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| 3UDGMENT No. .3%.,/ ' ...,..,..... | 88 | I ",,, |
| IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA | ) |
| ) |
| DIVISION | GENERAL | ) |
| |
| BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT | ) ) |
| OF THE | STATE | OF VICTORIA | ) |
| Re : | BREMER | LAKE | DAVID |
A Debtor
| Ex parte: | LAWSON | & | LAUGHLIN | PTY LTD |
Petltlonlng Credltor
MINUTES OF ORDER
COURT: Woodward J
| - | DATE: 30 June 1988 |
| PLACE: Melbourne |
| l. | A Sequestration Order be made against the estate | of |
| the Debtor. |
| with rule 124 of the Bankruptcy Rules. |
2. costs, includlng reserved costs, be in accordance wlth the statute.
| Date of Commission of Act | of Bankruptcy : 23 march 1988. |
| - | NOTE: Thls order is to be settled and filed in accordance |
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA )
)
| DISTRICT | BANKRUPTCY | ) ) |
| OF THE STATE OF | VICTORIA | ) |
A Debtor
| Ex parte: | LAWSON & LAUGHLIN PTY LTD |
Petitioning Credltor
COURT: Woodward J
PLACE: Melbourne
EXTEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
| This is a | petltion for sequestration of the |
debtor's estate where the notice of intention to oppose the petltion, called "Notice of Grounds of Opposition", raised two issues. First, the debtor disputed the credltor's
| alleged | debt on the grounds | set out in the | debtor's |
| affidavit, sworn 7 June 1988. | That argument has been, in my |
view, properly abandoned by counsel for the debtor.
I should also say ln passing that there are no points taken about any of the formal matters that are required to be proved under the Bankruptcy Act 1966 ( 'the Act') before a sequestratlon order can be made.
This leaves one ground set out in the notice of
opposition, and perhaps a second which has been raised and
| dealt with in argument, which the court has to consider. | The |
first of these is stated in the notice of oppositlon in the
following terms:
| "Even if | the creditor proves Its alleged |
debt, the creditor says that his assets exceed hls liabilitles, and ln all the circumstances he ought not to be adludged bankrupt."
This takes me to sub-s.52(2) of the Act, which says, so far as is presently relevant,
"If the court .... 1 s satisfled by the debtor -
(a) that he is able to pay his debts; or
| (b) that for other | sufflclent | cause | a |
| sequestration order ought not to | be made, |
| it may dlsmiss the petltlon." |
| It is clear, on the material before me, that there are | very |
large amounts said to be owing by the debtor. This appears on the face of the affidavit of the trustee who has been placed In charge of the debtor's property pursuant to s.50 of the Act. That affidavlt by MC Lamb is strong evldence that
| the | debtor | 1 s | insolvent; one might | be | tempted to say, |
| I |
hopelessly insolvent.
| As agalnst that, It has | been argued by MC Kaufman |
| for the debtor that | there is a substantial action | pending In |
| the Supreme | Court, | brought | by the debtor | against the |
| Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Llmited | ('ANZ'). |
That action, if successful, would largely, ~f not entirely,
| cancel out the very large sum | of money which 1 s shown by the |
debtor's statement of affairs, and the affidavit of hls
| trustee, as owing by him to that | bank. |
| I have | studled the statement of clalm in | that |
| action. | It shows that | the matters sued for are very closely |
| related to the alleged debt of the debtor. Indeed, | at the |
risk of over-slmplifying the matter, I would say that the claim recognises the substantial indebtedness of the debtor to ANZ, but at the same time says that the bank was in breach of contract and in breach of a duty which It owed to the debtor in calling up the debt, and realising upon a number of mortgages and other securlties which it held.
| There is, as | I see the material before me, | no real |
dlspute that the debtor owed ANZ some very large sums of
money running into millions of dollars. The only dlspute is
whether, as I have said, the bank was entitled to call up
that debt and reallse assets at the time and in the way that
It dld.
I do not thlnk It 1s appropriate that I should say
| too much about that statement | of clalm, whlch was apparently |
only flled today in the Supreme Court.
| There is no doubt that, under | sub-s.52(2), the onus |
1 s on the debtor to satlsfy me that he is able to pay his debts. And, in the light of all the materlal before me, I have no doubt that, within the meaning explained in
| authorities such as | re Noye (1956) 18 ABC 7 7 , and re Twidle, |
[l9161 NZLR 7 4 8 , the bankrupt is not able presently to meet
his debts as they fall due.
Nor am I satisfied that the prospects of his succeeding In hls actlon against the bank are such that the court should hold its hand, or In some way delay the matter for what will obvlously be a long period before that complex claim can be determined.
| I am therefore satisfled that the debtor has not made out his submissions that he is able to pay his debts | or |
| that his Supreme Court action represents a sufficlent | cause |
| for dismissing o r adjourning the petltion. |
| The | other | submlssion | which | has been argued, |
although wlthout notlce, is that these proceedlngs are in some way tainted by the fact that the petitloning creditor has had some discusslons wlth ANZ, through their respectlve sollcitors, and that the bank has, apparently, up to thzs point paid the petitioning credltor's costs in bringing this
| bankruptcy petition, and may well meet cbsts | that have been |
| recently incurred, including | today's. |
I can find nothlng untoward or suspicious In those
clrcumstances. It seems to me to be no more than a sensible
| arrangement that, where two petitions are waiting | to be |
heard, the one which is slmpler and more straightforward should proceed, and that the costs of that petitloner should
| be borne, or contributed to, by a supporting creditor | having |
| a | very | much | greater | Interest | In the outcome of the |
proceedings.
| I can see nothing In this which amounts | to an abuse |
of the process of the Court, and indeed I think that, In his reply, Mr Kaufman sald that he did not put the matter so high. He rather suggested that the bank's intervention had prevented the petitioning creditor from properly considering
| an arrangement which | had been suggested to it by the debtor, |
| OK that because of the arrangement entered into between | the |
two petitioning creditors, the bank was in some way able to obtain its wishes by holding on to the coat-tails of the present petltionlng creditor.
| I do not accept | that the intervention of the bank |
| has in any way | prevented the petitioning creditor from making |
up its own mind that the arrangement suggested to it by the debtor was unsatisfactory - which I would have thought was clear beyond doubt - or that it was approprlate that the
| petition should proceed. | I accept the evidence of M r Lawson, |
| for the petltionlng creditor, | that those were decisions whlch |
| he came to | by himself in consultation wlth | his own solicitor |
| and were not | the subject in any way of pressure, improper | or |
otherwlse, from the bank. Nor, as I have said, do I belleve that there is anything significant In the circumstance that the bank has allowed and encouraged thls partlcular petition
| to proceed ahead | of Its own, | or | that thls amounts | to |
sufficient cause for a sequestration order not to be made.
I find that both the acts of bankruptcy alleged in
| this matter, namely, | the failure to comply with a bankruptcy |
notice and the calling of a meeting of credltors on 6 may this year, have been made out; but I think it is approprlate that I should make the sequestration order simply upon the failure of the debtor to comply with the bankruptcy notice.
For the reasons that I have given, I am satlsfied
| that an act of | bankruptcy has | been committed and I am |
| satisfied | with the proof of the matters | set out in |
| sub-s.52(1) of the Act. | I note that Mr Kenneth Wayne Lamb |
has consented to act as trustee In this matter. There will be an order of sequestratlon agalnst the estate of the debtor, the act of bankruptcy being the fallure of the debtor to comply wlth the provisions of a bankruptcy notice on or before 23 march 1988. Costs, includlng reserved costs, will
| be in accordance with the statute. | I order that the costs of |
| Kenneth Wayne Lamb, | in this matter, be paid out of the |
| estate. |
| With regard to Mr Kaufman’s application | for a stay, |
| I think that I must exercise my dlscretion havlng regard to |
| all the material that | has been put before me, and taking into |
account as best I can the possibility of an appeal being instituted and belng successful. I am not sure that I have
| to be satisfied, as counsel for | the petitioning credltor has |
| urged, that there are ‘special circumstances’ pointing | to the |
| grant of a stay. | I would merely say that there needs to be |
| something | about the case that causes the Court to be |
satisfied that it is approprlate that a stay be granted. Whether that is the same thlng as saying that there need to be special c~rcumstances, I am not sure, but the state of mind in which I flnd myself 1 s that, havlng regard to all the
| circumstances, I am | not | satisfied | that it would be |
| appropriate to grant a stay | and I do not grant one. |
| I certlfy that thls and the |
six ( 6 ) preceding pages are
a true and accurate copy of the
Reasons for Judgment hereln of
The Hon Mr Justice woodward
Associate
Counsel for the Debtor: Mr T. Kaufman
| Solicitors for the Debtor: Weigall | & Crowther |
| Counsel for the Creditor: | Mr J Fajgenba'um QC with |
| Solicitors for the Creditor: | Freehill Hollingdale & Page |