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Carson, In the matter of Trollope Property Holdings Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (ACN 005 649 212) [2009] FCA 118 (17 February 2009)

Last Updated: 19 February 2009

FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA


Carson, In the matter of Trollope Property Holdings Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (ACN 005 649 212) [2009] FCA 118


IAN MENZIES CARSON (IN HIS CAPACITY AS LIQUIDATOR OF TROLLOPE PROPERTY HOLDINGS PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION) (ACN 005 649 212))
VID 953 of 2008


GORDON J
17 FEBRUARY 2009
MELBOURNE


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
VID 953 of 2008

CARSON, IN THE MATTER OF TROLLOPE PROPERTY HOLDINGS PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION) ACN 005 649 212


BETWEEN:
IAN MENZIES CARSON (IN HIS CAPACITY AS LIQUIDATOR OF TROLLOPE PROPERTY HOLDINGS PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION) (ACN 005 649 212))
Plaintiff

JUDGE:
GORDON J
DATE OF ORDER:
17 FEBRUARY 2009
WHERE MADE:
MELBOURNE

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:


  1. The costs of the Commissioner of Taxation in relation to the application be costs in the winding up.
  2. The balance of the amount of $1,706,891.99 after allowing for the debts and claims payable under s 556(1)(a)-(df) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) be paid to the National Australia Bank.

Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using eSearch on the Court’s website.


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
VID 953 of 2008

CARSON, IN THE MATTER OF TROLLOPE PROPERTY HOLDINGS PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION) (ACN 005 649 212)


BETWEEN:

IAN MENZIES CARSON (IN HIS CAPACITY AS LIQUIDATOR OF TROLLOPE PROPERTY HOLDINGS PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION) (ACN 005 649 212) Plaintiff

JUDGE:
GORDON J
DATE:
17 FEBRUARY 2009
PLACE:
MELBOURNE

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

INTRODUCTION

  1. This is an application by Ian Menzies Carson (in his capacity as liquidator of Trollope Property Holdings Pty Ltd (in liq)) (“the Company”). The Applicant seeks directions from the Court pursuant to s 479(3) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (“the Act”) as to the proper characterisation of an amount of funds received from settlement of proceedings (“the Agreed Amount”) involving the Company and the Australian Taxation Office (the “ATO”), or alternatively, an order pursuant to s 564 of the Act that some or all of the Agreed Amount be distributed to the National Australia Bank (the “NAB”).
  2. The Company had granted a fixed and floating charge in favour of NAB on 8 March 2002 to secure the Company’s indebtedness to NAB (“the NAB Charge”). The NAB Charge was lodged with the Australian Companies and Securities Commission on 3 April 2002. As at 6 August 2004, NAB, as a creditor of the Company, was owed approximately $2.127 million.

MATERIAL FACTS

  1. This application arises out of a sale of land at 619-631 Springvale Road, Mulgrave Certificate of Title Volume 10307 Folio 877 (“the Property”) pursuant to a sale contract entered into by the Company with Salvatore Tarascio on 17 April 2003. On or about 25 February 2004, Capital Finance Australia Ltd (“CFAL”), as mortgagee in possession of the Property pursuant to a registered debenture charge dated 28 August 2002, appointed Mark Anthony Korda and Mark Francis Xavier Mentha (“the Agents”) as agents of CFAL. The ATO was informed of the appointment of the Agents on or about 26 February 2004. A new goods and services tax (“GST”) account with the ATO was opened in the name of CFAL as controller.
  2. On 31 March 2004, the Agents settled the sale of the Property (receiving $18,000,000 plus adjustments and GST (totalling $19,979,785.06) at settlement) and the registered debenture charge dated 28 August 2002 in favour of CFAL was discharged as part of the settlement process. Nothing was paid to NAB in respect of the amount secured by the NAB Charge. A caveat lodged by NAB claiming an equitable interest as chargee in the Property was withdrawn. The amount received by CFAL from the proceeds of sale fell approximately $125,000 short of the amount owed to it by the Company.
  3. After 31 March 2004, CFAL paid to the ATO an amount of $1,831,819.45 in payment of the assumed GST liability arising from the sale of the Property (“the GST Amount”).
  4. On 24 June 2004, the Company was wound up and the Applicant was granted leave to be appointed liquidator of the Company pursuant to s 532(2) of the Act.
  5. On 5 May 2006, proceedings were issued against the ATO by the Applicant on the basis that the transfer of the GST Amount (referred to in par [5]) was void as against the Applicant pursuant to s 588FE(2) of the Act because the remittance of the GST Amount by CFAL to the ATO constituted a payment made by the Company in respect of an unsecured debt that the Company owed to the ATO (“the ATO Proceedings”). The ATO alleged that the Company was not a party to the transaction with respect to the GST Amount.
  6. To enable the Applicant to pursue the claim against the ATO, NAB agreed to fund the Applicant to seek to recover the GST Amount. Clause 10 of the Funding Agreement between the Applicant and the NAB provided that:

“The [Applicant] acknowledges and agrees that having regard to the risk assumed by NAB in paying the Costs and providing the Indemnity, that the [Applicant] will...make application for orders pursuant to section 564 of the Act...”


  1. The ATO Proceedings eventually settled. Pursuant to the terms of settlement, inter alia:
    1. the ATO agreed to credit CFAL with an amount equal to the GST Amount together with any interest accrued on that amount (defined as the “Refund”); and
    2. CFAL agreed to pay the Refund, less an amount of $125,000 (the total being $1,706,891.99, which is the Agreed Amount referred to in par [1] above) to the Company.

THIS PROCEEDING

  1. As noted, the Applicant seeks directions from the Court pursuant to s 479(3) of the Act as to the proper characterisation of the Agreed Amount or an order pursuant to s 564 of the Act that some or all of the Agreed Amount be distributed to the NAB. Both the NAB and the ATO had notice of the proceeding. The ATO appeared at the hearing of this application.
  2. The Applicant adopts alternate characterisations of the Agreed Amount:
    1. the Agreed Amount is a payment received by the Company on account of an unsecured debt of the Company owed to the ATO such that the Agreed Amount would, subject to any order under s 564 of the Act giving NAB an advantage over the unsecured creditors as a result of the indemnity provided by NAB to the Applicant to recover the GST Amount under the Funding Agreement, be divisible amongst the unsecured creditors of the Company; or
    2. the Agreed Amount is characterised as being a refund of monies mistakenly paid by CFAL to the ATO such that the NAB would be entitled to the Agreed Amount as a secured creditor of the Company ahead of the unsecured creditors.
  3. It is common ground that the Agreed Amount would not have been recovered but for the funding provided by NAB.

LEGISLATION AND AUTHORITIES

  1. Section 564 of the Act provides that:

Where in any winding up:


(a)  property has been recovered under an indemnity for costs of litigation given by certain creditors, or has been protected or preserved by the payment of money or the giving of indemnity by creditors; or


(b)  expenses in relation to which a creditor has indemnified a liquidator have been recovered;


the Court may make such orders, as it deems just with respect to the distribution of that property and the amount of those expenses so recovered with a view to giving those creditors an advantage over others in consideration of the risk assumed by them.


  1. In Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v TJF EBC Pty Ltd (2006) 224 ALR 490, Barrett J of the New South Wales Supreme Court considered s 564 of the Act and concluded at [8]ff that:
    1. I am satisfied that, as a matter of power, the court may, under s.564, make an order that causes the creditor chosen for preferred treatment to rank ahead of any one or more of the creditors having claims within the s.556(1) categories.   This is because s.556(1) is expressed to operate "Subject to this Division", that is, Division 6 of Part 5.6.  Section 564 is within Division 6.  The priorities created by s.556(1) are thus susceptible to inroads made by or pursuant to other Division 6 provisions, including s.564.  So much was recognised by Campbell J in Jarbin Pty Ltd v Clutha Ltd [2004] NSWSC 28; (2004) 208 ALR 242.
    2. Section 564 contemplates that assisting or indemnifying creditors within its purview may be given "an advantage over others".  The section does not say "all others" or "some others" or "any others".  In referring to "others" generally, it contemplates, in my view, that the court may, by its order, give the assisting or indemnifying creditors "an advantage over" any one or more of the other creditors or all of them, with the result that the court may, as a matter of jurisdiction, cause the debts of the creditors in question to be placed on any of the rungs of the ladder of priority created by s.556(1) (and, within a particular rung, above, below or beside the creditors with claims that s.559 causes to rank equally inter se), above the topmost of those rungs or below the bottom rung (yet ahead of "all other unsecured debts and claims").  In short, s.564 is cast in terms giving the court a complete discretion regarding positioning of the whole or any part of the debts of the assisting or indemnifying creditors on the scale of priorities in the winding up and the opening words of s.556(1) cause any such positioning ordered by the court to have effect despite what would otherwise be the order of priority under s.556(1).
    3. It is then necessary to consider a second matter raised by the Commonwealth, that is, as to the approach the court should take when invited to make an order under s.564 creating a priority superior to one or more of the s.556(1) priorities.  The Commonwealth submits that, in such a case, the onus is on the s.564 applicant to show that such a result is "just".  Given the express terms of s.564 ("... may make such orders, as it deems just ..."), that is obviously so.  The Commonwealth also says, however, that a particularly heavy onus is borne by a s.564 applicant who seeks to have the court create a situation where assisting or indemnifying creditors intrude, as it were, into the order of priorities created by s.556(1) rather than merely being preferred over "all other unsecured debts and claims".
    4. There is nothing in the legislation indicating the weight of the burden to be shouldered by a s.564 applicant in different factual situations.  Rather, the legislature has left it to the court to decide what, in the particular circumstances, is "just".  That question must, in my view, be approached without pre-conceptions about the abstract importance of particular kinds of debts and claims as compared with others.  There can be no doubt that, as a matter of social policy, it is important that employees' interests be protected when employer companies collapse.  That policy is reflected in ss.556(1)(e), (f), (g) and (h), 558, 560 and 561.   But, as s.556(1) itself shows, the legislature attaches a greater importance, in terms of priority, to a number of other debts and claims (see s.556(1)(a), (b), (c), (d), (da), (db), (dc), (dd), (de) and (df)). 
    5. The approach to be taken in s.564 cases remains as stated a decade ago by Brownie J in Household Financial Services Pty Ltd v Chase Medical Centre Pty Ltd (1995) 18 ACSR 294 in the following passage at pp.296-7 (approved by the Court of Appeal in State Bank of New South Wales v Brown (2001) 38 ACSR 715):

The last words s 564 provide for, and the authorities accent the need to assess the risk run by the indemnifying creditors, for whose benefit an application is made, but the authorities show that it is also appropriate to look to the sum recovered (or the value of the property recovered), the failure of other creditors to provide the indemnity, the proportions between the debts of the indemnifying creditors and the other debts, the public interest in encouraging creditors to provide indemnities so as to enable assets to be recovered, and, generally, the totality of the circumstances; and there has been a tendency in recent times to adopt a more liberal approach, in favour of indemnifying creditors. See Re Bavistock (1946) 14 ABC 30; Re Ivermee; Ex parte Official Receiver (1974) 36 FLR 187; Re Passmore; Ex parte Official Receiver (in liq) (1984) 56 ALR 181 at 186; Re Kyra Nominees Pty Ltd (in liq) (1987) 11 ACLR 767; 5 ACLC 811 at 819; Re Ken Godfrey Pty Ltd (in liq) (1994) 14 ACSR 610; 12 ACLC 1071.

See also Re Ken Godfrey Pty Ltd (in liq) (1994) 14 ACSR 610 at 612.

ANALYSIS

  1. Consistent with those authorities, I consider that in the whole of the circumstances the NAB should be given an advantage under s 564 that sees it receive in priority to all other creditors 100% of the Agreed Amount after allowing for debt and claims payable under ss 556(1)(a)-(df) of the Act. NAB should be entitled to the whole of the fruits of the action against the ATO successfully pursued with its assistance subject, of course, to prior deduction of the Applicant’s remuneration and costs. I accept that cases in which an assisting creditor is awarded 100% of the net recovery will be “rare” (see Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v TJF EBC Pty Ltd (2006) 224 ALR 490 at [23] and [24]) but consider that this is one of those rare cases. The NAB assumed the risk of the litigation and it did so in respect of an amount of money that but for an error made at the time of settlement of the Property it would have been entitled to as a secured creditor. That error has cost NAB not only the costs of the proceedings against the ATO under the Funding Agreement but also the debts and claims payable under ss 556(1)(a)-(df) that will be met from the Agreed Amount before it is distributed to the NAB.
  2. Having adopted that approach, it is unnecessary for the Applicant to seek, and the Court to give, directions pursuant to s 479(3) of the Act as to the proper characterisation of the Agreed Amount and I decline to do so.
I certify that the preceding sixteen (16) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Gordon.

Associate:


Dated: 17 February 2009


Counsel for the Applicant:
Mr G T Bigmore QC with Mr P Fary


Solicitor for the Applicant:
Maddocks


Counsel for the Australian Taxation Office:
Mr M McInnis


Solicitor for the Australian Taxation Office:
Australian Taxation Office
Legal Services Branch


Date of Hearing:
17 February 2009


Date of Judgment:
17 February 2009


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