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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 29 September 2016
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
CIV-2016-404-711 [2016] NZHC 2211
UNDER
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the Companies Act 1993, section 241
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IN THE MATTER OF
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an application for the liquidation of
WINSTON HOME STAGING LIMITED
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BETWEEN
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LESLIE ROSS CRUMMER Plaintiff
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AND
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WINSTON HOME STAGING LIMITED Defendant
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Hearing:
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19 September 2016
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Appearances:
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P F Chambers for the Plaintiff
D J Clark and S Fletcher for the Defendant
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Judgment:
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19 September 2016
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ORAL JUDGMENT OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE R M
BELL
Solicitors:
Henley-Smith Law, Glen Eden, Auckland, for the Plaintiff
Wilson McKay (D Clark) Auckland, for the Defendant
Copy for:
Paul F Chambers, Auckland, for the Plaintiff
CRUMMER v WINSTON HOME STAGING LIMITED [2016] NZHC 2211 [19 September
2016]
[1] Mr Crummer applies under s 241 of the Companies Act 1993 for an order that Winston Home Staging Ltd be put into liquidation. He says that he is a creditor of the company for $6,576.82 for an unpaid invoice for moving furniture, and also for other fees and expenses arising from that. A statutory demand for that amount was served on the registered office of Winston Home Staging Ltd on 10 February
2016. The company did not comply with the demand within 15 working days of
service and did not apply to set aside the statutory
demand under s 290 of the
Companies Act. Mr Crummer began the liquidation application on 11 April 2016.
He relies on the presumption
of insolvency under s 287(a) of the Companies
Act.
[2] On creditors’ applications for liquidation relying on
inability to pay debts, three questions usually come up:
(a) Is the plaintiff a creditor? (b) Is the defendant insolvent?
(c) How should the court exercise its residual discretion?
[3] There are two main questions in this case. First,
whether the statutory demand was served in accordance with
s 387 of the
Companies Act and, second, is there a genuine and substantial dispute as to the
debt claimed by Mr Crummer? Winston
Home Staging Ltd also contests insolvency.
It does that by contesting the service of the statutory demand but says that in
any event
it is solvent.
[4] As its name suggests, the company carries on a home staging business. For that it requires its furniture to be moved from its warehouse to houses where the furniture is used to assist in selling properties. Ms Liang Huang, the company’s director, says that Mr Crummer quoted her $750.00 to move furniture from six houses to the company’s warehouse. Mr Crummer then charged her more than he had quoted, after he had moved furniture from only five of the houses. The sixth delivery was never completed. When the dispute erupted, Mr Crummer took the
furniture he had moved and, according to Ms Huang, other furniture which he had not moved, from her warehouse. He has put them into alternative storage. She alleges that Mr Crummer is holding furniture in storage to a value of some estimated
$50,000. Mr Clark says that her business has come to a standstill with the
removal of the furniture.
[5] Ms Huang has attached to her affidavit texts that between
her and
Mr Crummer about this matter. One of Ms Huang’s texts
says:
The original agreement was $750.00. You not even finished the whole job. In
the middle of the day you stolen my furniture and ask
for money when I was not
at my warehouse. In front of the police you ask for $2,250. Now youre asking
for $5,000. You are criminal.
[6] One of Mr Crummer’s replies says this:
very good. but you have 30 days in which to come up with the full amount
otherwise the furniture is legally mine to do whatever I
want with it.
It’s called workers lean [sic]. luv u.
[7] The debt that Mr Crummer has claimed includes a charge of $4,617.82
for moving the furniture. He has also included charges
for storing the
furniture. On top of that he has included a bill from his lawyer for $1,750.00
including GST. I was advised that
Mr Crummer had instructed his lawyer when Ms
Huang complained to the Police about him taking the company’s furniture.
I can
understand Ms Huang making that complaint, if she is correct that Mr
Crummer took not only the furniture he had moved but also other
furniture. Mr
Crummer may have a lien over the furniture he has moved for the amount of unpaid
freight but he does not have any
right to take other belongings of Winston Home
Staging Ltd.
[8] Winston Home Staging Ltd brought a claim in the Disputes Tribunal
to try to get the matter resolved. The Disputes Tribunal
declined jurisdiction
because the value of the furniture held by Mr Crummer was more than
the Tribunal’s jurisdiction.
Winston Home Staging Ltd has now started a
proceeding in the District Court seeking recovery of the furniture.
[9] I am satisfied that Mr Crummer has proved service of the statutory demand. The person who served the statutory demand has deposed that she went to the
registered office of Winston Home Staging Ltd, apparently a residential
address. After knocking at the door and receiving no response,
she left the
statutory demand in a courier box inside the front door alcove. There is no
dispute that the place where she served
the statutory demand is the registered
office of the company. By leaving the statutory demand at the registered office
of the company
she served it in accordance with s 387(1)(c) of the Companies
Act. Ms Huang says that she did not become aware of the statutory
demand until
she saw it attached to a counterclaim document which Mr Crummer filed in the
Disputes Tribunal. Her evidence does not
go any further than that. Her
evidence does not show that the document was not validly served. I
accordingly find that the
statutory demand has been properly
served.
[10] The effect of non-compliance with a statutory demand and the absence
of any application to set aside the statutory demand
is that there is a
presumption that the company is unable to pay its debts. It does no more than
that. In a liquidation application
the company is entitled to adduce evidence
to rebut the presumption of insolvency, and it may resist the application for
liquidation
on all other grounds, including disputing the debt.
[11] It is well established that when a debt is subject to a bona fide
dispute then the court may not make a liquidation
order. In Yan v
Mainzeal Property and Construction Ltd the Court of Appeal
said:1
[61] It has long been established that, as a general rule, an order to
put a company into liquidation will not be made where
the application is founded
upon a debt that is genuinely disputed. To apply to wind up a company in such
circumstances is regarded
as an abuse of the court’s process: Bateman
Television Ltd (in liq) v Coleridge Finance Co Ltd. In such cases, the
court has an inherent jurisdiction to prevent such an abuse of process. But
the court also has power to consider
disputed debts in the context of an opposed
application for liquidation or upon applications for orders restraining
advertising and
staying proceedings. The relevant principles were recently
summarised by Associate Judge Faire (now Faire J) in South Waikato
Precision Engineering Ltd v Ahu Developments Ltd in these terms:
(a) A winding up order will not be made where there is a genuine and
substantial dispute as to the existence of a debt such
that it would be an abuse
of the process of the Court to order a winding up;
(b) In such circumstances,
the dispute, if genuine and substantially disputed, should be resolved
through action commenced
in the ordinary way and not in the Companies
Court;
(c) The assessment of whether there is a genuine and substantial
dispute is made on the material before the Court at the time
and not on the
hypothesis that some other material, which has not been produced might,
nonetheless be available.
(d) The governing consideration is whether proceeding with
an application savours of unfairness or undue pressure.
[12] An exception to that is under s 288(5) of the Companies Act. A
creditor, whose debt is disputed, may bring a proceeding
within that section if
they can show that they are a prospective or contingent creditor, and that there
is a prima facie case for
the company being insolvent. That, of course, cannot
be proved by service of a statutory demand. The court needs to give leave.
Mr
Crummer has not tried to bring himself within s 288(5). Accordingly, the
question is whether the debts in the application are
subject to a genuine
dispute.
[13] I am satisfied that there are arguable grounds for dispute in this
case. I bear in mind that the amounts in issue are small.
The parties have,
understandably, been economic in their evidence. It is obviously sensible for
both sides not to go to inordinate
efforts in their evidence.
[14] Now for the arguable grounds for dispute.
[15] Ms Huang maintains that she was quoted $750.00 for moving the
furniture. Mr Crummer has not contested that. As I understand
his case, he says
that he is entitled to charge more than the quoted price. His argument seems
to involve the proposition that,
if he has not been paid the price in full, then
he is no longer to be held to his original quote and may charge at his ordinary
charge-out
rate. That seems to me to be an unusual proposition.
Ordinarily, the quoted price fixes the contractor’s expectation
interest and the contractor cannot demand more than his expectation interest in
any claim, even if there has been a breach of contract
by the other
side.
[16] The other basis for Mr Crummer’s increased charges seems to be
that he had
to do extra work beyond what he had quoted on. Seen in that light, this matter
becomes an argument by a contractor claiming extras. Such disputes often
arise in construction contracts. Invariably such matters
are unsuitable for a
merits determination in a liquidation application. Similarly, given the
court’s standard approach
of not trying to resolve actual conflicts
between the parties, I am unable to determine the reasonableness or otherwise of
the charges
of Mr Crummer. It is inappropriate that I should begin any such
enquiry.
[17] Ms Huang says that Mr Crummer did not complete the job
because he removed furniture from only five houses. That
is an arguable breach
of contract.
[18] Ms Huang says that Mr Crummer took not only the furniture he removed
but other furniture out of the company’s warehouse.
Under s 23 of the
Carriage of Goods Act 1979, carriers have liens for freight due for moving
goods. But that lien does not extend
to goods that the carrier has not
moved. To the extent that Mr Crummer has taken property which is not
subject to the
lien, there is an arguable claim against him for conversion and
detinue.
[19] Ms Huang says that the furniture Mr Crummer has taken is worth many
thousands of dollars. It seems likely that the value
of the furniture exceeds
the amount claimed by Mr Crummer. In that event, insolvency set-off under s 310
of the Companies Act may
apply. On liquidation the indebtedness of the company
will be set off against any liability of Mr Crummer to the company for his
conversion of the goods. When those matters are set off against each other so
as to form a single debt, it is likely that Mr Crummer
may owe the company more
than the company owes him. That position would mean that there was no net
indebtedness. When a creditor
applying for liquidation turns out not to be owed
any money on an insolvency set-off basis, there is no real reason for putting
the
company put into liquidation.
[20] Another matter for dispute is Mr Crummer’s claim for his legal costs. In some contracts, creditors specify that their customer must pay any legal costs incurred in collecting a debt. There is no written contract here and there is no basis for implying a contractual term that Winston Home Staging Ltd should pay Mr Crummer any legal costs he incurs in collecting the debt. It may happen that if a liquidation application is successful the court will order costs. That liability only
arises when the court pronounces the order. It does not arise earlier. The
claim for legal fees here is for giving legal advice
to deal with a complaint by
Winston Home Staging Ltd to the Police. That does not create any liability on
Winston Home Staging
Ltd to pay Mr Crummer’s legal costs when dealing with
enquiries made by the Police. That part of the debt is also subject to
a genuine
dispute.
[21] Overall, I am satisfied that because the indebtedness claimed by Mr
Crummer is subject to a genuine dispute, in terms of
the principles reaffirmed
by the Court of Appeal in Yan v Mainzeal,2 Winston Home
Staging Ltd has a sound defence to this liquidation application.
[22] I do not need to deal with the insolvency defence. Winston Home
Staging Ltd has started proceedings in the District Court.
That is the
appropriate court in which to determine the differences between the parties. I
am in no position to judge the merits
of the dispute between them.
[23] I dismiss the liquidation application and order Mr Crummer to pay
costs to Winston Home Staging Ltd. The costs will be on
a category 2B basis.
If the parties cannot agree costs, memoranda may be
filed.
.......................................
Associate Judge R M Bell
2 Yan v Mainzeal, above n 1.
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