Christodoulou, Re E.R. Christodoulou, Ex Parte E.R.
[1986] FCA 524
•11 Mar 1986
| IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA | ) | |||
| GENERAL DIVISION |
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| BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF THE SOUTHERN | ) | |||
| DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF OUEENSLAND | ) |
RE: ELFRIEDE RUTi CHRISTODOULOU
| M | PARTE: ELFRIEDE RUTH CHRISTODOULOU |
MINUTES OF ORDER
| JUDGE MAKING ORDER: | PINCUS J. |
| DATE OF ORDER: | 3 NOVEMBER 1986 |
| WHERE MADE: | BRISBANE |
| THE COURT ORDERS THAT: |
1. The sequestration order made against the estate of
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set aside.
| 2. |
The costs of the applicant, Mrs. Christodoulou, of affidavits, be taxed and paid by the petitioning creditor to the said applicant.
| Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 124 of the Bankruptcy Rules. |
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| IN THE FEDERAL COURT | OF AUSTRhLIA |
| GENERAL DIVISION | QLD E894 of 1986 |
| BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF QUEENSLAND |
RE: ELFRIEDE RUTH CHRISTODOULOU
| EX PARTE: | ELFRIEDE RUTH CHRISTODOULOU |
| PINCUS J. | 3 NOVEMBER 1986 |
EX TEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
| This is an application made by Mrs. Elfrlede Ruth | i |
Christodoulou for an order that a sequestration order made by me
| against her | estate on | 6 October | 1986 be set aside. Among the |
| materials upon which | I acted in making that order was | an affidavit |
of Mr. John Andrew Gibbison as follows:
| I | "On Monday the eighth day of September | 1986 at 11.10 |
| o'clock | in | the | forenoon, | I served Elfriede |
| Christodoulou with an official copy of the | petition |
| of | Budget Shopfitters Pty. Ltd. together with a |
copy of the affidavit of Philip Francis Richards
| sworn the twenty-eighth day of July | 1986, verifying |
| paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 | of the petition, a copy of |
the affidavit of Tracy Leigh Robins sworn the
| thirtieth day of July 1986, | verifying paragraph 4 |
| of | the petition, and a copy of | the affidavit of |
Philip Francis Richards sworn the 21st day of personally at 594 Stanley Street, South Brisbane in
| the said State. | " |
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The expression "delivering to her personally" does not,
| to me, mean leaving on | a | table for her. Paragraph | 2 | reads as |
| follows | : |
| "I identified the person | I served by: virtue of the |
fact that at the time of service the said Elfriede
| Christodoulou admitted to | me | that she was the |
| person referred to herein | as the Debtor." |
The evidence In that affidavit has been challenged by the three
witnesses who have made affidavits and were called before me,
namely Mrs. Christodoulou herself, Tracey-Jayne Osborne, and Mrs.
| Christodoulou's son, Peter | John Wolff. The affidavlts of these |
| three persons are not entirely consistent with one another. | The |
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| inconsistencies, however, do not greatly concern me. They seem to | ! |
| be the sort of variatlon one would expect to find between the versions of people trying to recall events which were not, at the time, of any great significance to them. |
| Their stories are, however, | at one, in that they all say |
| the papers were not handed to Mrs. Christodoulou. For example, | ! ' , |
| Mrs. Christodoulou's version of events is that she had gone to | the |
| toilet at | the time when the papers were left; that is, she was |
| absent from the room. Peter | John | Wolff's verslon of events is |
| that he saw the man who | is apparently Mr. Gibbison about | 10 or 15 |
yards away from his mother and heard him call out; she did not
| respond and left the factory, and the man shortly thereafter left | , y |
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| the papers on | a table. |
| The account of events given by | Mr. Gibbison includes the | I. ,' |
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| following, that he spoke to Mrs. Christodoulou, told her that he | ! |
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| wanted to see her and had some documents | o hand to her, that he | 1- |
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| followed her | to the | rear door where, as she walked throuuh | the |
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| I | door, she attempted to slam it in his face and | he prevented that, |
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| that she walked through a small ante-room. | He then goes on: |
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| "I entered also and | as the Defendant was walklng out |
| of this room, I informed her 'Mrs. Chrlstodoulou, | I |
| have a | Creditor's Petition for service on you. I |
have already served Chris wlth a copy and he
| informed me | you would be | here thls mornlng. Are |
| you | the | person | named | in | the | document | as the |
| Judgment Debtor, Elfriede Chrlstodoulou?' | I was |
holding the Creditor's Petition out in front of me.
| I | She looked back, appeared to see | the Credltor's |
| Petition and said 'Yes' | or 'Yeah'. | I said to her |
| 'I'll | leave the document on this table for you'. | I |
indicated towards the only table In the ante-room.
| She looked around and appeared to see where | I had |
indicated. She did not respond, she continued to
walk towards the toilet room on the rear landing
section of the building. I left the premises again
by the rear stairway."
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| My experience of professional process servers is such | as |
| to make me rather doubtful about this account. | I | would have |
| thought that Mr. Gibbison would have attempted more firmly than | he |
| did to give the papers to Mrs. Christodoulou. | I , I ,- |
Mr. Ambrose, who appears for the creditor, points out
that if Mr. Gibblson's account of events is correct, that would
| have constituted due service, and | I agree with what he says. | a | , |
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| However, the real point | I have to decide is: why were the papers |
left on the table? Were they left on the table, as Mr. Gibbison
| says, because Mrs. Christodoulou | was moving | away, or were they |
left on the table because she was gone? It seems to me a little
more probable they were left on the table because she was gone. I
| think that the suggestion that | a | process server would leave |
| documents on the table, | as opposed to handing them | to the person |
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| to | be | served, | where | there | was | an | alternative | open, | is | not |
attractive, and I am also influenced somewhat by the fact that the
| version of events | now given, as | it seems to me, | 1s difficult to |
| reconcile with that on which | I acted when I made the sequestration |
| order. | :-. |
| It is true that one may find | an excuse for the swearing |
of the latter version in that a printed form was being followed. to me that Mr. Gibbison should have said, if that was the fact, "I
| dld not dellver them to her personally. | I left | them on a table |
near her and told her what the documents were."
| I | also agree with the suggestion made by Mr. Lee of |
| counsel, for Mrs. Christodoulou, that the statement | i paragraph 2 |
of the affidavit of September which I have quoted is not easy to
| reconcile | with | Mr. | Gibbison's | present | evidence. | However, | I |
| hesitate to reject Mr. | Gibbison's evidence. He was an impressive |
witness and the task of determining who to accept is not an easy
one. There are legitimate points to be made, and they have been
| made by | Mr. | Ambrose, against the evidence of | Mr. Wolff, Miss |
| Osborne, and Mrs. Christodoulou, but in the end | I | prefer their |
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| evidence to that | of Mr. Gibbison and propose to act on that basis. |
| It will therefore be ordered that the sequestration | I |
| order made against the estate of Elfriede Ruth Christodoulou on | 6 |
| October 1986 be set aside. |
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| I will order that | thc costs of thc applicant, | Mrs. |
| Christodoulou, of | and incldental to the hearing | today, including | i |
| the affidavits, be taxed and paid by the petitioning creditor | I ' |
| l | respondent to the said applicant. |
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