1 MASTER: By originating process filed on 15 December 2000 the Plaintiff, Dventures Pty Limited, seeks an order that a statutory demand served upon it by the Defendant, Andrew Hugh Jenner Wily, be set aside.
2 That statutory demand is dated 28 November 2000. It is addressed to the Plaintiff. Paragraph 1 thereof is as follows:
The Debtor owes Andrew Hugh Jenner Wily, in his capacity of Deed Administrator of Brac Retail Pty Limited (subject to a Deed of Company Arrangement) of Level 6, 50 Margaret Street Sydney (the " Creditor ") the amount of $186,750.00 , being the total of the amounts described in the schedule.
3 The schedule to the demand is as follows,
Description of Debt Amount ($)
1. The amount of cheque number 001100
drawn on the account of Dventures Pty Ltd
held at the Newport Beach branch of the ANZ
bank dated 12 May 2000 given by Dventures
Pty Ltd and payment of which was refused
by Dventures Pty Ltd bank upon presentation
for payment. $186,750.00
Total $186,750.00
4 The demand is signed by one Alan Tropp, after whose name appears the following: "Capacity: Partner, Armstrong Wily & Co".
5 The demand was accompanied by an affidavit of Alan Tropp sworn 28 November 2000.
6 I shall later in this judgment refer in greater detail to various aspects of the form of the demand and the form of the affidavit which were the subject of submissions at the hearing before me.
7 The cheque referred to in the statutory demand was in evidence. The payee named in that cheque is "Armstrong Wily & Co (Trust Account)". The drawer of the cheque is the Plaintiff. It was not in dispute that after the cheque had been drawn and after it had been given to Armstrong Wily & Co, the bank, at the direction of the Plaintiff, stopped payment upon the cheque.
8 In order to understand the circumstances which have given rise to the present proceedings and which, in particular, brought about the giving of that cheque to Armstrong Wily and Co and the subsequent dishonour of that cheque, it is necessary that I should set forth certain facts which are not in dispute between the parties.
9 These proceedings have their origin in a Deed of Company Arrangement dated 11 December 1999, in respect of a company, Brac Retail Pty Limited ("Brac").
10 Under that Deed of Company Arrangement the present Defendant, Andrew Hugh Jenner Wily (described therein as "Andrew Hugh Jenner Wily of Armstrong Wily & Co. Chartered Accountants, Level 6, 50 Margaret Street Sydney in the state of New South Wales ("the administrator")") became the administrator of Brac. By that Deed Timothy Brachmanis, the Director of Brac, assumed certain financial obligations and liabilities. Those liabilities, in the events which have happened, included (by clause 12.1(d) of the Deed) payment by Timothy Brachmanis of the amount of $200,000 by 1 April 2000 to the administrator "for the administrator to deposit into the Fund". (The word "Fund" is defined in clause 1.1 of the Deed.)
11 By 12 May 2000 Timothy Brachmanis had discharged only part of the foregoing liability, and the amount of his indebtedness under that provision of the Deed was in an amount of $186,750.
12 Timothy Brachmanis was at that time and at all relevant times the sole director of Dventures Pty Limited ("Dventures"), which company is the Plaintiff in the present proceedings. Mr Brachmanis authorised a cheque to be drawn upon the bank account of Dventures in the amount which he was obligated to pay to Mr Wily. That was the cheque referred to in the statutory demand. That cheque was enclosed with a letter dated 12 May 2000 from M D Nikolaidis & Co., Solicitors for Mr Brachmanis, addressed to "Messrs Armstrong Wily & Co.", and was received on 12 May 2000 by Alan Topp, a partner of the Defendant (who, it will be recalled, signed the statutory demand and swore the affidavit in support).
13 Mr Timothy Brachmanis in return received a receipt headed "Armstrong Wily & Co. Trust Account". Upon that receipt appear, after the printed words "Details/Instructions", the words "M D Nikolaidis & Co. - money regarding Deed for Brac Retail Pty Limited." I would here interpolate that M D Nikolaidis & Co. are the solicitors acting for the Plaintiff in the present proceedings.
14 That cheque was deposited in the account conducted by Armstrong Wily & Co. with the ANZ bank on 12 May 2000 (that being the date when the cheque was received).
15 Subsequently, either on 12 May 2000, or very shortly thereafter, payment on the cheque was stopped - that is, the cheque was dishonoured upon presentation. (Notice of that dishonour was communicated by letter from the bank dated 15 May 2000.)
16 After the institution of the present proceedings, by the originating process to which I have already referred, the Court (by orders made by consent on 5 March 2001) ordered that the Plaintiff file and serve points of claim and that the Defendant file and serve points of defence. In consequence, the various factual matters which were in issue between the parties were thereby identified and delimited.
17 It emerged from the filing of the points of claim and points of defence and from the various affidavits which have been filed on behalf of the respective parties that Timothy Brachmanis, although the only director of the Plaintiff company, was not a shareholder of that company; the only shareholder of the Plaintiff was, at all relevant times, a company Hobbes Holdings Pty Limited, of which one Edgar Brachmanis (variously described as the father and the step-father of Timothy Brachmanis) was the sole shareholder.
18 The present proceedings are brought by the Plaintiff pursuant to the provisions of Division 3 of Part 5.4 of the Corporations Law. The Plaintiff at the outset has challenged the effectiveness of the statutory demand, submitting that, for various reasons, it was defective in form.
19 Further, the Plaintiff submits that there is a genuine dispute between the Plaintiff and the Defendant about the existence of the debt asserted in the demand.
20 Further, the Plaintiff submits that the amount claimed in the demand is not a debt.
21 In challenging the form of the statutory demand the Plaintiff points to the fact that it was signed not by the Defendant, Mr Wily, but by Alan Topp, describing himself as partner, not of Mr Wily, but in the firm Armstrong Wily & Co.
22 Provision is made in Division 2 of Part 5.4 of the Corporations Law for the service of a statutory demand on a company, and the consequences when a company fails to comply with a statutory demand. The contents of the demand are set forth in section 459 E (2). That subsection requires, inter alia, that the demand must be signed by or on behalf of the creditor (paragraph (f)). It is the submission of the Plaintiff that in the instant case the demand was not signed by or on behalf of the creditor.
23 In the instant case the creditor is identified in the demand as "Andrew Hugh Jenner Wily, in his capacity of Deed Administrator of Brac Retail Pty Limited (subject to a Deed of Company Arrangement) of Level 6, 50 Margaret Street, Sydney (the "creditor")" (paragraph 1 of the demand). It is signed by Alan Topp, purporting to do so in his capacity as "Partner, Armstrong Wily & Co.".
24 Not only does subsection (3) of section 459 E require that, in the circumstances of the instant case, the demand be accompanied by an affidavit of the nature described in that subsection, but the demand itself contains under the heading "Notes" a reference to such an affidavit (note 3). Such an affidavit must (in the circumstances of the instant case) comply with the Corporations Act Rules (see the definition of "rules" in section 9 of the Corporations Law). Rule 2.5 provides (subject to a provision not here relevant) that an affidavit that is to be made by a creditor may, in the circumstances of the instant case, be made "by the creditor or a person authorised by the creditor to make the affidavit on behalf of the creditor" (paragraph (c)).
25 In the instant case the evidence discloses that Mr Topp was at all material times a partner in the firm Armstrong Wily & Co. and that at all material times the other partners in that firm included Andrew Hugh Jenner Wily, the present Defendant.
26 The Defendant in response to the foregoing submissions, relied firstly upon the authority of one partner to act on behalf of the other partners of a partnership (see, for example, Partnership Act 1892 (NSW), section 5; Lindley & Banks on Partnership, 17ed. (1995), Chapter 12, pages 299f).
27 Further, the question whether the demand has been "signed by or on behalf of the creditor" is a question of fact, the existence of which can be established on the balance of probabilities by the ordinary rules of evidence and proof (see Dennis Hanger Pty Limited v Kanambra Pty Limited (1992) 6 ACSR 687 at 689-690; DCT (Vic) v Players Entertainment Network Pty Limited (1988) 13 ACLR 541).
28 The foregoing statutory provisions (of the Partnership Act) and the legal principles relating to the authority of partners, as well as the statement in the affidavit of Alan Godfrey Topp, sworn 27 June 2001 concerning the constitution at the relevant times of the firm Armstrong Wily & Co., and the fact that at relevant times each of Mr Topp and Mr Wily was a partner of that firm, satisfy me upon the balance of probabilities that the statutory demand signed by Mr Topp was signed "on behalf of Mr Wily".
29 The next ground upon which it is submitted on behalf of the Plaintiff that the statutory demand is defective is that Mr Wily himself is not the creditor. The basis for this submission is that, so it is submitted, there existed no debt payable to Mr Wily. That is, that any debt which was owed by Mr Timothy Brachmanis (or by any other person) in consequence of the dishonour of the cheque drawn by the Plaintiff in payment of that indebtedness of Mr Brachmanis was a debt payable, not to Mr Wily, but to the company Brac Retail Pty Limited, of which Mr Wily was the deed administrator.
30 Not only does the Plaintiff by the foregoing submission challenge the form, and thus to the effectiveness, of the statutory demand, but that submission is also relied upon by the Plaintiff in support of an asserted genuine dispute of the nature recognised by section 459H(1), the existence of which requires that the Court must set aside the statutory demand.
31 It was the submission of the Plaintiff that any cheque drawn in satisfaction of the indebtedness of Mr Brachmanis should have been drawn in favour of Brac Retail Pty Limited (Administrator Appointed). It was a concomitant of this submission that the entity to which Mr Brachmanis was indebted, and is respect of which indebtedness the cheque was paid, was not Mr Wily, but the company, and that, in consequence, only the company, and not Mr Wily (irrespective of how he was otherwise described), could serve the statutory demand. The Plaintiff submitted that a statutory demand by which Mr Wily (irrespective of the capacity by which he was described) was named as the creditor was ineffective to claim a debt asserted to be owing to Brac Retail Pty Limited.
32 Such a submission totally disregards the factual context in which Mr Timothy Brachmanis, through his solicitor, in the course of and as a culmination of extensive and protracted negotiations between himself (through his solicitor) and Mr Wily as administrator of the company (through Mr Wily's partner, Mr Topp) sought to discharge the indebtedness of Mr Brachmanis to the company.
33 Further, the distinction drawn by the Plaintiff in the foregoing submission, being the distinction between a debt owed to Mr Wily in his capacity as deed administrator of the company and a debt owed to the company, totally disregards a number of specific provisions of the Deed of Company Arrangement. For example, the obligations of Mr Brachmanis under clause 12.1 included an obligation at the date of executing the Deed, to "pay the amount of $25,000 to the Administrator for the Administrator to deposit into the Fund". Clause 1.1 of the Deed defines Administrator as meaning, relevantly,
Andrew Hugh Jenner Wily as either Voluntary Administrator or Deed Administrator...
34 The same clause defines "Fund" as meaning,
a consolidated bank account conducted by the Administrator and styled "Brac Retail Pty Ltd Deed Fund" into which will be paid moneys to pay the Entitlements of Admitted Creditors and the costs and expenses of the Arrangement.
35 Further, paragraph (d) of Clause 12.1 creates (as has already been observed) an obligation and liability upon Mr Brachmanis, in the circumstances which have arisen, to pay the amount of $200,000 by 1 April 2000 "to the Administrator for the Administrator to deposit into the Fund".
36 I am satisfied that the foregoing provisions of the Deed have the effect that the only entity to whom money is owed under those provisions and the only entity which can receive money from Mr Brachmanis in discharge of his liability thereunder is Mr Wily in his capacity as either Deed Administrator of Brac Retail Pty Limited or as Voluntary Administrator of Brac Retail Pty Limited.
37 Indeed, it could well be argued that an attempt by Mr Brachmanis to make a payment directly to the company (for example, by bypassing Mr Wily and effecting a deposit into any existing bank account of the company) would not constitute a discharge of the indebtedness of Mr Brachmanis to the company.
38 In my conclusion, the indebtedness of Mr Brachmanis under the Deed is an indebtedness to Mr Wily in his capacity as "the Administrator" as defined in Clause 1.1 of the Deed. In consequence, I am satisfied that Mr Wily in the capacity described in the statutory demand is appropriately the creditor in respect to the alleged indebtedness. I do not accept that in so identifying the creditor there is any defect in the statutory demand or that there is disclosed any genuine dispute as to the existence of the debt.
39 As well as submitting that, for the foregoing reasons, the form of the demand itself is defective, the Plaintiff also submits that the form of the affidavit in support of the demand is defective, and that, in consequence, the service of the demand on the Plaintiff is ineffective.
40 I have already observed that section 459E(3) requires that the demand must be accompanied by an affidavit. That subsection requires that the affidavit