Section 139ZQ
17 Section 139ZQ is found within Pt VI of the Bankruptcy Act, namely that Part which is directed to "[a]dministration of property". Within that Part, Div 3 is directed to "[p]roperty available for payment of debts"; Div 4 is directed to "[r]ealization of property"; and Div 4B is directed to "[c]ontribution by bankrupt and recovery of property". Within Div 4B, Subdiv J is directed to "[c]ollection of money or property by Official Receiver from party to transaction that is void against the trustee".
18 Section 139ZQ is a provision found within Subdiv J. It provides as follows:
Official Receiver may require payment
(1) If a person has received any money or property as a result of a transaction that is void against the trustee of a bankrupt under Division 3, the Official Receiver:
(a) if the Official Trustee is the trustee - on the initiative of the Official Receiver; or
(b) if a registered trustee is the trustee - on application by the trustee;
may require the person, by written notice given to the person, to pay to the trustee an amount equal to whichever of the following is applicable:
(c) if:
(i) the transaction is void against the trustee under section 128B or 128C; and
(ii) the transaction is by way of a contribution to an eligible superannuation plan for the benefit of a person (the beneficiary) who may or may not be the bankrupt; and
(iii) the beneficiary is a member of the eligible superannuation plan;
whichever is the lesser of the following:
(iv) the money or the value of the property received;
(v) the beneficiary's withdrawal benefit in relation to the eligible superannuation plan;
(d) in any other case - the money or the value of the property received.
(2) The notice must set out the facts and circumstances because of which the Official Receiver considers that the transaction is void against the trustee.
(3) The notice may:
(a) require the amount to be paid at a time or within a period set out in the notice; or
(b) require the amount to be paid at such times, and in such instalments, as are set out in the notice.
(4) After the Official Receiver has given a notice to a person under subsection (1), the Official Receiver may at any time, by a further notice given to the person, revoke or amend the first-mentioned notice.
(5) If the Official Receiver gives a notice under this section, the Official Receiver must send a copy of the notice to the bankrupt and, if a registered trustee is the trustee, to the trustee.
(6) A notice to be given under this section to the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, or to an authority of the Commonwealth, of a State or of a Territory, is taken to be duly given if it is given to a person who, by any law, regulation, appointment or authority, has the function of paying, or in fact pays, money on behalf of a Department of the Commonwealth, of that State or of that Territory, or on behalf of the authority, as the case may be.
(7) If a person is required by a notice under this section to pay to the trustee the value of any property, the requirement is taken to be complied with if the property is transferred to the trustee.
(8) An amount payable by a person to the trustee under this section is recoverable by the trustee as a debt by action against the person in a court of competent jurisdiction.
(9) For the purposes of subparagraph (1)(c)(ii), disregard a benefit that is payable in the event of the death of a person.
(10) In this section:
contribution has the same meaning as in Subdivision B of Division 3.
eligible superannuation plan has the same meaning as in Subdivision B of Division 3.
member of an eligible superannuation plan has the same meaning as in Subdivision B of Division 3.
withdrawal benefit has the same meaning as in Subdivision B of Division 3.
The term "value" is defined in s 139K as follows:
value, in relation to property referred to in a notice, means the market value of the property when the notice is given.
19 Also within Subdiv J of Div 4B is s 139ZS. That section confers power upon the Court to set aside a notice and provides as follows:
Power of Court to set aside notice
(1) If the Court, on application by a person to whom a notice has been given under section 139ZQ or by any other interested person, is satisfied that this Subdivision does not apply to the person on the basis of the alleged facts and circumstances set out in the notice, the Court may make an order setting aside the notice.
(1A) The application must be made:
(a) not later than 60 days after the day the notice under section 139ZQ was given to the applicant; or
(b) if the applicant is another interested person - not later than 60 days after the day the applicant became aware that the notice has been given.
(2) A notice that has been set aside is taken not to have been given.
Section 139ZS(1A) is expressed in mandatory terms such that no application may be made later than the 60 days there specified: Sampson (Trustee) v Taboada [2017] FCA 79 at [42] per Burley J.
20 The provisions within Subdiv J were summarised as follows by Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ in Vale v Sutherland [2009] HCA 26, (2009) 237 CLR 638 at 643 to 644:
[11] The notice must "set out the facts and circumstances because of which the Official Receiver considers that the transaction is void" (s 139ZQ(2)). Once a notice has been issued the property is "charged with the liability of the person to make payments to the trustee as required by the notice" (s 139ZR(1)). Failure or refusal to comply with the notice is an offence (s 139ZT(1)). The amount payable to the trustee under the section is recoverable as a debt by action in a court of competent jurisdiction (s 139ZQ(8)). However, on application by the person subject to the notice, or any other interested person, a court having jurisdiction in bankruptcy under the Act may set aside the notice where it is satisfied that Subdiv J does not apply to the person "on the basis of the alleged facts and circumstances set out in the notice" (s 139ZS(1)). These words are important in construing the section.
(Footnote omitted.)
21 Without being exhaustive, a few of the features of s 139ZQ should presently be noted.
22 First, the legislative objective of s 139ZQ is to provide an administrative mechanism for the recovery of dispositions of property that are void as against the Official Trustee or the registered trustee. The section provides "an administrative shortcut whereby the necessity for protracted proceedings under ss 120, 121 and 122 of the Act could be circumvented": Re Rose; Godfrey v Whitton [2006] FCA 823 at [24] per Graham J. "The scheme of Subdiv J encourages the saving of costs by, on the one hand, compliance with the notice by the transfer to the trustee of property in respect of the value of which the notice requires payment (s 139ZQ(7)) and on the other, by the revocation or amendment of notices to accommodate a settlement (s 139ZQ(4))": Vale v Sutherland [2009] HCA 26 at [22], (2009) 237 CLR 638 at 647 per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ.
23 Second, the reference in s 139ZQ(1) to "a transaction that is void against the trustee" is but one of a number of provisions in the Bankruptcy Act directed at identifying transactions that are void and at identifying the circumstances in which property transferred by a bankrupt as a result of such transactions is available to the trustee for distribution to creditors. Sections 120 and 121, for example, are directed respectively at "[u]ndervalued transactions" and transfers of property that defeat creditors. Section 139ZQ is not drafted in terms of the Official Trustee being of the "opinion" or being "satisfied" that a person has received money or property as a result of a transaction that is void as against the trustee; the section is drafted in terms of there in fact being a transaction which is void. The power conferred is, accordingly, "dependent upon the existence of a jurisdictional fact": Re McLernon; Ex parte SWF Hoists and Industrial Equipment Pty Ltd v Prebble (1995) 58 FCR 391 at 401 per Carr J.
24 Third, s 139ZQ(1) also refers to the giving of a notice to pay "an amount equal to … the money or the value of the property received". "The term 'value' in this provision has the meaning given by the definition of 'value' in s 139K, namely 'the market value of the property when the notice is given'" : Vale v Sutherland [2009] HCA 26 at [8], (2009) 237 CLR 638 at 643 per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ. See also: Combis (Trustee) v Spottiswood (No 2) [2013] FCA 240 at [73], (2013) 11 ABC(NS) 407 at 425 per Logan J
25 Fourth, the amount stated in the notice, however, is not conclusive as to the value of the property that has been transferred: Re Aley; Ex parte Sweeney v Aley (1996) 63 FCR 294 at 300 to 301. Drummond J there observed:
I am reluctant to read s 139ZR of the Act as making a notice under s 139ZQ of the Act effective to charge property owned by the recipient of the notice with liability to pay the figure asserted in the notice as the value of the transferred property in contrast to the true value of the property at the date of receipt. Section 139ZR(1) of the Act charges the property "with the liability of the person to make payments to the trustee as required by the notice". Under s 139ZQ(1) of the Act, all that the notice can require by way of payment to the trustee is payment of "an amount equal to ... the value of the property received". It is that, not for example the amount stated in the notice, that is to be paid. Section 139ZQ(2) of the Act does not require any information as to how the figure demanded by the notice was arrived at to be set out in the notice. The figure stated in the notice as the value of the property received from the bankrupt is not given by the Act any evidentiary force. A notice issued in reliance on s 139ZQ is, in my opinion, only effective to give rise to a debt enforceable under s 139ZQ(8) of the Act and a charge within s 139ZR of the Act if the amount demanded by the notice is, in fact, equal to the value of the property at the relevant time. Such an interpretation should not create any significant difficulty since the concept of the value of property at a particular time will generally involve an imprecise rather than an exact assessment of worth.
Nor is a statement in the notice as to the facts upon which the notice was given conclusive: Vale v Sutherland [2009] HCA 26, (2009) 237 CLR 638 at 647. Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ there observed:
[24] In an action by the Trustee to recover that amount as a debt, the appellant would be at liberty to establish such matters of fact, from which the liability was alleged to arise, as were disputed. The same would be so in any action to restrain the exercise of the power of sale conferred by s 139ZR(6).
(Footnote omitted.)
In an action to recover the amount claimed in the notice as a debt, the person receiving the notice would thus be able to dispute that amount: Vale v Sutherland [2009] HCA 26 at [24], (2009) 237 CLR 638 at 647 per Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Kiefel JJ. Similarly, in Halse v Norton (1997) 76 FCR 389 at 399, Lee and RD Nicholson JJ observed:
If a notice served on a person under s 139ZQ remains uncontested, service of the notice provides the trustee with a right that may be enforced against that person, namely, the right to recover as a debt the sum claimed in the notice. If the claim for the payment of money made in the notice is disputed, s 139ZS provides a means by which the controversy as to the application of Div 3 of the Act to the transaction is to be resolved and determined by the Court. In most cases it will be necessary for the trustee to be joined as a party to a proceeding commenced under s 139ZS, but if the applicant, or the Official Receiver, fails to have the trustee so joined the Official Receiver will stand in the trustee's place and be under the same onus of proof as the trustee.
26 Fifth, inaccuracies in the statement of facts in a notice may not be sufficient, without more, to result in an order under s 139ZS setting aside the notice: Official Trustee in Bankruptcy v Lopatinsky [2003] FCAFC 109 at [151], (2003) 129 FCR 234 at 256 per Whitlam and Jacobson JJ.
27 Sixth, in circumstances where the amount claimed as a debt is put in issue by the recipient of a s 139ZQ notice, the trustee bears the onus of establishing the facts alleged in the notice: Halse v Norton (1997) 76 FCR 389 at 392. In the context of resolving a question as to onus of proof and s 139ZS, Black CJ there observed:
a trustee has always carried the onus of proving the facts that make a transaction void and in instances in which the onus of proof is to lie elsewhere the Parliament has clearly so provided.
A little later, the Chief Justice further addressed as follows the question of onus in respect to proof of the "jurisdictional fact" upon which a notice proceeds, namely the basis upon which it is claimed that a transaction is "void" (at 392):
Clearly, too, s 139ZS is not the exclusive means of challenging a notice under s 139ZQ … and there may well be cases in which there is good reason for the trustee to bring what would be in effect a cross-application for a declaration that a transaction is void … It would be strange if the position of the trustee varied according to the procedure adopted in the particular case.
In these circumstances, but especially because of the nature of the "jurisdictional fact" upon which the power to issue a notice is dependent, I consider that the primary judge was correct in concluding that subdiv J has not changed the position with regard to the burden of proof other than requiring an applicant to put before the Court sufficient evidence to call the validity of the notice into question. Such a situation is not novel in the law; it is not unlike the situation where reliance is placed upon the presumption of regularity but sufficient evidence is put before the Court to challenge the application of the presumption in the particular case, or class of case …
Thus, for example, in Official Trustee in Bankruptcy v Lopatinsky [2003] FCAFC 109 at [152], (2003) 129 FCR 234 at 256, Whitlam and Jacobson JJ there observed with reference to the facts of that case that the Official Receiver "bears the onus of satisfying the Court that s 120 does apply".
28 Finally, non-compliance with a notice under s 139ZQ constitutes a criminal offence: s 139ZT. See: Official Trustee in Bankruptcy v Lopatinsky [2003] FCAFC 109 at [150], (2003) 129 FCR 234 at 256 per Whitlam and Jacobson JJ