Oates Properties Pty Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue
[2003] NSWSC 596
•4 July 2003
CITATION: Oates Properties Pty Ltd & Ors v Commissioner of State Revenue [2003] NSWSC 596 HEARING DATE(S): 26/06/03 JUDGMENT DATE:
4 July 2003JUDGMENT OF: Gzell J DECISION: Declaration as to common intention and rectification of deed of appointment CATCHWORDS: EQUITY - Equitable Doctrines and Presumptions - Rectification - Mistake of Law - Deed of appointment of new trustee - Failure irrevocably to exclude benefits to trustees - Ad valorem stamp duty assessed on transfers of property to new trustee - Disconformity between common intention and deed of appointment - Whether rectification should be granted LEGISLATION CITED: Duties Act 1997
Revenue Ruling SD 118
Stamp Duties Act 1920
Income Tax Act 1918 (UK)CASES CITED: Burroughes v Abbott [1922] 1 Ch 86
Jervis v Howle and Talke Colliery Co Ltd [1937] Ch 67
Whiteside v Whiteside [1950] Ch 65
Joscelyne v Nissen [1970] 2 QB 86
Re Butlin's Settlement Trusts [1976] Ch 251
Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd (in liq) v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd (1919) 26 CLR 410
Commissioner of Stamp Duties (NSW) v Carlenka Pty Ltd (1995) 41 NSWLR 329
Club Cape Schanck Resort Co Ltd v Cape Country Club Pty Ltd (2001) 3 VR 526
Prestige Land Developments Pty Ltd v Eagle Hotels Pty Ltd [1996] ANZ Conv R 208
Baird v B C E Holdings Pty Ltd (1996) 40 NSWLR 374
Victoria Gardens Developments Pty Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue (1999) 99 ATC 4683
Davis v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2000) 171 ALR 654
Baxter v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2002) 196 ALR 519
Conagra International Fertiliser Co v Lief Investments Pty Ltd (1997) 141 FLR 124
Terceiro v First Mitmac Pty Ltd (1997) 8 BPR 15,733
Permanent Trustee Australia Ltd v FAI General Insurance Co Ltd (1998) 153 ALR 529
Leibler, Leibant Investments Pty Ltd v Air New Zealand Ltd [1999] 1 VR 1 at 27
Trimmer v Lax (unreported, 9 May 1999, SC (NSW))
Furey v Mackne (unreported, 9 December 1999, SC (NSW))
Palmer v Roads and Traffic Authority [2001] NSWSC 846
Fitzwood Pty Ltd v Unique Goal Pty Ltd (in liq) [2002] FCAFC 285
Barak Pty Ltd v W T H Pty Ltd [2003] NSWSC 15
LE Stewart Investments Pty Ltd v FC & M Legge Building Contractors & Developers [2003] NSWSC 193
Meagher, Gummow and Lehane's Equity Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, Butterworths Lexis Nexis, Australia, 2002
Spry, The Principles of Equitable Remedies, 6th ed, LBC Information Services, Australia, 2001
Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 6th ed, Sweet & Maxwell, UK, 1929PARTIES :
Oates Properties Pty Ltd - 1st Plaintiff
Cameron Oates Properties Pty Ltd - 2nd Plaintiff
Cameron William Donald-Oates - 3rd Plaintiff
Commissioner of State Revenue - DefendantFILE NUMBER(S): SC 2259/03 COUNSEL: Mr J O Hmelnitsky SOLICITORS: Blake Dawson Waldron Lawyers
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
EQUITY DIVISION
GZELL J
FRIDAY 4 JULY 2003
2259/03 OATES PROPERTIES PTY LTD & ORS v COMMISSIONER OF STATE REVENUE
JUDGMENT
1 The first plaintiff is the new trustee of the Cameron Oates Property Trust. The second plaintiff is the retiring trustee and the third plaintiff is the Appointor under the trust. They seek rectification of the deed of appointment of the new trustee. The defendant, the Commissioner of State Revenue, has entered an appearance submitting to the orders of the Court save as to costs.
2 The Duties Act 1997, s 54(3) provided that duty of $10 was chargeable with respect to a transfer of dutiable property as a consequence of the retirement of a trustee or the appointment of a new trustee if the Chief Commissioner was satisfied that:
- “(a) none of the continuing trustees remaining after the retirement of the trustee is or can become a beneficiary under the trust, and
(b) none of the trustees of the trust after the appointment of a new trustee is or can become a beneficiary under the trust, and
(c) the transfer is not part of a scheme for conferring an interest, in relation to the trust property, on a new trustee or any other person, whether as a beneficiary or otherwise, to the detriment of the beneficial interest or potential beneficial interest of any person.”
If the Chief Commissioner was not so satisfied, the transfer was chargeable with the same duty as a transfer to a beneficiary in conformity with the trusts.
3 The second plaintiff, as trustee, had acquired six properties for $4,735,000 million on which stamp duty of $208,895 had been paid. The third plaintiff negotiated the acquisition of a rural property to be held by the second plaintiff in its own right. Contracts were exchanged. Negotiations then took place with St George Bank to re-finance the six properties held by the second plaintiff as trustee. The bank required the rural property to be held on a “stand-alone” basis and not by the same entity that held the other properties on trust. Since contracts for the acquisition of the rural property in the name of the second plaintiff had been exchanged, the third plaintiff thought the most appropriate course was to appoint a new trustee in the stead of the second plaintiff.
4 Clause 14.1(b) of the trust deed constituting the trust provided that the Appointor, without the consent of the trustee or trustees, might appoint a new trustee or trustees in the place of, or in addition to, any existing trustee or trustees provided that the settlor should not be eligible for appointment as a trustee.
5 Before proceeding with this course of action, the third plaintiff was anxious to ensure that there would be no adverse financial or taxation implications. A meeting took place between the third plaintiff, Andrew Cusack, the financial controller of the trust and Peter Edwards, chartered accountant. The third plaintiff explained that he wanted to know if he could appoint a new trustee in place of the existing trustee without having to pay ad valorem stamp duty on the transfer of the six properties held by the trust. Mr Edwards said that his understanding was that if it was just a change of trustee with no change of beneficial ownership, only nominal duty would be payable. Since he was not a stamp duty expert, Mr Edwards suggested that advice be taken from the trust’s lawyers, Davidsons Solicitors.
6 The third plaintiff telephoned Mark Ronald Davidson and explained that he was considering the appointment of a new trustee but was concerned about the possible imposition of stamp duty on the transfer of the properties. He said:
- “I have spoken to Peter Edwards about this. I want to be sure that if we appoint a new trustee there is no stamp duty payable. I’m not going to do it if I have to pay thousands in stamp duty again. Peter Edwards thinks that there is no duty to pay. Can you talk to him and check it for me.”
7 Mr Davidson spoke with Mr Edwards who said he did not think that duty was payable. Mr Davidson instructed an employed solicitor to research the matter. She drew his attention to the Duties Act 1997, s 54 and to Revenue Ruling SD 118 with respect to the forerunner of that provision. In particular, it contained the following view of the Chief Commissioner:
- “It is accepted by the Chief Commissioner that if:
- (a) an amendment is made to a deed of trust of a discretionary trust to the effect that any persons who are or have been the trustees of the trust are absolutely prohibited from being a beneficiary under the deed or otherwise directly or indirectly benefiting under the deed; and
(b) that amendment is irrevocable
a transfer to a new trustee of the trust, which is consequential upon the execution of an instrument of appointment or retirement referred to in section 73(1)(a)(i) to (iii), would be liable to the nominal duty of $1 under section 73(2A).”
8 Mr Davidson telephoned the third plaintiff and advised him that if a new trustee was appointed, all the properties could be transferred without lability to ad valorem stamp duty provided the new trustee and any other trustees appointed after that could never benefit from the trust. The third plaintiff instructed Mr Davidson to draft the necessary documents to effect the appointment of a new trustee and to make any amendments to the trust deed that were necessary to exclude trustees from benefit under the trust.
9 Clause 3.2 of the trust deed provided that notwithstanding any rule of law or equity to the contrary, a trustee of the trust might be a beneficiary of the trust and benefit from it in the same way as any other beneficiary.
10 Mr Davidson settled a deed of appointment whereunder the third plaintiff accepted the resignation of the second plaintiff and confirmed the appointment of the first plaintiff as trustee of the trust in place of the second plaintiff. The second plaintiff confirmed its retirement and was discharged from further performance of obligations and duties under the trust. The first plaintiff covenanted that it had not received a benefit of any kind whatsoever in connection with the trust. The deed contained the following provisions:
4.2 The New Trustee covenants it shall not receive a benefit from the Trust Fund.”“4.1 Clause 3.2 of the Trust Deed is hereby revoked.
11 Mr Davidson believed that the deed of appointment would satisfy the defendant in terms of Revenue Ruling SD 118. The third plaintiff executed the deed of appointment on his own behalf and on behalf of the first and second plaintiffs in the belief that only a nominal amount of stamp duty would be payable on the transfer of the six properties to the first plaintiff. The sole reason the third plaintiff intended to appoint the first plaintiff as trustee was to secure the re-financing by quarantining the rural property as required by St George Bank.
12 Following execution, the deed of appointment and transfers of the six properties were lodged with the defendant. The defendant expressed the view that an effective amendment required reference to the trustee not becoming a beneficiary to be irrevocable which was not the case. He assessed duty on the six transfers at $245,869. An objection to the assessment was lodged and disallowed by the defendant.
13 The plaintiffs seek a declaration that it was their common intention at the time of execution of the deed of appointment that it include the following clause in lieu of cl 4.1:
- “Clause 3.2 of the Trust Deed is hereby revoked and in lieu thereof, a new clause 3.2 is hereby inserted as follows:
- “Any new trustee of the Trust and any subsequent trustee of the Trust or any person who has been a trustee of the Trust must not be or become a beneficiary of the Trust. Despite any other provision of this Deed, this clause 3.2 is irrevocable and may not be removed or amended.”
14 The plaintiffs seek an order that the deed be rectified to give effect to that intention by including the above clause as if from the date of its execution.
15 This is, par excellence, a case of mistake of law. The parties were not mistaken as to the provisions of the deed. They were mistaken as to their legal effect. The defendant was not satisfied in terms of the Duties Act 1997, s 54(3)(a) and s 54(3)(b) that none of the trustees, present or future, could become beneficiaries of the trust. The mere deletion of cl 3.2 did not exclude the possibility of subsequent amendment of the trust deed to re-insert such a provision.
16 As the learned authors of Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, Butterworths Lexis Nexis, Australia, 2002 at par 26-060 point out, the authorities on the question whether rectification will be granted for mistake of law rather than mistake of fact are impossible to reconcile.
17 Support for the plaintiffs’ application is to be found in Burroughes v Abbott [1922] 1 Ch 86. A husband’s settlement on trustees consequent upon an order of the Divorce Court directed the trustees to pay out of the income of the trust an annual annuity of a stated amount free of income tax. Rule 23(2) of the General Rules applicable to the Schedules to the Income Tax Act 1918 (UK) provided that every agreement for payment of interest, rent, or other annual payment in full without allowing any deduction of tax was void. Following the death of the husband, the wife obtained rectification of the settlement. Counsel who drafted it believed that the deed complied with the order of the Divorce Court. It was held at 95 that the Court had jurisdiction to rectify the deed to make it conform to that order. In lieu of the requirement to pay the specified sum free of income tax, the deed was amended to provide for the payment of an amount that, after the deduction of income tax, would leave clear the specified sum.
18 In Jervis v Howle and Talke Colliery Co Ltd [1937] Ch 67 a lease of the plaintiff’s coal mine provided for payment of a royalty of 3d per ton free of tax thereby infringing the same rule. The solicitor who drew the lease gave no thought to the rule. When the parties executed the lease they thought that its effect would be that after deduction of income tax the plaintiff would receive 3d per ton of coal sold by the defendant and, following Burroughes, the lease was rectified.
19 The point about these authorities is that the parties were aware of the law in the sense that they understood that income tax was payable, but they were under a common mistake as the legal effect of the provisions in the instruments.
20 In Whiteside v Whiteside [1950] Ch 65, a husband executed a deed in favour of his former wife after dissolution of their marriage in which he covenanted to pay a specified sum per annum free of income tax up to but not exceeding a stated amount. This provision was in substitution for one drafted by the wife’s solicitors that provided for the payment of such an amount that after the deduction of income tax not exceeding the stated amount would represent the specified sum. The husband sought rectification to restore the deed to the terms of the draft.
21 After the proceedings had been commenced but before the matter came before the Court, the parties executed a supplemental deed rectifying the error so that as between themselves the deed then took the form, and was thereafter to be treated as having always taken the form, that the obligation was to pay such an amount as, after deduction of tax, would leave the specified sum per annum. The Court of Appeal refused to grant rectification on the basis that there was no real issue between the parties.
22 At 74, Evershed MR commented on a passage from Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 6th ed, at 620:
- “The passage is this: “Though the court will rectify an instrument which fails through some mistake of the draftsman in point of law to carry out the real agreement between the parties, it is not sufficient in order to create an equity for rectification that there has been a mistake as to the legal construction or the legal consequences of an instrument.” I do not read that passage as meaning that if the mistake made is in using language to perfect an agreement which in law has some result different from the common intention, that is not a case in which there can be rectification. I do not read the passage as so stating, and I think, as at present advised, that if it did it would be too wide. I think it may well be that if the mistake has arisen from the legal effect of the language used that may provide a ground for the exercise of the court’s reforming power. Subject however to that qualification, I think that the passage cited is correct”
23 In Joscelyne v Nissen [1970] 2 QB 86 the plaintiff, when his wife became ill, entered into an agreement with his daughter, the defendant, whereby she took over his business in return for which she was to pay certain household expenses. Following a dispute with her father, the defendant ceased to pay household expenses, maintaining that upon the proper construction of the agreement there was no obligation to do so. Rectification was ordered. An appeal was dismissed. At 98, Russell LJ on behalf of the Court of Appeal endorsed the following statement:
- “Where two persons agreed expressly with one another what was the meaning of a particular phrase but did not record their definition in the contract itself, if one of the parties sought to enforce the agreement on the basis of some other meaning, he could be prevented by an action for rectification.”
24 In Re Butlin’s SettlementTrusts [1976] Ch 251 a settlor executed a voluntary settlement that contained a provision settled by senior and junior counsel to empower a majority of the trustees to exercise any of the powers over the income or capital of the trust fund. It having been held that the clause conferred a power to act by majority only in the case of illness, infirmity or temporary absence abroad and not generally, the settlor sought and was granted rectification of his settlement. At 260, Brightman J said:
- “Furthermore, rectification is available not only in a case where particular words have been added, omitted or wrongly written as the result of careless copying or the like. It is also available where the words of the document were purposely used but it was mistakenly considered that they bore a different meaning from their correct meaning as a matter of true construction. In such a case, which is the present case, the court will rectify the wording of the document so that it expresses the true intention.”
25 In Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity Doctrines and Remedies at par 26-070 the above passage from Brightman J is criticised as being too wide. It would appear to be in conflict with the proposition that if a document contains the very words the parties intended it to contain, no rectification is possible (Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd (in liq) v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd (1919) 26 CLR 410 at 451).
26 In Commissioner of Stamp Duties (NSW) v Carlenka Pty Ltd (1995) 41 NSWLR 329, Sheller JA with whom the other members of the Court of Appeal agreed, cited the passage from Brightman J with apparent approval at 336. In that case, the directors of the corporate trustee of a discretionary trust were advised that an income tax advantage was available to them if the income of the trust was appropriated to a company. When one of the directors gave instructions to his solicitors he intended that a company be introduced as an income beneficiary and otherwise have no role or interest in the trust.
27 The solicitor was concerned to ensure that in amending the trust deed he did not cause any additional beneficiary to acquire an interest in the corpus of the trust or otherwise vary the rights of beneficiaries with existing vested interests because this would have brought about a resettlement, liable to duty under the Stamp Duties Act 1920. The corporate trustee executed a deed poll amending the trust deed by including in the definition of beneficiaries any other person or corporation nominated in writing by the trustee to be a beneficiary with the exception of the settlor and the trustee.
28 The effect of the amendment was that a company nominated as a beneficiary would be entitled to share in a distribution of capital. The deed thus operated as a conveyance of property made without consideration in money or money’s worth and was exigible to ad valorem duty. Rectification to include in the power of appointment of capital and the default of appointment of capital provisions an exclusion of any person or corporation nominated by the trustee as a beneficiary under the new provision was granted and upheld on appeal.
29 Sheller JA conducted an extensive review of the authorities. At 340 his Honour expressed the view that essential to relief by rectification is a mistaken expression of the true agreement:
- “The plaintiff must prove that there was disconformity between the intention and the written instrument and that the intention continued to the time of execution of the instrument. The plaintiff must displace the hypothesis, arising from the execution of the written instrument, that it expressed the true intention.”
30 His Honour went on to give examples of careless copying, omission of some words of limitation and mistake as to the legal effect of the words used. His Honour was of the view that if a claimant convinced the Court that the instrument did not conform with the intention of the parties or of the party which made it and the intention was clear and precise and could be achieved by the language of an order for rectification, relief should be available.
31 At 341 his Honour cited with approval a proposition now contained in Spry, The Principles of Equitable Remedies, 6th ed, LBC Information Services, Australia, 2001 at 611:
- “A more difficult case arises where the parties are aware of the precise terms of the relevant part of the document but misapprehend their effect. Here it appears to be necessary to distinguish between two positions. The first position occurs where the concurrent intention, that is, the intention that the document is desired to effectuate, remains the dominant and governing intention. In this event it should not matter that the precise terms of the document have been seen by the parties, and rectification, where otherwise appropriate, should be ordered.”
Dr Spry QC then cites the passage from Brightman J in Butlin’s Settlement Trusts .
32 In his additional observations in Carlenka, Mahoney A-P expressed a similar view to Sheller JA. At 311 his Honour said:
- “In my opinion, the principle upon which rectification is granted involves two things: that the party (in the case of a unilateral transaction) or the parties (in the case of a transaction between parties) had at all relevant times an intention which was to be given effect by the document to be rectified; and that that document does not give effect to the transaction.”
33 To like effect is the observation of McClelland A-JA at 345:
- “In general, the remedy of rectification of an instrument is available where it is established by clear and convincing proof that at the time of execution of the instrument the relevant party or parties as the case may be had an actual intention (if more than one party, a common intention) as to the effect which the instrument would have which was inconsistent with the effect which the instrument as executed did have in some clearly identified way. In this context “effect” means the legal and factual operation of the instrument according to its true construction, but does not include legal or factual consequences of the operation of the instrument of a more remote, or collateral, kind (for example, its liability to stamp duty).”
34 In Club Cape Schanck Resort Co Ltd v Cape Country Club Pty Ltd (2001) 3 VR 526 the parties to a dispute entered into terms of settlement. They provided that certain charges be determined by negotiation failing which either party should be at liberty to refer the determination of the charges to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. That body lacked jurisdiction to determine such matters. The Victoria Court of Appeal disallowed rectification on the basis that the terms of settlement expressed the parties’ common intention and the fact that the common intention could not be given effect did not justify an order for rectification.
35 That is not the case in the instant circumstances. Here the common intention was to satisfy the defendant by forever excluding a trustee from benefit under the trust. There was disconformity between that intention and the effect of the deed of appointment. Its exclusion of the provision that trustees could be beneficiaries was not irrevocable.
36 Reference has been made to the qualification stated by McClelland A-JA in Carlenka that rectification is not available where the discordant effect of the instrument is of a remote or collateral kind on a number of occasions (Prestige Land Developments Pty Ltd v Eagle Hotels Pty Ltd [1996] ANZ Conv R 208 at 209, Baird v B C E Holdings Pty Ltd (1996) 40 NSWLR 374 at 384, Victoria Gardens Developments Pty Ltd v Commissioner of State Revenue (1999) 99 ATC 4,683 at 4,697, Davis v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2000) 171 ALR 654 at 667, Baxter v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2002) 196 ALR 519 at 528).
37 Carlenka has been cited with approval on many occasions (Conagra International Fertiliser Co v Lief Investments Pty Ltd (1997) 141 FLR 124 at 143, Terceiro v First Mitmac Pty Ltd (1997) 8 BPR 15,733 at 15,738, Permanent Trustee Australia Ltd v FAI General Insurance Co Ltd (1998) 153 ALR 529 at 568, Leibler, Leibant Investments Pty Ltd v Air New Zealand Ltd [1999] 1 VR 1 at 27, Trimmer v Lax (unreported, 9 May 1999, SC (NSW)), Furey v Mackne (unreported, 9 December 1999, SC (NSW)) at par 7, Palmer v Roads and Traffic Authority [2001] NSWSC 846 at par 271, Fitzwood Pty Ltd v Unique Goal Pty Ltd (in liq) [2002] FCAFC 285 at par 172, Barak Pty Ltd v W T H Pty Ltd [2003] NSWSC 15 at par 23, LE Stewart Investments Pty Ltd v FC & M Legge Building Contractors & Developers [2003] NSWSC 193 at par 13). The decision is binding on me.
38 In my view, there was disconformity between the intention of the parties to the deed of appointment and the written instrument and the intention continued to the time of execution of the instrument. As I have said, that intention was to satisfy the defendant that trustees could never benefit under the trust. The deed of appointment did not achieve this intention because the exclusion of cl 3.2 was not irrevocable.
39 The plaintiffs have displaced the hypothesis arising from the execution of the deed of appointment that it expressed their true intention. That intention is clear and precise and can be achieved by the language in which rectification of the deed is sought. I grant relief in terms of par 1 and par 2 of the summons.
40 Paragraph 3 of the summons asked for costs. The defendant has not submitted to an order for costs. His submitting entry of appearance, except as to costs, was an appropriate course for him to take. He should not be burdened by an order for costs. The necessity for this application had nothing to do with the conduct of the defendant. There will be no order as to costs.
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Last Modified: 07/09/2003
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