Re Green, Marilyn Joy Ex Parte Green, Marilyn Joy

Case

[1984] FCA 407

29 Oct 1984

No judgment structure available for this case.

BBIKRTJPTCY DISTRICT OF THE

SOUTHERN

1

DISTRICT ilF THE

STT?TE

OF OUEENSLAND

RE:

MBRILYN

J O Y GREEN

( A p p l i c a n t )

EX

FARTE:

I.lAF:ILYN

J G Y GREEN

( A p p l i c a n t )

a n d

-

OVERDRIVE PROMOTIOWS

FTV LTD !Respondent i

f o r the

reupondent

29 October 1984

S. KIFT

ASSXIkTE TO SFEIKtEP. J .

I

407

C A T C H W O R D S

BANKRUPTCY - application to set aside bankruptcy notice - calculation of amount demanded by notice - notice founded on two or more judgments or orders invalid - notice not invalid.

RC: PIhRILYN JOY GREEN

EX PARTE: MhRILYN JOY GREEN (hppllcant) and

OVERDRIVE PROMOTIONS FTY LTD (Respondent)

BANKRUFTCY MOTICE NO. 1482 of 1984

SFENDER

J .

BRISBANE

29 OCTOBER 1984

IN THE FEDERAL COURT

OF AUSTRALIA

BANKRUPTCY NOTICE

GENERAL DIVISIOM

)

NO. 1482 OF 1984

BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF THE SOUTHERN ) DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF OUEENSLAND )

RE: MARILYN JOY GREEN

M PARTE: MARILYN JOY GREEN (Applicant1 and

OVERDRIVE PROMOTIONS PTY LTD (Respondent)

O R D E R

SPEMDER

ORDER:

MAKING

JUDGE

J.

DATE OF ORDER:

OCTOBER

1984

29

WHERE MADE:

BRISBANE

T B

COURT ORDERS THAT:

1. Application to strike out the bankruptcy notlce be dlsmissed.

2.

The time within

which Marilyn Joy Green

has to comply with the bankruptcy notlce

be extended to 5 November 1984.

3 . The applicant pay the respondent's costs,

to be taxed.

IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

)

DIVISION

GENERAL

1

NOTICE

BANKRUPTCY

NO. 1482 OF 1984

BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF THE SOUTHERN ) DISTRICT OF THE SThTE OF OUEENSLAND )

RE: MARILYN JOY GREEN

D; PARTE: P1ARILYN JOY GREEN (Applicant) and

OVERDRIVE PROMOTIONS PTY

LTD (Respondent)

SPENDER J.

29 OCTOBER 1984

EXTEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

This is an application to set aside

a bankruptcy notice.

It

is

part

of

what I regard as an unedlfyinq

history

of

lltiqation involving these parties, and

I confess my view of the

matter has been somewhat influenced by that history;

but, on

analysis, the question really comes down to

a

questlon

of

constructlon of the bankruptcy notice.

The bankruptcy notice has claimed the amount of

$5565.02

as being due by Marilyn Joy Green

to the judgment creditor, being

"the balance due under

a

final Judgment and Order obtalned by it

... in the District Court of Queensland held at Brisbane on the

4th February, 1983,

belnq a

Judgment for

... $6296.92 and an

order that (Marilyn Joy Green) and

... Anthony Christopher Hansen

do pay to the ludqment creditor its costs

...

which costs have

2.

. .

been taxed and certified at . . . $1059.67 being a

judgment and

order the execution

of which has not been stayed.”.

That is the claim, and the bankruptcy notice then

proceeds “The said

sum

of ... $5565.02

is

calculated

as

follows :

- ”

abovementioned

“The

~udqment

6,296.92

The abovementioned order

f o r

costs

&.059.67

Sub-total

$7,356.59

Less -

The amount

of taxed costs

due and payable to

you by

the

judgment

creditor

pursuant to an order of

the Honourable Mr Justice

this

McGreqor

in

Honourable

Court of

Brisbane

on

the

11th

August, 1983.

1,806.07

Less -

The amount

of taxed costs

payable by

you and the

sald ANTHOIVY CHRISTOPHER

HANSEN pursuant

to

an

<)t-dFr of 1113 Honour Judqe

Helman

made

the

In

District Court

held

at

Brisbane

on

17th

December, 1982 and taxed

and

certified

on

22nd

November, 1983.

$314.50 $1,491.51

Sub-total

$5,865.02

Less -

The amount of costs

taxed and payable to you

3 .

by the Judgment creditor

pursuant to the order of

Honourable

the Mr

Justice McGregor in this

Honourable

Court

at

Brisbane

on

7

th

December, 1983.

$300.00

$ 5 , 5 6 5 . 0 2

Then the bankruptcy notice requires payment

of the sum

of $5565 .02

or, In the alternatlve, the securing of the payment

of that sum.

C l y n c J.

n

I

Re

Application for Issue of a BankruptCV

Notice; Ex parte Tlnson (1946) 14 A.B.C. 41 at p.43 sald "Now,

it is settled law that two or more judgments or orders cannot be

Included in the one notice". Hi3 Honour referred

t o In re Low;

Ex parte The Arqentine Gold Fields Ltd (1891) 1

0 . B .

147, In re

Bassett; Ex

parte Lewis ( 1 8 9 5 ) 2 Manson 177

and Re A Bankruptcv

Notice (1906) l4 Manson 133 and concluded at p.43:

"As the bankruptcy notice before me requires

the payment of moneys which became payable in

pursuance of two orders, it is not

a valid

notice.

"

He a l s o

indicated in the circumstances of that case

he

was

unable

t o make

an

amendment

to

the

bankruptcy

notice.

~

In Re

Edmunds (1936) 9 A.B.C.l, Lukin

J. was concerned

wlth

a bankruptcy notice which professed to be based upon

a

~udgment obtained m

the

High Court but the petitloner alsg

4.

included an amount for taxed costs pursuant to an order

of the

Full Court of the State of Victoria.

Lukin J. said

at

p.3:

"The petitioner obviously has made

a mistake

in regard to

the amount for

whlch he procured

the bankruptcy notice to be issued. He 4as

wrongly included the amount of taxed costs

of

the trial of the petition and of the appeal

t o

the

State Full Court, allowed

by that

Court, as if the High Court had made

an order

in regard thereto as well as to the costs

incurred on appeal to it.

Thls mistake

1s relied upon by the debtor

respondent here as

an

irregularity

invalidating the bankruptcy notice, and he

relies on the case

of

In re Low;

Ex parte

mentine Gold Fields Ltd (1891) 1 Q.B. 147,

and other cases following that authoritv

- In

re Collier (1891) 8 Mori. 80 at p.83; -In

O.C.S. (a Debtor) (1904) 2 K.B.

161; In re

Bankruptcy Notice (1906) 14 Manson, 133.

But

since those cases were decided

the English

Bankruptcy Act has been amended...

. "

He then

referred

to

the

change

that

has occurred

in

the

legislation and which is now to be found in sub-s.

4 1 ( 5 ) .

He

said in relation to this

(at p.4):

I ,

,-

- -

kqxEded as a

bankruptcy notice bared, a5

it

professes to be, entirely on the Hlgh Court's

judgment 'the sum specified' therein 'exceeds

the amount actually due' within the words of

that proviso. The bankruptcy notice does not

refer to

the State Full Court judgment.

If

it had the bankruptcy notice would have been

Irregular but, as it is, I thlnk I must hold

that this proviso

by

its wide terms covers

the present case. Therefore in its present

form it is not invalid."

MY Heywortli-Smith, who appeared wlth Mr Carmody for the

I

’.

5 .

applicant to set aside the bankruptcy notice, conceded that there

would here be

a valid bankruptcy notlce were there to be no

allowances made from the sum of

$7356.59.

He further conceded

that, were the bankruptcy notice

to have made no reference to the

order of Helman D.C.J.

of $314.50, equally no ob~ectlon

could be

taken to it.

The core

of his submissions was that

the bankruptcy

notice was founded on two judgments, and that conduct or that

course was impermlsslble.

Reference G?RS made by Mr Harrison Q.C., for the judgment

debtor,

to the observations made by Lockhart

J.

in Re Walsh

(1982) 47 A . L . R .

7 5 1 at pp.

755-756 where his Honour said:

“Before turning to the question whether

it is

the time of

issue or servlce of a bankruptcy

notice

that

determlnes

the

question

of

overpayment of the amount itself,

I propose

to make some brlef observation pertaining to

this

case

and

generally.

The law of

bankruptcy

is

not

intended

to

protect

rascals, rather it should flush them out and

deal wlth

them fairly and according to law.

In

recent

times

there

is

a growing

and

disturbing tendency of unscrupulous debtors

to use the technicalities that traditionally

surround

bankruptcy

law to

deliberately

esplolt

the

courts

and

the

system

they

adminlster.

The

principles

lald

down

by

judges over many years relating to bankruptcy

notices did not envisage this development.

The courts must not aid the ruthless and

cynical

exploitation

of

the laws of

insolvency by unscrupulous debtors.

I do not

suggest

for

one

moment

that

bankruptcy statutes should not be construed

othcrwise than according to thelr ordinary

and natural meaning in the liqht of their

evident

purpose

and

guided

well

by

established

principles

developed

by

the

courts. But where the application of these

6 .

principles would necessarlly lead to a manlfest absurdity ur lnju5tlce, thc courLs

I

must strain against it and ensure that the

laws of insolvency

are

interpreted

and

applied firmly and fairly in the interests

of

debtors and creditors alike. If this means

that some old principles laid down by the

courts of yesteryear must go, then so be it.

The law does not stand still, impervlous to

changing tlmes and conditions. If the laws

of bankruptcy are allowed to become

the haven

or

refuge of

the rascal they have utterly

failed the community

which they are deslgned

to serve.

"

I hasten to

add that there is no suggestion

here that

Marilyn Joy

Green, on any material before

me, is a person

properly to be characterized as

a rascal or a rogue, nor is there

any suggestlon of a

ruthless and cynical exploitation of the law

of insolvency by

an unscrupulous debtor.

The impresslon I got,

quite frankly, is that there has been

a prolonged litlglous game

which

has

had

the

effect

of

postponing

the

securing

of

substantial lustice between the parties and

the aid the courts

can give to that end.

m e n one approaches the construction

of the bankruptcy

notice here,

in my

view it is properly

t o

be considered

a s d

claim based

on the judgment given in the Dlstrict Court

of

Queensland on 4 February 1983 in an amount of $7356.59.

The

bankruptcy notice then proceeds to recite

a calculation by which

the balance, a sum

of the order of

$2,000,

is waived on that

particular judgment debt.

It,

is true that not all of the amount of the first

judgment of

McGregor J. has been waived. Fhat has been allowed

!

7.

off is the amount of $1806.07 less an amount of

$314.50.

!

I acknowledge that there are difficulties in the method

by which

the bankruptcy notice has been expressed;

but, in the

light of the concessions which

were very fairly and properly made

by

Mr Heyworth-Smith.

I view thls not as

a

bankruptcy notice

which is founded

on two judgments, but one In whlch'the

~udgment

creditor has allowed to the debtor

an amount which does take into

account a contra amount

of $314.50.

I

do

not think this renders

the

bankruptcy notice

Invalid. Were I of the

view, however, that

the reference to the

sum of $314.50 did render the bankruptcy notice invalid,

I ~7ould

have no hesitation In the clrcumstances of this case in allowlnq

an amendment of the bankruptcy notice to take account of that

fact. But as

I

say, my view is that the bankruptcy notlce

1s

valid.

The application to strike out the bankruptcy notice

1 s

dismissed.

I extend the time within which Marilyn

Joy Green has to

comply with the bankruptcy notice to

5 November 1984.

I order that the applicant pay the respondent's

costs,

to be taxed.

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