Alleged errors in construction of s 43(1)(b)(iii) of the Act
29 The debtor argues that the primary judge made two related errors of construction of s 43(1)(b)(iii) of the Act. First, it is submitted that the primary judge's description of the phrase "carrying on business in Australia" as having "a very wide meaning" was mistaken. Second, it is submitted that the phrase requires the conduct of a commercial enterprise in the nature of a going concern, or trading, in Australia.
30 As to the first alleged error, the primary judge relied upon Re Mendonca; Ex parte Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1969) 1 ATR 571 and Re Vassis; Ex Parte Leung (1986) 9 FCR 518 for the proposition that the phrase has "a very wide meaning". In Theophile v The Solicitor‐General [1950] AC 186, the House of Lords considered s 1(2) of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 (UK) which defined a "debtor" as including a person who, "was carrying on business in England, personally, or by means of an agent or manager". Lord Porter held at 201:
In a sense it is true that the appellant was not actively carrying on business within three months of the presentation of the petition, but there is a series of cases…which in unbroken sequence have decided that trading does not cease when, as the expression is, "the shutters are put up," but continues until the sums due are collected and all debts paid.
31 In In re Bird v Inland Revenue Commissioners; Ex parte the Debtor [1962] 1 WLR 686, the Court of Appeal at 693, 697-698 and 699, described the ratio decidendi of Theophile as being that, "trading is not completed until you have performed all the obligations that the fact of trading imposed upon you".
32 In Mendonca, Gibbs J referred at 574-575 to, "the somewhat wide understanding of those words ["carrying on business"] that has come to be established in bankruptcy law", citing Theophile and Bird.
33 In Vassis, Burchett J at 525-526 adopted the view of Gibbs J and added that the words, "either personally or by means of an agent or manager", are words of extension, not limitation. Justice Burchett held that the debtor was "carrying on business in Australia" since the winding-up of the debtor's business and the payment of its debts had not been concluded.
34 I accept the debtor's submission that the primary judge's description of the phrase "carrying on business" as having "a very wide meaning" somewhat overstates the effect of Mendonca and Vassis. However, that overstatement had no ultimate consequence. The judgments in Theophile, Bird, Mendonca and Vassis have a significance for the present case that will be considered later in these reasons.
35 The debtor's second submission is that the primary judge erred in failing to find that s 43(1)(b)(iii) of the Act requires a commercial enterprise in the nature of a going concern, that is, activities engaged in for the purpose of profit on a continuous and repetitive basis in Australia. The debtor submits that there must be evidence of trading in Australia.
36 In response, the creditor submits that it is unnecessary that the whole of a business, or even a substantial part of the business, be conducted in Australia. The creditor argues that all that is required is that some part of a business, not necessarily direct trading activity, be carried on in Australia.
37 There is no authority that directly addresses the competing submissions in the context of s 43(1)(b)(iii) of the Act, but assistance may be gained from cases that have considered a similar phrase in statutory provisions that have a similar context. That context is the foundation of a jurisdictional nexus.
38 The debtor relies upon Hope v Bathurst City Council (1980) 144 CLR 1, where Mason J accepted at 8 that the dictionary definition of "business" which comes closest to its popular meaning is, "a commercial enterprise as a going concern". His Honour considered that, "it is the words "carrying on" which imply the repetition of acts…and activities which possess something of a permanent character". In the context of s 118 of the Local Government Act 1919 (NSW), his Honour held at 8-9 that "business" denoted, "activities undertaken as a commercial enterprise in the nature of a going concern, that is, activities engaged in for the purpose of profit on a continuous and repetitive basis".
39 In Tiger Yacht Management Ltd v Morris (2019) 268 FCR 548, the Full Court considered the meaning of "carrying on business in Australia" in r 10.42 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) (Rules), for the purpose of r 10.43 of the Rules which deals with service of an originating application in a foreign country. The Full Court observed:
50 The expression "carrying on business" may have different meanings in different contexts: Luckins v Highway Motel (Carnarvon) Pty Ltd (1975) 133 CLR 164 at 178 (Gibbs J). So, care must be taken to understand the context in which the requirement is being considered. However, when used to ensure a jurisdictional nexus as a matter of comity it will have a meaning informed by the requirement to ensure there is sufficient connection with the country asserting jurisdiction. It requires resort to the usual or ordinary meaning of the phrase and invites a factual inquiry. As the Court said in Anchorage Capital Partners Pty Ltd v ACPA Pty Ltd (2018) 259 FCR 514 at [99]:
Whether a company is carrying on business in Australia is a question of fact: Luckins (Receiver & Manager of Australian Trailways Pty Ltd) v Highway Motel (Carnarvon) Pty Ltd (1975) 133 CLR 164 at 186. While it is correct to say that a company may be found to carry on business in Australia even though it does not maintain an office in Australia or the bulk of its business is carried on outside Australia, it does not follow that such a company will be found to carry on business in Australia merely because it has engaged in a small number of isolated transactions. Each case will depend on its own facts.
51 The activities must form a commercial enterprise: Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Valve Corporation (No 3) (2016) 337 ALR 647 at [197].
52 The words 'carrying on' imply the repetition of acts and activities which possess something of a permanent character: Hope v Bathurst City Council (1980) 144 CLR 1 at 8 (Mason J). Participation in a single transaction or a number of isolated transactions will not satisfy this aspect.
40 In Australian Information Commissioner v Facebook Inc (No 2) [2020] FCA 1307, Thawley J held the Commission had established a prima facie case that Facebook Inc carried on business in Australia within the meaning of s 5B(3)(b) of the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth), by providing services to a subsidiary by undertaking data processing activities, including operating cookies on the devices of users in Australia. This was in circumstances where Facebook Inc carried out the bulk of its business overseas.
41 In Re Application of Campbell; Gebo Investments (Labuan) Ltd v Signatory Investments Pty Ltd (2005) 54 ACSR 111, Barrett J, considering s 21(2) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), stated at [31]:
Case law makes it clear that the territorial concept of carrying on business involves acts within the relevant territory that amount to or are ancillary to transactions that make up or support the business.
This passage was approved by the Full Court of the Federal Court in Valve Corporation v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (2017) 258 FCR 190 at [149].
42 In Smith (on behalf of National Parks and Wildlife Service) v Capewell (1979) 142 CLR 509, the defendant was charged with a breach of s 105(a) of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 (NSW), which provided that, "a person shall not exercise or carry on…the business of a skin dealer" unless properly licenced. Justice Gibbs held at 519:
It seems clear that a solitary transaction of sale or purchase of skins in New South Wales will only constitute an offence against s 105(a) of the Act, if the sale of (sic) purchase has been made by the defendant with the intention that it shall be the first of several transactions in a business which he thereby commences to carry on, or if it has been made in the course of a business which the defendant is carrying on elsewhere.
43 In Gebo, Barrett J, referring to the last part of this passage, concluded at [39]:
…a company may be found to be carrying on business "in" a particular geographic area even though the bulk of its business is conducted elsewhere.
44 In Re TCL Airconditioner (Zhongshan) Co Ltd v Castel Electronics Pty Ltd (No 2) (2019) 369 ALR 192, McKerracher J, also considering s 21(2) of the Corporations Act, observed at [19]:
It was held a considerable time ago that carrying on business generally connotes a commercial enterprise conducted systematically and regularly with a view to profit or a succession of acts designed to advance some enterprise of the company pursued with the view to pecuniary gain: Hyde v Sullivan (1955) 56 SR (NSW) 113 at 119. But as Barrett J emphasised in Gebo, it is not necessary for the purposes of Pt 5.7 that the company in question engages in a series of acts within Australia. Particularly, in modern times, a company may be found to be carrying on business in Australia even though the bulk of its business is conducted elsewhere. This, indeed, has long been the case: see, for example, Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Aktien-Gesellschaft Fur Motor Und Motorfahrzeugbau Vorm Cudell & Co [1902] 1 KB 342; [1900-3] All ER Rep 195.
45 In Theophile, Bird, Mendonca and Vassis, it was held that a person carries on business during the process of a business being wound up and repaying its debts, even though the business has ceased to actually trade.
46 In Actiesselskabet Dampskib "Hercules" v Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Company [1912] 1 KB 222, the defendant was a company engaged in the construction of a railway in Canada. Four of its directors resided in London and formed a committee which raised loan capital to be used for the construction of the railway. The money raised was paid into a bank account in London and then remitted to Canada. The committee had a secretary and staff and met at an office in London. No other business of the company was transacted by the committee.
47 In Actiesselskabet, in the context of Ord IX, r 8 of the Rules of the Supreme Court 1883 (UK), Lord Buckley held at 227-228 that a writ could only be served upon the company in London if the company was carrying on business in England. While the language of Ord IX, r 8 did not include the phrase "carrying on business", a body of case law dealing with service of a process on foreign corporations favours the expression "carrying on business" as a "convenient test" of presence in the jurisdiction for the purpose of effective service: see, for example, South India Shipping Corporation Ltd v Export-Import Bank of Korea [1985] 1 WLR 585, 589; Badcock v Cumberland Gap Park Company [1893] 1 Ch 362, 367-368; Haggin v Comptoir D'Escompte de Paris (1889) 23 QBD 519, 522; Newby v Von Oppen and The Colt's Patent Firearms Manufacturing Company (1872) LR 7 QB 293, 296; and see Bray v F Hoffman-La Roche Ltd (2002) 118 FCR 1 at [61].
48 In Actiesselskabet, the Court of Appeal held that the raising of capital in London for use in the company's railway operations in Canada amounted to carrying on business in England. Lord Vaughan Williams held at 227:
Undoubtedly the defendants have officers here who act on their behalf at a fixed residence and who circulate advertisements of the defendants in their name; but it is contended that we ought to hold that they are not carrying on the business of the company, because the business carried on here is not that of running or managing the railway, but of raising money by means of the issue of bonds and debentures, which money is to be used by the company in Canada. In my judgment it is impossible to draw any such distinction. I think that in doing what it did the London board was carrying on the business of the company, and that it makes no difference that they pay no rent for the office in which they carry it on. The office is the office of the company; the business is advertised in every way as being carried on at the office. The appeal must therefore be dismissed.
49 Lord Buckley held at 228:
The cardinal factors are that the company does acts within the jurisdiction which are part of its business as a company, and does them at a fixed place within the jurisdiction. The raising of this loan capital is part of the company's business, and it is done here by a London committee constituted of the directors resident in England. They are the company's agents in this country for that purpose.
50 Section 43(1)(b)(iii) of the Act requires that the debtor "was carrying on business in Australia" at the time of the act of bankruptcy as a foundation for the jurisdiction of a court to make a sequestration order. Applying the cases that have considered a similar phrase in broadly similar contexts, it can be concluded that:
(1) Whether a company is "carrying on business in Australia" is a question of fact.
(2) The words "carrying on" imply the repetition of acts and activities which possess something of a permanent character; and it is generally insufficient for there to be a single transaction or a number of isolated transactions.
(3) A single transaction in Australia may be enough if it has been made in the course of business which the debtor is carrying on overseas.
(4) A debtor may carry on business "in" Australia even though the bulk of his or her business is conducted overseas.
(5) It may be sufficient that there are acts done in Australia ancillary to activities or transactions that make up a business. In this regard, trading is not regarded as completed until a business has performed all the obligations imposed by the fact of trading. Therefore, it is not essential that a business engage in actual trading activity in Australia. Examples of such ancillary acts may include the raising of capital in Australia for use by a business overseas, or the winding up of a business and the payment of debts after a business has ceased to actually trade in Australia.
(6) A person may carry on business in Australia without necessarily having a place of business in Australia.
51 I reject the debtor's submission that for the debtor to carry on business in Australia, it is essential that a going concern exist in Australia. It is not essential to demonstrate actual trading activity in Australia. It may be enough for the creditor to demonstrate that the debtor engages in acts or transactions in Australia which are ancillary to trading activity conducted overseas. Whether it is enough will depend upon the particular facts of the case.