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[2011] NSWSC 1378
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In the matter of Bevillesta Pty Limited [2011] NSWSC 1378 (16 November 2011)
Last Updated: 22 November 2011
Case Title:
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In the matter of Bevillesta Pty Limited
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity Division - Corporations
List
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Before:
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Decision:
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1. Order that the interlocutory process of Top Ryde
Funding Pty Ltd filed on 14 October 2011 be dismissed. 2. Grant leave to
Dana Terese Rahme to file a notice of motion seeking leave to amend in
conformity with the reasons published by
me on 16 November 2011. 3. Direct
that any such notice of motion be filed and served not later than 23 November
2011 and be returnable before me at 9.30am
on 30 November 2011. 4. Direct
that the question of costs in relation to the interlocutory process of Top Ryde
Funding Pty Ltd be listed before me for
oral argument not exceeding fifteen
minutes at 9.30am on 30 November 2011.
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Catchwords:
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PROCEDURE - form of initiating process -
"creditors' trust" created by deed of company arrangement - trust deed creates
procedure
for proof of debts to establish status as beneficiary - various
provisions of corporations legislation "incorporated into" trust
deed by
reference - person dissatisfied with rejection of proof by trustees files
interlocutory process in proceeding in which voluntary
administrators obtained
directions as to establishment of creditors trust - "funder" of trust maintains
that the person's application
is a nullity because (a) filed in completed or
spent proceeding (b) embodied in interlocutory process that can only be used to
make
an application under Corporations Act and (c) a trust instrument cannot
confer jurisdiction on the court - "funder's" objections
well taken but do not
lead to finding of nullity - the situation is one of irregularity under Civil
Procedure Act s 63 amenable to
amendment under s 64.
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Legislation Cited:
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Civil Procedure Act 2005, ss 58, 63,
64. Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), Part 5.3A, s 439A, s 1321.Corporations
Regulations 2001 (Cth), reg 5.6.54(2). Supreme Court (Corporations) Rules
1999, rule 2.2, Form2, Form 3. Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005, rules 6.2,
6.3, 6.4, 13.4, 14.28.
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Interlocutory applications
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Parties:
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Martin John Green and Peter Paul Krejci as Voluntary
Administrators of Bevillesta Pty Limited - Plaintiffs Top Ryde Funding Pty
Limited - Applicant Dana Terese Rahme - Respondent
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Representation
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Mr F Kunc SC - Applicant Mr G D McDonald -
Respondent
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- Solicitors:
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Middletons - Applicant Solon Lawyers -
Respondent
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT
- Proceedings
2011/00099655 were commenced by an originating process filed on 28 March 2011 by
Mr Green and Mr Krejci, who were then
the administrators in the voluntary
administration of Bevillesta Pty Ltd under Part 5.3A of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth).
- Mr
Green and Mr Krejci sought certain orders and directions concerning procedures
by which they might put before creditors for decision
a proposal for the
adoption of a deed of company arrangement which, in turn, would cause to be
created a so-called "creditors' trust".
- The
proceedings were heard and determined by Bergin CJ in Eq who, on 10 June 2011,
delivered reasons for making orders generally as
sought by the voluntary
administrators: Re Bevillesta Pty Ltd [2011] NSWSC 417; (2011) 84 ACSR
215.
- Thereafter,
Mr Green and Mr Krejci proceeded to place before creditors at the s 439A meeting
in the Part 5.3A administration of Bevillesta a report previously circulated;
and the creditors, for their part, resolved that Bevellista should execute
a
deed of company arrangement.
- The
deed of company arrangement was duly executed. It is dated 8 July 2011. The
parties are Bevillesta, Mr Green and Mr Krejci and
Top Ryde Funding Pty Ltd
(referred to as the "Funder"). The deed of company arrangement contemplated the
execution of a trust deed
in a form annexed to the deed of company arrangement.
By force of the deed of company arrangement (and upon execution of the trust
deed), Bevellista was to be released from all claims of creditors and those
creditors were to become beneficiaries under the trust
deed.
- The
trust deed was also executed on 8 July 2011. Its parties are the Funder, Mr
Green and Mr Krejci as the administrators of the deed
of company arrangement and
Mr Green and Mr Krejci as trustees of the trusts of the trust deed itself.
- Upon
execution of the trust deed, three things of significance happened:
(a) the claims of persons who were creditors of Bevellista in respect of
matters predating 16 February 2011 were, by force of the
deed of company
arrangement provisions, released and barred;
(b) the persons with such claims became entitled to seek to come in as
beneficiaries of the trusts of the trust deed with respect
to a trust fund
thereby constituted, which trust fund was made up principally of money provided
by the Funder; and
(c) the deed of company arrangement then terminated, leaving the former
creditors of Bevellista with such rights as accrued to them
by virtue of the
trust deed.
- The
property the subject of the trusts of the trust deed is a fund of money. The
trustees declare that they hold the fund on trust
for "the Deed Administrators
and the Admitted Beneficiaries". The term "Admitted Beneficiaries" is defined as
follows:
" Admitted Beneficiary means any Trust Beneficiary whose Trust Claim
is accepted fully, partially or contingently by the Trustees in accordance with
this
Deed or is the subject of a decision by the Court pursuant to clause 9.3 of
this Deed (to the extent the Court orders that the Trust
Claim ought to be
admitted to proof by the Trustees) and remains owing as at the date the Interim
Dividend and the Final Dividend
are paid."
- "Trust
Beneficiary" is defined in this way:
" Trust Beneficiary means a person who has a Trust Claim or claims to
have a Trust Claim."
- A
"Trust Claim" means a claim that a former creditor of Bevillesta has under the
deed.
- The
deed contains detailed provisions for establishing matters relevant to the
question whether a person is entitled to be recognised
as an "Admitted
Beneficiary" and, if so, in what amount. Those provisions draw heavily on
Corporations Act procedures with respect to the proof of debts in the
winding up of a company. The process is conceptually and procedurally similar
to
the proof of debt process (with the trustees under the trust deed playing a
decision-making role generally equivalent to that
of a liquidator). Numerous
provisions of the Corporations Act and Corporations Regulations
are said by the trust deed to be "incorporated into" the trust deed "as if
they were fully set out herein" and as if certain substitutions
of wording were
made (for example, for "liquidator" substitute "trustees").
- The
foregoing is by way of perhaps over-long introduction to the matter immediately
at hand. On 6 October 2011, Dana Terese Rahme
filed an interlocutory process in
proceedings 2011/00099655, that is, the proceedings that resulted in the orders
made by Bergin
CJ in Eq consequent upon her Honour's decision of 10 June 2011.
By her interlocutory process, Mrs Rahme purported to make an application
under
regulation 5.6.54(2) of the Corporations Regulations and s 1321 of the
Corporations Act . She sought two orders as follows:
"1. An Order that the applicant's Proof of Debt, dated 4 August 2011 in the
amount of $922,231.01 be admitted in full, or such part
as the Court determines,
by the Defendants as the Trustees of the Creditors Trust of Bevillesta Pty
Limited.
2. An Order that the applicant's Proof of Debt, dated 4 August 2011 in the
amount of $1,598,417/38 be admitted in full, or such part
as the Court
determines, by the Defendants as the Trustees of the Creditors Trust of
Bevillesta Pty Limited."
- Thereafter,
on 14 October 2011, the Funder filed an interlocutory process in proceedings
2011/00099655 seeking an order under rule 13.4 of the Uniform Civil Procedure
Rules 2005 that Mrs Rahme's interlocutory process of 6 October 2011 be
dismissed. There is an alternative claim under rule 14.28 that the interlocutory
process be struck out. The Funder's contention is thus that Mrs Rahme's
application discloses no reasonable
cause of action or is an abuse of process.
- The
claims in Mrs Rahme's interlocutory process are claims against the trustees. No
issue was raised as to the standing of the Funder
to seek to intervene, as it
has by its own interlocutory process, in a matter that appears to be one between
Mrs Rahme and the trustees
only.
- In
order to understand the case the Funder seeks to make, it is necessary to refer
to clauses 9.1 and 9.2 of the trust deed, which
are as follows:
" 9.1 Admissibility and adjudication of Trust Claims
(a) Upon termination of the DOCA all Claims of Creditors against the Company
shall extinguish and shall become Trust Claims against
the Trust Fund pursuant
to this Deed.
(b) The Trustees shall call for formal proofs of debt in support of any Trust
Claims from Trust Beneficiaries pursuant to those parts
of the Corporations Act
and Corporations Regulations incorporated into this Deed by clause 9.2 of this
Deed for the purpose of deciding whether to admit that Trust Claim pursuant to
this Deed as an Admitted Claim.
(c) Interest shall not accrue or be payable on any Trust Claim from the
Appointment Date.
(d) A Trust Beneficiary has 21 days from being notified of the Trustees'
decision under clause 9.1(b) of this Deed to file with the
Court and serve on
the Trustees any appeal or other application in relation to the Trustees'
decision. The Trustees will not pay
a Final Dividend until the Court appeal or
application has been determined.
(e) Only Admitted Beneficiaries are entitled to participate in any interim
Dividend or Final Dividend and the Trustee shall reject
any proof of debt for a
Trust Claim which is not an Admissible Proof or to which clause 9.6 of this Deed
applies and shall ignore
that Trust Claim for the purposes of calculating the
value of the Admitted Claims and the amount of the Interim Dividend or Final
Dividend.
(f) The rights of the Admitted Beneficiaries are limited to the Trust Fund.
Application of the Corporation Act
Section 544 and Subdivisions A, B, C, D and E (other than sections 563B and
564) of Division 6 of Part 5.6 of the Corporations Act, Corporations Regulations
5.6.37 and 5.6.39 to 5.6.72 (inclusive and other than Corporations Regulations
5.6.43A, 5.6.54 and 5.6.70A) of the Corporations Regulations are incorporated
into this Deed and the Trustees and Trust Claims under this Deed, as if they
were fully set out herein and as if:
(a) references to the liquidator were references to the Trustees;
(b) references to winding up were references to the operation and performance
of this Deed;
(c) references to creditor were references to Trust Beneficiary; and
(d) references to the court were references to Court as defined in this
Deed."
- The
Funder maintains that Mrs Rahme was notified of the trustees' decision in
respect of her two proofs of debt (a decision, in each
case, to reject the
proof) by a letter dated 15 September 2011 addressed to Mrs Rahme care of her
solicitors (there does not appear
to be any evidence of how the letter was
communicated or when it reached its addressee); that she had, in terms of clause
9.1(d),
twenty-one days after being so notified in which to "file with the Court
and serve on the Trustees any appeal or other application
in relation to the
Trustees' decision"; that her application filed on 6 October 2011 does not
answer the description "any appeal
or other application in relation to the
Trustees' decision"; and that any step Mrs Rahme now takes to file and serve an
application
will be outside the time allowed by clause 9.1(d).
- The
Funder does not say that Mrs Rahme did not act within the specified twenty-one
day period. Rather, the Funder argues, the steps
that Mrs Rahme did take -
filing and service of the interlocutory process of 6 October 2011 - were beset
by defects of a fatal kind
such that Mrs Rahme cannot be regarded as having
initiated an "appeal or other application in relation to" the trustees'
decisions
to reject the two proofs of debt.
- The
first point the Funder makes is that the proceedings 2011/00099655 had been
completed and were, as it were, "spent" following
the making by Bergin CJ in Eq
of orders in consequence of the reasons of 10 June 2011. On that basis, it is
said, those proceedings
were not in existence as a context in which or platform
from which Mrs Rahme's application could be launched; and the only course
procedurally available to her was to commence a new proceeding by some
appropriate initiating process.
- Second
and in the same vein, it is said by the Funder that an interlocutory process in
Form 3 under the Supreme Court (Corporations) Rules 1999 - the document
Mrs Rahme used - is (and an originating process in Form 2 would be) an
impermissible vehicle for advancing an "appeal
or other application" as
envisaged by clause 9.1(d) of the trust deed. This is because an interlocutory
process (like an originating
process) can, under rule, 2.2, only be used for "an
application required or permitted by the Corporations Act to be made to
the Court" and, by no stretch of the imagination, is a clause 9.1(d) "appeal or
other application" one "required or
permitted" by the Corporations Act .
- Third,
the Funder says that it is a fundamental misconception to think that clause 9.2
invests the court with jurisdiction. The most
it does is to cause various forms
of words drawn from the Corporations Act and the Corporations
Regulations to be treated, under the trust deed, as if they were actually
set out in it; and if those words, as notionally contained in the trust
deed,
purport to create jurisdiction in the court, they are attempting to do something
that the provisions of a trust instrument
simply cannot do and are for that
reason inoperative and superfluous.
- There
is clear merit in all these contentions advanced by the Funder. A trust
instrument obviously cannot give powers to the court.
The court can adjudicate
disputes between a trustee and a beneficiary (or a person claiming to be a
beneficiary or to be entitled
to be regarded as a beneficiary) in exercise of
its general equitable jurisdiction. A claim by a beneficiary (or a person
claiming
to be a beneficiary or to be entitled to be regarded as a beneficiary)
to an interest in a particular trust fund is plainly not a
claim under the
Corporations Act or the Corporations Regulations . And such a
claim plainly does not arise as part of or as a necessary incident of a
proceeding in which the court has determined
claims for relief by a company's
Part 5.3A administrators seeking the court's guidance as to materials they
should place before the company's creditors for the purpose of their
decision-making at a meeting.
- The
consequence, the Funder says, is that Mrs Rahme's interlocutory process of 6
October 2011 is a nullity. She should have filed
a statement of claim or summons
( Uniform Civil Procedure Rules , rules 6.2, 6.3 and 6.4) not referring
to any corporations legislation and seeking some declaratory or other
appropriate relief calculated to establish the
entitlement that the trustees'
letter of 15 September 2011 did not admit. Furthermore, the Funder maintains, it
is now too late for
Mrs Rahme to retrieve the position - either by filing some
new initiating process or by seeking to amend her interlocutory process
- since
neither of those courses would cause her "appeal or other application in
relation to" the trustees' decision to be filed
and served within the specified
period of twenty-one days.
- I
disagree. The orders Mrs Rahme seeks are intelligible, given the provisions of
the trust deed that adopt, even by importing the
words of legislative
provisions, a system of proof of debts to establish the identities and interests
of persons who are to participate
in the trust fund as beneficiaries. It is true
that the definition of "Admitted Beneficiary" refers to "a decision by the Court
pursuant
to clause 9.3 of this Deed" ("Court" being defined as any court having
jurisdiction to determine matters under both the Corporations Act and the
Trustee Act 1925, as this court does), but that does not mean that the
deed makes an ineffective attempt to vest jurisdiction in the court. The clause
itself makes it tolerably clear that the application on which such a decision of
the court would be made is an application brought
in the court's general
non-statutory jurisdiction. Each order actually sought by Mrs Rahme, if made,
would be, I suppose, in the
nature of a mandatory injunction and, while that is
probably not the ideal remedy in a case where a person claims recognition as
a
beneficiary by a trustee holding a fund upon trust for a person's creditors
(see, for example, Wain v The Earl of Egmont [1834] EngR 605; (1834) 3 My & K 445; 40
ER 170), the intent is sufficiently clear.
- Section
63 of the Civil Procedure Act is in these terms:
(1) This section applies to proceedings in connection with which there is, by
reason of anything done or omitted to be done, a failure
to comply with any
requirement of this Act or of rules of court, whether in respect of time, place,
manner, form or content or in
any other respect.
(2) Such a failure:
(a) is to be treated as an irregularity, and
(b) subject to subsection (3), does not invalidate the proceedings, any step
taken in the proceedings or any document, judgment or
order in the proceedings.
(3) The court may do either or both of the following in respect of
proceedings the subject of a failure referred to in subsection
(1):
(a) it may, by order, set aside the proceedings, any step taken in the
proceedings or any document, judgment or order in the proceedings,
either wholly
or in part,
(b) it may exercise its powers to allow amendments and to make orders dealing
with the proceedings generally.
(4) The court may not take action of the kind referred to in subsection
(3)(a) on the application of any party unless the application
is made within a
reasonable time and, in any case, before the party takes any fresh step in the
proceedings after becoming aware
of the failure."
- Mrs
Rahme's interlocutory process was not properly or appropriately filed "in" the
"proceedings" commenced by the originating process
of Mr Green and Mr Krejci
upon which Bergin CJ in Eq made orders in June 2011. But that interlocutory
process itself embodies or
initiates "proceedings" in its own right, being
proceedings between Mrs Rahme and the trustees. In Harkness v Bell's Asbestos
and Engineering Ltd [1967] 2 QB 729, Lord Denning MR said at 735, in
relation to an English rule of court relevantly indistinguishable from s 63:
"This rule should be construed widely and generously to give effect to its
manifest intentions. I think that any application to the
court, however
informal, is a 'proceeding'. There were 'proceedings' in being at the very
moment that the plaintiff made his affidavit
and his solicitor lodged it with
the registrar ."
- That
is the position in this case also. As in Australian Coastal Shipping
Commission v Curtis Cruising Pty Ltd (1989) 17 NSWLR 734 (at 753), the steps
Mrs Rahme took of filing the interlocutory process and serving it on the
trustees were steps by which she began
proceedings against the trustees.
- There
was, in respect of those proceedings, a failure to comply with the rules of
court (rules 6.2, 6.3 and 6.4 as to the appropriate form of initiating process).
Bearing in mind what I have said about the relief actually claimed, that is a
failure "in respect of ... manner, form or content" or "in any other respect".
Section 63(2) therefore denies the invalidity for which the Funder contends -
subject, however, to the possibility that the court may, pursuant
to s 63(3)(a),
order that the proceedings or some step or document be set aside.
- There
is no application by the Funder for an order under s 63(2). Indeed, it would
have been inconsistent with the stance the Funder took (that Mrs Rahme's
interlocutory process is a nullity) to
seek an order setting it aside: a nullity
has no life or operation and is not susceptible to an order setting it aside or
affecting
it in any way (except an order bringing it to life). Nor, I might say,
would any order setting the interlocutory process aside have
been made, if
sought. No injustice could possibly have been occasioned to anyone by the use of
the wrong form of document.
- Under
s 64 of the Civil Procedure Act , the court may order, at any stage of
proceedings, that any document in the proceedings be amended. Because Mrs Rahme
has embarked
on new proceedings, it is open to the court to order that the
interlocutory process she has filed be amended. There is no apparent
reason why
it should not be amended by casting it as a summons or statement of claim
between Mrs Rahme as plaintiff and the trustees
as defendants, omitting all the
prefatory and formal matter referring to the Corporations Act and the
Corporations Regulations and then leaving intact the actual claims for
relief (but with "Applicant's" changed to "Plaintiff's") - and, if a summons is
used,
retaining the section immediately before the claims for relief, reading:
"On the facts stated in the supporting affidavit of Dana Terese Rahme dated 6
October 2011, the Applicant applies for:"
(but with "Applicant" amended to "Plaintiff").
- Under
s 58 of the Civil Procedure Act , the court, when faced with a decision
whether to make an order for the amendment of a document, must seek to act in
accordance with
the dictates of justice. In this case, the ends of justice would
be served by allowing a document conveying the relevant claims in
the
unambiguous terms in which they are now framed to continue in a surrounding
verbal context formulated in the procedurally correct
way. That conclusion is
made particularly apt by the fact that the trustees, in notifying Mrs Rahme of
the rejection of her claim,
saw fit to refer in their letter to various
provisions of the Corporations Regulations referring to proofs of debt in
a winding up.
- Because
the claims and their basis are clear and the several deficiencies identified by
the Funder can be remedied by amendment in
the way I have described, the case is
not one in which no reasonable cause of action is disclosed or there is abuse of
process. It
is true that the filing of an interlocutory process has involved a
filing fee less than that that would have been attracted by a
summons or
statement of claim, but that deficiency could be addressed by terms imposed as a
condition of any grant of leave to amend.
- I
have not so far mentioned that Mrs Rahme filed in court an amended interlocutory
process during the hearing of the Funder's application.
I need only say that
that document maintained the original claims set out at paragraph [9] above (as
well as advancing further claims)
but did not address fully the matters with
which I have dealt in these reasons.
- One
concluding comment is warranted. The trustees of a settlement of the kind under
discussion cannot necessarily proceed on the footing
that, just because the same
words are used (or imported), the processes the trust deed lays down are simply
a transplanted version
of statutory processes that apply to a winding up and
that it is simply a matter of following the same procedures under a different
enabling instrument. Their duties as trustees may create a need to consider
matters that would otherwise not arise for consideration.
In Whitmore v
Turquand [1860] EngR 1304; (1860) 1 J & H 444; 70 ER 821 (affirmed (1861) De G F &J
107; 45 ER 819), for example, Page Wood V-C, dealing with a trust for the
benefit of creditors and
the correct approach to provisions for the
establishment of creditors' debts and rights to participate, referred to the
duty of a
court of equity to prefer substance over form and sometimes to "act in
contradiction to the strict words of instruments of this kind";
see also the
like observations of the Vice-Chancellor in the earlier case of Raworth v
Parker [1855] EngR 929; (1855) 2 K&J 163; 69 ER 736.
- The
appropriate outcome is as follows:
1. Order that the interlocutory process of Top Ryde Funding Pty Ltd filed on
14 October 2011 be dismissed.
2. Grant leave to Dana Terese Rahme to file a notice of motion seeking leave
to amend in conformity with the reasons published by
me on 16 November 2011.
3. Direct that any such notice of motion be filed and served not later than
23 November 2011 and be returnable before me at 9.30am
on 30 November 2011.
4. Direct that the question of costs in relation to the interlocutory process
of Top Ryde Funding Pty Ltd be listed before me for
oral argument not exceeding
fifteen minutes at 9.30am on 30 November 2011.
**********
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