issues
4 Section 120(1) of the BA provides that a transfer of property by a person (transferor) who later becomes a bankrupt is void against the trustee in the transferor's bankruptcy if:
(a) the transfer took place in the period beginning 5 years before the commencement of the bankruptcy and ending on the date of the bankruptcy; and
(b) the transferee gave no consideration for the transfer or gave consideration of less value than the market value of the property.
5 Section 120(2) of the BA exempts certain transfers from the operation of s 120(1), including a transfer to meet all or part of a liability under a maintenance agreement or a maintenance order. The phrase "maintenance agreement" is defined in s 5(1) of the BA to exclude a financial agreement within the meaning of the FLA. It follows that s 120 of the BA is capable of applying to a transfer made or purportedly made under an otherwise valid binding financial agreement.
6 Section 120(3)(a) of the BA provides that despite subs (1), a transfer is not void against the trustee if, in the case of a transfer to a related entity of the transferor:
(i) the transfer took place more than 4 years before the commencement of the bankruptcy; and
(ii) the transferee proves that, at the time of the transfer, the transferor was solvent; …
7 Mr and Mrs Fernihough are related entities for the purposes of this provision: BA, s 5(1).
8 Section 121 of the BA relevantly provides:
121 Transfers to defeat creditors
Transfers that are void
(1) A transfer of property by a person who later becomes a bankrupt (the transferor) to another person (the transferee) is void against the trustee in the transferor's bankruptcy if:
(a) the property would probably have become part of the transferor's estate or would probably have been available to creditors if the property had not been transferred; and
(b) the transferor's main purpose in making the transfer was:
(i) to prevent the transferred property from becoming divisible among the transferor's creditors; or
(ii) to hinder or delay the process of making property available for division among the transferor's creditors.
Showing the transferor's main purpose in making a transfer
(2) The transferor's main purpose in making the transfer is taken to be the purpose described in paragraph (1)(b) if it can reasonably be inferred from all the circumstances that, at the time of the transfer, the transferor was, or was about to become, insolvent.
Other ways of showing the transferor's main purpose in making a transfer
(3) Subsection (2) does not limit the ways of establishing the transferor's main purpose in making a transfer.
Transfer not void if transferee acted in good faith
(4) Despite subsection (1), a transfer of property is not void against the trustee if:
(a) the consideration that the transferee gave for the transfer was at least as valuable as the market value of the property; and
(b) the transferee did not know, and could not reasonably have inferred, that the transferor's main purpose in making the transfer was the purpose described in paragraph (1)(b); and
(c) the transferee could not reasonably have inferred that, at the time of the transfer, the transferor was, or was about to become, insolvent.
Rebuttable presumption of insolvency
(4A) For the purposes of this section, a rebuttable presumption arises that the transferor was, or was about to become, insolvent at the time of the transfer if it is established that the transferor:
(a) had not, in respect of that time, kept such books, accounts and records as are usual and proper in relation to the business carried on by the transferor and as sufficiently disclose the transferor's business transactions and financial position; or
(b) having kept such books, accounts and records, has not preserved them.
Refund of consideration
(5) The trustee must pay to the transferee an amount equal to the value of any consideration that the transferee gave for a transfer that is void against the trustee.
What is not consideration
(6) For the purposes of subsections (4) and (5), the following have no value as consideration:
(a) the fact that the transferee is related to the transferor;
(b) if the transferee is the spouse or de facto partner of the transferor - the transferee making a deed in favour of the transferor;
(c) the transferee's promise to marry, or to become the de facto partner of, the transferor;
(d) the transferee's love or affection for the transferor;
(e) if the transferee is the spouse, or a former spouse, of the transferor - the transferee granting the transferor a right to live at the transferred property, unless the grant relates to a transfer or settlement of property, or an agreement, under the Family Law Act 1975;
(f) if the transferee is a former de facto partner of the transferor - the transferee granting the transferor a right to live at the transferred property, unless the grant relates to a transfer or settlement of property, or an agreement, under the Family Law Act 1975.
Exemption of transfers of property under debt agreements
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Meaning of transfer of property and market value
(9) For the purposes of this section:
(a) transfer of property includes a payment of money; and
(b) a person who does something that results in another person becoming the owner of property that did not previously exist is taken to have transferred the property to the other person; and
(c) the market value of property transferred is its market value at the time of the transfer.
9 Despite his promise to transfer his interest in the Pearsall property to his wife, Mr Fernihough has not done all things necessary to transfer his legal interest. As such, Mr Fernihough presently remains named on the certificate of title as a joint registered proprietor. As a consequence, Mr Fernihough submits, there has been no transfer of property upon which s 120 or s 121 can operate. Alternatively, Mr Fernihough submits that he was solvent at the time that he entered into the Agreement so that the exemption in s 120(3)(a) therefore applies. Mr Fernihough further submitted that an order for the sale of the Pearsall property could only be made by the Supreme Court of Western Australia. I reject the latter submission for the same reasons given in Weston (Trustee), in the matter of Jeffery v Jeffery [2019] FCA 554 at [41] to [54].
10 The following issues arise:
(1) whether there has been a "transfer" of "property" within the period specified in s 120(1)(a);
(2) to the extent that a transfer of property has occurred, whether Mrs Fernihough gave no consideration for the transfer, or otherwise gave consideration of less value than the market value for the property transferred;
(3) whether the exception prescribed in s 120(3) in respect of Mr Fernihough's asserted solvency applies;
(4) for the purposes of s 121 of the BA:
(a) whether the condition in s 121(1)(a) is fulfilled; and
(b) whether the "main purpose" specified in s 121(1)(b) has been established on the evidence; and
(5) whether Mr Fernihough's interest in the property has vested in the trustee and, if so, whether the property should be sold and the net proceeds divided equally between the trustee and Mrs Fernihough.
11 The third of these issues may also be swiftly disposed of. The exemption in s 120(3)(a) has no application because, to the extent that there has been a transfer of an interest in the Pearsall property, the transfer took place less than four years before Mr Fernihough's bankruptcy commenced: BA, s 120(3)(a)(i).
12 In respect of the fourth issue, Counsel for the trustee confirmed that the case premised on s 121 of the BA depended on the Court finding that the property forming the subject of the proceedings was transferred for no or inadequate consideration. It is submitted that the provision of no or inadequate consideration would be sufficient, in and of itself, to prove that the purpose of the transfer was to prevent the Pearsall property from becoming divisible among Mr Fernihough's creditors.