You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Federal Court of Australia >>
2010 >>
[2010] FCA 53
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Stork ICM Australia Pty Ltd v SFS 007.298.633 Pty Limited (Formerly Stork Food Systems Australasia Pty Ltd), in the matter of Stork ICM Australia Pty Ltd (Deregistered) [2010] FCA 53 (2 February 2010)
Last Updated: 9 February 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Stork ICM Australia Pty Ltd v SFS
007.298.633 Pty Limited (Formerly Stork Food Systems Australasia Pty Ltd), in
the matter of Stork
ICM Australia Pty Ltd (Deregistered) [2010] FCA 53
|
Citation:
|
Stork ICM Australia Pty Ltd v SFS 007.298.633 Pty
Limited (Formerly Stork Food Systems Australasia Pty Ltd), in the matter of
Stork
ICM Australia Pty Ltd (Deregistered) [2010] FCA 53
|
|
|
|
Parties:
|
STORK ICM AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 004 448 042) v
SFS 007.298.633 PTY LIMITED (ACN 007 298 633) (FORMERLY STORK FOOD SYSTEMS
AUSTRALASIA
PTY LTD) and AUSTRALIAN SECURITIES AND INVESTMENTS
COMMISSION
|
|
|
|
File number:
|
NSD 1689 of 2006
|
|
|
|
Judge:
|
LINDGREN J
|
|
|
|
Date of judgment:
|
2 February 2010
|
|
|
|
Catchwords:
|
CORPORATIONS - scheme of arrangement -
order made under s 413 of Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) for transfer
of property and liabilities of Australian subsidiary of overseas corporation to
another Australian subsidiary
of the same corporation - transfer of
transferor’s liabilities to persons suffering from exposure to asbestos
fibre and of
responding insurance where insurer consented - transferor company
deregistered under court order made under s 413 of the Act - subsequently
further claim made against transferor company - application made for
reinstatement of registration and
orders transferring the further liability and
responding insurance - whether necessary that reinstatement operate
retrospectively
to time of deregistration - orders made reinstating registration
with full retrospectivity, transferring liability and responding
insurance, and
again deregistering company
|
|
|
|
Legislation:
|
|
|
|
|
Cases cited:
|
|
|
|
|
|
21 December 2009, 22 January, 2 February
2010
|
|
|
|
Date of publication of reasons
|
9 February 2010
|
|
|
|
|
|
Place:
|
Sydney
|
|
|
|
Division:
|
GENERAL DIVISION
|
|
|
|
Category:
|
Catchwords
|
|
|
|
Number of paragraphs:
|
36
|
|
|
Counsel for the First Defendant:
|
|
|
|
|
Solicitor for the First Defendant:
|
McCullough Robertson
|
|
|
|
Counsel for the Second Defendant:
|
Mr P R Whitford SC
|
|
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
|
|
NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
|
|
|
|
|
IN THE MATTER OF STORK ICM AUSTRALIA PTY LTD
(ACN 004 448 042) (DEREGISTERED)
|
|
STORK ICM AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 004 448 042)
Plaintiff
|
|
AND:
|
SFS 007.298.633 PTY LIMITED (ACN 007 298 633)
(FORMERLY STORK FOOD SYSTEMS AUSTRALASIA PTY LTD)First
Defendant
AUSTRALIAN SECURITIES AND INVESTMENTS COMMISSION Second
Defendant
|
|
|
|
|
DATE OF ORDER:
|
|
|
WHERE MADE:
|
|
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Australian
Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) be added as second defendant.
- Pursuant
to s 601AH(2) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (the Act), ASIC
reinstate the registration of Stork ICM Australia Pty Ltd (ACN 004 448 042) (the
Company).
- Immediately
following the reinstatement of the registration of the Company pursuant to Order
2 above, pursuant to s 413(1) of the Act the following transactions (a), (b),
(c) and (d) are to and will occur in the sequence set out below, each
immediately following its predecessor:
(a) The property of the
Company consisting of:
(i) its rights of indemnity, if any, against Zurich Australian Insurance Ltd
(Zurich) under any policy of insurance, including any
policy of insurance with
any party for which Zurich is now responsible; and
(ii) its rights of indemnity, if any, against WorkCover Queensland under any
policy of insurance;
including in each case, without limitation, any employer’s indemnity
policy in respect of worker’s compensation liability
(Included Policies)
are to and will be transferred to and become the property of the first
defendant;
(b) all and any liabilities, if any, of the Company to persons who have
suffered or hereafter suffer injury as a result of exposure
at any time to
asbestos fibre to which any of the Included Policies respond are to and will be
transferred to and become liabilities
of the first defendant (Included
Liabilities);
(c) any legal proceeding pending in respect of any such Included Policies or
Included Liabilities is to and will be continued by or
against the first
defendant; and
(d) the Company is to and will be deregistered without winding up.
- The
liberty to apply reserved by Orders 7 and 8 made on 14 December 2006
continues.
- These
orders be entered forthwith.
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
|
|
|
NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
|
|
|
GENERAL DIVISION
|
NSD 1689 of 2006
|
IN THE MATTER OF STORK ICM AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 004 448 042)
(DEREGISTERED)
|
BETWEEN:
|
STORK ICM AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 004 448 042)
Plaintiff
|
|
AND:
|
SFS 007.298.633 PTY LIMITED (ACN 007 298 633) (FORMERLY STORK FOOD
SYSTEMS AUSTRALASIA PTY LTD) First Defendant
AUSTRALIAN SECURITIES AND INVESTMENTS COMMISSION Second
Defendant
|
|
JUDGE:
|
LINDGREN J
|
|
DATE:
|
9 FEBRUARY 2010
|
|
PLACE:
|
SYDNEY
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- On
14 December 2006 I made orders and published reasons for judgment in this
proceeding: see In the matter of Stork ICM Australia Pty Ltd; Stork ICM
Australia Pty Ltd v Stork Food Systems Australasia Pty Ltd (2007) 25 ACLC
208. The present reasons are to be read in the light of those reasons and I
will not repeat what I said in them.
For those and the present reasons, on
2 February 2010 I made the further orders that appear at the front of these
reasons.
- I
will use the abbreviated forms of reference that I used in the earlier reasons,
including “Stork FSA” for the defendant,
even though I note that
Stork FSA subsequently changed its name as appears in the heading above.
- Little
needs to be said here concerning the background to the earlier reasons and
orders. Stork ICM had once been engaged in the
fields of mechanical and
electrical engineering, and it was involved in the construction of petrochemical
plants. It had long since
sold its business and ceased all active operations.
However, from time to time, claims had been made against it by persons who
alleged
that they had suffered injury arising out of exposure to asbestos fibre.
Dealing with these claims when they were made seems to have
been Stork
ICM’s only activity. The claims were handled by the relevant insurer.
- Both
Stork ICM and Stork FSA were Australian subsidiaries of a global corporation
that was incorporated in the Netherlands. For
tax reasons, the parent
corporation desired that Stork ICM’s defunct status be formalised by a
transfer of its assets and liabilities
to Stork FSA followed by the
deregistration of Stork ICM. The question that arose was whether this innocuous
aim could be achieved
without prejudicing the position of persons who might in
the future claim to have suffered injury from exposure to asbestos fibre.
- It
is expressly contemplated by s 601AA(2)(e) of the Act that in the case of a
deregistration following the making of an application
to ASIC, the application
may be made only if the company has no outstanding liabilities. No doubt the
Court would ordinarily wish
to be satisfied that a company has no outstanding
liabilities at the time when it makes an order for deregistration without
winding
up under s 413(1)(d) of the Act. The reason is that
s 601AD(1) of the Act provides that on deregistration the company ceases to
exist. Although
s 601AD(2) vests the company’s property, other than
property that it held on trust, in ASIC, the Act does not, of course,
subject
ASIC to any outstanding liabilities of the company. When the orders were made
on 14 December 2006, the evidence established
that all known asbestos
related claims against Stork ICM had been resolved.
- In
the circumstances explained in the earlier reasons and above, the present case
has been concerned with the possibility that Stork
ICM may have unknown
liabilities or potential liabilities to persons suffering from exposure to
asbestos fibre. At the time of the
making of the orders on 14 December
2006, all claims that had been made by such persons had been satisfied, and no
further claims
were known to exist. It was acknowledged by all, however, that
further claims might emerge in the future.
- By
the terms of the orders on 14 December 2006, there were excluded from the
transfers of Stork ICM’s property and liabilities,
what were referred to
in the orders as “Excepted Policies” and “Excepted
Liabilities”. The reason was to
be found in “no assignment without
consent” provisions contained in Stork ICM’s insurance policies.
There was
a possibility that while a liability of Stork ICM might be transferred
to Stork FSA, the purported transfer of responding insurance
might fail to
achieve its purpose because of that contractual provision - a result which would
be to the disadvantage of Stork FSA
and might be to the disadvantage of the
claimant.
- I
discussed this matter at [96]-[99] of the earlier reasons, but did not need to
decide the point finally, because the practice adopted
was to transfer only
insurance indemnities where the insurers had consented, the others being the
Excepted Policies. Any liability
of Stork ICM to a sufferer from exposure to
asbestos fibre to which an Excepted Policy responded (Excepted Liability), was
not transferred,
and that Excepted Policy was not transferred either. The
objective was to avoid any possibility of liabilities being transferred
without
responding insurances also being transferred or insurances being transferred
without liabilities to which they respond also
being transferred.
- At
[123] of the earlier reasons I noted that if a claimant to whom an Excepted
Liability related subsequently came to light and wished
to sue Stork ICM, he or
she would be entitled to apply under s 601AH(2) of the Act for the Court to
order that ASIC reinstate
the registration of Stork ICM. I also noted that the
Court would make such an order if it was satisfied that it was just to do
so.
- There
have been developments since the making of the orders on 14 December 2006.
- First,
Zurich Australian Insurance Limited (Zurich) has consented to a transfer of all
insurance policies which Stork ICM held or
holds with that company, if any, and
also insurance policies which Stork ICM held or holds with other parties for
which Zurich is
now responsible, if any, to Stork FSA in accordance with the
Scheme.
- Second,
on or about 14 August 2009, David Raymond Willesden filed a writ in the Supreme
Court of Queensland against, inter alia,
Stork ICM seeking damages in respect of
asbestos related injuries. It has been determined that WorkCover Queensland is
the insurer
in relation to that claim. Bruce Thomas Lawyers represent WorkCover
Queensland in the proceeding. They have advised that Mr Willesden
has caused
Stork FSA to be substituted as defendant for Stork ICM. Obviously, the problem
is that in terms of the orders made on
14 December 2006, any liability of
Stork ICM to Mr Willesden is an Excepted Liability and any responding insurance
of WorkCover
Queensland is an Excepted Policy. WorkCover Queensland has,
however, consented to any right of indemnity under any policy enjoyed
by Stork
ICM with WorkCover Queensland being transferred to Stork FSA.
- Stork
FSA has applied pursuant to the liberty to apply reserved by Orders 7 and 8 of
14 December 2006 for orders having the effect
of transferring to Stork FSA the
rights of insurance indemnity previously enjoyed by Stork ICM as against Zurich,
or other entities
in respect of whose policies Zurich is now responsible, and
WorkCover Queensland, and all liabilities to which both of those indemnities
respond (including the alleged liability to Mr Willesden).
- The
objective that is sought to be achieved is one that is concurred in by all
parties. This is that no claimant or prospective
claimant and no insurer will
be disadvantaged, and that every claimant or prospective claimant and insurer
will stand in the same
position vis-à-vis Stork FSA following a transfer
as he, she or it would have occupied in relation to Stork ICM if that company
had not been deregistered.
- Zurich,
WorkCover Queensland’s solicitors Bruce Thomas Lawyers, and
Mr Willesden’s solicitors Maurice Blackburn,
are aware of the making
of the present application by Stork FSA. None of them has expressed opposition
or sought to be heard. ASIC
has been heard and must be added as a party for the
reasons that appear below.
- Pursuant
to Order 4(c) made on 14 December 2006, ASIC deregistered Stork ICM on 20
December 2006. Consequently, by the operation
of s 601AD(1) of the Act,
Stork ICM ceased to exist on that date. Since that date it has not been
possible for Stork ICM to
be sued because it has been non-existent.
- Whatever
the position may be in relation to a transfer of property formerly owned by
Stork ICM (which vested in ASIC on the deregistration
under s 601AD(2)), a
former liability of Stork ICM cannot now be transferred without Stork
ICM’s registration being first
reinstated. The reason is that, absent
reinstatement, there is no longer an entity that is liable, and therefore, in
effect, no
longer a liability in existence (see [33] below).
- Section
601AH of the Act provides for reinstatement of the registration of a company
that has been deregistered. Subsection (2)
of that section provides as
follows:
(2) The Court may make an order that ASIC reinstate the registration of a
company if:
(a) an application for reinstatement is made to the Court by:
(i) a person aggrieved by the deregistration; or
(ii) a former liquidator of the company; and
(b) the Court is satisfied that it is just that the company’s registration
be reinstated.
- In
my opinion Stork FSA is a person aggrieved by the deregistration of Stork ICM.
The expression “aggrieved by the deregistration”
should be given a
wide meaning. I do not think that it is confined by reference to a person who
was aggrieved by ASIC’s act
of deregistration at the time when that act
took place. It seems that in the present case, Stork FSA would not satisfy that
description
because it acquiesced in the deregistration of Stork ICM. I think
that the expression is wide enough, however, to encompass a person
who is
aggrieved by the state, fact or condition of deregistration. Stork FSA is so
aggrieved. One reason is that it is being sued
by Mr Willesden and desires to
have the benefit of any insurance indemnity provided by WorkCover
Queensland.
- Whether
it is just that registration be reinstated depends, inter alia, on the effect of
reinstatement. The effect of reinstatement
is described in subs (5) of
s 601AH, which provides as follows:
(5) If a company is reinstated, the company is taken to have continued in
existence as if it had not been deregistered. A person
who was a director of the
company immediately before deregistration becomes a director again as from the
time when ASIC or the Court
reinstates the company. Any property of the company
that is still vested in the Commonwealth or ASIC revests in the company. If the
company held particular property subject to a security or other interest or
claim, the company takes the property subject to that
interest or
claim.
- In
my view it is just that the position described in subs (5) be achieved in
relation to any claims to which the insurance indemnities,
if any, which Zurich
and WorkCover Queensland are liable to provide, respond. Claims should be able
to be made against a legal entity
that will have the benefit of the relevant
insurance indemnity, as would have been the case prior to the deregistration of
Stork
ICM on 20 December 2006.
- Two
questions remain to be discussed.
- First,
a question was raised as to whether it is necessary that ASIC be joined as a
party. In my opinion this is necessary for two
reasons. The first reason is
that the property of Stork ICM at the time of its deregistration, including its
rights under insurance
policies, vested in ASIC upon the deregistration by the
operation of s 601AD(2) of the Act. An order having the effect of
divesting
property from ASIC should not be made without ASIC’s being a
party. The second reason is that an order for reinstatement is
an order that
ASIC reinstate the registration. Save in special circumstances, an order that a
person do something should not be
made without the person’s being a
party.
- The
second question arises from Stork FSA’s preferred course that an order be
made under s 601AH(3)(b) of the Act that
reinstatement take effect as of
the date of the order and not be deemed by s 601AH(5) to have taken effect
as of the time of
deregistration on 20 December 2006.
- Subsection
(3) is as follows:
(3) If the Court makes an order under subsection (2), it may:
(a) validate anything done between the deregistration of the company and its
reinstatement; and
(b) make any other order it considers appropriate.
Subsection (5) was set out at [18] above.
- It
will be appreciated that the proposed reinstatement of registration, transfers
of liabilities and responding insurances, and subsequent
(second) deregistration
are to occur in rapid succession. Stork FSA prefers that the reinstatement take
effect in the same accounting
period as that in which the other two acts take
effect.
- I
do not think, however, that s 601AH(3)(b) empowers the Court to make an
order denying to a reinstatement the retrospective
effect provided for in
s 601AH(5). Subsection (3) assumes that an order has been made under
subs (2), and in my view the
only order that the Court is able to make
under subs (2) is one having the retrospective effect provided for in
subs (5). There
is a question, however, precisely what that retrospective
effect is.
- Senior
counsel for Stork FSA referred the Court to what has been described as the
limited nature of the retrospective effect for
which subs (5) provides. The
second and third sentences of subs (5) suggest that the first sentence has
a limited effect.
- Senior
counsel referred to the discussion by Campbell J in White v Baycorp
Advantage Business Information Services Ltd [2006] NSWSC 441; (2006) 200 FLR 125
(White); and by White J in Foxman v Credex National Australian Trade
Exchange Pty Ltd (in liq) [2007] NSWSC 1422; (2008) 65 ACSR 476. Reference may also be made to
CGU Workers Compensation
(NSW) Ltd v Rockwall Interiors Pty Ltd [2006] NSWSC 690; (2006) 201 FLR 296 (CGU);
Mitzev v Foxman (2007) 13 BPR 24,989; and Tom Michael Oates v
Consolidated Capital Services Pty Ltd [2007] NSWSC 680. The relevant issue
addressed in these cases was whether particular acts, conduct, states of mind or
omissions were to be attributed
to the deregistered company, or particular acts
purportedly directed against it were to be treated as effective, in each case as
at a time during the period of the deregistration. The cases recognise that the
mere retrospective effect of a reinstatement, without
more, does not supply the
additional facts necessary to make for a positive answer to such questions.
- The
circumstances of the present case, however, are more akin to those of
GIO General Ltd (Agent for
NSW WorkCover Scheme) v Sabko Pty Ltd [2007] NSWSC 251; (2007) 70 NSWLR 743. In that case, as
in the present one, all of the circumstances giving rise to the liability in
question had occurred prior to deregistration
and all that remained for the
liability to be enlivened was the effluxion of time. The company had entered
into a contract of insurance
for the period 8 April 2005 to 8 April 2006. After
doing so, the company was deregistered on 25 December 2005. The contract of
insurance provided for automatic renewal for a further year from 8 April 2006 to
8 April 2007, for a premium that was to fall due
on 31 July 2006, unless the
company gave a certain notice to the insurer. The insurer issued an invoice for
the renewal premium
for the second annual period, the “due date”
being 31 July 2006.
- On
16 March 2007, a reinstatement order was made and on the hearing it was assumed
that ASIC had reinstated the registration of the
company in accordance with that
order.
- Austin J
held that by reason of the first sentence of s 601AH(5) the reinstatement
was retrospective to 25 December 2005
and that the company had become indebted
to the insurer for the renewal premium in 2006. His Honour distinguished
White and CGU. In White certain notices were purportedly
given on behalf of the deregistered company, and in CGU a statutory
demand was served purportedly on the deregistered company and not complied with
by it during the deregistration period.
- Austin
J emphasised that in the case before him, the liability for the renewal premium
accrued under the terms of the pre-existing
contract by nothing more than the
effluxion of time. His Honour rejected a submission that the liability was not
enlivened by reason
of the fact that while it was deregistered the company could
not have given to the insurer notice that the renewal was not required.
- In
the circumstances of the present case, there are no post-deregistration acts,
conduct, states of mind or omissions of the company
or post-deregistration acts
directed against the company that are essential to the accrual of the liability.
The mere deemed continued
existence of Stork ICM is sufficient to perfect its
liability.
- Even
if, contrary to my view, the Court has power, by an order made under
s 601AH(3)(b) to modify the operation of subs (5),
it would not do so
in the circumstances of the present case. The reason is that the enlivening of
the liabilities of Stork ICM depends
on reinstatement being fully retrospective.
As noted earlier, when Stork ICM ceased to exist on 20 December 2006 there
ceased to
exist any legal entity that bore the liabilities in question. In
these circumstances it seems an appropriate use of language to
say that upon
deregistration the liabilities ceased to exist (more precisely they ceased to
exist subject only to the possibility
of a retrospectively effective
reinstatement). If, as Stork FSA asks, an order were made pursuant to
s 601AH(3)(b) of the Act
that the first sentence of s 601AH(5) not
apply, apparently the reinstatement would have effect only from the date when
ASIC
in fact reinstated the registration pursuant to the Court’s order.
In these circumstances, the non-existence of the company
from 20 December 2006
down to that date would remain untouched and Stork ICM’s liabilities would
not be enlivened upon the
making or effectuating of the order for
reinstatement.
- For
the above reasons, on 2 February 2010 I made, first, an order joining ASIC as
second defendant; second, an order that ASIC reinstate
the registration of Stork
ICM; third, orders that immediately following reinstatement, the insurance
indemnities, if any, that are
available from Zurich and WorkCover Queensland and
all of the liabilities, if any, of Stork ICM to which any such policies respond,
be transferred to Stork FSA and any legal proceeding pending in respect of such
policies or liabilities be continued by or against
Stork FSA; and, fourth, an
order that Stork ICM be again deregistered without winding up. The liberty to
apply reserved by orders
7 and 8 made on 14 December 2006 will continue. This
is relevant in case any further consenting insurer comes to light or any further
claim is made arising out of exposure to asbestos fibre.
I certify that the preceding thirty-six (36)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Lindgren.
|
Associate:
Dated: 9 February 2010
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2010/53.html