The proceeding before the primary judge
11 The liquidators relied on affidavits made by Mr Nipps on 13 June and 3 November 2023, together with an affidavit of their solicitor Ms Hogarty made on 15 November 2023. The Gong parties relied on two affidavits made by their solicitor Mr Greenberg on 11 October and 13 November 2023, and an affidavit of Mr Gong made on 17 October 2023. Mr Nipps was cross-examined by counsel for the Gong parties. A very considerable quantity of documentation was placed before the primary judge. It is before us in the form of Part B of the Appeal Book comprising 10,305 pages and Part C comprising 422 pages, most of which is not germane to the issues. The appeal book should have been limited to the core documents relevant to each appeal ground. It should not be necessary to remind practitioners of the explicit requirement at r36.54 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 that Part B is an index, and only an index, and that Part C is limited to only the exhibits and evidence to which reference is made in the written submissions. It may also be observed that the manner of preparation of each of those parts in this appeal cannot be reconciled with the overarching purpose at ss 37M and 37N of the FCA Act.
12 Despite the volume of material adduced, and with commendable alacrity, the primary judge formulated and published comprehensive reasons six days after the completion of the hearing.
13 Her Honour summarised the evidence and made many findings of fact which are not challenged by the Gong parties' grounds of appeal. It is convenient to reproduce relevant portions of her Honour's reasons. Commencing at PJ [25] and concluding at [31] her Honour dealt with the liquidators' explanation for the delay in the following terms:
25. Mr Nipps' evidence detailed, at great length, the challenges he and Mr Wight (the other liquidator) and their staff have experienced in untangling the affairs of the i-Prosperity group. According to Mr Nipps' affidavits, the companies' books and records were not organised in any logical manner, were incomplete, and untrustworthy (eg in relation to transactions being misdescribed in narrations). It is difficult, in any summary, to do justice to the extent of the difficulties encountered by the Liquidators. Since their appointment, the Liquidators have also been engaged in various pieces of litigation. Some of that litigation was initiated by the Liquidators - to avoid prejudicing interests in assets and to put another set of i-Prosperity companies (the Telco companies) into liquidation - but most of it was initiated by other parties, but required the involvement of the Liquidators for various reasons.
26. The Liquidators have also been engaged in time-consuming tasks relating to engagement with creditors, providing information to creditors, other liquidators and some government regulators, as well as progressing statutory document requests, generally seeking information and progressing public examinations and related document request procedures. The Liquidators' activities have been further hampered by live access to the relevant server having become unavailable after that server was seized by the Financial Crimes Squad of the New South Wales police force around 14 August 2020, and vast amounts of email data only becoming effectively searchable after being loaded into "Relativity" in June 2021.
27. The Liquidators' submissions summarised the ways in which their investigations have been hampered as follows:
(a) The Companies' affairs are very complex. Mr Nipps' evidence is that some of the projects in which the Companies were involved entailed "extremely complicated structures". The difficulties associated with obtaining an understanding of these commercial arrangements has been exacerbated by the counter-parties to the transactions being unco-operative in their responses to requests by the Liquidators for information and documentation.
(b) The books and records of the Companies are intermingled and incomplete, requiring that the liquidators reconstruct records in order to be in a position to review them. The Companies did not deploy an adequate or consistent document management system. The characterisation of transactions in the Companies' books and records is unreliable and requires independent verification. Particular difficulties have been encountered with the Companies' recording of transactions denoted as "loans", where the Liquidators are continuing to review 368 transactions (purportedly relating to different parties) processed through a "Director Loan Ledger" and 614 transactions processed through an "Investor Loan Ledger" for the two year period immediately prior to the liquidators' appointment as administrators. The Liquidators have obtained documents from third parties relating to the affairs of the Companies, via subpoenas issued in proceedings in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, and have sought and obtained orders releasing the liquidators from the implied undertaking that would otherwise inhibit the use that could be made of those documents.
(c) The format in which electronic data of the Companies is stored has made review of that data time-consuming. In addition, the server of IPP was confiscated by the Financial Crimes Squad of the New South Wales police force so that the Liquidators lost access (albeit remote access) to the server and could only access the information saved on it by requesting documents from a third party consultant who had imaged the server data at the appointment date.
(d) The directors of the Companies have not been forthcoming with information that may have assisted or expedited the Liquidators' investigations. Save for some preliminary communications immediately prior to, and following, the liquidators' appointment, Mr Gu and Mr Huang have not been available to speak with the liquidators or the liquidators' staff. The liquidators understand that both men left Australia in July or August 2020, following which neither has been contactable.
(e) To assist with their investigation of the affairs of IPP and IPG Chats SPV, the Liquidators are conducting public examinations in the Supreme Court of Victoria. Examination summonses have resulted in the production of a large volume of documents to the Liquidators, the contents of which require review. The public examinations of the examinees is still pending, and the dates fixed for the examinations have been adjourned to a date to be fixed, but not before 29 September 2023.
(f) Investigations into the Companies' affairs have been delayed on account of the Liquidators needing to address the Companies' ongoing involvement in various Court proceedings. As detailed in the Nipps Affidavit, one or other of the Companies was, or is, involved in three separate proceedings in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, applications for the appointment of receivers (in the Supreme Court of New South Wales and in this Court), a proceeding in the Supreme Court of Victoria and three other proceedings issued in this Court.
(g) The Liquidators have undertaken the vast majority of their investigations with very limited funding. The Companies had very limited cash reserves at the time of the Liquidators' appointment. Extensive efforts by the liquidators to obtain funding which are detailed in the Nipps Confidential Affidavit, have diverted the liquidators from investigative work.
28. I accept those submissions as an accurate reflection of the evidence, and accept Mr Nipps' evidence as to the material extent to which those impediments have hampered the Liquidators' investigations.
29. I also accept, based on Mr Nipps' evidence, that the Liquidators and their staff have been diligently pursuing a range of tasks concerning the liquidations with which they are charged. The Liquidators have been, and are, faced with very difficult circumstances and it is in no way surprising that they have not been able to finalise their investigations and initiate claims without obtaining extensions. They have had to, and have, prioritised their work.
30. In his first affidavit, Mr Nipps gave the following overview of the steps taken in the overall conduct of the administration and winding up of the Companies:
(a) Undertaken a detailed review of the books and records of the Companies as produced to us on the date of our appointment;
(b) Interviewed Michael Gu, the chief executive and director of the Companies;
(c) Interviewed Harry Huang, the chief finance officer of the Companies and a former director of some of the Companies;
(d) Undertaken interviews with a number of former employees and creditors of the Companies;
(e) Prepared a detailed report to creditors for the purposes of s 439A of the Act and the second meeting of creditors;
(f) Reviewed court documents relating to litigation that was on foot as against the Companies on the date of our appointment to the Companies;
(g) Responded to subpoenas served on a number of the Companies;
(h) Responded to a number of applications for leave under s 500(2) of the Act for proceedings to be commenced against one or more of the Companies;
(i) Identified, preserved and realised a number of interests in assets available to one or more of the Companies, focusing in particular on possible proprietary interests held by the Companies and particularly those that were at risk if the Liquidators did not act swiftly;
(j) Engaged with a number of potential funders on the possibility of those funders providing funding for the Liquidators to undertake further investigations and if warranted, litigation;
(k) Engaged with creditors in response to queries made by them;
(l) Served notices on a number of parties requiring the delivery of documents to the Liquidators;
(m) Engaged in correspondence and attended meetings with creditors and the former advisors to the Companies to understand better the Companies' affairs and to determine if there are any assets or claims to pursue;
(n) Engaged in correspondence with Mr Gu's trustee in bankruptcy, including submitting a proof of debt in the bankruptcy;
(o) Provided regular written reports to the Committee of Inspection for IPP, convened a number of meetings of the Committee of Inspection for IPP and engaged with the other Committees of Inspection for the Companies as required;
(p) Responded to numerous detailed requests for information from creditors both formally and informally, including pursuant to requests made under section 70-45 of the Insolvency Practice Schedule (Corporations). This required undertaking the following general steps for each request:
i. engaging with creditors in respect of the request, including to address its scope, reasonableness and any funding we required to locate and provide the requested documents;
ii. undertaking searches, and reviewing books and records, of the Companies to identify information responsive to the request, including where required, obtaining legal advice for matters such as privilege (by referring to this advice I do not waive any privilege attaching to such advice);
iii preparing various flow of funds analyses (for example, the flow of funds between the Companies and/or the Companies and investors or investments) to assist creditors;
iv. collating documents responsive to requests and providing them to creditors;
v. preparing briefs to creditors; and
vi attending meetings with creditors and, on occasions, their legal representatives;
(q) Responded to a Notice to Produce issued by an Inspector appointed under section 20 of the Gaming and Liquor Administration Act 2007 (NSW) and a summons issued by Adam Bell SC appointed under the Casino Control Act 1992 (NSW) to provide information under section 8 of the Royal Commissions Act 1923 (NSW) to Mr Bell as part of his review of The Star and its Sydney Casino;
(r) Responding to numerous requests made by, and otherwise engaging with, New South Wales (NSW) Police to provide information and otherwise deliver up books, records and equipment in the possession of the liquidators relating to the NSW Police's ongoing investigations into persons associated with the Companies, and specifically Mr Gu and Mr Huang;
(s) Responding to, and producing documents in accordance with a notification of review by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) dated 28 May 2021 for the five financial years ending 30 June 2016 to 30 June 2020 in respect of the following entities: [list of entities omitted]
(t) Responding to various requests made by other regulators and government bodies for information and/or to deliver up book and records of the Companies;
(u) Undertaken recovery activities to recover funds relating to:
i. a property registered in the name of Moli Ventures Pty Ltd (Moli Ventures) which had been purchased by G&H Partners Co. Pty Ltd using funds from IPP and was transferred to Moli Ventures without Moli Ventures paying sufficient consideration;
ii. payments made by IPP and IPG Asset Services to repay part of a $17 million loan from Tor Asia Master Fund to IPG Chats SPV, which loan was guaranteed by a member of co-sureties;
iii the payment by IPP of Stamp Duty for the acquisition of a development property in Rhodes, Sydney, which was registered to i-Prosperity Waterside Rhodes Pty Ltd;
iv a property purchased off the plan by the company Elite Opera Holdings Pty Ltd, for which the deposit and FIRB fees were paid using IPP's funds;
v. a property purchased in the name of LZYH Pty Ltd for which IPP paid loan repayments to the registered mortgagee, National Australia Bank Ltd (NAB);
vi. units held by IPP in the IPG Mortgage fund;
vii. a voidable transaction against the ATO to recover preference payments made to the ATO;
viii. funds held in bank accounts in the name of various Companies that were subject to freezing orders made by the Supreme Court of New South Wales prior to the Administrators' appointment;
ix. a loan advanced to John Landerer by IPP or IPG;
x. a loan from IPP to Beef Life Burwood NSW Pty Ltd; and
xi. realising units held by IPA in managed investment funds.
31. In addition, the Liquidators have pursued public examinations in relation to their claims against Crown and Star. Those proceedings resulted in both casino entities producing substantial volumes of documents in response to orders for document production, an issue which is discussed further below.
14 None of those findings are directly challenged in the appeal grounds.
15 Returning to the findings of the primary judge, her Honour next dealt with the funding difficulties experienced by the liquidators and in general terms found that they were "largely unfunded", that the total remuneration to date was in excess of $7.5 million, and that recoveries were in the order of $3.75 million. Some third-party funding had been secured to conduct compulsory examinations. The liquidators were then in discussions with funders and creditors in an endeavour to secure funding for the commencement of proceedings. Those discussions had not concluded by the time of the hearing before her Honour: PJ [32] - [33]. Some of those findings are challenged by reference to new evidence.
16 The primary judge then dealt with the funding that the liquidators had procured, commencing at PJ [34] and ending at [43]. Within that part of the analysis, the appellants specifically assert error at PJ [39]. Once again it is convenient to set out the entirety of her Honour's analysis:
34. One success that the liquidators did enjoy was "Fair Entitlements Guarantee" (FEG) funding that was secured in June 2022; the initial request for FEG funding was made in October 2021. As was stressed by the Gong parties, that funding was sought and obtained to conduct public examinations of Mr Gong, Mr Landerer, Crown and Star, but the Liquidators only proceeded to make public examination applications in respect of Star and Crown. In cross-examination, Mr Nipps explained that, as the work involved in the Star and Crown public examinations was more extensive than had been anticipated initially, the Liquidators made a "strategic decision" to pause on the Landerer and Gong public examinations and redirect all the funding to Crown and Star. Mr Nipps accepted that the work on the Landerer and Gong public examinations had been paused before it turned out that Crown and Star produced significant quantities of documents, putting pressure on the budget. Mr Nipps explained that the Liquidators focused on the Crown and Star investigations as the Gong and Landerer claims involved very complex transactions, whereas the casino claims involved a clearer forensic tracing exercise, which could be progressed more quickly.
35. Mr Nipps' evidence was that the Liquidators had continued to intend to proceed with public examination proceedings in respect of Mr Gong and Mr Landerer, while noting that, if sufficient documentation was produced, it may not be necessary to proceed with oral examinations. He rejected the suggestion that the Liquidators remained undecided about whether any public examination proceedings were necessary in respect of the Gong and Landerer parties. It appears from Mr Nipps' evidence that the Liquidators' solicitors were presently reviewing a package of material with a view to formulating public examination applications. Mr Nipps was otherwise not across the detail of the exact investigatory steps to be undertaken, as senior staff handled such matters.
36. Mr Nipps rejected the suggestion that, with funding in mid-2022, public examination proceedings could have been initiated straight away. He pointed to the level of work needed to get to the point of actually issuing proceedings. Mr Nipps did not accept that the decision to focus on the casino claims was taken in July 2022:
Is it correct that in July of 2022 you made the decision to concentrate on the casinos and leave Mr Gong and Mr Landerer for the time being?---That's not correct. It wasn't July, and like I said I don't recall specifically when between June and making that call - when Barry and I - Mr [Wight] and I had a discussion in consultation with our solicitors to focus on the casino claims. I don't recall specifically when that decision was made.
37. Returning to the funding in relation to the Star and Crown public examinations: while further funding was sought from the Attorney General's Department (which administers FEG) in late October 2022, some further funding was not secured until February 2023. There was a lot of back and forth.
38. I accept Mr Nipps' evidence that the Liquidators have undertaken a great deal of work to secure third party funding (albeit they have so far enjoyed relatively modest success). I also accept that their lack of external funding has hampered the progress of the Liquidators' investigations, although the degree to which that has slowed things down is hard to judge in view of the significant extent to which the liquidators have self-funded.
39. In relation to the pausing of work on the Gong and Landerer investigations, the Liquidators ought not be criticised for devoting their FEG funding to seeing through the making of public examination applications in relation to Crown and Star, and reviewing the significant volume of material received from those entities. Accordingly, I do not accept that, as counsel for the Gong parties, urged, there was a decisive "fork in the road" in July 2022 and that the Liquidators' election to focus their energies on the Crown and Landerer investigations was a strategic choice that should result in no extension being allowed. While the decision to focus on the Crown and Star investigations was indeed a strategic decision, it is one that has been satisfactorily explained. There was no decision to effectively abandon those investigations, which decision is sought to be reversed by an extension application late in the piece.
40. Mr Nipps also explained the Liquidators' view that the Gong and Landerer investigations would need to be progressed by compulsory court processes on the basis that they had seen how uncooperative Mr Gong and Mr Landerer were. The Gong parties drew out that much of the basis for this view of Mr Gong, as it was set out in Mr Nipps' initial affidavit, concerned interactions with Mr Gong concerning his claims as a creditor in the liquidations, when the liquidators had had only one written exchange with him in relation to claims against the Gong parties over the period of the liquidation. In addressing this matter, Mr Nipps also observed that the Liquidators had had significant interactions with Mr Gong through litigation in which they were both involved.
41. Having regard to these matters, the very limited attempts to engage with Mr Gong regarding potential claims against the Gong parties over the course of the liquidations is concerning. That said, given there was a great deal of interaction with Mr Gong in relation to other matters, there is a rational explanation for the Liquidators' assessment that engagement needed to be pursued through compulsory processes.
42. Counsel for the Landerer parties resisted the suggestion that Mr Landerer had been unhelpful in his dealings with the Liquidators. While, as counsel for the Landerer parties pointed out, Mr Landerer did provide some information and documents, some of his responses were decidedly unhelpful and flippant. For example, the Liquidators repeatedly asked Mr Landerer for details of amounts advanced in respect of the Regina Equities loan (which is further explained below). Instead of providing the details requested, Mr Landerer, a practising solicitor, said:
I am puzzled by your repeated request for a schedule of amounts advanced. If you do not have evidence of the advances, then perhaps I should get my money back and the balance credited.
43. Mr Landerer was no more forthcoming when the Liquidators renewed their request in answer to this correspondence. Counsel for the Landerer parties suggested that, if the Liquidators were unhappy with Mr Landerer's response, they could, and should, have commenced at that stage (first quarter of 2022) a public examination procedure to obtain the documents and information Mr Landerer was not providing. I do not accept that the Liquidators' explanation for their delay in this case can be swept away on the basis that they should have commenced proceedings to obtain each discrete piece of information or documentation that the Landerer parties (or any other person, including the Gong parties) had not provided. That would be a deeply inefficient course to take and one that, not surprisingly, did not recommend itself to the Liquidators.
17 Having summarised the evidence and made these findings, the primary judge turned to the evidence regarding the potential claims at [44]-[59] in terms that are not challenged by the appeal grounds. It suffices for present purposes to observe that her Honour was satisfied that many of the claims involve substantial sums in multiples of millions of dollars, the sum of all potential claims exceeds $122 million, and there are potential claims against two casino operators: Crown Melbourne Ltd of $50 million and The Star Pty Ltd of $12.5 million: PJ [44] (the Casinos). Her Honour regarded the quantum of the claims as material for two reasons: first, that any unfairness which flows from creditor queue jumping is exacerbated where the amounts involved are large; and secondly, that recovering funds pursuant to claims is the only prospect that a dividend will be paid to the creditors: PJ [45]. The primary judge accepted that each group of claims in annexures A and B were the subject of continuing investigation, and that the liquidators were not then in a position to assess the prospects of success: PJ [46] - [47]. Her Honour accepted that the difference in the periods of extension sought by the liquidators for the identified group claims reflected the stage which the investigations had reached: PJ [49] - [50]. Further, at PJ [51] her Honour accepted the evidence of Mr Nipps that in order to "confidently determine whether to bring applications" the liquidators would need to undertake the following steps:
(1) obtain further books and records from the companies;
(2) conduct a review of any further recovered books and records from the companies;
(3) complete the review of the documents that have been produced and are still to be produced in the Examination Proceedings for the Crown and Star claims;
(4) consider whether there is a need to undertake any further public examinations of persons that may have information in relation to the examinable affairs of the companies and complete such examinations;
(5) conduct a detailed investigation into a number of potential claims to substantiate the claims prior to taking any steps towards making the necessary application(s);
(6) identify any further potential claims;
(7) obtain advice as to the merits of any claims and the potential benefit to the companies in prosecuting the claim - including assessing the "risk-reward" ratio of the claim to determine whether the potential recovery (and the likelihood of succeeding in the prosecutions) warrants the time and cost of prosecuting the claim;
(8) prepare court documents required for the commencement of proceedings to seek relief in respect of the impugned transactions; and
(9) brief counsel in regards to prosecuting one or more of the potential claims.
18 At PJ [52] - [59], the primary judge addressed the potential claims against the Gong and Landerer parties. Relevantly, Mr Gong received payments exceeding $18 million in the months prior to the external administration of i-Prosperity, which he explained in his evidence as the repayment of various loans advanced to companies within the Group. Mr Gong has lodged a proof of debt with the liquidators of approximately $43 million. At PJ [54] her Honour referred to evidence from Mr Nipps that Mr Gong is not a detached third-party creditor in that he is referred to as the general manager of the Group in email correspondence in 2017 and 2018, his wife was an employee of one or more of the Group companies from 1 April 2019, and he was a director or had shareholder interests in several entities which formed "part of the broader i-Prosperity group of companies". Overall, her Honour concluded at PJ [60] that:
In my view, the identified claims have sufficient apparent substance to warrant the Liquidators continuing to investigate them in order to ascertain whether they have sufficient merit, and prospects of recovery, to warrant litigation.
19 That finding is not challenged by the grounds of appeal.
20 The primary judge next dealt with the question of prejudice from PJ [61] to [68]. Other than general prejudice which ordinarily flows from delay, her Honour dealt with the specific claim of Mr Gong at PJ [64] - [67] as follows:
64. Mr Gong claimed specific prejudice on a number of bases. First, he said that, in December 2022 he accepted a global settlement offer from Mr Landerer, which included the Regina Equities loan. Mr Gong deposed that, in deciding to settle with Mr Landerer, he took into account that the Liquidators had not, to that point, pursued a claim in respect of the Regina Equities loan, even though they had pursued another loan claim with some success. Mr Gong said he believed that there were "reasonable prospects" that the Liquidators had by then abandoned the Regina Equities loan, although he said in his evidence that he did appreciate the risk that the Liquidators may seek to challenge the loan.
65. In my assessment, Mr Gong made a commercial decision to settle with Mr Landerer and was prepared to take the chance that the Liquidators would yet pursue the Regina Equities loan. He settled with Mr Landerer in December 2022, eight months before the expiry of the default period provided for in s 588FF(3)(a) of the Act. This was not a deal agreed to as the final days of that period ran down. I do not consider that the extension of the period during which Mr Gong remains exposed to a risk he had already decided to run constitutes a material prejudice on the facts of this case.
66. Mr Gong also said that Mr Huang had stopped responding to his messages in February 2022 and he was of the view that, if the Liquidators obtained an extension of time, he will not be able to have Mr Huang assist him with any proceedings brought against him. Mr Gong thought that Mr Huang might have been more willing to assist him if proceedings had been commenced by the Liquidators earlier. It appears from Mr Gong's evidence that Mr Huang stayed in touch with him until Mr Gong made it clear he would not be providing any more loans to Mr Huang. I do not consider the fact of Mr Gong's continued lack of access to Mr Huang, who ceased contact for apparently commercial reasons - viz, Mr Gong making it clear that no more loans would be forthcoming - constitutes a material prejudice that ought to be taken into account.
67. The third and final form of prejudice raised by Mr Gong was that his records are stored at two locations in Australia, but he now spends much of the year in China to attend to business concerns, which would make it more difficult to access documents and provide prompt instructions to his solicitors. Mr Gong's living arrangements are a matter for him. If he wished to, no doubt he could arrange for such hard copy records as are presently in Australia, to be delivered to him in China. I do not accept this is a material form of prejudice that ought to be taken into account.
21 Those findings caused the primary judge to conclude at PJ [68] that specific prejudice had not been established. Those findings and that conclusion are not challenged by the grounds of appeal.
22 Finally, the primary judge explained the exercise of her discretion at PJ [69] - [79]. Although the appellants' grounds of appeal only identify error within this part of the analysis at PJ [70], [73], and [78] - [79], in oral submissions senior counsel for the appellants added [75] and [76] to the list of complaints. A proper understanding of the entirety of her Honour's reasoning within those paragraphs is necessary to the resolution of the appeal grounds, and for that reason we set out each relevant paragraph:
69. The Liquidators accept that there has been significant delay, and that the extensions they seek are at the outer edges, if not beyond, the length of extensions that have previously been granted by this Court. It cannot be gainsaid that the Liquidators have been aware of a number of the claims they wish to continue to investigate, with a view to potential prosecution, for some time. But being aware of the existence of a potential claim is one thing; such claims had to be investigated, and their prospects assessed, before the Liquidators could responsibly commence proceedings. I also accept that the Liquidators have been faced with a momentous and complicated task, the magnitude and difficulty of which has only been compounded by the directors disappearing (and therefore offering no assistance in untangling the companies' complicated affairs). While aware of many potential claims, they have not been able to complete their investigations due to the need to respond to the vast range of matters and enquiries to which Mr Nipps deposed. The Liquidators have not been sitting on their hands, which is a significant point of distinction from the circumstances addressed by Ward J (as her Honour then was) in Re Clarecastle.
70. As the Liquidators are seeking an extension to put themselves in a position where they can properly decide whether or not to bring proceedings, it is not necessary to conduct a preliminary enquiry into the merits: see, eg, Green at [15] (Austin J); Chin, Re Agatha Trading Pty Ltd (in liq) [2020] FCA 991 at [35] (Markovic J); Langdon, Re Phoenix Institute of Australia Pty Ltd [2021] FCA 180 at [33] (Markovic J); Walker at [44] (Nicholas J). The question is whether the Liquidators should be granted an extension in which to pursue potential claims. The Liquidators have set out, in some detail, the potential claims they have identified, and have detailed the enquiries they consider they need to make, and the advice they will require, in order to finalise their views on whether or not particular claims should be pursued.
71. With the exception of some specific prejudice being experienced by Mr Landerer's firm, extending the time for the pursuit of voidable transactions will not occasion specific prejudice, although I accept that any extension necessarily occasions presumptive, or general, prejudice through the passage of time.
72. I am mindful that Parliament has set a limitation period of three years. That limit was set for the policy reasons I have referred to above. Nevertheless, Parliament also saw fit to provide for Liquidators to have the capacity to obtain a single extension from the Court. In my view, while mindful of purposes which limitations serve and the fact that the statutory regime anticipates that sometimes the best course is for loss to lie where it falls, the Court should not shy away from exercising the power to extend the period in appropriate cases. The default three year limit may well be sufficient in most liquidations, but these liquidations involve the affairs of multiple companies and have been beset by difficulties arising on numerous fronts. In my view, interests of justice do not lie in foreclosing the possibility of further investigations, and potential litigation of claims.
73. Ultimately, I must consider what is fair and just in all the circumstances. In my view, the time period for commencing voidable transaction proceedings should be extended for the potential claims that the liquidators have identified. I include in this the potential claims against the Gong and the Landerer parties. While the Liquidators did pause their preparations in respect of the intended public examinations of Mr Landerer and Mr Gong, the need to prioritise work and the allocation of funding was a feature of the circumstances they faced; it was not tantamount to a decision to simply let the clock run down on a limitation period. Moreover, Mr Gong and Mr Landerer were both, as referred to above, involved in the affairs of the i-Prosperity group in ways that set them apart from the general body of persons dealing with a company that subsequently enters liquidation.
74. The potential claims involve a significant aggregate quantum. With the exception of some claims - which are of such a modest quantum that it would not make sense to pursue them independently of other claims against the same entities - most of the claims identified by the Liquidators are also each of significant quantum. Of course, it must be recognised that the claims are, at this stage, merely potential claims, but in my view the Liquidators ought to have time in which to pursue their investigations of those claims, to see if they have merit and ought to be pursued. Pursuit of substantial claims presents the only prospect of unsecured creditors receiving any dividend.
75. For these reasons, I consider that it is appropriate to grant the Liquidators extensions in respect of the claims identified in Annexure A and Annexure B to the originating application. I am not, however, satisfied that there should be a general "shelf order" for two reasons. First, the evidence of Mr Nipps shows that, over the last three years, the Liquidators have obtained an extensive knowledge of the affairs of the i-Prosperity group. While the Liquidators have been unable to pursue and finalise the investigation of numerous identified potential claims, they have identified a large number of potential claims. In my view, it is unlikely that the liquidators have, in the course of all their work over the past three years, simply failed to notice a significant potential claim.
76. Secondly, with the exception of those who may face the claims specified in items 1 and 2 of Annexure A to the originating application (and potentially claims in relation to the Chatswood Central Shopping Centre claims specified in item 5 of Annexure B), other potentially affected persons have been notified of the Liquidators' application, which was made prior to the expiration of the original three year period. The objective of certainty in commercial affairs is more powerful in respect of this group of potential defendants; unlike Mr Gong, Mr Landerer and the other interested parties, they know nothing of any potential that claims may be advanced beyond the default three year time frame. Nor, in the absence of any compelling reason to think that significant claims have remained unidentified, are there any strong countervailing factors.
77. While counsel for the Liquidators noted that, if some presently unknown claim were uncovered, it cannot be pursued for the benefit of creditors of the companies if there is no shelf order, that is a function of the statutory regime; it is not, of itself, a factor that warrants extending the time limit when there is nothing to suggest that there is a real chance that material claims have, in all the work done to date, simply been overlooked.
78. The final question is how long the extensions should be. The present application was filed in June 2023. At that stage, the extension sought in respect of the claims in Annexure A was the later of 15 January 2025, or 18 months from the date of orders being made. In the case of the claims in Annexure B, it was the later of 15 July 2025 or the date that is 24 months from the date of orders being made. In submissions, counsel for the Liquidators accepted that the passage of time since the application was filed is relevant, but submitted that the Liquidators have been in a state of uncertainty since the Gong parties, and then the Landerer parties, indicated they wished to oppose the application. Counsel also noted that the hearing of the application has been significantly delayed by the inability of the Gong and the Landerer parties to comply with the court ordered timetables.
79. I accept that the time that has passed since the application was filed should not simply "come off the top" of the extensions sought. However, to allow 24 months (in the case of the Annexure B claims) would extend the period until late November 2025, which is an exceptionally long period. As a benchmark, doubling the statutory three year period would take the date to 15 July 2026 (or 17 September 2026 in the case of IPG Chats SPV). In my view, balancing the competing considerations, the appropriate course is to:
(a) limit the extension in respect of the claims in Annexure A to 15 March 2025, which allows for two end of year periods being encompassed in the period of the extension;
(b) limit the extension to the specific date sought by the liquidators in respect of the Annexure B claims, being 15 July 2025, which is just short of 20 months from the date of my orders.