The legislative scheme under the PPSA
26 The PPSA creates a system of notice of security interests by registration, as distinct from a system whereby interests are created by registration. Its purpose is to provide persons searching the system with enough information to know whom to contact to find out more about a security interest: see Auburn Shopping Village Pty Ltd v Nelmeer Hoteliers Pty Ltd [2017] NSWSC 1230; (2017) 324 FLR 378 at [64]-[66] (Ward CJ in Eq), quoting Re Lambert (1994) 20 OR (3d) 108 at [32]-[33]. As I have already adverted to, registration of security interests, and the timing of registration, can be important to matters such as competing priorities between different security interests.
27 The Registrar has the functions given under the PPSA or any other Act: s 195(1). He (the present Registrar being male) has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his functions: s 195(2). He may conduct an investigation into any matter for the purpose of performing his functions: s 195A(1).
28 One of the Registrar's key functions is the establishment and maintenance of the PPSR: s 147(1). With presently immaterial exceptions, he must ensure that the PPSR is operational at all times: s 147(4). An application to register an interest (by a 'financing statement') or to amend a registered interest (by a 'financing change statement') must be registered if it is in the approved form, any fee has been paid, the registration is not prohibited by the regulations and the Registrar is not satisfied that the application is frivolous, vexatious or offensive or contrary to the public interest or made in contravention of s 151: s 150(3). So there is no positive obligation on the Registrar to be satisfied of the accuracy of a registration before it is registered.
29 It was common ground that the PPSR is in practice, a computer database which is searchable at all times by members of the public and which any person seeking to make or amend a registration can add to directly. There is no process by which new registrations are regularly checked or vetted by a human being before they are publicly available for search.
30 Section 151 does, however, impose a positive obligation to hold a belief as to certain matters on the person registering the financing statement or financing change statement. Section 151(1) provides:
A person must not apply to register a financing statement, or a financing change statement, that describes collateral, unless the person believes on reasonable grounds that the person described in the statement as the secured party is, or will become, a secured party in relation to the collateral (otherwise than by virtue of the registration itself).
This is a civil penalty provision.
31 There is also a civil penalty provision in s 151(2) requiring a person who has registered a financing statement or financing change statement to remove the registration if the secured party named in the registration has never been a secured party in relation to the collateral (the PPSA's term for the property that is the subject of the security interest) and there are no reasonable grounds or no longer any reasonable grounds for the belief that the person described as the secured party is, or will become, a secured party in relation to the collateral. This may be concerned with relatively unusual cases of misuse of the PPSR; in any event the cumulative requirement that the person has never been a secured party means that it does not apply to the more usual case of a change of circumstances, such as the discharge of a security over collateral when a debt is repaid in full.
32 If a discharge of the underlying security does occur, and the registration is not changed to reflect it, then s 178 provides for a person with an interest in the relevant collateral to give a demand to the secured party for the amendment or ending of the registration in respect of the collateral (as appropriate). Sections 179 to 181 provide for a process by which the Registrar can amend the PPSR administratively after an amendment demand has been given to the secured party and notified to the Registrar. Section 182(4) permits the court to make appropriate orders for amendment.
33 Section 186 must be construed in the above context. It is a context where the apparent intent of the PPSA is to put the primary burden of ensuring that there is a reasonable basis for a registration to be made, or to continue, on the party who has made or is intending to make the registration and, failing that, on other parties who have an interest in the collateral. It does not place any positive obligation on the Registrar to verify any of the information which, in practice, is placed on the PPSR by or on behalf of persons claiming that they have, or will have, security interests.
34 Section 186 appears in Part 5.7 of the PPSA, which concerns removal of data and correction of registration errors. Section 184 empowers the Registrar to remove data, including an entire registration, from the PPSR on various grounds, including where he is satisfied that the application to register it was frivolous or vexatious or retaining it on the PPSR is contrary to the public interest. Section 185, in broad terms, permits the Registrar to remove registrations that have expired. Section 186, to recap, permits the Registrar, at his initiative to 'restore data to the register (including an entire registration) if it appears to the Registrar that the data was incorrectly removed' from the PPSR. Section 188 permits the Registrar to correct errors or omission which he has made.
35 There is little authority on the construction of s 186. There are only two cases: SFS Projects Australia Pty Ltd v Registrar of Personal Property Securities [2014] FCA 846; (2014) 226 FCR 188; and Scottish Pacific (BFS) Pty Ltd v Registrar of Personal Property Securities [2017] FCA 1378.
36 The circumstances in the first of these cases were similar to those of the present case, in that a mistake in the course of an assignment of securities led to the removal of security interests from the PPSR rather than their transfer. The assignees applied for the restoration of the data under s 186 but the Registrar contended that he did not have power to do that. He argued that s 186 only addressed an incorrect exercise of the Registrar's powers to remove data, and if all the Registrar had done was register a financing change statement in accordance with his obligation to do so under s 150(3), then the data could not be said to have been incorrectly removed. Gleeson J rejected those arguments. Her Honour held that all that is required to activate the discretion under s 186 is for data to have been removed from the PPSR which ought correctly to be included in the PPSR: SFS Projects Australia at [69]. That could include removal by reason of error on the part of a person applying for the registration of a financing change statement under s 150(3): at [70]. Her Honour characterised s 186 as a remedial or beneficial provision which should be construed beneficially in the event of any ambiguity: at [71]. Data may be 'incorrectly removed' from the PPSR if its removal results from lodgement of an application which did not correctly reflect the intentions of the person making the application: at [74]. So the Registrar did have power to restore data to the PPSR which had been removed as a result of an error by the person who submitted a financing change statement: at [76]-[77]. In this proceeding the Registrar did not seek to challenge the correctness of SFS Projects Australia.
37 The facts in Scottish Pacific (BFS) were different to those in SFS Projects Australia. In Scottish Pacific (BFS) there was a dispute about whether the registrations in question had in fact been discharged accidentally, and about whether the secured obligations had been satisfied. Also, the application to restore the data was made nine months after it was removed, and there had been a significant amount of search and registration activity in the meantime. Farrell J accepted Gleeson J's construction of the PPSA in SFS Projects Australia: Scottish Pacific (BFS) at [65]. But Farrell J refused to grant the relief sought because the way that the matter had come before her did not attract the jurisdiction of the court: see [73], [78]. Unlike the present application, the application in Scottish Pacific was not brought under the ADJR Act.
38 Justice Farrell did say, however (at [81]), that she was not convinced that s 186 reveals the same bias towards restoring data as is evidenced by s 150(3), under which the Registrar must register a financing change statement unless he is satisfied as to the matters I have already mentioned. Her Honour went on to say:
The Registrar has a discretion to restore data if 'it appears to the Registrar' that the data was incorrectly removed. I accept that the decision to restore data does not require certainty that the data was incorrectly removed. In the absence of evidence that a former secured party seeking restoration does not have a belief satisfying s 151 or relevant prejudice to third parties, the Registrar would be free to exercise his discretion to restore data upon an application by a former secured party asserting that the data had been removed in error. However, where there is evidence which casts doubt on whether a person could satisfy s 151, the Registrar may not be satisfied that the data was 'incorrectly removed' so that the precondition to the exercise of discretion is not met.
39 Justice Farrell was, with respect, correct to say that the requirement that it 'appears to the Registrar' that the data was incorrectly removed does not require certainty. In a different context it has been held that a requirement that something 'appear to' a decision-maker requires only that the decision-maker form 'a prima facie opinion': Cornall as Secretary of the Law Institute of Victoria v AB [1995] 1 VR 372 at 389. That is not necessarily the same as a prima facie case; the point of requiring a fact 'to appear to' a person is to make the person the judge of that fact, not to require proof of that fact, let alone certainty: see Robinson v Sunderland Corporation [1899] 1 QB 751 at 757. It is consistent with these authorities and with the beneficial interpretation to be placed on s 186 that all that is required to activate the Registrar's discretion is that there be information before him which leads him to form the view that, on the face of that information, data was incorrectly removed from the PPSR.
40 That view must concern incorrect removal in the wider sense endorsed in SFS Projects Australia. So if the circumstances suggest it, the Registrar must form a view about whether the data was removed due to lodgement of an application which did not correctly reflect the intentions of the person making the application. The registrar need not look into the question to the extent required for him to reach the view with certainty, or beyond reasonable doubt, or on the balance of probabilities, or to any other definite standard. That is consistent with the overall scheme of the PPSA as principally relying on the parties lodging financing statements and financing change statements, and on parties with an interest in collateral, to ensure the accuracy of the PPSR. But the Registrar does need to apply his mind to the question of whether it appears, at least on the face of information before him, that the data was incorrectly removed.
41 The section and the context provide little guidance as to how the discretion is to be exercised if that threshold has been reached. But I do consider that it would be inconsistent with a beneficial interpretation of the section, and with the unexacting nature of that threshold, to fetter it by any requirement that it only be exercised when it is clear that the data has been incorrectly removed.
42 There are two further things to say about the discretion. One is that the strength of the view that the Registrar forms as to whether data has been incorrectly removed can be relevant to the exercise of the discretion. It is obvious that the greater the certainty, the more likely it is that the PPSR should restore the data; the greater the doubt, the more supportable would be any decision not to restore it.
43 The other point to be made is that none of the considerations above mean that it is irrelevant to the discretion to consider whether the security interest underlying the removed data still exists (or ever existed). Counsel for Curo submitted that it was irrelevant. His submission was that since the scheme of the PPSA effectively places responsibility for the accuracy of the PPSR on the holders of security interests and interests in collateral, it is not for the Registrar to inquire into whether the security interest still exists. It will already be apparent that I accept the premise to that argument. But I do not accept the conclusion. The relatively broad, plain English meaning of 'incorrectly removed from the register' in s 186, as recognised in SFS Projects Australia, means that in appropriate circumstances the continued existence (or not) of a security interest will be relevant to both the existence of the discretion and to its exercise. That is simply because, if a security interest no longer exists (or never existed), that makes it less likely that a registration in relation to the security interest has been incorrectly removed. To the extent that opposition to the restoration of data by a grantor is based on an allegation that the security interest does not exist, that opposition may be relevant for the same reason.