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Sydney Markets Credit Services Co-operative Limited v Pisciuneri [2011] FMCA 968 (7 December 2011)
Last Updated: 8 December 2011
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SYDNEY MARKETS CREDIT
SERVICES CO-OPERATIVE LIMITED v PISCIUNERI
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[2011] FMCA 968
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BANKRUPTCY – Application for adjournment of
creditor’s petition – personal insolvency agreement – where
petition
stayed by virtue of s.189AAA of Bankruptcy Act 1966
– where stay lifted upon adjournment of creditors meeting – where
meeting called by purported Controlling Trustee –
whether appointment of
controlling trustee invalid – where Part B of Controlling Trustee
Authority incomplete but signed by
purported controlling trustee – whether
substantial compliance – where no substantial compliance – whether
form
valid in accordance with s.306 of Bankruptcy Act – whether
formal defect or irregularity – whether form completed in a manner that
answered the essential requirements
of the Bankruptcy Act – whether
controlling trustee appointed – whether adjournment should be
granted.
BANKRUPTCY – Application for adjournment of creditor’s petition
– personal insolvency agreement – whether
adjournment should be
granted for continuation of creditors meeting to reach proposed PIA –
where petitioning creditor opposed
trustee report upon which PIA to be agreed
– where trustee report contains insufficient information to conclude that
PIA would
be of general advantage of creditors – where indication of lack
of transparency as to debtor’s assets – where petitioning
creditor
an outside creditor – where petitioning creditor’s debt minor
compared to those debts sought to be utilised
to vote in favour of PIA.
BANKRUPTCY – Creditor’s petition – where debtor’s
application for adjournment formed only basis of submission
that court apply its
discretion under s.52(2)(b) – where adjournment denied – where court
satisfied that act of bankruptcy committed – where court satisfied of
other requirements under s.52 – whether discretion should be exercised
– whether sequestration order should be granted.
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Bankruptcy Act 1966, Part X, ss. 33(1)(a),
52(2)(b), 73, 188, 188(1), 188(2)(a), 189A(2), 189AAA, 306Bankruptcy
Regulations 1996, regs.10.02(3), 10.03(1)
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|
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SYDNEY MARKETS CREDIT SERVICES CO-OPERATIVE LIMITED
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Delivered on:
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7 December 2011
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REPRESENTATION
Counsel for the Applicant:
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Mr F. Carnovale
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Solicitors for the Applicant:
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Manion McCosker Solicitors
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Solicitors for the Respondent:
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Watson Mangioni Lawyers
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ORDERS
(1) A sequestration order be made against the estate of
Natale Pisciuneri.
(2) The Applicant Creditor’s costs (including any reserved costs) be taxed
(in accordance with the Federal Magistrates Court (Bankruptcy) Rules
2006) and paid from the estate of the Respondent Debtor in accordance with
the Act.
(3) Under the Bankruptcy Regulations a copy of this sequestration order be given
to the Official Receiver in Sydney within 2 days.
THE COURT NOTES:
(i) That the date of the act of bankruptcy is 12 August 2011.
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FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA AT
SYDNEY
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SYG 1972 of
2011
SYDNEY MARKETS CREDIT SERVICES
CO-OPERATIVE LIMITED
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Applicant
And
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- Mr
Pisciuneri, the debtor in these proceedings was, to use a neutral term because
of the complexity of the structures, a principal
in the fruit marketing business
known as Duffy Bros. The business involved a number of retail fruit markets
situated in suburbs
in the Sydney area. The structure of the business included
ownership of real estate, companies and trusts. A number of other individuals
was associated with Mr Pisciuneri including his brother. Some of the
obligations of the entities which made up the structure were
secured by way of
mortgages on real estate and/or by personal guarantees of Mr Piscuineri and
other associates. One such obligation
was that to the Sydney Markets Credit
Services Co-Operative Limited to whom one of the companies in the structure,
Duffy Bros. Fruit
World Pty Limited ACN 050 034 118, was indebted in the sum of
$635,553.03 (including costs) pursuant to a Judgment in the District
Court
obtained on 9 May 2011. Mr Piscuineri was a guarantor of that obligation.
- On
22 July 2011 the creditor issued a bankruptcy notice claiming a total sum of
$644,350.65 being the judgment sum plus interest to
date. No challenge was made
to the bankruptcy notice. The notice was served on 22 July 2011. The last day
for compliance was 15
August 2011. By not complying with the notice Mr
Piscuineri committed an act of bankruptcy on 15 August 2011. On 5 September
2011
the Sydney Markets presented a petition to this court in which it claimed
that Mr Piscuineri owed it $677,906.67 but noted that it
held security and
therefore claimed as an unsecured debt the sum of $150,000.00 only. A month
later, on 6 October 2011, Mr Piscuineri
purported to execute a controlling
trustee authority pursuant to Part X of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (the
“Act”) and ss.188, 189A(2) and Regulation 10.02(3) of the
Bankruptcy Regulations 1996 (the “Regulations”).
Mr Piscuineri purported to appoint Mr Phillips Aggs as his controlling
trustee.
- The
first return date of the creditor’s petition was 10 October 2011 but by
virtue of s.189AAA of the Act a stay of the petition
was presumed to be in
effect:
- “Stay
of proceedings relating to creditor's petition until meeting of debtor's
creditors
- (1)
If:
- (a)
an authority signed by a debtor
under section 188
has become effective; and
- (b)
either:
- (i)
a creditor's
petition
was presented against the debtor
before the authority became effective; or
(ii) a creditor's
petition
is presented against the debtor
after the authority became effective but before the first or only meeting of the
debtor's
creditors
called under the authority;
proceedings
relating to that petition
are, by force of this subsection, stayed until:
(c) the conclusion of the
meeting; or
(d) the adjournment of the
meeting;
whichever is the earlier.
(2) This section does not limit subsection
206(1).”
- On
1 November 2011 Mr Aggs prepared a report to creditors in advance of a
creditors’ meeting that was due to take place on 11
November. That
meeting did take place but for reasons that are dealt with in more detail
hereafter, the meeting was adjourned until
28 November 2011. The effect of
the adjournment was that the stay of the proceedings was lifted so that the
court was able to hear
the petition. In order to prevent this occurring and
having a sequestration order made against his estate Mr Piscuineri made an
application to this court under s.33(1)(a) that the hearing of the petition be
adjourned until after the adjourned creditor’s
meeting or alternatively,
pursuant to s.52(2)(b) of the Act, the court should exercise its discretion and
not proceed to make the
sequestration order.
- Two
issues arise for consideration. The first is whether Mr Aggs was ever appointed
controlling trustee under Part X and was entitled to hold the meeting of
creditors that took place on 11 November. The second was that if Mr Aggs’
appointment
was valid whether the court should grant the adjournment in the
light of a number of issues raised by the creditor with Mr Aggs prior
to the
first meeting that put in doubt both the disclosure made by the debtor in his
statement of affairs and the treatment of those
matters that were disclosed in
the report by the controlling trustee. I shall deal with each in
turn.
The validity issue
- The
actions of a debtor who wishes his affairs be dealt with under Part X without
his estate being sequestrated are controlled by s.188 and the Regulations.
Relevantly, s.188(1), 188(2)(a) and Regulation 10.02(3) and
10.03(1):
- “s.188 Debtor
may authorise trustee or solicitor to be controlling trustee [see Table B]
- (1) A
debtor
who desires that his or her affairs be dealt with under this Part without his or
her estate being sequestrated and:
(a) is
personally present or ordinarily resident in Australia;
(b) has
a dwelling-house or place of business in Australia;
(c) is
carrying on business in Australia, either personally or by means of an agent or
manager; or
(d) is a member of a firm or partnership carrying on
business in Australia by means of a partner or partners or of an agent or
manager;
may sign an authority in accordance with the approved
form naming and authorising a registered
trustee, a solicitor or the Official
Trustee
to call a meeting of the debtor's
creditors
and to take control of the debtor's
property.
- (2)
An authority signed by a debtor
under this section is not effective for the purposes of this Part unless:
- (a) if
the person authorised is a registered
trustee or solicitor--the person has consented in writing to exercise
the powers given by the authority; and
Reg 10.02 Information to be given to debtor (Act ss 188 (2AA) and (2AB))
- (3)
A person authorised under subsection 188 (1) of the Act to take control of a
debtor's property must not consent to exercise
the powers given by the authority
unless the debtor has given the person a signed acknowledgement (which may be
included with or
appended to the authority) that the debtor has received and
read the prescribed information.
Reg 10.03 Documents under section 188 of Act
- (1)
A registered trustee or solicitor who consents to exercise the powers given by
an authority under section 188 of the Act
must sign a consent in accordance with
the approved form.”
- It
is not in dispute that the approved form is the form issued by the Insolvency
and Trustee Service Australia entitled “Controlling Trustee
Authority” which was utilised by Mr Pisciuneri in the instant case.
The form contains two parts, Part A to be completed by the debtor and Part
B to
be completed by the controlling trustee. Completion of Part A satisfies the
requirements of Regulation 10.02(3).
- Part
B of the form as “completed” is reproduced below.
- The
debtor argues that the name and address of the proposed trustee is not
completed, neither is the consent to exercise the power
given by way of ticking
the box. A signature does appear under the heading “Signature of
controlling trustee” but whether
or not that is the signature of Mr Aggs
cannot be derived from the document itself. There being no purported written
consent in
accordance with the approved form any consent assumed to have been
given by Mr Aggs attending at ITSA and paying the fee or acting
as the
controlling trustee and holding the meeting does not constitute a valid consent
under the Act and therefore the debtor’s
s.188 authority never became
effective.
- In
Re Curry; Ex parte Goldsea Pty Ltd [1992] FCA 619; (1992) 40 FCR 32 Spender J considered
a situation in which a debtor signed a Part X authority under a previous
iteration of sub-s.188(2) that relevantly provided:
- “An
authority signed by a debtor under this section is not effective for the
purposes of this Part unless —
- (a)... the
solicitor named in it has consented, in writing, to call the meeting of
creditors, as the case may be;
- (b) the
signature of the debtor to the authority and the signature of the ... solicitor
to the consent are each attested by a witness;
and
- (c) within 10
days before signing the authority, the debtor gave to the ... solicitor:
- (i) a
statement of the debtor's affairs; and
- (ii) a
statement indicating how the debtor proposes that his or her affairs be dealt
with under this Part.”
His
Honour noted:
“It appears that the authority by Mrs Curry was signed by her on 19
November 1991 at Brisbane but the statement of her affairs
was not given to the
solicitor until 20 November 1991. The authority contains a consent by Douglas
Macleod Beames, a solicitor, to
call a meeting of creditors, but that consent is
dated 24 November 1991. The notice of meeting is dated 19 November 1991, which
predates
the consent of Mr Beames to act pursuant to Pt X.
It seems to me that the authority signed by Mrs Curry is not effective for the
purposes of Pt X, not only because of want of compliance with s 188(2)(a) but
also because the evidence establishes want of compliance with s
188(2)(c).”
- This
case is thus authority for the proposition that if no consent is given the
appointment is ineffective. It does not answer the
question as to whether
consent is given in the circumstances pertaining here where a signature appears
on the form but there is no
confirmation of acceptance of the appointment or any
indication that the person whose signature appears on the form is the person
nominated by the debtor or is in fact a registered trustee.
- There
are two statutory provisions which have relevance to the issue. The first is
s.25C of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901:
- “Compliance
with forms
- Where an Act
prescribes a form, then, unless the contrary intention appears, strict
compliance with the form is not required and
substantial compliance is
sufficient.”
The second is s.306 of the Bankruptcy
Act:
“Formal defect not to invalidate proceedings
- (1)
Proceedings
under this
Act are not invalidated by a formal defect or an irregularity, unless
the
court before which the objection on that ground is made is of opinion
that substantial injustice has been caused by the defect or irregularity
and
that the injustice cannot be remedied by an order of that court.
- (2)
A defect or irregularity in the appointment of any person exercising, or
purporting to exercise, a power or function under
this
Act or under a personal
insolvency agreement entered into under this
Act does not invalidate an act done by him or her in good
faith.”
Could it be said that Part B as completed
constitutes substantial compliance with the form? In Adams v Lambert
[2006] HCA 10; [2006] 225 ALR 396 which, like most of the bankruptcy cases dealing with the
section relates to a bankruptcy notice, the High Court stated at [22]:
“The difficulty is that in a case such as the present, where there is a
specific requirement to state a provision, it is not
substantial compliance to
state a different provision. In such a case, the problem cannot be avoided by
looking at the form as a
whole and observing that, like the curate's egg, it is
bad only in part.
In Irani v Hollyburton UK Ltd [2007] FCA 1447; [2007]
163 FCR 329 Middleton J opined at [21]:
“Substantial compliance is a matter of degree. The court is concerned to
look to the practical effect of what has been provided
by way of information and
the practical effect of what the form sought to achieve.
In
Malek v Macquarie Leasing Pty Ltd [2007] FCAFC 14 the Full Court Branson,
Conti and Siopis JJ said at [11]:
“Understandably, neither party contended that a bankruptcy notice which
wholly omits the note to par 7 nonetheless substantially
complied with Form 1
within the meaning of s
25C of the Acts
Interpretation Act (see Adams v Lambert [2006] HCA 10; (2006) 225 ALR 396 at [22]). For this reason
the critical issue to be determined on this appeal is whether s
306 of the Act
operates to validate the bankruptcy notice served on Ms
Malek.”
In Australian Steel Co (Operations) Pty Ltd v
Lewis [2000] FCA 1915; [2000] 199 ALR 68 the Full Court Black CJ, Heerey and Sunberg JJ in
part of the judgment that was unaffected by the decision in Adams v
Lambert said at [43]:
“A provision as to substantial compliance, assuming it applies at all,
cannot make unessential that which purpose reveals
as essential. It can
hardly be said that there has been substantial compliance with a prescribed form
where the form fails to include
information made essential by an
enactment.”
In Bendigo Bank Ltd v Williams [2000] FCA 482; [2001]
173 ALR 175 the Full Bench Moore Kiefel and Lehane JJ stated at [19]:
“We do not know of any case, and counsel were unable to refer us to any,
in which it has been held that a complete failure
to incorporate any information
of a kind required by either the Act or the Regulations (including the form), or
their predecessors,
has been held not to amount, in the terminology of Kleinwort
Benson, to a failure to meet a requirement made essential by the Act.
That,
perhaps, is not surprising. First, though we would not exclude the possibility
of exceptional cases it might perhaps be thought
strange, where the legislature
and the executive have required a notice to take a particular form and to
include a number of specified
items of information, for the Court to take the
view in the absence of a clear legislative licence to do so, that some of those
items
are essential but others are not. Secondly, counsel for the appellant
conceded, rightly in our view, that he could not suggest that,
in circumstances
where an item was wholly omitted, there was substantial compliance with the form
within the meaning of s 25C of the Acts Interpretation Act (on the assumption,
contrary to our view, that the section has an operation in relation to the
contents of the form as opposed to
its format) or r 6 of the earlier Bankruptcy
Rules 1968 (Cth).”
In Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs v A [1999] FCA 1679; [1999] 57 ALD 550 Merkel J opined at [43]:
“I can see no reason for discerning a legislative intent that a
failure to complete an approved form in accordance with any or
every direction in it should necessarily result in the application being
invalid for the purposes of the Act. There is much to be said
for the view that
the intent of the legislative scheme is that information necessary to
enable the Minister or his delegate to decide the substantive issues raised by a
visa application must be provided as directed
in an approved form. However, I do
not accept that the same intent exists in respect of all of the information
sought in an incomplete
form irrespective of the significance or relevance to
the outcome of the application or the uncompleted parts of
it.”
Finally, in Project Blue Sky v Australian
Broadcasting Authority [1998] HCA 28 McHugh, Gummow and Kirby, Lehane JJ
said at [93]:
“A better test for determining the issue of validity is to ask whether it
was a purpose of the legislation that an act done
in breach of the provision
should be invalid. This has been the preferred approach of courts in this
country in recent years, particularly
in New South Wales. In determining the
question of purpose, regard must be had to "the language of the relevant
provision and the
scope and object of the whole statute.”
- What
I take from these authorities is in considering a question of substantial
compliance one must look at what it is that the statute
requires and that the
form sets out to provide. In this case the statute requires the consent of the
trustee and the form provides
for that by identifying the trustee and then
requiring him to indicate his consent by ticking the box. In the instant case
the trustee
is not identified and there is no indication of consent being given.
In my view even the signature does not specifically identify
the trustee, it is
just a signature. In those circumstances I do not believe that it could be said
that there has been substantial
compliance with the form.
- Notwithstanding
the failure to substantially comply with the form the actions of the trustee
might be saved by the provisions of s.306
if it could be said that the defect is
merely a formal one or an irregularity. In Adams & Lambert supra the
High Court said at [18]:
- “The
questions whether the defect or irregularity is a formal defect or irregularity,
and whether substantial injustice has
been caused and cannot be remedied, are
separate and distinct, the latter question arising only if the former is
answered in the
affirmative. It may be accepted that, if a defect could cause
substantial injustice, it may not easily be classified as a formal
defect or
irregularity. But the absence of claimed injustice does not conclude the
separate question that arises under s 306 about
whether the defect or
irregularity is a formal defect or irregularity.”
- The
court in Lambert relied heavily upon what fell from it in Kleinwort
Benson v Crowl [1988] HCA 34; [1988] 165 CLR 71. They accepted that a bankruptcy notice
would be a nullity if it failed to meet a requirement made essential by the Act
and then
said at [27]:
- “If, as
in the present case, what is in question is an error in the form of a
misdescription of a statutory provision, then
a consideration of the general
purpose of the Act, and the particular purpose of the legislative scheme
relating to bankruptcy notices,
leads readily to a conclusion that if the error
could reasonably mislead a debtor as to what is necessary to comply with the
notice
it is not merely a formal defect or
irregularity..”
That is not suggested to have been
the case here but at [28] in Adams their Honours said:
“The other exclusionary aspect of the expression "a formal defect or an
irregularity" in s 306 was said [in Kleinwort Benson] to consist in
a failure to meet a requirement made essential by the
Act.”
But that question is not answered by my merely
observing that there has been a failure to meet a requirement. The court in
Lambert expressly excluded as a requirement made essential by the Act the
correct completion of the form in all respects. But it still had
to be completed
in a way that answered the essential requirements. It seems to me that for the
same reason that the form was not
substantially complied with it was not
completed in a respect that was made an essential requirement by the Act, namely
the consent
of the trustee. In this case it is not just the failure to tick the
box, it is the failure to tick the box AND complete the contact
details so that
the trustee is properly identified. The fact that a trustee is nominated by the
debtor might give rise to an assumption
that the person who completes the form
is that nominated person, but without any identification it is not an assumption
that can
be elevated into an inference. For these reasons I do not believe that
s.306 is available to save the appointment which I find never
to have been
validly made.
The discretionary issues
- The
proposal put by Mr Pisciuneri in his Draft Deed of Personal Insolvency Agreement
submitted to his creditors, was that he would
make contributions of $2,500.00
per month for a period of twenty-eight months, which in the draft deed was
totalled to a figure of
$68,500.00 but which in fact would total $70,000.00.
From this sum the controlling trustee would take $16,000.00 for his fees.
In
the documents submitted with the report at Annexure D there is a listing of
creditors that indicates the total for unsecured creditors
of $4,901,680.00 and
for all creditors of $8,701,680.00. However, as an inducement to the remaining
unsecured creditors to vote
in favour of the scheme it was said that creditors
are to the value of $4,039,180.00:
- “Have
agreed to stand aside their debts for dividend distribution purposes. I advise
that confirmation of same from the individual
creditors is yet to be received.
Those creditors whom elect to stand aside for distribution purposes will still
retain their rights
to vote in the upcoming creditor’s
meeting.”
- There
is no indication in the report that those creditors who had elected not to claim
in this administration had agreed to release
Mr Pisciuneri from his
obligations to them or whether they were going to obtain reimbursement through
some other means, most probably
by recourse to other joint obligors under the
various guarantee arrangements pursuant to which the debts had been incurred.
It was
accepted that these debts were not personal debts of Mr Pisciuneri, that
rather those of the Duffy Bros.’ business.
- The
report to creditors and the statement of affairs are detailed documents found as
Exhibit “NP1” to the affidavit of
Mr Pisciuneri sworn on 14 November
2011. Within that exhibit is a letter dated 9 November 2011 from Messrs
Toomey Pegg, the lawyers
for the petitioning creditor. It is a letter of some
ten pages. Section 2 of the letter sets out the nature of the creditor’s
concerns:
- “(2) Our
client:
- (a) has
serious concerns with:
- (i) the
Report you have issued;
- (ii) the
“summary of the Debtor’s “Statement of Affairs”
contained in the Report (the summary suggests a
number of possibilities which
include, without limitation:
- (A) the
Debtor has not disclosed material assets and the Debtor has not disclosed
material liabilities; or
- (B) in
preparing the Summary of the Statement of Affairs you have omitted material
information; and
- (iii) the
recommendation you made in relation to the Debtor’s proposed Personal
Insolvency Agreement contained in the Report
and the bases for that
recommendation;
- (b) does not
consider you have properly exercised your powers or discharged your duties under
Section 190 of the Act nor that you
have properly discharged your duties under
Section 190A of the Act;
- (c) does not
consider, on the basis of the Report, you have properly discharged your
obligations to make appropriate enquiries and
investigations in connection with
the debtor’s property and examinable affairs [the words/expressions in
italics have defined
meanings under the Act];
- (d) is of the
view that you have not exercised your powers and functions in a commercially
sound way nor in an impartial and independent
manner;
- (e) is of the
view the Report:
- (i) is
misleading;
- (ii) contains
material omissions and misstatements of facts;
- (iii) has not
been prepared in a prudent manner;
- (iv) discloses
a failure to properly understand or properly treat information within your
knowledge and discloses a failure to have
proper regard for information within
your knowledge; and
- (v) does not
contain information such as to justify the recommendation to the creditors
contained in it;
- (f) considers
the inadequacy of the information made available to you and/or gathered by you
impugns the integrity of the Report
and as such makes it an unsuitable basis
upon which to make any recommendation to the creditors and unsuitable for the
purposes of
the creditors making any decision as to the acceptance or rejection
of your recommendations;
- (g) is of the
view you have not put up a proposal for acceptance by the Creditors which is in
the interest of the Creditors to accept;
- (h) it is of
the view you have not, pursuant to your obligations under Section 189A of the
Act, discharged your duties in a manner
such as to properly gather, and properly
consider, the available information about the Debtor’s affairs so as to
properly summarise
and comment on the Debtor’s affairs nor put yourself in
a position such as to enable you to properly recommend a resolution
that
“the Debtor executes a Personal Insolvency Agreement”;
- (i) has
serious concerns that you are recommending a Personal Insolvency Agreement
(“PIA”) which includes a statement that the antecedent
transaction provisions of the Act should not apply to the Debtor; and
- (j) is unable
to understand how you could properly make any recommendations of the kind made
by you on the basis of the limited material
reviewed by you and without
undertaking appropriate searches of public registers (or undertaking those
searches in a proper manner)
or obtaining copies (inter alia) of the accounts of
various companies and trusts and copies of relevant trust deeds relevant to the
affairs of the Debtor and, in turn, considering them in a commercially sound
manner.
The balance of the letter gives specific
instances of the concerns raised by the creditor. Amongst those concerns are
the failure
of the trustee or the debtor to indentify two pieces of real estate
from the property in respect of which Mr Pisciuneri holds a beneficial
interest
being Lot 59 in DP 29834 and Lot 6 in DP 880227. The lawyers also raised
concerns about a company known as Adore Pty Limited
and the Adore Investment
Trust. The concerns raised in the letter at [3(l) and (m)] are paraphrased in
Mr Carnavale’s helpful
written submissions at paragraphs 31 –
33:
“[31] Statement of Affairs (item43D) states that the Debtor owns shares
in the above company but fails to state, as required
by the form, whether the
Debtor is owed money by the company. Report does not point out this failure.
Nothing in the Report specifically
deals with the company’s financial
position.
[32] Statement of Affairs (item 44) refers to the above trust (of which the
above company is stated to be the trustee) as a trust
in which the Debtor is, or
in the last 5 years has been, a unit holder or beneficiary. It states that the
trust owns a property
at Goulburn valued at $1,300,000 and that the trust owes
the Debtor $275,000. Yet the Report, at para 7.1, states the trust has
no
assets, and that the trustee came to that conclusion from information sought
from the Debtor’s accountant and from a review
of the trust’s
financial statements. No explanation is given in the Report as to why the
Goulburn property referred to in
the SOA is not an asset of the trust.
[33] In addition, it is not clear what financial statements he reviewed given
his statement in para 6 of the Report about the unavailability
of up-to-date
financial statements and other relevant information.”
The
letter goes on to deal with other concerns of the creditor, some of which are
more fully articulated in Mr Carnavale’s submissions.
They point out
discrepancies between the statement of affairs and the trustee’s report
and looks at the various Duffy companies
which make up the structure. For
example, in relation to Duffy Bros.’ Fruit Markets (Campbelltown) Pty
Limited and the Duffy
Bros. Campbelltown Unit Trust Mr Carnavale points out:
“[45] Statement of Affairs (item 43D) refers to the above company as a
company in which the Debtor owns shares, but fails
to state, as required by the
form, whether the Debtor is owed money by the company. Report does not point
out this failure.
[46] Statement of Affairs (item 44) refers to the above trust (of which the
above company is stated to be the trustee) as a trust
in which the Debtor is, or
in the last 5 years has been, a unitholder or beneficiary, and states that the
trust owes him $3.9 million
but that the trust has no assets. The trust is
mentioned in para 6.10 of the Report where it deals with the above company but
the
trust is not mentioned elsewhere. In para 6.10 the trustee states that the
likelihood of recovery of the debt, quantified there
as approximately $4,000,00,
is “nil”, but there is no disclosure in the Report of the basis for
that opinion. If it
should be inferred that the basis is the financial
statements cited in that paragraph (though they are cited only for the statement
that the Debtor is owed approximately $4,000,00), the problem is that it is
unclear what financial statements were reviewed given
the statement in para 6 of
the Report about the unavailability of up-to-date financial statements and other
relevant information.”
In respect of Duffy Bros. Country
Fresh Unit Trust it is noted:
“[52] The Report (para 6.1) says that Debtor is a shareholder of the
above company and was a director until 27 July 2011.
Statement of Affairs fails
to mention the company at all in item 43D. Report does not point out the
failure. Report (para 6.11)
states that, according to information from the
Debtor’s accountant, the company is currently operating a supermarket but
states
that the trustee cannot provide details of the company’s current
financial statements requested by the trustee. There is no
evidence of any
attempt to obtain the information from the company itself.
[53] Statement of Affairs (item 44) refers to the Duffy Bros Country Fresh
Unit Trust (of which the above company is stated to
be the trustee) as a trust
in which the Debtor is, or in the last 5 years has been, a unitholder or
beneficiary, and states that
the trust owns plants, equipment, stock etc valued
at $900,000 but charged to St George Bank and that the trust owes him $720,000.
Report (para 7.4) states that the unitholder are two companies. Nothing is said
about the Debtor’s present or past status
as a unitholder or beneficiary
as disclosed in item 44 of the SOA. Report (para 7.4) states that the
controlling trustee cannot comment
on the trust’s financial position
because of the unavailability of information from the Debtor’s
accountant.”
The concerns raised in the examples set out
above are repeated in respect of other Duffy Bros.’ entities and
trusts.
- The
trustee’s report provides a comparison between the return available from
acceptance of the PIA and bankruptcy although it
is to be noted that the
comparison does not take into account the concerns raised by the creditor. It
shows a distribution to unsecured
creditors under the PIA of 5¢ in the
Dollar and under a bankruptcy of nil, although to be fair it indicates the
unsecured creditors
at $873,500.00 of which $650,000.00 is made up of the
petitioning creditor who can only be admitted to proof for $150,000.00 at this
stage. It also shows that the figure of $68,500.00 by way of contribution is
reduced to $41,386.00 for creditors after deduction
of ITSA and the controlling
trustee’s costs and expenses.
- The
substantive objections of the petitioning creditor are:
-
The proposal is based upon inaccurate information and insufficient
investigation.
-
The proposal excludes investigation of antecedent transactions.
-
The decision upon the proposal is being made by creditors the value of whose
debts is open to dispute but who do not intend to participate
in the
arrangement. Whilst it is not known whether those creditors are going to
release their debts, if they did not do so then
it is unfair to the petitioning
creditor to force it to take a small percentage in the dollar when those
creditors may have the opportunity
of a much larger sum. If they are going to
release the debtor then what interest do they have in the PIA.
- There
are a number of similarities between this case and two others in which a similar
adjournment was sought. In David Bendel Ex Parte: Low Lippmann (A Firm)
[1996] FCA 1400 Merkel J considered an application where:
- “[19] The
only outside party listed in the Statement of Affairs with a simple debt with no
benefits, favours or associations
attached, is the petitioning
creditor.
[20] It has a prima facie entitlement to proceed with its
petition.”
- His
Honour refused the adjournment for reasons which include some of relevance to
the current proceedings. At [21] his Honour says:
- “[21] I
have reached this conclusion for a number of reasons. First, the petitioning
creditor may be prejudiced by the adjournment.
Its debt is a small one. If it
wishes to raise issues as to the assets or creditors of the debtor, or to
challenge the Part
X arrangement, the onus and the expense fall entirely upon it. If it
does not take such steps it receives little or nothing.
- [22] A
sequestration order, rather than the vagaries and uncertainties of the Part
X arrangement proposed in the present case, constitutes a more
appropriate vehicle in the present circumstances. Two examples suffice.
The
simplicity of the present proposal would have the trustee under Part
X complete his role almost immediately if the $30,000 is paid - before
enquiries or investigations are undertaken. Also, no challenge
to invalid
preferences is available under Part
X. That may be a real issue in the present matter.
- [23] Second,
given the serious questions raised about assets and creditors, including
quantum, of the debtor, it is my view that
such matters are best determined by a
trustee after a sequestration order (if one is to be made) rather than in an
arrangement voted
on previously, mainly by interested or friendly parties, whose
entitlement to do so is properly, and seriously, raised as an issue
by the
petitioning creditor. That such issues arise is beyond question. Some of the
family or friendly entity debts are payable on
demand. However, due to their
antiquity some may be statute barred (See Ogilvie v. Adams [1981] VicRp 92; (1981) VR 1041). Also an issue is raised as
to whether some of the family or other arrangements in relation to "friendly"
debts were intended to create
legal relations between the parties. Other issues
are also likely to arise. “
- The
second case is HP Mercantile Pty Ltd v V Turco and Marinelli & M
Turco [2010] FMCA 114 per Barnes FM where there were also questions of
non-disclosure at [8] and [9]. Questions of related parties [13]. At [44] her
Honour opined:
- “Smith
FM suggested in Munro & Anor v McLeod [2006] FMCA 388 (at [25]) it is a “foundation
proposition” that “the Court should not adjourn a petition to allow
consideration
of a Part
X agreement unless it considers such an adjournment would be for the
general benefit of the creditors, and that the considerations
in favour of the
adjournment outweigh the prima facie entitlement of the petitioning creditor to
proceed on its petition”.
More generally, I note that in exercising the
discretion to grant an adjournment of a creditor’s petition due weight
must be
given not only to the prima facie right of a petitioning creditor to
obtain a sequestration order but also to the importance of avoiding
or
minimising delay once bankruptcy proceedings have been instituted (see
Abignano; in the matter of Abignano v Wenkart [1999] FCA 1695).”
Her Honour also
made reference to the decision of Sweeney J (with whom Frankie J agreed
in Field v Commercial Banking Company of Sydney Ltd [1978] FCA 46; (1978) 37 FLR 341
that was accepted as authority in these matters by Merkel J in Bendel.
His Honour said at [349]:
“It would be unwise to attempt to draw up an exhaustive catalogue of the
circumstances to which the court should pay regard
in considering an application
for an adjournment of a creditor's petition. However, to illustrate the point
that the one circumstance
of the execution of an authority should be looked at
in the general context of each individual case, one may usefully refer to some
other relevant circumstances in such a case, as for example: 1. the course of
dealings between the parties, from the time when the
obligation to the
petitioning creditor is said to have arisen to the date of the hearing; 2. the
attitude to the application of the
petitioning creditor, as prima facie, on
proof of the matters mentioned in s 52 (1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966, the
court will proceed to make an order for sequestration (see Rozenbes v.
Kronhill(2));
3. the general financial position of the debtor; 4. the relation between the
debt of the petitioning creditor and the total liabilities
of the debtor, as it
may be seen, for example, that the petitioning creditor's opposition would be
sufficient to defeat any special
resolution proposed at a creditors' meeting; 5.
any attitude to the application disclosed by other creditors; 6. any evidence
bearing
upon the question whether it would be for the advantage of the creditors
that the debtor's affairs be administered under Pt X of the Act; 7. the
likelihood that the debtor would be able to place before a meeting of creditors
a particular proposal, or evidence
of his general circumstances, calculated to
persuade them to vote for the administration of his affairs under Pt X. It
will at once be obvious that many of these circumstances will be within the
knowledge of the debtor, rather than of the petitioning
creditor, and it will be
for the former to give evidence of them. Such evidence should, where
practicable, be in affidavit form.”
- Barnes
FM declined to grant an adjournment noting at [52]:
- “It is
difficult on the evidence before the court to assess the merits of the PIA
proposals given the lack of certainty about
the debtors’ financial
circumstances.”
And at [54] she stated:
“Moreover Merkel J [in Re Bendel] also suggested, (at [12] and
[20] – [23]), that the court is entitled to take into account possible
prejudice to the petitioning
creditor caused by an adjournment of this nature,
especially where other creditors who will vote on any proposed Part
X arrangement appear to be related or “friendly” creditors.
As in Turco there are here related creditors in relation
to some of whom there are unresolved issues.
- In
the instant case it is accepted by the debtor and those appearing for him that
there is much work to be done to respond to the
matters raised by the
petitioning creditor in the letter of 9 November. Because of the considerable
amount of work one could not
come, at this stage, to a positive conclusion that
it would be to the general advantage of creditors that the debtor’s
affairs
be administered under Part X as distinct from bankruptcy. Like her
Honour I take the view that the absence of information that is within the
knowledge of the
debtor is a factor against granting the adjournment he seeks.
The level of disclosure in the statement of affairs would appear to
indicate
that Mr Pisciuneri is not being completely transparent about his assets and
in this regard the exclusion of antecedent transactions
in the draft deed is of
particular concern. In regard to the matters raised by Sweeney J in
Field I am unable to say that there is anything in the course of dealings
between the parties that would influence me either way.
I have not been
told very much about how the debt arose but I can see that enforcement has been
prompt and the petitioning creditor
is opposed to the application for the
reasons given. The general financial position of the debtor is difficult to
ascertain, he
appears to owe a very large sum of money by virtue of his
guarantor obligations. It would appear that the only substantial outside
creditor is the applicant. But that should not exclude the applicant from its
opportunity to have all the affairs of the debtor
investigated by a bankruptcy
trustee.
- The
petitioning creditor’s debt is minor in relation to those others which are
sought to be utilised to vote in favour of the
PIA but who will not benefit
directly from it. This is itself a cause for some concern. I can see no
evidence that there is an
advantage to the creditors for this debtor’s
affairs to be administered under Part X because so much of his affairs is
opaque. Mr Pisciuneri will argue that the PIA provides an efficient,
inexpensive and simple means
of dealing with the one creditor who seeks to
enforce his rights. But that does not answer the question as to why that
creditor
should be forced into acceptance of the proposal by the intervention of
persons who would appear to have little interest in it.
It is always open to a
bankrupt to put a proposal to his creditors under Division 6, s.73 of the Act at
a time when the true nature of his financial position is known.
- In
the instant case this seems to me to be preferable course of action. The
misgivings which the creditor holds about the current
proposal are shared by
myself and I am therefore not minded to grant the adjournment sought under
s.33(1)(a). The only ground put forward by Mr Pisciuneri for the exercise of
discretion under s.52(2)(b) was the forthcoming adjourned meeting. Although the
meeting was scheduled for only a few days after this hearing I have no evidence
that the many queries raised by the applicant creditor will be able to be
answered at that time and the likelihood is that a further
adjournment will be
needed. I am not prepared to grant the adjournment under s.33 I would not
propose to exercise my discretion in favour of the debtor under s.52. As I am
satisfied that the debtor committed the act of bankruptcy alleged in the
petition and as I am satisfied with the proof of
the other matters required by
s.52 of the Act I shall make a sequestration order against the estate of Natale
Pisciuneri and I order that the applicant’s costs
(including reserved
costs, if any), be taxed and paid from the estate of the respondent in
accordance with the Act. Under the Bankruptcy Regulations a copy of this
Sequestration Order be given to the Official Receiver in Sydney within two days.
The court notes the date of the act
of bankruptcy is 12 August 2011.
I certify that the preceding twenty seven (27) paragraphs are a
true copy of the reasons for judgment of Raphael FM
Date: 7 December 2011
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