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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 10 September 2002
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION: NRMA Workers Compensation
(NSW) (No 2) Pty Ltd v Eaternity Pty Ltd [2002] NSWSC 601
CURRENT JURISDICTION: Equity
FILE NUMBER(S):
2598/02
HEARING DATE{S): 4 & 5 June 2002
JUDGMENT DATE:
05/06/2002
PARTIES:
NRMA Workers Compensation (NSW) (No 2) Pty
Limited (P)
Eaternity Pty Limited (D)
JUDGMENT OF: Hamilton J
LOWER COURT JURISDICTION: Not Applicable
LOWER COURT FILE
NUMBER(S): Not Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL OFFICER: Not
Applicable
COUNSEL:
D S McCrostie, Solicitor (P)
M D Gill,
Solicitor (D)
SOLICITORS:
P W Turk & Associates (P)
Nash
O'Neill Tomko (D)
CATCHWORDS:
CORPORATIONS [182] - Voluntary
administration - Protection of company property during administration - Winding
up company - Power
of Court to adjourn hearing of winding up application -
Criterion by which discretion to be exercised - Relevant
considerations.
ACTS CITED:
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) ss 440A &
459A
DECISION:
Short adjournment of winding up proceedings
granted.
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW
SOUTH WALES
EQUITY DIVISION
HAMILTON
J
WEDNESDAY, 5 JUNE 2002
2598/02 NRMA WORKERS
COMPENSATION (NSW) (NO 2) PTY LIMITED v EATERNITY PTY
LIMITED
JUDGMENT
1 HIS HONOUR: This is an
application by Eaternity Pty Limited (Administrator Appointed) (“the
company”) under s 440A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) ("the CA") for
an order that the plaintiff's winding up application, brought under s 459A of
the CA, be adjourned for a period to be determined by the Court. The period
asked for in fact is a period ending on a day shortly
after the holding of a
second creditors' meeting under the administration, which is scheduled for 20
June 2002, about a fortnight
hence. The plaintiff in the proceedings is NRMA
Workers' Compensation (NSW) (No 2) Pty Limited. That company, by originating
process
filed on 8 May 2002, sought the winding up of the company. The
originating process was returnable yesterday, 4 June 2002, when the
company's
application under s 440A came before me and was adjourned by me together with
the winding up application until today for the purpose of my delivering judgment
on the adjournment application.
2 The company is a company which until
recently conducted a number of restaurants and bars and a number of retail food
outlets under
the old GPO building at 1 Martin Place, Sydney. It also conducted
elsewhere in Martin Place a well known restaurant and bar known
as Banc and Wine
Banc, respectively. It no longer conducts any of these businesses and is not
now trading. The GPO businesses appear
to have been taken over by a Mr
Petroulas or companies associated with him, allegedly by virtue of powers
exercised under heads of
agreement which the company entered into with Mr
Petroulas or his associates in December 2001. The Banc and Wine Banc
establishments
appear to have been transferred to another company controlled by
Mr Sarris, the controller of the company, in circumstances which
the
administrator says require further investigation. In any event, it seems clear
that the company is not trading.
3 This is a case, as is not uncommon,
where the administrator was appointed late. Mr Albarran was appointed
administrator on 24 May
2002 after the originating process for winding up had
been taken out and before its return date. Attempts to conduct companies under
administrations which are commenced in those extreme circumstances require close
scrutiny where questions of the continuation of
the administration are brought
before the Court. The circumstances of the company as shown in the evidence are
as follows. The
company has negligible assets. The administrator's report
states it to have debts of some $3 million, including a debt of approximately
$1.8 million to the Australian Tax Office ("the ATO"). There were some
submissions before me yesterday on the plaintiff's part that,
in fact, the debts
were $3 million plus the ATO debt (which the ATO has now informed the Court is
in fact $1.9 million). However,
the evidence appears to indicate that the $3
million is a figure inclusive of the ATO debt. I propose to proceed on that
basis,
although, as far as I am concerned, the result would not be different if
in fact the ATO debt were in addition to the $3 million
debt, so that the total
debts were about $5 million. The $3 million is clearly exclusive of any claim
by Mr Rodney Adler to be a
creditor, but Mr Adler has not so far made any such
claim. It is clear that before the company ceased operating it paid Mr Adler
$1
million, but the administrator states that it is not yet clear whether or not
that payment was made in circumstances where it
could be characterised as a
preference in Mr Adler's favour.
4 The reason for the short adjournment
sought under s 440A is to permit further consideration of a possible deed of
company arrangement ("DCA"). The relevant offer is sworn to in an affidavit
of
Mr Sarris, the former controller. Mr Sarris' offer is to make in 18 months time
a payment of $450,000 plus the administrator's
costs and expenses. This would
permit a payment to unsecured creditors of approximately 15 cents in the dollar.
In addition, Mr
Sarris offers, if the company continues in administration, to
fund litigation against Mr Petroulas and his interests. It is alleged
that
amounts, which may total several million dollars, may be recoverable from this
source in relation to alleged breaches of the
heads of agreement, which have
already been mentioned. Mr Sarris is aware that the costs of such proceedings
would be a minimum
of $100,000, and may very well be much more, and offers to
provide to the administrator all those costs.
5 At the first creditors'
meeting under the administration, which was held on 31 May 2001, there were in
attendance creditors for
amounts totalling approximately $700,000, who voted
unanimously for an adjournment of the winding up proceedings and the further
consideration of a proposed DCA at the second meeting on 20 June 2002. In
addition, the ATO has now appeared before me and indicated
that it also supports
an adjournment of the originating process to permit consideration of the DCA.
The course of adjournment for
further consideration is thus favoured on the
evidence by creditors representing $2.6 out of the $3 million owed, or a
considerable
preponderance by value of the creditors. Even if the $5 million
figure were correct, those persons would represent a good half by
value of the
creditors.
6 The plaintiff, which on the material before me is the sole
creditor opposing this course, is owed under a judgment debt some $113,000.
Its
solicitor says to the Court that there is not a discharge on the application of
the onus of showing that it is in the interests
of creditors that the
adjournment be granted. He says that the scheme remains nebulous. He says that
the promised payments are considerably
down the track and require borrowings by
Mr Sarris that are not yet assured. He says that the proposed scheme does not
provide for
the pursuit of a possible claim against Mr Rodney Adler, and he says
that the Petroulas claim could be pursued as well through a
liquidator being
funded by Mr Sarris or by creditors in some appropriate way. He says that, even
if Mr Sarris were not prepared
to fund a liquidator but only an administrator,
the liquidator could in due course after examination of the situation return the
company to administration on appropriate terms.
7 The authorities
concerning the proper basis for the exercise of the discretion to adjourn under
s 440A were gathered by me in my judgment in TCS Management v CTTI Solutions
Pty Ltd [2001] NSWSC 830. In that judgment at [18] I
said:
”What I derive from a consideration of the foregoing
authorities, as perhaps appears from my reflections during their recitation,
is
that it is dangerous, as in so many cases, to place any gloss upon the statute.
The sole consideration posited as the criterion
for the Court's decision in s
440A(2) is the interests of the company's creditors. It is clear that the onus
is on the person seeking the adjournment to establish to
the satisfaction of the
Court that the adjournment is in the interests of those creditors. In general
terms, that will be difficult
to do unless there is a good case that there will
be a greater or more accelerated return from the course contended for. But
considerations
beyond mere quantum may be relevant to take into account in
determining what is in the interests of the creditors and whether it
is
established that an adjournment may be said to be in the creditors' interests.
Where there are advantages in either course, in
general terms it may well be the
proper course to give such adjournment as will allow the creditors themselves to
vote upon the proposal
and determine which course they prefer.”
8 I
refer in particular also to the decision of Santow J in Waste Recycling and
Processing Services of NSW v Local Government Recycling Co Pty Ltd [1999] NSWSC 507; (1999) 32
ACSR 194 and Deputy Commissioner of Taxation: In the Matter of First Netcom
Pty Limited [2000] NSWSC 989, where his Honour referred to what he described
as "an intermediate case", where a short adjournment of the winding up
application
is indicated as being in the interests of the creditors to permit
further investigation of a proposed DCA, and of the affairs of
the company
generally, so that where there is a deal to be said in favour of each of the
alternatives of winding up and proceeding
by administration the decision can be
made by the creditors, who are, of course, the persons most
affected.
9 There are two factual matters that I should add. The first
is that in view of the fact that the company is no longer trading, there
appears
to be no public interest against a short adjournment. Secondly, certainly by
reason of the shortness of the adjournment
now sought, any possible claim of a
person against Rodney Adler is in no way prejudiced.
10 The conclusion
that I have come to is that this is one of the intermediate cases referred to.
The evidence seems clear that, if
the matter proceed by way of liquidation,
there will be no return to the creditors, unless there is recovery of moneys by
litigation.
It is certainly not clear at the moment that there is anyone
willing to finance litigation against either Mr Petroulas and his interests
or
against Mr Adler if the company is in liquidation. The promise of $450,000 plus
expenses in due course, together with a further
offer of funding the litigation
against the Petroulas interests, is something which may well be deemed to be in
the interests of
creditors if satisfactorily incorporated in a DCA. Whilst the
submissions which Mr McCrostie has put to me for the plaintiff are
not without
force, the course I propose to follow is to adjourn the winding up proceedings
to a day a short time after 20 June 2002
to permit the proposed DCA to be
considered by a creditors' meeting on that day.
11 There will be orders
in accordance with short minutes initialled by me.
**********
LAST UPDATED: 09/09/2002
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