instead, a declaration that the payments referred to in the notice of motion are not void as against the trustee of the property of the bankrupt as a preference, priority or advantage under S. 95 of the Bankruptcy Act 1924-1950, and an order that the respondent trustee pay the costs of the deputy commissioner both here and below. JAQUES.
WEBB J. This is an appeal from a decision of the Federal Court of Bankruptcy (Clyne J. under S. 25 of the Bankruptcy Act 1924-1950, on a question of law, namely, whether the Crown is bound by S. 95 of the Act. The Bankruptcy Court held that the Crown was bound.
Section 95 reads:
every payment made person unable to pay his debts as they become due from his own money, in favour of any creditor
having the effect of giving that creditor
a preference, a priority or an advantage over the other creditors, shall, if the debtor becomes bankrupt on a bankruptcy petition presented within six months thereafter be void as against the trustee in bankruptcy."
The appellant commissioner received several payments of federal sales tax, totalling £3,077 18s. 5d. from a taxpayer, Winkler, who, it is now conceded by the appellant commissioner, was, when he made those payments, unable to pay his debts as they became due from his own money, and who became bankrupt within six months after such payments.
For the appellant commissioner it was submitted that the Crown is not bound by S. 95.
Section 30 of the Sales Tax Assessment Act (No. 1) 1932-1953 provides that sales tax is a debt due to the Crown.
Section 5 (3) of the Bankruptcy Act 1924-1950 provides, inter alia, that:
the provisions of the Act relating to the remedies against the property of a debtor, the priorities of debts bind the Crown
It is the scope of such provisions that has to be determined. The respondent trustee submits that S. 95 is a provision relating to such remedies and priorities.
As to "remedies" when, under S. 104, the trustee disclaims property of the bankrupt consisting of land burdened with onerous covenants the disclaimer operates to determine the liabilities of " the bankrupt and his property" in or in respect of the property disclaimed. It is clear that remedies against the property of the debtor" are defeated as a result of the disclaimer In re Thomas Ex parte Commissioners of Woods and Forests 1. But S. 95 does not defeat any remedy against the property of the debtor it does
1(1888) 21 Q.B.D. 380.