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An important argument in the trial in Australian Securities and Investments
Commission v Macdonald (No 11)[2009] NSWSC 287 was the
evidentiary value of the minutes of a key board meeting.
The minutes of the meeting of the board of James Hardie at the 15 February
2001 Meeting which referred to approval of the ASX announcement at the
centre of the case were signed as a correct record by the chairman at the
next meeting of the board on 4 April 2001.
ASIC argued that the minutes had the benefit of a statutory presumption in
s 251A(6) of the Corporations Law that the minutes were proof of their
contents unless the defendants proved to the contrary.
However there was a failure to comply with Section 251A(1) in that the minutes were not recorded in a minute book within a month of the meeting.
Gzell J decided that "Section 251A(6) does not say that the minute is
conclusive evidence of happenings at a meeting unless the contrary is
proved. It does not state... that the events recorded in the minute are
deemed to have happened. It says the minute is evidence of the events
unless the contrary is proved. And whether the contrary is proved must be
judged on the whole of the evidence. If the evidence establishes that an
event recorded in a minute did not occur, the fact of its recording in the
minute has no effect."
However he observed that "One thing that has emerged clearly in this case
is that recollection is fallible. If a minute is to be given evidentiary
value, it ought to be a contemporaneous document, for then it is more
likely to be an accurate reflection of the proceedings of the meeting
rather than a reconstruction of them."
Nevertheless, Gzell J decided that the Draft ASX Announcement was approved
at the 15 February 2001 Meeting of the JHIL board of directors. |