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Calabretta v Redpen Developments Pty Limited (in liquidation) (receivers and managers appointed), in the matter of Redpen Developments Pty Limited (in liquidation) (receivers and managers appointed) [2010] FCA 81 (17 February 2010)
Last Updated: 17 February 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Calabretta v Redpen Developments Pty
Limited (in liquidation) (receivers and managers appointed), in the matter of
Redpen Developments
Pty Limited (in liquidation) (receivers and managers
appointed) [2010] FCA 81
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Citation:
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Calabretta v Redpen Developments Pty Limited (in liquidation) (receivers
and managers appointed), in the matter of Redpen Developments
Pty Limited (in
liquidation) (receivers and managers appointed) [2010] FCA 81
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Parties:
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DOMENIC CALABRETTA v REDPEN DEVELOPMENTS PTY
LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED) ACN 113 687
666
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File number:
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NSD 544 of 2009
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Judge:
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YATES J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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CORPORATIONS – application for order
pursuant to s 447C(2) of Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
declaring whether or not administrator was validly appointed by defendant
company – where appointment based on resolution of
sole director of
company who was bankrupt and disqualified from managing corporations by
operation of s 206B(3) of the Act – whether invalid appointment can
be validated by s 201M of the Act - application for order pursuant to s 447A(1)
of the Act if appointment of administrator declared to be invalid –
whether substantial injustice would be caused by order
validating an otherwise
invalid appointment
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Legislation:
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Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) Part 5.3A, ss
9, 201M, 206A(2), 206B(3), 436A(1), 439A, 443D, 443F, 447A, 447C(2), 448A, 449E,
513A, 513C, 556, 588FB, 588FC, 588FDA, 588FEBankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth)
ss 55(4A), 57A
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Cases cited:
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4 November 2009 and 8 February 2010
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Place:
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Sydney
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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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56
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Counsel for the Applicant:
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Mr M J Dawson (on 4 November 2009) and Mr A W Smith (on 8 February
2010)
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Solicitors for the Applicant:
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Levitt Robinson Solicitors (until 27 January
2010)
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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IN THE MATTER OF REDPEN DEVELOPMENTS PTY LIMITED
(IN LIQUIDATION) (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED) ACN 113 687 666
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DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATIONPlaintiff
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AND
BETWEEN
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REDPEN DEVELOPMENTS PTY LIMITED (IN
LIQUIDATION) (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED) ACN 113 687
666Defendant
DOMENIC CALABRETTA Applicant
REDPEN DEVELOPMENTS PTY LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS
APPOINTED) ACN 113 687 666 Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
matter be adjourned to a date to be fixed for the purpose of making orders in
accordance with these reasons.
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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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 544 of 2009
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IN THE MATTER OF REDPEN DEVELOPMENTS PTY LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
(RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS APPOINTED) ACN 113 687 666
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BETWEEN
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DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION Plaintiff
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AND
BETWEEN
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REDPEN DEVELOPMENTS PTY LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS
APPOINTED) ACN 113 687 666 Defendant
DOMENIC CALABRETTA Applicant
REDPEN DEVELOPMENTS PTY LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (RECEIVERS AND MANAGERS
APPOINTED) ACN 113 687 666 Respondent
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JUDGE:
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YATES J
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DATE:
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17 FEBRUARY 2010
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- By
Amended Interlocutory Process dated 9 December 2009 the applicant, Domenic
Calabretta, seeks an order pursuant to s 447C(2) of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth) (the Act) declaring whether or not his purported appointment as
administrator of the defendant was valid. Mr Calabretta seeks
this relief
because his appointment was based on a resolution of the apparent sole director
of the defendant, Santo Bartolotti, who,
unbeknown to Mr Calabretta at the time,
was an undischarged bankrupt and thus disqualified from managing corporations by
operation
of s 206B(3) of the Act. The effect of disqualification is that,
absent permission, a person ceases to be a director, alternate director or
secretary
of a company: s 206A(2). Mr Bartolotti had no such permission.
Therefore, he was not a director of the defendant at the time the resolution was
purportedly
passed. No other matter was brought forward as impugning Mr
Calabretta’s appointment as administrator.
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If it be declared that his appointment was not valid (an outcome that was not
resisted but was propounded by the applicant), Mr
Calabretta seeks an order
pursuant to s 447A(1) of the Act to the effect that Part 5.3A of the Act is to
operate in relation to the defendant as if he, Mr Calabretta, had been validly
appointed on 1 October 2009 on the
basis of a valid resolution.
- Appearances
have been made by the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (the plaintiff in the
principal hearing on whose application the
defendant was wound up by order of
this Court on 30 October 2009) and Steven Nicols, the liquidator of the
defendant. The Deputy
Commissioner of Taxation did not oppose the relief sought
by Mr Calabretta. Mr Nicols appeared at the hearing on 4 November
2009 but
not at the hearing on 8 February 2010. He did advise in writing, however, that
he had read the written submissions prepared
by Mr Smith who appeared as counsel
for Mr Calabretta and advanced those submissions on Mr Calabretta’s behalf
on 8 February
2010. Mr Nicols advised that he had nothing to add to those
submissions, save that the costs of the application should not
be payable out of
the assets of the defendant and thus, in effect, borne by the creditors.
Leaving aside the question of costs,
I have taken Mr Nicols’ present
position to be that he does not dispute the factual and legal submissions
advanced on
Mr Calabretta’s behalf, at least in their written form.
- On
30 October 2009 the receivers and managers of the defendant, Justin Walsh and
Richard Dennis, advised in writing through their
solicitors that they did not
propose to be heard in relation to the application. The receivers and managers
had been appointed on
7 October 2009 by Suncorp-Metway Limited, a secured
creditor of the defendant.
- On
3 November 2009 the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC)
advised in writing that it did not propose to intervene
or seek leave to appear
in respect of the application.
- The
defendant’s creditors have been notified of the hearing of the
application. No creditor has sought to appear. No creditor
has sought to
oppose the application.
- I
am of the view that, on the basis of the submissions that have been made,
Mr Calabretta’s appointment as administrator
of the defendant was not
valid. I am also of the view that an order should be made pursuant to s 447A(1)
of the Act that Part 5.3A of the Act is to operate in relation to the defendant
as if Mr Calabretta had been validly appointed as administrator by the defendant
pursuant to s 436A(1) of the Act on 1 October 2009. However, the costs of the
application should not be paid out of the assets of the company.
- I
wish to hear the parties further on the precise form of the orders to be made
including, if necessary, the appropriate form of
the order as to
costs.
BACKGROUND FACTS
- The
evidence adduced in support of the application was not disputed.
- Mr
Calabretta is a registered liquidator and an official liquidator. He is a
partner in the firm of chartered accountants called
Hall Chadwick.
- On
1 October 2009 the defendant, by writing, purported to appoint
Mr Calabretta as administrator of the defendant pursuant to
a resolution
made that day by the board of the defendant constituted by its sole director, Mr
Bartolotti. The purported appointment
was made pursuant to s 436A(1) of the
Act.
- Section
436A(1) of the Act provides as follows:
A company may, by writing, appoint an administrator of the company if the board
has resolved to the effect that:
(a) in the opinion of the directors voting for the resolution, the company is
insolvent, or is likely to become insolvent at some
time in the future;
and
(b) an administrator of the company should be appointed.
- Mr
Calabretta had been approached to act as administrator by Guy Castellino on the
evening of 1 October 2009. There is some evidence
that Mr Castellino was, at
that time, the general manager of the defendant. Mr Castellino also seems to
have been a former director
of the defendant. The approach was by telephone
call. Mr Calabretta was not in his office. He signified his provisional
consent
to the appointment. At the time he did not have access to a computer to
undertake a company search or a conflict search. Previously,
however, on 18
August 2009, Mr Calabretta had participated in a meeting with
representatives of the defendant, including Mr
Castellino, to discuss the
possible preparation by his firm of a solvency report to be used in the
principal proceeding commenced
by the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation to wind up
the defendant. In the events which happened, Mr Calabretta’s firm
was
not engaged by the defendant to prepare a solvency report. This earlier
contact, however, was sufficient to enable Mr Calabretta
to form a provisional
view, on the evening of 1 October 2009, that his acceptance of the
appointment would involve no conflict
of interest.
- On
the morning of 2 October 2009 Mr Calabretta asked his staff to complete a
conflict search and to obtain a company search, with
respect to the defendant,
from the publicly-accessible ASCOT database maintained by ASIC. The search
showed Mr Bartolotti to be
the sole and current director of the defendant. A
search of the ASCOT database was also conducted with respect to Mr Bartolotti.
The search showed Mr Bartolotti to be a current director of the defendant.
- Mr
Calabretta’s evidence was that, after conducting all company, director and
conflict searches, he completed and executed
a consent to act as voluntary
administrator of the defendant. No point was taken at the hearing about the
fact that this written
consent was given on 2 October 2009, plainly after the
purported appointment by the defendant of Mr Calabretta as administrator:
see s
448A of the Act. This may itself be a ground for impugning Mr
Calabretta’s appointment: Gould v Companies Auditors and Liquidators
Disciplinary Board (2009) 71 ACSR 648. However, as the point was not taken
by any interested party, and as no submissions have been made in relation to it,
I will simply
note that it may have constituted an independent ground for
holding that the appointment was not valid.
- On
6 October 2009 Mr Calabretta issued a Report to Creditors and convened a first
meeting of creditors, as an administrator is required
to do by s 439A of the
Act. The meeting was held at the offices of Hall Chadwick on 14 October 2009.
After the meeting Mr Calabretta had a
conversation with Mr Castellino (who
had attended the meeting) in which Mr Calabretta raised the issue of possible
insolvent trading
by directors. He inquired of Mr Bartolotti’s financial
position. Mr Castellino informed Mr Calabretta that “Santo has
no money
and he recently filed for bankruptcy”. Mr Calabretta gave this
evidence:
I said: “When did he file for bankruptcy?”
He said: “Last week, I think.”
I said: “Guy, this is really important. Did he file for bankruptcy before
he appointed me to Redpen.”
He said: “No. It was definitely after your appointment.”
I said: “Ok.”
- Mr
Calabretta said that he made a note to conduct a bankruptcy search against
Mr Bartolotti so that the date of bankruptcy could
be recorded in Mr
Calabretta’s Second Report to Creditors. I infer that Mr Calabretta
accepted the accuracy of what he had
been told by Mr Castellino concerning the
timing of Mr Bartolotti’s bankruptcy.
- On
28 October 2010 a member of Mr Calabretta’s staff undertook a search of
the National Personal Insolvency Index (NPII) in
respect of current and former
directors of the defendant. The search showed that Mr Bartolotti was an
undischarged bankrupt who
had been made bankrupt on 7 August 2009 following the
presentation of his own petition.
- Mr
Calabretta says that the result of this search was the first knowledge he had
that Mr Bartolotti had become a bankrupt with effect
from 7 August 2009.
- On
29 October 2009 Mr Calabretta issued his Second Report to Creditors. In that
report he disclosed Mr Bartolotti’s bankruptcy
and his discovery of
the possible defect in his appointment as administrator. He gave notice of his
intention to make the present
application. He also recommended that it was in
the creditors’ interests for the defendant to be wound up.
- The
evidence shows that on 22 April 2002 ASIC and Insolvency and Trustee Service
Australia (ITSA) entered into a Memorandum of Understanding
which provided for
data-matching between the ASCOT database and the NPII database, with ASIC as the
matching agency. Under this
arrangement ITSA contributes data relating to
(amongst other things) undischarged bankrupts. On a weekly basis ASIC downloads
from
ITSA an NPII update file that includes details of new bankrupt persons and
updates with respect to (amongst other things) existing
bankruptcies. After
this data has been screened, an automated matching report is generated each week
by ASIC. The matching report
identifies those persons who are recorded on ASCOT
as being current office holders and whose ASCOT data matches the NPII data with
respect to certain personal details. All matching reports are manually verified
for data quality assurance. The evidence indicates
that any administrative
action to be taken by ASIC will be taken no later than 90 days after the
matching process has been completed.
Such administrative action may include
ASIC updating its corporate register to show that a person has, in accordance
with s 206A(2) of the Act, ceased to be an office holder of the company.
Plainly enough, there is a time-delay between data-matching and any
administrative
action that ASIC eventually may take with respect to a particular
office holder of a company.
- A
search of the ASCOT database conducted on 5 February 2010 with respect to the
defendant showed that Mr Bartolotti ceased to be
a director on 7 August 2009.
As I have previously noted, the searches that Mr Calabretta caused to be carried
out on 2 October 2009
showed Mr Bartolotti to be the sole and current director
of the defendant. It was submitted on behalf of Mr Calabretta that the
entry
shown on the search conducted on 5 February 2010 was consistent with
administrative action having been taken by ASIC as
a result of the process I
have described, as opposed to voluntary action having been taken by Mr
Bartolotti or by any other person
acting on behalf of the defendant. I accept
that submission.
- Mr
Calabretta gave evidence that it has always been his practice to undertake a
company search when appointed as an external administrator
to a company. He
does not undertake an NPII search but relies on ASIC searches to correctly
identify the directors and any person
who has been disqualified as a director of
a company. He gave evidence that he has been working in (what he called) the
“insolvency
industry” for nine years and that he regularly
participates in and attends training sessions run by various organisations,
including the Insolvency Practitioners Association of Australia (IPAA) and
insolvency firms, about the practice and management of
insolvency appointments.
He is currently a full member of the IPAA. He has worked for other liquidators.
He gave evidence that
he has never known anyone to obtain, at the time of being
appointed an administrator, a NPII search for each director of a company.
He
gave evidence that he does not recall being told that to obtain such a search
was “industry practice”, or that such
a search was required by law
or otherwise considered to be best practice. He expressed his belief that it is
widely accepted in
the “insolvency industry” that an insolvency
practitioner will rely on an ASIC company search to identify the current
directors and whether any directors are bankrupt or otherwise disqualified from
acting as directors.
- There
was no challenge to this evidence. I accept it as evidence of the general and
usual practice of insolvency practitioners in
the position of Mr Calabretta at
the time of his purported appointment as administrator of the defendant.
- The
evidence shows that no monies were received or recovered by Mr Calabretta
as administrator of the defendant in the period
1 October to 30 October 2009,
although costs were incurred by him.
STANDING
- Section
447C(1) of the Act makes plain that Mr Calabretta has standing to seek an order
declaring whether or not his appointment was valid. I am
also satisfied that he
has standing to seek the consequential relief to which I have referred. Section
447A(4)(f) of the Act provides that an order can be made under s 447A(1) on the
application of “any other interested person”. In Re Pasdonnay
Pty Ltd (ACN 009 131 622) (Administrators Appointed); McDonald & Anor
[2005] FCA 335; (2005) 53 ACSR 717 Gyles J at [17] held that invalidly appointed administrators
who have acted on the basis of the appointment are interested persons
within the
meaning of s 447A(4)(f). Mr Calabretta is such a
person.
THE CONSEQUENCES OF MR BARTOLOTTI’S BANKRUPTCY
- It
has been submitted on behalf of Mr Calabretta that, as Mr Bartolotti was an
undischarged bankrupt at the time of Mr Calabretta’s
appointment as
administrator of the defendant, Mr Calabretta’s appointment was invalid
and cannot be validated by s 201M of the Act.
- No
contradictor has come forward to argue against this submission. In the absence
of an effective contradictor, and having regard
to the considerations to which I
now refer, the submission should be accepted.
- As
I have noted, a person is disqualified from managing corporations if the person
is an undischarged bankrupt: s 206B(3). A person ceases to be a director,
alternate director or a secretary of the company if the person becomes
disqualified from managing
corporations under Part 2D.6 of the Act and is not
given permission to manage the corporation: s 206A(2).
- The
relevant effect of the Official Receiver accepting on 7 August 2009 the
debtor’s petition presented by Mr Bartolotti
was that Mr Bartolotti
became a bankrupt on that date: ss 55(4A) and 57A Bankruptcy Act 1966
(Cth). The cumulative effect of s 206B(3) and s 206A(2) was that, by
operation of the Act, Mr Bartolotti ceased to be a director
of the defendant on
7 August 2009. Thereafter no application for permission to manage a corporation
was made by him. As he was
not a director of the defendant on 1 October 2009 he
could not have passed a resolution that would enliven the operation of s 436A
of
the Act pursuant to which the defendant purported to appoint Mr Calabretta. It
follows that Mr Calabretta’s appointment
was not valid.
- Moreover,
in the absence of argument to the contrary, I am not persuaded that s 201M
operates to render effective Mr Bartolotti’s
act of purportedly passing
the resolution. Section 201M(1) provides:
An act done by a director is effective even if their appointment, or the
continuance of their appointment, is invalid because the
company or director did
not comply with the company’s constitution (if any) or any provision of
this Act.
- Section
201M(1) is qualified, relevantly, by the requirement that, at the time of the
impugned act, the appointment, or the continuance
of the appointment, of the
director was invalid because the company or the director failed to comply with
the company’s constitution
or a provision of the Act. However, in the
present case, the effect of Mr Bartolotti’s bankruptcy was that, by
operation of
the Act itself, and without more, Mr Bartolotti immediately ceased
to be a director of the defendant at the commencement of his bankruptcy
on 7
August 2009. The problem for Mr Calabretta was that, as at 1 October
2009, that fact could not be ascertained by
search of the ASCOT database. The
case does not present itself as one involving the act of a director whose
appointment or continuing
appointment was invalid at the relevant time because
the company or the director did not comply with the company’s constitution
or a provision of the Act. For an example of such a case, see Re Colorbus
Pty Ltd (in liq); Mentha and Another v Colorbus Pty Ltd (in liq) and
Another [2004] VSC 486; (2004) 213 ALR 789 at [21]- [22].
-
I am of the view that it is appropriate in the circumstances to make an order
declaring that Mr Calabretta’s purported appointment
as administrator of
the defendant was not valid because the resolution on which his purported
appointment was based was not a valid
resolution of the board of directors of
the defendant.
RELIEF PURSUANT TO S 447A(1) OF THE ACT
- Section
447A(1) provides as follows:
The Court may make such order as it thinks appropriate about how this Part is to
operate in relation to a particular company.
- In
Australasian Memory Pty Limited and Another v Brien and Another (2000)
200 CLR 270 at [17] the High Court made a number of observations concerning the
width of the power conferred by s 447A(1). The High Court noted
that there is
nothing on the face of the provision which suggests that it should be read down.
The High Court further noted that
the words of the provision are wide enough to
confer power to make orders which will have effect in the future but which are
occasioned
by something that has been done or not done under Part 5.3A before an
application is made under s 447A(1).
- Section
447A(1) has been used on a number of occasions to overcome a deficiency in the
appointment of an administrator, including
where a resolution founding the
appointment of an administrator was invalid: Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
v Portinex Pty Ltd [2000] NSWSC 99; (2000) 156 FLR 453; Sutherland (as liq of Sydney
Appliances Pty Ltd (in liq)) v Robert Bosch (Aust) Pty Ltd and
Others [2000] NSWSC 32; (2000) 33 ACSR 680; Shirlaw v Graham [2001] NSWSC 612;
Panasystems Pty Ltd v Voodoo Tech Pty Ltd [2003] FCA 428; (2003) 21 ACLC 842; McIntosh
and Another (as joint and several admins of CMX Technologies Pty Ltd) v CMX
Technologies Pty Ltd (admins apptd) (2005) 56 ACSR 283; Re Pasdonnay,
supra; HPI Australia Pty Ltd [2008] NSWSC 1106.
- The
discretion whether to exercise the power is undoubtedly a plenary one, to be
exercised having regard to all the circumstances
of the case that have been
brought to the court’s attention by the applicant for relief and by those
who have an interest in
the matter and who may be affected by the granting of
that relief. One relevant consideration is whether substantial injustice would
be caused by effectively validating an otherwise invalid appointment:
McIntosh at [32].
- Mr
Calabretta has brought to the Court’s attention three matters which could
cause, but which he submits would not cause in
the present case, substantial
injustice should an order be made to the effect that Part 5.3A of the Act is to
operate in relation
to the defendant as if Mr Calabretta had been validly
appointed with effect from 1 October 2009. These matters relate to (a)
the
administrator’s statutory indemnity and lien; (b) the
administrator’s remuneration, and (c) the consequences of a
change in the
relation-back day.
- It
is convenient to consider the first two matters together.
- If
an order of the kind that is sought by Mr Calabretta is made then he would be
entitled to be indemnified out of the defendant’s
property for certain
debts, liabilities, damages or losses, and remuneration as fixed under s 449E: s
443D. This right of indemnity
(as opposed to any independent claim Mr Calabretta
might have at general law to recover fair remuneration: see Sutherland v
Take Seven Group Pty Ltd (1998) 29 ACSR 201 at 204) would have priority over
all the defendant’s unsecured debts, subject nevertheless to the priority
regime provided
by s 556 of the Act: s 443E(1). Section 443F of the Act
provides that, to secure the right of indemnity given by s 443D of
the Act, an
administrator has a lien on the company’s property. This lien can be
asserted against assets in the administrator’s
hands without diminution by
the statutory priority otherwise accorded by s 556: Weston v Carling
Constructions Pty Ltd (in Liq) [2000] NSWSC 693; (2000) 175 ALR 202; Bell v Amberday Pty
Ltd and Another (2001) 39 ACSR 25; Lockwood and Another v White
[2005] VSCA 30; (2005) 11 VR 402; Hamilton and Another v Donovan Oates Hannaford Mortgage
Corp Ltd and Others [2007] NSWSC 10; (2007) 207 FLR 163. However, in the present
case, Mr Calabretta made no recoveries. There are no assets in his hands. The
result in practical terms
is that if an order of the kind that is sought by Mr
Calabretta is made, his right of indemnity will have the priority accorded by
the Act but the statutory lien will provide no security. In turn, the utility
of his indemnity will be dependent on whether and
to what extent the liquidator
makes recoveries.
- Mr
Calabretta submits that this outcome does not bring about substantial injustice
that would militate against the granting of the
relief he seeks. He submits
that he has carried out the work required of an administrator, which has
included the preparation of
the two reports and the convening of the
creditors’ meeting to which I have referred. He submits that the work
done in investigating
the affairs of the defendant has been of value in
providing information about the defendant’s business, property, affairs
and
financial circumstances. I accept these submissions.
- The
Report to Creditors issued by Mr Calabretta on 6 October 2009 shows that Mr
Calabretta does have the benefit of an indemnity
and guarantee for the payment
of his fees and expenses to a maximum of $30,000.00 for acting as administrator
of the defendant.
The indemnity and guarantee has been provided by Mr
Castellino. This, however, is not a reason for not granting the relief
that Mr Calabretta seeks. Moreover, I do not know what, if any, legal
or
practical difficulties might confront him in seeking to enforce this security,
particularly in circumstances where, as I have
found, his appointment as
administrator was not a valid appointment.
- I
now turn to consider the change in the relation-back day.
- Absent
an order of the kind that Mr Calabretta seeks, the relation-back day will be 9
June 2009, being the date of the filing by
the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation
of the originating process seeking the order that the defendant be wound up in
insolvency: s 513A;
s 9. If an order of the kind that Mr Calabretta seeks
is made, the relation-back day will be the later date of 1 October 2009, being
the date that will be taken as the day on which the administration began: s
513C. A consequence of this shift will be that the period
for recovery of
voidable transactions pursuant to s 588FE of the Act will, correspondingly,
shift because the determination
of the relevant period in which such recovery
can be made will necessarily be dependent on the relation-back day by reference
to
which the period ends. In short, absent an order of the kind that is sought,
the prospect would exist for the liquidator to attack,
as voidable transactions,
transactions that occurred at an earlier point in time than would be the case if
the order as sought were
to be made. This is a significant consideration.
- Mr
Calabretta’s investigations led him to report on possible recoveries
available to creditors in the event that the defendant
be wound up. In his
Second Report to Creditors he identified a number of transactions that appeared
to be possible voidable transactions
in respect of which money, property or
other benefits may be recoverable by a liquidator under Part 5.7B of the Act.
These transactions
were of two types. First, there were loans by way of vendor
finance to various purchasers of home units in a development at 83 Marine
Parade, Redcliffe, Queensland, which was the main undertaking of the defendant.
The evidence indicates that the Redcliffe development
was completed in January
2007. There is, however, no evidence as to when sales commenced or when vendor
finance was provided. Secondly,
there were transactions related to possibly
misappropriated funds that were paid to a related entity of the defendant in
January
and February 2006.
- Section
588FE(4), dealing with voidable related entity transactions, is likely to be
available in respect of both types of transactions
whether the relation-back day
be 9 June 2009 or 1 October 2009, because the relevant period will be
the four year period
ending on the relation-back day which, looking at the
matter practically, would seem to cover, in either case, the transactions in
contemplation. The transactions that were related to possibly misappropriated
funds were specifically identified as related entity
transactions in Mr
Calabretta’s Second Report to Creditors. It is possible that one or more
of the loan transactions with
respect to the sale of units at the Redcliffe
development were of the same character.
- The
position would be different if reliance were to be placed on s 588FE(3) dealing
with voidable uncommercial transactions (as defined
in s 588FB), where the
relevant period is the two year period ending on the relation-back day. The
difference would manifest itself
in respect of loan transactions entered into
between 9 June 2007 and 1 October 2007, or acts done in that period for the
purpose
of giving effect to loan transactions, with respect to the sale of units
at the Redcliffe development.
- Similarly,
the position would be different if reliance were to be placed on the general
provision in s 588FE(2) in relation
to transactions entered into between
9 December 2008 and 1 April 2009, or acts done in that period for the
purpose of giving
effect to the transactions, whether or not the transactions
are loan transactions with respect to the sale of units at the Redcliffe
development.
- However,
in each case, the evidence does not reveal whether there are any relevant
transactions. I am also mindful of the requirement
that, in the case of both
s 588FE(2) and s 588FE(3) of the Act, the transaction must be an
insolvent transaction. There
is no evidence before me which would enable me to
know whether any particular transaction was an insolvent transaction as defined
in s 588FC of the Act or an uncommercial transaction as defined in s 588FB of
the Act. Thus all that is presented is the bare theoretical
possibility that,
if the order as sought is made, there may be some prejudice to the
liquidator’s ability to recover money
or assets.
- Balanced
against the possibility to which I have referred is the fact that
Mr Calabretta carried out substantial work and incurred
costs in the not
unreasonable belief at the time that his appointment as administrator was valid.
That belief continued up to the
time that he received notice based on the NPII
search undertaken on 28 October 2009 that Mr Bartolotti was a bankrupt from
7
August 2009. Had Mr Calabretta’s appointment as administrator been
valid initially, the somewhat anomalous shift in the
relation-back day would
have occurred by force of the Act in any event. It has not been suggested that
his purported appointment
was made for the improper purpose of seeking to effect
a change in the relation-back day for the advantage of third parties. I should
add that there is no reason to think that the liquidator will not have available
to him the usual remedies at law and in equity to
recover the loans provided by
way of vendor finance or any other debts. In so far as an unreasonable
director-related transaction
may be involved, the provisions of s 588FDA of
the Act may also be available to the liquidator.
- In
all the circumstances I am not satisfied that substantial injustice would be
caused by making an order of the kind that is sought.
I am otherwise satisfied
that it is appropriate that an order of that kind should be
made.
DISPOSITION
- In
my view it would be appropriate to make an order pursuant to s 447C(2) of the
Act declaring that the purported appointment of
Mr Calabretta on 1 October 2009
as administrator of the defendant pursuant to s 436A of the Act was not valid,
on the ground that
the resolution on which that appointment was purportedly made
was not a valid resolution of the board of directors of the defendant.
- In
my view it would be appropriate to make an order pursuant to s 447A(1) of the
Act that Part 5.3A of the Act is to operate in relation
to the defendant as if
Mr Calabretta had been validly appointed as administrator of the defendant
pursuant to s 436A of the
Act on 1 October 2009.
- I
will hear the parties further, if necessary, as to the precise terms of these
orders.
- In
my view Mr Calabretta’s costs of this application should not be paid out
of the assets of the defendant and, in effect,
borne by the creditors. Whilst,
on the evidence, Mr Calabretta carried out the usual searches on 2 October 2009,
it was open to
him to make further enquiries, including by conducting a NPII
search on that day. Had Mr Calabretta carried out a NPII search with
respect to
Mr Bartolotti on 2 October 2009, I am satisfied that it would have revealed
that Mr Bartolotti had been a bankrupt
since 7 August 2009. The risk of acting
on the basis of an ASCOT database search that may not be accurate because of a
time-delay
in data-matching with the NPII database, when more timely and, in the
circumstances, more relevantly accurate information could be
obtained by
searching the NPII database itself, is one which Mr Calabretta should bear, not
the creditors of the defendant. I am
provisionally of the view that the costs
should lie where they fall and that, for the avoidance of doubt, it should be
ordered that
Mr Calabretta should bear his own costs of this application. I
will, however, hear the parties further on the appropriate form of
the costs
order, if necessary.
- The
only order I make at the present time is that the application be adjourned to a
date to be fixed for the purpose of making orders
in accordance with these
reasons.
I certify that the preceding fifty-six (56)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Yates.
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Associate:
Dated: 17 February 2010
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2010/81.html