Warea Pty Ltd v Waterloo Industries Pty Ltd t/as Deltrite Financial Services
[1986] FCA 121
•26 Mar 1986
"NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION"
1 '
| IN THE FEDERAL COURT | OF AUSTRALIA | ) |
| 1 | QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY | ) | QLD G6 of 19.36 |
| GENERAL DIVISION | ) | ||
| I | |||
| I |
| BETWEEN: | WFREZ PTY . LTD. |
First Applicant
| AND: | STRIPE LIMITED |
Second Applicant
| AND: FIATERLOO | INDUSTRIES PTY LTD | & DRS | j. |
| I . |
trading as DELTRITE FIbJANCIAL SERVICES
First Respondent
AND: WILLI4M LEOMARD P.RMSTRONG
| Second Respondent | . _ |
| AND: LISA N. VIRBA | . |
Tflird Respondent
AND: ROEFPT WAYNE COLLIMS
Fourth Respondent
| DATE OF HEAPING: | 2 6 March | l 986 |
| DATE JTJDGPIENT DELIVEPED: | 26 March 1986 |
| COCTNSEL | : |
| . for the applicants | Mr. A. J.H. Morris instructed |
| by Cooper, Grace and Ward |
I .
| . for the fourth | respondent | Mr. D.R. | Bouqhen | instructed |
by Cannan and Peterson
J. A . LYONS
ASSOCIATE TO PINCUS J.
26 March 1986
I
l
| IN THE FEDERAL COURT | OF AUSTRALIA |
| 9UEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY | QLD G6 of 1986 |
| GENERAL DIVISION |
BETWEEN: WmEA PTY. LTD.
First Applicant
| AND: | STRIPE LIMITED |
Second Applicant
| AND: | WATERLOO INDUSTRIES PTY LTD & ORS trading as DELTRITE FINANCIAL SERVICES |
First Respondent
| AND: WILLIAM | LEONARD ARMSTRONG |
Second Respondent
| AND: LISA | N. VIRBA |
Third Respondent
AND: ROBERT WAYNE COLLINS
| Fourth Respondent | I i |
| I |
MINUTES OF ORDER
I
| i | JUDGE MAKING ORDER: | PINCUS J. |
| I | ||
| DATE OF ORDER: | 26 March 1986 |
| l | - . |
| I | WHERE MADE: | BRISBANE | , i |
| THE COURT ORDERS THP.T: | |||
| . . |
| 1. The | application | to | vary | the | injunctlon | be | l .> |
dismissed.
| 2. | The costs of the first and second applicants | in |
| resistlng | this | application | be | costs | of those |
applicants in the principal proceedings, as between
the applicants and the fifth respondent.
| I | NOTE: | Settlement and entry | of orders is dealt with in | Order 36 |
| ! | of the Federal Court Rules. |
| l | I ' |
| I |
QLD G6 of 1986
| BETWEEN: WAREA | PTY. LTD. |
First Applicant
AND: STRIPE LIMITED
Second Applicant
I
| l | .> |
| AND: | WATERLOO INDUSTRIES PTY LTD | & ORS |
trading as DELTRITE FINANCIAL SERVICES
First Respondent
| AND: | WILLIAM LEONARD ARMSTRONG |
Second Respondent
AND: LISA N. VIRBA
Third Respondent
| AND: | ROBERT LWYNE COLLINS |
Fourth Respondent
I
| PINCUS J. | 26 March 1986 |
I
I
I
| I | I |
| I | EX TEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT |
| I | |
| I | |
| I | |
| ! |
| I | In this matter, an | application is made to vary | a Mareva |
injunction granted by me on 4 March 1986 and varied on 7 March
| 1 | 1986. | The application is made on behalf of the fifth respondent |
| and | seeks an exception | from | the | effect | of | the | injunction |
| permitting the fifth respondent to pay her solicitors | sums up to |
I
2 .
| $7,110 | towards the costs of resistance to the claims of the |
applicants and certain other minor exceptions.
The minor exceptions relate to a motor vehicle, and the
| fifth respondent says that the motor vehicle | is the sub~ect | of a |
| trust and that registration | fees and insurance premium are due in |
| respect of it. | The evidence relating to that matter is that the |
| fifth | respondent says the vehicle was bought by the second |
| respondent 10 | to 12 | months ago, and | he "told me then that it |
| would be put into the trust". | I drew the attention of counsel to |
the circumstance that the evidence just referred to did not seem
| to me sufficient to | show that the vehicle was trust property. |
After taking instructions, counsel informed me that he could take
| it no further. | I | therefore hold that, on the evidence presently |
t :
available, there is nothing to support the suggestion that the
| vehicle 1s trust property or to support the application | so far as |
| it relates to the vehicle. |
The more Important issue, however, has caused me more
| difficulty. | The evldence is that on 5 January 1985 the second |
respondent assigned his interest in certain land to the fifth
| respondent for the sum of | $1. | It is not stated what was the |
| value of the property in question, but it is said to | be a house |
| in which the second respondent lives. | On | the face of | it, the |
| transfer | for | nominal | consideration | is | usceptible | of | the |
explanation that the second respondent desired the property not
| to be in his name, for the purpose | of keeping it out | of the reach |
| of his creditors, actual or potential. | The only other common |
| reason for forming | a | trust inter vivos these days is that the |
| I | ' | 3. |
| parties desire to affect their tax posltlon. | The assignment or |
| the house seems not likely to have that effect, and | I therefore |
| infer, prima | facie, that it was intended to | keep | the property |
away from creditors.
The fifth respondent has given evidence, In the form of
| an affidavit, that she | has $47,000 In the "Armstrong Trust" |
| invested at call. There is | no evidence as | to the source of the |
!
| $47,000. | It may be, for | all I know, that | the | money | was | I , |
beneficially owned by the fifth respondent. However, that seems unlikely, as she 1 s a pensioner living in rented accommodation,
| and her only substantial asset seems to be | a sum of money, to be |
| referred to later, obtained from the sale of | what she describes | t |
| as "my former matrimonial home. | ! | |
| l i |
I
: '
| The statement | of clalm, In Its present | form, makes the |
| allegation that the fifth respondent received | a sum of $48,793.16 |
| and other amounts as | a volunteer, or wlth knowledge of the |
| circumstances In | which | the same were received by the | first |
| respondent from the appllcants and | says, | in effect, that that |
| money may be traced back to the transaction with | the respondents, |
| of whlch the applicant has complained. |
I think the present application on behalf of the fifth
| respondent would have been more attractive | If there had been some |
| explanation of | the source of the | $47,000. | It | would, no doubt, |
I,
| have been simple enough for | the fifth respondent, who has made | I |
| two affidavits, to say in one of them where the money came | from, |
| and I take the absence of explanation into account. |
I
| I ' | 4. |
| I |
| However, that is not the principal point. | The question, |
| as finally fixed on by counsel | in their arguments, was simply |
| this: counsel for | the fifth respondent said that, assuming that | ||
| the respondent is |
|
referred to, then she has a right, if she reasonably resists the applicant's claim to the money, to be indemnified for costs out
| of the trust fund. Counsel | for the applicants says that, while |
| he concedes that to be | so, the matter may in the end become | a |
I
| contest of priorities, the applicants contending that they have | a | > . |
| right to assert their equitable Interest | in the fund ahead of the |
| trustee's right to indemnity. |
| It seems | to me that the way to resolve the conflicting |
| arguments is to consider the position in two ways: flrst | of all,- |
on the assumption that the fifth respondent is successful in her
| resistance, and, secondly, on the assumption | that she is not. If |
the fifth respondent is successful in her resistance to the claim
I
| she will, | whether or not she obtains an order for costs, as it |
| seems to me, have ample | funds against which to exercise her right |
| of indemnity. | If, on the other | hand, she is unsuccessful in her |
| resistance to the | claim, | it may well be that, as counsel have |
| argued, she would not be permitted | a right of access to the |
| funds for indemnity | in | respect | of | her | costs | ahead | of | the |
applicants, or indeed, perhaps any right of indemnity.
| She, therefore, in my view, is | not | entitled | to |
| protection on the assumption which | I have just mentioned, and her |
| I | only right to protection at this stage must be | on the assumption |
I ,
5 .
| I | I |
| i | |
| ! |
that she will ultimately win. On that basis, the question really
| becomes whether in the exercise of | my discretion I should permit |
| the depletion of the | funds to the extent deslred to avoid the |
| inconvenience to which the | fifth respondent would be put by |
| having to have access | to her own funds to meet solicitors' costs. |
This involves some reference to the fifth respondent's
| evidence. | She estimates her living expenses to be up | to $100 a |
| week, | added | to | which | is | $100 rental. | Her | larger | interest |
| investment does not mature until September, so | that she has six |
| llving expenses months to cover. | The | interest she is presently |
'!
| receiving, however, seems to me quite adequate | to | flll the gap |
| between her income and her outqolngs, subject to the difficulty | I I, |
| to which her counsel | drew | attention, whlch is that the greater | .. |
| I . |
| part of the Interest is not to | be paid until September. | ! |
| ! |
| That | produces the result that to meet current legal |
expenses, if her sollcltors insist upon that, she has to have
access to the smaller investment account, which presently stands
| at something over $13,000. | If she spent the sum | which it is |
| desired to abstract from the trust account, namely | $7,110, she |
| would have about | $6,000 left, or | a sum in excess of $200 a week, |
| if expended between | now and September. |
| The figures placed before me, that | is, show no necessity |
| or reasonable need to have access | to | the trust funds to meet |
| legal costs; | as far | as I | can see, on the assumption that the |
fifth respondent is ultimately successful, the only inconvenience
she will have suffered is that she will have to have access to
6.
| the trust funds by | way of indemnity for a slightly larger amount, |
| being the interest she will | have lost by spending her own funds |
| on the defence of the action, | a sum, | as it seems to me, which |
| would be likely | to be in | the region of $350. |
..
| Although I would be inclined, if a reasonable necessity | ). |
were shown, to give the fifth respondent access to the trust fund
at this stage, on the figures presented to me, it does not seem
| to be necessary that she | do so. | She is able to obtain the |
deslred sum from the funds in the bank, and while that will cause
| her | to require | a larger indemnlty If she ultimately wins the |
!
| case, I do not think that is such an inconvenience | as to warrant |
| a variation of the injunction. |
| It follows that in both respects the application | wlll be |
| refused, and | I will not vary the | in~unction | further. |
I order:
| (1) that the applicatlon | be dismissed; |
| ( 2 ) that | the | costs | of | the | first | and | second | appllcants | in |
| reslsting this application be costs | of those applicants in |
the principal proceedings, as between the applicants and the
fifth respondent.
| : cedy | tba+ this and the 5 | preceding |
| :noes are a true copy cf the reasons for | l |
| judgrrent hcreln | of His Honour | l . |
| :,. |
| Mr. Justice Pincus | ; | ., |
Associate
Dated 7- -86
0
0
0