"95 Interest on debt under judgment or order
(1) Where judgment is given or an order is made for the payment of money, interest shall, unless the Court otherwise orders, be payable at the prescribed rate from the date when the judgment or order takes effect on so much of the money as is from time to time unpaid."
Rates have been prescribed from time to time since 27 May 1993. There is no suggestion that the rates set forth in the interest calculations in the Notice are not as prescribed.
13 The provision identified in the interest calculation appendix to this Notice, the Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW) s 95(1), is, it is argued by counsel for Marshall, the 'rate provision' in this case and not, as should have been identified, the 'source provision'. It is submitted that the correct source provision is the Local Courts (Civil Claims) Act 1970 (NSW) s 39(1). Counsel argued that this defect should be held fatal to the notice pursuant to the decision in Australian Steel Company (Operations) Pty Ltd v Lewis (2000) 109 FCR 33 ("Australian Steel Co"). It was submitted that I should follow the decisions to that effect of Driver FM in Jiminez v Welcome Homes Real Estate Pty Ltd [2001] FMCA 122 and Raphael FM in Boorowa Shire Council v Booth [2001] FMCA 31.
14 With respect to this alleged deficiency in the Notice, counsel for GMAC submitted that this case is to be distinguished from Australian Steel Co as the Notice in this case refers to both supporting statutes, whereas in Australian Steel Co there was a complete failure to refer to the source provision, and relied upon decisions of Beaumont J in Wright v Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2001] FCA 386, of Madgwick J in St George Bank Ltd v Baldwin [2001] FCA 161, and of the Full Court in Kirk v Ashdown [1999] FCA 1664. It was argued that the Notice contains the essential elements as required and would not reasonably mislead a debtor. It was submitted that the approach the Court should take in respect of alleged deficiencies in bankruptcy notices is that determined by the High Court in Kleinwort Benson v Crowl (1988) 165 CLR 71 and that even if there is a deficiency it is cured by s 306 of the Act, which provides:
"306(1)Proceedings under this Act are not invalidated by a formal defect or an irregularity, unless the court before which the objection on that ground is made is of the opinion that substantial injustice has been caused by the defect or irregularity and that the injustice cannot be remedied by an order of that court."
15 This case is a further illustration of the minefield that bankruptcy law has become for judgment creditors since the decision in Australian Steel Co. There is a real question as to what was authoritatively decided by that judgment. The majority declined to follow the reasoning in another, earlier, Full Court decision of Kirk v Ashdown. They did not, and could not have, overruled that decision (or George v Tricontinental Corporation Ltd (1994) 53 FCR 284) for reasons I endeavoured to express in Australian Steel Co (at [123]).
16 In my opinion, the decision in Australian Steel Co should be understood by reference to the facts which arose for decision in that case. Having in mind the earlier Full Court decisions in George v Tricontinental Corporation Ltd, Kirk v Ashdown and Trustees of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary v Weir (2000) 98 FCR 447 and the reasoning of the High Court in Kleinwort Benson, I do not agree that the effect of the current provisions is that any failure to follow the detail of the prescribed form is a failure to comply with an essential statutory requirement and so fatal to validity as (on one view) may have been held by the majority in Australian Steel Co (see [40] but cf [42] and [44]). The decision in Re St Leon; Ex parte National Australia Bank Ltd (1994) 56 FCR 371 to which reference is made in that connection is impossible to reconcile with Kleinwort Benson and the Full Court decisions to which I have referred.
17 Nonetheless, Australian Steel Co decided that a particular form of bankruptcy notice was invalid, and there is no other contrary decision of a Full Court on the same form. In those circumstances, if the form of bankruptcy notice here were the same as that considered in Australian Steel Co, then I should follow the decision in that case regardless of the reasoning leading to it.
18 A copy of the bankruptcy notice in Australian Steel Co has been provided by counsel for GMAC. The relevant parts of the Schedule and the Notes are the same as in the present case. The attached calculation of interest was as follows:
"INTEREST
(a) Interest is being claimed pursuant to Section 101 of the Supreme Court Act 1986 (Vic)
(b) 20/4/99 to 12/5/99 being 22 days @ 12.3% on $7,998.74 = $59.30
Interest Total = $59.30"
The attached certified extract of judgment referred to the Melbourne Magistrates Court but did not refer to post judgment interest, or to any provision of any Act.
19 The position concerning post judgment interest in Victoria is explained in the following passage from the judgment of the majority in Australian Steel Co:
3. In the present cases the notices all had the same defect. Each notice was founded on an order made in the Magistrates' Court of Victoria and claimed interest from the date of the order to the date of issue of the notice. In a schedule attached to each notice the calculation of interest was set out and also, as is now required, a statement as to "the provision under which the interest is being claimed". The notices stated that interest was claimed "pursuant to section 101 of the Supreme Court Act 1986 (Vic)". However that provision did not apply to the orders founding the notices. Interest on Magistrates' Court orders is governed by s 100(7) of the Magistrates' Court Act 1989 (Vic). That section provides:
"Every judgment debt carries interest at the rate for the time being fixed under s 2 of the Penalty Interest Rates Act 1983 from the time the order is made."
4. Section 101 of the Supreme Court Act is as follows:
"Every judgment debt carries interest at the rate for the time being fixed under s 2 of the Penalty Interest Rates Act 1983 from the time the judgment is given or, in the case of costs which are taxable by the taxing master, from the date of the order from the taxing master stating the result of the taxation or such other date as the Court orders."
5. Generally speaking, costs in the Supreme Court are ordered to be taxed, whereas costs in the Magistrates' Court are fixed at the time of the making of the order.
6. The Penalty Interest Rates Act 1983 (Vic) s 2 provides for the proclamation of interest rates from time to time. The applicable rate in the present cases was published in the Victorian Government Gazette No 7 of 19 February 1998 at 395. Thus in dollar terms the amount of interest payable on a judgment debt of a given amount over a given period will be the same whether the judgment is in the Supreme Court or the Magistrates' Court. In the present cases the amounts are as follows:
Order Interest
The Australian Steel Company
(Operations) Pty Ltd v Lewis $7,998.74 $59.30
Royal & Sun Alliance Workers'
Compensation Ltd v Oakes $2,964.85 $63.94
Metropolitan Fire & Emergency
Services Board v Zemlic $14,645.25 $315.86"
20 It will be seen that in that case the relevant provision which fixed the rate was not the Supreme Court Act 1986 (Vic) (to which reference was made in the Notice) but the Penalties Interest Rates Act 1983 (Vic) (to which reference was not made). In the present case, the provision of the Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW) to which reference was made in the Notice did fix the rate as it was expressly incorporated by reference in the relevant Local Court rule. Further, the Notice and the Certificate of Judgment make it plain that the judgment is governed by the Local Courts (Civil Claims) Act 1970 (NSW). The only provision of that Act which deals with post judgment interest is s 39, which leads inexorably to Pt 13 r 3 of the Rules, which unequivocally identifies the provision referred to in the Notice. Put another way, the debtor could actually verify the interest entitlement by reference to s 95(1) of the Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW), which was the identified provision by contrast with the position in Australian Steel Co ([44]). The debtor would not be misled. It follows that I do not agree with the decision of Raphael FM in Boorowa Shire Council v Booth or that of Driver FM in Jiminez v Welcome Homes Real Estate Pty Ltd, and prefer the original preference of Driver FM as expressed in Shephard v Blueberry Farms of Australia (Corindi) Ltd [2001] FMC 2. In considering this issue, I have received considerable assistance from the approach of Beaumont J in Wright v Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd, particularly at [6]-[25] (cf Madgwick J in St George Bank Ltd v Baldwin, particularly at [4]-[8]).
21 My conclusion is that there was no defect or irregularity in the Notice as alleged, but if there were there would be substantial compliance with the form as permitted by s 25C of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth). In any event, as there is no evidence of substantial injustice, s 306 of the Act would apply to any such irregularity.
22 The second defect alleged is that the Notice requires payment otherwise than in accordance with the judgment debt. This is so because the Notice, in par 4, requires payment to be made to "Canberra Lawyers, Barristers and Solicitors, of 7/13 Napier Close, Deakin, ACT 2600", however the judgment relied upon is in favour of EA Bourne Pty Ltd. Counsel for Marshall relies on the decision in Re Martin; Ex parte Government Employees Finance and Industrial Loan Corporation (1969) 13 FLR 353 and James v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1955) 93 CLR 631 at 639-641.
23 Counsel for GMAC submits that there is no inhibition upon a creditor company appointing an agent to receive payment of a judgment debt, which is the effect of the relevant portion of the Notice. The debtor is left in no doubt as to the manner of payment.
24 In my opinion, the submission for GMAC is correct, and is made clear in the present case by the following portion of the Notice:
"The person who applied for this notice to be issued is:
Peter Robert Harris
who confirms by the following signature that he or she is the creditor's authorised agent:
"P Harris"
and whose address for service is:
Canberra Lawyers,
Barristers and Solicitors,
7/13 Napier Close,
DEAKIN ACT 2600
Telephone number: 02 6282 7120
Fax number: 02 6282 7130
DX number (if applicable) DX 24616 DEAKIN"
25 The decisions in Re Martin and James v Federal Commissioner of Taxation turned upon the terms of the Bankruptcy Act as it stood at the respective times of those decisions. Those provisions are no longer part of the Act. The present prescribed form of bankruptcy notice leaves open the procedure in the present case. I note in passing that the bankruptcy notice in Australian Steel Co was prepared on the same basis and no point was taken.