Mr Burhala's standing to set aside the order of Justice Moshinsky
36 The first interim order sought by Mr Burhala seeks the setting aside of the order of Moshinsky J on 20 December 2017 pursuant to rr 39.05(a) and 39.05(b) of the Rules. Those rules provide that:
The Court may vary or set aside a judgment or order after it has been entered if:
(a) it was made in the absence of a party; or
(b) it was obtained by fraud; …
37 As a threshold matter relevant to determining Mr Burhala's standing to seek these orders, r 1.40 of the Rules provides the following:
Exercise of Court's power
The Court may, at any stage of the proceeding, exercise a power mentioned in these Rules in the proceeding:
(a) on its own initiative; or
(b) on the application of a party, or a person who has a sufficient interest in the proceeding.
38 Rule 1.40 of the Rules does not itself pose a barrier to Mr Burhala's standing. Mr Burhala is named as third respondent and is a party to this proceeding. But a bankrupt being named as a party is not itself a sufficient basis to grant standing: see, in a slightly different context, Bagshaw v Scott [2002] FCAFC 362; 126 FCR 27 (Bagshaw) at [40] per Mansfield, Conti and Allsop JJ. The terms of r 1.40(b) is insufficient by itself to confer standing on Mr Burhala in respect of the application before Moshinsky J for the grant of leave under s 58(3)(b) of the Act. It is necessary to consider the nature and scope of such an application.
39 The policy underpinning s 58(3) of the Act was summarised by Moshinksky J in his Honour's ex tempore reasons as follows:
The policy behind the requirement to obtain leave under s 58(3)(b) was described by Hill J in Re Rose; Ex parte Devaban Pty Ltd [1994] FCA 1082 as follows:
The obvious policy behind s.58(3) of the Act was that any proceedings in force at the time of bankruptcy should be stayed and no further proceedings should be commenced so far as they relate to the period prior to bankruptcy unless the Court gives leave. In this way the bankrupt is freed from any claims that might be made in respect to the period prior to bankruptcy and the Trustee in bankruptcy can, if the Trustee accepts the proof of debt, treat a claim against the estate like the claim of all other creditors, so that the assets of the estate are, in due course, divided pro rata among the creditors.
Another reason for staying proceedings or preventing new proceedings from being commenced is to ensure that the Trustee of a bankrupt estate is not put to expense in defending proceedings which the Trustee has no money to defend. On the other hand, the Act does contemplate that the Court will, in an appropriate case, grant leave. In that respect a case would be an appropriate case where the proceedings proposed against the bankrupt are proceedings to which other parties are involved and for the proper conduct of which it may be necessary for the bankrupt to become a party.
In Fraser v Commissioner of Taxation (1996) 69 FCR 99, Beaumont J, with whom Black CJ and Tamberlin J agreed, said at 114:
… a central feature of the established scheme of bankruptcy is an equitable or rateable distribution of property amongst all unsecured creditors. Any mechanism to secure this objective can allow for the recovery of assets by one person only and that is the trustee, acting on behalf of the general body of creditors. In exercising that function, the trustee will need to make administrative decisions, or judgments, from time to time. But it is for the trustee alone to make those judgments, in the interests of creditors as a whole; even if, where appropriate, the trustee may take into account their expressed wishes. The point is that there is no scope here for any role to be played by individual creditors acting on their own initiative; and if litigation is to be instituted with a view to the recovery of assets, it is the trustee's function, and responsibility, to be the dominus litis and thus entirely in charge of the litigation to the exclusion of individual creditors. In other words, the relevant scheme of the legislation, specifically that of s 58(3), is that individual creditors have no right to decide to pursue, or not pursue, the assets of the bankrupt with a view to the satisfaction of individual debts … Section 58(3) should be interpreted in a way that gives practical effect to this legislative purpose.
40 The purpose of s 58(3)(b) of the Act was likewise described by Barrett J in Mango Media Pty Ltd v Velingos [2008] NSWSC 202; 216 FLR 176 at [13] as:
to ensure that the bankrupt estate and the provable claims upon it remain under the control and supervision of the courts having jurisdiction in bankruptcy. The legislation as a whole is aimed at marshalling assets, ascertaining debts and claims and applying the former towards satisfaction of the latter. The procedures by which the process is to be conducted and the objective is to be achieved are set out in the Bankruptcy Act and administered by those courts to which exclusive jurisdiction in bankruptcy is given by Parliament. To the extent that an attempt is made to resort to any other process of dealing with debts and claims, particularly if resort is to be had to courts other than the bankruptcy courts, there must first be screening by a bankruptcy court.
41 Section 58(3)(b) operates as an exception to the general protection of the property of the bankrupt's estate from inference by individual creditors. A court, directed by the statutory purposes underpinning the discretion in that provision, may grant leave to a creditor for the commencement and maintenance of any legal proceeding in respect of a provable debt.
42 A grant of leave under s 58(3)(b) effects, to a specified extent, a distribution in the statutory entitlement to commence and maintain proceedings in respect of provable debts. But this distribution only relevantly affects the trustee of a bankrupt estate, acting in the interests of the creditors as a whole, and the creditor obtaining leave of the Court. As such, it is open for the trustee of a bankrupt estate to oppose an application by a creditor for leave under s 58(3)(b). But, in this case, the Trustees supported the Commissioner's application.
43 A grant of leave under s 58(3)(b) is not, however, a matter to which the bankrupt is sufficiently interested in the requisite sense. As such, I agree with the view of Gyles J in Kattirtzis at [5], as followed by Moshinsky J in his ex tempore reasons and in subsequent reasons in this proceeding (Commissioner of Taxation v Yeo (Trustee) [2018] FCA 635 at [3]), that the bankrupt is not a necessary party to proceedings under s 58(3). It follows that a bankrupt also does not have standing to set aside a grant of leave under s 58(3)(b).
44 For these reasons, even assuming there were grounds under rr 39.05(a) or 39.05(b) of the Rules for the order of Moshinsky J to be set aside, Mr Burhala does not have standing to seek such an order. It also follows from these principles that Mr Burhala does not have standing to seek the second interim order set out in his interim application - that he be granted leave to file and serve a defence to the Commissioner's application for leave under s 58(3)(b). As discussed, Mr Burhala was not a necessary party to enable Moshinsky J to determine that application.