Court of Appeal New South Wales
Rinehart v Hancock [2013] NSWCA 326
- Hearing Dates
- 2 October 2013
- Decision Date
- 03/10/2013
- Before
- Macfarlan JA
Meagher JA - Decision
- The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
[Note: The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the Court otherwise orders, a judgment or order is taken to be entered when it is recorded in the Court's computerised court record system. Setting aside and variation of judgments or orders is dealt with by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and 36.18. Parties should in particular note the time limit of fourteen days in Rule 36.16.] - Catchwords
- ARBITRATION - application for leave to appeal against interlocutory decision dismissing application to stay proceedings and refer them to arbitration - arbitration clause in deed applicable where "disputes under this deed" - whether releases and undertakings in deed foreclosed claims in equity proceedings - whether certain of the claims constituted claims covered by the deed when they had not been communicated prior to the date of the deed - whether outcome of equity proceedings claims "governed or controlled" by the deed
- Cases Cited
- Haydon v Lo & Lo [1997] 1 WLR 198
Rinehart v Welker [2012] NSWCA 95 - Category
- Principal judgment
- Parties
- Ginia Hope Frances Rinehart (First Applicant)
Hancock Prospecting Pty Ltd (Second Applicant)
Hope Downs Iron Ore Pty Ltd (Third Applicant)
John Langley Hancock (First Respondent)
Bianca Hope Rinehart (Second Respondent)
Hope Rinehart Welker (Third Respondent)
Gina Hope Rinehart (Fourth Respondent) - Representation
- Solicitors:
Gadens Lawyers (First Applicant)
Corrs Chambers Westgarth (Second and Third Applicants)
Yeldham Price O'Brien Lusk (First and Second Respondents)
Corrs Chambers Westgarth (Fourth Respondent)
Counsel:
R G McHugh SC/P W Flynn (First Applicant)
D B Studdy SC/C Colquhoun (Second and Third Applicants)
C H Withers/N Zerial/A Hochroth (First and Second Respondents)
B R McClintock SC (Fourth Respondent) - File Number(s)
- CA 2013/285046
DECISION UNDER APPEAL
- Court/Tribunal
- Supreme Court
- Before
- Bergin CJ in Eq
- Date of Decision
- 18/09/2013
- Medium Neutral Citation
- Hancock & Anor v Rinehart & Ors [2013] NSWSC 1352
- Court File Number(s)
- 2011/285907
Judgment
1THE COURT:
This is an application by three of the defendants in the Court below
for leave to appeal against a decision of Bergin CJ in Eq of 18
September 2013 ([2013] NSWSC 1352) refusing to grant a stay of
proceedings in the Equity Division and to order that all or part of the
proceedings be referred to mediation and arbitration. There is urgency
in the determination of the application to this Court as a hearing of
the proceedings at first instance has been fixed to commence on 8
October 2013. In these circumstances it is appropriate that brief
reasons only be given and that we not repeat the description given in
the primary judgment of the relevant facts and circumstances, including
the terms of the "Hope Downs Deed" (the "Deed"). The same abbreviations
as used in the primary judgment are used in this judgment.
2Leaving
discretionary matters aside, for the applicants to succeed on their
application to this Court, they need to demonstrate that at least one of
two contentions is correct. The first contention is that the
plaintiffs' claims in the Equity proceedings relating to the 2006
Amendments to the Constitution of HPPL are at least reasonably arguably
foreclosed by the releases contained in clause 6 of the Deed, with the
result that the outcome of those claims is "governed or controlled" by
the Deed in the sense referred to in Rinehart v Welker [2012]
NSWCA 95 at [125]. The second contention is that the plaintiffs are
arguably prevented by the undertaking in clause 7(a) of the Deed from
allegedly seeking the appointment of Mr Bruce Carter as an independent
trustee of the trust.
The 2006 Amendments
3The
respondents advanced several reasons why the first contention should be
rejected, including the proposition, as found by the primary judge,
that clause 6 was inapplicable because the plaintiffs' allegations
concerning the 2006 Amendments did not constitute "Claims" released by
clause 6(a) as they had not been asserted or communicated by any of the
plaintiffs to any of the defendants prior to the date of the Deed.
4The
correctness of this proposition depends on the proper construction of
the definition of "Claim" in clause 1.1 of the Deed, and in particular
the meaning to be given to the word "claim" as used in the expression
"any claim, demand, action, suit or proceeding, whether existing or
discontinued" in paragraph (a) of that definition. As was observed by
Lord Lloyd when delivering the judgment of the Privy Council in Haydon v Lo & Lo
[1997] 1 WLR 198 at 204, depending on the context in which it is used,
the word "claim" may mean a "claim for something or a right to
something".
5The
applicants argue that "claim" is used in the latter sense in paragraph
(a) of the definition. On that basis they say that their argument that
the claims or assertions made in relation to the 2006 Amendments have
been released has reasonable prospects of success and is, for that
reason, "sustainable". In the application before this Court none of the
parties argued that the primary judge had erred in proceeding upon the
basis that an argument answering that description, which was founded
upon a provision of the Deed, would give rise to a "dispute under this
deed" for the purposes of the relevant arbitration clause (clause 20).
6Her
Honour considered that the language of the definition could only
reasonably be understood as using the word "claim" in the sense of a
claim for something. For that reason, she concluded that this argument
of the applicants had no reasonable prospects of success (Judgment
[130], [132]). In our view the primary judge did not err in so
concluding.
7Each
of the words in the expression "claim, demand, action, suit or
proceeding" describes or involves by one of its meanings the assertion
of something or the demand for something as due. Their use in the one
expression indicates that they are to be understood in that same
overlapping sense. The adjectival phrase "whether existing or
discontinued" qualifies each of those words. That description is only
capable of applying if each is used in that same overlapping sense. The
word "claim" is used in the same sense in paragraph (b) and each of the
paragraphs (d) of the definition. The language - "any claim made" -
makes clear the sense in which the word is used, namely an assertion or
demand made. One does not ordinarily describe a cause of action as
"made".
8The
applicants point to the further words of limitation in paragraph (a)(i)
of the definition which require that the claim or demand be "with
respect to events or matters arising or actions taken prior to the date
of this deed". It is said that if "claim" refers to a claim for
something, the earlier words of limitation "whether existing or
discontinued" make those further words superfluous because if a claim is
existing, having been made, the matters or actions with respect to
which it is made must have occurred. In our view, reference to a
presumption against the use of surplus language provides no assistance
because the same observation might equally be made if "claim" means a
right or cause of action. For the cause of action to exist the matters
or actions out of which it arises must have occurred.
9More
significantly, the terms of the definition do not suggest that the
draftsman was so careful and precise that it should be presumed that no
surplus language was used. The definition contains a number of words
which have the same or similar meanings and specific provisions which
cover subject matter dealt with by more general provisions. It also
contains a provision which, when read with the opening words of the
definition, is grammatically unintelligible (paragraph (c)) and
provisions which appear twice (paragraph (b) and the first paragraph
(d)). None of this provides a sound foundation for the making of the
relevant presumption when addressing the question of construction. If
the presumption was made it would not suggest a different answer to that
question because the further words of limitation in paragraph (a)(i)
may operate to exclude from the defined term a claim concerning a
threatened (future) action or proceeding which might not be with respect
to any event which has occurred or action taken prior to the date of
the Deed.
10Finally,
we should record that the meaning of "claim" in the definition of
"Claim" was not in issue in the earlier appeal to this Court. Nor was
it the subject of any consideration. In argument the applicants made
reference to the observations in the judgment of Bathurst CJ in Rinehart v Welker
[2012] NSWCA 95 at [136], [137], [142]. Those observations are, at
best, equivocal in relation to the question of construction in issue in
this application.
11We
agree with the primary judge's conclusion that the applicants' first
contention that the claims in respect of the 2006 Amendments have been
released is not sufficiently arguable to give rise to or constitute a
dispute under the Deed.
The Clause 7(a) undertaking
12In
our view, the applicants' second contention also fails. As indicated
earlier, clause 7 contains undertakings. The clause does not therefore
purport to release or bar any claims. Moreover, clause 11, which
permits the pleading of certain provisions of the Deed in bar of any
claims or proceeding, is expressed to apply only in respect of releases
given under the Deed.
13The
applicants contend that the plaintiffs' claims concerning the identity
of the trustee of the Trust constitute a breach of the undertaking
contained in clause 7(a) not to do anything which could have an adverse
impact on the Hancock Group's rights in certain respects. However, even
if, by making those claims, the plaintiffs breached that undertaking,
those claims would not necessarily fail. That breach of undertaking
might be relevant to the Court's consideration of the plaintiffs' claims
concerning the trustee but it would not automatically foreclose them.
This was the approach, with which we respectfully agree, taken by
Bathurst CJ (with the concurrence of Young JA) in Rinehart v Welker [2012] NSWCA 95 to breaches of undertakings contained in the Deed (see the chapeau
to [146] and (b) and (c)). Whilst his Honour was dealing with
undertakings in other sub-clauses of clause 7 than (a), his reasoning is
in our view equally applicable to clause 7(a)
14The
primary judge did not expressly refer to clause 7(a) but did refer to
this Court, in its earlier decision, having dealt with breaches of
undertakings (Judgment [133]), indicating that her Honour considered the
Court's reasoning to be applicable to the undertakings relied on in the
present case. As we have indicated, that reasoning stands against the
applicants' second contention.
15In
these circumstances, we do not consider it to be reasonably arguable
that a finding that the plaintiffs had breached their undertaking in
clause 7(a) would necessarily determine the plaintiffs' claims
concerning the 2006 Amendments in favour of the defendants.
Orders
16For
these reasons, neither of the applicants' contentions should be
accepted. Their application for leave to appeal should accordingly be
dismissed with costs. In these circumstances, it is unnecessary to deal
with the discretionary considerations relied on by the respondents in
opposition to the application for leave to appeal.
**********
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