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Devere Legal Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (ACN 125 641 787) v Greener Investments Pty Ltd (In Administration) (ACN 110 036 452) [2010] FCA 789 (27 July 2010)
Last Updated: 27 July 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Devere Legal Pty Ltd (In Liquidation)
(ACN 125 641 787) v Greener Investments Pty Ltd (In Administration) (ACN 110 036
452) [2010]
FCA 789
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Citation:
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Devere Legal Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (ACN 125 641 787) v Greener
Investments Pty Ltd (In Administration) (ACN 110 036 452) [2010]
FCA
789
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Parties:
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DEVERE LEGAL PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION) (ACN 125
641 787) v GREENER INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (IN ADMINISTRATION) (ACN 110 036
452)
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File number:
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SAD 41 of 2010
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Judge:
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LANDER J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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CORPORATIONS – application to wind up
in insolvency – application to adjourn the hearing to allow the
company to enter into administration
– s 440A(2). Held: The
adjournment application refused – in the interests of the company’s
creditors for the company to be wound up.
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Creevey v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
(1996) 19 ACSR 456 followed Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v Yates
Security Services Pty Ltd (1998) 16 ACLC 448 followed
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Place:
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Adelaide
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Plaintiff:
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Solicitor for the Plaintiff:
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Griffin Hilditch
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Counsel for the Defendant:
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Mr N Fragos
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Solicitor for the Defendant:
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Piper Alderman
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Counsel for the Supporting Creditor:
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Mr G Dart
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Solicitor for the Supporting Creditor:
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Delta Law
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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IN THE MATTER OF GREENER INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (IN
ADMINISTRATION) (ACN 110 036 452)
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DEVERE LEGAL PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION)
(ACN 125 641 787)Plaintiff
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AND:
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GREENER INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (IN ADMINISTRATION)
(ACN 110 036 452)Defendant
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
defendant’s application under s 440A(2) of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth) for an order that Greener Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 110 036 452)
continue under administration rather than be wound up be dismissed.
- Greener
Investments Pty Ltd be wound up in insolvency under the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth).
- Mr
Nicholas Fryer, an official liquidator, be appointed liquidator of the defendant
under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
- The
plaintiff’s costs of and incidental to the application be taxed and
reimbursed out of the property of the defendant in accordance
with the
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
- The
costs of the supporting creditor, (Neovest Pty Ltd (In Liquidation)), of and
incidental to the application, be taxed and reimbursed
out of the property of
the defendant in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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SAD 41 of 2010
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IN THE MATTER OF GREENER INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (IN ADMINISTRATION)
(ACN 110 036 452)
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BETWEEN:
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DEVERE LEGAL PTY LTD (IN LIQUIDATION) (ACN 125 641
787) Plaintiff
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AND:
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GREENER INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (IN ADMINISTRATION) (ACN 110 036
452) Defendant
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JUDGE:
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LANDER J
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DATE:
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27 JULY 2010
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PLACE:
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ADELAIDE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- On
24 June 2010 I made the following orders:
- The
defendant’s application under s 440A(2) of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth) for an order that Greener Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 110 036 452)
continue under administration rather than be wound up be dismissed.
- Greener
Investments Pty Ltd be wound up in insolvency under the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth).
- Mr
Nicholas Fryer, an official liquidator, be appointed liquidator of the defendant
under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
- The
plaintiff’s costs of and incidental to the application be taxed and
reimbursed out of the property of the defendant in accordance
with the
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
- The
costs of the supporting creditor, (Neovest Pty Ltd (In Liquidation)), of and
incidental to the application, be taxed and reimbursed
out of the property of
the defendant in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).
- At
that time I said I would give reasons for dismissing the defendant’s
application under s 440A(2) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (the
Corporations Act). These are those reasons.
- The
application that commenced this proceeding to wind up the defendant in
insolvency was filed by the plaintiff on 8 April 2010.
- The
plaintiff Devere Legal Pty Ltd (Administrator Appointed) claimed in a statutory
demand dated 12 March 2010 that the defendant
owed it the sum of $138,839.48
being the amount of a default judgment entered on 14 January 2010 in the
District Court of Queensland
in Action No. 3370/09.
- The
statutory demand was served on 12 March 2010 by the plaintiff’s solicitors
by registered post at the defendant’s
registered office at 38 Nash Street,
Gympie Queensland 4570. The defendant failed to pay the debt demanded or take
any steps to
pay that amount.
- On
9 April 2010 Nicholas Lewis Fryer of Level 8, 26 Flinders Street, Adelaide
signed a consent to act as liquidator, which consent
was filed on 12 April
2010.
- On
30 April 2010 the plaintiff’s solicitor filed an affidavit deposing to
service of the originating process lodgement of the
ASIC Form 519 Notification
of Court Action relating to Winding Up, Publication of the Winding Up Action and
service of the Consequent
of the Liquidator. As at that date the plaintiff had
proved all of the matters needed to be established under the Corporations Act
for the winding up of the defendant in insolvency.
- On
31 May 2010 Terry Grant van der Velde, registered liquidator was appointed
jointly and severally with Paul Desmond Sweeney as
administrators of the
defendant by a resolution of the directors Jamie Marshall Horsburgh and Amanda
Joy Horsburgh. The directors
needed to resolve that the company was insolvent
or likely to become insolvent: s 436A(1)(a) of the Corporations Act.
- On
2 June 2010 the defendant, by its administrators, applied for the adjournment of
this proceeding pursuant to s 440A(2) of the Corporations Act 2001
(Cth). That subsection provides:
The Court is to adjourn the hearing of an application for an order to wind up a
company if the company is under administration and
the Court is satisfied that
it is in the interests of the company’s creditors for the company to
continue under administration
rather than be wound
up.
- That
subsection requires that application to be determined before considering whether
an order should be made that the company be
wound up in insolvency.
- The
onus is upon the administrators on this application for an adjournment to
persuade the Court that it would be in the interests
of the company’s
creditors for the company to continue under administration rather than be the
subject of a winding up order.
In doing so, the administrators must satisfy the
Court that “it is in the interests of the company’s creditors that
the administration continue rather than liquidation ensue”: Deputy
Commissioner of Taxation v Yates Security Services Pty Ltd (1998) 16 ACLC
448. The administrators may do so by persuading the Court that there are assets
which if realised under administration rather than by
winding up would produce a
larger or more accelerated dividend for the company’s creditors:
Creevey v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (1996) 19 ACSR 456.
- On
2 June 2010 Mr van der Velde swore an affidavit in support of this application.
He exhibited the resolutions of the directors,
Jamie Marshall Horsburgh and
Amanda Joy Horsburgh made on 31 May 2010 signed by the Chair Mr Horsburgh
resolving that in the directors’
opinion the defendant is insolvent or
likely to become insolvent and appointing the administrators. The resolution
does not disclose
where the meeting was held. He exhibited a number of
exhibits; one of which was an affidavit of Jonathan Paul McLeod filed in a
proceeding in which the defendant was respondent in the Supreme Court of
Queensland. Mr McLeod is an official liquidator and
the liquidator of
Neovest Limited (In Liquidation) (Neovest). In that affidavit Mr McLeod
deposes that the two directors of
the defendant remain resident in the Kingdom
of Thailand. They have failed to make themselves available for examination in
Australia
in relation to the examinable affairs of Neovest. Mr McLeod
exhibited to his affidavit arrest warrants for the arrest of Jamie
Horsburgh and
Amanda Horsburgh which issued out of the Supreme Court of Queensland. Neovest
applied to be heard as a supporting
creditor, which I allowed.
- In
a subsequent affidavit filed in these proceedings Mr McLeod has deposed to his
interests in the defendant and its directors.
Mr McLeod has conducted public
examinations under Part 5.9 of the Corporations Act. The examinations which he
has conducted have inquired into a related party sale by the defendant in these
proceedings of a property
at Mango Hill, Queensland. The current owner of the
property Blue Box Investments Pty Ltd is a related party of the defendant.
The
defendant held a mortgage as an edge lender and sold the property pursuant to
the covenants in the mortgage. Mr McLeod has deposed
that the public
examinations have disclosed that half of the price which was obtained for the
sale of the property was set off against
moneys claimed to be owed by the
directors of the defendant to the parents of Mrs Horsburgh in relation to
investments that
had failed. Mr McLeod has deposed that it is likely that this
set-off is for moneys invested in and used by Mr and Mrs Horsburgh
in a related
company, Property Secured Investments Ltd, which was a company which had raised
money from the public but eventually
went into administration and is now
deregistered.
- Mr
McLeod has deposed that Mr and Mrs Horsburgh have failed to cooperate in the
public examination and have continued to remain in
Thailand. He has again
deposed that the Magistrates Court in Brisbane have issued warrants for the
arrest of Mr and Mrs Horsburgh
in connection with their failure to attend the
Neovest public examinations, but those arrest warrants have remained
undischarged.
- Quentin
Rozario, who is Neovest’s liquidator’s solicitor, has deposed that
he has conducted Neovest’s public examination
and at no time have the
defendant’s directors given him or his office their actual living address
or any address in Thailand
where they can be reliably contacted.
- Mr
McLeod claims that the related party transaction has meant that Neovest has been
deprived of moneys due to it under a subsequent
mortgage to that of the
defendant. As a result, he claims that the defendant is indebted to
Neovest.
- He
asserts that a proper investigation of the related parties by the defendant is
required and a liquidator would facilitate that
investigation.
- Mr
van der Velde in his affidavit deposes to the assets and liabilities of the
defendant so far as they are known to him. His knowledge
is said to be derived
from what he has been told by Mr Jamie Horsburgh.
- Mr
van der Velde says he has been told that a major asset of the defendant is in
the amount of money which is currently held in the
Supreme Court of Queensland
in the order of $3.1 million. That money was paid into the Supreme Court as a
consequence of a judgment
of the Supreme Court involving the compulsory
acquisition by the Brisbane City Council of a number of properties. The
defendant’s
entitlement to that sum, if it be so entitled, is a mortgage
of a property which has been compulsorily acquired.
- He
refers to the dispute between the defendant and Neovest in respect of the
payment out of the monies held in Court. Mr McLeod
as liquidator of Neovest
claims to be entitled to the monies in preference to the defendant. Mr van der
Velde says that he has been
told by Mr Horsburgh that on 17 May 2010 the
defendant applied to the Supreme Court for the release of the moneys.
- Mr
van der Velde deposes to other possible assets of the defendant in paragraph 7
of his affidavit:
7. I am informed by Mr Horsburgh that the other assets of Greener
are:
7.1 A claim for interest in respect of the Release Claim. This claim is yet to
be determined but is expected to be in the order
of
$600,000.00;
7.2 A further potential claim in the Supreme Court of Queensland related to the
same subject matter as the Release Claim, however,
this claim has not yet been
pursued;
7.3 An appeal in respect of the value of the Release Claim in which Greener is
involved, however, it is unclear at this time whether
that appeal will be
successful. Greener and Mio Art Pty Ltd allege that the compensation paid ($18
million as referred to above)
was an under value and Brisbane City Council are
liable to pay a higher level of compensation. The compensation already paid is
not challenged and includes the $3.1 million which is the subject of the Release
Claim; and
7.4 A second registered mortgage over a property at lot 71 Watkins Street,
Buxton, Queensland (the Buxton Property). The first registered mortgagee
is currently in possession of the property, however, the first registered
mortgagee is also under
external administration and at this time Mr Horsburgh
cannot determine what value may be
recovered.
- Mr
van der Velde does not say how those assets might arise or the recoverability of
the assets and I make the following comments.
- In
relation to paragraph 7.1 the Court is not informed as to who might be liable to
the defendant for interest in respect of the
sum of $3.1 million and how that
sum for interest might be recovered.
- As
to paragraph 7.2, as I understand it, the defendant’s entitlement to any
sum in relation to the compulsory acquisition is
as mortgagee. It is not
explained how the defendant would have any further potential claim in the
Supreme Court.
- It
is said in paragraph 7.3 that Greener has appealed in respect of the value of
the Release Claim. The Land Court valued the properties
acquired by the
Brisbane City Council at $18 million. It is not obvious to me how Greener might
benefit by appealing against the
assessment of the value of the properties. The
notice of appeal which is exhibited to Mr McLeod’s affidavit (JPM-6) does
not
assist. The defendant claims that the Court failed to make an appropriate
award for disturbance, but concedes that it may not have
addressed that issue
appropriately in its evidence. The notice of appeal
concludes:
It is reasonable to expect that the subsequent mortgagees will appeal, which
Greener Investments understands to mean that it also
needs to appeal
...
Indeed, the administrators have not disclosed the amount of the mortgage sum.
If the mortgage secured the sum of $3.1 million it is
difficult to see what
benefit the defendant might have in any appeal.
- The
information referred to in paragraph 7.4 is unhelpful. Whether the second
mortgage has any value will depend of course upon
the value of the property and
the amount of the first mortgage. Neither fact is disclosed.
- Mr
McLeod asserts that Mr van der Velde has failed to include as an asset of the
defendant the defendant’s claim in the estate
of Richard William Spencer
and Silvana Parovich (of which Mr van der Velde and Mr Sweeney are trustees) who
were the guarantors of
the Mango Hill loan.
- There
are said to be four creditors who are identified in paragraph 4 of Mr van der
Velde’s affidavit.
- I
am instructed by the director of Greener, Mr Jamie Horsburgh, that the creditors
of Greener are as follows:
4.1 When Time is Essential Pty Ltd (WTIE) secured by fixed and floating
charge created on 8 August 2008 and registered on 10 February 2010 in the amount
of approximately
$10 million; and
4.2 Unsecured creditors as follows:
(a) Devere in the amount of $138,839.48 which includes disbursements to third
parties;
(b) Thomson Adsett Architects in the amount of approximately $100,000.00;
and
(c) Buckley Vann Town Planners in the amount of approximately
$20,000.
- Of
most interest is the claim by When Time Is Essential Pty Ltd (WTIE) as a secured
creditor, secured by a fixed and floating charge
created on 8 August 2008 which
was not registered until 10 February 2010.
- There
is no information in Mr van der Velde’s affidavit which would
identify:
(a) the amount of advances pursuant to the fixed and
floating charges;
(b) the date of the advances;
(c) the purpose of the advances.
- More
particularly, the fixed and floating charge is not exhibited to the affidavit so
it cannot be ascertained when that fixed and
floating charge was stamped if it
was stamped or any evidence as to when it was created.
- The
Court is informed in paragraph 10 of Mr van der Velde’s affidavit that
WTIE and the defendant are related companies, both
being wholly owned by Shepard
Blue Pty Ltd and both have a common director in Amanda Joy Horsburgh.
- Mr
van der Velde has not deposed to the ownership of the shares in Shepard Blue Pty
Ltd.
- The
defendant has relied upon an affidavit of one of the directors of the defendant,
Jamie Horsburgh, who has given his address as
care of 60 Hamilton Road, Araluen,
Queensland, although it is clear that he does not live at that address but lives
in Thailand.
He has deposed that WTIE advanced the sum of $2.3 million to the
defendant in order to fund a loan from the defendant to various
parties. He
said that when the funds were loaned by WTIE to the defendant, the defendant did
not have its own bank account and as
a result the funds were transferred from
WTIE to a later party of the defendant, Riverplace Investments Pty Ltd
(Riverplace). Riverplace
then advanced those funds to the recipients of the
loan through a solicitor and a number of tranches on behalf of the defendant.
He has exhibited a copy of a bank statement of Riverplace which shows a receipt
of $1 million and a loan of those monies, he says,
to the loan recipient. The
document does not establish the facts relied upon.
- He
said that the loan made by WTIE to the defendant is evidenced by the accounts of
each company. He has exhibited documents which
he said are the balance sheets
of WTIE and the defendant which do show corresponding assets and liabilities
during the period 2005
to 2009. He said that on 8 August 2008 the defendant and
WTIE executed a loan agreement to formalise the arrangements between them.
- He
said the amount of the loan reflects the initial advance of $2.3 million
together with interest at the rate of 4% per month compound
less repayments made
by the defendant in the sum of $6,523,000.
- Mr
van der Velde in an affidavit sworn on 22 June 2010 which was exhibited to an
affidavit of Brooke Tegan Willshire has deposed
that Mr Rick Jones represents
Property Security Investments Administration Pty Ltd and is a member of the
committee of creditors.
Mr van der Velde does not disclose that company as a
creditor in his affidavit. I am not told of the relationship of that company
to
Property Secured Investments Pty Ltd which went into administration and has been
delisted. I do not know who controls Property
Security Investments
Administration Pty Ltd or who its shareholders are.
- The
proposal that Mr van der Velde makes which the administrators say would satisfy
the onus resting upon them under s 440A(2) is contained in paragraphs 11 to
13 of his affidavit sworn on 2 June 2010:
- I
am advised by the directors of WTIE and Greener that WTIE would be prepared to
grant priority to the unrelated creditors of Greener
only for the purposes of
Greener entering into a deed of company arrangement (DOCA) with its
creditors. The DOCA would also be conditional upon the payment of moneys out of
the Supreme Court of Queensland.
- On
the face of documents provided to me by the directors of Greener, this DOCA
would provide a better return to creditors than liquidator
because the largest
creditor, whether security is maintained or not, is removed from consideration
of the return to the remaining
creditors. Further, as it appears are no other
assets of the company except for the moneys held in the Queensland Supreme Court
and related court actions, in my opinion there will be very little prejudice to
the creditors in allowing a DOCA to be considered
by the creditors. Further,
there does not appear to be any competing claims as amongst the unsecured
creditors.
- I
am advised by the director of WTIE that should Greener proceed into liquidation,
WTIE will attempt to enforce its security.
- Mr
van der Velde does not depose to his opinion as to whether the security would be
void against the liquidator. In fact, the security
would be void as against the
liquidator.
- The
proposition in the first sentence of paragraph 11 is superficially attractive,
but becomes less attractive when one considers
the condition in the second
sentence in paragraph 11.
- Mr
van der Velde does not depose in that affidavit to any conflict of interest or
potential conflict of interest which might affect
his or Mr Sweeney’s
ability to act as administrators of the defendant.
- In
fact there is, in my opinion, such a conflict which ought to have been disclosed
by Mr van der Velde in his affidavit. The Court
is entitled to expect candour
on the part of the registered liquidators who by registration enjoy a reputation
bordering on approval
by the Court.
- Neovest
is in liquidation. Ms Silvana Parovich acted as a director and company
secretary of that company between 29 May 2003 and
20 August 2007. On
20 August 2007 a sequestration order was made against her estate in the
Federal Magistrates Court in the
Brisbane Registry and Mr van der Velde and
Mr Sweeney were appointed as trustees of that estate. She is presently an
undischarged
bankrupt.
- As
I have already noticed, there is a dispute between the defendant and Neovest as
to the entitlement to the sum of $3.1 million
which has been paid into the
Queensland Supreme Court. Neovest, which is the subsequent mortgagee to the
defendant in relation to
the property which was compulsorily acquired, disputes
the validity of the defendant’s mortgage. Ms Parovich was the company
secretary and director of Neovest at the relevant time.
- Moreover,
she was also a director and the owner of the property Ecomonitors Pty Ltd and
was one of the directors who signed the mortgage
which is relied upon by the
defendant in the Supreme Court proceedings.
- The
applicant contends, and I think rightly, that if that factual dispute has to be
resolved it is likely that Ms Parovich will be
a witness.
- Both
the defendant and Neovest are creditors of the estates of Silvana Parovich and
Richard William Spencer. Neovest has filed proof
of debts in each estate in the
amount of $18,004,257 and the trustees (Mr van der Velde and Mr Sweeney) have
allowed proof in the
amount of $16,755,350. Mr Sweeney as trustee of those
estates on 5 August 2008 admitted a proof of debt filed by the defendant for
the
amount of $126,141,030.
- In
my opinion there is clearly potential for a conflict of interest if Mr van der
Velde and Mr Sweeney were to be the administrators
of the defendant and their
position as trustees of the estate of Ms Parovich. In a subsequent affidavit
sworn on 16 June 2010 Mr
van der Velde deposed in paragraph
7:
I refer to paragraphs 7 to 11 of the affidavit of Bernard Colin Walrut sworn on
9 June 2010. In my view there is no conflict of
interest in respect of the
bankrupt estate of Ms Silvana Parovich and Greener Investments Pty Ltd. The
issues between Ms Parovich
and Greener are complex but it is my belief that
the issues are not relevant to the within proceedings or the petitioning
creditor.
I have advised the committee of creditors of the concern raised by Mr
Walrut and have been tentatively advised by 100% of the committee
that they do
not wish to appoint a replacement administrator.
- The
defendant relied also upon an affidavit of Blayne Ledger which is exhibited to
an affidavit of Brooke Tegan Willshire. Mr Ledger
is the solicitor on record
acting for the defendant in the Supreme Court of Queensland proceedings.
- He
has deposed that in 2004 the defendant advanced money by way of two loans to a
number of companies in the Neoliodo Group of Companies
which granted a number of
mortgages over real property to the defendant. Neovest, he said, was not a
borrower under the loan facilities
nor was it one of the companies that the
defendant ever dealt with.
- He
has deposed to the $3.1 million which has been paid into Court and said that the
competing claimants are the defendant “who
claims money is owing under
loan agreements advanced and secured previously by registered mortgages over the
land that was compulsorily
acquired. Greener Investments Pty Ltd currently sits
in priority in respect to its former security to that of any other party
including
Neovest Ltd; and Neovest Ltd pursuant to a mortgage previously
registered which is subsequent in priority to that of Greener Investments
Pty
Ltd.”
- He
said that on 20 May 2010 Justice Applegarth in the Queensland Supreme Court
dismissed the defendant’s application and Neovest’s
application for
payment to the respective companies of the $3.1 million paid into Court.
Instead he directed that the matter not
be heard summarily but that Neovest file
and serve a statement of claim by 15 June 2010. Mr Ledger said that
Neovest has failed
to comply with his Honour’s order. He claims that
Neovest is unable to comply because it has no claim and that Neovest is
intentionally delaying filing and serving the statement of claim “so as to
continue with the pretense (sic) of being a creditor
of Greener Investments, and
so that it does not have to plead it (sic) claim for the $3.1 million plus
accretions, thereby hoping
Greener Investments Pty Ltd will be wound
up.”
- Mr
Ledger said that he is an unsecured creditor of the defendant to the extent of
$30,000. He was not so identified by Mr van der
Velde.
- He
said that Neovest is not a creditor of the defendant and nor could it be, but
that Neovest was seeking to interfere in the affairs
of the defendant to gain a
tactical advantage for use in the Queensland Supreme Court proceedings.
- He
said that he had been provided with a copy of the proposed Deed of Company
Arrangement (DOCA) and it is his view that it would
be detrimental to the
defendant’s claim for the $3.1 million plus accretions if the defendant
were to be placed in liquidation.
He said:
It would make it more difficult to get instructions by solicitors acting in the
Queensland Court proceedings. It would increase
the legal costs incurred in the
proceedings with the Supreme Court. There would be further delays. As such, it
would be detrimental
to creditors of Greener
Investments.
In respect to the DOCA I wish to inform the Court that it is proposed that I
will be placed in priority in respect of payment of
my legal fees for acting in
the Queensland Supreme Court proceedings. Such priority is proposed to be given
to me in priority to
the other secured creditors. This priority is proposed as
a result of not seeking payment of my fees until a resolution of the matter,
terms which other solicitors would probably not agree to in the
circumstances.
- It
can be seen from those matters that Mr Ledger has a significant interest in
having the defendant proceed under administration
pursuant to the terms of the
proposed DOCA because he would thereby be paid in full and for his services
rendered, and in priority
to any other unsecured creditor.
- In
my opinion there are good reasons why it is not appropriate for an order to be
made under s 440A(2) of the Corporations Act to allow the defendant to
continue under administration rather than be wound up in insolvency.
- The
directors of the defendant appear to be unreliable. They have been
uncooperative in the administration of Neovest. Their lack
of cooperation has
led to summonses being issued for their arrest. The defendant has been involved
in a number of related company
transactions with companies controlled by the
defendant’s directors and relatives of those directors.
- It
is essential that independent investigation be made of those related party
transactions to determine the true assets and liabilities
of the defendant.
- It
is also necessary to determine whether any sum is owed by the defendant to the
secured creditor and indeed whether the security
of the secured creditor is void
as against the liquidator.
- The
administrators who have been proposed are not in my opinion sufficiently
independent to administer the DOCA in circumstances
where they are also the
trustees of the estates of the two bankrupt persons to whom reference has been
made.
- It
was contended on behalf of the defendant that to proceed under the DOCA would be
to the advantage of the unsecured creditors because
of the availability of
Mr Ledger to continue to act on the terms which had been agreed with the
administrator.
- In
my opinion there is nothing in that point. There is no reason why a liquidator
could not engage Mr Ledger to act for the company
upon the same terms and
conditions in the event that a winding up order were made. In the event that Mr
Ledger is not prepared to
act, there is no reason why another solicitor properly
instructed could not continue the litigation to obtain the payment of the
$3.1
million in the Queensland Supreme Court.
- It
is essential in my opinion that an administrator properly independent of all of
the parties is appointed for the purpose of conducting
proper examinations into
the related party transactions and to determine whether the directors have
discharged all of their duties
to the defendant in accordance with their
obligations at law. It is also important in my opinion to have an independent
investigation
to determine whether the defendant was trading whilst insolvent
and, if so, whether or not proceedings ought to be taken for the
purpose of
attempting to recover some of the losses occasioned by the defendant.
- For
those reasons I made the orders to which I have referred.
I certify that the preceding sixty-five (65)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Lander.
|
Associate:
Dated: 27 July 2010
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