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Goodman v Thomson Maloney & Partners Pty Ltd trading as Charter Keck Cramer [2011] FCA 97 (1 February 2011)
Last Updated: 17 February 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Goodman v Thomson Maloney & Partners
Pty Ltd trading as Charter Keck Cramer [2011] FCA 97
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Citation:
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Goodman v Thomson Maloney & Partners Pty Ltd trading as Charter Keck
Cramer [2011] FCA 97
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Appeal from:
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Application for leave to appeal: Goodman v Thomson Maloney & Partners
Pty Ltd trading as Charter Keck Cramer [2010] FCA 1185
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Parties:
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MORRIS GOODMAN, GRETA GOODMAN and WORLDWIDE
ENTERPRISES PTY LTD (ACN 083 154 741) (IN LIQUIDATION) v THOMSON MALONEY &
PARTNERS
PTY LTD (ACN 006 085 141) TRADING AS CHARTER KECK CRAMER (A
FIRM)
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File number:
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VID 947 of 2010
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Judge:
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GRAY J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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BANKRUPTCY – action commenced by
person who subsequently becomes bankrupt – whether application for leave
to appeal from order requiring
payment of security for costs is action for
personal injury or wrong done to bankrupt – no election by trustee in
bankruptcy
– pending appeal against sequestration order – whether
application for leave to appeal should be dismissed or stayed
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bankrupt’s spouse also applicant for leave to appeal – whether
application for leave to appeal should be stayed
altogether or only so far as
concerns bankrupt
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Finikiotis v Knight Frank (SA) Pty Ltd
[2001] FCA 1733 followed Jambrecina v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy
[2003] FCA 1352 distinguished McKellar v Container Terminal Management
Services Ltd (No 4) [2002] FCA 185 followed
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Place:
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Melbourne
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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12
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Counsel for the applicant:
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The first applicant appeared in person
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Counsel for the respondent:
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Mr T Rosen
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Solicitor for the respondent:
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Robert Richter & Associates Pty Ltd
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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MORRIS GOODMANFirst
Applicant
GRETA GOODMAN Second Applicant
WORLDWIDE ENTERPRISES PTY LTD (ACN 083 154 741) (IN
LIQUIDATION) Third Applicant
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AND:
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THOMSON MALONEY & PARTNERS PTY
LTD(ACN 006 085 141) TRADING AS CHARTER KECK CRAMER (A
FIRM)Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
1. The application for leave to appeal be
stayed until further order.
- The
appellants make no application for a further order, unless and until the
sequestration order made against the first appellant
is set aside, or the
bankruptcy of the first appellant is annulled.
3. The respondent’s costs of today be reserved.
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 Federal Law
Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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VID 947 of 2010
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BETWEEN:
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MORRIS GOODMAN First Applicant
GRETA GOODMAN Second Applicant
WORLDWIDE ENTERPRISES PTY LTD (ACN 083 154 741) (IN
LIQUIDATION) Third Applicant
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AND:
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THOMSON MALONEY & PARTNERS PTY LTD (ACN 006 085 141) TRADING AS
CHARTER KECK CRAMER (A FIRM) Respondent
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JUDGE:
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GRAY J
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DATE:
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1 FEBRUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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MELBOURNE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
application being called over today is an application for leave to appeal from a
judgment of a single judge of this Court. The
judgment from which the
applicants wish to appeal is an interlocutory judgment, requiring the first
applicant, Mr Goodman, and the
second applicant, his wife, to provide security
for costs in a proceeding in the Court, and staying the proceeding if they do
not.
On 12 November 2010, Jessup J dismissed parts of the application for leave
to appeal and referred the remainder to the Full Court.
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17 December 2010, a federal magistrate made a sequestration order against the
estate of the first applicant. On the same day,
the solicitors for the
respondent wrote to the trustee in bankruptcy, giving him notice of this
application. The trustee in bankruptcy
wrote back, by letter dated 13 January
2011, stating that he was not in a position to make an election in writing to
prosecute or
to discontinue the application.
- By
s 60(2) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) (“the Bankruptcy
Act”):
An action commenced by a person who subsequently becomes a bankrupt is, upon his
or her becoming a bankrupt, stayed until the trustee
makes election, in writing,
to prosecute or discontinue the action.
Section 60(3) provides:
If the trustee does not make such an election within 28 days after notice of the
action is served upon him or her by a defendant
or other party to the action, he
or she shall be deemed to have abandoned the action.
In s 60(5), the word “action” is defined to mean
any civil proceeding, whether at law or in equity. This is certainly a wide
enough definition to include
an appeal in a civil proceeding. For the purposes
of s 60(2) and (3), therefore, an application for leave to appeal against the
order requiring security for costs is an “action”.
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the face of it, therefore, no election in writing having been made by the
trustee in bankruptcy within 28 days after notice of
the application has been
served on him by the respondent, the trustee is deemed to have abandoned the
application for leave to appeal.
- There
is an exception to the provisions of s 60, found in s 60(4). That subsection
provides that:
a bankrupt may continue, in his or her own name, an action commenced by him or
her before he or she became a bankrupt in respect
of:
(a) any personal injury or wrong done to the bankrupt, his or her spouse or de
facto partner or a member of his or her family; or
(b) the death of his or her spouse or de facto partner or of a member of his or
her family.
It is apparent that that provision has nothing to do with the present case.
An application for leave to appeal against an order that
a litigant provide
security for costs is not a proceeding in respect of personal injury or wrong
done to that litigant.
- The
first applicant relied on a statement that he quoted from Jambrecina v
Official Trustee in Bankruptcy [2003] FCA 1352 at [13], where Bennett J
said:
Section 60(2) refers to the stay of an action commenced by a person who
subsequently becomes a bankrupt, until the trustee makes an election to
prosecute or discontinue the action. That is not the case here because,
while the trustee has made an election in writing not to prosecute or
discontinue the action, which election is challenged by Mr
Jambrecina by reason
of s 178, the proceedings were commenced in the High Court after he became a
bankrupt. Section 60(4) excludes from the operation of s 60(2) and
provides that the bankrupt may continue, in his own name, an action commenced by
him before he became a bankrupt in respect of
a personal injury or wrong done to
him and such a right to recover damages or compensation is not part of the
property of the bankrupt
to be divisible amongst his creditors (s
116(2)(g)). Again, this section may have no application as it does not
apply where the bankruptcy preceded the commencement of the action.
If s
60(2) and s 60(4) of the Act do not apply, the cause of action would then vest
in the respondent by reason of s 58(1).
- The
first applicant read the sentence in which her Honour referred to s 60(4) and s
116(2)(g) of the Bankruptcy Act and attempted to expand that sentence into a
broad proposition that, unless the application for leave to appeal involved
property
divisible among the creditors of a bankrupt, then that application
falls within s 60(4). This is obviously an unsustainable proposition. Bennett
J was doing no more than summarising the effect of s 60(4) and s 116(2)(g),
before saying that they had no application to the case before her. In the
proposed appeal, the applicants do not seek to recover
damages or, indeed, to
recover anything, but merely to undo an order made against them. It is clear,
in my view, that s 60(4) is inapplicable to the present case.
- It
might be thought that, once the application for leave to appeal had been
abandoned, or deemed to be abandoned, by the trustee
in bankruptcy, it ought to
be dismissed. In Finikiotis v Knight Frank (SA) Pty Ltd [2001] FCA 1733,
the Full Court determined that that would not be an appropriate order. That
case involved a situation similar to the present, where
there was before the
Full Court an appeal which did not fall within s 60(4) of the Bankruptcy Act,
and which had not been the subject of an election by the trustee in bankruptcy.
The Full Court declined to dismiss the appeal,
but instead made orders having
the effect of staying it until after the appeal brought by one of the appellants
in that case against
a sequestration order should be determined, and orders that
had the effect of reviving the appeal if the bankruptcy of the appellants
were
set aside or annulled.
- The
Full Court judgment, of course, is binding on me. I therefore should not make
orders dismissing the application for leave to
appeal. Rather, I should make
orders staying it until the outcome of the appeal against the sequestration
order, or any other possible
proceeding in which the bankruptcy might be
annulled, should become known.
- One
further issue arises. The second applicant in this case is not a bankrupt.
There is a corporation named in the application
for leave to appeal as the third
applicant. It is in liquidation and its right of appeal is stayed in any event
by reason of that.
So, it is the position of the second applicant that causes
the greatest difficulty.
- In
McKellar v Container Terminal Management Services Ltd (No 4) [2002] FCA
185, Weinberg J dealt with a similar issue. At [22], his Honour cited
authorities to the effect that, where one of several applicants
in a proceeding
is made bankrupt, the effect of s 60(2) of the Bankruptcy Act is to stay the
entire proceeding, and not just the claims brought by the bankrupt. His Honour
followed those authorities. I should
follow those authorities as well.
Therefore, I should stay the application for leave to appeal so far as both the
first and second
applicant are concerned, until such time as the outcome of the
first applicant’s bankruptcy appeal is known.
- I
make the following orders:
1. The application for leave to appeal be
stayed until further order.
- The
appellants make no application for a further order, unless and until the
sequestration order made against the first appellant
is set aside, or the
bankruptcy of the first appellant is annulled.
3. The respondent’s costs of today be reserved.
I certify that the preceding twelve (12)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Gray.
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Associate:
Dated: 14 February 2011
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