Jackson, J.W. v Sterling Industries Ltd

Case

[1987] FCA 392

6 Jul 1987

No judgment structure available for this case.

/-

C A T C H W O R D S

.-

BANKRUPTCY - debtor’s petition - acceptance restralned until

discharge of order for security

- setting aside of order for

security -

whether abuse of process

- right in debtor to

acceptance.

HIGH COURT - practice - judgment not yet entered

- whether

effective.

Bankruptcy Act 1966

Ex

parte: Sterlinq Industries Limlted (Receivers and Manasers

Appointed)

Re:

John William Jackson & Anor.

Qld P452 of 1986

Re:

John Willlam Jackson and Maxene Susan Jackson

Ex parte: National Westmlnster Finance Australia Limited

Qld P788 of 1986

Re:

John William Jackson

Ex parte: National Westminster Finance Australia Limited

Qld P1337

of 1986

PINCUS J. BRISBANE

6 JULY 1987

.

IN THE FEDERAL COURT

OF AUSTRALIA

)

GENERAL DIVISION

)

BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF THE SOUTHERN

)

DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF OUEENSLAND

1

No. P452 of 1986

EX PARTE:

STERLING INDUSTRIES LIMITED (RECEIVERS AND

MANAGERS APPOINTED)

AppllcantlCreuitor

RE:

JOHN WILLIAM JACKSON

First RespondentIDebtor

THE REGISTRAR IN BANKRUPTCY

FOR THE SOUTHERN

DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF OUEENSLAND

Second Respondent

QLD P788 of 1986

RE: JOHN WILLIAM JACKSON and MAXENE SUSAN JACKSON

EX PARTE: NATIONAL WESTMINSTER FINANCE AUSTRALIA

LIMITED

QLD P1337 of 1986

RE:

JOHN WILLIAM JACKSON

EX PARTE: NATIONAL WESTMINSTER FINANCE AUSTRALIA

LIMITED

MINUTES OF ORDER

JUDGE

MAKING

O R D E R :

PINCUS J.

DATE OF ORDER:

6 JULY 1987

m MADE:

BRISBANE

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

The debtor's petition be accepted

sub~ect to

the

Registrar being satisfled

as to the questions of

form in s.55(3).

NOTE:

Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with

in

Rule 124 of the Bankruptcy Rules.

IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

)

GENERAL DIVISION

)

BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF

THE

SOUTHERN

1

DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF OUEENSLAND

)

'No. P452 of 1986

M PARTE:

STERLING INDUSTRIES LIMITED (RECEIVERS AND

MANAGERS APPOINTED)

ApplicantlCredltor

RE:

JOHN WILLIAM JACKSON

First Respondent/Debtor

THE REGISTRAR IN BANKRUPTCY FOR

l ?

SOUTHERN

DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF OWEENSLAND

Second Respondent

QLD P788 of 1986

RE: JOHN WILLIAM JACKSON and MAXENE SUSAN JACKSON

M PARTE: NATIONAL WESTMINSTER FINANCE AUSTRALIA

LIMITED

QLD P1337 of 1986

RE: JOHN WILLIAM JACKSON

M PARTE: NATIONAL WESTMINSTER FINANCE AUSTRALIA

LIMITED

PINCUS J.

6 JULY 1987

M "F'ORE

REASONS FOR

JUDGm

The question in this case is whether

a d btor's petition

should be accepted. On 23 April 1986 Sheppard J., in proceedings

brought under s.52

of the Trade Practices Act

1974 by Sterling

Industries Limited (Receivers and Managers Appointed) against the

debtor and others, ordered that the debtor provide security in the

sum of $3 million. On

30 Aprll 1986 Beaumont J. made two orders

on the application of Sterling Industries Limited (Receivers and

Managers Appointed), the first being that the debtor be restrained

until 1 May 1986 from presenting a petition against himself

pursuant to s.55 of the Bankruptcv Act, and the second being that

the Reglstrar in Bankruptcy for the Southern District of the State

of Queensland be restrained up to

1 May 1986 from accepting such

a

petition.

Subsequently, those orders were extended

by Burchett J.,

after a contested hearlng. His Honour's order was that the debtor

be restrained from presenting

a petition against himself and that

the Registrar be restrained for a like period from acceptlng any such petitlon untll the earllest of three nominated events. The

second of those

nommated events was the dlscharge of

the order of

Sheppard J. mentioned above.

The petltion

by

the

debtor

which

IS currently

in

questlon was presented on the same day as the order

of Mr. Justlce

Beaumont, that is,

30 April 1986.

On 11 June 1987, the Hlgh Court

of Australia allowed

an appeal from the Full Court of this

Court,

which had upheld the order of Sheppard

J.;

the

High Court set

aside the order of Sheppard

J. The High

Court's order has not yet

been taken out, but counsel for the debtor,

Ms. Atkinson, says

that the debtor is entitled, there being

no relevant restraint, to

have the petition accepted.

3 .

Section 55(1) of the Bankruptcy Act says:

"Subject to this section,

a

debtor may present to

the

Registrar

a petition

against

himself

accompanied by

a statement of hls affairs, verified

by affidavit, and

a copy of that statement."

Under subs.(2) a form is prescrlbed, and under subs.(3) where the

form is complled with

and the statement of affairs is in the

prescribed form, the petition "shall be accepted by the Reglstrar

. . . ' I .

Acceptance is not discretionary.

If the petition is accepted, the result will be that the

debtor will become bankrupt by vlrtue of the presentatlon

of the

petition on 30 Aprll 1986: s.55(3)(b).

According

to an affidavlt of Mr. W.J. Weir,

the

solicltor for the debtor,

on

16 May 1986 an authorlty was signed

In favour of

Mr.

A.R.

Taylor,

trustee,

under

s.188 of the

Bankruptcy Act. Apparently

no meetlng of creditors has yet been

held, but Mr. Welr's affidavit, which was sworn

on 22 June 1987,

says

the

meeting

"1s now

being

called

for

Wednesday,

the

twenty-fourth day of June at 3.00 p.m." The affidavlt says, "Our client 1s desirous of having his own petition processed prior to that meeting." Since that reason has gone, it 1s not clear why It

is that the debtor wants

his petition accepted.

There is also

a creditor's petition for sequestration

before me set down for hearing later this morning and

Mr. Sullivan

has appeared on behalf of the petitioning creditor, and initially

asked that I not accede to

Ms. Atkinson's request on behalf of the

4 .

debtor. He has, however, abandoned that stance, and the only

question is whether or not, leaving that initial opposltion aside,

the Registrar should

or should not accept the petition.

The question is,

as it seems to me, simply

from

what

date the order of

the High Court, setting aside the relevant order

of

Sheppard J., became

effective.

There

is

no

doubt, from

communications from that Court, that the order has been made, and

the only reason it has not been taken out

is that in a

respect

unrelated to the order

for security there is a dispute as to the

proper form of order.

Order 4 3 r . 3 ( 1 )

of the Rules of the

Hlgh Court says:

"When a

Judgment is pronounced by the Court, the

entry of the judgment

shall,

sublect to the next

succeedlng sub-rule, be dated as of the day

on

which the judgment is pronounced, unless the

Court

otherwise

orders,

and

the

judgment

shall

take

effect from that

date."

Order 4 4 r.19 of the same rules

says:

"An order which is drawn

up shall be dated

as of the

day on which it was made, unless the Court or a Justice otherwise directs, and shall take effect

accordingly.

"

Neither rule makes it absolutely

clear, in my

view, whether an

order of the High Court is effective from the day

on which it is

made, in advance

of its being entered.

5 .

A question of that sort arose before Atkin S., as he

then was, in Hambleton v. Brown C19171 2 X.B. 93.

In that case, a

judgment for costs had been recovered.

The costs were taxed, but

the amount of the costs had not at the date

of Atkin S.’s judgment

been

entered

on

the

record.

There

was

an

assignment

of the

~udgment,

and various points were taken

about it, only one

of

which is presently relevant. At p.98 Atkin J. said:

“Thirdly, the further point was made that

in any

case, whether valldly assigned

or not, the debt was

not payable at the date

of the wric because of the

failure to enter.

I thlnk this is based upon a

misapprehension.

In

an

actlon

on

a

judgment

It

appears necessary to prove the judgment by production of the record. The ordlnary traverse of the existence of the judgment sued on is “nul tiel record. The point, however, 1 s one not of llability but of evidence.”

The

~ u d g e accordlngly held that an assignment made before

the

amount had been entered was effective,

following Holtby v. Hodqson

(1890) 24 Q.B.D. 103.

In that case, the Court of Appeal held that

a garnishee order absolute attaching a

judgment debt which had not

been entered was effective. Hambleton

v.

Brown seems

to go a

little further than Holtbv

v. Hodqson, because In the earlier case

the question arose after entry, as to the date upon whlch the

attached judgment was effective.

What Atkin J. described as a purely technical point

as

to proof should

not,

I think, be taken to detract from the

debtor’s rights under the Bankruptcy

Act,

although, in my

vlew,

the Deputy Registrar acted rightly and prudently

in not proceeding

without reference to the Court.

P

.rr

6 .

. -

, -

A second point is whether

I should direct the Deputy

Registrar not to accept the debtor's

petition untll the creditor's

petition is heard. In view of the absence of opposition from the

petitioning creditor, this point must be one to

be resolved ex

parte.

In Clvne v. Deputv Commissioner of Taxation

(1984) 55

A.L.R.

143 at 152, the judgment of the then Chief Justlce and

of

Murphy, Brennan and

Dawson JJ., reads as follows:

"It 1s a purpose foreign to

the bankruptcy laws, and

an abuse of process,

for a debtor to present

a

petition for the purpose of maklng

it

impossible

for a creditor to obtain

a sequestration order

on a

pending petition and

with the further purpose of

shortening the period of relation back, possibly placing beyond the reach of the trustee property which would otherwise vest in him."

Here It

has been held In interlocutory proceedlngs that

the

presentation of a

petitlon was prlma facie an abuse of process,

but the reason for that holdlng, namely, the order

of Sheppard J.,

no longer has effect. Burchett J., in his reasons of 5

September

1986, held that there was such

a prima facle case on

the

basis

that the purpose

of presentation was to make

it lmposslble "for an

order of thls Court, which it is within hls capaclty to obey, to

be enforced by contempt proceedings aqalnst him."

That

prima

facie finding still stands, but the peculiarity

of the matter is

that the purpose mentioned by Burchett

J. must now have gone.

The

debtor's current efforts to

have his petition accepted presumably

must have some other purpose. Although some might well suspect

that the purpose is perhaps still

a bad one, the dicta of the Hiqh

Court in

Clvne's case (quoted above) cannot be held to apply,

particularly in view of

the absence of any

opposition from the

petitioning creditor.

' 2

7.

C .

. r

It seems to me that the proper course is to direct that

the debtor's petition be accepted, subject, to satlsfaction as to

the matters mentioned in

s.55(3);

that is, I

direct that it be

accepted if the Registrar is satisfied

as to the questions of form

mentioned in that provision.

certify that this and

the

precedlng

pages ars a true copy of the reasons for

judqoent hcreln of HIS Honour

Mr. Justice Pincus

4

' m i a t e

Dafea 6 3~1~

987

Counsel for the Applicant:

Ms. R. Atklnson

Solicitors for the Applicant:

Messrs. Gllshenan & Luton

Counsel for the Respondent:

Mr. J. Sullivan

Solicitors for the Respondent:

Messrs. Cleary & Hoare

Date of Hearmg:

6 July 1987

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