The Supreme Court of New South Wales has delivered a practical reminder on “consent not to be unreasonably withheld” in the context of security substitution.

In B32 Investments Pty Ltd v The Owners – Strata Plan 81539 [2026] NSWSC 160, Hammerschlag CJ in Equity dismissed a mortgagor’s bid to compel a mortgagee to accept replacement collateral, holding that the mortgagee could reasonably refuse consent where the proposed substitute was materially inferior in value and marketability to the existing security.

This decision matters for settlement and finance practitioners who draft “switch-out” rights in deeds and facilities, and for secured counterparties deciding whether to accept substitute collateral.

The plaintiffs sought to swap the Cooper Street mortgage for a first mortgage over 36 Leicester Avenue, zoned RE1 (Public Recreation) within a precinct identified for eventual council acquisition. Two valuation reports were tendered: the plaintiffs’ valuer at $2.5m, the defendant’s at a $1.8–$2.2m range (mid-point $2m). The Owners refused consent, citing inferior value, limited marketability (essentially one real buyer—Council—at an unknown time), and enforcement cost/shortfall risks. The plaintiffs sued for a declaration that consent was unreasonably withheld and for specific performance.

The Court identified a key issue: whether, on the probabilities, the refusal was unreasonable.

None of the refusal reasons was “unreasonable, irrational, unfounded, or eccentric.” The plaintiffs did not discharge their onus. The summons was dismissed; costs to the Owners on a provisional basis.

For secured parties, the case confirms you may reasonably refuse a swap that leaves you materially worse off, even if the substitute technically meets a minimum dollar threshold. For drafters, precision in articulating “equal or better” security, across value, marketability and enforcement, will reduce disputes and align outcomes with commercial expectations.