order 8 made by Ward CJ in Eq on 1 February 2022.

    **********

Amendments

30 October 2025 - Order 10 - date amended

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