Extension of time under s 41(6A)
44 The applicant alternatively seeks an extension of time in which to comply with the Notice under s 41(6A)(a) of the Bankruptcy Act. This Court may grant an extension of time for compliance where the debtor has instituted proceedings, within the original time for compliance, to set aside a judgment in respect of which the bankruptcy notice was issued.
45 As I have found that the Notice was deemed to have been served on the respondent on 30 September 2021, the 21-day compliance period is calculated from that date. The applicant therefore had until 21 October 2021 to comply with the Notice, or to make an application for an extension of time. The applicant had done neither by the deadline.
46 Pursuant to s 41(6A) of the Bankruptcy Act the Court may extend the time for compliance with the Notice where, before the expiration of the time for compliance (in this case 21 October 2021) proceedings to set aside the judgment in respect of which the Notice was issued have been instituted by the debtor.
47 The applicant's evidence regarding the institution of proceedings in the Local Court to seek to have the judgment set aside is that following the receipt of the Notice, she instructed her solicitor to lodge an application to set aside the default judgment. On 21 October 2021, her solicitors faced unspecified technical difficulties while attempting to lodge the application. The application was lodged with the Local Court online registry at 11:59pm on 21 October 2021. The applicant annexed a lodgement confirmation email received from eservice@agd.nsw.gov.au on 22 October at 12.03 am (the Registry email). The Online Registry email stated:
The form(s) filed on 21 October 11:59 PM have been processed by the court.
If you were charged a filing fee, your tax invoice is attached.
Transaction reference number: B20211021-8626862
Submitted by: Allan McGregor
Filing date: 22 October 2021 12:00 AM
48 The applicant relies on the automatically-generated Online Registry filing acceptance email to submit that the application to set aside the judgment was filed on 21 October 2021 at 11:59pm, prior to the expiry of the 21 days.
49 The question of when the Local Court proceedings were instituted is resolved by reference to the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) (UCPR), which apply to civil proceedings before the Local Court. Rule 3.4 relates to the electronic filing of documents. The relevant parts of r 3.4 provide as follows:
(3) A document that is filed by means of the Online Registry is taken to have been filed when the Online Registry gives notice of acceptance of the document.
(4) Notice of acceptance of a document, and the date and time of the acceptance, is to be given, by means of Online Registry, to the registered user by whom the document was filed.
(5) Despite a document being submitted to be filed by means of Online Registry, and notice of acceptance being given by Online Registry, the document may subsequently be rejected by the court if the documents fails to comply with any substantial requirements of the approved form or the rules in relation to such a document.
(Emphasis added.)
50 I note that the UCPR does not have an equivalent provision to that of r 2.25(3) of the FC Rules, which provides that if a document is sent by electronic communication to a Registry, the document is, if accepted by the Registry, taken to be filed:
(a) if the whole document is received by 4.30pm on a business day for the Registry - on that day; or
(b) in any other case - on the next business day for the Registry.
51 Despite the somewhat general usage of the word "filed" in the UCPR, I consider that the effect of r 3.4(3) is that the application to set aside the default judgment was instituted on 22 October 2021. The application was accepted by the Online Registry at 12:00am according to the Registry email. According to r 3.4(3) a document is taken to be filed when the Online Registry gives notice of acceptance. That the relevant time is the time of acceptance rather than the time of uploading or submitting the document to the Registry is supported by rr 3.4(4) and (5), in particular those parts highlighted above. Pursuant to r 3.4(4) it is the date and time of the acceptance that is to be given to the registered user, not the time of receipt or uploading. Rule 3.4(5) speaks of a document being "submitted to be filed", this suggests that the document is not filed until an action, i.e. acceptance, is taken by the Registry.
52 The applicant had until 21 October 2021 to either comply with the Notice, institute proceedings to set aside the judgment in respect of which the Notice was issued, or, to make an application to this Court to set aside the Notice. The applicant had done none of these by the deadline. On expiry of the deadline, an act of bankruptcy took place.
53 As the institution of proceedings to set aside the default judgement or an application to set aside the bankruptcy notice within time are jurisdictional requirements, this Court cannot extend the time for compliance with the Notice under s 41(6A) when neither step has been taken.
54 The applicant submitted that rr 1.32 and 1.34 of the FC Rules allowed the Court to dispense with the requirements of s 41(6A) of the Bankruptcy Act. Rule 1.32 empowers the Court to make any orders it considers appropriate in the interests of justice; while r 1.34 permits the Court to dispense with compliance with any of the FC Rules. For completeness, I note that the applicant also submitted that s 33ZF of the FC Act would similarly allow the Court to make orders dispensing with the requirements of the Bankruptcy Act. As that section only applies to representative proceedings commenced under part IVA of the FC Act, it does not apply to the current proceeding.
55 The FC Rules are not a source of power to dispense with requirements under the Bankruptcy Act. In Nugawela v Deputy Commissioner for Taxation [2016] FCA 578, McKerracher J held that there was no such a power under the FC Rules, stating at [39]:
As the time for compliance with the bankruptcy notice is fixed under the Bankruptcy Act, the Court cannot dispense with compliance with the FCR pursuant to either r 1.34 or r 1.39. In relation to r 1.34, Altobelli FM in Charlton v CNH Capital Australia Pty Ltd [2013] FMCA 232 (at [5]), correctly held in relation to a similarly worded provision that:
The power to extend time for compliance with a bankruptcy notice under s 33(1)(c) of the [Bankruptcy Act] is expressly disallowed, and thus the authorities state that failure to comply with s 41(6A) is not a 'procedural irregularity capable of cure' but 'fatal to jurisdiction': Re Shaddock; Shaddock v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (unreported Federal Court of Australia, Goldberg J, 9 April 1998). In other words this court lacks the power to set aside the bankruptcy notice unless the application was filed before the expiration of the time fixed for compliance with the requirements of the bankruptcy notice.