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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 22 March 2016
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND DUNEDIN REGISTRY
CIV-2016-412-000030 [2016] NZHC 420
BETWEEN
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VINE-TECH CONTRACTING LIMITED
Plaintiff
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AND
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SOUTH RIVER LIMITED Defendant
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Appearances:
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N Graham for Plaintiff
No appearance for Defendant
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Ruling:
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11 March 2016
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(Determined on the papers)
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RULING OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE OSBORNE
as to proper registry
[1] Documents which an intending plaintiff (Vine-tech) has submitted
for filing in the Dunedin Registry give rise to an issue
as to the proper
registry for the intended proceeding.
The intended proceeding
[2] Vine-tech claims to be a creditor of the intended defendant (South River). [3] South River has its registered office at Albany.
[4] Vine-tech served a notice under s 289 of the Companies Act 1993 upon South
River in December 2015. In the intended proceeding, Vine-tech would seek an
order placing South River in liquidation.
VINE-TECH CONTRACTING LIMITED v SOUTH RIVER LIMITED [2016] NZHC 420 [11 March 2016]
The Registry
[5] Vine-tech’s solicitors sought to file the documents in the
intended proceeding
(the documents) in the Dunedin Registry.
[6] They did so upon the basis that South River operates a
vineyard at its principal place of business in Tarras,
Otago.
[7] When the documents were received at the registry, the Deputy
Registrar returned them to Vine-tech’s solicitors.
He explained that r
31.4(1) High Court Rules applies to the intended proceeding. For Vine-tech, Mr
Graham now requests that a Judge
rule as to the registry in which the documents
may be filed.
The High Court Rules
[8] Part 31 of the High Court Rules deals with applications to the High
Court to put companies into liquidation.1 The High Court Rules
generally continue to apply to liquidation applications except to the extent
that the general rules are modified
by or inconsistent with Part
31.2
[9] Rule 31.4 High Court Rules identifies the proper registry of the
Court for the filing of a liquidation application. It
provides:
31.4 Proper registry of court
(1) Despite rules 5.1(1) to (3) and 5.25, the proper registry of the
court for the purposes of the filing of a statement
of claim under rule 31.3
is—
(a) the registry of the court in the town where, or the registry of
the court in the town nearest to which, the defendant company's
registered
office is situated; or
(b) if the defendant company does not have a registered office, the
registry of the court in the town where, or the registry
of the court in the
town nearest to which, the defendant company's principal or last known place of
business is or was situated.
(2) This rule does not limit rule 5.1(4) and (5).
1 High Court Rules, r 31.1(1).
[10] The effect of r 31.4 is clear. Liquidation applications are to be
filed in the registry in the town at or nearest
to which the
defendant’s registered office is situated.
[11] By the express exclusion of the operation of rr 5.1(1) –
(3), the r 31.4 provisions displace the usual provisions
as to proper registry
which apply to other proceedings (and which are based on place of residence or
principal place of business).
Application of rules in this case
[12] The application of r 31.4 to this case is straightforward. The
registered office of South River is at Albany. The registry
of this Court at
Auckland is, by the provisions of r 31.4, the proper registry for the
purposes of the liquidation application.
It is irrelevant that South River
has its principal place of business in Otago.
Transfer to a different registry?
[13] Faced with the Deputy Registrar’s decision, Mr Graham suggests
that the Court might accept the documents for filing
in the Dunedin Registry
pursuant to r 5.1(5) High Court Rules.
[14] Rule 5.1(5) has express application to liquidation
proceedings.3
[15] Rule 5.1(5) provides:
5.1 Identification of proper registry
...
(5) If it appears to a Judge, on application made, that a different
registry of the court would be more convenient to the parties,
he or she may
direct that the statement of claim or all documents be transferred to that
registry and that registry becomes the proper
registry.
[16] Rule 5.1(5) cannot be applied in the present circumstances. The rule assumes that a proceeding has been filed in its proper registry. It permits transfer thereafter
on the basis of convenience to the parties. It is a step which may be
entertained when the proceeding has been commenced and the
convenience of all
parties can be considered. It is not available to the plaintiff before the
proceeding is commenced.
[17] I refrain from expressing a concluded view as to the circumstances
in which a change of registry would be ordered on a liquidation
proceeding.
There are considerations in liquidation proceedings which go beyond the
interests of the two entities which are the
actual parties to the proceeding.
The right of creditors and other entities to enter appearances both in support
and in opposition
raise issues of access to the court for those other entities.
It may be anticipated that a transfer of registry for a liquidation
proceeding
is more likely to occur for the purposes of hearings rather than all documents
on the file, so that (for instance) persons
may continue to file documents in
the court registry nearest to the company’s registered office.
[18] In the event, these are matters for consideration at a later date
should one or other of the parties pursue an order under
r 5.1(5).
Have the documents been “filed”?
[19] Mr Graham makes a final submission to the effect that the documents
in the liquidation proceeding have already been filed
because they were received
by the Court with a cheque for the appropriate fee attached. Mr Graham refers
to the decision in Watson v Attorney-General.4
[20] In Watson, one issue was whether the plaintiff had commenced an application for judicial review within three months of a decision of the Quota Appeal Authority delivered on 28 April 1993. The evidence was that the plaintiff ’s judicial review documents had been lodged at the High Court Registry at Auckland on 28 July 1993
with the $100 filing fee also paid on that
date.
4 Watson v Attorney-General HC Auckland M 1137/93, 29 November 2000.
[21] The defendants argued that the documents had not been filed in the
proper form until after the expiry of the three-month
time limit because the
Court had not signed the notice of proceeding until 2 August 1993.
[22] Morris J held:
[17] In my view, however, the fact the court did not sign the Notice of
Proceeding until 2 August 1993 is irrelevant in determining
the date at which
the documents were lodged. It is very clear r 3 envisages as soon as the
document(s) are received by the proper
office of the court together with the
appropriate fee they are lodged and proceedings are commenced. This procedure
provides certainty.
[23] The point raised by Mr Graham in this proceeding turns on the
definition of
“to file” under r 1.3(1) High Court Rules.
[24] Rule 1.3(1) provides:
1.3 Interpretation
(1) In these rules, unless the context otherwise
requires,—
to file, in relation to any document, means to lodge the document in
the form required by these rules in, or to send it by post
or
electronically in accordance with these rules to, the proper registry of the
court, together with the fee (if any) payable
for filing it
[25] Mr Graham’s submission that Vine-tech’s documents have
already been filed is plainly untenable given the
terms of the
definition. The documents were submitted to the registry at Dunedin which,
for the reasons I have found, is
not the proper registry. The decision in
Watson v Attorney-General has no application – in that case the
documents had been properly filed.
Impact of incorrect filing
[26] I am aware from the correspondence between Mr Graham and the Deputy Registrar that, through the time taken over the attempted filing of Vine-tech’s documents, Vine-tech will no longer be able to rely upon the presumption of insolvency arising from its unmet statutory demand. Vine-tech, if it wishes to rely on a statutory presumption of insolvency, will be faced with issuing a fresh statutory
demand. The Court cannot alleviate that position. The Deputy Registrar acted
correctly in rejecting the documents.
Ruling
[27] I direct that:
(a) the statement of claim, notice of proceeding and associated
affidavits in which Vine-tech Contracting Limited is identified
as plaintiff and
South River Limited identified as defendant, have not been filed in the High
Court; and
(b) the proper registry for such documents is the Auckland
Registry.
Associate Judge Osborne
Solicitors:
Goldsmith Law, Dunedin
Counsel: A Pinnock, Barrister, Dunedin
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