grounds 1 and 10 of the grounds of appeal
24 Ground 1 of the appeal makes a general complaint about lack of procedural fairness, and no specific complaint about the hearing before the primary judge is identified. However, in ground 10 of the appeal, Mr Blake specifically complains that the primary judge came to an early view and, therefore, denied him natural justice.
25 I will consider both of these grounds of appeal together. In order to do so, it is necessary to have some regard to the proceedings before the primary judge on 22 May 2014 and 27 May 2014 and his reasons for decision.
26 As mentioned, three affidavits were served on Mr Blake on the day before the hearing on 22 May 2014. These affidavits were made by Mr Jason Shane Cronan, the trustee in bankruptcy of the bankrupt estate of Mr Blake, Mr Paul Robinson, a manager of Lion Finance and Ms Alessandro Navarro, a solicitor employed by the solicitors for Lion Finance.
27 The affidavit of Mr Cronan gave evidence of the financial position of Mr Blake. Mr Cronan attached to his affidavit the statement of affairs which Mr Blake had completed and submitted to him. Mr Cronan also attached correspondence from the Bank of Western Australia Limited (BankWest) in relation to the monies owed by Mr Blake to BankWest. The correspondence revealed that Mr Blake owned two properties and that BankWest had mortgages over each of the properties which secured loans in the sum of $154,114.01 and $539,645.57 and that the loans were in arrears. The correspondence also revealed that Mr Blake had a debt of $4,235,000 to BankWest arising from his liability as a guarantor of the obligations to the bank of a company of which he was a director.
28 There was also attached to Mr Cronan's affidavit a proof of debt filed by the Australian Taxation Office in the sum of $1,118,302.83, in respect of unpaid income tax and director penalties in relation to three companies associated with Mr Blake.
29 Mr Cronan said that Mr Blake disclosed in his statement of affairs that his income consisted of wages in relation to part-time employment as a disc jockey/entertainer of approximately $18,200 per annum and rent in relation to each property estimated at $16,640 and $15,600 per annum.
30 Based on the information available to him, Mr Cronan had prepared a first report to creditors, which reported Mr Blake's position as follows:
Total assets - $764,000.44
Total liabilities - $7,233,287
Secured creditors - $723,855
Unsecured creditors - $6,509,402
Total deficiency of $6,469,243.
31 Mr Cronan deposed that he had received notification that Mr Blake had brought proceedings to challenge the tax debt. However, those proceedings had been stayed pursuant to s 60(2) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth).
32 The affidavit from Mr Robinson deposed to the circumstances of Mr Blake's liability to Lion Finance. Mr Robinson said that Lion Finance had taken an assignment of a credit card debt due by Mr Blake to GE Capital Finance Australia Limited, trading as GE Money.
33 The affidavit of Ms Navarro dealt with the question of the service of the bankruptcy proceedings on Mr Blake and correspondence with Mr Blake before the hearing of the application for the sequestration order before Registrar Baldwin.
34 As previously mentioned, at the hearing on 22 May 2014, the primary judge gave Mr Blake leave to file an affidavit dated 16 May 2104, and granted an adjournment until 27 May 2014 to give Mr Blake an opportunity to consider and respond to the affidavit material served on Mr Blake by Lion Finance. Mr Blake did not avail himself of that opportunity.
35 Accordingly, when the review application resumed before the primary judge on 27 May, the primary judge had before him the three affidavits filed by Lion Finance and Mr Blake's affidavit of 16 May 2014.
36 The content of Mr Blake's affidavit was not confined to evidence of facts, but included assertions and submissions. In his affidavit, Mr Blake sought to divide his debts into three categories, namely, disputed debts, debts associated with the companies with which he was associated and personal debts. The debts, which Mr Blake categorised as "personal debts" totalled, in his view, $812,142.29 and he said that he had in place a repayment programme with each of his personal creditors. The "disputed debts" totalled about $1,310,718 and included, inter alia, the debt of over $1 million due to the Australian Tax Office, and, curiously, the debt of $92,000 due to Mr Mann, the creditor who Mr Blake said would make an affidavit opposing the making of the sequestration order. The "company debts" totalled about $5,076,155 and included the $4,250,000 which Mr Blake, as a guarantor, owed to BankWest.
37 Ignoring the "disputed" and "company" debts, Mr Blake contended that the sequestration order made by Registrar Baldwin should be set aside so that he could trade his way out of his financial difficulties and repay his personal debts.
38 In rejecting Mr Blake's application for the adjournment, and in dismissing his review application, the primary judge had regard to Mr Blake's case for the setting aside of the sequestration order as set out in his affidavit of 16 May 2014, as well as the contentions which Mr Blake foreshadowed that he would make if given an opportunity to file his written submissions, and to Mr Blake's claim that he intended to file an affidavit from Mr Mann.
39 In summary, the primary judge found granting an adjournment would be futile because the evidence revealed that Mr Blake was hopelessly insolvent, that he had wilfully ignored debts in very large amounts in advancing his proposition that he would be able to trade his way out of his debts if his bankruptcy was set aside, and that, in the circumstances, that proposition was "fanciful". Also, the primary judge found that the objections which Mr Blake foreshadowed he would make in his proposed written submissions, were inconsequential. The primary judge also found, in effect, that the opposition of Mr Mann, a creditor for a relatively small amount who was prepared to wait for his money, would, in light of the overwhelming evidence of Mr Blake's hopelessly insolvent positon, and the support of other creditors for the sequestration order, make no difference to the outcome. Further, said the primary judge, Mr Blake had had sufficient opportunity to put forward his materials.
40 In his 21 November 2014 written submissions, Mr Blake contended that the primary judge was in error in not granting the adjournment which he sought at the hearing on 27 May 2014.
41 Further, in those submissions, Mr Blake complained that the primary judge's error was that he:
[F]ocused too much on my credit worthiness rather than the law of whether or not the imposition of a sequestration order by Registrar Baldwin was a true justifiable decision according to the entire case circumstances according to the Act.
42 Mr Blake also contended that the primary judge erred in concluding that his financial position was "tragic or hopeless" and that the primary judge ignored his evidence that he was able to trade his way out of his financial difficulties.
43 These errors by the primary judge, said Mr Blake, were indicative of the fact that he had already made up his mind at the hearing of 27 May 2014.
44 In my view, Mr Blake has not demonstrated any error on the part of the primary judge, nor that the primary judge had made up his mind against Mr Blake's case, so as to deny Mr Blake a fair hearing on 27 May 2014.
45 First, the primary judge did not err in refusing Mr Blake's application for an adjournment on 27 May 2014. By that date, Mr Blake had already had the opportunity to file any affidavits and submissions on which he sought to rely pursuant to the directions which were made by the primary judge on 7 May 2014. Albeit that Mr Blake did not file any affidavit material by 16 May 2014, his affidavit dated 16 May 2014, was received into evidence at the hearing on 22 May 2014. As I have mentioned, that affidavit contained a blend of assertions and submissions as well as some evidential material and presented the case which Mr Blake wished to make for the setting aside of the sequestration order.
46 Further, on 22 May 2014, the primary judge did grant an adjournment to permit Mr Blake to file any further material in answer to the evidence which had been filed by Lion Finance. However, Mr Blake did not avail himself of the opportunity to do so.
47 In dealing with Mr Blake's adjournment application on 27 May 2014, the primary judge had regard to the matters which Mr Blake foreshadowed that he wished to contest in relation to the affidavit evidence of the witnesses for Lion Finance and the utility of permitting a creditor of Mr Blakes', Mr Mann, to make an affidavit in opposition to the sequestration order. The primary judge also had regard to the evidence and submissions made in Mr Blake's affidavit dated 16 May 2014. In addition, of course, the primary judge also took into account the evidence of Mr Cronan, and on that basis, rejected Mr Blake's application for the adjournment and the application for review.
48 In my view, there is simply no merit in Mr Blake's contention that the primary judge was biased or approached the matter with a closed mind. Mr Blake was given every opportunity to put evidence before the primary judge and to advance his case. However, the evidence of Mr Cronan showed that Mr Blake was hopelessly insolvent. In light of the evidence before the primary judge, and in view of the opportunities that Mr Blake was given to put material before the court, it was entirely open to the primary judge to dismiss the application for the adjournment and to dismiss Mr Blake's review application, for the reasons which he gave. The primary judge did not err in doing so.
49 Further, contrary to Mr Blake's contention, the primary judge did not misunderstand Mr Blake's claim, nor did the primary judge ignore his "evidence" in support of his claim that he could trade out of his difficulties. In fact, the primary judge included in his reasons for decision the following paragraphs of Mr Blake's affidavit of 16 May 2014:
[65] My total actual personal debts as stated in the above table [$802,817] have been managed every month by way of payment arrangements firmly in place as it always has been prior to 13 February 2014.
[66] The actual personal debts with payment arrangements in place may continue to be managed every month beginning 31 May 2014 once my Bankruptcy is overturned on 22 May 2014.
[67] There is also a chance that all my debts could be consolidated under the one loan for a low interest rate.
[68] The prospect put forward that I could trade my way out of financial difficulty is within the realms of possibilities.
[69] With my bankruptcy being overturned, I will be able to increase my combined real estate kerb side valuations from the guesstimated fire sale figures of 740,000 - 800,000, to properly saleable properties for the longer term in the vicinity of 850,000 - 900,000 and above.
50 The difficulty for Mr Blake was that the evidence of Mr Cronan demonstrated that he was hopelessly insolvent; and, as the primary judge found, Mr Blake had simply ignored debts amounting to more than $5 million, in seeking to put forward his contention that he could trade his way out of his financial difficulties.
51 Nor did the primary judge err in having regard to Mr Blake's "creditworthiness" as Mr Blake contended. Mr Blake's financial position or more specifically, his solvency, was a highly relevant matter which fell for consideration by the primary judge.
52 Grounds 1 and 10 of the grounds of appeal are dismissed.