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Beyond Properties Pty Ltd & Ors v Knight [2009] FMCA 779 (14 August 2009)
Last Updated: 18 August 2009
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
BEYOND PROPERTIES PTY LTD
& ORS v KNIGHT
|
|
BANKRUPTCY – Review of Registrar's decision
to adjourn creditors’ petition – “other sufficient
cause”
why a sequestration order should not be made – offsetting
claim – abuse of process – public interest – sequestration
order made.
|
|
|
BEYOND PROPERTIES PTY LTD
|
|
Second Applicant:
|
BEYOND INTERNATIONAL LTD
|
|
Third Applicant:
|
DISCOVERY COMMUNICATIONS INC
|
|
Fourth Applicant:
|
SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE CORPORATION(SBS)
|
|
Fifth Applicant:
|
FOXTEL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD
|
|
Sixth Applicant:
|
BEYOND PRODUCTIONS PTY LTD
|
|
Delivered on:
|
14 August 2009
|
REPRESENTATION
Counsel for the
Applicant:
|
Ms S. Goddard S.C. with Mr R. Ross-Smith
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Solicitors for the Applicant:
|
DLA Phillips Fox
|
|
|
There being no appearance by or on behalf of the respondent
|
ORDERS
(1) The order of the Registrar of 13 May 2009 adjourning
the hearing of the creditor’s petition to 17 August 2009 at 9.00 am
be
dismissed.
(2) A sequestration order be made against the estate of Andrew Knight.
(3) The applicant creditor’s costs be taxed and be paid from the estate of
the respondent debtor in accordance with the Bankruptcy Act 1966
(Cth).
The Court notes that the act of bankruptcy is 30 April 2008.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATESCOURT OF AUSTRALIA
ATADELAIDE
|
ADG 203 of 2008
BEYOND PROPERTIES PTY LTD
|
Applicant
Second Applicant
|
DISCOVERY COMMUNICATIONS INC
|
Third Applicant
|
SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE CORPORATIONS (SBS)
|
Fourth Applicant
|
FOXTEL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD
|
Fifth Applicant
|
BEYOND PRODUCTIONS PTY LTD
|
Sixth Applicant
And
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Introduction
- I
have before me an Application for Review of a decision of Registrar Christie of
13 May 2009. At that time the Registrar adjourned
the hearing of a petition for
the sequestration of the estate of Andrew Knight (“the respondent”)
to 17 August 2009 at
9.00am giving liberty to apply and reserving costs. The
applicants say that the sequestration order should have been made and should
now
be made on the review.
- The
creditor’s petition was filed on 8 September 2008 and relies on the
applicants’ judgment debt against the respondent
for the sum of
$541,973.92. The debt arose from a costs order made in Federal Court
proceedings on 10 December 2007.
- An
application for review of a Registrar’s decision proceeds by way of a
hearing de novo.[1] In
reviewing the orders the Court is obliged to begin afresh and exercise for
itself any discretion exercised by the Registrar.
This includes being satisfied
of the various matters referred to in s.52 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966
(Cth) (“the Act”).
Respondent’s involvement in the hearing
- The
somewhat unusual circumstances of the hearing of this Application for Review of
a Registrar’s decision demands an explanation.
The unusual circumstances
are brought about by the fact that, although the respondent was ordinarily
resident in Australia when the
act of bankruptcy was committed, for some time
now he has resided in the United Kingdom. On a number of occasions orders have
been
required as a result of the respondent’s absence from Australian
shores.
On 13 October 2008 Registrar Christie made the following orders:
- Personal
service on the respondent of Creditors Petition No ADG 203 of 2008, copies of
the affidavits verifying the petition and a
copy of any consent to act as
trustee be dispensed with.
- In
lieu of personal service, an official copy of the Creditor’s Petition,
copies of the affidavits verifying the petition, a
copy of any consent to act as
trustee and a sealed copy of this order be served on the respondent
by:
- Prepaid
ordinary post addressed to the respondent at PO Box 131 Woodside in the State of
South Australia; and
- Prepaid
airmail addressed to the respondent at 190 Shaftesbury Avenue, London WC2H 8JL
in the United Kingdom; and
- Emailing
a scanned copy of the documents to bowvayne@email.com;
- In
each instance referred to in paragraph 2 hereof, the documents be accompanied by
a letter stating the date of posting or emailing,
as the case may be.
- Service
in accordance with this order shall be deemed good and sufficient service of the
said documents upon the respondent.
- If
service is effected in accordance with this order, the said documents shall be
deemed to be served on the respondent on the tenth
day after the date on which
all the methods of service referred to in paragraph 2 hereof have been effected.
- The
hearing date of this petition be amended to 10 November 2008 at
2.15pm.
7. Costs of and incidental to
this application are reserved.
- When
the respondent filed his notice of opposition to the creditors’ petition
on 7 November 2008 he gave his address for service
as
PO Box 131 Woodside,
SA 5244. As well as giving this South Australian post office box address, the
respondent’s supporting
affidavit filed the same day also showed that his
email address was bowvayne@email.com.
- On
17 March 2009, with the respondent appearing by telephone in the UK, Registrar
Christie made the following orders in relation to
the hearing of the
creditor’s petition:
- The
matter be listed for hearing at 9.00 am on Friday 17 April 2009.
- The
respondent to file and serve written submissions by 4.30 pm on 8 April 2009
service to be by email to the applicant using the
address:
peter.charatsis@dlaphillipsfox.com
3. Costs be
reserved.
- On
14 April 2009 the respondent filed an outline of argument and on 16 April 2009
an affidavit of himself sworn 14 April 2009 in London.
- The
creditors’ petition was heard on 17 April 2009 and the Registrar’s
decision made on 13 May 2009. The Registrar ordered
that the creditors’
petition be adjourned to 17 August 2009. This is the decision now under
review.
- The
Application for Review first came on before me for directions on 4 June
2009. The parties had previously been advised that the
application was listed
for hearing at 10.00 am on 18 June 2009.
On 4 June 2009 the applicants were
represented by Counsel but there was no appearance by or on behalf of the
respondent. The following
orders were made:
- The
applicants file and serve material to be relied upon by 10 June 2009 at
10am.
- The
respondent file and serve material to be relied upon by 15 June 2009 at
12 noon.
- The
applicants file and serve an outline of submissions by 15 June 2009 at
5pm.
- The
respondent file and serve an outline of submissions by 17 June 2009 at
5pm.
- The
respondent be permitted to appear by telephone at the hearing on 18 June 2009 at
10am providing that he communicates with the
Associate to Federal Magistrate
Simpson on (08) 8219 1000 or by email to sareg@fedcourt.gov.au or tony.westgate@fedcourt.gov.au
to confirm that he wishes to do so.
- The
respondent have liberty to apply to have the matter called back on prior to the
hearing to seek such variation to these orders
as he considers necessary and
appropriate.
- Solicitors
for the applicants to advise the respondent of these orders.
- When
the matter came on before me on 18 June 2009 the applicants appeared by their
Counsel and the respondent appeared by telephone.
The respondents requested
that the hearing be adjourned as he needed more time to prepare, file and serve
material for the hearing.
I acceded to this request. The following orders were
made:
- This
matter be listed for hearing before FM Simpson on 1 July 2009 at 10.00 am (SA
time) (Noting half a day allowed).
- The
time for the respondent to comply with paragraph 2 of the Order made on 4 June
2009, being the filing and serving of all material
upon which he intends to rely
at the hearing, is extended to not later than 12pm (SA time) on 25 June
2009.
- The
time for the applicants to comply with paragraph 3 of the Order made on 4 June
2009, being the filing and serving of an Outline
of Submissions, is extended to
not later than 12pm (SA time) on 29 June 2009.
- The
applicants be at liberty to file and serve any responding affidavit material by
not later than 12pm (SA time) on 29 June 2009.
- The
time for the respondent to comply with paragraph 4 of the Order made on 4 June
2009, being the filing and serving of his Outline
of Submissions, is extended to
not later than 3pm (SA time) on 30 June 2009.
- The
respondent be permitted to appear by telephone at the hearing on 1 July 2009 at
10am PROVIDED THAT he telephones the Registry
on (08) 8219 1000 just prior
to the commencement time.
- On
1 July 2009 at about 10.00 am the respondent contacted the Court by telephone.
The Court was unable to immediately embark on the
hearing as it had other court
commitments. The respondent was informed that the Court would commence the
hearing as soon as it was
able to and that he should ring back at 10.45 am South
Australian time. It became clear during that telephone conversation that
the
respondent had not complied with the orders made on 18 June 2009 concerning the
filing of any further affidavit material and
submissions and that he wished to
do so. Arrangements were made with Court staff for the respondent to forward
his material for
consideration by the Court prior to the matter being brought on
later that day. The material was eventually sent through to the
Court. The
respondent failed to ring back at 10.45 am as requested. Attempts were made by
the Court staff to contact the respondent
by telephone in the United Kingdom but
the recorded message received was that the respondent’s phone could not
receive the
call. The matter was adjourned to 2.15 pm in the hope that before
then the respondent would ring back in which event he would be
told of the
adjourned time.
- The
respondent did contact the Registry at some time after the matter had been
adjourned to the afternoon at 2.15 pm South Australian
time. He was told that
he should ring the Court at 2.10 pm as the matter had been listed for argument
at 2.15 pm. The respondent
was further advised that if he failed to do so the
matter would be heard without him being present by telephone. The respondent
failed to contact the Court at 2.10 pm. The Court waited a further 15 minutes
and then commenced hearing submissions on behalf of
the applicants at
2.25
pm. No further contact was made with the Court by the respondent on the day that
submissions were heard.
- It
is unfortunate that the respondent was not present by telephone to hear the
submissions put on behalf of the applicants but a full
opportunity was given for
him to do so. It was necessary for the Court to proceed with the submissions on
1 July 2009 as the applicants
had twice been ready to proceed. They were
entitled to have their application proceed notwithstanding the
respondent’s non-attendance
by telephone.
Material before the Court
- The
evidence and other material put before the Court on the Application for Review
is as follows:
Document Description Date Filed
- Creditor’s
Petition 8/9/2008
- Affidavit
of Peter Tehan 8/9/2008
- Affidavit
of Lynette Ireland 8/9/2008
- Affidavit
of Jonanthon Torpy 8/9/2008
- Affidavit
of Kristen Welch 8/9/2008
- Notice
stating Grounds of Opposition to
Creditor’s Petition
7/11/2008
- Affidavit
of Andrew Knight 7/11/2008
- Affidavit
of Peter George Charatsis 10/11/2008
- Affidavit
of Shannon Elizabeth Platt 14/12/2008
- Outline
of Petitioning Creditors 10/2/2009
- Outline
of Argument of Respondent 14/4/2009
- Affidavit
of Andrew Knight 16/4/2009
- Outline
of Applicant’s Submissions in
Response 16/4/2009
- Application
for Review 29/5/2009
- Affidavit
of Shannon Elizabeth Platt 10/6/2009
- Affidavit
of Peter Tehan 29/6/2009
- Applicant’s
Submissions 29/6/2009
- Affidavit
of Debt of Peter Tehan 1/7/2009
- Affidavit
of Debt of Jonathan Torpy 1/7/2009
- Affidavit
of Debt of Simon Ward 1/7/2009
- Affidavit
of Debt of Susan Story 1/7/2009
- Affidavit
of Andrew Knight (unsworn) Not filed
- Affidavit
of Andrew Knight sworn 24.6.09 1/7/2009
- Reasons
of Registrar Christie 13/05/2009
- There
was no application by the applicants or respondent to call oral evidence or to
cross-examine the deponent to any affidavit.
In relation to item 14(v) above I
have treated that document as submissions rather than evidence as it is an
unsworn affidavit.
Background
- The
background to this creditor’s petition proceeding is helpfully detailed in
the reasons of Registrar Christie of 13 May 2009
as follows:
- “Mr
Knight deposes that he coined the name ‘Mythbusters’ in 1988 and
subsequently authored three books under the
name ‘Mythbusters’. In
addition, he claims he promoted a television series about the investigation of
myths, in which
the presenters were known as ‘Mythbusters’, to
television executives in Australia between 1994 and 2004. He further
deposes
that in 2000 he registered ‘Mythbusters’ as a business name in
Australia and purchased the rights to the domain
name
www.Mythbusters.com.au.
- In or about
2002, one or more of the applicants commenced using the name
‘Mythbusters’ for a television series and subsequently
released
‘spin off’ books in Australia.
- On 12 May
2004 Mr Knight applied, by application number 1001523, to register an
application for an Australian trade mark ‘Mythbusters’
in classes 16
and 41 (including printed matter and including entertainment). The application
was accepted, apparently on 27 August
2004, and its acceptance advertised on 6
September 2004. A Notice of Opposition was lodged by one of the applicants,
Beyond Properties
Pty Ltd (Beyond Properties), on 7 December 2004 (the
resultant proceedings are referred to hereunder as the ‘trade mark
proceedings’).
It appears a competing application was subsequently also
lodged by one or more of the applicants.
- Proceedings
giving rise to creditors petition
- On 25
January 2005 Mr Knight commenced an action in the New South Wales District
Registry of the Federal Court of Australia (the
Federal Court) alleging that the
applicants had breached s 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) and committed
the tort of passing-off by producing and distributing a television series
entitled ‘Mythbusters’
and ‘spin-off’ books. Mr Knight
claimed the right to the name ‘Mythbusters’ as a result of his use
of that
term in books that he had written and in approaches he had made to
television production companies. A cross claim instituted by
Beyond Properties
and Beyond International Ltd alleging that letters written by Mr Knight to their
customers or potential customers
containing allegations regarding the name
‘Mythbusters’ were themselves misleading and deceptive was not
pressed on the
last day of trial. On 8 February 2007 the primary application
was dismissed with costs by Buchanan J. Relevantly his Honour found
that:
- “Mr
Knight had established that he had a reputation in Australia as the author of
children’s books bearing the name ‘Mythbusters’;
- He had also
established that he had a reputation with members of the group whom he had tried
to interest in the idea of a series
based upon his concept of
‘Mythbusters’ but did not establish a reputation with the Australian
television viewing public;
- The
production, distribution and broadcasting of the ‘Mythbusters’
television program caused damage to Mr Knight’s
plans for a program of the
same name;
- Mr Knight
did not establish deception or misrepresentation of or to the Australian
television viewing public or production executives
or establish a case of
passing off;
- In the
absence of any formal protection of the name ‘Mythbusters’ by its
registration under the Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth) Mr Knight was obliged to
demonstrate a distinctive secondary meaning associated with him so as to
establish a proprietary interest
but failed to do so;
- Mr Knight
did not establish the tort of passing-off and misleading and deceptive conduct
in relation to the ‘spin off’
books.”
- His Honour
also formally dismissed the cross claim and awarded costs of the cross claim to
Mr Knight. On 22 August 2007 the costs
in relation to the primary application
were estimated at $528,000.00 by a taxing officer and, in the absence of any
objection, a
Certificate of Taxation subsequently issued on 19 September 2007.
By order of 10 December 2007 Mr Knight was ordered to pay this
amount to the
applicants. The costs of the cross claim do not appear to have been set off
from the debt claimed and indeed there
is no evidence that they have yet been
quantified. It appears that at least one other interlocutory costs order in Mr
Knight’s
favour may also not have been set off from the debt claimed or
indeed been quantified.
- Mr Knight
appealed to the Full Court of the Federal Court but that appeal was dismissed
with costs on 19 November 2007. These costs
have not yet been taxed.
- On 14
December 2007 Mr Knight filed an application for special leave to appeal from
that decision to the High Court of Australia
(High Court). On 13 March 2009,
the application for special leave was refused with costs.
- Trade
mark proceedings
- Despite the
passage of some five years, the trade mark proceedings remain unresolved.
Mr Knight claims the reason for this delay
primarily relates to repeated
requests for extensions of time and suspension by the applicants. His affidavit
of 6 November 2008,
sets out at para 31.1 to 31.16 the extension and suspension
applications that have been made. The timeline contained in it is broadly
consistent with the material contained in the affidavit of Shannon Elizabeth
Platt sworn on 3 December 2008 and filed on behalf of
the applicants. Mr Knight
deposes that:
- “31.1 On
2 March 2005, despite being on notice of my trade mark application since
September 2004, Beyond applied for an extension
of time within which to serve
its evidence-in-support to 7 June 2005. The application was granted.
- 31.2 On 7
June 2005 Beyond applied for another extension of time within which to serve its
evidence-in-support to 7 September 2005.
The application was granted. Beyond
did not serve any new evidence within the extra time period granted.
- 31.3 On 29
November 2005 I served my evidence-in-answer without any application for further
time.
- 31.4 Following
service of my evidence-in-answer Beyond requested a five-day extension for
filing its evidence-in-reply purporting
that a one-page statutory declaration
was not served with the main body of my evidence-in-answer on 29 November 2005.
Despite the
fact that the Trade Mark Office held that the one-page statutory
declaration had been served on Beyond in time, the five-day extension
was
granted.
- 31.5 On 6
March 2006 Beyond applied for an extension of time within which to serve its
evidence-in-reply to 6 June 2006. The application
was granted, however, the
Senior Trade Mark Examiner, Mr Sinclair, put Beyond on notice that it would be
highly unlikely that any
further request for an extension would be granted
unless there were compelling reasons.
- 31.6 On 5
June 2006 Beyond applied for a further extension of time within which to serve
its evidence-in-reply to 6 August 2006.
The application was granted even
thought the Hearing Officer stated that the reasons given by Beyond for the
delay in service were
not considered “compelling”.
- 31.7 Just
prior to the matter proceeding to be set down for hearing, Beyond applied for a
suspension of the opposition decision until
after the determination of the
proceedings.
- 31.8 The
Hearing Officer advised that she did not intend to allow the suspension,
following which Beyond requested a hearing for
the suspension.
- 31.9 In
letter dated 27 July 2006 the Hearing Officer made the procedural direction that
both the hearing for the suspension and
the main opposition hearing would be
held at the same time. Beyond opposed having the hearing for the suspension and
the hearing
for the substantive matter heard together.
- 31.10 The
Trade Mark Office reasserted that both matters would be heard at the same time
and the likely hearing date would be 29
August 2006. Following this, Mr Pollock
of Spruson & Ferguson, trade mark attorney for Beyond, advised that the
hearing would
not take place on the day proposed by the Trade Mark Office as he
would be on holiday around 17 August 2006 to around 4 September
2006.
- 31.11 After
being requested by the Trade Mark office to confirm available dates
Beyond’s attorney indicated in his letter
of 15 August 2006 that
Beyond’s counsel was available to attend a hearing on 15 September 2006.
This was also confirmed by
Beyond’s trade mark attorney Mr Pollock on the
telephone to my solicitor, Ms Ciccocioppo on 15 August 2006. However,
Beyond’s
attorney asserted that the hearing for the matter would take more
than one day and since the 15 September 2006 is a Friday the hearing
could not
take place on 15 September 2006 as the hearing could not
‘spill-over’ into a Saturday.
- 31.12 After
the Hearing Officer advised in an email dated 17 August 2006 “I have
considered Mr Pollock’s comments but
I fail to see why both matters cannot
be heard on the one day... It appears that a one day hearing starting at 9am on
15 September
[2006] in Canberra will be sufficient and is a date that would suit
both sides”. Following this, Beyond’s attorney advised
under cover
of letter dated 17 August 2006 that Beyond’s counsel was now not available
on the 15th of September 2006 or “any other date
in September”.
- 31.13 Further,
on or about 23 August 2006 Beyond filed and served an application in the Federal
Court against the Registrar of Trade
Marks (first respondent) and I (second
respondent). Beyond’s application was an application to review the
decision of the
delegate of the Trade Mark Registrar made on 27 July 2006 to
have both the hearing for the suspension and the main opposition hearing
at the
same time (referred to above). Prior to the hearing of Beyond’s
application the Trade Marks Office reversed its decision
to hear the substantive
matter and the suspension at the same time and allowed the suspension of the
trade mark opposition proceedings.
- 13.14 Beyond
applied for a further suspension of the opposition proceedings pending the
outcome of my appeal to the Full Court of
the Federal Court and this led to the
continuing suspension of the trade mark proceedings.
- 13.15 Following
the decision of the Full Court, the Trade Mark Office proposed the hearing of
the opposition be set down for April
2008. However Beyond advised that its
counsel was unavailable at that time.
- 13.16 Recently,
the trade mark office has granted a further suspension following Beyond’s
request that the trade mark matter
is suspended until after the hearing High
Court Application and any subsequent appeal.”
- The
proceedings were last suspended pending the determination of the High Court
application for special leave to appeal, however,
that matter has now been
resolved and there is no evidence before me to suggest that, at least at this
time, any further reason for
delay has been put forward. It appears from the
material before me that the matter will be listed on the next available
convenient
Sydney hearing date.
- Mr Knight
claims that if he is successful in his trade mark application he will have a
prima facie right to bring a claim for damages
or account of profits against the
applicants for infringement of the trade mark and for damage caused to him by
their actions. He
has deposed that the amount sought would be at least $1.2
million but has not provided details of how that amount was arrived at.
He says
he is not able to quantify any amount that would be claimed on account of
profits in the absence of the financial records
of the applicants.
-
- United
Kingdom proceedings
- In 2006 Mr
Knight commenced proceedings in the High Court of England and Wales, against
Beyond Properties, Beyond Productions Pty
Limited (Beyond Productions), Beyond
International Services Limited (Beyond International Services) and Discovery
Communications
Incorporated (Discovery) seeking damages and injunctive relief in
relation to the ‘Mythbusters’ name in what appears
to be an action
similar in nature to the Federal Court proceedings (although the relevant
factual issues differ somewhat). The application
was dismissed on 24 May 2007
and permission to appeal the decision was refused on 21 June 2007. Costs were
ordered to be assessed
but an order was also made that on an interim basis
payment be made in an amount of ₤300,000. Those costs have not been paid
by Mr Knight. Mr Knight filed an application in the Court of Appeal seeking an
extension of time in which to file a Notice of Appeal
from that decision,
permission to appeal that decision and a stay of execution of the order for
costs. On 3 March 2008 that application
was also dismissed.
- Mr Knight
has also deposed to his having commenced new proceedings in the High Court of
England and Wales against Beyond Properties,
Beyond Productions, Beyond
International Services, Beyond International Limited, Discovery, Simon and
Schuster Inc and John Luscombe.
Mr Knight claims that Beyond Properties and the
other defendants are (and have been) selling and promoting books under the
‘Mythbusters’
mark in the United Kingdom even though they
denied they were doing so in the earlier proceedings. It is not clear on the
evidence
before me what stage these proceedings have reached.
- Hong
Kong proceedings
- Mr Knight
has also deposed that he owns the ‘Mythbusters’ trade mark in Hong
Kong in classes 16 and 41. He states that
he has put the applicants on notice
of a claim with respect to infringement of the ‘Mythbusters’ trade
mark in the Hong
Kong jurisdiction. There is no further evidence before this
Court as to the particulars of Mr Knight’s claim or indeed, whether
those
proceedings have been commenced at all.
- Singapore
proceedings
- On or about
27 October 2005 Mr Knight commenced action in the High Court of the Republic of
Singapore seeking damages and injunctive
relief in respect of the
‘Mythbusters’ trade mark from Beyond International and Beyond
Properties in an action that again
appears to have been substantially similar in
nature to the Federal Court proceedings. As a result of him not complying with
an
order for payment of security for costs in an amount of S$35,000.00 the
application was dismissed on 2 February 2007 with costs.
A Certificate of
Taxation issued against Mr Knight for an amount of S$97,353.66 of which
S$87,353.66 remains owing.
- Other
Proceedings
- Other
proceedings between the parties also appear to have commenced in the USA
(currently stayed by consent until the finalisation
of the trade mark
proceedings and the UK proceedings) and more recently in
Malaysia.”
The review proceedings
- On
the basis of the evidentiary material tendered before me I am satisfied of the
matters referred to in sub-s.52(1) of the Act namely,
the matters stated in the
petition, that service of the petition was effected, and that the debt on which
the applicants rely is
still owing. Having made these findings I am able to
make a sequestration order against the estate of the respondent unless the
respondent satisfies me that, either, he is able to pay his debts, or, there is
“other sufficient cause” why a sequestration
order should not be
made.[2] The respondent
does not argue that he is able to pay his debts but says that for “other
sufficient cause” the order
should not be made. The respondent seeks
dismissal of the petition or, alternatively, adjournment of the hearing of the
petition
pending determination of the trade mark proceedings.
- The
respondent’s argument that there is “other sufficient cause”
for making the orders that he seeks has three limbs.
He says, firstly, that he
has a claim against the applicant petitioning creditors that exceeds the amount
of the judgment debt.
Second, he says that “(these) bankruptcy
proceedings are being used to seek an advantage outside of the bankruptcy
process
itself”. He submits that this would amount to an abuse of process
and the creditors petition would have to be dismissed.
Finally, the respondent
says that it is not in the public interest for the sequestration order to be
made. Again, he submits that,
if made out, the petition should be
dismissed.
- I
will address in turn each of these three arguments put forward by the
respondent.
Offsetting claim
- If
the respondent can show that he has a claim against the petitioning creditor
equal to or exceeding the amount of the judgment debt
the Court should dismiss
the petition. The respondent must show that the claim is a genuine and serious
one which he has not reasonably
been able to
litigate[3]. It must be
a ‘real claim’ likely to succeed, having sufficient validity to
justify a dismissal or
adjournment[4]. An
arguable claim by itself does not necessarily constitute “other sufficient
cause” within the meaning of sub-s.52(2)(b)
of the Act to justify
dismissal or adjournment of the creditor’s petition. There is a public
interest consideration in dealing
with insolvent debtors which the Court must
consider in addition to the interests of the individual parties. There is also
a public
interest consideration in dealing with creditors’ petitions
promptly and before they expire. In Re Dominic Maddestra; Clyde William
Badger and Christopher John Borella Ex parte: Penfolds Wines Pty
Ltd[5]
(Maddestra’s case”) Lee J said in somewhat similar
circumstances to these:
- “Nine
months have passed since the hearing of the petition was adjourned without the
Supreme Court litigation being any closer
to resolution and, indeed, if it were
to go to trial it could not expect to be heard within fifteen months.
Furthermore, I am satisfied,
as counsel for the petitioner submits, that the
litigation does not have on its face a real appearance that it is capable of
satisfying
the demands of the petitioner ... in the short term, a matter to be
borne in mind when assessing ... the public interest in these
petitions. If
collateral litigation is well advanced and likely to bring a beneficial result
to a debtor, there may be a good cause for the Court
not to make a sequestration
order and it may be satisfied that such an order ought not to be made....
The point has come where a determination must be made whether
the petition
should be dismissed or sequestration order made.” (emphasis
added).
- The
applicants submissions in relation to the offsetting claim can be summarised as
follows:
- The
resolution of the trade mark proceedings will not occur in the foreseeable
future and, in any event, will not give rise to a current
entitlement to
damages; and
- The
respondent has not produced evidence to prove that his contingent entitlement on
his trade mark claim even remotely approaches
the amount of his current debt to
the applicants.
- I
accept the respondent’s
evidence[6] that the
Australian Trade Mark Office has confirmed that the opposition proceedings
before it have been set for the September sessions
in Sydney to take place
between
7 and 11 September 2009. I also accept the evidence of Ms
Platt[7] that:
- a decision of
the Registrar of Trade Marks would take 3 to 6 months to be handed down;
- an appeal by to
a single judge of the Federal Court by the unsuccessful party in the opposition
proceedings would take 1 to 2 years
to be finalised;
- an appeal to the
Full Federal Court would take a further 6 to
18 months to be finalised;
and
- an application
for special leave to appeal to the High Court of Australia (“High
Court”) would take about 1 year to be
determined and a further year to
hear and issue judgment in relation to the appeal.
- If
the respondent is successful at any stage of the opposition proceedings I
consider it more likely than not that the applicants
will appeal if an appeal is
available. If however the respondent is ultimately successful in the opposition
proceedings he will then,
and only then, be in a position to commence his
proceedings for damages for trade mark infringement to enforce his trade mark
registration
against the applicants or any of them (“the infringement
proceedings”). The infringement proceedings are the proceedings
that the
respondent says will provide the offsetting claim against the applicants that
amounts to “other sufficient cause”
to dismiss or adjourn the
creditors’ petition.
- The
respondent’s options in relation to the infringement proceedings will
depend on the goods and services covered by the MYTHBUSTERS
trade mark that the
respondent is permitted to register. If the respondent obtains a trade mark
registration in relation to books
only, the respondent is unlikely to succeed in
an infringement proceeding against any of the applicants. In the
respondent’s
failed Federal Court proceedings before Buchanan J against
the applicants[8] His
Honour said:
- “208.
During the course of the proceedings I permitted Mr Knight to amend his
Statement of Claim to plead causes of action
against the first, second, third
and sixth respondents in relation to the three spin-off books. The amendment
was permitted in circumstances
where, although it was opposed by the
respondents, counsel for the respondents very fairly and properly conceded that
he could not
argue any question of prejudice arising from the
amendment.
209. ...
- 210. The
Mythbusters books and the spin-off books are markedly different in every respect
– size, appearance, concept and content.
In any view there is no
possibility of confusion between them. ...
- 211. ...
In my view Mr Knight’s causes of action with respect to the spin-off books
must be rejected.
- 212. In
light of this finding it is only necessary to deal briefly with another
contention on Mr Knight’s behalf.
- 213. It
cannot be, and is not, alleged that any of the respondents is the publisher of
the first or second Mythbusters book although
it is admitted on the pleading
that the third Mythbusters book is published by the first, second or sixth
respondent. To overcome
the lack of direct connection to publication of the
first and second spin-off books Mr Knight sought to rely on the doctrine of
‘instruments
of deception’ and, by that route, to attribute ultimate
responsibility to one or more of the respondents with respect to the
first and
second spin-off books.
and later
- 217. ... In
the present case Mr Knight sought to apply the doctrine to books imported into
Australia where not only had licensing
for publication itself, occurred outside
the jurisdiction but neither the importers nor publishers were parties to the
proceedings.
- 218. Simon
and Schuster and Wiley were licensed to publish the first and second books in
the United States and Canada and did so.
That conduct is not actionable in the
present proceedings. They are not parties to the proceedings. The books were
presumably
imported into Australia in accordance with the liberty preserved by
s.22A of the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth). It has not been shown that any of the
respondents are responsible for or have any connection with their importation or
sale
in Australia. In my view the doctrine of ‘instruments of
deception’ has no application to these circumstances.
- 219. It
follows from these various conclusions that so much of the Further Amended
Statement of Claim as attempts to raise causes
of action in passing-off or under
s.52 of the TP Act with respect to any or all of the spin-off books must also be
dismissed.
- If
the respondent obtains a trade mark registration in relation to television
services, the applicants (as respondents to the respondent’s
infringement
proceedings) could cross-claim for revocation of the respondent’s
MYTHBUSTERS trade mark. I accept the evidence
of Ms Platt that such trade mark
infringement proceedings are likely to take about 2 years from issuing the
application to delivery
of judgment. If the applicants (in these proceedings)
were unsuccessful in the infringement proceedings at first instance or on
any
appeal I consider it likely that they would appeal with further lengthy delay
before the High Court either refused special leave
or handed down its decision
on the appeal.
- It
will be seen that the applicant has a formidable task ahead of him as a
hopelessly insolvent and unrepresented litigant if he intends
to continue with
these various proceedings to their ultimate conclusion. The applicants already
have very substantial costs orders
against the respondent not only in Australian
jurisdictions but also in other countries.
- If
able to pursue the trade mark proceedings as a result of this Court dismissing
this creditors’ petition the respondent may
well have to address
applications for security for costs as well as further applications seeking a
sequestration order. If there
are no such application that are successful it is
never the less clearly going to be many years before the offsetting claim is
ultimately
decided.
- In
my view the respondent’s proposed litigation can not be said to
“have on its face a real appearance that it is capable of satisfying
the demands of the petitioner... in the short
term”[9].
This is particularly so since the respondent has not put forward any evidence as
to the likely quantum of his offsetting claim.
Instead, he says that the damage
caused by the applicants’ infringement “... has been extensive
and such damage exceeds the cumulative costs order awarded in the
applicants’
favour”[10].
I can not and do not accept this statement at face value.
- It
is for the respondent to establish the existence of sufficient
cause.[11] He has
failed to provide any evidence of an important element of the offsetting claim
aspect of his “sufficient cause”
submission notwithstanding the
detailed written submissions of the
applicants[12] on the
topic and their evidence in support of those submissions.
- I
am not satisfied that the respondent’s offsetting claim, if it can be said
he has one, is equal to or exceeding the amount
of the judgment debt. I find
that the respondent has failed to establish an offsetting claim as ‘other
sufficient cause’
for declining to make a sequestration
order.
Abuse of Process
- I
turn therefore to ‘abuse of process’ as “other sufficient
cause”.
- Again,
the onus of proving abuse of process is on the respondent. It is a heavy
onus[13]. The
respondent must show that the applicants’ real intention in bringing the
creditors petition was for some purpose that
is not
legitimate[14]. If
there is no evidence of the creditors’ states of mind regarding improper
motive the Court will not infer
such[15]. Even if a
creditor has an interest in the debtor being made bankrupt to stifle litigation,
that in itself is not enough for refusing
to make a sequestration order if,
apart from that motive, the petitioning creditor is entitled to the order
sought[16].
- In
Dowling v Colonial Mutual Life Assurance Society
Ltd[17] the
petitioning creditor sought a sequestration order so that it could then have the
debtor examined so as to ascertain the identity
of persons who had instigated
the debtor to be able to publish defamatory matters concerning the creditor. It
was submitted on behalf
of the debtor that the creditor’s petition was
thereby an abuse of process. A majority of the Court found that in these
circumstances
there was only the ‘use’ of the creditor’s
petition, and not the ‘abuse’ of the process. The Court
said it
would have been different if for instance there had been a finding that the
creditor had threatened the debtor that if he
did not give the names of the
individuals, they would proceed to obtain the sequestration order. Such a course
would have been an
abuse of the
process[18].
- I
agree with Registrar Christie that this is clearly a case of “use”
as opposed to “abuse” even if there was
established (which I do not
find there is) a desire to stifle the other litigation referred to in those
reasons. There is no basis
made out to dismiss the petition on this ground. In
making this decision I have taken into account the detailed written submissions
of the respondent contained in his various submissions and, in particular, those
contained in the respondent’s document ‘Outline
of Argument’
filed on 14 April 2009 (“Outline of Argument”) paragraphs 5 to 19
inclusive together with the evidence
on which the submissions are
based.
The Public Interest
- The
substantial submissions from the respondent on this topic are to be found in
paragraphs 20 to 24 of the Outline of Argument. The
respondent submitted
that:
- “This
conduct (delaying the Trade Mark opposition proceedings to try to wear down the
respondent) in comparison to the speed
and urgency that if (sic) has pushed
through these bankruptcy proceedings is indicative of a party attempting to
manipulate the processes
of the various court forums to its own advantage and
abusing the over-arching objectives of these
forums”[19].
- It
will be seen that this submission is very similar to the abuse of process
argument. For the reasons stated earlier, I do not consider
that there has been
an abuse of process. I find that there is no credible evidence before the Court
to justify a finding that the
applicants have delayed the Trade Mark opposition
proceedings and proceeded expeditiously with the bankruptcy proceedings to try
to wear down the respondent, or that the applicants have improperly attempted to
manipulate the processes of other courts to their
own advantage without due
regard to the proper conduct of those proceedings.
Conclusion
- For
the above reasons I see no proper basis for dismissing or further adjourning the
creditors’ petition. I would make the
orders sought by the
applicant.
I certify that the preceding
37Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!Error! Style not defined.Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!thirty-seventhirty-seven (37) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for
judgment of Simpson FM
Associate: J. Semler
Date: 14 August 2009
[1] See r.20.03 of
the Federal Magistrates Court Rules 2001 (Cth)
(“FMCR”).
[2]
Ss.52(2)(a) and (b) of the
Act.
[3] Re LHF
Wools [1970] Ch
27.
[4] Re
Schmidt; Ex parte Anglewood Pty Ltd (1968) 13 FLR 111 at
116.
[5] [1993] FCA
15, Unreported, Federal Court of Australia, Lee J 3 February 1993,
paras.21-23.
[6] See
affidavit referred to in para.14(w) of these
reasons.
[7] See
affidavit referred to in para.14(o) of these
reasons.
[8]
Knight v Beyond Properties Pty Ltd [2007] FCA 70, unreported, Federal
Court, Buchanan J, 8 February
2007.
[9] The
Maddestra case at
paras.21-23.
[10]
Affidavit of respondent sworn on 24 June 2009 and filed on 1 July
2009.
[11] Cain
v Whyte (1933) 48 CLR 639 at 645-646; Ling v Commonwealth (1996) 68
FCR 180.
[12]
Paragraphs 103 to 124 of the applicants’ submission filed on 29 June
2009.
[13]
Williams v Spautz (1992) 174 CLR
509.
[14]
Rozenbes v Kronhill (1956) 95 CLR
407.
[15] Edward
James Bride & Anor v KMG Hungerfords (A firm) [1998] FCA 412
(“Bride’s
case”).
[16]
Re Coyne; Ex parte: Binningup (South) Pty Ltd [1993] FCA
81.
[17] (1915) 20
CLR 509.
[18] At
pp.524-5.
[19]
Outline of Submissions para.20.
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