Company Agent Law
Company Agent Law
Company Agent Law
Larelle Chapple
Senior Lecturer
TC Beirne School of Law
The University of Queensland
and
Phillip Lipton
Associate Professor
School of Accounting and Law
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University
ii
Published in Melbourne by the Centre for Corporate Law and Securities Regulation and
CCH Australia Limited
The Centre for Corporate Law and Securities Regulation
Faculty of Law
The University of Melbourne
Vic 3010
Australia
Phone:
Fax:
Email:
Website:
61 3 8344 5281
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http://cclsr.law.unimelb.edu.au
61 2 9857 1300
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Chapple, Larelle
Lipton, Phillip
Enforcing Contracts in Dealings with Corporate Officers and Agents
iv
Preface
This monograph was written with the purpose of bringing up to date an earlier monograph The Authority of Agents and Officers to Act for a Company: Legal Principles by
Phillip Lipton. This was necessary due to several changes and developments in the law
since the original monograph was written in 1996.
The Company Law Review Act 1998 came into effect on 1st July 1998 and while
retaining the broad thrust of the previous legislation, introduced some significant differences in wording. It remains unclear to what extent these differences alter the meaning
and operation of the legislation and previous common law however we believe that it is
useful to revisit the legislation in the context of the history of the common law rules
underpinning the statutory provisions and the policies these rules sought to implement.
The various attempts to codify the common law are also important to consider in order
to enhance the understanding of the objectives sought to be met by the current legislation.
In addition to these legislative amendments, there have also been several recent cases
that cast light on the operation of the legislation and its purposes. This monograph compares and contrasts these cases so as to assess whether a preferred approach may be discernible which would enable the law to be applied in a consistent and commercially realistic manner.
The consideration of these issues has resulted in a work that departs significantly
from the earlier monograph to the extent that it is substantially a new work rather than a
revised edition.
We wish to thank Professor Ian Ramsay, Director of the Centre for Corporate Law
and Securities Regulation, Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne for his encouragement for us to proceed with this work and agreeing to publish it.
Larelles contribution to this monograph is derived substantially from material in her
doctoral thesis as well as prior publications, which are referenced in this monograph.
Accordingly, it is appropriate to express gratitude to her prior co-authors, Ms Janine
Pascoe from Monash University and Dr David Morrison from the University of
Queensland. Professor Bryan Horrigan (The University of Canberra) has provided valuable advice on the thesis version of the material and the Law School at Queensland
University of Technology, Brisbane has graciously granted the use of facilities and
resources. In this regard, the support of Professor Paul von Nessen is acknowledged.
Many of Larelles colleagues at the University of Queensland have sustained and
supported her endeavours, including Ms Brenda Marshall, Dr Pam Kent, Mr Scott Hirst,
Professor Colin Ferguson and Dr Mary-Rose Cooney to mention a few. Financial support from the Commerce Research Fund, School of Commerce, The University of
Queensland, is gratefully acknowledged.
Last but not least, Larelle wishes to thank her family: Mark, Jeremy and Jack
Chapple.
vi
vii
Contents
Centre for Corporate Law and Securities Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . iii
Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v
List of Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix
List of Abbreviations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xv
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
2. Actual and Apparent Authority of a Companys Agent. . . . . . . . 4
3. The Indoor Management Rule at Common Law . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
4. Exceptions to the Rule in Turquands Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
5. The Statutory Reformulation of the Indoor
Management Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
6. The Statutory Assumptions: Section 129 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
7. The Indoor Management Rule and Forgeries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
8. The Limitations to the Statutory Assumptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
9. Implications for Lenders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
10. Overview. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142
Appendix I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
Appendix II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
viii
Tables
Table 2.1
Table 5.1
Table 5.2
Table 5.3
Table 8.1
ix
List of Cases
A
Advance Bank Australia Ltd v Fleetwood Star Pty Ltd (1992) 10 ACLC 70353, 112,
119
Advance Bank of Australia Ltd v FAI Insurances Ltd (1987) 2 NSWLR 464, 5ACLC
7255, 54
Agip (Africa) Ltd v Jackson [1991] Ch 54788
Albert Gardens (Manly) Pty Ltd v Mercantile Credits Ltd (1973) 131 CLR 6031, 39
ANZ Ltd v Australian Glass and Mirrors Pty Ltd (1991) 9 ACLC 70274, 75, 77
ANZ Executors & Trustee Company Ltd v Qintex Australia Ltd [1991] 2 QdR 36058,
67, 69, 76, 85, 101, 139, 153
Australian Breeders Co-operative Society Ltd v Jones (1998) 16 ACLC 10066
Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v Minister for Transport & Communications
(1989) 7 ACLC 52541, 51, 72, 119
Austalian Securities and Investments Commission v Hallmark Gold NL (1999) 30 ACSR
68853
B
Baden, Delvaux and Lecuit v Societe Generale pour Favoriser le Developpement du
Commerce et de lIndustrie en France SA [1983] BCLC 32529, 87, 89, 90, 92, 121,
124
Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACLC 488, 12, 32, 41, 42, 46, 47,
51, 52, 78, 79, 80, 87, 111, 113, 119, 120, 123, 128, 133, 135, 140
Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1992) 10 ACLC 15578, 11, 46, 78, 114
Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACLC 23246, 72, 97, 115
Barclays Finance Holdings Ltd v Sturgess (1985) 3 ACLC 66241, 105
Barnes v Addy (1874) LR 9 Ch App 24487, 90, 94, 152
Bay Marine Pty Ltd v Clayton Country Properties Pty Ltd (No 2) (1987) 5 ACLC
3866, 144
Beach Petroleum NL v Abbott Tout Russell Kennedy (1999) 33 ACSR 1130, 148
Beach Petroleum NL v Johnson (1993) 115 ALR 41134
Bell Resources Holdings Pty Ltd v Commissioner for ACT Revenue Collections (1990) 8
ACLC 53341, 112, 118
Belmont Finance Corp v Williams Furniture Ltd (No 2) [1980] 1 All ER 39388
Belven Enterprises Pty Ltd v Lydham Pty Ltd (1996) 14 ACLC 147871, 73, 97
Biggerstaff v Rowatts Wharf Ltd [1896] 2 Ch 9337
Brick & Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd (1992) 10 ACLC
2536, 11, 12, 46, 47, 71, 77, 78, 81, 86, 99, 101, 102, 112, 113, 116, 119, 131, 135,
136, 137, 140, 147, 151
Brick & Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd (1991) 9 ACLC 324
46, 53, 97, 149
British Thomson-Houston Co Ltd v Federated European Bank Ltd [1932] 2 KB 17646,
72, 97, 115
C
195 Crown Street v Hoare [1969] 1 NSWR 193100
CAC v Guardian Investments Pty Ltd [1984] VR 1019124
Charterbridge Corporation Ltd v Lloyds Bank Ltd [1970] Ch 6258
Chisum Services Pty Ltd (1982) 1 ACLC 292, Re33
City of Camberwell v Cooper [1930] VLR 28955
Clay Hill Brick Co v Rawlings [1938] 4 All ER 10016
Club Flotilla (Pacific Palms) Ltd v Isherwood (1987) 5 ACLC 102715
Collingridge v Sontor Pty Ltd (1997) 15 ACLC 168166
Consul Development Pty Ltd v DPC Estates Pty Ltd (1975) 132 CLR 37388, 121
Corpers (No 664) Pty Ltd v NZI Securities Australia Ltd (1989) ASC 55-71416
Crabtree-Vickers Pty Ltd v Australian Direct Mail Advertising and Addressing Co Pty
Ltd (1975) 133 CLR 7210, 23, 102
Custom Credit Holdings Ltd v Creighton Investments Pty Ltd (1985) 3 ACLC 24831,
32
D
Daniels v Anderson (1995) 13 ACLC 61486
Darvall v North Sydney Brick and Tile Co Ltd (No 4) (1988) 6 ACLC 109554, 63
David Payne & Co Ltd [1904] 2 Ch 608, Re55
Ding v Sylvania Waterways Ltd (1999) 17 ACLC 53163
Dawson v Westpac Banking Corporation (1989) 7 ACLC 1,17574
Dawson v Westpac Banking Corporation (1991) 66 ALJR 9498
Duke Group Ltd v Pilmer (1998) 16 ACLC 56754, 65
Duke Group Ltd v Pilmer (1999) 17 ACLC 132934
Duck v Tower Galvanizing Co [1901] 2 KB 31428
E
Edward Love & Co Pty Ltd [1969] VR 230, Re54, 55, 65
Efrons Tie & Knitting Mills Pty Ltd [1932] VLR 8, Re31, 33, 99, 137
English and Scottish Mercantile Investment Co v Brunton [1892] 2 QB 70029, 88
Entwells Pty Ltd v National and General Insurance Co Ltd (1991) 5 ACSR 42416
Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand (1993) 11 ACLC 9526, 7, 11, 12, 46,
47, 78, 89, 90, 101, 131, 137, 139, 140, 153
Equity Nominees Ltd v Tucker (1967) 116 CLR 51839, 99
Ernest v Nicholls (1857) 6 HLC 401 20, 34, 103
F
Farrow Finance Company Ltd v Farrow Properties Pty Ltd (1998) 16 ACLC 89734
Freeman & Lockyer v Buckhurst Park Properties (Mangal) Ltd [1964] 2 QB 4807, 9,
16, 23, 76, 77, 79, 80, 102
List of Cases
xi
G
Greater Pacific Investments Pty Ltd v Australian National Industries Ltd (1996) 39
NSWLR 14378
Grove v Flavel (1986) 4 ACLC 65486
H
Hampshire Land Co [1896] 2 Ch 743, Re34
Hapytoz Pty Ltd [1937] VR 40, Re31, 37, 39
Haycraft Gold Reduction & Mining Co [1900] 2 Ch 230, Re101
Hely-Hutchinson v Brayhead Ltd [1968] 1 QB 5496, 16, 30, 118
Hilton International Ltd v Hilton (1988) 4 NZLC 96-26586
Houghton & Company v Nothard, Lowe and Wills Ltd [1927] 1 KB 24637
Houghton & Company v Nothard, Lowe and Wills Ltd [1928] AC 134, 35
Howard v Patent Ivory Manufacturing Co (1888) 38 Ch D 15619, 28, 109
Hughs v NM Superannuation Pty Ltd (1993) 11 ACLC 9237, 19
I
International Sales & Agencies Ltd v Marcus [1982] 3 All ER 55188
Introductions Ltd v National Provincial Bank Ltd [1970] 1 Ch 19954
Irvine v Union Bank of Australia Ltd (1877) 2 App Cas 36635
J
Jeffree v NCSC (1989) 7 CLC 55686
Jon Beauforte (London) Ltd [1953] 2 WLR 465, Re35, 55, 58
Jovista Pty Ltd v Pegasus Gold Australia Pty Ltd (1999) 17 ACLC 52495
K
KL Tractors Ltd (1961) 106 CLR 318, Re55
Kinsela v Russell Kinsela Pty Ltd (1986) 4 NSWLR 72286
Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd [1998] 3 VR 1611, 12, 33,
46, 48, 85, 89, 92, 107, 108, 114, 115, 128, 129, 130, 131, 136, 139, 140, 141
Kreditbank Cassel (GmbH) v Schenkers Ltd. [1927] 1 KB 82637, 104, 105, 145
L
Linter Group Ltd v Goldberg (1992) 10 ACLC 73934
Lyford v Media Portfolio Ltd (1989) 7 ACLC 27172, 80, 112, 118, 119
xii
M
3M Australia Pty Ltd v Kemish (1986) 4 ACLC 185123
Madi Pty Ltd (1987) 5 ACLC 847, Re74
Mahoney v East Holyford Mining Co (1875) LR 7 HL 86938, 73, 103
McNamara v Flavel (1988) 6 ACLC 80286
Mancini v Mancini (1999) 17 ACLC 157099
Meridian Global Funds Management Asia Ltd v Securities Commission [1995] 2 AC
50034
Metropolitan Fire Systems Pty Ltd v Miller (1997) 23 ACSR 699123
Mirimbiak Nations Aboriginal Corporation v Peninsula Prestige Cars Pty Ltd [2000]
VSC 5569
Morris v Kanssen [1946] AC 45918, 19, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32, 109, 117, 118
Myers v Aquarell Pty Ltd [2000] VSC 42946, 48, 75, 100, 101, 136
MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon Pty Ltd (1997) 15 ACLC 1,05771, 97, 100
MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon Pty Ltd (1999) 17 ACLC 86198, 100
N
NAB v Sparrow Green Pty Ltd (1999) 17 ACLC 1665 11, 12, 13, 46, 48, 75, 79, 80,
129, 130, 135, 138, 139, 151
Nece Pty Ltd v Ritek Incorporation (1997) 15 ACLC 81316
Nicholson v Permakraft (NZ) Ltd [1985] NZLR 17286
Ninety Five Pty Ltd v Banque Nationale de Paris [1988] WAR 13288, 89, 121
Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1990) 8 ACLC 6117, 14, 15, 20,
30, 31, 32, 38, 39, 43, 46, 47, 51, 55, 73, 85, 86, 87, 94, 97, 103, 104, 109, 111, 113, 114,
116, 120, 128, 133, 140, 145, 147, 149
Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1987) 5 ACLC 64232, 47, 105,
145
O
Ooregum Gold Mining Company of India v Roper [1892] AC 12566
P
Panorama Developments (Guilford) Ltd v Fidelis Furnishings Fabrics Ltd [1971] 2 QB
7117, 15
Perkins v NAB (1999) 30 ACSR 25646, 116, 122, 136
Pyramid Building Society v Scorpion Hotels Pty Ltd (1996) 14 ACLC 67911, 12, 46,
48, 78, 79, 80, 115, 128, 130, 135, 140, 15
Q
Qintex Ltd (1990) 8 ACLC 811, Re 16
Queensland Bacon Pty Ltd v Rees (1966) 115 CLR 266123, 124
List of Cases
xiii
R
Rama Corporation Ltd v Proved Tin & General Investments Ltd [1952] 2 QB 14735,
37, 38, 74
Registrar-General v Northside Developments Pty Ltd (1989) 7 ACLC 5224
Reid Murray Holdings Ltd v David Murray Holdings Pty Ltd [1972] 15 SASR 38686
Richard Brady Franks Ltd v Price (1937) 58 CLR 11283, 86, 96
Richardson v Landecker (1950) 50 SR (NSW) 25095
Ring v Sutton (1979) 5 ACLR 54686
Rogers v The Royal College of Ophthalmologists (1991) 9 ACLC 149766
Rolled Steel Products (Holdings) Ltd v British Steel Corporation [1986] 1 Ch 2465,
88, 101
Royal British Bank v Turquand (1856) 119 E R 8861, 18, 38, 50, 103, 146
Royal Brunei Airlines v Tan [1995] 2 AC 37889
Ruben v Great Fingall Consolidated [1906] AC 43920, 104, 145
S
Scottish Loan Finance Co Ltd (1944) 44 SR(NSW) 461, Re31, 39
Sixty-Fourth Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd [1998] 3 VR 13311, 12, 33, 46, 48,
78, 80, 92, 128, 129, 130, 131, 135, 136, 139, 151
Sixty-Fourth Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd (1996) 14 ACLC 67046, 78, 115
South London Greyhound Racecourses Limited v Wake [1931] 1 Ch 49639, 104, 105
Southern Cross Commodities Pty Ltd v Ewing (No 2) (1988) 6 ACLC 64734
Spies v The Queen (2000) 18 ACLC 72786
Spedley Securities Ltd v Southern Sea Farms Ltd (1991) 9 ACLC 1367123
Story v Advance Bank Australia Ltd (1993) 11 ACLC 62945, 46, 47, 52, 72, 99, 107,
113, 131, 138, 140
Strong v J Brough & Son (Strathfield) Pty Ltd (1991) 9 ACLC 101860, 62
T
Tilley v Egan [2000] QCA 35696
Tivoli Freeholds Ltd [1972] VR 445, Re62
Trevor v Whitworth (1887) 12 App Cas 40966
Tummon Investments Pty Ltd (1993) 11 ACLC 1139, Re7, 16
U
United States Surgical Corporation v Hospital Products International Pty Ltd [1983]
NSWLR 15790
xiv
W
Walker v Wimborne (1976) 137 CLR 186, 91
Webb Distributors (Aust) Pty Ltd v Victoria (1993) 179 CLR 1563
Westpac Banking Corporation v Dawson (1990) 8 ACLC 68198
X
Y
Z
List of Abbreviations
AC
ACLC
ACSR
ALR
All ER
App Cas
ASC
BCLC
Ch
Ch
ChD
CLERP
CLR
DLR
ER
HL
HCA
KB
LR HL
M&W
NSWLR
NSWR
NSWCA
NZLR
QB
QLS
SASR
SR(NSW)
VLR
VR
WAR
WLR
xvi
Chapter 1
Introduction
The legal fiction of the separate legal entity principles enables companies to be bound by
contracts entered into with outside parties. However, for the company to be bound by the
contract, several internal transactions must have occurred. These internal transactions
are not necessarily observable to the outside party. First, as a result of registration of the
company, the company has been granted contractual capacity, but the scope and limitations on its powers need to be identified. Second, the company will have appointed officers and agents to act on its behalf, but the scope of their authority must be identified.
Third, regardless of the scope of authority expressly granted, the general law imposes
inherent restrictions on the exercise of authority by corporate agents, for example, they
must exercise the companys powers according to the fiduciary constraint to act in the
best interests of the company.
If the scope of these internal transactions is exceeded or otherwise abused by corporate officers, it has consequences for the contracts entered into with outsiders. To minimise the risk of unenforceability for the outsider, the general law, followed by statutory
codification, developed some principles to assist the outsider in enforcing contracts.
Sections 128129 of the Corporations Act1 purport to comprise a statutory adoption of
the common law rule known as the Rule in Turquands case2 or the indoor management
rule. This rule formed the common law basis of the application of agency principles to
companies. Its essence was to allow outsiders dealing with a company to assume that the
internal proceedings of a company were properly carried out.
The Rule in Turquands case has traditionally struck a balance where officers of a
company act without authority. It protects outsiders and enables them to enforce contracts against a company. At the same time the rule was subject to several exceptions that
limited its protection to outsiders who act bona fide. In recent times this issue of corporate authority has most often arisen in the context of financial transactions where a company has contested the validity of a document executed under the seal of the company.
From the point of view of lenders such as banks, the most important issue that has arisen
is the scope of exceptions, that is, whether the lender was put on inquiry by the circumstances surrounding the formal execution of the contract.
Since 1983, the rule has been codified and set out in the Corporations Act in the form
of assumptions representing the various aspects of the rule and limitations that correspond to the exceptions to the rule. These limitations are now contained in s 128(4) of
the Corporations Act. Whilst there have been three iterations of the statutory indoor management rule since 1983, there remains uncertainty as to the scope of protection afforded to outsiders dealing with companies. In particular, the statutory limitations to some
1 See Appendix I, where the current and former provisions in the Corporations Act are reproduced.
2 Royal British Bank v Turquand (1856) 119 ER 886.
extent differ from the common law exceptions, especially as the Corporations Act does
not explicitly provide for an inquiry exception. However, case law demonstrates that
judges may be prepared to interpret the limitations in s 128(4) consistently with the policy behind the common law rules.
The most recent statutory reform to corporate contracts and authority of agents
occurred with the Company Law Review Act 1998. Operational since 1 July 1998, the
Company Law Review Act 1998 inserted new provisions relevant to corporate contracts
and agents, dealing with:
1. the role of the corporate constitution and simplification of corporate powers and
ultra vires;3
2. the procedures for companies entering into external contracts; and
3. the scope of protection conferred to third parties entering into these contracts.4
It is timely to re-examine the statutory rules for corporate contracts. The reforms
superficially appear to be a mere simplification of the prior statutory regime, which itself
was subject to some uncertainty in application. This monograph describes the common
law rules surrounding the principles of agency law in their application to companies.
Central to the common law position is the doctrine of constructive notice and the Rule in
Turquands case and its exceptions. One of the features of agency law in its application
to companies was that an outsider dealing with a company was taken to have constructive notice of the companys public documents. In this context, the most important of
these documents was the companys constitution, in particular where it contained a
restriction on the authority of the companys officers or agents. This doctrine of constructive notice operated in favour of the company and against the outsider by deeming
that the outsider was aware of the restriction of authority. Therefore the company as principal was not liable under a contract entered into by an officer or agent who exceeded the
authority conferred by the constitution.
The Rule in Turquands case recognised that in some cases, an agent may act without authority, however this would not be apparent to an outsider even after reading the
constitution. The rule protected the outsider and operated against the company unless
certain exceptions arose which resulted in the loss of this protection.
Of course, agents exercise authority within the context of the company as a separate
legal entity, with its own contractual capacity. All companies capacity to enter into contracts has been affected by developments in the doctrine of ultra vires. Ultra vires
means beyond power and when used in company law, refers to corporate capacity,
where transactions outside the formal objects and powers stated in a companys constitution were previously void.
The corporate debt or finance contract provides a compelling application of the rules
of agency and the interaction with the statutory rule. This is due primarily to the prevalence of litigation. Litigation over the last decade shows that lenders, as outsiders, are
involved in disputes with companies in enforcing corporate borrowing or securities trans3 The Company Law Review Act 1998 inserted new Chapter 2A Registering a company, and new Part 2B.1
Company powers and how they are exercised.
4 The Company Law Review Act 1998 inserted new Part 2B.2 Assumptions people dealing with companies are entitled to make.
Introduction
actions. The magnitude of such contracts, the degree of formality that surrounds their formation and the degree of scrutiny that lenders are subjected to in relation to borrowers
and security providers indicate a need for practical guidelines to maximise enforceability of these types of corporate contracts.
Within this framework, the principles of agency law with respect to implied actual
authority and apparent authority are applicable to contracts with companies because an
agency relationship arises as a result of the appointment of an officer or a holding out
that such an appointment has been made. Accordingly, we commence this monograph by
reviewing, in chapter 2, the general principles of agency as they apply to corporate contracts.
Following the analysis of the Rule in Turquands case and its exceptions and limitations contained in chapters 3 and 4, chapter 5 discusses the history and background of
statutory reform to the indoor management rule, and related doctrines, such as constructive notice and ultra vires. Chapter 6 analyses in detail the statutory assumptions in s 129.
In a number of respects, these assumptions incorporate the common law agency principles. The primary focus is considering whether the statutory indoor management rule
achieves its stated purpose of clarifying and codifying the Rule in Turquands case. The
purpose of the legislation was stated as being to ensure that a person who deals in good
faith with persons who can be reasonably supposed to have the authority of the company should be protected against later [claims] by the company that the persons purporting
to act for it lacked authority.5 Whilst chapter 7 briefly digresses to examine the common
law rule against forgeries and the extent to which the Corporations Act now abrogates it,
chapter 8 discusses the scope the limitations to the statutory rule contained in s 128(4).
It is suggested that the current statutory limitations do not substantially depart from their
common law derivation.
As borrowing and security contracts indicate a particular instance of vulnerability,
chapter 9 sets out a number of practical implications for lenders arising from the analysis of both the common law and statutory provisions relating to corporate authority.
Finally, chapter 10 offers our summary and overall conclusions, detailing the scope
of legislative reform and suggesting future reforms to the statutory rule and its limitations
to reflect the policy of the Rule in Turquands case with greater clarity than at present.
5 Explanatory Memorandum, Companies and Securities Legislation (Miscelleneous Amendments) Act 1983, [188].
Chapter 2
Actual and Apparent Authority
of a Companys Agent
Company Contracts
As a company is an abstract entity, it can only enter into contracts through the actions of
a natural person. Section 126 provides that a companys power to make a contract may
be exercised by an individual acting with the express or implied authority of the company. A contract may also be made with or without a common seal. Section 127 prescribes
how written contracts are to be executed, whether by seal or not.
Sections 126 and 127 indicate that a company may enter into a contract directly
through one of its organs, usually the board of directors, or through a person who represents the mind and will of the company. The clearest way in which this occurs is by the
affixing of the company seal. This type of situation is governed by the organic theory of
company law that largely lies outside the law of agency but draws upon it.
A company may also enter into a contract indirectly through an agent. The agent may
be an officer or employee of the company. Whether a company will be liable under a contract for the acts of an officer or agent is governed by the general law of agency. These
agency principles have been modified by the Corporations Act so as to recognise the
abstract nature of companies. The agency rules that are particularly applicable to companies are also affected by the common law rules known as the doctrine of constructive
notice and the Rule in Turquands case. The Corporations Act now governs these rules,
in ss 128130. This monograph is primarily concerned with these provisions but as they
presuppose and are based on the above rules and general agency principles, it is first necessary to examine the common law rules. Accordingly, this chapter sets out the foundation principles of agency, whilst the following two chapters examine the scope of the
Rule in Turquands case and its limitations.
At common law, a particular feature of the applicability of agency principles to companies was that the acts of an agent could only bind the company if they were within the
objects of the company as stated in its constitution.1 Acts outside the scope of the companys objects are ultra vires (beyond powers) and were once not binding on the company. Section 125(2), however, provides that a contract with a company is not invalid just
because it is outside its object clause. Similarly, s 125(1) provides that if a companys
constitution contains restrictions on powers, contracts are not invalid merely due to noncompliance with these restrictions. Ultra vires actions have no direct relevance under s
1 Prior to the Company Law Review Act 1998, companies were required to have a memorandum of association and
articles of association. This requirement has been abolished since 1 July 1998. In this monograph, we have adopted
the current term constitution when referring to the companys constituent documents, in preference to the former
concepts of memorandum and articles. For those companies that may still have a memorandum and articles, s 1415
provides that these documents will become the companys constitution.
125, and may only be enforced as statutory contracts in the same way as other contraventions of the companys constitution, under s 140(1). Ultra vires actions may also be
relevant indirectly, where they form part of an action involving breaches of duty by directors, oppression or applications for winding up by members.2 These indirect effects of
ultra vires generally involve proceedings of an internal nature. The main purpose for
abolishing the ultra vires doctrine in relation to outsiders has been to afford additional
protection to outsiders in their dealings with companies. Companies can generally no
longer rely on restrictions contained in their constitutions to avoid contractual obligations.
A distinction is made between acts that are ultra vires the company because such acts
are beyond the power of the company and acts that are within the companys power but
outside the authority of the companys officers or agents when exercising the power. In
the latter case the officer or agent is sometimes confusingly described as acting ultra
vires. This confusion has been acknowledged in the past. For example, Slade J in Rolled
Steel Products (Holdings) Ltd v British Steel Corporation3 stated:
Primarily [ultra vires] is used to describe acts which are beyond the capacity of a company ...
[T]he phrase is also sometimes used to describe acts which are not beyond the capacity of the company but simply beyond the authority of either the board of directors or a majority of the shareholders. In many instances the sense in which the phrase is being used is far from clear....
Actual Authority
Actual authority arises where the principal has given consent to the agent to act for the
principal.5 This may derive from an express or implied conferral of authority (e.g in the
corporate constitution) by the principal to the agent to do certain acts or enter into a particular transaction.
2 See Explanatory Memorandum, Company Law Review Act 1998, [8.4]; S Woodward, Ultra Vires Oversimplified:
Changes to Company Powers Under the Second Corporations Act Simplification Bill (1997) 15 Company and
Securities Law Journal 162, 169. The ultra vires reforms are discussed in chapter 5.
3 [1986] 2 Ch 246, 286. Approved of by Advance Bank of Australia v FAI Insurances Ltd (1987) 5 ACLC 725, 733
(Kirby P).
4 See for example K Dharmananda, Ultra Vires Goes Ultra Violet (1997) 71 Australian Law Journal 622, 622;T
Cain, Ultra Vires in 1984 (1985) 1 Queensland Institute of Technology Law Journal 31, 31.
5 H A J Ford, R P Austin and I M Ramsay, Fords Principles of Corporations Law (10th ed, 2001) [13.030].
In a company context, an officer or agent will often have implied actual authority. A
company will usually give consent to an agent to act for it by appointing the agent to a
particular position. Generally, the constitution will confer a wide power of management
on the board of directors.6 In the usual case, the board is the organ of the company for
the purposes of management so that its acts are the acts of the company itself. The
authority of the board in this respect stems directly from the constitution. While the board
is more than an agent as regards contracts between a company and an outsider, it has
actual authority in the same way as an agent may have actual authority to act for the
company.
Usually, outsiders do not deal directly with the board. Rather, they deal with a person to whom the board has delegated some or all of its functions. This person may be
appointed as managing director of the company7 upon whom the directors may confer
any of the powers exercisable by them.
The appointment of a person as managing director results in that person having the
implied actual authority usually associated with that position.8 The implication arises
from the fact of the appointment as managing director and the usual or customary authority of a managing director in the circumstances of the company and the nature of its business.
In several cases during the 1990s,9 the phenomenon of the de facto managing director may be observed. An officer may not actually be appointed as managing director, but
if they act in that capacity with the consent and acquiescence of the board, it is legitimate
to find that they have the authority that goes with that position. It is common for boards
to regard one of their number as the managing director with ultimate responsibility for
the management of the company, however, the formal appointment contemplated by s
198C or similar provisions in the constitution has not been carried out. To facilitate transactions with third parties, the courts have conferred on dominant controllers with acquiescing boards the full authority of the company, most noticeably in cases involving corporate groups. This extension of actual authority creates a new category of officer that
has been referred to as the de facto managing director.10
This result was achieved in Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees
Pty Ltd,11 where Mr Goldberg, a director was taken to have implied actual authority to act
as the company in circumstances where he held a controlling shareholding and assumed
the role of managing director with the acquiescence of the other directors. Transactions
had generally been entered into without prior reference to the board and no attempt was
made to interfere with his assertion of control over the companys affairs.
The acquiescence of members of the board to the conferral of actual authority
requires not merely the silent acquiescence of the individual members of the board, but
6
7
8
9
See s 198A set out in Appendix I (and former Table A art 66).
See s 198C set out in Appendix I (and former Table A art 79(1)).
Hely-Hutchinson v Brayhead Ltd [1968] 1 QB 549.
See for example discussed below: Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd (1992) 10
ACLC 253, Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
10 See for example P Hanrahan, I Ramsay and G Stapledon, Commercial Applications of Company Law (2nd ed, 2001)
[21240].
11 (1992) 10 ACLC 253.
the communication by words or conduct of their respective consents to one another and
to [the agent].12
Normally, the appointment of a person as a director does not carry with it the implied
actual authority to bind the company.13 The power of management under the constitution
is conferred on the board as a collegiate body.
The appointment of a person as secretary of a company confers implied actual
authority to make contracts in connection with the internal administration of the company but not in relation to the management of the company in the sense of carrying on the
companys business.14
Whether a director elected as chair has implied actual authority to bind a company is
not entirely clear. The usual functions of a chairing director do not generally extend to
conducting the companys business operations15 and a he or she has no more authority to
bind the company than has any other single director.16 The authors of Fords Principles
of Corporations Law suggest that as officers who hold the chair commonly receive more
remuneration than do other directors, there may be some things that the director elected
as chair of a public company is impliedly authorised to do beyond the usual authority of
a single director.17 While the usual authority of a director elected as chair is unclear, the
existence of implied actual authority may be determined from the circumstances and conduct of the company and its chair in the same way as occurred in the Brick and Pipe case.
This situation involving a director elected as a chair arose in Equiticorp Finance Ltd
v Bank of New Zealand.18 The Equiticorp Group was comprised of companies in its
finance arm and other companies in an industrial arm. Hawkins was chair of the Group
and director of a number of companies. A company in the industrial group borrowed
money from a bank. The bank required early repayment and Hawkins applied assets of
two member companies of the finance arm with the tacit approval of all but one of the
directors of the finance arm companies. There was no formal approval from the boards
of the finance arm companies for the transfer of assets. When the companies went into
liquidation, the liquidator sought recovery of the assets on the ground (among others),
that the payment of the assets was not authorised by the two companies. Clarke and
Cripps JJA, in a majority judgment, held that the business of the various companies in
the Equiticorp Group was conducted under the general authority of Hawkins who undertook all decisions of significance either with or without consultation with senior members of management. In these circumstances, Hawkins had implied actual authority to
apply the assets of the finance companies in the manner in which he directed.
In a dissenting judgment, Kirby P held that no implied actual authority had been conferred on Hawkins. He stated:
12 Freeman and Lockyer v Buckhurst Park Properties (Mangal) Ltd [1964] 2 QB 480, 501 (Diplock LJ).
13 Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1990) 8 ACLC 611, 645 (Dawson J).
14 Panorama Developments (Guilford) Ltd v Fidelis Furnishings Fabrics Ltd [1971] 2 QB 711 and Northside
Developments, 645 (Dawson J); Re Tummon Investments Pty Ltd (1993) 11 ACLC 1, 139.
15 Hughes v NM Superannuation Pty Ltd (1993) 11 ACLC 923.
16 Hely-Hutchinson v Brayhead Ltd [1968] 1 QB 549.
17 Supra n 5, [13.090].
18 (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
Kirby P also found that the other directors were either unaware of the disposal of the
assets or were opposed to it. This did not amount to acquiescence at the time in the transfer of the assets. In his judgment, Kirby P noted that outsiders should be protected in their
dealings with companies that operate in an irregular way and are dominated and effectively controlled by particular individuals. However as the bank knew of the structure of
the Equiticorp Group, it is to debase the integrity of company law, and the obligations
of companies to operate according to law, to extend the protective principle to cloak Mr
Hawkins with implied actual authority...The suggested imperative of realism and the
realpolitic of corporate control does not authorise courts to ride roughshod over the due
observance of company law.20
This dissenting judgment emphasises the balance of interests that is at the heart of
determining when a company is to be bound by the unauthorised acts of its officers.
These considerations form the basis of the common law principles and the statutory
assumptions and limitations contained in the statutory indoor management rule.
The implied actual authority of an officer may be restricted by the circumstances of
the company. In Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd21 at first instance, it was held that
one director had not acquiesced to giving the other director implied actual authority usual
for a managing director, where the purpose of the company was to hold the title to the
directors family home. This limited function of the company meant that it was unnecessary for the company to appoint such an officer.
This case went on appeal and was dismissed by the Court of Appeal on other
grounds.22
Apparent Authority
An agents apparent or ostensible authority (the terms apparent and ostensible
authority have the same meaning) creates the agency relationship because of the appearance of authority conferred on the agent. It does not depend on any agreement or relationship between principal and agent. It is often the case that an outsider does not know
whether an agent has actual authority and the extent of that authority. Usually, all the outsider relies on is the appearance of authority. Depending on the circumstances, the extent
of an agents apparent authority may be the same as the agents actual authority or it may
exceed the scope of the agents actual authority. In some situations a person may have
apparent authority to do particular acts for the principal even though that person has been
given no actual authority to contract. Thus actual and apparent authority rest upon entirely different bases but may often overlap.
19
20
21
22
10
through its board that its agent was the managing director of the company. The contract
was within the customary authority of a managing director and the outsider had relied on
this apparent authority. Diplock LJ stated four conditions that must be met in order for a
company to be bound by the acts of an agent where the agent had no actual authority to
so act:
1. a representation must be made to the outsider that the agent had authority to
enter into the kind of contract the outsider seeks to enforce;
2. the representation must be made by someone with actual authority to manage the
companys business or at least authority in respect of the matters relating to the
contract;
3. the outsider must be induced by the representation to enter into the contract and
in fact relied upon the representation;
4. the memorandum or articles do not deprive the company of the capacity to either
enter into the type of contract concerned or to delegate authority to enter into
that kind of contract to the agent.
The last of these conditions refers to acts that are ultra vires the company in the sense
of being outside the objects clause in the constitution. Ultra vires contracts are now governed separately under the Corporations Act. The policy behind this statutory reform is
to abolish the doctrine of ultra vires in relation to contracts with outsiders.26 Therefore
under the Corporations Act, a company may be bound by an ultra vires contract entered
into by an agent with apparent authority. The last condition also requires the constitution
to authorise a delegation of authority to enter into the type of contract concerned. This
power to delegate is usually conferred in a form similar to the replaceable rule s 198D.
The condition that has caused the most uncertainty from the outsiders point of view
has been the second. This requires the representation to be made by someone with actual authority to manage the companys business or in respect of matters to which the contract relates. In the Freeman and Lockyer case, this did not present a problem to the outsider because the board through its acquiescence made the representation or holding out
to the director assuming the role of managing director.
Usually, an outsider will be in contact with someone to whom the board has delegated authority. It will be difficult for the outsider to determine the nature and extent of this
authority. This becomes critical where the board has represented that someone has apparent authority to bind the company and this person then purports to cloak another person
with apparent authority. Such a situation does not meet the second of Diplock LJs conditions.
This fact situation arose in the High Court case of Crabtree-Vickers Pty Ltd v
Australian Direct Mail Advertising Co Pty Ltd27 in which the court approved of the principles stated by Diplock L J in Freeman and Lockyer. A managing director was found to
lack actual authority to enter into the contract in question because of limitations on his
power. An employee had been held out by the managing director to have the necessary
authority to enter into a contract on behalf of the company. The High Court applied the
principles formulated by Diplock LJ and held that the employee had no actual authority.
26 Section 125.
27 (1975) 133 CLR 72.
11
The employee also did not have apparent authority because the representation was made
by someone who himself, as the managing director, only had apparent authority to carry
on management of the company.
In order for the representation in this case to have been made by someone with actual authority, it would need to have been made by either the board or by a committee of
directors which had been delegated the authority to carry on the business of the company. It seems curious that a managing director may bind the company through his apparent authority based on a representation by the company and yet, such a person is unable
to represent that someone else has apparent authority. If a company can be bound by a
contract, in circumstances such as arose in Freeman and Lockyer, it is hard to see why
the company cannot be bound by a representation of the same person that holds out that
someone else has authority to bind the company. This problematic result is avoided if the
managing director is regarded as having implied actual authority because the board
acquiesced to his assumption of broad powers.
Accordingly, the Australian cases, such as Brick and Pipe28 and Equiticorp,29 which
have given rise to the concept of the de facto managing director, effectively sideline
much of the apparent authority doctrines difficulties by permitting outsiders the benefits
that flow from dealing with officers who have actual authority. This is a realistic view of
commercial situations where, like Brick and Pipe, a Goldberg management style is
apparent.30
Cases decided subsequent to Brick and Pipe demonstrate however the point beyond
which the principles of implied actual authority will not be flexibly applied. For example, in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd,31 Sixty-Fourth Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie
Bank Ltd,32 Pyramid Building Society v Scorpion Hotels Pty Ltd,33 Koorootang Nominees
Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd,34 and National Australia Bank v Sparrow Green Pty
Ltd,35 the outsiders each asserted that the officer they dealt with, in relation to the provision of a third party security by the company, was the de facto managing director. In each
case, the officer did not have the actual authority to bind the company. The critical factor in each case was the failure of the outsider to prove a substantial link between the officer, their assertion of authority, and the acquiescence of the board. De facto managing
directors are not clothed with implied actual authority solely due to their own unilateral
assertions. The results of these cases are summarised in Table 2.1 below. The facts and
details of the cases are examined in more detail in chapters 5, 6 and 8.
28 Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd (1992) 10 ACLC 253.
29 Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
30 L Law and D Morrison, The Brick & Pipe Appeal Updating Ostensible Authority (1992) 10 Company and
Securities Law Journal 330, 333.
31 (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
32 [1998] 3 VR 133.
33 (1996) 14 ACLC 679.
34 [1998] 3 VR 16.
35 (1999) 17 ACLC 1,665.
12
PERSON
ASSERTING
AUTHORITY
ACTUAL ACQUIESCENCE
DIRECTORS
BY BOARD
EXPLANATION
Goldberg
representing
Furst as
secretary
Goldberg,
Furst and
Mrs Goldberg.
Yes
Equiticorp Finance
Ltd v Bank of
New Zealand
(1993) 11
ACLC 952.
Hawkins
Hawkins was
only a director
of one of the
appellant
companies.36
Yes
Bank of New
Zealand v Fiberi
Pty Ltd
(1994) 12
ACLC 48.
Doyle
Doyle and
Arnhold
No
Sixty-Fourth
Throne Pty Ltd
v Macquarie
Bank Ltd
[1998] 3 VR 133.
Kandy
Dr and
Mrs Taft
No
Pyramid Building
Society v Scorpion
Hotels Pty Ltd
(1996) 14
ACLC 679.
Lewis
Lewis,
Luscombe,
Glasscock &
Warfe
No
Koorootang
Nominees Pty Ltd
v ANZ Banking
Group Ltd
[1998] 3 VR 16.
Jeffries
Jeffries,
S Ramsay and
W Ramsay
No
National
Australia Bank
v Sparrow Green
Pty Ltd (1999)
17 ACLC 1665.
Green
Green and
Sparrow
Sparrow
resigned from
the board but
this was not
held to be
acquiescence.
36 Giles J recorded some doubt about the exact constitution of the relevant boards of directors of the two appellant
companies, EFL and EFSA. However, it appears that, at material times, there were some common directors. They
comprised Mr David Adams, Mr Brian Fitzgerald, Mr Dennis Cowell, Mr David Crick, Mr Brian Chittenden and Mr
Dennis Teroxy. At least, it was not seriously contested that they were directors. Mr Allan Hawkins was a director of
EFSA. He held no office (including director) of EFL. Mr Cowell was the managing director of EFSA and
EFL.(1993) 11 ACLC 952, 959 (Kirby P).
13
Where the de facto managing director assertion fails, the outsiders are left with
apparent authority. The strict adherence to the conditions enunciated in the Freeman and
Lockyer case produces considerable difficulties and uncertainty to an outsider. The outsider is required to ascertain the validity of a conferral of authority on the managing
director in circumstances where the dealings are not with the board or a committee to
whom authority has been delegated. To the outsider, the circumstances indicate a holding out by the company because it appears to have allowed the representation to be made.
The application of agency law requires the representation to be made by an organ of the
company, such as its board or a person or persons to whom authority has been delegated, such as a managing director or committee of directors. In the latter case, the outsider
must hope that the authority was properly conferred on the committee so as to constitute
actual authority. This places outsiders dealing with any person who does not possess
actual authority in a potentially perilous position, yet it may be difficult or impossible for
an outsider to ascertain the nature of the authority.
The operation of the Rule in Turquands case and the statutory assumptions is significantly compromised if an outsider is expected to delve into the indoor management
of a company in order to determine whether a particular person has actual or apparent
authority. According to Crabtree-Vickers this distinction can be critical in determining
whether a company is bound by a contract. The Corporations Act renders some assistance. For example, s 129(2) and s 129(3) allow the outsider to assume that the companys officers (identified from the public record, or from a holding out) are duly appointed and have the customary authority of that position. Further, s 201M provides that acts
of officers are not invalid merely because of a defective appointment. However, s 201M
applies to acts of an internal, administrative nature only. Outsiders enforcing contracts
must rely on the s 129 assumptions, but reliance on the assumptions is subject to disqualifying circumstances.
National Australia Bank v Sparrow Green Pty Ltd37 is a case involving the statutory
rule and shows that the statutory assumptions were still not effective to overcome an
absence of authority. In that case, one of the directors retired from the business, but the
ASIC register was not altered. The remaining director assumed the role of managing
director, even though there was no formal appointment. The bank was precluded from
enforcing a contract signed by the purported managing director for several reasons, relating to both the absence of authority, and the absence of the availability of the statutory
assumptions, due to the knowledge exception applying.
Accordingly, the effect of actual authority and whether outsiders may rely on it
depends upon the scope of protection provided by the assumptions in ss 128129, and is
analysed in chapter 6. As the statutory assumptions incorporate the concept of customary authority, this is defined below.
14
Customary Authority
Where an officer or agent of the company exercises authority that is not customary for
someone in that position to normally have, the agent does not have implied actual authority or apparent authority to bind the company. The customary authority of particular officers is relevant in considering the limits of both implied actual authority and apparent
authority.
Three matters affect the scope of customary authority of a company officer:
1. the size of the company;
2. the nature of its business; and
3. the position held in the company.
As for the first matter, the size of the company influences the size of the board. For
example, a director of a small or closely held company would be expected to have more
involvement in the companys business. They would be expected to have a wider customary authority than an officer of a large public company.39
As for the second matter, the nature of the companys business also affects the
authority that would reasonably be expected, and reasonably required, of an officer managing that type of enterprise. To this extent, whilst the companys constitution does not
affect the companys corporate power, it may limit indirectly the customary authority of
its officers. Ford Austin and Ramsay give the example of a director of a charitable company being more restricted that an officer occupying a similar position in a commercial
company. Charitable companies are required to have a constitution (s 150) requiring the
company to pursue charitable purposes only. The authority of its officers would have to
be restricted to be consistent with the companys object.
As to the third matter, the position occupied affects the scope of what an officer is
entitled to do on behalf of the company. In this respect, it is convenient to look at the various positions and describe the customary authority.
Company director
While it is usual for the board as a whole or a managing director to be conferred with
very wide powers of management, it is not usual for an individual, ordinary director to
have such authority. In Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General,40 Dawson
J considered the authority of an individual director:
The position of director does not carry with it an ostensible authority to act on behalf of the company. Directors can act only collectively as a board and the function of an individual director is to
participate in decisions of the board. In the absence of some representation made by the company,
a director has no ostensible authority to bind it.
It should be noted that while the customary authority of directors is limited, they may
still be able to bind the company if there has been a representation or holding out by the
company that greater than usual authority has been conferred.
15
Company secretary
A company secretary may in certain circumstances act as an agent of the company. The
implied actual authority or apparent authority of a company secretary extends to making
contracts on behalf of a company that relate to the administration or internal workings of
the company. In this respect, the customary authority of the company secretary has
expanded substantially over the past century. Lord Denning MR considered this question
in Panorama Developments (Gilford) Ltd v Fidelis Furnishing Fabrics Ltd.41 A company secretary entered into a contract for the hire of cars for the purpose of carrying the
companys major customers. The secretary then used the cars for his own purposes. The
car hirer sued the company on the basis that its secretary had apparent authority to enter
into that contract. Lord Denning stated:
A company secretary is a much more important person nowadays than he [sic] was in 1887. He is
an officer of the company with extensive duties and responsibilities. This appears not only in the
modern Companies Acts, but also by the role that he plays in the day-to-day business of companies. He is no longer a mere clerk. He regularly makes representations on behalf of the company
and enters into contracts on its behalf that come within the day-to-day running of the companys
business. So much so that he may be regarded as held out as having authority to do such things on
behalf of the company. He is certainly entitled to sign contracts connected with the administrative
side of a companys affairs, such as employing staff, and ordering cars and so forth. All such matters now come within the ostensible authority of a companys secretary.
The role of the secretary clearly does not extend as far as that of the directors. It is
limited to matters of an administrative nature. Dawson J in the Northside case held that
the office of secretary did not carry with it any apparent authority to affix the company
seal and mortgage a companys land nor to enter into commercial transactions upon his
own decision which are not of an administrative kind required for the day-to-day running
of the companys affairs.42
Where an outsider deals with a secretary or individual director who is acting outside
the usual authority of an officer of the type concerned, the outsider loses the protection
that arises from reliance on apparent authority. From the outsiders point of view this presents difficulties because it is rare for the outsider to deal directly with the board. Usually,
the outsider deals with someone whom it may reasonably be assumed has been delegated to act on behalf of the board. It may be difficult for the outsider to determine whether
the officer or agent is acting with actual or apparent authority and the extent of the
authority conferred by the board.
Managing director
An outsider dealing with a company will usually be in a stronger position if dealings
were conducted with a managing director. The constitution will usually empower the
board to appoint a managing director to exercise such of the boards powers at it thinks
fit.43 A managing director has the customary authority to do almost all the things related
to management that the board is empowered to do. The usual role of a managing direc41 [1971] 2 QB 711, 7167. The distinction between managerial and administrative acts was also referred to in Club
Flotilla (Pacific Palms) Ltd v Isherwood (1987) 5 ACLC 1,027.
42 (1990) 8 ACLC 611, 645.
43 See s 198C.
16
tor is to deal with every day matters, to supervise the daily running of the company, to
supervise the other managers and indeed, generally, be in charge of the business of the
company.44 This includes engaging persons to do work for the company45 and borrowing money on the companys behalf.46
The limits on the customary authority of a managing director are not entirely clear.
It does not extend to transactions that are outside ordinary trading transactions.47 In Re
Tummon Investments Pty Ltd48 a person was named in ASIC records as the principal executive officer and secretary of a company. That person borrowed funds on behalf of the
company but used the funds for his own purposes. At no time did the board of the company authorise the borrowing on behalf of the company. On the liquidation of the company, the lender lodged a proof of debt relating to the unsatisfied loans. It was held that
the principal executive officer did not have implied actual authority or apparent authority to enter into the loan transaction because it was not one that formed part of his administrative functions and was not entered into in the ordinary course of business. The company had not made a representation to the other party that the agent had authority to enter,
on behalf of the company, into the kind contract that was sought to be enforced.
The customary authority of a managing director probably does not extend to certain
far-reaching decisions such as purporting to sell the entire business of the company. For
example, in Re Qintex Ltd49 it was held that the office of managing director did not carry
with it the authority to make critical decisions after the filing of an application to wind
up the company. In applying Qintex, Lehane J in Nece Pty Ltd v Ritek Incorporation50 in
obiter commented that a managing director may have customary authority where it is
shown that the board consistently recognised the particular managing directors representation of the company in all matters to do with a particular debt and demand leading
to the winding up application.
Entwells Pty Ltd v National and General Insurance Co Ltd (1991) 5 ACSR 424, 427 (Ipp J).
Freeman & Lockyer v Buckhurst Park Properties (Mangal) Ltd [1964] 2 QB 480.
British Thomson-Houston Co Ltd v Federated European Bank Ltd [1932] 2 KB 176.
Corpers (No 664) Pty Ltd v NZI Securities Australia Ltd (1989) ASC 55714.
(1993) 11 ACLC 1139.
(1990) 8 ACLC 811.
(1997) 15 ACLC 813, 815.
British Thomson-Houston Co Ltd v Federated European Bank Ltd [1932] 2 KB 176; Clay Hill Brick Co v Rawlings
[1938] 4 All ER 100.
52 [1968] 1 QB 549.
17
Where an officer or agent of a company acts outside the customary authority of a person occupying the particular position concerned, the company may still be liable if it has
held out that its officer or agent possesses greater authority than would be usual. This
holding out must have been made by someone who has actual authority to make such a
representation for the company. Where such a representation has been made, the outsider
may still enforce the contract even though the agent of the company was not validly
appointed or the agent acted outside the customary authority of a person occupying the
particular position concerned.
53 C Baxter, Ultra Vires and Agency Untwined (1970) 28 Cambridge Law Journal 280.
54 For example, ss 198A and 198C.
Chapter 3
The Indoor Management Rule
at Common Law
The Rule in Turquands Case
Outsiders entering into transactions with companies have enjoyed limited protection ever
since the decision in Turquands case over 100 years ago. The rule provides that persons
dealing with a company and contracting in good faith may assume that acts within its
constitution and powers have been properly and duly performed and are not bound to
inquire whether acts of internal management have been regular.1
The application of this rule gives rise to an irrebuttable presumption that prevents the
company from avoiding a contract by relying on the fact that the proceedings were irregular and the person acting for the company was unauthorised to do so. This serves to protect persons who are entitled to presume, just because they cannot know, that the person with whom they deal has the authority which he claims.2
At common law, the doctrine of constructive notice operated against outsiders dealing with companies. However, this doctrine did not operate where the directors or other
agents of a company acted outside their authority but this was not apparent from the articles or other public documents of the company. The Rule in Turquands case states that
while persons dealing with a company are taken to have constructive notice of the contents of the companys public documents, they need not go further to ensure that the
internal proceedings of the company have been properly carried out. In fact, the outsider
can assume that these proceedings were properly carried out.
In Royal British Bank v Turquand,3 the deed of settlement, the equivalent of the memorandum and articles of a company, empowered the board of directors to borrow amounts
as authorised by a resolution of the general meeting of the shareholders. The company
borrowed money from a bank on the authority of two of its directors who authenticated
the companys common seal. There was no authority given by the general meeting. The
company refused to repay the loan and argued that the bank had constructive notice of
the articles and should have been aware of the lack of authority. It was held that an outsider need not inquire into whether such a resolution had in fact been passed. The company was bound to the bank because the passing of the resolution was a matter internal
to the company.
Jervis CJ said: ... the party here, on reading the deed of settlement, would find, not
a prohibition from borrowing, but a permission to do so on certain conditions. Finding
1 Halsburys Laws of England 4th ed 1988, Vol 7(1) para 980. This statement was approved by Lord Simonds in
Morris v Kanssen [1946] AC 459, 474.
2 Lord Simonds in Morris v Kanssen [1946] AC 459, 474.
3 (1856) 6 E&B 327; 119 ER 886.
19
that the authority might be made complete by a resolution, he would have a right to infer
the fact of a resolution authorising that which on the face of the document appeared to
be legitimately done.4
The Rule in Turquands case grew naturally as a response to the development of the
doctrine of constructive notice. While outsiders had constructive notice of matters they
could discover for themselves from public documents such as the articles, they could not
reasonably be taken to have notice of matters concerning the indoor management of the
company. The rule is primarily one of procedural convenience for the outsider, who cannot independently access the companys minute books to corroborate procedural compliance, and therefore should not be required to do so. Accordingly, the company itself
cannot rely upon the rule: Hughes v NM Superannuation Pty Ltd.5
The types of procedural matters the rule applies to include the conduct of meetings
of the company and the affixation of the common seal. For example, a quorum may not
have been present, inadequate notice may have been given or a voting irregularity may
have occurred. The rule also operates in situations where the common seal is not affixed
in accordance with the constitution or the board is not properly constituted. In these
cases, an outsider can generally hold the company liable, although protection is subject
to exceptions.
The rule has been criticised because of uncertainty that has arisen from a large body
of case law. Professor Gower observed: Unhappily its obscurity increases in direct proportion to the literature upon it, and only its undoubted practical importance makes it
essential to devote some space to it even at the risk of further obfuscation.6 Gower commented that the history of the development of the rule saw an increase in the limitations
to which the rule was subject. These limitations have become so extensive that the object
of the rule has been obscured.
The result is that the law has become a jungle of irreconcilable decisions to the benefit of no one
save the legal profession. If this branch of the law is ever codified the draftsman will be well
advised to ignore all case-law of the present century and to go back to first principles and the judgements of the founding fathers of our modern company law. Unhappily a textbook writer has to try
to state the law as he finds it and not as it ought to be.
The provisos and exceptions that defined the limits to the outsiders protection are
listed below.
1. The outsider must act in good faith.
2. The outsider must not have actual knowledge to the contrary.7
3. The outsider cannot presume in his own favour that things are rightly done if
inquiry that he ought to make would tell him that they were wrongly done.8
4. The outsider cannot assume matters that are inconsistent with public documents,
as the doctrine of constructive notice presumes all outsiders have notice of the
4 (1856) E&B 327, 332.
5 (1993) 11 ACLC 923.
6 L C B Gower, Modern Company Law (2nd ed, 1957) 141. These comments do not appear in the current edition of
this work because statutory reforms in England have largely replaced the common law principles in much the same
way as occurred in Australia leaving only a few ghostly relics...to haunt us. (5th ed, 1992) 198.
7 Howard v Patent Ivory Manufacturing Co (1888) 38 Ch D 156.
8 Morris v Kanssen [1946] AC 459, 475 (Lord Simmonds).
20
21
of the case should have put Barclays upon inquiry. Because Barclays failed to make further inquiries as to whether the common seal was properly affixed, it was unable to rely
on the Rule in Turquands case and Northside was not bound by the mortgage.
The circumstances that put Barclays upon inquiry were that the mortgage secured
Northsides major asset where the transactions were outside its usual business and not for
its benefit. Barclays was prevented from relying on the Rule in Turquands case because
it ought to have suspected an irregularity. Although Barclays did not have to have actual knowledge of the lack of authority of Sturgess and his son to affix the company seal,
it had constructive knowledge. These various attributes of knowledge are examined in
more detail when examining the ambit of the rules exceptions in chapter 4.
All five justices comprising the High Court agreed with this result. However, each
judge delivered a separate judgment, with detailed analysis as to the basis and operation
of the indoor management rule. A brief summary of the High Courts analysis is useful
to rationalise the scope of the indoor management rule.
The High Courts contribution to the development of the common law rule may be
summarised according to four main points:
1. articulation of the theoretical justification for the rule, including its interaction
with principles of agency;
2. discussion of the interaction between the rule, and the constraints imposed on
companies to comply with their mandatory constitutions (i.e the doctrine of ultra
vires, which rendered void contracts beyond the scope of the companys stated
objects or powers);
3. confirmation that the rules relating to contracts void for forgery involve separate
principles and not part of the rule itself; and
4. clarification of the various aspects of the knowledge exceptions to the rule.
The first two points are discussed below, whilst the knowledge and forgery exceptions are discussed in later chapters.
22
Although the reason for the rule is relatively clear, its theoretical foundation is subject to some debate. The High Courts judgment typifies this diverse approach. The basic
distinction in approaches in whether the rule is an organic manifestation of the corporate structure and separate legal entity principle, or is simply an application of established legal rules, such as agency or estoppel. This debate is briefly described below. The
significance of this debate has ongoing relevance, particularly regarding the interpretation of statutory reform subsequent to Northsides case. The statutory provisions are
analysed in later chapters.
23
24
25
The next chapter looks at the development of the exceptions and qualifications to the
common law rule. In the following chapters, we examine the contribution of the statutory reforms to the operation of the rule.
27 R Grantham, Attributing Responsibility to Corporate Entities: A Doctrinal Approach (2001) 19 Company and
Securities Law Journal 168; Ramsay, Stapledon and Fong, supra n 20.
28 Campbell (1960), supra n 9, 116.
Chapter 4
Exceptions to the Rule in Turquands Case
Introduction
As we foreshadowed in chapter 1, the Rule in Turquands case did not extend to protect
outsiders in all circumstances, such that the scope of the exceptions under the current
statutory version of the rule continues to be a controversial issue. The common law rule
did not apply where the outsider did not act innocently or reasonably in the light of the
circumstances. The common law principles withheld protection to the outsider where
certain exceptions arose. The circumstances excluding the rule may be distinguished as
exceptions relating directly from the rules development, and impediments to the rules
operation sourced from conflicting common law doctrine.
In the first category, the full exposition of the rule and its exceptions was proposed
by the House of Lords in 1946 in Morris v Kanssen1 as:
persons dealing with a company in good faith may assume that acts within its constitution and
powers have been properly and duly performed and are not bound to inquire whether acts of internal management have been regular.2
This emphasises that the rule is primarily one of procedural convenience: the outsider
cannot independently access the companys minute books to corroborate procedural
compliance, and therefore should not be required to do so. However, Lord Simmonds
qualified the rule by stating that:
It is a rule designed for the protection of those who are entitled to assume, just because they cannot know, that the person with whom they deal has the authority which he claims. This is clearly
shown by the fact that the rule cannot be invoked if the condition is no longer satisfied, that is, if
he who would invoke it is put upon his inquiry. cannot presume in his own favour that things are
rightly done if inquiry that he ought to make would tell him that they were wrongly done. 3
27
1. The operation of the rule against forgery, that rendered any contract tainted by
forgery void, despite the Rule in Turquands case; and
2. The operation of the doctrine of ultra vires, that rendered any contract beyond
the companys mandatory constitution void, despite the rule.
In both of these instances, the rule was not effective, as forgeries or ultra vires transactions were rendered void due to an absence of corporate capacity or consent. Corporate
capacity was not a matter of mere procedural convenience that could be assumed. These
doctrines are explained below, to describe the fetters on the common law rule. Their
effect due to statutory reform is analysed in chapter 5 and the rule as to forgeries is
specifically examined in chapter 7.
This chapter summarises the direct exceptions to the common law rule. The interaction of the other provisos is dealt with in subsequent chapters. The structure of this discussion is presented in Figure 4.1 below. This exercise is necessary to analyse and interpret the scope of statutory reform that occupies the later chapters.
Figure 4.1 The common law rule and its provisos
COMMON LAW
Rule in Turquand
THE RECENT
COMMON LAW
in Australia
The rule and
its provisos
Direct exceptions
to the rule
Good faith as a
condition precedent
Knowledge
exceptions
Forgery &
void contracts
Ch 5
Ch 7
Actual
knowledge
Imputed
knowledge
The position
of insiders
Due inquiry
Constructive
notice
Meaning of
public
Materiality of actual
knowledge of public
documents
Distinguishing
procedural constraint
from delegation
28
Good Faith
Although good faith is mentioned by the House of Lords in Morris v Kanssen4 in connection with the indoor management rule, it does not appear to be considered, or applied,
as a separate substantive element. Early literature on the indoor management rules evolution does not elaborate upon good faith.5 Good faith commonly invokes standards of
fairness, loyalty and cooperation.6 As an example in company law, creditors against
whom a voidable preference action has been taken may rely on good faith as a defence.7
Where good faith is typically applied, it has dual requirement of acting honestly (subjectively) as well as reasonably (objectively). As the indoor management rule has developed in Australia, good faith more manifests itself in the degrees of knowledge that preclude reliance on the assumptions, rather than as a precondition. This is certainly evident
from the statutory version, which makes no reference to good faith as an element of
reliance, although the legislature refers to the adoption of the common law rule and
good faith in dealings.8
Lord Alverstone CJ alluded to the connection between any requirement of good
faith and the common law rule in Duck v Tower Galvanizing Co,9 stating:
it has always been held that it is not incumbent on the holder of such a document purporting to be
issued by a company to inquire whether those persons pretending to sign as directors have been
duly appointed so that there has been ample authority to show that no informality will alter
rights possessed by a bona fide holder for value upon a document that purports to be in order.
The connection with the good faith element relies on the recognition that the common law rule is subject to the remedies in equity for the principal to avoid the contract
where the agent has breached their authority, subject to the rights of the bona fide purchaser. The adoption of good faith is not really a separate element of the rule, but a
gloss that recognises the other claims under the contract to which the outsider may
become subject, for example, the equitable defence of the bona fide purchaser for value
without notice.
29
between the actual knowledge and the inquiry exceptions is to categorise the latter as a
type of constructive knowledge. The distinction, however, is not clear cut. For example,
the failure to make inquiries may be due to recklessness or wilful blindness. This may be
captured as actual knowledge, rather than constructive knowledge. The effect of a person being put on inquiry here is that a failure to make reasonable inquiries results in the
inference of actual knowledge. Lord Esher MR expressed this inferred actual knowledge
in English and Scottish Mercantile Investment Co Ltd v Brunton:11
When a man has statements made to him, or has knowledge of facts, which do not expressly tell
him of something which is against him, and he abstains from making further inquiry because he
knows what the result would be or, as the phrase is, he wilfully shuts his eyes then judges are
in the habit of telling juries that they may infer that he did know what was against him. It is an inference of fact drawn because you cannot look into a mans mind, but you can infer from his conduct
whether he is speaking truly or not when he says that he did not know of particular facts.
30
13
14
15
16
[1946] AC 459.
[1968] 1 QB 549.
(1990) 8 ACLC 611.
(1990) 8 ACLC 611, 619622.
31
reliance on the purported actual or apparent authority of those acting or purporting to act on behalf of the company;
any representations made to the outsider by those acting or purporting to act on
behalf of the company;
the existence or otherwise of any prior connection or association between the
outsider and the company;
whether the outsider conducted any search of the public record.
The Northside case represents what may be considered a high water mark for due
inquiry, involving a fairly rigorous degree of reasonable conduct imposed on the lender.
The Northside decision is the final chapter on the common law knowledge exceptions, although there was pre-existing Australian case law to reconcile with its findings.
Previous Australian authorities involving the due inquiry exception to the rule include:
Re Efrons Tie & Knitting Mills Pty Ltd,17
Re Hapytoz Pty Ltd,18
Re Scottish Loan Finance Co Ltd,19
Albert Gardens (Manly) Pty Ltd v Mercantile Credits Ltd,20 and
Custom Credit Holdings Ltd v Creighton Investments Pty Ltd.21
As Efrons Tie, Scottish Loan and Hapytoz involved third party securities, it is particularly useful to examine whether they are consistent with Northside.
In Efrons Tie, the rule was unavailable to a creditor who was seeking to enforce a
third party guarantee. Cussen ACJ, foreshadowing Mason CJ in Northside, held that as
the guarantee was provided to secure the directors personal liability, the bank had constructive knowledge that the guarantee was not in the interests of the company and was
bound to inquire into the circumstances of its execution. The guarantee was signed under
common seal.
Hapytoz and Scottish Loan involved a different form of execution of the written contract, as the guarantees were signed under the personal signature of the respective managing directors. In Hapytoz, the third party guarantee was provided to secure the debts of
another company, and as there were no circumstances to put the creditor on inquiry, the
rule applied. The managing director signed the guarantee. Although not cited, Hapytoz is
similar in facts and outcome in Scottish Loan.22
The different forms of execution mean that the relevant assumptions under the rule
to be made by the creditor are different. In Hapytoz and Scottish Loan, the managing
director signed the respective guarantees, so the creditor could assume that the managing director had authority to sign. The potential conflict between the corporate security
providers and the third party debtor was not was not obvious enough to provoke inquiry,
as in neither case was the signatory to the guarantee the principal debtor (unlike Efrons
Tie). Even in Hapytoz, the guarantor company shared common directors and common
shareholders to the debtor company.
17
18
19
20
21
22
[1932] VLR 8.
[1937] VR 40.
(1944) 44 SR(NSW) 461.
(1973) 131 CLR 60.
(1985) 3 ACLC 248.
In Scottish Loan, a guarantee was signed purportedly by the managing director Levitus, in favour of the
Commissioner of Taxation, in respect of another partys (Forbes) tax debt.
32
This is the point of distinction between the personal signature cases with the common seal cases that is not necessarily highlighted by Northside (a seal case). As the result
in Northside shows, where the seal is affixed, the creditor has stronger evidence from the
face of the document whether there is a conflict by a principal debtor committing corporate assets to a third party guarantee in their favour. For example, in Northside, the lender
failed to distinguish between Sturgess personal interests and his other corporate interests. Although the method of execution seems to be a compelling point of distinction
between the creditors constructive knowledge in these cases, caution must be exercised
in extrapolating this to more modern cases. Brennan J in Northside commented that had
it been found that the creditor [in Hapytoz] was put on inquiry, that result would not have
been surprising.23
It may not only be the manner of execution that provides objective facts from which
an outsider may need to inquire further. In Custom Credit Holdings Ltd v Creighton
Investments Pty Ltd,24 the financier was told by one director that the companys solicitor
had doubts as to the validity of the execution of the documents. Having this fact revealed
gave rise to the reasonable obligation on the financier to inquire further.
Accordingly, the common law exception of due inquiry arises when either:
the person dealing with the company has a particular relationship with the company and is in a position to know about the companys internal management
(regardless of their actual knowledge);25
the actual knowledge (by subjective knowledge or reckless indifference) possessed by the outsider would lead a reasonable person to doubt the efficacy of
the assumption.26
The matters of knowledge that trigger the doubt include:
1. the circumstances of the company.27
2. The nature of the transaction itself. As alluded to by Mason CJ in Northside: A
person, even one who has no special relationship with the company concerned,
may be put upon inquiry by the very nature of the transaction....28 Further, in
Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General at first instance, Young J
distinguished between conveyancing transactions and ordinary commercial transactions in holding that in a conveyancing transaction, especially one involving a
large amount of money or very valuable land, a court would very easily come to
the conclusion that a reasonable person, acting in such a transaction, would make
inquiries.29 This refers to the standard beyond constructive knowledge into constructive notice.
3. The identity of its officers.30
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
33
Imputed knowledge
Both actual and constructive knowledge requires evidence of some accumulation of facts
by the outsider. A practical issue that affects corporate or institutional outsiders is the
question of the acquisition of knowledge. To be more precise, where the outsider is a corporation, how does the court ascertain a corporations knowledge? The issue of imputed
knowledge has arisen in the more recent cases on the statutory rule, although it relies on
underlying common law authorities.
In a commercial transaction, there are several layers of responsibility within the institution to bring the contract to fruition. A typical chain of command, as represented by the
recent cases Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd35 and Sixty-Fourth
Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd,36 involves the banks officers dealing face to face
with the companys officers, and those officers in either case may be different from the
actual decision makers in the corporation. The knowledge of the bank officer with
responsibility for the account is imputed to the bank.37 The bank also engages professional legal and valuation services. The chain of command is such that the bank accumulates disparate pieces of information about the transaction and the parties to it.
Essentially, it is a question of fact for the court to ascertain the nature and effect of the
accumulation of knowledge. In Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group
Ltd,38 counsel for the bank argued that the communication breakdown evident from the
bank records and witness recollections amounted to honest confusion, not knowledge
about the transaction. Hansen J confirmed that a company has the knowledge of its officers. His Honour extended this to the situation of a solicitor who has been engaged by
the outsider to investigate a particular transaction. As a question of fact, Hansen J
resolved that the banks actual knowledge of some matters (that Koorootang was a
trustee company) lead to constructive knowledge of others (e.g. that the officer of
Koorootang misapplied the trust assets for his personal interests).
31 Re Efrons Tie & Knitting Mills Pty Ltd [1932] VLR 8. Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd
provides a post-Northside example. Once the bank knew that the director who represented the borrower also represented the third party security provider, and that there was no business connection between the two, then the bank
ought to have made further enquiries of the other directors or beneficiaries of the trust, represented by the security
provider.
32 [1998] 3 VR 16.
33 [1998] 3 VR 16
34 These cases are discussed in chapters 5 to 8.
35 [1998] 3 VLR 16.
36 [1998] 3 VR 133.
37 Re Chisum Services Pty Ltd (1982) 1 ACLC 292.
38 [1998] 3 VR 16.
34
Constructive Notice
Common law development
At common law, an outsider dealing with a company was deemed to have notice of the
public documents of the company. This is known as the doctrine of constructive notice
and is a modification of the general rules of agency as applied to companies. The application of this doctrine meant that where the authority of an agent was limited by a companys constitution, an outsider dealing with the company was taken to have read and
understood these documents and to be aware of the agents lack of authority. The outsider
could not then hold the company liable despite any representations to the contrary made
by the company. This doctrine was also applicable in cases where a company acted outside its objects as stated in the constitution. The doctrine corresponded to the situation in
agency law where the third party is aware that the agent has exceeded their authority and
is unable to bind the principal.
The doctrine of constructive notice was well established by 1857. Lord Wensleydale
said:
The stipulations of the deed, which restrict and regulate [the directors] authority, are obligatory
on those who deal with the company; and the directors can make no contract so as to bind the whole
body of shareholders, for whose protection the rules are made, unless they are strictly complied
with.42
35
ity or exceeded authority. For example, former Table A, art 66(2) empowered the directors to borrow money and to charge any property of the company as security. This power
may, in the constitution of some companies, be subject to certain limitations. Under the
doctrine of constructive notice, outsiders were taken to be aware of the existence of any
such limitations contained in the constitution. If the directors gave security on a loan that
was in excess of their specified borrowing powers, the outsider could not hold the company to be bound by the act of the directors because the outsider was taken to know of
the limitation on the directors authority. This was so, even in the absence of actual
knowledge of the limitation.
The doctrine of constructive notice applied to public documents such as the constitution, and notices of special resolutions.43 The doctrine operates against the outsider and
in favour of the company.44
The doctrine of constructive notice is unfair because it precludes any examination of
the state of actual knowledge of both parties to the contract. For example, the company
itself may rely on restrictions in its constitution to preclude enforceability of a transaction, even where the company may have misrepresented its capacity.45 The doctrine of
constructive notice routinely caused confusion to outsiders and attracted criticism. For
example, Professor Ford in 1978 noted that:
Most contracts are made with companies without inspection of their memoranda for the reason
that the insistence on inspection would slow down commerce intolerably. ... But the doctrine of
constructive notice operates regardless of the nature of the transaction and it served no useful purpose when it enabled a company to avoid liability on a contract entered into in circumstances
where no reasonable person would ask to see the memorandum.46
It is difficult to find support for the doctrine: Campbell47 suggests that the function of
public documents, in particular the memorandum and articles was to restrict powers
which would otherwise exist at common law. Montrose48 thought that this doctrine differentiated companies from partnerships because restrictions in partnership agreements
did not affect third parties.
36
The operation of the indoor management rule as a protection for outsiders is adversely affected by the doctrine of constructive notice, for four reasons:
1. the doctrine demands notice of public documents, so there is an issue as to the
meaning of what constitutes public documents;
2. There is confusion caused by some common law cases as to whether the outsiders actual knowledge of the public documents overrides constructive notice;
3. the distinction between procedural regularity and substantive limitations on powers, as revealed in the public documents; and
4. the continuing role of notice.
1. The meaning of public documents
All companies legislation has required the filing of documents at regular intervals
(e.g. annual returns), and upon the happening of certain events, all of which inform outsiders, including:
incorporation or registration;
changes of officers;
allotment of shares;
notices of special resolutions, which generally by their very nature relate to
changes in the constituent documents;
notices relating to external administration.
If we assume that all documents filed with the regulator are public documents, constructive notice is counterproductive to the simple rule of procedural regularity. If documentary evidence of a companys decision is required for the public record, then constructive notice necessarily imposes the proviso that the assumption may only be made
if it is consistent with the content of the public record. For example, if a matter ought to
be decided by special resolution, then the indoor management rule allows the outsider to
assume that the procedure has been carried out. However, the doctrine of constructive
notice fixes the outsider with notice of documents lodged, or not lodged. The outsider
cannot assume that the special resolution has been held when that assumption is inconsistent with the public record. In this sense, constructive notice interferes with procedural regularity assumptions in cases where the irregularity is apparent on the face of the
constitution or other public document.
Notification of external administration and routine changes of officer both alert outsiders to a change in the identity of officers authorised to exercise corporate power. In
this way, the interaction between the public record and the outsider can be positive, as it
allows the outsider to confirm the officers identity.
The rule is enhanced if the negative aspects of constructive notice are minimised and
the positive aspects retained. This can be seen with the statutory version of the rule. For
example, the public record as to the identity of officers is necessary and conclusive to the
making of certain statutory assumptions, although the outsider does not have to prove
that they actually checked and relied on the public record at the time of entering into the
transaction. The statutory version of the rule and the statutory abolition of constructive
notice, are discussed in chapters 5 and 6.
37
38
the outsider with a single director only. Ultimately, Sargant LJ in Houghton held that the
outsider could not assume that the director they were dealing with had more than the customary authority of a director. The rule did not apply, even if the outsider had actual
knowledge and not merely constructive notice of the power of delegation in the constitution.
Dawson J in Northside concludes the debate by arguing that:
the notion that potential authority under an article might, without more, be treated as actual
authority by an outsider to the company who knows of the article was something which obviously
went beyond the reasonable requirements of business convenience and was difficult to sustain upon
principle.59
39
a mere procedural constraint, and the results in the Australian common law cases suggest
that this is a largely unnecessary exercise. Australian cases on the common law rule highlight two features of the rules application:
1. Even where the constitution imposes merely a procedural restraint, constructive
notice of the public documents will not allow the outsider to assume compliance
if the manner of execution is inconsistent with the constitution. In Equity
Nominees Ltd v Tucker, the companys constitution required the seal to be signed
by at least two directors and the secretary. Two directors only signed the third
party guarantee signed under seal. Windeyer J held that the rule did not apply
where the articles apparently or in fact were not complied with.64
2. In Australia, unlike the English decisions,65 the delegation problem has been
overcome by essentially treating a substantive power of delegation as a procedural requirement. For example, Re Scottish Loan Finance Co Ltd66 and Re
Hapytoz Pty Ltd67 are cases involving the positive exercise of an appointment
provided in the constitution, but were treated as merely procedural, so the rule
applied. The existence of the power was enough, despite the absence of any representation as to its exercise.68
4. The continuing role of constructive notice
Although constructive notice of public corporate documents is now abolished in s
130 (except for registered charges), the concept of notice remains relevant to the doctrine
of the bona fide purchaser for value without notice. Issues of the outsiders title may still
be challenged if the transaction occurred with actual or constructive knowledge, or notice
of a prior equity. In the corporate transaction, the prior equity may refer to the companys right to avoid the contract due to directors acting without authority. In a transaction
involving land, an outsider is still expected to conduct the normal searches as to title in
land registers, hence the reference to notice.
The effect of the doctrine of the bona fide purchaser for value without notice, in land
transactions, is affected by the Torrens system of indefeasibility of registration, but this
conveyancing practice aspect of legislative intervention by the states various land titles
legislation is not pursued here.
40
41
42
that the statutory rule does not operate in a legal social and economic vacuum.75 The
statute does not override existing common law principles on the rule, as expressed in
Northside, nor did it provide unconditional protection to outsiders, nor does it preclude
reference to other competing considerations (such as good faith).
3. Common law background relevant for statutory interpretation
The Explanatory Memorandum to the statutory reform that introduced the indoor management rule into the companies legislation kept Turquands case on the agenda by
specifically referring to the intention to clarify the rules operation.76 Any academic exercise in tracing the rules development and application, and resolving remaining ambiguities, inevitably requires comparison with the common law principles. Defining the scope
of the statutory versions of the actual or constructive knowledge exceptions is one of the
important contributions of the common law principles in shaping the debate as to statutory interpretation. As discussed later in chapter 8 there was initial judicial agreement
that the statute departed from the common law constructive knowledge exception of put
on inquiry. However, the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Bank of New Zealand v
Fiberi Pty Ltd77 narrowed the perceived gap between the common law and the statute.
The debate continues as to the meaning of the newly drafted statutory exception, its connection with constructive knowledge, and the role of common law principles.
Once the surrounding factors of ultra vires, forgeries and constructive notice have
been specifically reformed, the issues for statutory reform of the rule itself include:
1. Resolving the ambit of the exceptions;
2. Specifically, clarifying the open-ended obligation of reasonable conduct imposed
by constructive knowledge and its formulation into the due inquiry exception;
3. Clarifying whether the rule provides an assumption of delegation of authority;
4. Stating the role of the corporate seal and the extent of the assumption regarding
its use; and
5. Confirming the role of agency principles and the types of authority, particularly
to confirm the implied authority that company officers possess by virtue of their
position.
Chapters 5 to 8 now examine in detail these issues within the context of statutory
reform.
74 Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v Minister for Transport & Communications (1989) 7 ACLC 525, 535
(Gummow J).
75 (1994) 12 ACLC 48, 51.
76 Explanatory Memorandum, Corporations Bill 1988, [567].
77 (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
Chapter 5
The Statutory Reformulation
of the Indoor Management Rule
Statutory Intervention
The common law principles surrounding the operation and development of the indoor
management rule discussed in earlier chapters have now been affected by reform to the
Corporations Act in ss 125130. The statutory version of the rule itself is based around
seven protective assumptions set out in s 129 and are subject to the limitations in s 128.
It was necessary to consider in the earlier chapters the Rule in Turquands case, its exceptions and the rules of agency law in their application to companies because the statutory
provisions are based upon the common law principles. This chapter will consider the
extent to which the statutory provisions represent a departure from the traditional rules.
In particular, it is unclear to what extent the inquiry exception to the Rule in Turquands
case has been incorporated into the legislation. Recent case law has indicated that the
common law rules provide necessary background in the interpretation of the provisions.
Accordingly, there continues to be uncertainty in formulating the scope of the indoor
management rule due to several factors:
1. the continuing relevance of the common law rule in modern circumstances in
Australia since Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General;1
2. whether the common law is simply mirrored, as opposed to reformulated, by
statutory revisions of the rule;
3. the effect of the recent simplification of the rule by the Company Law Review
Act 1998;
4. the extent of the exceptions precluding the rules operation; and
5. in promoting business contracts, the rule must balance the business convenience
of the outsider with commercial morality factors to prevent fraud, mentioned in
chapter 3, under the discussion of the significance of the Northside case.
Aligned with reform to the Rule in Turquands case, the Company Law Review Act
1998 also continued the legislative goal of abolishing ultra vires and the doctrine of constructive notice. In tandem with the statutory rules reform, this chapter examines these
related reforms.
44
Recent Litigation
The application of the indoor management rule for the protection of outsiders dealing
with corporate borrowers and mortgagors is particularly dynamic and has attracted considerable academic commentary2 and practitioner focus.3 The cluster of 1990s cases
applying the statutory rule primarily concern financing transactions.4 Much of the recent
judicial and academic comment on the indoor management rule is relevant, because it
has arisen in the context of finance and security transactions.
Table 5.1 below nominates the important Australian cases and Table 5.2 provides a
comparative overview. As these tables show, the cases have mixed results for the lenders
involved. As Table 5.2 demonstrates, the selection of the comparative features is
designed to identify up front the critical factors that affected the outcomes. These factors are based on both the standards of conduct imposed on the outsiders and the context
of the transaction, such as the identity and characteristics of the corporate borrower/security provider. The factors featured in Table 5.2 are referred to in more detail in chapter 8
(the statutory exceptions) as contributing to the factual matrix triggering the exceptions
to the statutory rule.
Collectively, these cases illustrate a combination of common features that the courts
have been required to balance between protecting the outsider and enhancing commercial integrity, in situations involving contested authority. Significant factors throughout
these cases include:
1. Securities transactions: the disputes involve the validity of loan and securities
transactions.
2. Third party mortgages: the corporate security provider disputed the security granted in respect of loans made available to other (related and unrelated) borrowers.
2 Notably but not exhaustively: I Ramsay, G Stapledon and K Fong, Affixing of the Company Seal and the Effect of
the Statutory Assumption in the Corporations Law (1999) 10 Journal of Banking and Finance Law and Practice 38;
D Loxton, One Step Forward, One Step Back: The Effect of Corporate Law Reform on Procedures in Dealing with
Companies Borrowing or Giving Guarantees (1999) 10 Journal of Banking and Finance Law and Practice 24;
C Hammond, Section 164(4)(b) of the Corporations Law: To be Put Upon Inquiry or Not to be Put Upon Inquiry:
Is that the Question? A Problem of Statutory Interpretation(1998) 16 Company and Securities Law Journal 93;
B Horrigan, Busting Guarantees! [1998] National Law Review 7;
J Lambrick, Corporate Benefit in Financial Transactions: A Policy Perspective (1997) 8 Journal of Banking and
Finance Law and Practice 212;
J ODonovan, Corporate Benefit in Relation to Guarantees and Third Party Mortgages (1996) 24 Australian
Business Law Review 126;
B Horrigan, Third Party Securities Theory, Law and Practice in J Greig and B Horrigan (eds), Enforcing
Securities (1994);
D Morrison, The Indoor Management Rule A Review (1994) 4 Australian Journal of Corporate Law 264.
3 For example, The Honourable Justice Paul de Jersey, A Question of Notice, Paper presented at QLS Securities
Intensive V Seminar, Royal Pines, Gold Coast, October 1991, 115136;
The Honourable Justice Paul de Jersey, Lending to Company Groups The Problems of Corporate Power and
Directors Authority, Paper presented at the 9th Annual Banking Law and Practice Conference, Gold Coast, April
1992;
The Honourable Justice Ken Handley, When are Outsiders on Notice that Corporate Agents Lack Authority?, Paper
presented at QLS Securities Intensive VII Seminar, Coolum, October 1993, 2034;
J Story, Authority of Corporate Officers: The Northside Case and Section 164, Paper presented at QLS Securities
Intensive VII Seminar, Coolum, October 1993, 3564;
J Gallimore, The Authority of Companies to Enter into Transactions a New Twist (1994) 14 (8) Proctor 10;
The Honourable Chief Justice Paul de Jersey, Securities Case Law The Year in Review, Paper presented at QLS
Banking and Finance Law Intensive Seminar, Brisbane, October 2000.
4 Only the Australian decisions, including Northside and later cases, are emphasised. Australian cases dealing with
other applications of the statutory provisions of the indoor management rule are only referred to incidentally.
45
3. Invalid execution: the security documents were executed under common seal
with later claims of invalid execution. The dispute involves the authority of those
officers who purported to attest the deal. In several situations, the attesting signatories were not even officers. In Story v Advance Bank Australia Ltd,5 the signatory was an officer, but their signature was forged.
4. Corporate benefit: claims made by the corporate security provider that it
received no direct benefit from the loan transaction.6
5. Corporate control: one person whose personality dominated the management of
the corporate security provider (either with or without the acquiescence or direct
sanction of other board members).
6. Corporate personality: the inability or unwillingness by outsiders to distinguish
between the dominant individual and the corporate personality. Similarly, where
groups were involved, the inability or unwillingness to distinguish between individual
companies and the group entity.
7. Public information: the extent to which outsiders resorted to and relied on public
information held by the ASIC.
8. Lack of shareholder involvement: there is no evidence that formal shareholder
approval to the transaction was sought.
9. Other basic information errors: failure by the outsider to follow through when basic
information was requested or supplied, or failure to reconcile conflicting information, or
failure to rely on or act on professional advice.
Technically, the lenders in the cases outlined in Table 5.2 who were unsuccessful in
enforcing their contracts were unable to rely on the indoor management rule due to the
scope of the exceptions. Although the analysis of the exceptions is addressed in more
detail in chapter 8, some preliminary reconciliation of the outcomes is appropriate. The
inability to access indoor management rule protection is directly attributable to two factors within the lenders control:
failure to meet a threshold of familiarity with the corporate borrower/security
provider and other parties to the transaction (including access to basic publicly
available information); and
failure to identify the officers of the company purporting to have the authority
to exercise corporate power (the authority of officers was discussed in chapter 2).
46
Table 5.1 Indoor Management Rule cases involving banks and financiers as
outsiders
Case name in full
Referred to as:
Court
Appeal history
Northside Developments
Northside
Pty Ltd v Registrar-General
(1990) 8 ACLC 611.
High Court
Mason CJ, Brennan,
Dawson, Toohey &
Gaudron JJ
Vic Supreme Ct FC
McGarvie, Marks &
Beach JJ
Story
NSW CA
Gleeson CJ, Mahoney
& Cripps JJA
Equiticorp
NSW CA
Kirby P, Clarke &
Cripps JJA
Fiberi
NSW CA
Kirby P, Priestley &
Clarke JJA
Sixty-Fourth Throne
Vic CA
Winneke P, Tadgell JA
& Ashley AJA
Scorpion
Vic Sup Ct
Nathan J
Koorootang
Sup Ct Vic
Hansen J
Sparrow Green;
SA CA
Perkins (first instance)Olsson, Mullighan &
Nyland JJ
Myers
Sup Ct Vic
Gillard J
SA Sup Ct Debelle J
Perkins v NAB
(1999) 30 ACSR 256.
47
COMMON LAW
Brick
& Pipe
Story
Equiticorp Fiberi
NO
YES
YES
YES
NO
REASON?
put on
inquiry
Statutory
rule
applied
Statutory
rule
applied
Statutory
rule
applied
Statutory
exception
applied
OUGHT
TO KNOW
NO
NO
NO
YES
NO
NO
YES
(Goldberg
was de
facto MD)
NO
YES
(Hawkins
was de
facto MD)
NO
NO
YES
YES, but
forgery
involved
YES
NO
FORGED SIGNATURE?
NO
NO
YES
NO
NO
CORPORATE BENEFIT?
NO
NO
YES
YES:
group
welfare
NO
YES
NO
NO
NO
YES
CORPORATE GROUP?
NO
YES
YES
YES
NO
DOMINANT MANAGER?
NO
YES
(Goldberg)
YES
(Story)
YES
(Hawkins)
NO
DOMINANT BY ACQUIESCENCE
NO
YES
NO
YES
NO
TRADING COY?
NO
YES
YES
YES
NO
TRUST ASSETS?
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
SHAREHOLDER RATIFICATION?
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
LENDER CONSTRUCTIVE
TRUSTEE?
NO
NO
NO
NO: but
Kirby P
in dissent
NO
NOT
ARGUED
NOT
ARGUED
NOT
ARGUED
NOT
ARGUED
NOT
ARGUED
NO
YES
YES
YES
NO
LENDER /SOLICITOR
FOLLOWED UP REQUESTS
FOR INFORMATION
N/A
YES:
N/A
confirmation
of Fursts
appointment
as secretary
sought
N/A
N/A
48
Scorpion
Koorootang Sparrow
Green
Myers
COMMON LAW
STATUTE PRE CLR ACT
LENDER SUCCESSFUL?
NO
NO
NO
NO
YES
REASON?
Statutory
exception
applied
OUGHT
TO KNOW
Statutory
exception
applied
OUGHT
TO KNOW
Statutory
exception
applied
OUGHT
TO KNOW
Statutory
exception
applied
OUGHT
TO KNOW
Statutory
rule
applied
NO
NO
NO
NO
YES
(McCardel
was sole
director)
NO
NO
NO
NO
YES
NO
NO
YES, but
forgery
involved
NO, only
one officer
signed
YES
FORGED SIGNATURE
NO
NO
YES
NO
NO
CORPORATE BENEFIT?
NO
NO
NO
YES
YES
YES
YES
SUBSTANT YES
-IAL ASSETS
NOT
KNOWN
CORPORATE GROUP?
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
DOMINANT MANAGER?
YES
(Mr & Mrs
Kandy)
YES
(Lewis)
YES
(Jeffries)
YES
(Green)
YES
(McCardel)
DOMINANT BY ACQUIESCENCE
NO
NO
NO,
NO
although his
advice was
sought
YES, sole
director
TRADING COY?
Trustee
YES
Trustee
YES
Trustee
TRUST ASSETS?
YES
NO
YES
NO
YES
SHAREHOLDER RATIFICATION?
NO
NO
NO
NO
NO
LENDER CONSTRUCTIVE
TRUSTEE?
NO: but
NO
Ashley AJA
in dissent
YES
NO
NO
NOT
ARGUED
YES
ARGUED
NOT
ARGUED
NOT
ARGUED
NO: bank
did not act
on legal
advice
NOT
KNOWN
(lender did
not have
solicitors)
YES
YES
YES
NOT
KNOWN
NOT
YES
49
The cases in Table 5.2 show that the lender was successful in relying on the indoor
management rule in only four out of the ten cases listed. In the unsuccessful cases, protection was denied because of the ambit of the constructive knowledge of the lender
(although Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd also involved actual
knowledge of certain factors). The facts of the cases are discussed in more detail in chapters 6, 7 and 8 when the statutory provisions are analysed.
The results from the cases formulate the guidelines to indoor management rule
reliance set out in chapter 10. In the meantime, the ambit of the rule and its exceptions
are analysed to arrive at the scope of protection afforded to finance contracts.
50
Companies
Codes
1 January
1984 (as
amended
1985)
Corporations
Law
1 January
1991
Company Law
Review Act
1 July 1998 &
Corporations
Act 14 July
2001
No statute
s 67(1)
s 161(1)
s 124(1)
No statute
s 67(3)
s 161(3)
s 124(2)
No statute, only
common law
rule8
s 68C
s 165
s 130
No statute,
only common
law rule
s 68A(1)(3)
s 164(1)(3)
s 128s 129
s 164(4)
s 128(4)
s 166
s 128(3)
7 This provision was first inserted in 1985 by the Companies and Securities (Miscellaneous Amendment) Act 1985.
8 The common law rule of constructive notice (i.e. deemed notice by outsiders of the corporate constitution) and its
application to the common law indoor management rule was discussed in chapter 4.
9 The former versions of the statutory rule comprised six assumptions. There are seven assumptions in the current
rule. This is discussed in the next chapter.
10 The statutory wording of the exceptions was changed from the common law expressed in Northside, then changed
again in the 1998 amendments. This is discussed in chapter 8.
11 The common law rule of forgery (i.e. that a forgery is a nullity) and its effect on the common law indoor management rule is discussed in chapter 7.
12 Explanatory Memorandum, Companies and Securities Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 1983, [188].
51
52
The new simplified version of the indoor management rule contained in s 128(1) suggests only one qualifying circumstances for the outsider to prove: that there are dealings with the company.16 Further, the wording of s 128(4) still seems to require some
direct connection between the person, the company and the dealing by using the phrase:
if at the time of the dealings they knew or suspected that the assumption was incorrect.
The company is not entitled to assert that the assumption is incorrect in proceedings, but
there is not the same imperative (as appeared in former s 164(1)) that the outsider may
only rely on the assumptions if they bring proceedings.
The word dealings was also used in former s 164(1) and is discussed in the case
law. However, in former s 164(1), the outsider was linked directly to the dealings by the
phrase a person having dealings with a company. There was some danger that this
would not appear appropriate to cover the types of agency questions contemplated by the
assumptions. A strict interpretation of the expression would remove the benefit of the
assumptions from an outsider who is unable to show the existence of an actual pre-existing legal relationship with the company.
The term dealings was given a broad meaning in Story v Advance Bank Australia
Ltd.17 In this case, a bank dealt with a managing director who was permitted de facto control of the conduct of a companys business by the other director. It was held that the concept of having dealings with a company extends beyond dealing with someone who has
actual authority and includes situations where a document is forged. It extends to purported dealings.
The authors of Fords Principles of Corporations Law concur that s 128(1) and (2)
allow the assumptions to apply where the outsider deals with a person who purports to
represent the company, or who purports to have acquired title from a company.18 This
interpretation enables an outsider to be protected in cases where the outsider is unable to
show that the companys agent possessed authority so as to bind the company. The company would then be unable to argue that the outsider did not have dealings with a company but only with persons purporting to be its officers or agents.
While not deciding the issue, Kirby P in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd19 suggested that it was arguable that a person is not dealing with a company if the circumstances of that persons relationship with the company or the dealings themselves, should
have put the person on inquiry. The failure to make inquiry as to whether the dealings
16 Although Loxton, supra n 2, 30, suggests that the ambit is even wider and a person does not have to be dealing with
the company to exploit the assumption.
17 (1993) 11 ACLC 629.
18 H A J Ford, R P Austin and I M Ramsay, Fords Principles of Corporations Law (10th ed, 2001) [13.281][13.290].
19 (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
53
were with the company or with the particular individuals would result in the outsider losing the entitlement to make the assumptions. This interpretation creates difficulties
because it results in the introduction of a further inquiry exception to the assumptions.
There is no significance to be attached to the use of the plural: it was held previously that dealings does not require multiplicity of transactions.20
The requirement in s 128(2) that the outsider may also have acquired title through
another in relation to dealings, to be entitled to make the assumptions, remains
unchanged from former s 164(1).
As the qualifying circumstances have been reduced, this suggests that the assumptions may be available to a wider range of situations that under the former provisions.
However, the assumptions are personal to each particular outsider. For example, provided a person has had dealings with a company, then they can assume that directors have
been appointed, but the assumption must relate to their dealings. In ASIC v Hallmark
Gold NL,21 a person sought to assume that a company validly appointed directors, in
order to resist an application made against them by the regulator. ASIC, after receiving a
complaint by the companys shareholders, sought an order that three directors were not
validly appointed. Two directors were purportedly appointed at the annual general meeting, whilst the board subsequently appointed the third director. The third director argued
that at the time of his appointment, he had dealings with the company and could assume
that the directors currently on the board were validly appointed. Lee J held it was unnecessary to consider whether ss 128129 applied because they do not apply in rem by
making valid acts of a company that are invalid.22 This was not a case where the company was making an assertion against the outsider.
(Former s 165(1) was substantially similar: a person shall not be taken to have
knowledge of the memorandum or articles of a company or any other document or particulars by reason only that they have been lodged with the Commission.) This means
that a company can no longer rely, as against an outsider, on any limitations of authority imposed on the organs or agents of the company by the constitution.
20 Brick & Pipe (1991) 9 ACLC 324, 3456 (Ormiston J); Advance Bank Australia Ltd v Fleetwood Star Pty Ltd
(1992) 10 ACLC 703, 710 (Studdert J).
21 (1999) 30 ACSR 688 (Lee J).
22 (1999) 30 ACSR 688, 395.
54
Section 130 operates together with the assumptions an outsider is entitled to make
under s 129. For example, under s 129(2), an outsider may assume that an officer has
authority to exercise the powers and perform the duties customarily exercised or performed by an officer of a similar company. The outsider need not be concerned with
restrictions on the authority of the officer or agent imposed by the constitution.
55
mal commercial loan transaction was held to be void by ultra vires. Although the company had the power to borrow, the loan was to fund a business activity that was outside
the companys constitution, and the bank knew this. By contrast, Re David Payne & Co
Ltd27 held that as long as the company had a power to borrow in its memorandum, the
lender does not have to ensure that the directors apply the loan for an intra vires purpose.
To balance these criticisms, three points may be made in defence of ultra vires:
1. The doctrine of ultra vires was developed in the early cases during the nineteenth
century primarily to protect shareholders and members from unauthorised use of
corporate funds.28 This protection to shareholders was subverted during the twentieth century by such strategies as widely drafted objects and powers clauses.
Consequently, protection to shareholders was eroded, the process of incorporation was seriously encumbered and created pitfalls for third parties.29
2. As mentioned in chapter 3, the doctrine of constructive notice, in conjunction
with ultra vires, seriously undermined the position of third parties. Traditionally,
the doctrine of constructive notice was developed to counterbalance the protection to shareholders by ultra vires, that is, it was developed to ensure that shareholders invested on the basis that they were assumed to have knowledge of the
companys constituent documents. It was a doctrine developed to constrain the
actions of insiders, that, when applied to outsiders, operated harshly.30
3. Although companies (or more usually, their liquidators31) could invoke ultra vires
and its void affect, so too could outsiders invoke a companys ultra vires actions
to defend a claim brought by the company against them.32
Adopting the view of the outsider, such as a lender, the reforms minimise the risk of
invalid corporate dealings and minimise the transaction costs. The companys constitution, if there is one, operates from the shareholders point of view as an expression of the
collective expectation regarding the companys activities and managers powers.
Watson33 and Grantham34 have argued that the balance may be too far in favour of outsiders at the expense of shareholders interests. Although we do not wish to vigorously
debate the chosen legislative path, any criticism of the legislative policy is at least consistent with the High Court in Northside (noted in chapter 3), that corporate law principles must balance between facilitating business transactions with companies against preventing corporate fraud. This balancing test is useful to moderate competing views as
to the scope of the outsiders protection.
It is also worth observing the expectation gap left by the legislature in the latest round
of reform. Although the Corporations Act still contemplates, and in some cases, requires,
the corporate constitution, there is equivocal signalling of the purpose of such regulation.
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
[1904] 2 Ch 608.
Re KL Tractors Ltd (1961) 106 CLR 318, 338 (Fullagar J).
United Kingdom, Report of the Committee on Company Law Amendment, (Cmnd 6659, 1945), 12.
The real focus of complaint by an outside party against whom the doctrine of ultra vires is invoked, is therefore, the
doctrine of constructive notice.: W Paterson and H Ednie, Australian Company Law vol 1 (2nd ed, 1971) [20/10] .
For example, Re Edward Love & Co Pty Ltd [1969] VR 230 and Jon Beauforte (London) Ltd [1953] 2 WLR 465.
For example, City of Camberwell v Cooper [1930] VLR 289.
B Watson, Corporate Collapses Time to Reintroduce the Ultra Vires Rule? (1990) 8 Company and Securities Law
Journal 240.
R Grantham, Contracting with Companies: Rule of Law or Business Rules (1996) 17 New Zealand Universities
Law Review 39.
56
57
(iii) if it omits the word Limited from its name, it must have objects limiting
its activities to charitable (s 150).
If there are any special resolutions, the most likely effect is to modify the
replaceable rules, in which case the replaceable rules as modified will govern
the company.
2. Was the company incorporated between 1 January 1984 and 30 June 1998?
These companies were required to have a memorandum, although stated objects
and powers were optional. The ASIC records will reveal whether the company
passed a special resolution to repeal its former constitution (s 136). If so, then
the company has no constitution, and the replaceable rules apply, subject to the
same three complications for public companies. If the company still has its
memorandum and articles, then these documents will remain as the companys
constitution (s 1415). Similarly, if there are any special resolutions, they may
either repeal the existing constitution or modify the replaceable rules, in which
case the replaceable rules as modified will govern the company.
3. Was the company incorporated before 1 January 1984?
These companies were required to have a memorandum, with stated objects and
powers. The ASIC records will reveal whether the company has passed a special
resolution to repeal its former constitution (s 136). If so, then the company has
no constitution, and the replaceable rules apply, subject to the same three complications for public companies. If the company still has its memorandum and
articles, then this will remain the companys constitution (s 1415). Similarly, if
there are any special resolutions, they may either repeal the existing constitution,
or modify the replaceable rules, in which case the replaceable rules as modified
will govern the company.
The difficulty is that the constitution may not necessarily comprise the one document
that was submitted for incorporation, but now must be recreated from the special resolutions filed on the public record. In summary, if the company records indicate that it
once had a memorandum, the record must be checked to ensure that it has not been
repealed. If the company never had a constitution, or repealed it, the record must be
checked to ensure that the replaceable rules apply unmodified, or that a constitution has
not subsequently been reinstated.
Identifying the format of the constitution enables any stakeholder, whether outsider,
insider or the regulator, to ascertain whether the company has any self-imposed objects
or restriction on powers. The significance of the existence and contents of the constitution, in terms of its effects and indeed whether the outsider needs to know any details of
the companys constitution, is considered in the next part that examines the direct and
indirect effects of breaching the constitution.
The Explanatory Memorandum rather unhelpfully suggests that:
Acts which are contrary to restrictions on the companys exercise of powers will now be treated
in the same way as any other breach of a companys constitution.41
58
59
To test the effectiveness of the repeal of s 162(7) and (8), the direct consequences formerly listed in those sections were itemised as set out below.45
Under former s 162(7), the fact that a company contravened its constitution, or that
an officer was involved in the contravention, could only be asserted in the following situations:
1. In a prosecution of a person for an offence against the legislation (s 162(7)(c)):
although no longer explicit, it is intuitive that such a general effect survives.
Depending upon the nature of the offence, a directors disregard of the constitution may be relevant to the elements of that offence, as shown in Figure 5.1
below. Woodwards example of the breach of the statutory duty of good faith,46
remains valid under the current provision in s 181 that requires directors to act in
good faith and exercise powers for a proper purpose. The constitution contains
an expression of corporate purpose, so that a breach of the constitution may evidence lack of good faith, or improper purpose. A contravention of this provision
is an offence if accompanied by recklessness or intentional dishonesty: s184(1).
Figure 5.1 Breach of constitution and offences for breach of statutory duties
Breach of
constitution
Not an offence
No direct effect
May be evidence of
breach of good faith
duty s181
Reckless or
intentionally
dishones an
offence
s184
2. In an application for a management banning order under s 230 (s 162(7)(d)): former s 230 allowed the court to make an order prohibiting a person from managing a corporation where there were repeated breaches of the legislation.
Section 230 has been replaced, as a result of changes effected by the Corporate
Law Economic Reform Program Act 1999, with Part 2D.6 Disqualification
from managing corporations. Part 2D.6 still contains a power by the court to disqualify for repeated breaches of the legislation: s 206E. Woodward concluded
that the effect of the repeal of s 162 is to render irrelevant breaches of the consti45 See Woodward , supra n 35.
46 Ibid 166, see also Explanatory Memorandum, Company Law Review Act 1998, [8.4].
60
No a breach of
legislation for
disqualification
No direct
application
May also be
evidence of breach
of good faith duty
s181
Repeated breaches
may lead to
disqualification
Breach is a
civil penalty
may lead to
disqualification
s206E
s206C
61
other person) who is aware that directors are proposing to act in breach of
objects or restrictions in the companys constitution.50 The courts express
jurisdiction in the Corporations Act to grant an injunction is not available, as s
1324 provides that the remedy is available only for contraventions of the legislation. The passive wording of s 125, combined with the absence of any explicit
outcome, suggests that a breach of the corporate constitution does not, of itself,
contravene the legislation. However, this does not preclude the possibility that a
breach of the constitution will have relevance in other matters, leading to an
injunction for other contraventions, such as discussed above, breach of duty51 or
as an oppression remedy.
5. Proceedings by the company or by a member against present or former directors
(s 162(7)(g)): the Explanatory Memorandum asserts that this provision related to
the common law doctrine that a director of a company who causes the company
to act outside its powers is automatically liable to the company for any loss
resulting from the breach.52 No authority for this assertion is provided, and it
gives rise to two separate issues: first, was the effect of s 162(7)(g) confined to
the common law doctrine as identified, and secondly, in any event, the deletion
of s 162(7)(g) does not automatically repeal the operation of the common law
damages doctrine.
As to the first point, there may be some confusion generated by the Explanatory
Memorandum as to the relation between s 162(7)(g) and s 162(8). Former s 162(8) was
more explicit as to the damages effect. It provided:
Where, if subsection (7) had not been enacted, the Court would have power under section 1324 to
grant an injunction restraining a company, or an officer of a company, from engaging in particular conduct constituting a contravention [of the constitution] the Court may, order the company, or the officer, as the case may be to pay damages .
The terms of s 162(7)(g) are more general, permitting ultra vires actions to be asserted in any proceedings against directors by either the company or a member. There is
nothing to suggest that the proceedings are limited to damages. Referring to the directors duties example, if the ultra vires action of directors is being used as evidence of a
breach of the duty of good faith, or breach of the duty of care,53 then a whole range of
civil remedies, including damages, is available to the company. This remedy may be pursued by the company, or by a member on behalf of the company under Part 2F.1A (the
statutory derivative action). Further, members may sue in their own right if they are seeking to enforce the constitution as a contract (discussed below). Repeal of s 162(7)(g) does
not preclude ultra vires actions being raised indirectly if this relates to enforcement of
some other provision or duty on directors.
As to the second point, the Explanatory Memorandum is probably incorrect in
attributing the common law doctrine of damages for breach of constitution solely to
s 162(7)(g), as s 162(8) had a similar effect. As a breach of the constitution is no longer
a contravention of the Act, and as a contravention of the Act is a prerequisite to seeking
50
51
52
53
62
63
Given the restructured ultra vires provisions that now provide no direct consequence
for the breach of the constitution, the reference in the Explanatory Memorandum to the
relevance of winding up may be valid on two alternative bases, either by confining
Menhennitt Js finding to the context of the statutory provision then in place, (so that in
the absence of specified effects, lack of capacity or power may be a ground of winding
up), or by applying the substance of the judgment that loss of substratum is different to
ultra vires, but confirming the role of the constitution in identifying the general intention
and common understanding of the members.
Added to this list, also, must be the effects from former s 162(7)(g), that directors acting for non-constitutional purpose may still be raised in proceedings against directors, for
example, an action for damages for breaching the constitution, or for breaching their general law duties.
These effects are predominantly of an internal nature, and are unlikely to affect the
validity of an external contract entered into in breach of the constitution. The remedy of
winding up obviously has consequences for an outsider regarding the long-term effectiveness of any transaction. Similarly, the appointment of a receiver as a remedy for
oppression would usually trigger default and crystalisation under a floating charge. For
any other discretionary oppression remedy under s 233, presumably, the court would
limit the exercise of its discretionary power to situations of threatened or proposed
breaches of a companys constitution. Otherwise, an attack on executed contracts would
jeopardize the rights of third parties and reinstate a form of ultra vires.61 An outsider may
be directly affected by allegations of directors breach of fiduciary duty flowing from a
non-constitutional transaction, if they have participated in the breach of duty. The outsiders participatory liability is determined according to the law of constructive trusts.
(Discussed in Chapter 6).
The only immediate relevance of a contravention of the constitution is that it results
in a breach of the corporate contract. Section 140 confirms that the constitution applies
as the terms of a contract between:
the company and each member; and
the company and each officer; and
a member and each other member.
Further, as a restriction on the companys powers to amend its constitution, any
amendment that increases a members liability to the company is not valid unless they
agree in writing to be bound: s 140(2)(b).
Members may seek a remedy against the company under the general law in the form
of a declaration or injunction (but not damages)62 to enforce the constitution. Bryson J in
Darvall v North Sydney Brick & Tile Co Ltd (No. 4)63 confirmed that the former antiultra vires provisions (ss 6768 Companies Codes) operate to diminish the enforceability among the members and the company of the contractual obligations among them
arising out of the constitution.
61 Supported by Australian Corporations and Securities Commentary [33140].
62 Webb Distributors (Aust) Pty Ltd v Victoria (1993) 179 CLR 15.
63 (1988) 6 ACLC 1,095, 1104. A member was successful in having a dividend declaration declared invalid, on the
basis that the articles did not authorise a dividend in the form of assets (shares in a wholly owned subsidiary). Also,
Austin J in Ding v Sylvania Waterways Ltd (1999) 17 ACLC 531 declared that an alteration to the constitution to
impose a new levy was not binding under s 140(2). None of these disputes affected the rights of outsiders.
64
It is not accurate to describe a breach of the constitution, which only affects the internal contract between the company and members (s 140), as a direct effect. In the
absence of any explicit direct effects, and due to the repeal of former s 162, it is concluded that there are no direct consequences if a company contravenes its constitution.
The rewording of s 125 does not prevent enquiry as to possible indirect effects of the
breach of the corporate constitution. Figure 5.3 below summarises possible direct and
indirect effects. Whether the effects of the breach of the corporate constitution are direct
and indirect, they primarily have significance for internal parties only. The extent of the
risk to outsiders is assessed as minimal.
Figure 5.3 Comparison between direct effects and indirect effects of breach of the
companys constitution
Corporate
consitution
May contain
objects
May limit
powers
Actions
contravening
consitution
Direct
No explicit
effects
Indirect
Residual effects
of former
s162(7)(8)
Breach of
corporate
contract
s140
no direct effect
on outsiders
winding up
s461
proceedings
against
directors
oppression
s232
common law
action to sue
directors for
breach of
constitution
Breach of duty
ss180184
civil
remedies
Prosecution
of offences
(not s 180)
civil penalty
disqualification
orders s206C
The balance of the effects of a breach of the constitution would now have to be considered as indirect effects.
65
2. Dealing with No Liability companies that breach their stated objects adds another layer of compliance, so s 125(2) is not enough to protect outsiders from all
effects of a breach of the Act, particularly an injunction. It would seem that a
member or any other person whose interests are affected could seek an injunction under s 1324 for a breach of s 112(3), as this subsection specifically prohibits a No Liability company from breaching its constitution.
To the extent that s 112(4)66 only precludes letting contacts over the mining land
without a special resolution, breach of this restriction would not amount to a
breach of the constitution, but would be a procedural matter for the outsider to
assume under the statutory assumptions.
66
A company cannot be equated with an individual for all purposes, so some ad hoc
distinctions have been made with respect to corporate capacity, for example:
A company cannot act maliciously against its members. In Rogers v The Royal
College of Ophthalmologists,68 Young J posed the question that if a company
has all the powers of a natural person, and a natural person has the power to gossip about a friend, why does the company not have the power to do what this
company, unless restrained, intends to do? Ultimately, His Honour did not quite
answer this question, as he granted the injunction based on the finding that it
would be a fraud on the power for the board to exercise its powers maliciously.
Section 124 does not abrogate any restriction that a company cannot represent
itself in legal proceedings other than by a practitioner: Bay Marine Pty Ltd v
Clayton Country Properties Pty Ltd (No 2).69
It has been held under the common law that the doctrine of maintenance of share capital operates as a restriction on corporate capacity. For example, a company had no power
to:
Purchase its own shares: Trevor v Whitworth;70
Issue shares for less than their nominal value: Ooregum Gold Mining Company
of India v Roper;71
Issue shares in breach of the fundraising provisions: Australian Breeders Cooperative Society Ltd v Jones.72
These effects have now largely been overcome by the recent reforms. However, these
effects may be of little continuing relevance in any case, as s 124(1) is different to former s 161(1) in one significant respect. Former s 161(1) had effect subject to the
Corporations Law (former s 161(2)(a)); whereas this qualification to s 124(1) was deleted by the Company Law Review Act 1998. Although this simplification is not referred
to in the Explanatory Memorandum, the effect of this change is arguably more than just
simplification. Where certain contracts are illegal for companies, whether under the
Corporations Act itself, or due to some other statute or due to general law principles, the
outsider could not enforce them. In the case of the first category, contracts illegal under
the corporations legislation, former s 162(2)(a) operated as a limitation on a companys
capacity. A contract invalid by some other provision in the Corporations Law was not
saved by the grant of power in former s 161. For example, in Collingridge v Sontor Pty
Ltd,73 a contract had the effect of an unauthorised reduction of capital. Young J held the
contract was still void, despite former s 161:
68 (1991) 9 ACLC 1,497, 1,499.
69 (1987) 5 ACLC 38, 41 (Samuels JA). In that case, the Supreme Court Rules required companies to be represented
by a solicitor. The Court of Appeal (majority, Kirby P dissenting) held that the amendments to the Companies Codes
affecting capacity did not alter this rule.
70 (1887) 12 App Cas 409.
71 [1892] AC 125.
72 (1998) 16 ACLC 100.
73 Collingridge v Sontor Pty Ltd (1997) 16 ACLC 1,681.
67
In any event, s 161 does not appear to authorize the company to do something which under the
Corporations Law it cannot do. Thus, even after ss 160162, if a company purports to make an
agreement which involves an unauthorized reduction of capital the agreement is ultra vires and
void.
Contracts that contravene the Act are arguably no longer void since the Company
Law Review Act 1998 changes for two reasons:
1. s 124 is no longer expressly subject to the Act; and
2. the combined effect of the Company Law Review Act 1998 and the Corporate
Law Economic Reform Program Act 1999 simplifies many of the procedural limitations on companies in relation to share dealings, so that the procedures are no
longer required,74 and the provisions expressly preclude any void effect.75
2. Section 124(2): capacity not affected by the companys interests not being served
The drafting of s 124(2) has been simplified compared to its former equivalent, s 161(3).
A significant change is that instead of the companys capacity being unaffected by the
fact that the doing of an act by a company would not be, or is not, in its best interests,
s 124(2) now only refers to the companys interests are not served. The previous use
of the qualifier best suggests a connection with the fiduciary formulation of the best
interests of the company as a whole. The deletion of best relieves any future concerns
that s 124 is confined to precluding the void effect for transactions entered into in breach
of fiduciary duties. The more generic, unqualified interests denotes that all transactions
tainted by a non-corporate purpose, whether that be identified as a breach of the constitutional constraints, or identified by the fiduciary constraint, are not void. Accordingly,
the redrafted format of s 124(2) is more explicit in recognising abuse of power in all
its forms, and that such transactions are not to be treated as void. Hence, the former s
161(3) did not affect the outcome in ANZ Executors & Trustee Company Ltd v Qintex
Australia Ltd,76 nor would the redrafted s 124(2), as the case involved the issue of specific performance (i.e. courts discretion), not the issue of whether the transaction was
void ab initio.
Constitution optional
If outsiders are dealing with a company, it is unnecessary for the outsider to access the
companys constitution. For those who may still insist on this information, it may be a
frustrating task to identify the companys constitution. Companies registered after 1 July
74 For example, capital reductions, unlike in Collingridge, no longer require court authorisation to be valid, only shareholder approval: s 256B, s 256C.
75 For example, a capital reduction in breach of s 256B and s 256C does not affect the validity of any transactions: s
256D.
76 [1991] 2 Qd R 360.
68
1998 do not need a constitution, unless they are No Liability or charitable companies.
Table A articles have been repealed and the replaceable rules operate as the default rules
for all companies. Existing companies are able to repeal former memoranda and articles.
Constitutions may state objects and powers, but there are no explicit effects
The effect of s 125 is similar to former s 162 by expressly providing that the exercise of
a power is not invalid merely because it contravenes the constitution. However, the
streamlined s 125 may cause confusion as it no longer makes transparent the indirect, or
internal effects, of a breach of the constitution. Contravention of the constitution may
still be raised in related actions such as prosecutions of directors, actions for damages
against directors, oppression proceedings and winding up applications. Section 125 may
be misleading as it no longer recognises these effects, but they still exist.
The use of best interests in the former provision is too restricting, due to the strong
association between best interests of the company and directors fiduciary duty. The
new provision makes it clearer that capacity is not affected by any non-corporate purpose, not just directors breach of fiduciary duty.
69
the lender still has to identify the officers of the company and ascertain their
position.
The existence of a non-corporate purpose still operates as an inherent limitation
on officers authority. However, with optional constitutions, it is more difficult to
define non-corporate purpose. The judgment of McPherson J in ANZ
Executors and Trustee Co Ltd v Qintex Australia Ltd assists to some extent in
defining non-corporate purpose. His Honour said:
We cannot order a shareholder to require the company to execute the instrument of guarantee if to do so would involve infringing the essential principle that corporate powers and
funds may be used only for corporate purposes. For a commercial or trading company confronting insolvency to make a gift of its assets in derogation of the interests of creditors is
not to use powers or purposes for their corporate but to do so for a non-corporate purpose.
For a subsidiary now to execute an instrument rendering it liable for an indebtedness in the
order of $110 million cannot possibly be for its benefit.78
70
5. If the abuse of power relates to a fiduciary breach by directors, the extent of the
threat depends to some extent on the scope of the statutory assumption as to
proper performance of duties, discussed in chapter 6. Otherwise, a contract will
be voidable unless the outsider is a purchaser for value without knowledge of the
fiduciary breach. Knowledge is a critical concept here, as degrees of actual and
constructive knowledge by the outsider may also trigger constructive trust liability.
More comprehensive guidelines to the conduct of transactions, taking into account
the indoor management rule and all statutory reforms are offered in the concluding chapter, chapter 10. To conclude this chapter, several points are made:
1. The outsider needs to identify the corporate party, by sighting a certificate of registration. This confirms that the Corporations Act applies to the entity, and that it
is actually registered. Pre-registration contracts are enforced under Part 2B.3.
2. If the company is regulated under the Corporations Act, there is also an issue in
determining which version of the law applies. As outlined above, there have
been three stages of statutory reform. The first of July 1998 is a critical date
because that is when major change occurred. However, the substance of the
change is not significant so as to affect these concluding remarks.
3. The outsider needs to know the number of and identity of current corporate officers.
4. The outsider does not need to sight current nor former constitution. If the outsider currently has those documents, it amounts to knowledge of the restrictions
on powers, or object, if any. However, knowledge of the constitution is not
enough to make any contract voidable.
5. The outsider may be inconvenienced if the company is involved in litigation
over disputes with compliance with the constitution. Such disputes may affect
the viability of the company and cause inconvenience to outsiders, but will not
affect transactions. Whether such litigation occurs is beyond the control of an
outsider.
6. Similarly, the outsider will be inconvenienced if the company is involved in disputes with the regulator for breaching its constitution, for example, a No
Liability company may be required to change status for breaching its restriction
to mining purposes, but will not affect transactions.
Chapter 6
The Statutory Assumptions: Section 129
The Content of the Assumptions
This chapter examines in detail the scope of the assumptions available to outsiders. The
drafting of the current assumptions in s 129 reflects a new, more streamlined style compared to former s 164(3). Section 129(8) gives specific instructions as to their application: the assumptions that may be made under this section apply for the purposes of this
section. This statement of application has three effects:
1. Each of these assumptions is separate and discrete: Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd
v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd.1 This means that just because an outsider
cannot rely on a particular assumption, he or she is not prevented from relying
on the other assumptions.
2. The assumptions apply only where the qualifying circumstances in s 128 have
been met (discussed in chapter 5) and not for other purposes of the Corporations
Act.
3. The outsider does not have to prove that they actually made the assumption to
rely on it.
These are examined below.
First, as the Explanatory Memorandum states, the assumptions are intended to be
cumulative.2 This avoids the awkward drafting apparent from earlier iterations of the rule
that required internal cross-referencing. A similar effect had been achieved under the previous assumptions, which had been held to be discrete assumptions, so that if access to
one failed, then others were still available.3 For example, in Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd
v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd,4 the outsider could not assume compliance with the
constitution, as it had actual knowledge of non-compliance, but that did not prevent it
from relying on the assumption as to due sealing.
However, the reverse is not the case, as Horrigan states, it is unlikely that outsiders
may actually subsume the assumptions.5 That is, if a specific assumption cannot be relied
upon, then the outsider cannot fall back on the more general. For example, where a sealed
document has not been attested by two officers as required by the sealing assumption, the
general assumption as to compliance with the constitution will not save it.6 Brennan J,
1
2
3
4
5
6
72
in refusing special leave to appeal in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd,7 said that the
applicability of the first assumption to a dispute over the attestation of the seal is a doubtful proposition, having regard to the particular assumption as to sealing.
Second, the assumptions only apply to that section, meaning that they operate only
as procedural assumptions. This confirms the procedural regularity purpose of the rule.
As expressed by Mahoney JA in Story v Advance Bank Australia Ltd, the assumptions do
not validate the transaction, but rather prevent the company from relying on the invalidity.8 So, for the procedural assumptions to apply elsewhere, specific provision is made,
for example, s 442F.9 In addition, this means that the assumptions are only available to
counter assertions against the company. In Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd v
Minister for Transport and Communications,10 it was held that the former s 164(1) allows
the assumptions to be made only in relation to assertions by the company that they are
not correct. Where an assertion of non-compliance with a companys constitution is made
by a third party, the statutory provisions do not apply and the common law Rule in
Turquands case and its limitations will still be operative.
Third, it is not necessary for an outsider to actually make these assumptions in order
to rely upon them. In Lyford v Media Portfolio Ltd,11 a company argued that evidence
showed that the making of the assumptions would have been contrary to the usual practice of the outsider in making loans, therefore the assumptions could not be made.
Nicholson J dismissed this argument on the basis that the statutory rule prevents a company from asserting that any of the assumptions are incorrect. This is so, whether or not
the assumptions were actually made by the outsider:
It is the assertion which brings into application the provisions and not proof that assumptions
were in fact made. 12
The new statutory version of the indoor management rule has been reworded and
restructured, prompting a comparison between new ss 128129 with the former sections.
The previous six assumptions that the outsider was entitled to make are now restructured
into seven in s 129,13 with some modification consequent upon other Company Law
Review Act 1998 innovations. The utility of each assumption is analysed below.
Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACLC 232, 236.
Story v Advance Bank Australia Ltd (1993) 11 ACLC 629, 640.
Section 442F provides that the assumptions are available where the administrator has control of the company.
(1989) 7 ACLC 525.
(1989) 7 ACLC 271.
(1989) 7 ACLC 271, 281.
See Appendix I where the provisions are set out in full.
73
cised. This assumption retains the common law distinction between procedural regularity and substantive exercise of powers. Accordingly, the principles discussed in chapter 3
from Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General are still correct where it was
asserted that potential authority cannot be treated as actual authority, merely because the
companys constitution confers the power to grant authority.14
However, in another sense, it appears to have a wider operation because the Rule in
Turquands case was subject to the doctrine of constructive notice, which has now been
abolished by s 130. Outsiders are no longer taken to be aware of provisions in the constitution. This enables outsiders to make the assumption that the company has complied
with its constitution even though the constitution has not been complied with and this
would have been apparent to the outsider had it been read. For example, if the constitution contains a restriction on the power of the board to borrow in excess of a certain sum,
an outsider who is unaware of this provision is not taken to know of this restriction. In
fact, the outsider can assume that the board has the power to borrow an amount greater
than the specified amount.
This broader operation of the statutory assumption arising from the abolition of the
doctrine of constructive notice has significant implications. It places an outsider who is
unwilling to read the companys constitution in a stronger position than one who makes
an effort to read the constitution. This may sometimes unfairly advantage an outsider
who deliberately dons blinkers in circumstances where there are grounds for suspicion
that an officer or agent of a company is acting in an unauthorised manner. This situation
is addressed by the limitations to the assumptions contained in s 128(4).
The operation of this assumption depends upon the wording of the particular constitution involved. Further, the existence of the specific assumptions in the following subsections suggests a very limited role for this first assumption, but a case such as Belven
Enterprises Pty Ltd v Lydham Pty Ltd 15 shows that it can provide a valuable fallback.
74
al matters covered by the rule, whereas in other cases, such as Rama Corporation Ltd v
Proved Tin and General Investments Ltd,18 a failure to properly appoint a managing
director was treated as a substantive matter of delegation that could not be assumed.
Now, the circumstances of appointment are irrelevant provided the identity of the officer
is revealed on the public record.
An early illustration of this assumption, relying on former s 164(3)(b), was Re Madi
Pty Ltd.19 A subsidiary company entered into a deed of guarantee in which it guaranteed
repayment of loans made to its holding company. The company seal was affixed to the
deed attested by a director and a person who signed as secretary. The company later
claimed that it was not bound by the deed of guarantee because the person who signed
as secretary had not been appointed despite having been named as one of two company
secretaries at the relevant time. The company argued that it was not bound because the
seal had not been affixed in accordance with its constitution. The Victorian Supreme
Court held that the company was bound because the person had been named as secretary
in the annual return lodged under the Companies Code equivalent of s 345. This amounted to a holding out by the company that the named person was its secretary and thereby
authorised to affix the companys seal.
One of the flaws of the former provision was that it was more specific as to the source
of ASIC information. Former s 164(3)(b) required the outsider to make the assumption
based only on the information contained in the latest register of officers (former s 242)
or annual return (former s 335).20 Where there was inconsistency in the information available to the outsider, such as in Dawson v Westpac Banking Corporation,21 the outsider
ought to only rely on the prescribed sources.
ANZ Ltd v Australian Glass and Mirrors Pty Ltd22 involved the issue of inaccurate
public records. The bank was faced with conflicting information regarding the officers
of the company. Kaye J confirmed that the bank, acting reasonably, is not required to
make any additional searches of the public record. A company search by the banks solicitors revealed the officers of the company to be a solicitor, Semmel, and his secretary
Sullivan. In reality, the company was incorporated as a shelf company and sold to
clients, Mr and Mrs Vasiljevic. Mr and Mrs Vasiljevic were already customers of the
bank. When they purchased the company, they applied for loans in the companys name.
Security documents were executed under seal and signed by Mr and Mrs Vasiljevic. The
bank queried the information on the statutory registers. Under the statutory rule, the bank
was entitled to treat Semmel and Sullivan as directors. Ultimately, the bank accepted the
document signed by the Vasiljevics by relying on further information and representations.
18 [1952] 2 QB 147.
19 (1987) 5 ACLC 847.
20 P Lipton, The Authority of Agents and Officers to Act for a Company: Legal Principles (1996) 34, argued strongly in
favour of expanding former s 164(3)(b).
21 (1989) 7 ACLC 1,175, 1179, at first instance, (Bryson J): if there were anomalies or doubts created by documents
which were not filed primarily for the purpose of notifying to the public the identities of office-holders, but referred
to such matters incidentally, such as annual returns, the latter documents should not have been relied on. The case
pre-dated s 68A. This issue was not raised on appeal.
22 (1991) 9 ACLC 702, 707.
75
National Australia Bank v Sparrow Green Pty Ltd23 is a case that involves a reverse
situation of conflicting information. The bank in that case checked the ASIC register and
noted that the directors of the borrower company were Mr Green and Mr Sparrow.
However, the bank accepted the documents signed under the seal of the company attested by Green only, as sole director. Sparrows resignation did not actually occur until
some six months after the transaction. However, the bank accepted the representations
by Green and the companys accountant that Sparrow intended to resign; and did not follow up on its request to view documentary evidence of Sparrows resignation at the time
of the transaction. The Court held that the bank had actual knowledge that there were
two directors of the company, therefore it could not assume (pursuant to s164 (3) (b)) due
sealing by Green only.
The recent case of Myers v Aquarell Pty Ltd24 is a good illustration of the paramouncy of the public record. In that case, the companys constitution required it to have two
directors. The lender sought to rely on a document sealed by the company, attested by
one director who signed as sole director. Regardless of the constitution, Gillard J held
that where there was only one director on the public record, the company could legitimately operate as a sole director company. Unlike Sparrow Green, the lender had no
actual knowledge of the companys constitution.
The expanded provision referring to information on the public record makes searching superficially easy for the outsider. It allows reliance to be placed on the electronic
search obtained from the ASIC as to the identity of officers. It does not however resolve
the problem of conflicting information. Loxton alerts to the risk of a transcription error
by the ASIC and a consequent judicial holding that the officer is not properly appointed.25 Where there may be a mistake in the public records, revealed for example if the outsider obtains or retrieves hard copies of the annual return or return of directors, the outsider has two choices:
1. rely on an expedient interpretation of s 129(2) that preserves the paramountcy of
the public record to prevent the company from asserting the contrary; or
2. as in ANZ v Glass & Mirrors and Sparrow Green, request confirmatory information from the company to form the basis of a representation and apparent authority.
An interpretation of s 129(2) that preserves the efficacy of the ASIC records is of
course the preferable one from the outsiders point of view.
By referring to customary powers and duties, s 129(2) enacts the common law rules
of customary authority, set out in chapter 2.
The current s 129(2) is based on former s 164(3)(b), but is not identical. A change in
wording is evident by the phrase similar company in s 129(2). Former s 164(3)(b)
referred to the customary authority of an officer exercised by a company carrying on a
business of the kind carried on by the company. This change in wording highlights the
second flaw in the drafting of former s 164(3)(b), as the phrase company carrying on a
business of the kind carried on by the company unnecessarily limited the scope of the
23 (1999) 17 ACLC 1665.
24 [2000] VSC 429.
25 D Loxton, One Step Forward, One Step Back: The Effect of Corporate Law Reform on Procedures in Dealing with
Companies Borrowing or Giving Guarantees (1999) 10 Journal of Banking and Finance Law & Practice 24, 34.
76
customary authority of an officer. This change in wording in s 129(2) overcomes the narrower application that involved a consideration of the kind of business carried on by the
company. (Curiously, this narrow application was not evident under the former s
164(3)(c) assumption.) It was unclear how the nature of the business carried on by a company affected the customary authority of the companys officers. Thus it was difficult to
determine how customary authority under former 164(3)(c) differed, if at all, from that
under former s 164(3)(b).
The kind of business carried on by a company may have been a reference to the size
of the company and may have allowed for a distinction to be made between tightly-held,
small proprietary companies effectively run by one director and listed public companies
which usually have large boards which operate in a collegiate manner. The customary
authority of a director of a small company may be regarded as broader than the customary authority of an individual director of a large public company.
According to our discussion in chapter 2, customary authority is defined according
to a number of factors, including the size of the enterprise, the purpose of the company
and why it was incorporated. Where a company has a limited purpose of merely holding
a particular asset, the customary authority of a managing director may be considerably
narrower than would be the case where the company is engaged in regular business. A
consideration of the kind of business carried on by a company may also refer to the usual
business activities of the company. If a managing director enters into a contract on behalf
of the company that falls outside and is unrelated to the usual business activities of the
company, then the assumption may not apply.26
As both former s 164(3)(b) and former s 164(3)(c) relied on the concept of customary authority, it is entirely unclear as to why only s 164(3)(b) contained the business of
the kind carried on by the company phrase and whether it was intended to cause the second and third assumptions to have dissimilar operations. The Explanatory Memorandum
to the Company Law Review Act 1998 states that the change to similar company is
merely intended to be a plainer version of the former provision,27 so the uncertainty
remains in relation to any disputes occurring prior to the Company Law Review Act 1998.
77
78
A common thread in both Brick & Pipe and Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New
Zealand34 to the lenders success in preventing a corporate borrower asserting lack of
authority was the courts willingness to hold that the dominant manager, acting with
acquiescence of the board, had the actual authority to bind the company.35 The courts
have accepted that this conferral of authority may be informal and based on a course of
dealings between the outsider and the lender.36
Other cases on the statutory rule show that that the outsider failed to prove that the
officer they were dealing with had actual or apparent authority either through acquiescence, or by a representation emanating from the company. For example:
In Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd,37 the bank portrayed Mr Doyle, the
head of the Doyle group in that case as a dominant persona. Mr Doyle represented his son to be the secretary of Fiberi Pty Ltd for the purpose of attesting
the seal on a third party mortgage. In fact his spouse, Ms Arnhold, was the secretary, and she had no knowledge of the representation or the transaction. The
bank relied on the representation, but was subsequently unable to prove that Mr
Doyle had the actual authority of Fiberi to make it. Allen J at first instance38 distinguished Brick & Pipe on the basis that there was no knowledge or acquiescence by the board of Fiberi to Mr Doyles activities.
In Sixty-Fourth Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd,39 Michael and Lisa Kandy
attested the seal of the company on a third party mortgage, whereas Lisas parents, the Tafts, were the officers. The Tafts had no knowledge of the mortgage.
Macquarie Bank, in dealing with the Kandys, relied on previous dealings with
other companies in the Kandy group, the Kandy group solicitors, (who were not
retained to act for Sixty-Fourth Throne) and had no direct contact with the Tafts.
The bank, through its solicitors, obtained a company search showing that the
Tafts were directors, but never pursued this information and did not check the
sealed documents in relation to it.40 Hedigan J at first instance, held that the case
was similar to Fiberi, in that the only representations as to Michael Kandys
authority came from third parties who had no authority to make the representations on behalf of the company.41
Nathan J in Pyramid Building Society v Scorpion Hotels Pty Ltd42 found the facts
of that case dissimilar to Brick & Pipe, as Mr Lewis, the dominant manager,
had assumed authority but was not invested with it. Lewis had embarked on a
course of conduct designed to exclude the other board members from the affairs
of the company. He never presented himself in company with the other directors,
34 (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
35 See Table 5.2 in chapter 5 for a summary of the comparison of the relevant cases. For another example outside the
banking/finance application, see Greater Pacific Investments Pty Ltd v ANI Ltd (1996) 39 NSWLR 143 which was
also a successful case for an outsider where the court held that the dominant manager by acquiescence (Brian Yuill)
had actual authority to bind the company.
36 Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1992) 10 ACLC 1,557, 1,569 (Allen J).
37 (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
38 (1992) 10 ACLC 1, 557, 1,5701,571. The argument was not pursued on appeal.
39 [1998] 3 VR 133.
40 [1998] 3 VR 133. This finding of fact about the search was outlined in Tadgell Js judgment on appeal at 148.
41 (1996) 14 ACLC 670, 674. The argument was not pursued on appeal.
42 (1996) 14 ACLC 679.
79
in the market place or anywhere else, as having dominion over them.43 There was
a subsidiary argument that the directors had authorised Lewis to negotiate bridging finance with another bank, so that that authority carried over to the current
transaction. Nathan J rejected this carry over argument, and in any event,
found that Lewis had exceeded his authority in that transaction.
The facts of National Australia Bank v Sparrow Green Pty Ltd44 provided the
bank with some conflicting information that it chose to resolve by relying on the
director who assumed control of the company. The bank knew that there was
only one director, Green, who was managing and controlling the company, but
the bank also knew from the companys constitution and from the ASIC search
that the company was required to have a second director and that Sparrow occupied that position. The bank relied on assertions by both Green and the companys accountant that Sparrow was resigning, but the bank was not entitled to rely
on that assertion for two reasons. First, Green was only a director, and did not
have the actual authority to make a representation about another officers capacity, nor was there any other evidence that anyone else had the companys actual
authority to make the representation. Secondly, the bank knew that, in any
event, the borrower company was required to have two directors and that there
were two directors shown on the public record.
The lenders in these cases were primarily operating on their own mistaken belief and
fooled by the dishonesty or delusions of the individuals purporting to exercise corporate
power. The mistaken reliance on the dominant officer was fuelled, in cases such as
Fiberi and Scorpion, by the lenders failure to check from ASIC records the officers
identities. Even as in Sparrow Green, where the bank checked the ASIC registers, it was
uncommercial to accept the risk that it could rely on a single directors representation
that the public record was inaccurate. In practice, this confirms the desirability of securing a directors resolution, which is not commercially unreasonable to ask for in all
finance transactions.
The apparently contrary results in this series of cases exposes the statutory rule to
criticism. It exposes an outsider to uncertainty where someone who an outsider reasonably believes has authority makes a representation but it turns out that the representation
was not made by someone with actual authority to manage the business of the company either generally or in respect of those matters to which the contract relates.45 It is
often almost impossible for an outsider to discover who has actual authority to make representations for the company.
An obvious measure to enhance the outsiders protection under s 129(3) is to extend
the assumption to cases where a representation is made by someone with actual or
apparent authority to manage the business of the company either generally or in respect
of the particular contract concerned. This extension meets the original purpose of the
statutory amendment, which was stated to ensure that a person who deals in good faith
with persons who can be reasonably supposed to have the authority of the company
43 (1996) 14 ACLC 679, 694.
44 (1999) 17 ACLC 1665.
45 Freeman and Lockyer v Buckhurst Park Properties (Mangal) Ltd [1964] 2 QB 480, 5056 (Diplock LJ).
80
should be protected against later [claims] by the company that the person purporting to
act for it lacked authority.46
Further, the model for s 129 is the National Companies Bill 1975 para 34(2)(c) and
s 142(2) of the Ghana Companies Code.47 These provisions extend to a person represented by the company (acting through its members in general meeting, through its directors or through its principal executive officer) to be an officer or agent of the company.
This explains more fully whose representations may be attributed to the company for the
purpose of a holding out by the company. It would appear to encompass a representation made by a de facto managing director.
An extension to s 129(3) must be balanced against the purpose of the rule in its
entirety. That is, the rule is a procedural convenience. To allow outsiders to assume that
an officer has authority to make representations plunges into a matter of substantive law.
Regardless of the scope of the assumption, an outsider is still subject to the disentitling
circumstances of the exceptions. To take any of the examples where the outsider lost the
holding out assumption, would the outcome have been different under an extended
assumption in s 129(3)?
For example, Fiberi was primarily decided on the disentitling circumstances.
Accordingly, regardless of the scope of the s 129(3) assumption, the bank was not entitled to assume that the purported secretary who signed the seal was an officer of the
company, because they had knowledge that this was not accurate.
In Scorpion and Sixty-Fourth Throne, there was no representation by a director that
another person had authority. These were both cases where purported officers made representations about there own authority, unsubstantiated by any conduct or acquiescence
from the board.
In Sparrow Green, even had the bank been able to rely on the representations of one
director, it had actual knowledge to the contrary. In relation to all of the recent cases
examining s 129(3) then, an expanded assumption would not have altered the outcome.
This may suggest that the balance between the assumption and the disentitling circumstances, as they currently stand, is about right.
Finally, the statutory rule is more readily available than common law apparent
authority, in the sense that actual reliance is not necessary. In order for agency by apparent authority to arise at common law, it must be shown that the outsider was induced by
the representation to enter into the contract and in fact relied upon it.48
It appears that the common law rules of agency as stated in the Freeman and Lockyer
case may have been modified by the s 129(3) assumption. In Lyford v Media Portfolio
Ltd,49 it was held that an outsider need not have actually made the assumptions contained
in former s 164(3) in order to rely upon them. A company is prevented under s 128(1)
from asserting that the assumptions are incorrect. It is not relevant that the outsider actually made the assumptions, as ...the section talks only of assumptions which may be
made and need not necessarily reflect the actual assumptions made by the parties seek46 Explanatory Memorandum, Companies and Securities Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 1983, [188].
47 D Obadina, Irregular, Intra-vires Corporate Transactions and the Protection of Third Parties in the UK and the
Commonwealth The Case for Reform: Part 1 (1997) 18 The Company Lawyer 45, 51.
48 Freeman and Lockyer v Buckhurst Park Properties (Mangal) Ltd [1964] 2 QB 480, 505.
49 (1989) 7 ACLC 271.
81
ing to rely on s 68A [now s 129].50 This appears to dispense with the common law
requirement that the outsider must rely on the representation in order to hold the company bound by the acts of an agent who was held out by the company to be an officer or
agent.
An alternative interpretation that may impede the efficiency of the statutory rule is
that while s 128(1) prevents an assertion that the s 129(3) assumption is incorrect, the
assumption itself may not operate if a holding out by the company requires reliance by
the outsider on the representation in accordance with the common law principles. There
is no authority for this restrictive approach.
82
be deprived of the protective assumptions where the making of such assumptions is reasonable. The limitations contained in s 128(4) are intended to operate in cases where the
outsider does not act in good faith.
Accordingly, the statutory rule still does not relieve the outsider of the obligation to
verify both the identity and the position of the person with whom they are dealing. If they
are dealing with only one representative of the company, in the absence of a written contract, the company may not be bound by the contract if the person is merely a single
director with limited customary authority. If the outsider is relying on a written document
that purports to have been executed by the company, then there are additional procedural assumptions available in ss 129(5) and (6).
83
In analysing the derivation of this assumption and the judgment of Dixon J, Carroll55
concludes that former s 164(3)(f) means that the companys officers and agents may be
assumed to have duly performed the tasks and duties assigned to them by the company
under the constitution or by other means, that is, the first interpretation. ODonovan also
concludes, there is no clear authority that a bank can rely upon [former] s 164(3)(f) to
argue that it is entitled to assume that the directors have properly performed their fiduciary duties.56 Horrigan57 interprets the section as containing shades of grey: s 129(4)
does not operate as a catch all provision, as the fiduciary duty to act in the interests of
the company as a whole is a broad concept embracing many discrete things. In 1998
he acknowledged that the interpretation of s 129(4) is still undetermined and hotly
contested.58
The conservative view of former s 164(3)(f) favoured a tasks interpretation, and
there are several factors that support that narrow interpretation:
53 Explanatory Memorandum, Corporations Bill 1988, [570].
54 (1937) 58 CLR 112, 142. The plaintiff was unable to discharge the burden of proof that the defendant directors
acted in bad faith, so the transaction was not voidable.
55 R Carroll, Proper Performance of Duties by Company Officers: The Statutory Assumption in s 164(3)(f) (1995) 69
Australian Law Journal 200.
56 J ODonovan, Corporate Benefit in Relation to Guarantees and Third Party Mortgages (1996) 24 Australian
Business Law Review 126, 130.
57 B Horrigan, Third Party Securities Theory, Law and Practice in J Greig and B Horrigan (eds), Enforcing
Securities (1994) 275277.
58 B Horrigan, Busting Guarantees! [1998] 7 National Law Review [20].
84
1. The indoor management rule is a common law rule of procedural regularity only.
It would be an unintended consequence of the statutory enactment if it created a
substantial new limb to the rule that effectively subsumes the whole area of fiduciary duties and equitable remedies.59
2. Based on the interpretation of the words used, the assumption refers to performance of duties. This term is more appropriately applied in a procedural context. Substantive fiduciary duties are not performed.
3. Ipp J in Vrisakis v ASC60 (in examining the statutory duty of diligence, which
also refers to performance of duties) referred to duties as meaning the tasks
undertaken by directors and these may vary from one company to another. This
is different from a duty that is owed to the company, which remains constant.
Essentially, His Honour is distinguishing a matter of fact (what are the tasks
assigned to that office?) from the matter of law (what are the obligations that
attach to that office and the standards of conduct expected?). A rule of procedural regularity is confined to assuming matters of fact.
The advantage of the narrow tasks interpretation is that it refers both to matters set
out in the constitution and to statutory obligations. As for the constitutional tasks, this
approach appears consistent with the other assumptions of the statutory rule, as it represents a part of the Rule in Turquands case, enabling a presumption of regularity in the
internal workings of the company. It appears to complement the first assumption that
refers to compliance with the constitution and therefore applies to conferral of authority
by the constitution. This interpretation at least enabled an outsider to seek the protection
of the assumption in former s 164(3)(f) where the companys officers or agents act
beyond authority conferred on them by the company and purport to affix the company
seal.
In addition, the tasks interpretation covers matters of procedural regulation that
apply independently of the constitution. The assumption is suggesting that the outsider
does not have to read the constitution, nor the statute, to check for compliance. For an
example under the current legislation, the replaceable rules confer upon directors the
power to call a general meeting under ss 249C and 249CA. However, s 249D imposes on
directors the duty (in the sense of task) of co-operating with a request from members to
hold a general meeting. Even though it is not a matter under the constitution, the outsider
can access s 129(4) to assume that the directors performed their duties when the general
meeting was held.
To continue to impose this tasks definition on the current assumption in s 129(4)
is at least of some utility to outsiders, although it confines the ambit of s 129(4) to that
of an adjunct to the main Turquand rule in s 129(1).
Balancing the tasks view, however, we can construct an argument in favour of
reading into s 129(4) the widest possible ambit, that is, that it includes both tasks and
duties, including general law duties of good faith and care. Since Carrolls article, there
has been additional case law and commentary on former s 164(3)(f) and s 129(4).
Further, the wording of the former provision, as analysed by Carroll is slightly different
59 L Law and J Pascoe, Financiers and Constructive Trusts: Protection Versus Liability (2000) 11 Australian Journal
of Corporate Law 219, 229.
60 (1993) 11 ACLC 763, 767.
85
86
taking as bona fide purchaser for value without notice. There is support for the
view that the voidability of contracts is not affected by the statutory enactment
of the indoor management rule.67 Additionally, the outsider may incur personal
liability if they participate in the breach of duty. The principles that give rise to
participatory liability are discussed next, and are not merely subsumed by the
indoor management rule. Additionally, the rule applies subject to actual and constructive knowledge (i.e suspicion) exceptions in s 128(4).
The reference to duties in s 129(4) also probably includes the full range of statutory duties under ss 180184 and Chapter 2E, the general law fiduciary duties and, in an
insolvency context, the duties to creditors. The duty of directors to consider the interests
of creditors (as a whole, not individually) has been developed considerably within the
ambit of the fiduciary duties.68 At the same time, the statutory duty to prevent insolvent
trading has been expanded.69 Further recent developments have also resulted in a wider
duty to exercise care, diligence and skill.70
Accordingly, the real issue of substance for the outsider should not be the scope of
the assumption itself, but the ambit of the disentitling circumstances. The widest interpretation is therefore the more logical view.
87
2. Whilst the contract may remain enforceable, the outsider may become indirectly
affected, or at least inconvenienced, by internal disputes. (For example, shareholder action for oppression remedy or winding up, or where the company sues
its directors for damages or account of profits for breaches of directors duties.)
3. The outsider may be involved in the breach of duty to the extent that they incur
personal liability as constructive trustee, so that the outsider takes the property or
funds the subject of the transaction as trustee for the original beneficiaries of the
duty.
Under this assumption, it remains for us to examine the threat to the outsider of constructive trustee liability. The Corporations Act does not directly prevent the imposition
of a constructive trust on the outsider. There are provisions in the Corporations Act that
alter or modify the common law in regulating the conduct of directors. It is often provided that such legislation is to be read as being in addition to other provisions of the
Corporations Act or any other rule of common law or equity. Compliance with the legislation is not taken to relieve directors of their statutory or fiduciary duties.73 In the statutory indoor management rule, there is no such statement. However, it would be preferable to give full effect to the enforcement of the duties of directors and other officers and
expressly make the s 129(4) assumption subject to common law and equitable principles.
The rules of constructive trusts show how equitable principles dealing with the duties
of directors may affect the relationship of an outsider with the company and its directors.
These rules probably overlap with and are in addition to the statutory indoor management
rule and affect the balance of policy considerations referred to above in Northside
Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General.74
For example, in both Northside and Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd,75 a director affixed the company seal in an unauthorised manner for the purpose of mortgaging
the sole major asset of the company in order to secure loans that were for the benefit of
the director and of no benefit to the company. This probably constituted a breach of fiduciary duty by the director even though the courts did not refer to their fiduciary duties or
to the equitable remedies that may be sought to enable the company to set aside a contract with an outsider.
The principles relevant for when an outsider is liable as a constructive trustee and
liable to pay compensation for loss arising from a breach of duty, evolved from the case
of Barnes v Addy.76 This case laid down two principles in order for a stranger to be liable
as a constructive trustee. Either the trust property must be received with the requisite
degree of knowledge of the breaches of duty by the directors; or there must also have
been participation in the breaches or the taking of an advantage for the strangers own
benefit with the requisite knowledge.
This raises the question of what constitutes knowledge on the part of the third
party. In Baden Delvaux and Lecuit v Societe Generale,77 (discussed in chapter 4) Peter
73 For example, s 179 expressly recognises that other duties under legislation and other laws (including the general
law) are imposed on directors in addition to the statutory directors duties imposed under Part 2D.1. See for other
examples: s 230 in relation to financial benefits to related parties (Chapter 2E) and s 260E in relation to the authorisation of financial assistance (Part 2J.4).
74 (1991) 8 ACLC 611. See Chapter 3.
75 (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
76 (1874) 9 Ch App 244.
77 [1983] BCLC 325.
88
89
These five categories of knowledge ought to be considered as a scale of impropriety, with category (i), actual knowledge, being the most subjective, up to category (v)
that approaches an objective standard similar to negligence. In Royal Brunei Airlines Sdn
Bhd v Tan84 the Privy Council held that the Baden five-point knowledge scale is relevant
in cases of knowing receipt.
The application of the knowledge scale has recently been examined by several
Australian commentators,85 as well as extensively addressed by Hansen J in Koorootang
Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd86 and Kirby P in Equiticorp Finance Ltd v
Bank of New Zealand.87 In particular, Lodge discusses in detail the application of Baden
in other cases, including Australian, English and New Zealand authorities. Her analysis
of Barnes v Addy concludes that the classification of knowledge ought not to be considered as a rigid scale, but as overlapping categories. This analysis however does not conclude on the vexed issue of the application of category (v), knowledge of circumstances
which would have put an honest and reasonable person on inquiry. Category (v) knowledge is most controversial, because it imports an objective standard similar to negligence, which has a profound effect on liability. If category (v) is sufficient, then it places
an active duty on outsiders to enquire into the possibility of the directors fiduciary
breach when the company enters into a transaction. This approaches the undesirable
effect of inadvertent liability. Scaling back from category (v) approaches more a standard
of intention, which appeals more to the purpose of constructive trustee liability.
Not all of the Australian cases on recipient liability directly address the Baden scale,
but it is used as a reference point in discussing the main Australian cases, below:
Ninety Five Pty Ltd v Banque Nationale de Paris88
Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand89
Sixty-Fourth Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd90
Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd.91
These cases contribute to the question of knowledge and as they are not included in
Lodges analysis, they are examined in detail below.
1. Ninety Five Pty Ltd v Banque Nationale de Paris
The decision in Ninety Five Pty Ltd v Banque Nationale de Paris is one of the first cases
in Australia to impose recipient liability following the High Court decision on participatory liability in Consul Development. It is a more unusual case than the other three listed above, because the bank was a true stranger to the transaction, in the sense that there
was no direct contractual relationship between the bank and the plaintiff company.
84 [1995] 2 AC 378.
85 Including; P Finn, The Liability of Third Parties for Knowing Receipt or Knowing Assistance in D Waters (ed),
Equity Fiduciaries and Trusts, (1993) 200; S Barkehall Thomas, Knowing Receipt: Options and Issues for the High
Court, in Perspectives on Banking Finance and Credit Law, ed W Weerasooria (1999); Also M Bryan, Cleaning
Up After Breaches of Fiduciary Duty the Liability of Banks and Other Financial Institutions as Constructive
Trustees (1995) 7 Bond Law Review 67; J Pascoe, Equitable Remedies in Cases of Misapplied Company Funds:
Recent Developments (1996) 14 Company and Securities Law Journal 393; and M Lodge, Barnes v Addy: The
Requirements of Knowledge (1995) 23 Australian Business Law Review 25.
86 [1998] 3 VR 16.
87 (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
88 [1988] WAR 132.
89 (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
90 [1998] 3 VR 133.
91 [1998] 3 VR 16.
90
In that case, the bank lent money to another company, Bicton Investments Pty Ltd,
for the purpose of acquiring the issued share capital in the plaintiff company. Prior to the
acquisition, the plaintiff company was part of the Metro group. It was the practice in the
group for subsidiaries to deposit surplus funds with the holding company, at a commercial interest rate. Accordingly, on settlement of the share transaction, the plaintiff company received a cheque drawn from the bank on Bictons account for $3 million. In addition, the plaintiff company received cheques for $1.3 million, from its former holding
company, to discharge the debt owed by the former holding company. However, the proceeds from the discharged debt were immediately on lent to the purchaser Bicton, so that
on settlement, the cheques for $1.3 million were endorsed by the plaintiff company to
Bicton. The banks officer at settlement took the endorsed cheques for $1.3 million and
deposited them to Bictons account. There was no dispute that the effect of the transactions effected at settlement amounted to a breach of fiduciary duty by the plaintiff companys directors, specifically because they granted financial assistance for the purchase
of the plaintiff companys shares in breach of the Companies Act 1961 (WA) (Now see
Part 2J.3 Corporations Act).
The dispute related to the banks role as participating in the breach of duty. In an
uncontroversial decision, Smith J held that because the bank had actual knowledge of the
breach of duty, it was liable under both limbs of Barnes v Addy as constructive trustee.92
Insofar as recipient liability is concerned, the judgment of Smith J makes several
exploratory points:
Smith J confirmed that breach of fiduciary duty is the same as breach of trust for
Barnes v Addy liability.93
Smith J defined constructive knowledge in terms of constructive notice as
where the recipient does not know but ought to know,94 but His Honour did
not refer this back to the Baden scale. By referring to constructive notice His
Honour is satisfied that recipient liability will arise on category (v), as he
endorsed other authority that referred to the expectation that the recipient act as a
reasonable person and demand inquiry.95
In the final result, Smith J did not need to conclusively decide or apply this definition of constructive notice, as His Honour decided that the bank had actual knowledge
that it received the plaintiff companys settlement funds in breach of the companys
directors fiduciary duty, and was liable as constructive trustee to account to the plaintiff
for the funds received.
2. Equiticorp Finance Ltd v BNZ
The facts of Equiticorp Finance represent the main scenario engaging this part of this
chapter: the danger that outsiders may experience dealing with companies where breach
of the directors fiduciary duties are alleged.96 However, the case is more of academic
interest than practical importance, as only Kirby P in dissent imposed recipient liability
92
93
94
95
91
as constructive trustee on BNZ. The case was discussed briefly in chapter 2 on aspects
of the officers authority to enter into the external contract, whilst here it is discussed in
more detail examining the effect on the outsider of the officers breach of duty.
BNZ was the principal banker to the Equiticorp Group of companies. The Equiticorp
Group was structured with two separate arms: the industrial group and the finance group,
both encompassed under the holding company, Equiticorp Holding Ltd. Allan Hawkins
was chairman of the Group and a director of some of its 140 companies. It appears that
of the companies directly involved in the case, there were common directors. In June
1987, a loan facility of $200 million was made available by BNZ to one of the wholly
owned subsidiaries, Uruz. Uruz acted as the conduit through which the money flowed
to fund the activities of the industrial group. By January 1988, BNZ was concerned as
to its exposure, and the facility was reduced to $65 million. By April 1988 it was apparent that the financial position of the industrial group was tenuous. To try to protect the
financial group, two of the finance group companies, Equiticorp Finance Ltd and
Equiticorp Financial Services Ltd, created liquidity reserve accounts with BNZ into
which approximately $50 million was deposited in June 1988. In July 1988, Allan
Hawkins made the decision, uncontested by other directors, to apply the liquidity
reserves in repayment of the Uruz debt. (The two companies were compensated for
the loss of funds via the transfer to them of certain receivables owned by other companies in the industrial group.) The reason for the decision was to maintain the support of
BNZ, which was described as imperative for the survival of the Group.
In the subsequent liquidation of the finance group companies, Equiticorp Finance Ltd
and Equiticorp Financial Services Ltd, the liquidators sued BNZ to recover the liquidity
reserves.
On the face of it, the liquidators had a very strong claim. In summary, their argument
was that the directors of the finance companies owed fiduciary duties of loyalty and good
faith to the shareholders and creditors of those companies. Using the companies funds
to repay the debts of another company is a breach of that fiduciary duty, applying Walker
v Wimborne.97 BNZ was involved to the extent that it knew of the breaches of duty, obliging it to account to the companies for the sums received. Kirby P was prepared to uphold
the liquidators claim against BNZ, and in particular, to impose constructive trust liability on BNZ over the funds that it received, knowing they were tainted by the directors
breach of fiduciary duties.
However, Kirby P was the dissenting judge in this case. The majority, Clarke and
Cripps JJA held that there had been no breach of fiduciary duties by the directors of
Equiticorp Finance Ltd and Equiticorp Financial Services Ltd:
Mr Hawkins considered, with some justification, that the welfare of the group was intimately tied
up with the welfare of the individual companies. In a climate of substantial liquidity problems
and having regard to the holding companys guarantee of the Uruz debt, we would conclude ... that
those responsible for managing the two companies thought that the steps taken to protect the group
as a whole, and in particular the holding company, coupled with the compensation scheme, were of
definite benefit to the companies. The alternative was possible disaster for the whole group including the two companies.98
97 (1976) 137 CLR 1.
98 (1993) 11 ACLC 952, 1,019.
92
Therefore, the result was that the directors did not breach their duties and BNZ was
not liable as constructive trustee for the funds. However, this is merely a result confined
to its facts: the judgment of Kirby P contains a cautionary tale for the outsider. Kirby P
held that a bank was a constructive trustee in circumstances where it was aware of
breaches of fiduciary duties by the directors and participated in them by taking advantage of the breaches for its own benefit. He said that while a bank does not have the
responsibility of gratuitously supervising or checking the managerial activities of its customers, it is not relieved of obligations arising from the particular circumstances of its
relationship with a particular customer.99
3. Sixty-Fourth Throne Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd
The case was previously discussed under the assumption of apparent authority, s 129(3).
It is now discussed briefly in respect of potential equitable liability on the outsider for
the officers breach of duty.100 The Macquarie Bank had advanced funds to Michael
Kandy on the security, inter alia, of a guarantee and registered mortgage over the respondent companys property. The financing transaction was risky, with no evident benefit to
the company. The mortgage had been executed by the fraud of Kandy, the son-in-law of
the companys two directors, Dr and Mrs Taft. A claim of participatory liability against
the Macquarie Bank was unsuccessful because the majority held that the principles of
constructive trusteeship, based either on recipient or accessory liability, could not be
imposed to undermine the doctrine of indefeasibility of interests established by the
Torrens system. The High Court refused an application for special leave to appeal.101
However, it is worth noting the strong dissenting judgment of Ashley AJA. His Honour
emphasised the need for the law to give adequate protection to trust property and the
interests of innocent beneficiaries, and was prepared to fix the bank with recipient liability. His judgment strongly endorsed the view that the concept of constructive knowledge should be given a broad application. He held that knowledge in the fourth Baden
category would clearly suffice for recipient liability and that the Macquarie Bank at the
least [ought to] have been put on enquiry.
4. Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd
The Koorootang case provides an example of a situation where the constructive trust was
imposed on an external party contracting with a corporate security provider.102 The ANZ
bank had dealt with Mr Jock Jeffries and the Jeffries Group of companies for twenty
years. Jock Jeffries was also a director of Koorootang, a company that was not related
nor connected to the Jeffries Group. Koorootang was formed to act as trustee in administering the estates of the Ramsay family, (Mrs Jeffries family). Koorootang had two
other directors, but they and the rest of the family, left Jock Jeffries to run the company.
Unknown to the Ramsay family, the Jeffries Group was in financial difficulty. Jock
Jeffries offered, and ANZ accepted, security for the Jeffries Group loans over
Koorootangs property, comprising shares and real property. The negotiations with ANZ
and the execution of the security documents took almost a year, between December 1992,
and November 1993. In executing the security documents (scrip lien, real property mort99 (1993) 11 ACLC 952, 986.
100 The description of the case is based on Law and Pascoe, supra n 59, 237.
101 High Court Transcript, 9 October 1998.
102 The description of the case is based on Law and Pascoe, supra n 59, 223224.
93
gage and associated requisitions) in Koorootangs name, Jock Jeffries forged the signature of one of the other directors. None of the other members of the Ramsay family were
aware that the transactions had occurred, nor did ANZ directly consult with any other
family members over the transactions. The real property mortgage was registered.
The shares, which were the subject of the scrip lien, were sold on 8 September 1993.
The fraud was uncovered in late 1994. Koorootangs solicitors wrote to ANZ disputing
the validity of the transaction, and ANZ took steps to exercise its power of sale.
Koorootang commenced proceedings against ANZ, claiming, inter alia:
a declaration that the scrip lien and mortgage were void and unenforceable,
alternatively, a declaration that ANZs interest in the scrip lien and mortgage was
held on constructive trust for Koorootang,
an injunction restraining ANZ from enforcing the mortgage,
recovery of the proceeds of the sale of shares, based on conversion, moneys had
and received, and breach of duty of care.
In finding for the plaintiff, Hansen J held that ANZ was a constructive trustee for
Koorootang of the real property the subject of the security transaction.103 ANZ was the
recipient of trust property, knowing that it was tainted by the breach of trust. As to the
requisite degree of knowledge, Hansen J held that ANZ had:
actual knowledge that the mortgaged property was trust property; and
constructive knowledge that the trust property was misapplied by Koorootang as
trustee and by Jock Jeffries, in breach of his fiduciary duty to Koorootang.
Hansen J found the bank had constructive knowledge of Jock Jeffries breach of fiduciary duty and breach of trust, and expressed it in terms of the banks wilful and reckless
failure to make inquiries about the matter that an honest and reasonable banker would
have made in the circumstances. Reference to wilful and reckless is analogous to
category (iii) (a type of actual knowledge, but Hansen called it constructive), and Hansen
J expressed disapproval at ANZs conduct, holding that the banks conduct fell short of
that expected of a reasonably prudent bank.104 Although the facts were complex, the main
aspects leading to Hansen Js assessment of the banks conduct included:
it was a third party security;
the mortgage was for a large amount ($7 million);
failure by the banks officers to follow procedure and obtain legal advice as to
the use of the trusts assets to secure Jeffries Group indebtedness;
failure by the banks officers to clarify inconsistent information on their file (for
example, the bank obtained a letter from Jock Jeffries confirming that the security was not trust assets, but that this was clearly inconsistent with earlier detailed
information that the bank had about the financial affairs of the trust);
failure by the bank to contact any other directors of Koorootang;
evidence of concern within the bank as to Jock Jeffries potential conflict of
interest.
103 Hansen J declined to determine whether constructive trusteeship applied to ANZs interest under the scrip lien.
Instead, Hansen J resolved the problem according to the rules of priority of competing equitable claims.
Koorootangs claim was successful, based on the priority accorded to the first in time created.
104 [1998] 3 VR 16, 122, 123.
94
Hansen J therefore did not need to express a concluded view on whether any category of constructive knowledge ((iv) or (v)) would apply, although he explicitly stated a
preference for at least category (iv) knowledge. He stated that category (v) is not sufficient, as cases in that category are characterised as ones where the outsider is merely
careless.
The Koorootang case examined the scenario where the outsider knew about the
breach of trust. The Koorootang case considered, but did not resolve, the relevance of the
indoor management rule assumptions to constructive trustee liability. As Hansen J
noted,105 in any case in which a fraud is carried out by an officer or agent of a corporation, former s 164 (now s 129) will have an important, perhaps conclusive, role to play.
The scope of the assumptions were not considered, because Hansen J decided that the
exceptions precluded ANZ from accessing any assumption, but Hansen J left open the
likelihood of the assumptions proving conclusive in a case where the Barnes v Addy
claim had only been based upon Jock Jeffries fiduciary duties as a director.
5. The Australian cases: support for constructive knowledge
To assess the state of recipient liability in Australia, the cases show that the prevailing
criterion is that the outsider must have constructive knowledge of category (iv): knowledge of circumstances that would have indicated the facts to an honest and reasonable
person. Whether this would extend to being more objective (i.e. category (v)) was floated by Kirby P but has not been adopted. As there is no direct application where the outsider to the contract with a company has incurred personal liability due to breach of the
fiduciary duty owed to the company by its officers, the risk is therefore hypothetical
rather than actual.
The only residual point of uncertainty is even if the scope of the assumption allows
fiduciary duty compliance, it still depends on the scope of the rules exceptions in s
128(4). It is unlikely that the exceptions to the rule, based on knowledge, would not overlap with participatory liability.106 Both demand high standards of prudence, conduct and
integrity in commercial dealings, standards emphasised by the High Court in Northside
and referred to in chapter 3.
The overlap between corporate law principles and wider equitable principles has now
been made. The significance of this is that if circumstances arise pursuant to s 128(4)
that will preclude an outsider from relying on the procedural assumptions,107 the corporate borrower may go further and seek equitable relief for breach by its directors of their
fiduciary duty.
95
they are the sole director and sole company secretary of the company occupies both
offices (no former equivalent).
A company may enter into contracts directly,108 but the companys assent to be bound
must be in the proper form.109 Proper form is specified in the Corporations Act however other statutes may specify procedural requirements. For example, Jovista Pty Ltd v
Pegasus Gold Australia Pty Ltd 110 concerned the execution by a company of a statutory
lien registered pursuant to the Workmans Liens Act 1893 (NT). Section 10(3) required
the notice to be signed and attested. It was argued that by sealing the documents,
the company had signed but not attested. Bailey J held:
the signatures of Jovistas director and secretary have the effect of authenticating the companys
signature by attesting that the companys seal was affixed in accordance with its Articles the four
applications were signed and attested in accordance with s 10(3) of the Act.
There arises, as a separate issue to the officers authority to exercise corporate power,
the issue of the officers authority to provide the companys assent in the proper form. As
two separate issues, there is a distinction between substantive authority and formal
authority,111 where:
1. substantive authority is the existence and scope of the officers authority to
enter into the contract; and
2. formal authority is the officers authority to signify, in the proper form, the
companys assent.
The assumption in s 129(5) is new, since 1 July 1998, and is a necessary consequence
now that the common seal is optional under s 123. Even if a company has a common
seal, the effect of s 127(1) is to make it optional whether the company uses it. For execution without the seal, s 127(1) provides that a company may execute a document without the seal if it is signed by:
(a)
2 directors; or
(b)
a director and a secretary; or
(c)
the sole director of a single director proprietary company.
Recent companies legislation has never prescribed the situations in which contracts
and transactions with outsiders are to be under seal.112 This has been left to commercial
practice, and therefore the outsider essentially dictates the procedure by which the companys assent to be bound is evidenced.
Section 127 (particularly subsection (1)) has no direct former equivalent section, and
the Explanatory Memorandum only makes brief reference to the section facilitating the
execution of documents without a seal.113 As s 127 is new, does it change the law, in terms
whereby it either:
1. confirms the existing distinction between substantive authority and formal
authority; or
108
109
110
111
96
97
ostensible authority of officers attesting the seal.118 Internal cross-referencing in this form
is not required, as the assumptions operate cumulatively: s 129(8). Instead, the cross-reference is to s 127(2) (execution of company documents under seal). The significance of
this change was recently examined,119 to determine whether this change in drafting has
rendered a substantive change in the ambit of the rule. There is a distinction made
between substantive authority to bind the company and formal authority to affix the seal.
Cases on the former s 164(3)(e) limit the assumption to formal authority, that is, the
assumption relates only to procedural regularity in ensuring that the companys assent is
in the proper form. Substantive authority relates to the authority of the officers to exercise corporate power to enter into the transaction. The former provision did not cure
defects in authority,120 nor was the common law indoor management rule intended to create authority where there was none. 121
Accordingly, there are two possible views of the redrafted s 129(6):
1. the narrow view, under which s129(6) is intended to remain as a rule of procedural regularity.
2. The wide view that s 129(6), via s 127(2), is designed to overcome lack of
authority.
The wide view is not sustainable, as it is not consistent with previous Australian
authority, nor has the legislature unequivocally signalled an intention to depart from that
previous law.122 Such an interpretation of s 129(6) does not accord with the indoor management rules role as a rule of procedural regularity, and one that operates as an adjunct
to the principles of agency but not in derogation of them.
The companys signature, whether represented by a seal or not, can only be physically inscribed via the actions of its officers or agents. The indoor management rule was
designed to cure most defects relating to formal authority to execute. A series of examples
of authentication problems are discussed below. These examples prove the comprehensive
ambit of the rules application. Set out below are the types of sealing disputes that have
arisen in litigation, and the extent to which the statutory assumptions resolve them.
98
esting corollary. Commissioner Wheeler QC held that former s 164(3)(a) could apply
where the outsider had not actually seen the document that they were seeking to enforce.
The Belven argument still applies to the current provision, which requires the common seal to appear to have been fixed to the document.
Appears to be sealed
Where a company has a seal, s 123 requires the seal to state the full name and ACN of
the company (similar to former s 219). This is significant because the assumption as to
due sealing in s129(6) requires the document to appear to have been sealed. If the seal
was defective through non-compliance with s 123 and as it is a matter capable of detection by mere casual physical examination, then arguably the outsider is precluded from
the assumption because they have actual knowledge of the defect or at least a suspicion
(s 128 (4)).
A situation arose in Westpac Banking Corporation v Dawson126 where the borrower
company used the seal for its proposed new name some four months prior to the name
change taking effect with the issue of a new certificate of registration. The New South
Wales Court of Appeal held the intention of the parties to enter into that transaction with
the borrower identified by its proposed new name and evidence that the appropriate internal procedures had been complied with were sufficient to cure the defect. The circumstances arose prior to the statutory enactment of the rule. The case adds only indirect support that such a defect could not be cured by the assumption in s 129(6) alone.
Where there is a non-complying seal, it may be that a court will disregard the seal
and s 127(2), and allow the outsider to assume that the document has been executed in
accordance with s 127(1). For the assumption to apply under s 129(5), the outsider would
only need to rely that officers signed the document. Whilst there is no direct authority,
this is similar to the approach of the High Court in MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon
Pty Ltd.127 The majority of the High Court held that as the document in question did not
need to be sealed, then authentication of the companys consent was sufficiently evidenced by the signature of its directors.
Forged seal
Contrast the above situation with a forged seal. Provided it is genuine on the face of it,
then the assumptions as to sealing in s 129(6) and absence of fraud and forgery in s
128(3) protect the outsider. After reviewing the relation between the former provisions (s
164(3)(e) and s 166) Justice Handley128 concluded that:
if the person dealing with the company is entitled to make the assumptions in [s164(3)(e)] that
person is also protected against the risk that a counterfeit seal has been used or that one or more of
the attesting signatures have been forged unless that person has actual knowledge of such forgery.
The main concern for outsiders since the Company Law Review Act 1998 is whether
the current provision relating to forgery in s 128(3) is excluded beyond actual knowl126 (1990) 8 ACLC 681; affirmed on appeal by the High Court in Dawson v Westpac Banking Corporation (1991) 66
ALJR 94.
127 (1999) 17 ACLC 861, 864.
128 When are Outsiders on Notice that Corporate Agents Lack Authority? Paper presented at QLS Securities
Intensive VII Seminar, Coolum, October 1993, 20, 32.
99
edge. Former s 166 only excluded actual knowledge. This issue is pursued in chapter 7,
where we argue that under the statutory rule, the outsider cannot make the assumption if
they knew or suspected that the seal/signature was a forgery.
Forged signatures
As referred to by Justice Handley above, it is unlikely that a forged signature on the company seal or signature affects the validity of execution from the outsiders point of view.
Story v Advance Bank Australia Ltd129 is a case precisely on point. Mr Story (a director
and secretary of Fleetwood Star Pty Ltd) forged his wifes signature (as the other director) on a third party mortgage to secure his loans. The signatures appeared consistent
with the public information on the company and it was held that the bank had no actual
knowledge and no duty to make inquiry from the circumstances, as to whether Mrs
Storys signature was genuine. The bank was able to rely on former s 164(3)(e).
100
this may not affect compliance with s 127(2), as the provision does not require two signatures but merely that the seal is witnessed by two directors. For the Efron view to
prevail, s 127(2) would require an interpretation that the seal is to be physically witnessed
by two different directors.134
In the second situation, the High Court in MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon Pty
Ltd135 held that the former s 164(3)(e) assumption was not available where the same officer signed in both capacities as director and secretary. In that case, Mr Edmonds held the
positions of director and secretary of MYT. The other director, Mr Pullen, was unavailable to affix the company seal on a deed of arrangement. Edmonds, with Pullens
informed consent, affixed and attested the seal. However, Gleeson CJ, Gaudron,
Gummow and Hayne JJ referred to the changes in the law due to the Company Law
Review Act 1998, indirectly alluding to a change in effect.136 The assumption requires the
seal to be witnessed by two directors or by a director and a company secretary (s 127 (2)).
It no longer explicitly refers to the witnesses being two separate people. This simplification in the wording of the sealing of a document may have the substantial effect of
altering a case such as MYT Engineering. Since July 1998, if the same officer signs as
both director and secretary, as Edmonds did, the outsider is in a stronger position to argue
compliance with s 127(2) and access the sealing assumption in s 129(6).
In MYT Engineering, the document itself was held valid under former s 182(7), that
enabled a company to authenticate a document or proceeding by the signature of an officer in lieu of the common seal. The ultimate result was that the signature of the officer
authenticated the deed of company arrangement on behalf of the company.137
There is no current equivalent to s 182(7), which suggests either oversight, or that s
127 renders such a provision redundant. As former s 182 is replaced by a combination of
ss 123, 126 and 127, the better view is the redundancy one. The Corporations Act, when
referring to company contracts, no longer distinguishes between execute and authenticate, as it did in former s 182. The majority judgment of the High Court in MYT
Engineering,138 and the judgment of Asprey JA in 195 Crown Street Pty Ltd v Hoare139
indicate that it is unnecessary to distinguish between a company signing a document,
executing a document or authenticating a document, as they all mean the same thing: the
manifestation of the companys assent. If MYT Engineering were to arise after the
Company Law Review Act 1998 changes and in the absence of the express authentication provision in s 182(7), the majoritys view still stands. Accepting that the deed did
not need to be sealed,140 a single directors signature, affixed to the seal in two capacities,
with the consent of the other director, still authenticates the companys assent. Arguably,
134 Unlikely, since Myers v Aquarell Pty Ltd [2000] VSC 429.
135 (1999) 17 ACLC 861, 864 (Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, Gummow and Hayne JJ) and 875, (Kirby J).
136 Their Honours said, in footnote 4 to their judgment: The provisions of the Law governing assumptions that may
be made by persons dealing with companies have since been amended by the Company Law Review Act 1998
(Cth) as applied by the Corporations (New South Wales) Act 1990 (NSW) s 7. Among other things, changes have
been made to reflect the possibility that a company may have only one officer. See ss 128, 129 of the Law. These
changes do not affect the present matter.
137 MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon Pty Ltd (1999) 17 ACLC 861, 870. Kirby J dissented on this point.
138 MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon Pty Ltd (1999) 17 ACLC 861, 870.
139 [1969] 1 NSWR 193, 202 (Asprey J): The companys signature can be affixed by that [natural] person in a variety
of ways so long as what is done by him is performed with the intention of authenticating the document so as to be
binding on the company under whose authority he is executing the document.
140 This was a point upon which Kirby J dissented.
101
now given that s 127(4) provides that s 127 does not limit the ways in which a company may execute a document, it would apply to the same effect. As to whether outsiders
are affected by this form of authentication is a question left open by the majority in MYT
Engineering and depends upon the scope of s 129.
Certainly, in Myers v Aquarell Pty Ltd, decided after 1 July 1998, where the company had appointed a sole director (despite the constitution requiring a minimum of two
directors), Gillard J held that that person signing in their capacity as both director and
secretary complied with the constitution.141
Note that this does not apply to a case where a director incorrectly describes himself/herself as a sole director, where the ASIC records indicate that there are two directors. This type of error is resolved under the next heading.
102
director is not necessarily available from the public record. In two of the major cases,
Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd147 and Equiticorp
Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand,148 the court assisted the lenders bid to enforce a
transaction by holding that a person who appeared to be in a position of dominance and
control, with the support and acquiescence of the board, had the actual authority to bind
the company. As discussed in chapter 2, subsequent cases emphasise that acquiescence
means that the board knew of the usurpers role, so that lenders in later cases were unsuccessful in proving actual authority.
The Brick & Pipe case was the breakthrough success for lenders. The company was
part of the Goldberg Group of companies, all of which were managed under the close
control of Mr Goldberg. He was on public record as being director of the company along
with Mrs Goldberg, Mr Furst and several independent directors, yet in reality he took
effective control. The third party security documents had to be signed under seal and
attested to by a director and the secretary only.149 Goldberg signed as director. Furst
signed as secretary, when he did not hold this position. The lender queried Fursts capacity to sign as secretary. Goldberg assured the lender that the appropriate parties had
attested the seal.150 The company later disputed the validity of the execution. The lender
relied on Goldbergs statement, treating it as a representation from the company that
Furst was secretary.
By virtue of the board acquiescing to his control, it may be argued, as in Freeman
and Lockyer v Buckhurst Park Properties (Mangal) Ltd,151 that Goldberg had apparent
authority to bind the company. But an agent with merely apparent authority cannot make
a representation binding the company as to another persons authority.152
Goldberg was considered by all, outsiders and insiders, to be the alter ego of each of
the companies in the group. In the affairs of Brick and Pipe, Goldberg acted without first
seeking board approval. The board routinely authorised transactions already completed
and did not interfere. Due the extent of his control Goldberg was clothed with the actual authority of the company. For the lender, this finding completed the links in the chain:
Goldberg had actual authority to hold out Furst as secretary, thus s 164(3)(c) operated so
that Furst could be assumed to be secretary, triggering the assumption of due execution.
Brick & Pipe is a good illustration of how the principles of authority work together
with the indoor management rule to overcome disputes as to authority. The effect of the
decision is not to confer authority on Furst where none existed, but to use the principles
of agency and substantive authority to link into the rules assumption as to formal authority to execute documents.
103
on its behalf also has authority to warrant that the document is genuine or is a true copy
(based on former s 164(3)(d)).
Consistent with the execution assumptions, this paragraph extends to formal authority only so is limited to its procedural effects.
Chapter 7
The Indoor Management Rule and Forgeries
The Common Law
Chapter 3 examined the scope of the common law indoor management rule and its exceptions. A significant limitation on the operation of the rule was where the company alleged
forgery in the execution of its contracts. It is unlikely that the scope of the common law
indoor management rule was designed to cure forgeries. In the separate judgments of the
High Court in Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General,1 Mason CJ,
Brennan J, Dawson J and Toohey J all discussed in some detail the alleged forgery
exception to the Rule in Turquands case. Overall, the members of the Court treated
forgery as a separate doctrine, not essentially part of the rule itself.
According to the various judgments of the High Court in the Northside case, forgery
in a limited sense operated to defeat the Rule in Turquands case. Brennan J thought that
it did not matter whether a false seal or signatures were used or the seal and signatures
were genuine but affixed or signed without authority. In both types of cases, a company
will be bound only if it is estopped from denying that the seal or signatures were false or
put on the document without authority. Therefore Brennan J did not regard forgery as a
separate issue but part of the general principles of estoppel.2
Dawson J adopted a similar approach but noted that in the case of a false seal or signatures, the company will usually not have represented that the forger had authority to
act. Thus a forgery will usually be a nullity under ordinary agency principles. Where the
seal and signatures are genuine, the question arises whether the seal and signatures were
affixed by persons held out by the company to have authority to do so. In such a case,
the Rule in Turquands case applied. Correspondingly, s 129(1) and (6) would now govern this situation in much the same way because the agency rules of apparent authority
have been incorporated into the assumption of valid sealing.
Mason CJ expressed doubt that forgery was a true exception to the rule but thought
that in any case it had a limited operation.3
Brennan J4 noted that confusion arises due to the two senses in which forgery is
used: in the strict sense of a false signature or seal, or in a wider sense, where the seal or
signatures are genuine, but where there is no authority to execute.
The common law dilemma demonstrated by the so-called forgery exception is illustrated by cases such as Ruben v Great Fingall Consolidated,5 South London Greyhound
Racecourses Limited v Wake6 and Kreditbank Cassel (GmbH) v Schenkers Ltd.7 Ruben
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
105
involved the fraudulent sealing of a share certificate. The certificate was attested by the
secretary. The company was not bound by the document and the secretary had no authority to warrant that the share certificate was genuine. The secretary did not have actual
authority, nor had been held out as having authority. It was held that the indoor management rule did not apply to transactions that were not genuine. The forged signature rendered this document not genuine.
Kreditbank and Wake, however, involved genuine signatures that were held to be
forgeries insofar as they purported to bind the company. Kreditbank involved bills of
exchange signed on the companys behalf, as drawer, by a branch manager. The branch
manager had no authority to sign. It was held an outsider could not assume that the usual
authority of a branch manager in the companys business was to draw bills. The case
could have been disposed of on the basis of lack of authority. However, the Court went
on to hold that the rule did not apply because the bills were forgeries.
In South London Greyhound Racecourses Limited v Wake8, the seal of the company
was affixed by the managing director and secretary with their genuine signatures, but
without the authority the board. The document was held to be a forgery.
The inconsistency of the latter type of case with the genuine forgery cases has been
criticised elsewhere.9 The common law effect of forgery, at least in the strict sense, has
now been abrogated by s 128(3).
However, the outsider is still at risk from the common law position, that for forgery
in the strict sense, the company is not bound, as its consent is a nullity.10 For forgery in
the wider sense, it is not really a matter addressed solely by the indoor management rule:
the resolution rests ultimately on agency principles and the extent of the actual or apparent authority of the agent to execute.
The principles relating to the effect of fraud now depend upon whether the
Corporations Act applies to the transaction. For events occurring before 1 January 1984,
the applicable law is the common law; for events occurring on or after 1 January 1984,
former Companies Codes s 68D applies;11 after 1 January 1991, s 166 Corporations Law
applies; and after 1 July 1998, s 128(3) Corporations Act applies.
Statutory Intervention
Former s 166
With the statutory reform in 1984 came modification to the common law rule on forgeries. Extending the protection conferred to outsiders, former s 166 provided that the
outsider in the case of fraud or forgery could still make the statutory assumptions. Former
s 166 provided that the assumptions may be made in relation to dealings with a compa8 [1931] 1 Ch 496.
9 I Campbell, Contracts with Companies (1960) 76 Law Quarterly Review 115, 13036; H A J Ford, Principles of
Company Law, (2nd ed, 1978) 124. At first instance, Young J in Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General
(1987) 5 ACLC, 642, 651 attempted to reconcile them; an explanation of the Ruben and Kreditbank cases may well be
that in those cases the forged instrument was not warranted as genuine by someone with actual authority.
10 According to Brennan J in Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1990) 8 ACLC 611, 633, it is difficult to envisage a case where the company has represented that it would be bound by a forgery.
11 It was held that s 68D does not have any retrospective effect (i.e. before 1 January 1984): Barclays Finance
Holdings Ltd v Sturgess (1985) 3 ACLC 662.
106
Explanatory Memorandum, Companies and Securities Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 1983, [216].
[1906] AC 439.
(1990) 8 ACLC 611, 617 (Mason CJ).
(1994) 12 ACLC 48.
(1994) 12 ACLC 48, 58.
(1994) 12 ACLC 48, 58.
107
tions, to resolve. This represents a sensible interpretation of the various statutory enactments dealing with the indoor management rule and is consistent with the case law that
has substantially been about forgery in the wider sense.
There are two major cases dealing with former s 166 and forgery in the strict sense:
Story v Advance Bank Australia Ltd18 and Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking
Group Ltd.19 In Koorootang, the bank did not rely on s 166. In Story, one director forged
the signature of the other director when affixing the companys seal to a mortgage. The
New South Wales Court of Appeal confirmed that in this situation, s 166 protected the
bank, unless it had actual knowledge of the forgery. However, this only sustained the
bank insofar as the forgery in the strict sense was concerned and Gleeson CJ dealt with
the second uncertainty with s 166: the relevance of constructive knowledge.
108
A major point of distinction with former s 166 was that s 166 included a specific proviso that actual knowledge by the person of the fraud or forgery precluded reliance on
the assumptions.
Subsection 128(3) now does not explicitly refer to actual knowledge, but resolves the
ambiguity regarding the relation between the forgery assumption, the other statutory
assumptions and exceptions.
There are at least two arguments that follow:
1. As there are no specific exclusions mentioned in the section, there is not intended to be any proviso precluding an outsider making the assumptions in the case
of forgery or fraud. That is, the outsider may make the assumptions even where
they have actual knowledge of the fraud or forgery.22 This argument represents a
significant departure (reversal) from both the former s 166 and the preceding
common law principles relating to the effect of fraud and forgery on transactions.
2. This provision is subject to the general exceptions in s 128(4).
Subsection 128(3) provides that fraud may be disregarded by the outsider in
making the assumptions, whereas s 128(4) specifies the circumstances where the
assumptions cannot be made, based on whether the outsider knew or suspected
the matter to be incorrect. Therefore, the general rule in s 128(3) is subject to
the exceptions in s 128(4). Whilst the effect of the exceptions is discussed in
chapter 8, the immediate consequence of the restructured provisions is that the
rule for fraud is explicitly subject to two exceptions. In Koorootang Nominees
Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd,23 Hansen J stated that the new drafting
makes it abundantly clear that, even in the case of fraud or forgery, a person
dealing with a company is not entitled to make any relevant assumption when
the person knew or suspected that the assumption was incorrect.24
22 Although the structure of the reform has changed since the Second Corporate Law Simplification Bill 1995, there
was early commentary on whether the revised fraud section was subject to any proviso. See P Ryan, Impact of the
Second Corporate Law Simplification Bill on Financiers Dealings with Companies (1997) 13 Australian Banking
Law Bulletin 19 who opined that A financier will be entitled to rely on the statutory assumptions even where they
had actual knowledge that an officer or agent of a company acted fraudulently or forged a document...
23 [1998] 3 VR 16.
24 [1998] 3 VR 16, 165. Also in agreement with this view: H A J Ford, R P Austin and I M Ramsay, Fords Principles
of Company Law (10th ed, 2001) [14.110] thought that the reformed fraud provision will operate differently from
former s 166 in that it will be subject to both of the statutory provisos. This was also the view expressed in P Lipton,
The Authority of Agents and Officers to Act for a Company: Legal Principles (1996) 57.
Chapter 8
The Limitations to the Statutory Assumptions
The History of the Exceptions
Chapter 3 examined the ambit of the common law rule, and chapter 4 identified and discussed in detail the provisos and exceptions that were developed that affected the operation of the common law rule. Those chapters noted that the rules operation was affected
by two sets of principles:
1. Direct exceptions to the rule, so that the assumptions of procedural regularity did
not operate where the outsider had knowledge that the assumption was incorrect.
Knowledge incorporates a spectrum from actual knowledge to due inquiry.
Actual knowledge includes subjective knowledge, wilful or reckless
blindness,1 or knowledge that insiders ought to know.2 Due inquiry incorporates the notion of outsiders reasonably acting on existing information.3
2. Indirect fetters to the rule, such as the doctrine of constructive notice (its abolition
discussed in chapter 5) and the rule against forgeries (discussed in chapter 7).
Similarly, the efficacy of the statutory rule must ultimately be judged according to
the exceptions. The statutory exceptions are loosely based on the common law. The operation of the statutory limitations to some extent serves the same purposes as the common
law exceptions to the Rule in Turquands case because they prevent a person dealing with
a company from assuming that the indoor management of a company is always regular.
They play a crucial role in determining the balance of interests between commercial convenience on the one hand and discouraging fraud and unauthorised acts by officers and
agents on the other. Of particular importance here is the extent to which the statutory limitations differ from the common law exception to the Rule in Turquands case where the
outsider is put upon inquiry.
In relation to this knowledge exception, the legislative formulations, both in 1984
when the first round of statutory reform commenced4 and more recently in the Company
Law Review Act 1998, depart from the common law rule of due inquiry. The main
uncertainty is to assess the degree of correlation between the common law notion of due
inquiry and the current statutory exception. This part of the chapter argues that whilst the
statutory test appears different, it substantially relies on similar factors that gave rise to
the due inquiry exception.
Table 8.1 below sets out the two separate stages of statutory reform to the limitations.
Accordingly, this chapter adopts a chronological approach to developments.
1
2
3
4
110
Companies
Code 1984
actual knowledge S68A(4)(a)
S68A(5)(a)
Corporations
Law 1991
S164(4)(a)
S164(5)(a)
Company Law
Review Act 1998
S128(4)
Comment on
CLRA
Assumption not
available if the person
knew it was
incorrect
Other knowledge
S164(4)(b)
S164(5)(b)
connection or
relationship with
the company is
such that he ought
to know that the
matter ...is not
correct
S128(4)
knew or suspected
that the assumption
was incorrect
S68A(4)(b)
S68A(5)(b)
connection or
relationship with
the company is
such that he ought
to know that the
matter... is not
correct
The boundaries of the exceptions identify the point where protection for the outsider
is lost. The immediate differences with the common law are in relation to the second limb
of the exception, as it is expressed in different terms than the common law due inquiry
principle. This leads to broader questions of policy to examine areas of overlap between
the common law and statute.
111
have known of circumstances that would indicate that the assumptions were incorrect.
It is interesting that in the 1998 round of reforms, the legislature abandoned the connection or relationship distinction, in favour of a more simply stated actually knew or
suspected exception (see s 128(4)). Before we can comment on the current provisions,
it is worth noting that the interpretation of the former provision in s 164(4) was far from
settled.6
Commentary on the former provisions is divided as to whether the different wording
effected any substantial change from the common law. The commentary presented three
views:
1. The substantial change view, that the statutory formulation was intended to
mean something different from the common law exceptions.7
2. The amalgamated view, that due inquiry as articulated in Northside
Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General8 applied to former s 164(4)(b).9 Kirby
P in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd10 contributed to the amalgamated
view, that is, that no substantial change had been effected.
3. A hybrid view, expressed in Lipton,11 that the second exception as to connection or relationship is substantially changed, but that the notion of due inquiry
forms part of the first exception in s 164(4)(a).
There is a significant distinction between the first and either the second or third view,
as it affects the degree of protection afforded to outsiders. Specifically, the first view
reduces the burden of inquiry on outsiders, as it is the connection or relationship that
triggers inquiry, not the circumstances of the transaction.12
The arguments for each of the views are presented below. The essential question, for
each view, is to determine the extent to which the statutory provisions mirrored the common law approach to actual knowledge and due inquiry.
6 See more comprehensively: C Hammond, Section 164(4)(b) of the Corporations Law: To be Put Upon Inquiry or
Not to be Put Upon Inquiry: Is that the Question? A Problem of Statutory Interpretation (1998) 16 Company and
Securities Law Journal 93.
7 P Lipton, The Inquiry Exception to the Rule in Turquands Case: Past or Present? (1991) 9 Company and
Securities Law Journal 37, 44, but moderated this view with a different interpretation of the first exception. This
view was indirectly supported by those authors who speculated that had Northside Developments Pty Ltd v
Registrar-General been decided on the statutory provisions, the result may have been different.
See T Cain, The Rule in Royal British Bank v Turquand in 1990 (1990) 2 Bond Law Review 152 and L Law and D
Morrison, (1993) Company Law: Recent Developments in the Indoor Management Rule paper presented at the
Accounting Association of Australia and New Zealand Conference, Darwin, 1993.
See also R Grantham, Contracts with Companies: Rule of Law or Business Rules (1996) 17 New Zealand
Universities Law Review 39, for commentary on similar New Zealand provisions.
8 (1990) 8 ACLC 611.
9 M Mourell, Northside (1991) 19 Australian Business Law Review 36; B Horrigan, Third Party Securities
Theory, Law and Practice in J Greig and B Horrigan (eds) Enforcing Securities (1994) 262 preferred the view that
the comments of Mason CJ and Brennan J in Northside would have some ongoing relevance.
10 (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
11 P Lipton, The Authority of Agents and Officers to Act for a Company: Legal Principles (1996) 6162. See also J
Stumbles, Corporate Benefit and the Guarantee in G Burton (ed) Directions in Finance Law (1989) 204, 216.
12 The Hon Justice Paul de Jersey, A Question of Notice paper presented at QLS Securities Intensive V Seminar, Gold
Coast, 1991.
13 See the factors set in chapter 4 under The Knowledge Exceptions, for example a third party security that appeared
to be unrelated to the purposes of the companys business and from which it derived no benefit: Northside
Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1990) 8 ACLC 611, 622 (Mason CJ); 631 (Brennan J).
112
There were several cases on the statutory provisions that referred to the apparent difference between the common law and statutes second exception, but not conclusively.
In Lyford v Media Portfolio Ltd,16 one of the first cases to consider s 164(4)(b), Nicholson
J stated that the common law due inquiry rule and the statutory connection or relationship rule were substantially different.17 His Honour agreed with Professor Ford18
who suggested that s 164(4)(b) applied only to a director, secretary, shareholder or
employee of the company who is having dealings with the company.
This view was endorsed in the subsequent case of Bell Resources Holdings Pty Ltd v
Commissioner for ACT Revenue Collections.19 Although the application of s 164(4)(b)
was not an issue requiring determination in that case, Jenkinson J pointed out that the
facts of the case illustrated the type of situation to which the connection or relationship
rule would apply. That case involved a share transfer executed under the respective common seals of the vendor and purchaser companies. Both companies had common officers
and the same two people affixed the respective seals at the same time. Jenkinson J held
that the connection or relationship of each of the two officers and the purchaser with
the vendor was such that they ought to have known of the irregular sealing.20
In Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd,21 the Court
acknowledged that s 164(4) does not incorporate the concept of being put upon
inquiry and we are obliged to have regard to the assumptions, as defined by the section,
which the respondents [the lender] were entitled to make subject to the exceptions in subs. 4.
Studdert J (at first instance) in Advance Bank Australia Ltd v Fleetwood Star Pty Ltd
agreed with the comment in Brick & Pipe and held that: the codified rule does not
attract consideration of those matters which prior to the codification might have been
considered to have put a person dealing with the company upon inquiry.22
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
113
However, the substantial change view does not hold up to subsequent authority. This
is explained in the next section.
114
resented a balancing of competing choices as to where the loss for fraud (in the wider
sense) should rest. In his opinion, the phrase connection or relationship still admitted
the common law alternatives of either:
a person who had a particular relationship with the company and was in a position to know about the companys internal management; or
the connection arising due to the nature of the transaction itself.
Given the features of the transaction entered into between the bank and Fiberi Pty
Ltd, and the similarity to Northside, the trial judge, Allen J, held that the bank was put
on inquiry.29 Kirby P affirmed this conclusion.
The same outcome was achieved by the decision of Priestley JA, however, his judgment represents a more subtle approach to the amalgamated view. His Honour distinguished at least three possible meanings of the words ought to know following the connection or relationship phrase in former s 164(4)(b). A person ought to know the
assumption was incorrect either:
1. because of facts actually in the persons possession should cause them to realise
the true position; or
2. because the person is under some kind of obligation to inform themselves (the
nature of the duty was not specified); or
3. because the person is reasonably expected to know the true position of the matter
assumed. The test for this reasonable expectation was referred to in terms of the
knowledge a reasonably competent and prudent banker in the factual matrix
presented by this case, would be expected to know, regarding the identity of the
officers and agents of the corporate borrower, especially as this information is
not difficult to procure. If there is difficulty in obtaining this information from
the borrower, then the need for it becomes more obvious.30
The third approach was favoured, but from where did Priestley JA derive the duty of
the outsider to act reasonably in making the assumptions? No external authority was provided for this point: rather, it arose from the interpretation of the preceding phrase: connection or relationship. The qualifying effect of those words requires the court to consider the full factual circumstances of the outsiders connection or relationship with the
company with regard to the particular matter or transaction.
Significantly, unlike Kirby P, Priestley JA did not claim to be influenced by the existing common law doctrine articulated in Northside. His Honours comments however are
consistent with common law doctrine, to the extent that the common law requirement of
good faith subsumes elements of reasonable conduct (see chapter 4 where we discussed this element of good faith).
The differences between the judgments are that Priestley JA did not completely
endorse Kirby Ps vision of the amalgamated view. In what has been described as a
slight variation31 to somewhat different,32 Priestley JAs comments are more consistent with an approach that interprets the statute with reference to, but not identical with,
the common law due inquiry:
29
30
31
32
Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1992) 10 ACLC 1557, 1571.
(1994) 12 ACLC 48, 59.
Hammond (1998), supra n 6, 100.
Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd [1998] 3 VR 16, 120.
115
The concept introduced by s 68A(4)(b) seems tobe slightly different, although undoubtedly
there is some overlapping between the contents of the two concepts.33
Priestley JAs view is a more conservative one, and more logically consistent with the
wording of the statute. The statute specifically limited due inquiry by interposing the
phrase, connection or relationship, but respects the view in the Explanatory
Memorandum that the statutory provisions ensure that only innocent parties may take
advantage of the rule. In refusing special leave to appeal to the High Court, Brennan J
confirmed Priestley JAs view that a reasonable bank in the position of BNZ would have
seen to it as a matter of routine that information confirming the identity of the companys secretary was in the banks possession.34 There was no specific discussion of the different interpretations of the statute by Kirby P and Priestley JA.
Kirby Ps view of the complete transposition between the common law and statutory law holds attraction as providing certainty: the meaning of due inquiry was fully
explored by the High Court in Northside. To determine the significance of the difference
between the two positions, two questions are relevant:
1. How has the distinction between the two Fiberi judgments been applied in subsequent cases? In both Sixty-Fourth Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd35 and
Pyramid Building Society v Scorpion Hotels Pty Ltd,36 the trial judges indicate
that the difference between put on inquiry and ought to know is more apparent than real, suggesting that on the type of cases confronted, there would be no
difference in result. In both cases, the court referred to and agreed with both
Fiberi judgments, but their application was more aligned with Priestley JAs
reasonable and prudent banker test, than in applying the various factors from
Northside. As Table 5.2 in chapter 5 shows, both cases were very similar to
Fiberi, as all three involved third party securities where corporate benefit was in
doubt, but significantly, the lenders did not ascertain from reliable sources the
identity of the signatories to the corporate seal. The results of these three cases
are sustainable on agency grounds, as the lenders dealt with purported officers
who were not appointed and had no authority to bind the company.
In Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd, Hansen J specifically preferred Priestley JAs interpretation, as it gave higher regard to the wording of the section.37 This case involved a different factual matrix, in that the bank
did a company search, but it made no difference38 and the bank knew that the
assets the subject of the third party securities were trust assets. His Honour held
that it was this information, that the bank knew, that lead to the requirement that
a reasonable and prudent banker would make further inquiries of the trustees
powers.
33
34
35
36
37
38
116
In National Australia Bank v Sparrow Green Pty Ltd, Debelle J (at first instance)
held that even if the bank did not have actual knowledge that Green lacked
authority to make representations, the banks connection or relationship with the
company was such that it ought to have known.39 His Honour specifically cited
Priestley JA in Fiberi, but did not elaborate upon the factual matrix in this case
that gave rise to the need to inquire.
2. Does it make any practical difference, from the outsiders point of view, whether
the common law is reflected by, or merely interpretative of, s 164(4)(b)?
Priestley JA presents us with a lesser degree of due inquiry, so are there circumstances involving a corporate borrower where Priestley JAs view would provide
a greater protection threshold than would be the case under due inquiry? The
subsequent cases do not provide any examples. In each case, the courts applied
Priestley JAs test to find that the lenders had not acted as reasonable and prudent bankers. The difference is that the statute assesses what the particular person acting reasonably would have known (the meaning of s 164(4)(b)); whereas
the common law involves the court in asking whether there were features of the
particular situation that required further inquiries.40 In the applications so far,
there is no practical difference in approach.
Finally, the overlap between common law and statute in relation to the first limb
actual knowledge is a matter that is not substantially argued in the amalgamated
approach. Debelle J at first instance in Sparrow Green said that The common law rule
as to actual knowledge is now to be found in s164(4).41 The significance of the former s 164(4)(a) actual knowledge is more important in the arguments relating to the
hybrid view, outlined below.
However the Court implicitly recognised that such a strict interpretation may afford
protection to an outsider in circumstances where this would be inappropriate.
Such circumstances may arise in the fact situation that occurred in the Northside
case. In applying the common law rules, all members of the High Court held that in the
circumstances, the lending bank was put on inquiry and therefore could not rely on the
39 Perkins v National Australia Bank (1999) 30 ACSR 256, 264, citing Priestley J in Fiberi. The appeal court in
Sparrow Green did not comment on the effect of former s 164(4)(b).
40 Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACLC 48, 60 (Priestley JA).
41 Perkins v National Australia Bank (1999) 30 ACSR 256, 264. It is assumed His Honour is referring to s 164(4)(a)
only by this comment, as he later discusses connection or relationship in s 164(4)(b).
42 (1992) 10 ACLC 253, 264.
117
protection of the Rule in Turquands case because it had not made further inquiry when
its suspicions of irregularity should have been aroused. Under the statutory provisions, a
strict interpretation of actual knowledge in s 164(4)(a) would have resulted in the bank
being able to assert the protective assumptions in s 164(3). This is because despite the
existence of suspicious circumstances, the bank did not actually know that the company
seal had been affixed by persons unauthorised to do so.
To give protection to an outsider in these circumstances may encourage the outsider
to refrain from making reasonable inquiries in the fear that such inquiries may lead to the
acquisition of knowledge that would result in the loss of the protective assumptions. This
would encourage outsiders such as lenders to don blinkers and perhaps unwittingly assist
company officers to breach their duties or act without authority to the detriment of the
company and its innocent shareholders or creditors. Mason CJ in the Northside case
commented that to put a lender on inquiry in the circumstances of the case was to strike
a fair balance between promoting business convenience and discouraging fraud and dishonesty. It would compel lending institutions to act prudently and thereby enhance the
integrity of commercial transactions and morality.43
Perhaps in recognition of these policy considerations, the Full Court of the Supreme
Court of Victoria in Brick and Pipe Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd44
retracted from a strict interpretation of actual knowledge when it added:
What amounts to actual knowledge is largely dependent on the facts and circumstances in a particular case and the inference they allow.45
The court was prepared to impute to the lender the actual knowledge of its solicitor.
It was not necessary to establish the actual knowledge of the lender itself. This means
that the knowledge of an agent may be imputed as actual knowledge of a principal.46
This hybrid view derives from an interpretation of former s 164(4)(b) connection or
relationship that confines it to a species of actual knowledge, that is, knowledge that
insiders ought to know. That section provided that the assumptions were not available
where the persons connection or relationship with the company is such that the person
ought to know that the assumption is not correct.
This limitation appears to adopt something similar to the common law inquiry exception to the Rule in Turquands case in situations where the person dealing with the company has a connection or relationship with the company. This limb of former s 164(4)
may strengthen the argument that the first limb should be given a narrow reading in the
interpretation of actual knowledge. The doubt raised by the wording of former s
164(4)(b) was that if Parliament intended the inquiry exception to apply generally, it
would not have restricted the section to situations where the person dealing with the company had a connection or relationship with it.
The purpose behind the second limb of former s 164(4) appears to be the adoption of
the common law principle that directors and other insiders of a company generally cannot gain the protection of the Rule in Turquands case.47 This exception was restricted so
43
44
45
46
47
118
as not to operate against a director who did not act as such in the particular transaction.48
Section 164(4)(b) does not refer to this distinction. Its terms are satisfied if there is a connection or relationship with the company, irrespective of whether the person acted for the
company in the particular transaction.
On this interpretation it would appear that former s 164(4)(b) had a narrow application so that it only applied to a non-arms length connection or relationship where the
person dealing with the company was an insider. The Explanatory Memorandum to the
1983 amendments stated the purpose of the provisions as being to protect persons who
are innocent and act in good faith. The existence of a connection or relationship which
resulted in a non-arms length dealing would strike at the innocence and good faith of the
person dealing with the company.
As mentioned under the substantial change view, this narrow interpretation of connection or relationship has authority, notably in Lyford v Media Portfolio Ltd.49 Media
borrowed money from Broadlands and secured the loan by conferring a charge that was
executed under the common seal of Media. The common seal was affixed and signed by
a director who acted without authority. The articles of Media provided that the common
seal could only be affixed with the authority of a resolution of the board. Such a resolution was not passed. Broadlands sought to enforce the charge and relied on the assumption of due sealing under former s 164(3)(e). Media argued that Broadlands was prevented from relying on this assumption because Broadlands and one of its directors had
a relationship with the director of Media such that Broadlands ought to have known that
the director of Media was acting without authority. This argument asserted that former s
164(4)(b) prevented Broadlands from making the assumption. Nicholson J rejected this
argument and gave former s 164(4)(b) a narrow operation. He held that it referred to
knowledge that a person ought to have by reason of a connection or relationship with the
company and not to knowledge that the person ought to have because of the circumstances of the transaction itself.
Obviously, a person who is a director or secretary would have a connection or relationship with the company such that the person would be deemed to have knowledge of
irregularities in the companys internal affairs. To allow an officer of the company the
protection of the statutory indoor management rule would be to encourage ignorance
and condone dereliction of duty.50 Such encouragement may arise where a director
gained protection so as to enforce a transaction that was not beneficial to the company
and also where directors are unaware of the articles of their company and whether the
internal proceedings are properly carried out.
A non-arms length relationship may also occur where the person dealing with the
company is an employee or solicitor of the company or perhaps a major shareholder. A
person may also be regarded as having a connection or relationship with a company for
the purposes of the narrow view of s 164(4)(b) where that person is involved in the operation of a group of companies of which the company with which he or she is dealing is
a member.51
48
49
50
51
119
According to Lyford v Media Portfolio Ltd, in order for the limitation contained in s
164(4)(b) to apply, it is necessary to refer to all the circumstances which show the nature
of the connection or relationship. It may then be assessed whether that connection or relationship was such that the person ought to have known that the assumption was incorrect. Nicholson J did not extend connection or relationship to include an arms length
business relationship with past dealings. On the contrary, he considered that the past
dealings indicated that the director of the chargor had the authority of the company to
affix the common seal. This was because the lender knew the director was in day-to-day
control of the management and finances of the company, the companys office was the
directors office and earlier borrowings in the name of the company had been concluded
by the director.52
The narrow interpretation outlined above has the effect of giving an outsider greater
scope under the statutory rules to enforce a contract despite refusing to make inquiries
about an apparent irregularity, than was the position previously at common law. This is
because the inquiry exception as applied in the Northside case only operates where the
person dealing with the company has a legal or non-arms length connection or relationship with company.
120
the Rule in Turquands case is such a failure. The High Court in the Northside case
strongly indicated that the common law inquiry exception was crucial in achieving the
purposes of the rule.
Kirby P in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd55 saw the interaction of the common law and statutory rules in these terms.
While effect should certainly be given to [former s 164] according to its terms, those terms do not
appear in a legal, social and economic vacuum...[former s 164] is not to be seen as a provision
which overrides well established principles and policies of the common law (as recently expressed
in Northside) unless that result is made plain by the language of the section.
The strict wording of former s 164(4)(a), which revolves around the term actual
knowledge, did not adequately incorporate the policy behind the common law principles and as stated in the Explanatory Memorandum. This resulted in the courts showing
some willingness to adopt a liberal interpretation of this term in order to arrive at a result
which accords with the common law. It was through this route that we retain the inquiry
exception to the Rule in Turquands case or something similar to it, despite its apparent
removal from former s 164(4).
This interpretation is to be preferred because the policy considerations referred to in
the Northside case and the Explanatory Memorandum are largely concerned with the
probity of the person dealing with the company. In effecting a balance of interests
between a company and the outsider it is surely relevant to consider the good faith or
innocence of the outsider. This matter is not directly referred to by the former provision, which only speaks of the state of actual knowledge possessed by the outsider. This
state of actual knowledge on the strict, literal view is not affected by considerations such
as whether the outsider has wilfully donned blinkers, has recklessly failed to make
inquiries when the circumstances strongly point to the need to make them, whether an
honest and reasonable person would have had actual knowledge of the facts given the
surrounding circumstances and whether a reasonable and honest person would have been
put on inquiry as a result of knowledge of the circumstances.
In considering whether an outsider should have the protection contained in the former s 164(3) assumptions, the good faith and probity of the outsider must be relevant so
as to allow a consideration of these factors. This could have been achieved in the former
provisions extending the operation of s 164(4)(a) to include a situation where the outsider
ought to know that a protective assumption is not correct. The limitation would then be
attracted where the outsider is put on inquiry but fails to do so in circumstances such as
arose in the Northside case.
The implementation of this proposal also clarifies the operation of the former s
164(4)(a) limitation in accordance with the policy of the section and obviate the need for
judicial ingenuity by giving a strained interpretation to the words actual knowledge.
Otherwise, it remains uncertain as to when inferences arise which would enable a court
to deem an outsider as possessing actual knowledge when this cannot be strictly shown.
This extension of the limitation in former s 164(4)(a) to incorporate the inquiry
exception would be consistent with equitable principles in relation to constructive trusts.
A company may recover compensation from a third party who has assisted the compa55 (1994) 12 ACLC 48, 51.
121
nys officers in a dishonest transaction with knowledge of their breach of duty.56 The
meaning of knowledge in these constructive trust cases has been broadly interpreted so
as to include knowledge that would have been gained by a reasonable person put on
inquiry due to the circumstances (discussed in chapter 4). The law of constructive trusts
applies to directors who act in breach of duty as well as trustees. Therefore under equitable principles, a company may seek a remedy for the recovery of property from a third
party who made a calculated abstention from inquiry.57
If the equitable rules give a company greater scope to bring an action against an outsider to seek remedies to avoid the contract or recover property, a plaintiff company
would be well-advised to rely, if possible, on the equitable rules which give a broad
meaning to knowledge. However this would require the company to firstly establish a
breach of fiduciary duty by an officer. Former s 164 does not require this.
The extent to which actual knowledge may be inferred also causes significant
uncertainty. For example it is difficult to determine whether actual knowledge exists in
circumstances where the outsider is aware of various facts but may not have understood
that these have a combined significance which if understood would have resulted in the
acquisition of further actual knowledge. The circumstances where knowledge will be
deemed under equitable principles of constructive trusts are quite clearly defined. These
principles have evolved over a long period and it is difficult to determine the extent to
which they may be incorporated into former s 164(4)(a).
The Company Law Review Act 1998 redrafted the provisions, so it is necessary to
examine whether the new version of the rule overcomes these difficulties.
These assertions warrant analysis. There are two apparent differences between the
wording of former s 164(4) and (5) and s 128(4):
1. there is a specific temporal connection introduced by the phrase at the time of;
and
56 Consul Development Pty Ltd v DPC Estates Pty Ltd (1975) 132 CLR 373; Baden Devaux and Lecuit v Societe
Generale [1983] BCLC 325; Ninety Five Pty Ltd v Banque National de Paris [1988] WAR 132.
57 Consul Development Pty Ltd v DPC Estates Pty Ltd (1975) 132 CLR 373, 408 (Stephen J).
58 Explanatory Memorandum, Company Law Review Bill 1998, [8.7].
122
123
was to create a provision which is more favourable to third parties than that
which existed previously.62
3. The debate as to the ambit of former s 164(4)(b) was not concluded, so an intention to depart from the previous law is ambiguous. As discussed above, the
meaning of s 164(4)(b) equivocates between either of the two views expressed in
Fiberi: Kirby Ps, that it equates with the common law put on inquiry and
Priestley JAs that ought to know means an examination of the conduct of a
reasonable and prudent outsider faced with the particular factual matrix. As the
Explanatory Memorandum excludes put on inquiry and refers to Fiberi, but
not to any specific judgment or passage, this could be interpreted as implicit support for the view of Priestley JA over Kirby Ps put on inquiry. This interpretation is supported by the fact that the Priestley JA view was concurred with by
Clark JA.
Examining the wording of the provision, a new element is potentially introduced by
using the word suspect. The test to suspect is used elsewhere in the Corporations Act
(e.g. s 588G), and in other areas of law (e.g. bankruptcy), and has existing principle upon
which to base its application.
The classic definition of suspect as applied in Australia appears in the judgment of
Kitto J in Queensland Bacon Pty Ltd v Rees:63
A suspicion that something exists is more than mere idle wondering whether it exists or not; it is
a feeling of actual apprehension or mistrust ... Consequently, a reason to suspect that a fact exists
is more than a reason to consider or look into the possibility of its existence.
As a definition of the degree of awareness that does not amount to suspicion, Kitto
Js test has proved useful in corporate law applications. Degrees of awareness that have
been distinguished from suspicion are:
more than a mere idle wondering;64
association of action with risk;65
mere passing suspicion;66
compelling inference;67
awareness of a reasonable and prudent person in the position of the outsider;68
expectation or prediction;69
62 C Hammond, Put Upon Inquiry Has Been Put to Rest Under Section 128(4) of the Corporations Law, But Have
Third Parties Dealing With Companies Been Placed in a Stronger Position? A Question of Statutory Interpretation
(1998) 16 Company and Securities Law Journal 562, 563.
63 (1966) 115 CLR 266, 303.
64 Queensland Bacon Pty Ltd v Rees (1966) 115 CLR 266.
65 Spedley Securities Ltd v Southern Sea Farms Ltd (1991) 9 ACLC 1367. Young J held that even where a person makes
a decision, aware that it is associated with risk, this is not a sufficient connection with the concept of suspicion.
66 H A J Ford (1986, 4th ed), supra n 18, 101 distinguished a mere passing suspicion from the basis for compelling
inference, formed for example when the outsider has knowledge of some facts from which a reasonable person
could infer that the assumption was incorrect.
67 Ibid.
68 Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACLC 48, 59 (Priestley JA). There is negligible difference between
this formulation and the one above.
69 To suspect as opposed to expect has been acknowledged in the insolvent trading cases to incorporate different
degrees of awareness: 3M Australia Pty Ltd v Kemish (1986) 4 ACLC 185, 192 (Foster J). See also Metropolitan
Fire Systems Pty Ltd v Miller (1997) 23 ACSR 699, 711 (Einfeld J): From the cases in which the meaning of these
words has been considered, it would appear that to suspect something requires a lower threshold of knowledge or
awareness than to expect it: see a discussion on to suspect by Kitto J in Queensland Bacon Pty Ltd v Rees (1966)
115 CLR 266, at 303; and 3M Australia at 192.
124
70 Ford Austin and Ramsay, supra n 61, (10th ed, 2001) [13.300]: While every case of suspicion in the Queensland
Bacon sense would be a case of being put on enquiry, not every case of being put on enquiry amounts to a suspicion.
71 Queensland Bacon Pty Ltd v Rees (1966) 115 CLR 266, 303.
72 CAC v Guardian Investments Pty Ltd [1984] VR 1019, 1025 (Ormiston J).
73 Loxton, supra n 60, 31. This definition was formulated by amalgamating the case law and dictionary definitions of
suspect.
74 Baden, Delvaux and Lecuit v Societe Generale pour Favoriser le Developpement du Commerce et de lIndustrie en
France SA [1983] BCLC 325.
NO KNOWLEDGE
5. KNOWLEDGE OF CIRCUMSTANCES
WHICH PUT AN HONEST AND
REASONABLE PERSON ON INQUIRY
4. KNOWLEDGE OF CIRCUMSTANCES
WHICH INDICATE THE FACTS TO AN
HONEST & REASONABLE PERSON
1. ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE
ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE
125
126
NO AWARENESS
Mere wondering
BADEN SCALE
CONSTRUCTIVE KNOWLEDGE
Northside
Kirby P in Fiberi
S
U
S
P
E
C
T
?
Metropolitan Fire
Systems v Miller
Put on inquiry
5. KNOWLEDGE OF
CIRCUMSTANCES
WHICH PUT AN HONEST
AND REASONABLE
PERSON ON INQUIRY
4. KNOWLEDGE OF
CIRCUMSTANCES
WHICH INDICATE THE
FACTS TO AN HONEST
& REASONABLE
Compelling inference
Expectation
2. WILFUL SHUTTING OF
EYES
Actual knowledge
1. ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE
ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE
ACTUAL AWARENESS
127
The statutory rule would not be intended to reward lazy or wilfully bind outsiders.
This is consistent with the content of the more specific assumptions in s 129. For example, s 129(2) allows the outsider to assume that a person named in public documents as
officer has been properly appointed. Whilst the outsider does not have to prove actual
reliance on the public record, failure to search has, in past decisions, lead to an unacceptable risk of being unable to rely on the assumption. Whilst the assumption provides incentive to search the public record, the exception cannot effectively cancel out that incentive.
At the other extreme, s 128(4) could just mean the same as Priestley JAs interpretation of former s 164(4)(b). The latter argument has more theoretical appeal in the sense
that it is consistent with the derivation and development of the rule, (i.e. that it is available to innocent outsiders). This is consistent with the Explanatory Memorandum and
also consistent with the wider commercial themes discussed in chapter 3, in emphasising
the role of the outsiders conduct in the transaction and Mason CJs78 notion of balancing
commercial convenience with morality.
The new provision has stimulated debate about whether any real change will be
reflected in judicial attitudes to the indoor management rule. The available commentary
on the new provision is similarly confident that the provision is flexible enough to admit
the existing jurisprudence.79 Accordingly, the existing case law such as the due inquiry
75 M Bland, Knowledge, Constructive Notice and Unconscionable Conduct LLM thesis presented to Queensland
University of Technology Faculty of Law, 1995.
76 Supported by Loxton, supra n 60, 32.
77 I Ramsay, The New Corporations Law (1998) 35.
78 As expressed in Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1990) 8 ACLC 611, 621622.
79 Hammond (1998), supra n 62, 564: it is not inconceivable that a court, when faced with a transaction lacking corporate benefit, could find that a reasonable person in the position of the lender would have a real apprehension of
fear that the assumption ... was not correct. See also Horrigan (1998), supra n 60, 17: this term is sufficiently
open-ended to allow judges some flexibility to disentitle financiers and other outsiders dealing with companies from
relying upon the assumptions in the right matrix of circumstances. Contrast, Loxton, supra n 60, 32.
128
exception is likely to remain relevant to s 128(4). The significance of earlier cases is discussed below.
129
purport to act for the company, as those previous dealings with the individuals
do not create enough of a connection, or representation of a connection, with the
company.
7. The general circumstances giving rise to the requirement of the financing transaction, such as the desperation of the borrower, the urgency with which the
transaction is conducted, or the quantum of the loan.
8. The person deriving the benefit from the transaction is the director proffering
the companys assets as security for loans for the directors personal or external
interests. This is the next step in awareness for the lender taking out a third
party security. Due to past dealings with the director in other capacities, the
lender has actual knowledge that the common director is the link between the
borrower and the security provider. This actual knowledge was emphasised in
Koorootang.
9. The assets secured are trust assets.
10. The assets secured are of a non-commercial nature such as a family home not
normally associated with corporate security transactions.
11. The outsider believes they are dealing with a corporate group, but does not
independently confirm the relationship between the entities.
12. The outsider believes they are dealing with a managing director, but does not
independently confirm their authority. Similarly, the outsider may deal with
several officers, mistakenly believing it is dealing with the board, but never
authenticates that belief. In Sixty-Fourth Throne, the bank dealt with both Mr
and Mrs Kandy, who were directors of other companies in past dealings, but
did not authenticate their authority to deal for the corporate security provider.
13. The outsider has sought further information, but relied on a non-authoritative
source for confirmation. For example, in Sparrow Green, the companys
accountant contributed to the banks belief that the second director had
resigned. In Sixty-Fourth Throne, the bank relied on assertions from a solicitor,
but it was the borrowers solicitor, not the companys solicitor.
14. The outsider chooses to disregard the public record. In Sparrow Green, the
bank chose to believe the assertions of one director that the other director had
resigned, even though the public record did not show that resignation. In SixtyFourth Throne, the banks solicitors obtained a company search that accurately
reflected the appointment of officers, but did not correlate that information with
the sealed document.
15. The outsider has requested further information, but then does not insist on following through. This can be specific, such as in Sparrow Green, where the
bank required a copy of the directors resignation, but settled the transaction
without it; or it can relate to evidence of departure from the banks usual practice. In Koorootang, the bank settled the transaction despite its officers not
complying with the banks usual procedure requiring legal confirmation that the
trusts assets could be provided as enforceable security for the borrower.
130
16. The ease with which the outsider can access information about the corporate
security provider. This factor highlights the difficult line-drawing exercise for
the outsider. Priestley JA in Fiberi held that for the bank to obtain information
verifying Doyles assertions as to the identity of Fiberis officers should have
been a matter of no difficulty, and if it was, then the need for obtaining the
information becomes more obvious.83
17. The existence of an independent duty between outsider and borrower creates an
insider relationship and may preclude the indoor management rule. Although
the circumstances in which it may arise in the case of a lender and corporate
borrower may be unusual, Rolfe J in Beach Petroleum84 held that a person dealing with a company is not entitled to rely on the assumptions if they have an
independent duty to the company, for example, a fiduciary relationship. The
rule cannot allow the person dealing with the company to avoid this duty.
This list is not exhaustive. For example, although Table 5.2 in chapter 5 mentions the
role of shareholder ratification, it was not directly relevant in any of the cases, but is still
relevant to the overall question of outsider protection. Nor does this list suggest that all
factors need to be part of the outsiders awareness in every case. There is a point of accumulation. The courts that mention the factual matrix are not specific as to its global
content or the point of accumulation. The extent to which the factual matrix can generate guidelines for outsiders conduct is discussed in the recommendations in Chapter 10.
Given this matrix, Northside, a case on due inquiry, shares similar features to Fiberi,
Sixty-Fourth Throne, and Scorpion, prompting comparison with the common law due
inquiry test and Priestley JAs interpretation of ought to know. The two tests are different, although Hansen J in Koorootang acknowledged that: It is difficult to imagine,
but there may be, cases in which the difference between these two views could be decisive....85 If the latter is still relevant to s 128(4), then the Explanatory Memorandum
requires a distinction. Several points are relevant to the distinction:
1. Northside was based on the Rule in Turquands case, which is not specific as to
the types of assumptions that may be made. The application of the exceptions to
the case was a substantive pre-condition to the issue whether the rule applied and
whether it was a procedural matter that Barclays was seeking to assume.
2. Under the statutory cases, the outsider first has to satisfy the court that the
assumption applies before the company has argued the exceptions. In four of the
five ought to know cases involving the corporate seal (Fiberi, Sixty-Fourth
Throne, Scorpion, Sparrow Green), the lender could not access the assumption
as to due sealing, but the courts still considered how the exception would have
defeated the lenders in any event. Koorootang was decided the other way
around, that is, instead of nominating the assumption that the bank was entitled
to rely on, Hansen J dismissed the issue by deciding that the exception applied in
any event.
83 Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACLC 48, 59.
84 Beach Petroleum NL v Abbott Tout Russell Kennedy (1999) 33 ACSR 1. This case involved the availability of the
statutory assumptions to the companys solicitor and is not directly on point in discussing a lenders duties.
85 [1998] 3 VR 16, 119.
131
3. The courts in the statutory cases have provided more detail to justify the factors
that resolved the ought to know issue than is evident from Northside. Although
the cases have been declared as similar, the later cases emphasise factors other
than the third party security without corporate benefit factor. Northside suggests that due inquiry is triggered by the first four elements in the matrix, listed above. To the extent that Table 5.2 represents that other features were relevant
in that case, these other features were not all emphasised in the case.
4. The indoor management rule cases involving a disputed sealing, whether based
on due inquiry or ought to know, would still be decided the same under the
1998 version of the rule. All cases involved issues of agents and officers
authority, the defects in which are not cured by the indoor management rule.
Koorootang is an exception to the extent that it involved two different transactions: a scrip lien and a subsequent mortgage. The scrip lien was just an issue of
agency, as the bank accepted the deposit of share certificates in Koorootangs
name under cover of a letter signed by one director, Jock Jeffries, without any
corroboration that he had the authority of the company to enter into the transaction. The mortgage was sealed with the forged signature of the other director, so
the case would turn on whether the bank actually knew or suspected the forgery.
Given the added factual complication that the bank had actual knowledge that
the assets charged under the third party security were trust assets, the issue is
whether the trust asset point is a strong enough point of distinction with Story to
trigger the suspicion. The indoor management rule does not allow the bank to
assume that a corporate trustee has complied with its trust deed in granting the
security, so dealing with a trust provided the bank with additional responsibilities
of inquiry.
5. The distinction between categories of knowledge is still relevant under trust law,
particularly the circumstances of the lenders knowledge that may lead to constructive trust liability. The rule does not preclude the imposition of the constructive trust remedy. This was discussed in chapter 5. A constructive trust was
argued successfully in Koorootang and unsuccessfully in Equiticorp and the
Sixty-Fourth Throne appeal.
The statutory ought to know exception was successfully avoided in Brick & Pipe
and Story, which at first glance are also similar. Closer inspection reveals that they do not
fit the matrix. In Brick & Pipe,86 the lender made searches and inquiries as to the appropriate officers of the company but relied on a representation from the company to resolve
inconsistencies. Brick and Pipe itself was also a trading company. In Story, Gleeson CJ
commented that the case was different from Northside in that the company received
some benefit from the loan transaction due to the intermingling of the financial affairs of
Mr Storys external interests and the company.87 Equiticorp does not fit the matrix
because firstly the majority of the New South Wales Court of Appeal accepted that group
welfare equated to corporate purpose. Secondly the majority accepted that the bank was
dealing with a managing director who had the actual authority of the companies to enter
into the transaction.
86 Although the Court did remark on how analogous the facts were to Northside.
87 (1993) 11 ACLC 629, 638.
132
Chapter 9
Implications for Lenders
The Factual Matrix That May Preclude Reliance on the Statutory
Indoor Management Rule
Chapter 8 analysed the limitations to the statutory assumptions. We concluded that the
factors of due inquiry that were highlighted by the High Court in Northside
Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General1 according to the common law are likely to
continue to be relevant to the statutory formulation of knew or suspected in s 128(4).
The factors of due inquiry or suspicion were identified according to the collective
description of the factual matrix. This adopts the approach of Priestley JA in Bank of New
Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd.2 If the circumstances of the borrowing transaction fit the factual matrix, the worst case for the outsider is that the new statutory rule still imposes the
same obligations of inquiry as formulated by Priestley JA in Fiberi, that is, the standard of
a reasonable and prudent banker. That standard at least comprises three main elements:
1. identifying the parties involved in the transaction, the nature of their involvement
(e.g borrower, security provider, guarantor) and their relationship with each other;
2. identifying the officers of the corporate parties; and
3. relying on information on the public record to confirm identification.
Formulating recommendations to fit all transactions is imprecise due to the number
of factors in the matrix. Other commentators have prefaced their practical suggestions
with different concerns or priorities, for example:
the new provisions should give rise to an expectation that the incentive to inquire
is reduced.3
There is a circular argument that could develop regarding the practical steps that
a lender takes. If the lender adopts a particular practice as a safeguard, does that
then become an inquiry that a reasonable and prudent banker would take,
prompted by suspicion?4
Under the former provisions, Horrigan described the line-drawing exercise
between wilful blindness and making routine enquiries that initiate other
queries.5 That comment still applies, as there is little support for a view that to
suspect something completely neutralises wilful blindness.
1
2
3
4
134
The factors in the matrix are cumulative. As most of the litigation has concerned
transactions with lenders, we formulate guidelines to maximise the lenders reliance on
the statutory rule. First, we indicate the general types of situations that may trigger the
exceptions to the rule. Second, we recommend positive steps that lenders may take to
maximise their position. Third, we examine in detail some particular scenarios, recurring
in past litigation and illustrate how our recommended procedures may be applied or varied, as the particular factual matrix may require.
135
between the directors and shareholders of the borrower, its purposes and business activities, the reasons behind the proposed borrowings and the nature of the
secured assets.
2. Carry out an ASIC search to ascertain the identity of the officers of the
corporate borrower/third party security provider. This information is currently
available in secondary form (printout ASCOT search) from the ASICs transcription from primary documents. Discount any risk that the information is inaccurate.6
For purposes other than reliance on the rule, the lender also needs to know the
existence and terms of prior registered charges, as the doctrine of constructive
notice still applies to charges: s 130(2).
3. Where the company search reveals the names of directors or significant shareholders with whom the lender has had no contact, inquiries should be made as to
whether they consent or are opposed to the borrower entering into the proposed
transaction.
4. Once the lender has carried out the search, its accuracy must be relied on to the
exclusion of all other inconsistent assertions. If the information revealed by a
company search is out of date or a search does not reveal required information
because the borrower has been newly registered or a change of officers has
occurred, it is best to wait until the appropriate returns are duly lodged. Where
there is a sense of urgency that the transaction proceed quickly, the lender should
obtain a certificate signed by a person who has actual authority of the company
(the board, a managing director or the companys solicitor), stating that the relevant officers of the borrower have been duly appointed, are authorised to enter
into the transaction and relevant returns have been lodged or will be lodged as
soon as practicable
In National Australia Bank v Sparrow Green Pty Ltd7 and Brick and Pipe
Industries Ltd v Occidental Life Nominees Pty Ltd,8 the lender was persuaded to
rely on information contrary to the public record. In the latter, the lender was
successful through the circuitous route of proving that the source of the alternate
information was a person with the actual authority of the company to make
assertions regarding the authority of other officers. This type of representation
was unsuccessful in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd,9 Pyramid Building
Society v Scorpion Hotels Pty Ltd,10 Sixty-Fourth Throne Pty Ltd v Macquarie
Bank Ltd11 and Sparrow Green, as the parties who made the representations
regarding the officers did not have the actual authority to do so. The facts and
outcomes of these cases were discussed in detail in chapters 2 and 5.
6 Loxton, ibid, 34 discusses the scenario of an error in the initial search that renders it an abundance of caution to
obtain document images of the returns. The possibility that an ASIC error will adversely affect the outsiders
reliance on the rule was discounted in the discussion on s 129(2) in chapter 6.
7 (1999) 17 ACLC 1665.
8 (1992) 10 ACLC 253.
9 (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
10 (1996) 14 ACLC 679.
11 [1998] 3 VR 133.
136
5.
6.
7.
8.
12
13
14
15
In Sparrow Green, Debelle J (at first instance) noted that the lender called for
a copy of the form recording the directors resignation.12 Even this strategy is
unreliable to counter the information on the public record, as there is no evidence that it has been lodged with ASIC. The pressure may be on the lender to
accept such evidence if the transaction timetable is tight. To accept a copy of a
form to be lodged would also require the lender to demand some evidence that
it had been lodged (such as an ASIC receipt) prior to the transaction being
executed.
In Sixty-Fourth Throne, the Court indirectly suggested it was a case of wilful
blindness for the lender to obtain a search of the corporate security provider but
then not cross-reference this information when presented with the signed mortgage.13
Do not obtain a copy of the companys constitution, as the information within
is not required for any of the specific assumptions in s 129(1)(7). Myers v
Aquarell Pty Ltd14 demonstrates that knowledge of the constitution was irrelevant for the outsider to access the assumption that the single director had validly affixed the seal to the mortgage.
If the lender already has a copy of the constitution (for example, from past
dealings), then this will constitute actual knowledge of its contents. However,
as Brick & Pipe and Sparrow Green show, this precludes reliance on the
assumption in s 129(1), but it does not preclude reliance on other assumptions
as to execution. In Sparrow Green, the banks actual knowledge that the constitution required two directors, combined with its failure to rely on the public
information as to officers, meant that the assumption as to proper execution
was not available. This contrasts with the effect of Myers, as even if the lender
had knowledge of the constitution, the sealing clause would be satisfied where
there was only one director on the public record and that director affixed the
seal as director and secretary.
Generally audit the other information that the lender routinely collects with a
view to critically assessing the merit of that information. The facts from complex cases such as Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group Ltd 15
indicate that the bank had accumulated a variety of information over the years
that had become distributed amongst different files, which overall would have
given it a high degree of insight into the activities of the borrower and the third
party company.
Ascertain, in general terms, the purpose of the loan. This is information that
banks routinely collect and is a particularly difficult factor to dismiss. On the
one hand, the assertions by the borrower at the time of the loan application may
be useful in demonstrating corporate purpose, either of the company itself, or
for the third party security provider. (The third party situation is discussed
under the particular factual matrices below). On the other hand, it may render
137
an otherwise routine transaction difficult for the lender, if the disclosure hints at
anything involving non-corporate purpose. Non-corporate purpose encompasses
the exercise of corporate power for illegal purposes (e.g. financing self
dealings16) or improper purpose (e.g. directors breaching duties to the company,
such as using funds for personal projects or simply some other potential for
conflict) or just generally, lack of corporate benefit (e.g. loan being used to
fund loans to or activities of other entities). An adverse disclosure of the purpose of the loan affects the lender because it relates to one of the factors in the
matrix, lack of corporate benefit. As discussed below under the particular factual matrices, the effect of lack of corporate benefit as the sole factor is uncertain,
as it is only one of the factors in the matrix for the reasonable and prudent
banker test that triggers suspicion. To the extent that the disclosure hints at
other matters such as illegality or fiduciary breach, the lender may also be vulnerable in equity, either because they will not be a bona fide purchaser for
value without notice or they may become subject to participatory liability (discussed in chapter 6).
9. Do not accept a document signed either under seal, or on behalf of the company, without cross referencing the signatories to the ASIC search information.
Also, do not accept a seal unless it accurately consists of the companys full
name, the expression Australian Company Number and that number: s 123.
10. Avoid the situation arising where the companys officers execute documents on
the lenders premises or otherwise in the vicinity of the lenders officers, as this
may arouse actual knowledge. In the common law case of Efrons Tie,17 it was
held that executing documents in the banks premises meant that it had actual
knowledge of a breach of the constitution. Actual knowledge of a breach of the
constitution does not directly affect proper execution, but actual knowledge of
some adverse factors adds to the factual matrix and the climate of suspicion.
11. Do not rely on any assertions from any individuals purporting to represent the
company until it is confirmed first, that they are officers from the public record,
and secondly, that they have the actual authority to bind the company. This latter point is a barrier for reliance by an outsider. Only the managing director, the
board as a whole and the shareholders in general meeting (subject to some limits) have the authority of the company. To rely on any of these sources for actual authority requires further inquiries: the existence of actual authority is not a
matter that can be assumed. Here, the best evidence is a board resolution
approving the transaction and the officers authority to execute specific contracts. The situations where actual authority was found with hindsight by the
courts, notably Brick & Pipe and Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New
Zealand,18 represent risky strategies for universal application. The lender cannot
rely on any judicial disposition to treat high profile and self-appointed individuals as managing directors without some independent corroboration.
16 Illegal in the sense that s 260D imposes civil penalty orders on those persons involved in the companys contravention of s 260A.
17 Re Efrons Tie & Knitting Mills Pty Ltd [1932] VLR 8. Discussed in chapter 4.
18 (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
138
12. Corporate benefit is not a major concern unless the transaction involves a third
party security (see the specific scenarios below); or in some other way the
lender has actual knowledge of its absence, such as discussed in point 8 above.
13. Check any relevant trust deed if the borrower or security provider is a trustee.
14. If doubts remain, the lender can incorporate draft minutes of proceedings of the
board with the offer to finance.
These minutes should record:
that named persons executing the required documentation are authorised to
do so,
that the company seal is affixed by persons with authority and in compliance
with the constitution,
the directors who were present.
139
contacting the third party company direct, the lender creates evidence of corporate benefit. Hansen J in Koorootang Nominees Pty Ltd v ANZ Banking Group
Ltd21 was critical of the banks failure to contact other officers of the trustee
company, or even the beneficiaries of the trust. External sources that have not
been accepted by the courts include solicitors acting for the borrower with no
evidence that they were retained by the security provider (Sixty-Fourth Throne
Pty Ltd v Macquarie Bank Ltd22) and, although not a case on third party securities, the companys accountant (National Australia Bank v Sparrow Green Pty
Ltd23).
3. As in the general guidelines, ascertain the identity of the officers of the third
party company from ASIC and rely only on that information.
Failure to take these proactive steps in a third party security situation does not automatically trigger the exception to render the rule unavailable. The risk of the failure is
that, with hindsight, an aggrieved corporate third party could accumulate enough of the
factors to argue the existence of a factual matrix that indicates a reasonable and prudent
banker would have made inquiries.
[1998] 3 VR 16.
[1998] 3 VR 133.
(1999) 17 ACLC 1665.
(1993) 11 ACLC 925.
ANZ Executors & Trustee Company Ltd v Qintex Australia Ltd [1991] 2 Qd R 360. See also G D Cooper and D B
Robertson, Subsidiary Companies Guarantees Their Continued Existence (1990) 1 Journal of Banking and
Finance Law and Practice 284, 286; the Honourable Justice Paul de Jersey, Lending to Company Groups The
Problems of Corporate Power and Directors Authority, Paper presented at the 9th Annual Banking Law and
Practice Conference, Gold Coast, April 1992, p 14; J Lambrick, Corporate Benefit in Financial Transactions: A
Policy Perspective (1997) 8 Journal of Banking and Finance Law and Practice 212, 223225.
26 (1976) 137 CLR 1, 6 (Mason J).
27 CASAC, Corporate Groups: Final Report (May, 2000) [243][246].
140
mon ownership.28 (See type 3 below). Corroboration reflects back to one of Priestley JAs
comments in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd29 relating to the ease of acquiring the
information. Ownership is a matter of public record. The disputes litigated show two
types of group structures:
1. the formal structure where ultimately a public company is involved as a holding
company, leading to a high level of disclosure in the market about the public
companys entities.30 In cases such as Equiticorp and Brick & Pipe, the lenders
were dealing with major corporate groups and this would be easy to corroborate
from public information.
2. The informal structure, involving loose alliances usually of proprietary companies where outsiders have assumed that common directors equates to some formal group structure. This incorrect assumption is evident for example in Fiberi.
In these situations, confirmation of the genuine group connection may be more
difficult given the absence of financial reporting by proprietary companies,31 but
share allotment information is available from the ASIC32 and the registers are
public documents.33
141
the Court was satisfied that the company, Fleetwood Star Pty Ltd, derived financial benefit from Mr Storys dealings with the bank in his other capacities.40
Conclusion
Does the new statutory indoor management rule decrease the burden of inquiry for
lenders dealing with corporate borrowers and security providers? The Explanatory
Memorandum issues the instruction to disregard the common law burden of due inquiry.
The standard of commercial morality imposed by judges requires the lender to be alert
to whether a corporate borrowing transaction balances too far in favour of facilitating
corporate fraud through inadequate inquiry. Applying this theme leads to the likelihood
that the reasonable and prudent banker standard42 will survive the transition into the new
provisions. The ramification is that the new provisions do not change the threshold problems of corporate dealing involving identifying the corporate officers and ascertaining
their authority. The Explanatory Memorandum expressed the intention to impose a
stricter test. This intention may be achieved through a change in emphasis in the factors already identified in the past cases as comprising good conduct by outsiders, rather
than imposing a major doctrinal shift. That is, there may now be a more careful analysis
of the factors in a particular factual matrix to trigger suspicion that the assumption is not
correct, than may have been the case under the former provision. The factors in the
matrix, however, still comprise those that have been identified from previous cases and
highlighted in Table 5.2 in Chapter 5.
40 The intermingling of the financial affairs of Mr Story and the company, which was known to the people who were
the sole shareholders and sole directors, and the ultimate application of part of the loan funds for the purposes of the
company, make the facts of the case significantly different from those in Northside Developments. (1993) 11 ACLC
629, 638 (Gleeson CJ).
41 [1998] 3 VR 16.
42 Per Priestley J in Bank of New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
Chapter 10
Overview
Introduction
This final chapter provides our summary of the issues and our research findings, including a restatement of the researchs significance to commercial practice involving financing contracts with companies.
This chapter is structured as follows: first, it provides a brief overview and summary of the research context of corporate contracts. Following the summary, we present a
comprehensive guide to the findings, particularly in relation to the interpretation and
operation of the statutory reforms analysed in the earlier chapters. Whilst chapter 9 contains our analysis of necessary guidelines to maximise the statutory protection to outsiders and their contracts, these recommendations are restated in a summarised form.
Finally, we present conclusions drawn from the findings, primarily areas of reform worthy of reconsideration or renewed attention.
In presenting our conclusion, it is worthwhile to note perceived limitations within
this work. We have examined the corporate law issues surrounding corporate contracts,
involving the existence of corporate power and the exercise of corporate power by the
companys officers. Tangential issues not considered in this monograph include:
The exercise by shareholders of corporate power, both in terms of ratifying
directors actions or subverting directors authority;
Contract law doctrines, such as unconscionability and misrepresentation, that
may also give rise to remedies due to the circumstances surrounding the formation of contracts;
Subsequent events to the circumstances of the formation, such as insolvency, that
may render a contract vulnerable.
We have touched on the relevance of fiduciary duties affecting the scope of officers
authority and the relevance of participatory liability where a contract is entered into in
breach of duty or trust. However, we do not present in this work a comprehensive analysis of either the substantive content of directors fiduciary duty nor of the principles of
participatory liability and constructive trusts.
The monograph focuses on corporate debt finance and corporate security transactions. However, even though such transactions often involve dealings in land, we have
not digressed to consider the effect on outsiders of the various state land titles registration systems and indefeasibility of title.
Summary
The purpose of this monograph is to examine the regulatory rules designed to facilitate
the formation of external contracts and to comment on the efficacy of legislative reform.
We have reviewed both general law developments prior to statutory intervention and the
Overview
143
statutory reforms. The current phase of statutory reform is contained in the Corporations
Act provisions inserted in 19981 covering the reforms to corporate power and ultra vires
and the changes to the wording of the statutory indoor management rule.
Companies may only enter into contracts through agents, usually its officers. The
terms of the officers appointment, meaning the grant of authority, is not required to be
disclosed and is not discernible to the outsider. The common law and s 129 provide
default rules for officers authority that arises as a matter of law. By virtue of the principles of agency, there are three types of authority that an agent may possess: actual, customary and apparent. In particular, the rules of customary authority are useful in company law, as officers appointed to a certain position are automatically granted the authority that customarily goes with that position. This is consolidated in s 129(2)(3).
The scope of officers authority is constrained by the requirement to exercise the
companys powers for a corporate purpose. Further, officers are subject to fiduciary constraints when exercising their authority. Together, these constraints operate to define the
limits of authority to exercise corporate power. The advantage from the outsiders point
of view is that the law sets out the default rules of customary authority and fiduciary duty
that are well established. The disadvantage is that issues of non-compliance with authority and fiduciary duty may affect the validity of contracts entered into with outsiders on
behalf of the company.
The preceding chapters examined the general law and recent legislative reform that
affects the formation of corporate contracts. There are two potential threats to finance
contracts: first, where the company lacks power to enter into the contract, so that it is
void ab initio, and second, where the company has power, but there is some abuse by
officers in exercising the power. The usual result in the second case is that contracts are
voidable.
Whilst the Corporations Act overcomes the void effect of the first threat, ultra vires,
whether the external contracts enforceability is enhanced by the ultra vires statutory
reforms also depends upon the application of the indoor management rule. The rule is
designed to allow outsiders to make certain assumptions regarding the officers exercise
of corporate power, for example that the procedural preconditions to the exercise of
power have been complied with. The rule has two main limitations affecting the extent
to which it assists outsiders enforcing contracts.
1. It is not comprehensive in overcoming all problems associated with dealing with
agents. For example, it is not possible to assume that officers have not acted illegally, nor is it possible to assume, from a persons assertion alone, that they are
an officer of the company. Accordingly, the outsider must ascertain from an
external source, usually ASIC records, the identity of the companys officers.
2. The rule has express exceptions where the assumptions are not available, based
on the knowledge of the outsider.
Chapter 6 reinforces the relevance of the outsiders knowledge of the officers abuse
of authority. The outsider is affected by their degree of knowledge of the circumstances
of the abuse, either because their knowledge of lack of corporate purpose:
1 Part 2B.1 Company powers and how they are exercised, Part 2B.2 Assumptions people dealing with companies
are entitled to make and Part 2B.4 Replaceable rules and constitution inserted as a result of the Company Law
Review Act 1998, operational 1 July 1998. The sections are set out in Appendix I.
144
Overview
145
to enforce the constitution. For example, chapter 5 showed that an ultra vires transaction entered into by officers is still relevant in other actions involving:
1. a winding up application;
2. the oppression remedy;
3. proceedings under statute against officers for breach of the Act;
4. a common law action for damages against officers for breach of constitution (as
the constitution forms the terms of the contract between members and officers, s
140).
Although these effects do not directly affect enforcement of the external contract,
they can disrupt or inconvenience the outsiders rights, especially in the winding up situation.
3 Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1990) 8 ACLC 611, 619 (Mason CJ): Of course, in applying
the rule, account must be taken of the doctrine of ultra vires and the constitution of the company.
4 Northside Developments Pty Ltd v Registrar-General (1987) 5 ACLC 642, 648 (Young J at first instance) citing H
Street, A Treatise on the Doctrine of Ultra Vires (1930).
5 Constructive notice means notice of the contents of the public documents.
6 Ruben v Great Fingall Consolidated [1906] AC 439.
7 Kreditbank Cassel GmbH v Schenkers [1927] 1 KB 826.
146
The nature of the common seal, and its importance in early common law doctrine that considered the seal as being the only method of expression of the companys assent.8
Although the first statutory efforts in 1983 to set out the rule stated that the legislature was simply clarifying and codifying the existing law9 in Royal British Bank v
Turquand,10 comparisons between the old law and the statutory law were inevitable.
Immediate differences between the common law and the 1983 statutory version of the
rule were:
Formal qualifying circumstances were drafted into the rule. That is, a person had
to have dealings with the company and be involved in proceedings in relation
to those dealings, to access the rule.
The statutory rule enumerated the assumptions that could be made. Apart from
the first assumption (compliance with the constitution) the other specific statutory assumptions were not clearly derived from the common law rule at all. Rather,
they represented the statutory adoption of procedural assumptions analogous to
the rule, for example, from the rules of agency.
The common law exceptions of actual and due inquiry were redrafted, initially
as actual knowledge or connection or relationship with the company such that
the outsider ought to have known that the assumption was incorrect.
The common law exception of forgery was clarified, so that the rule applied
regardless of allegations of forgery, although subject to the outsiders actual
knowledge of forgery.
Given the statutory redrafting in 1998, similar issues require examination, giving rise
to five main uncertainties regarding the rules current statutory form. These arise from:
1. The qualifying circumstances to relying on the statutory rule;
2. The revised rule as to forgeries;
3. The scope of the knowledge exceptions;
4. The scope of the specific assumption in s 129(4) that officers properly perform
their duties to the company; and
5. The scope of the specific assumptions in s 129(6) and (7) relating to execution
of documents with or without the seal and whether this relates to substantive
authority or merely procedural authority to enter into contracts.
These uncertainties, and suggested resolutions, are discussed below.
1. The pre-conditions to reliance in ss 128(1) and (2)
The drafting of the former statutory provision suggested three pre-conditions for the outsider to meet before they could access the rule. The outsider had to have:
dealings with the company,
in proceedings in relation to those dealings
where the company asserted matters contrary to the assumption.
8 K E Lindgren, The Negative Corporate Seal Rule and Exceptions Thereto (1974) 9 Melbourne University Law
Review 411.
9 Explanatory Memorandum, Company and Securities (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1983, [188].
10 (1856) 119 ER 886.
Overview
147
The new streamlined drafting of s 128(1) and (2) suggests only one element for the
outsider to prove: dealing with the company. Previous case law has given a wide meaning to dealing. Removal of the second and third element, while superficially a drafting
simplification, may actually make the rule more accessible.
2. The protection against forgery in s 128(3)
To the extent that the statutory provisions modify the forgery rule, this now refers to
forgery in the strict sense only. This statutory modification protects outsiders more
than the common law rule that rendered forgeries void. Under the statutory rule, a forgery
can be assumed to be valid execution, subject to the rules exceptions.
However, the Company Law Review Act 1998 effects both new drafting of the
forgery rule and a re-structure of the provision. There are three main differences. The
forgery rule is now found in s 128(3) (instead of in its own self contained section as with
former s 166). It appears before the exceptions in s 128(4) instead of after the exceptions
in former s 164(4). It no longer contains the express proviso of being subject to the outsiders actual knowledge. The re-ordering of the forgery provision now suggests that the
forgery assumption is subject to the same know or suspect exception is s 128(4) that
the assumptions in s 129 are subject to. Formerly the forgery assumption was only subject to the actual knowledge exception, but there was debate about the meaning of actual knowledge in former s 166.11
3. The exception to suspect in s 128(4)
The wording of the first statutory version of the knowledge exception, depended both
upon what the outsider actually knew and what they ought to know, based on their connection or relationship with the company. When enacted in 1983, this wording prompted comparison with the common law constructive knowledge exception of due inquiry.
Similarly, the redrafting of s 128(4) to substitute suspect for connection or relationship such that the outsider ought to know requires comparison. To suspect
something is a test that is found in other commercial applications. However, suspect in
these other contexts is usually treated as objective because it is used in conjunction with
the specific qualifier of reasonableness. For the purposes of s 128(4), the main uncertainty is the extent to which suspect will be treated as an objective test, particularly in
the absence of express words such reasonable or ought to know. To have, or not to
have, a suspicion is to have a subjective belief. At least in an evidentiary sense, it would
be difficult for a court to accept someones belief when surrounded by many factors that
make that belief unsustainable.
In this respect, the factual matrix concept referred to by Priestley JA in Bank of
New Zealand v Fiberi Pty Ltd12 (and discussed in detail in chapter 8) still has a role to
play in building a case against the outsiders reliance on the assumptions in s 129. The
factual matrix concept as described by Priestley JA describes the suspicion that a reasonable and prudent banker,13 placed in the factual matrix of the case, would need to
find out more. The factual matrix comprises the factors from Northside and other cases,
including Fiberi, which initiate an obligation of inquiry by the outsider. These factors
include (sourced from Table 5.2 in chapter 5):
11 See P Lipton, The Authority of Agents and Officers to Act for a Company: Legal Principles (1996) 57.
12 (1994) 12 ACLC 48.
13 Priestley JA expressed the test using the word banker, as the external party was a bank.
148
Overview
149
as a logical consequence of the process of clarifying and codifying the common law rule.
Outsiders would benefit more from an interpretation of the statutory rule that maximised
the scope of the assumption. It does not ignore the interests of the companys shareholders in favouring a wide interpretation, as the rule is subject to exceptions based on
whether the outsider has actual knowledge or suspected directors breach of fiduciary
duty. Further, the company can pursue remedies in equity for breach of fiduciary duty.
The statute does not expressly provide that the assumption in s 129(4) is subject to the
equitable rules, so it is unlikely that the rule of procedural regularity overcomes the equitable remedies for breach of fiduciary duty.15
5. The assumption as to execution of documents in s 129(5) and (6)
The assumptions as to execution of documents in s 129(5) and (6) were substantially
redrafted in 1998. This redrafting was due to two factors flowing from other Company
Law Review Act 1998 reforms:
1. the change to an optional common seal (s 123); and
2. the simplification of the former s 182 that set out in detail the rules for the formation and execution of company contracts directly, indirectly and by agents
with authority.16 The rules for execution of contracts have now been simplified in
s 127. Contracts may be executed without a seal, by the signature of two officers, or under seal, witnessed by two officers.
Ramsay, Stapledon and Fong examined the significance of the redrafted s 127, and
its effect on the correlative assumptions in s 129(5) and (6).17 Ramsay, Stapledon and
Fong discuss whether this change in drafting has rendered a substantive change in the
ambit of the indoor management rule. They distinguish between substantive authority to
enter into contracts and formal authority to affix the seal. The former provision (s 68A)
did not cure defects in authority,18 nor was the common law indoor management rule
intended to create authority where there was none. 19
Accordingly, Ramsay, Stapledon and Fong conclude that the redrafted assumptions
only relate to formal authority, so that s 129(6) does not overcome lack of substantive
authority.
The above discussion summarises the highlights of the analysis of statutory reform
in relation to ultra vires and the indoor management rule. The efficacy of the provisions
is analysed below by examining some typical safeguards. Further, the extent to which
the statutory provisions could be enhanced with additional changes, is addressed at the
end of this chapter.
150
1. Much of the litigation over the last decade has involved disputes arising from
corporate lending and security transactions. This allows a more specific and
meaningful focus.
2. The corporate lending transaction would be considered by most industry participants to be an important decision in the life of a company and one attended by
much formality. The nature of the risks and the quantum in such transactions
illustrate the tension involved in balancing the interests of the external parties
against the interests of the borrowers shareholders when assigning loss for the
outcome in abuse of corporate power.
Chapter 9 presents detailed guidelines and justifications. Below is a summary of the
main elements to the lenders successful enforcement of corporate contracts.
Overview
151
lender already has these documents, then the significance of knowledge attribution was
discussed in chapter 4 and summarised below.
If a bank insists on a copy of the constitution, for those companies that do not have
one, consider submitting a copy of s 141 (a table that signposts the replaceable rules), or,
for more detail, submit a summary of the content of the replaceable rules, available from
ASIC.20
It is important to emphasise that any information contained in the companys constitution is not required for any of the specific assumptions in s 129(1)(7).
152
Corporate purpose
On balance, it is difficult to sustain any counsel other than that the lender must ascertain,
in general terms, the purpose of the loan or the security provision. Such a routine disclosure can be seen in a positive light, as the assertions by the borrower at the time of the
loan application may be useful in discounting the effect of lack of corporate purpose.
The lender does not need to prove corporate purpose. However, as a matter of practicality, evidence of corporate purpose may be useful to have on file, to counter any
attack that may subsequently be made by the company, whether the company is seeking
to avoid the contract, or whether the company is seeking a remedy against the lender for
participating in a breach of the directors fiduciary duty (constructive trusts). Nothing in
the Corporations Act prevents the company taking action on the contract, seeking to
avoid the contract, or seeking remedies under constructive trust law. Lack of corporate
purpose is relevant because of:
1. The voidability of contracts in equity: a company can avoid a contract that is
entered into by abuse of power (whether in the sense of directors exceeding the
scope of their authority due to non-corporate purpose, or the sense of breach of
fiduciary duty). The remedy is not sustainable against the lender who acted in
good faith, for value and without notice of the abuse of power. Although equity
uses the term notice here, notice at least refers to constructive knowledge, in
the sense of what the lender reasonably ought to have known about the transaction. Therefore, the company will be successful in avoiding the contract if it can
prove that the lender ought reasonably to have had knowledge of the lack of corporate purpose.
2. The imposition of constructive trust liability on an lender who receives trust
property, with knowledge of an underlying breach of fiduciary duty: liability
under Barnes v Addy23 depends upon the claimant proving that the recipient reasonably ought to have known that the property was transferred to and acquired
by them in breach of the companys officers fiduciary duty. Therefore, the company will be successful in imposing constructive trust liability on a lender where
it can prove that the lender received the companys assets in circumstances
where the lender knew or reasonably ought to have had knowledge of directors
failure to act in the interests of the company as a whole.
3. Even where the indoor management rule may assist the lender to assume corporate purpose (e.g. s 129(4)), lack of corporate purpose is relevant to the factual
matrix concept. Lack of corporate purpose is one of the factors in the matrix for
the reasonable and prudent banker test that triggers the second exception to the
rule, rendering the specific procedural assumptions unavailable.
Overview
153
Knowledge attribution
In corporate lending and finance transactions, the lender itself is usually a company. The
lenders officers deal face to face with the company. The identity of the lenders officers
may change, or there may be a hierarchical structure to decision making in relation to the
contract. At various levels, the lender will have acquired information about the corporate
borrower. As constructive (not actual) knowledge of lack of corporate purpose is all that
is required to expose the lender to risk, then the lender invariably has an information
management problem. The significance is that the law will attribute the knowledge collected from disparate sources to the corporate outsider. Once the lender knows certain
information about the company, then this will trigger the reasonable obligation to inquire
further (constructive knowledge) or at least accumulate the factors under the factual
matrix concept that triggers the rules exception. Whether they have sought the information or not, some facts will come to the attention of the lender from other sources. The
types of information that the lender must not disregard, even where they have not sought
it, it summarised under Particular situations, below.
Particular situations
Situations where lenders particularly need to be wary of lack of corporate purpose are
listed below.
1. No liability and charitable companies
As the Corporations Act requires No Liability and charitable companies to have constitutions, it may be argued that the company type constitutes express notice of corporate
purpose. However, more than notice of the mandatory constitution would be required to
prove that the lender had knowledge of the non-corporate purpose in their particular
transaction. Further, for No Liability companies, s 112(5) provides protection, as a contract is not invalid merely because it is outside the companys mining purposes.
2. Third party security
By the very nature of the third party security transaction, the lender will know that the
borrower and the security provider are not the same person. The third party security is
merely one factor towards lack of corporate purpose, not conclusive. It is suggested that
the lender act a little more proactively in the third party security situation, by at least corroborating the connection between the borrower and the security provider. This corroboration should be from a source other that the borrower or the borrowers solicitor. Direct
contact with the security provider is a logical step; the response by the security provider
generates evidence of corporate purpose.
3. The group situation
A particular subset of the third party scenario is the intra-group transaction, where the
lender may be more relaxed about corporate purpose, but where some proactive steps are
still recommended. The main recommendation is to corroborate the group structure, from
some independent source. Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand24 illustrates
that financing transactions involving genuine corporate groups have sufficient corporate
purpose to take them out of the factual matrix concept. Note that Equiticorp did not
involve a guarantee. ANZ Executors and Trustee Ltd v Qintex Australia Ltd25 illustrates
24 (1993) 11 ACLC 952.
25 [1991] 2 Qd R 360.
154
that guarantees are considered a gift of assets, and at least in insolvency situations, will
be regarded as an abuse of corporate power by company officers.
4. Directors proffering other security for their loans
In another variation on the third party security scenario, the lenders risk is increased
where the borrower is a director of the third party security provider and the director is
proffering the companys assets as security for their personal loans. This connection adds
another factor to the factual matrix concept. The lenders risk increases, because the
transaction alerts suspicion as to lack of corporate purpose in the sense of the breach of
fiduciary duty. Suspicion of a breach of fiduciary duty indicates a risk of voidability of
the contract, a risk of participatory liability and a risk that the rules assumptions will not
be available. Due to the increased risk of exposure, it is suggested that the lender adopt
a more inquiring stance. The only real safeguard is for the lender to demand direct evidence of corporate purpose from the third party security provider, such as a board minute
or, more conclusively, a shareholder resolution approving the third party security.
5. Trust assets as security
Trust assets as security are a special case, whether or not the security is a third party security. The Corporations Act does not allow the lender to assume that the trustee has the
power to grant security. In this case, there are ultra vires issues regarding the trust, as well
as factors that add to the factual matrix concept that may inhibit access to the assumptions as to due execution. In view of the extra risk, the lender needs to make inquiry, primarily perusing a copy of the trust deed.
Conclusion
By analysing the new provisions in detail, the law reform achieves a fair balance between
outsiders and stakeholders interests. However, the law reform should not be attributed
with any major change from prior legislative attempts. Abuse of corporate authority is
relevant in several respects and short of expressly attacking the general law remedies
available to companies aggrieved by the actions of their officers in exercising power, the
Corporations Act provides useful presumptions to facilitate contract enforcement.
Although statutory intervention in the rules relating to corporate contracts has been
ongoing for the last twenty years, our findings suggest there are matters in the
Corporations Act that could benefit from some reappraisal or clarification. These are:
1. The simplified format of s 125, with the complete absence of any explicit effects
of non-compliance with the corporate constitution, leaves a gap. The
Explanatory Memorandum states that non-compliance with the constitution may
still be asserted or relied upon in other actions under the Act (for example breach
of the statutory duties, oppression remedy and winding up). The Company Law
Review Act 1998 represents a new streamlined drafting style that elsewhere
includes notes and tables signposting to other relevant provisions. Section 125
could have benefited from such a drafting technique.
2. Section 129(4) could benefit from an express description of the duties, for
example fiduciary or substantive to overcome the debate that the assumption
is restricted to some formalistic notion of administrative duties.
Overview
155
156
Appendix I
The major statutory provisions relevant to the monograph, before and after the Company
Law Review Act 1998 changes
158
Note:
For a companys power to issue bonus, partly-paid, preference and redeemable preference shares, see section 254A.
124(2) [Companys interests] A companys legal capacity to do something is not affected by the fact that the companys interests are not, or would not be, served by doing it.
Appendix I
159
Note:
If a company executes a document in this way, people will be able to rely on the assumptions in subsection 129(6) for dealings in relation to the company.
127(3) [Execution as a deed] A company may execute a document as a deed if the document is expressed to be executed as a deed and is executed in accordance with subsection (1) or (2).
127(4) [No limitation] This section does not limit the ways in which a company may
execute a document (including a deed).
160
129(4) Proper performance of duties. A person may assume that the officers and agents
of the company properly perform their duties to the company.
129(5) Document duly executed without seal. A person may assume that a document
has been duly executed by the company if the document appears to have been signed in
accordance with subsection 127(1). For the purposes of making the assumption, a person
may also assume that anyone who signs the document and states next to their signature
that they are the sole director and sole company secretary of the company occupies both
offices.
129(6) Document duly executed with seal. A person may assume that a document has
been duly executed by the company if:
(a) the companys common seal appears to have been fixed to the document in accordance with subsection 127(2); and
(b) the fixing of the common seal appears to have been witnessed in accordance with that
subsection.
For the purposes of making the assumption, a person may also assume that anyone who
witnesses the fixing of the common seal and states next to their signature that they are
the sole director and sole company secretary of the company occupies both offices.
129(7) Officer or agent with authority to warrant that document is genuine or true
copy. A person may assume that an officer or agent of the company who has authority to
issue a document or a certified copy of a document on its behalf also has authority to warrant that the document is genuine or is a true copy.
129(8) [Application of assumptions] Without limiting the generality of this section, the
assumptions that may be made under this section apply for the purposes of this section.
Appendix I
161
162
Note 1:
The memorandum and articles of a company immediately before the commencement of
this Part are taken together to make up the companys constitution after commencement
(see section 1415).
Note 2:
The Life Insurance Act 1995 has rules about how benefit fund rules become part of a
companys constitution and about amending those rules. They override this Act.
Consequential amendments to the rest of the companys constitution can be made under
that Act or this Act. See Subdivision 2 of Division 4 of Part 2A of that Act.
136(2) [Modification or repeal] The company may modify or repeal its constitution, or
a provision of its constitution, by special resolution.
136(3) [Further requirement] The companys constitution may provide that the special
resolution does not have any effect unless a further requirement specified in the constitution relating to that modification or repeal has been complied with.
136(4) [Modification or repeal of further requirement] Unless the constitution provides otherwise, the company may modify or repeal a further requirement described in
subsection (3) only if the further requirement is itself complied with.
136(5) [Public company] A public company must lodge with ASIC a copy of a special
resolution adopting, modifying or repealing its constitution within 14 days after it is
passed. The company must also lodge with ASIC within that period:
(a) if the company adopts a constitution a copy of that constitution; or
(b) if the company modifies its constitution a copy of that modification.
This also applies to a proprietary company that has applied under Part 2B.7 to change to
a public company, while its application has not yet been determined.
Appendix I
163
Note:
For the date of effect of these changes, see subsection 157(3) (name), subsection 164(5)
(type) and subsection 246D(3) and section 246E (class rights).
164
198A(2) [Exercise of powers] The directors may exercise all the powers of the company except any powers that this Act or the companys constitution (if any) requires the
company to exercise in general meeting.
Note:
For example, the directors may issue shares, borrow money and issue debentures .
Appendix I
165
166
Appendix I
167
162(8) [Court may order damages] Where, if subsection (7) had not been enacted, the
Court would have power under section 1324 to grant, on the application of a person, an
injunction restraining a company, or an officer of a company, from engaging in particular conduct constituting a contravention of subsection (2) or (3), as the case may be, the
Court may, on the application of that person, order the first-mentioned company, or the
officer, as the case may be, to pay damages to that person or any other person.
168
(i) the sealing of the document appears to be witnessed by 2 people, one of whom
may be assumed to be a director of the company because of paragraph (b) or (c)
and the other of whom may be assumed to be a director or a secretary of the
company because of those paragraphs; or
(ii) the sealing of the document appears to be witnessed by one person who may be
assumed to be a director and a secretary of the company because of paragraph
(b) or (c) but only if it is stated next to the signature that the person witnesses
the sealing in the capacity of sole director and sole secretary of the company;
164(4) [Exception where actual knowledge] Despite subsection (1), a person is not
entitled to make an assumption referred to in subsection (3) in relation to dealings with
a company if:
(a) the person has actual knowledge that the matter that, but for this subsection, the person would be entitled to assume is not correct; or
(b) the persons connection or relationship with the company is such that the person
ought to know that the matter that, but for this subsection, the person would be entitled to assume is not correct;
and where, by virtue of this subsection, a person is not entitled to make a particular
assumption in relation to dealings with a company, subsection (1) has no effect in relation to any assertion by the company in relation to the assumption.
164(5) [No assumption to good title where actual knowledge to contrary] Despite
subsection (2), a person is not entitled to make an assumption referred to in subsection
(3) in relation to an acquisition or purported acquisition from a company of title to property if:
(a) the person has actual knowledge that the matter that, but for this subsection, the person would be entitled to assume is not correct; or
(b) the persons connection or relationship with the company is such that the person
ought to know that the matter that, but for this subsection, the person would be entitled to assume is not correct;
and where, by virtue of this subsection, a person is not entitled to make a particular
assumption in relation to dealings with a company, subsection (2) has no effect in relation to any assertion by the company or by any other person in relation to the assumption.
Appendix I
169
(d) has forged a document that appears to have been sealed on behalf of the company;
unless the person referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) of this section has actual knowledge that the person referred to in paragraph 164(3)(b), (c) or (e), or the officer, agent
or employee of the company referred to in paragraph 164(3)(d) or (f), has acted or is
acting fraudulently, or has forged a document, as mentioned in paragraph (c) or (d) of
this section.
170
172(2) [Provision which could be in articles] Subject to this section, subsection 180(3)
and section 260, if a provision of the memorandum of a company could lawfully have
been contained in the articles of the company, the company may, by special resolution,
alter the memorandum:
(a) unless the memorandum prohibits the alteration of that provision by altering that provision; or
(b) unless the memorandum prohibits the omission of that provision by omitting that provision.
172(3) [Restriction on effect of special resolution] The memorandum of a company
may provide that a special resolution altering, adding to or omitting a provision contained in the memorandum, being a provision that could lawfully have been contained in
the articles of the company, does not have any effect unless and until a further requirement specified in the memorandum has been complied with.
172(4) [Examples of requirement] Without limiting the generality of subsection (3), the
further requirement referred to in that subsection may be a requirement:
(a) that the relevant special resolution be passed by a majority consisting of a greater
number of members than is required to constitute the resolution as a special resolution;
(b) that the consent or approval of a particular person be obtained; or
(c) that a particular condition be fulfilled.
172(5) [Particular class rights] Nothing in subsection (2) permits the alteration or omission of a provision of the memorandum of a company that relates to rights to which only
members in a particular class of members are entitled.
172(6) [Persons entitled to notice] Notice of a general meeting specifying the intention
to propose, as a special resolution, a resolution for the alteration of the memorandum of
a company, being an alteration provided for by subsection (1), shall be given:
(a) to all members;
(b) to all trustees for debenture holders; and
(c) if there are no trustees for, or for a particular class of, debenture holders to all debenture holders, or all debenture holders in that class, as the case may be, whose names
are, at the time of the posting of the notice, known to the company.
172(7) [Court may dispense with notice] The Court may, in the case of any person or
class of persons, for such reasons as seem sufficient to the Court, dispense with the notice
referred to in subsection (6).
172(8) [Cancellation of alteration] If an application for the cancellation of an alteration
of the memorandum of a company is made to the Court in accordance with this section
by:
(a) in the case of an alteration provided for by subsection (1) the holders of not less than
10% in nominal value of the companys debentures; or
(b) in any case the holders of not less, in the aggregate, than 10% in nominal value of the
companys issued share capital or any class of that capital or, if the company is not
limited by shares, not less than 10% of the companys members;
the alteration does not have any effect except so far as it is confirmed by the Court.
Appendix I
171
172(9) [Application to be made within 21 days] The application shall be made within
21 days after the date on which the resolution altering the memorandum of the company
was passed, and may be made, on behalf of the persons entitled to make the application,
by such one or more of their number as they appoint in writing for the purpose.
172(10) [Power of Court] On the application, the Court shall have regard to the rights
and interests of the members of the company or of any class of them as well as to the
rights and interests of the creditors and may do any or all of the following:
(a) adjourn the proceedings so that an arrangement may be made to the satisfaction of the
Court for the purchase (otherwise than by the company or a subsidiary of the company) of the interests of dissentient members;
(b) give directions and make orders for facilitating or carrying into effect any such
arrangement;
(c) make an order cancelling the alteration or confirming the alteration either wholly or
in part and on specified terms and conditions.
172(11) [Interpretation] A reference in this section to a provision of the memorandum
of a company that could lawfully have been contained in the articles of the company is,
in the case of a memorandum of a Division 2 or 3 company, a reference to a provision of
the memorandum of the company that could lawfully have been contained in the articles
of the company if the memorandum and articles of the company had originally been registered under this Law.
172
Appendix I
173
174
Appendix I
175
182(8) [Appointment of agent or attorney] A company may, by writing under its common seal, empower a person, either generally or in respect of a specified matter or specified matters, as its agent or attorney to execute deeds on its behalf, and a deed signed by
such an agent or attorney on behalf of the company and under his, her or its seal or, subject to subsections (10) and (11), under the appropriate official seal of the company, binds
the company and has the same effect as if it were under the common seal of the company.
182(9) [Duration of authority] The authority of an agent or attorney empowered under
subsection (8), as between the company and a person dealing with him, her or it, continues during the period (if any) mentioned in the instrument conferring the authority or, if
no period is so mentioned, until notice of the revocation or termination of his, her or its
authority has been given to the person dealing with him, her or it.
182(10) [Official seals] A company may, if authorised by its articles, have for use in
place of its common seal outside the State or Territory where its common seal is kept one
or more official seals, each of which shall be a facsimile of the common seal of the company with the addition on its face of the name of every place where it is to be used.
182(11) [Use of official seals] The person affixing such an official seal shall, in writing
signed by the person, certify on the instrument to which it is affixed the date on which
and the place at which it is affixed.
182(12) [Deemed sealed with common seal] A document sealed with such an official
seal shall be deemed to be sealed with the common seal of the company.
176
219(3A) [Limited effect] Subsection (3) has effect subject to Division 2 of Part 4.2.
219(4) [Permitted abbreviations] A company may comply with subsection (1), (2),
(2A) or (3) by setting out:
(a) the abbreviation Aust. instead of the word Australian;
(b) the abbreviation Co. instead of the word Company;
(c) the abbreviation No. instead of the word Number; or
(d) the abbreviation A.C.N. instead of the expression Australian Company Number.
219(5) [Prohibition against non-compliance of subsec (1), (2), (2A) or (3)] A person
(whether or not an officer of the company) shall not, on a companys behalf:
(a) use, or authorise the use of, a seal that purports to be a seal of the company but contravenes subsection (1); or
(b) issue, sign or publish a public document of the company that contravenes subsection
(2), (2A) or (3).
219(6) [Prohibition against non-compliance of subsec (2)] A person (whether an officer of the company or not) shall not sign or issue, or authorise to be signed or issued, on
a companys behalf, an eligible negotiable instrument of the company that contravenes
subsection (2).
219(7) [Person in contravention liable] A person who contravenes subsection (6) is
liable to the holder of the eligible negotiable instrument for the amount due on it unless
that amount is paid by the company.
219(8) [Signs] A company shall paint or affix and keep painted or affixed, in a conspicuous position and in letters easily legible, on the outside of its registered office and of
every office and place at which its business is carried on and that is open and accessible
to the public:
(a) its name; and
(b) in the case of its registered office the expression Registered Office.
Appendix II
The summary of the replaceable rules, prepared by ASIC, that companies without a constitution may download and use as their hardcopy constitution.
Source: www.asic.gov.au/info4companies.htm
Refer: chapter 5
178
Section No
(b) the interest is one that does not need to be disclosed under section 191; then
(c) the director may vote on matters that relate to
the interest; and
(d) any transaction that relate to the interest may
proceed; and
(e) the director may retain benefits under the transaction even though the director has the interest; and
(f) the company cannot avoid the transaction merely
because of the existence of the interest.
If disclosure is required under section 191, paragraph (e) and (f) apply only if the disclosure is
made before the transaction is entered into.
Note: A Director may need to give notice to the
other directors if the director has material personal
interest in a matter relating to the affairs of the company (see section 191)
2 Powers of directors
198A The business of the company is to be managed by or under the direction of the directors. The
directors may exercise all the powers of the company except any powers that this Law or the companys constitution (if any) requires the company to
exercise in a general meeting. For example, the
company may issue shares, borrow money and issue
debentures.
3 Executing negotiable
instruments
4 Managing director
Appendix II
179
Section No
7 Appointment of managing
directors
8 Alternate directors
9 Remuneration of directors
12 Termination of appointment
of managing director
180
Section No
204F A secretary holds office on the terms and
conditions (including the remuneration) that the
directors determine
Inspection of books
14 Company or directors may
allow member to inspect
books
Directors Meetings
15 Circulating resolutions
248A The directors of a company may pass a resolution without a directors meeting being held if all
the directors entitled to vote on the resolution sign a
document containing a statement that they are in
favour of the resolution set out in the document.
Separate copies of a document may be used for
signing by directors if the wording of the resolution
and statement is identical in each copy and the resolution is passed when the last director signs.
248C A directors meeting may be called by a director giving reasonable notice individually to every
other director. A director who has appointed an
alternate director may ask for the notice to be sent
to the alternate director
Appendix II
181
Meetings of Members
20 Calling of meetings of
members by a director
25 Chairing meetings of members 249U The directors may elect an individual to chair
meetings of the companys members
26 Business at adjourned meetings 249W(2) Only unfinished business is to be transacted at a meeting resumed after an adjournment.
182
Section No
29 How many votes a member has 250E Subject to any rights or restrictions attached
to any class of shares, at a meeting of members of a
company with a share capital.
a) on a show of hands each member has one vote;
and
b) on a poll each member has one vote for each
share they hold.
30 Jointly held shares
Appendix II
183
Section No
Shares
34 Pre-emption for existing
254D Before issuing shares of a particular class, the
shareholders on issue of
directors of the proprietary company must offer
shares in proprietary company them to the existing holders of the shares of that
class. As far as practicable, the number of shares
offered to each shareholder must be in proportion to
the number of shares of that class that they already
hold (subsection 1)
To make the offer, the directors must give the shareholders a statement setting out the terms of the offer
including the number of shares offered and the period for which it will remain open.
The directors may issue shares not taken up under
the offer under subsection 1 as they see fit.
The company may by resolution passed at a general
meeting authorise the directors to make a particular
issue of shares without complying with subsection 1.
35 Other provisions about paying 254U The directors may determine that a dividend
dividends
is payable and fix the amount, the time for payment
and the method of payment.
The methods of payment may include the payment
of cash, the issue of shares, the grant of options and
the transfer of assets.
184
Section No
254W(2) Subject to the terms on which shares in a
proprietary company are on issue, the directors may
pay dividends as they see fit.
Transfer of shares
37 Transmission of shares on
death
38 Transmission of shares on
bankruptcy
39 Transmissions of shares on
mental incapacity
40 Registration of transfers
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