APPEAL from the Federal Court of Bankruptcy, District of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.
At a meeting of the creditors of Benjamin David Bear, held at Sydney on 24th July 1941, the statement of his affairs showed that his liabilities amounted to the sum of £4,951 8s. 4d. and that his assets consisted of a fully paid-up one pound share in a furniture company. The creditors present or represented at the meeting unanimously agreed by way of an extraordinary resolution to accept the sum of £1,000 together with any moneys held by an accountant, Mr. C. A. Law, as trustee, in full satisfaction and discharge of all Bear's liabilities as at 24th July 1941, such sum, after payment of the trustee's proper costs, charges, expenses and commission, to be divided between the creditors pro rata according to the amount of their proved debts. At a meeting held on 31st July 1941, the creditors purported to confirm this extraordinary resolution.
On the same day James Wilson, one of the creditors, who was neither present nor represented at the meeting held on 24th July, filed a notice of motion in the Court of Bankruptcy for the considera- tion by the court of the composition or scheme of arrangement. An affidavit by Wilson's solicitor in support of the application was replied to by affidavits made by Bear and the trustee.
At the hearing of the application during the morning of 21st August 1941, Judge Lukin rejected the composition or scheme of arrangement on the ground that its terms were not reasonable and were not calculated to benefit the general body of creditors, and upon the matter being " brought on by the court again during the afternoon of that day his Honour ordered that a sequestration order be made against Bear.
Bear appealed to the High Court against these orders. Further facts and the relevant statutory provisions appear in the judgments hereunder.
Moverley, for the appellant. The appellant was not a party to the proceedings before the Judge in Bankruptcy. In the circum- stances, a petition not having been filed, the judge had no power, either under sec. 161 (2) or any other provision of the Bankruptcy Act 1924-1933, to make a sequestration order against the appellant. Sub-sec. h of sec. 161 is available only to the persons specified therein and refers to a composition or scheme which has taken effect as a bankruptcy proceeding. Annulment and rejection are not synony- mous terms. Here the composition or scheme was rejected, and therefore did not have any effect as a bankruptcy proceeding. The rejection merely created an act of bankruptcy which was available for