Re Daf, B.L. & Anor Ex parte Daff, B.L. & Anor

Case

[1985] FCA 448

9 Sep 1985

No judgment structure available for this case.

I .

#-

Bankruptcv - applications for discharge - observations cancernlng degree of particularity to be expected of trustee's report -

whether matters under s.150(6) established

- discretion

of the

Court under 6.150.

Bankruptcv Act 1966 ss. 149, 150

Re:

B R I M LEONARD DAFF and ANNE ELIZABETH DAFF - Bankrupts

Ex Parte: BRIAN LEONARD DAFF and ANNE ELIZABETH DAFF - Applicants

No. 379 of 1982

TOOHEY J.

PERTH

9 SEPTEMBER 1985

IN THE FEDERAL

COURT

l

OF

AUSTRALIA

i

GENERAL

DIVISION

)

No. 3 7 5 of 1982

BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT

i

OF THE STATE OF

)

WESTERN AUSTRALIA

i

RE :

BRIAN LEONARD DAFF and

ANNE ELIZABETH DAFF

Bankrupts

M PARTE: BRIAN LEONARD DAFF and

ANNE ELIZABETH DAFF

Applicants

MINUTE OF ORDER

JUDGE MAKING ORDER: TOOHEY J.

DATE OF ORDER:

9 September 1985

WHERE MADE:

Perth

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

1. BRIAN LEONARD DAFF and ANNE ELIZABETH DAFF each be discharged

from bankruptcy

but

that in each case the discharge be

suspended until 19 January 1986.

Note:

Settlement and entry of orders is dealt

with in Order 36 of the Federal Court

Rules.

No. 379 of 1982

RE :

BRIAN LEONARD DAFF and

ANNE ELIZABETH DAFF

Bankrupts

M PARTE: BRIAN LEONARD DAFF and

ANNE ELIZABECH DAFF

Applicants

m:

TOOHEY J.

9 September 1985

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

On 19 August 1982 Brian Leonard Daff and Anne Elizabeth

Daff

became

bankrupt

on

their

own petition. They

now

seek

discharge from bankruptcy.

On the hearing

of their applications

Mr. and Mrs. Daff appeared in person.

The Official Receiver also

appeared as did Umberto Procopio,

a

creditor who opposed the

applications on the ground that "The Bankrupts have paid

no

dividend in reduction of the debts proved".

In the ordinary course of events

Mr.

and Mrs.

Daff

would, by reason of

sUb-s.149(1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966, have

been discharged from bankruptcy

at midnight

on 19 August

1985.

However in each

case the Official Receiver, exercising his power

under para.l49(3)(c), entered

an

objection

to

discharge.

In

consequence the statutory discharge date was prolonged

by 2 years.

In the

case

of Mr. h f f , the

Offlclal Receiver's

objection was on the ground that his conduct

"both In respect of

the period before and the period after the date of bankruptcy

has

been unsatlsfactory". In the case of

Mrs. Daff, the objection was

that "the bankrupt has failed to co-operate in the administration

of her estate". While the lodging

of an objection pursuant

to

sub-s.149(3)

prolongs

the

period

of

bankruptcy,

it

does

not

prevent the bankrupt from applying to the Court for

an order of

discharge. The matters

pecified

in

sub-s.150(6)

which,

if

established, preclude the Court from making an order of discharge

or requlre the Court to suspend any order of discharge made, are

different from the grounds specified in sub-s.149(4) on which an

objection

may

be entered,

though

some

of

the

grounds

in

sub-s.149(4) are wide enough

to include conduct specified in

suh-s.150(6).

Nevertheless the direct consequence of entering an

objection under sub-6.149(3) is simply

to prolong the statutory

period. If there is then an application for discharge, it is only

the establishment of one of the matters specified in

sub-6.150(6)

that ties the

hands of

the Court In dealing with the application.

But, even

if no such matter is established, sub-s.150(9) confers

on

the Court

a wide discretion to refuse to make

an order of

discharge, to make an order, or to make an

order but suspend its

operation either unconditionally

or conditionally.

In the present case the report

of the Officlal Receiver

specifies

a number of matters under sub-s.150(6). By reason

of

sub-S. 150

,(12) the report is prima facie evldence

of the statements

contained

~n it.

The matters specified are as follows:

"(a) that

the

bankrupts

have

omitted

to

keep

and

preserve such books, accounts or records, as

sufficiently disclose their business transactions

and ilnanclal position withln the perlod

of five

years immediately preceding

the date on which they

became bankrupt;

(h) that the bankrupts

have after knowing themselves

to

be insolvent, continued to trade

or obtained credit

to the amount

of $100 or upwards;

(c)

That the bankrupts have contracted a debt provable

in the bankruptcy without having

at the tlme

of

contracting it any reasonable or probable grounds of expectation (proof of which lies on them) of

being able to pay

it

after

taking

into

consideration their other liabilities

at the time;

(d) that

he

bankrupts

have

failed

to

account

satisfactorily to the trustee for any

loss of, or

depreciation of, assets or for

a deficiency of

assets.

l'

The

Official Receiver said that he did not

wish

to

pursue the matter mentioned in para.(d).

I infer that, in the

Official Receiver's opinion, the bankrupts have now accounted satisfactorily for any loss of, or depreciation of, assets or any deficiency therein. Because of the operation of sub-s.150(12) and

because Mr.

and Mrs. Daff were unrepresented, I invited Mr. Daff

to

give

evidence

in

relation

to

the

matters

mentioned

in

paras.(a), (h) and (c) of para.18

of the Official Receiver's

report. In this regard it seems

to

me highly desirable that

a

trustee's report made pursuant to sub-s.150(3)

do more than echo

the

language of sub-s.150(6). It

should

specify

with some

particularity the conduct said to fall within the subsection.

The

bankrupt is then alerted to the matters he

has ta meet and the

Court is forewarned

nf the likely areas of contention.

Lack of

particularity in a trustee's report may mean that while the Court

is precluded from urantinu

an Immediate dlscharqe it

does not have

the materla1 to determine an appropriate period of suspension and

the nature of the

conditions, if

any, to be

attached to the

suspension.

Mr.

Daff gave evidence without the aid

of

any source

material and, inevitably, his testimony

lacked

etail.

It

appeared from the Official Receiver's report that

Mr.

and Mrs.

Daff formerly carried on

business as haulage contractors.

In the

financial year 1978-1979 they made

a substantial loss from that

business. They

also lost some

$60,000 in a motel venture in

Harvey and

$40,000 on the purchase and sale of cattle.

As

to sub-para.(a) of the Official Receiver's report,

Mr. Daff said that until

1981 the partnership employed

a full-time

accountant who maintained

the

ordinary

books

of

business.

Thereafter they seem

to have operated with a minimum of records -

cheque books, receipts and bank statements.

Mr. Daff said that

he

had given to the Official Receiver all business records, at least

those relating to the period until December

1981.

As to sub-para.(b),

his answer was the not uncommon

e

that

the

partnership

tried

to

trade

out

of

its

precarious

financial

position

but

was

unsuccessful

in

doing

so.

The

allegations in sub-para.(b) appear to relate to debts incurred in

connection

with the maintenance and repair of vehicles in the

haulage business.

AS to

sub-para.(c), the gravamen of this complaint was

that Mr. and Mrs. Daff, with no hope of paying later

debts,

continued ko c o n t r a c C them.

Mr. Daff'r; answer was largely the one

he gave in respect of sub-para.(b).

On the evidence available, scanty though

it is, Mr. and

Mrs. Daff

have not answered the prima facie case raised by the

Official Receiver's report.

This is

a case in which no dividend has

been paid and

there is no prospect of any dividend. Mr.

and Mrs. Daff have

three young children

and

Mrs. Daff is

engaged

in

home

duties. Mr.

Daff is employed

by the Pearson Family Trust, a trust

of

which the three children are the beneficiaries. Again the

evidence was unsatisfactory but it seems that the trust owns an old truck which is used to carry out cartage contracts. The trust

employs

Mr.

Daff

and

pays

him

$185 net a week.

According

to Mr. Daff,

the money earned by the trust is applied to the

school fees of the children. There

has been a public examination

of Mr. Daff

and

I assume that

if the Official Receiver thought

that there was anything in

Mr.

Daff's evidence to the Court

regarding the Pearson Family Trust that

was open to challenge, it

would

have

been

made

the

subject

of

cross-examination.

The

position remains that Mr. and Mrs.

Daff are unable to make any

contribution to their creditors and

are unlikely to

be in a

position to do SO.

Mr. Procopio is

a credltor of the Daffs for

an amount of

$2,000 or thereabouts plus legal costs incurred in prosecuting

h s

claim In the Local Court.

As I understand the position, he

was a

bricklayer

engaged

for

the

building

of

the

motel

to

which

Mr. and Mrs. Daff

have been bankrupt

now for more

than 3 years.

There 1 s nothinq to be gained,

s o far as the

creditors are concerned,

from

prolonging

their

bankruptcies.

While the matters referred to in the Official Receiver's report preclude me from granting an immediate discharge, I am of the

opinion that a

discharge 1 s appropriate in all the circumstances.

Any order for discharge must

be

suspended hut I see no purpose in

attaching conditions to the suspension. However to reflect the

unsatisfactory aspects

of

these bankruptcies, in each case the

discharge will be suspended until

19 January 1986.

Since writing these reasons

I have read the decision of

Woodward J. in Re Maher (unreported decision, delivered 21 August 1985)-in which reference is made to my own decision in Re Benda

(unreported decision, delivered

26

April 1985). Both decisions

were concerned

with

applications for discharge made before the

statutory three year period had expired. For that reason neither

decision is directly in point in the present case. Nevertheless

each emphasises the breadth of the discretion conferred on the

Court by sub-s.l50(9), even when sub-s.150(6) does not apply.

There is nothing in either decision inconsistent

with the reasons

that have led me to the order made in the present case.

I certify that this and the

five preceding pages

are a true

CODV of the Reasons for Judgment herein

of his Honour'hr. Justice

Toohey

Associate

Dated: 7 %&c&,

'?is--

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