Re Aitken, L.R. v Ex parte Aitken, M.N

Case

[1987] FCA 322

16 Mar 1987

No judgment structure available for this case.

LN TEE E'DW COURT OF AUSTRALIA

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G

DIVISION

1

)

BANKRUPTCY

DISTRICT

IN THE

1

No. W 935 of 1985

1

I

STATE OF NEW SOUTH WAUS AND THE

1

)

AUSTRAL-

CBPITBL

TERRITORY

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Re :

LINDSAY

ROBERT

AITKEN

Ex parte:

WGARXT NOREEX AITREN

I

Eznfeld J.

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, PLACE:

Sydney

' DATE:

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16 March 1987

EX-TEMPORE JUDGMENT

Thls 1s an applicat

ion to set aslde a summons

issued undir section

81

o f

the Bankruptcy Act (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") and, as

a

prelmznary point, the

applicant has sought access to the

onginal

application f o r the Issue

of the summons.

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MY attention has been drawn

to two cases whlch bear upon the question as

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to

whether access should

o r should not be granted to such fundamental

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! informatlon In relatlon

to an appllcatlon of this kind: Re Abrahams;

Ex

parte Thomas (1985) 9 FCR 232 and Re Stirllng Henry Limlded (in

L q.

)

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and The Companies Act

(1972) 1 NSWLR 497.

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In Re Abrahams at

236, Mr. Justice Lockhart

said:

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"It z s , I

think, timely to comment that whether the document

be

called an applicatlon

for the lssue

of a summons under

S 69 or S

81 or a statement of reasons to ground the lssue

of such a

summons or otherwlse, It should be sealed In an envelope

by the

Registrar wlth a notatlon that it 1 s not to be opened wlthout

the order

of a ~udge,

the Reglstrar

or a Deputy Reglstrar."

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I am informed that it was these observations of

Mr.

Justice Lockhart

that led to the Registry adopting the practice

of seallng applications

'

of this

kind.

The application ln thls matter is so sealed, permission

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to open being limited only to a judge and a reglstrar.

Mr.

Justice

Lockhart went

on

to say that this was a practice which has been

"followed in courts accustomed to deal with matters

of insolvency for as

long

as

I can remember" - the "I" in thls case being his Honour. His

Honour also said that It was a practice approved by authority and quoted

by way of example Re Stirling Henry Lirmted

(in Llq.1

(supra) - a

decision of Sir Laurence Street (then a Judge

in Equity).

In

Re Abrahams,

Mr.

Justlce Lockhart observed that the rationale

underlying the requlsement of secrecy

was of varied quality. One of

the

reascns

S I F - - - * ~ - -

yy'VLCAuy xhat h l s honour descrlbed as "the wisdom

of this

practice" was:

n .

. . that prima facie those who

are to be examined should not

have access

to the statement of the liquldator

or the trustee

... stating why it

is that they are proposed to be examined or

on what matters it

1s proposed to examine them."

With deepest respect to hls Honour, that

1s not a reason for adoptmg

the practlce but merely

a consequence of the practice bemg adopted. In

the declslon of S i r Laurence Street to whlch his Honour referred, there

is a quotatlon at page

501 of Slr George Jessel, the Master of

the

I

Rolls, in a case called Re Gold Company

(1379) 12 Ch.D. 77 at pages 82

I

and 83, and again at page

8 4 .

Hls Lordshl? recorded this practice In

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relation to a private examination In

a wlndlng up, but did not state

anything about its background

or, particxlarly, its rationale, other

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than to indlcate as had

Mr. Justlce Lockhazt, that

If access was given

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to such lnformation the examlnee mlghz be enabled

to defeat some

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: proceedlng that might

be taken agalnst hlm.

S1r Laurence Street,

at

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page

503,

in dealing with a request by counsel to have access to the

information in the case then before

hls Honour, sald that so far as his

Honour was aware,'such a clalm had never been made

in New South Wales

before then, that

i s before 1972.

Hls Honour went on:

"It is, it must be conceded, an

unusual procedure for a court to

make an order upon material that is withheld from the person

against whom the order is made. But, although unusual

i n

a

general sense,

it 1s hallowed by long practzce withln the fleld

of

company law both in this country and in England, and it

1s

based upon sound reasons

of public interest."

Once again, the reasons appear to escape detailed enunclation other than

a general statement

i n the following paragraph to

the effect that

If

someone

knows the basis upon whlch their examination was obtained they

may be put

in a position to avoid Its effects.

i

The publlc interest to whlch their Honours referred

is one aspect of the

matter. There are others. Notwlthstanding my profound respect for the

eminence and &stinction, not to say experxence, of the two learned

judges whose judgments I have quoted, It seems

to me to be unusual,

to

say the least, that a person would be brought

by compulsory process to

the court to be examlned about his

or her affalrs by a party who

IS

likely to place before the person In the course of the exarmnation

all

or most of the materlal that formed the basls

of the appllcation for the

issue of the orlginal summons

- in circumstances where invariably and as

a matter of course that person was entltled

to be, as

It

were,

potentlally ambushed and not be in a posltlon to

know

what his

or her

attention was to

be dlrected.

In the malorlty of cases It would be an

advantage - and would have been an advantage

In those cases wlth whlch

P

have had prevlous experlence in this area, partlcularly under

the

: Companies Code - for the questioners to have glven notice

to the

examlnees

of the material on which they were to be examlned, for

the

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purpose

of

ensuring

that

the

persons

had

obtained

any

necessam

documentary material

to enable them to answer the questions and also

t

stretch their recollections and make such other lnqulries as may assist

their answering questlons promptly and accurately.

Against this background,

I have myself read the document in question in

this case, which

IS

the application by the trustee of the estate of

Lindsay Robert Aitken for the examination of hls wife Margaret Noreen

Aitken. Virtually the whole of this document contalns requests for

information, or a desire to obtain informatzon, from

Mrs. Aitken about

matters on which the bankrupt

hmself was exarmned earlier and to which

he either gave no answer, an unsatisfactory answer,

o

an answer which

requred a great deal more elucidatlon and detall.

I can see nothing

In the document whxch would provlde

Mrs Altken, or her

husband, wlth an opportunlty to avold any prosecution or other action that might be taken by anyone. Nor has the trustee suggested any. To the contrary it would seem to me that if she is made aware of the

information which the trustee is

a m o u s to obtain she would be better

able to supply the answers.

So far as the trustee 1s concerned he would

be

in

a better position to take a much more aggressive

h n e In

the

examlnatlon than would be the case

if no notice was glven, because

Mrs.

Aitken

could not posslbly be expected to have at her fingertips the

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type of information which he says

he IS seeklng in the course of

the

section 8 1 proceedlng.

In addztion, with such notice any prevaricatlon

could more easily be detected, albeit that a section

81

examnation

ltself 1s not prmarily for thls purpose.

In those circumstances, It 1 s my view that

I

am

not constrelned by

authorlty from maklng available the applicatlon

f r the summons m this

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case, and I propose to do so.

I note ln thls connection that counsel

appearlng for the trustee did not object

to my making it available and

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said that he hlmself would be likely to use lt durlng the course

of th

examinatlon of the examinee.

Whilst I think the practice suggested by

Mr. Justlce Lockhart of seallng

the envelope and limitlng

permission to open It should be continued, It

seems to me that each case should be consldered on its merits.

If the

trustee consents to access to the examinee the Reglstrar

o r

Deputy

Registrar should make it

available as no Judge or Officer of the Court

I

will

know more about Its potential for misuse than the trustee and

hls/her advisers.

If there 1s a dispute, the matter can be decemned by a Judge, or by

a

RegistrarfDeputy

Registrar if approprlate. The only crlterlon for

refusal of access which

I

can derive from authorlty, princlple and

,

commonsense is a reasonable and reasonably based belief that the

, exanunee's knowledge of the document's contents would

or may lead to

effective avoidance of a signlflcant purpose

of the examinatlon such as

the destructlon or dlsposal of relevant documents, other tamperlng with

evldence or a re-ordering of events or evldence.

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