Section 588FA
28 Allianz and the Commissioner accepted that if the relevant payments were unfair preferences within the meaning of s 588FA of the Act, then the liquidators were entitled to succeed against them.
29 Section 588FA(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (the Act) provides:
A transaction is an unfair preference given by a company to a creditor of the company if, and only if:
(a) the company and the creditor are parties to the transaction (even if someone else is also a party); and
(b) the transaction results in the creditor receiving from the company, in respect of an unsecured debt that the company owes to the creditor, more than the creditor would receive from the company in respect of the debt if the transaction were set aside and the creditor were to prove for the debt in a winding up of the company;
even if the transaction is entered into, is given effect to, or is required to be given effect to, because of an order of an Australian court or a direction by an agency.
30 For present purposes the word "transaction" is defined in s 9 of the Act to mean a transaction to which the company is party. The following examples of a "transaction" are then given:
(a) a conveyance, transfer or other disposition by the body of property of the body; and
(b) a charge created by the body on property of the body; and
(c) a guarantee given by the body; and
(d) a payment made by the body; and
(e) an obligation incurred by the body; and
(f) a release or waiver by the body; and
(g) a loan to the body;
…
31 Section 588FA states that a transaction is an unfair preference if, and only if, the company and the creditor are parties to the transaction and it results in the creditor receiving more from the company than would be received by the creditor if the creditor was required to prove for a debt in a winding up of the company. Nevertheless, in deciding whether a creditor has received an unfair preference, it is necessary to look at the "ultimate effect" of the "entire transaction" between the company and the creditor. Not every payment made by a company to a creditor in the six months preceding the company's winding up need result in the giving of a preference. In Airservices Australia v Ferrier (1996) 185 CLR 483 Dawson, Gaudron and McHugh JJ said at 501-503 (citations omitted):
If a payment is part of a wider transaction or a "running account" between the debtor and the creditor, the purpose for which the payment was made and received will usually determine whether the payment has the effect of giving the creditor a preference, priority or advantage over other creditors. If the sole purpose of the payment is to discharge an existing debt, the effect of the payment is to give the creditor a preference over other creditors unless the debtor is able to pay all of his or her debts as they fall due. But if the purpose of the payment is to induce the creditor to provide further goods or services as well as to discharge an existing indebtedness, the payment will not be a preference unless the payment exceeds the value of the goods or services acquired. In such a case a court, exercising jurisdiction under s 122 of the Bankruptcy Act, looks to the ultimate effect of the transaction. Whether the payment is or is not a preference has to be "decided not by considering its immediate effect only but by considering what effect it ultimately produced in fact".
As a consequence, a payment made during the six month period cannot be viewed in isolation from the general course of dealing between the creditor and the debtor before, during and after that period. Resort must be had to the business purpose and context of the payment to determine whether it gives the creditor a preference over other creditors. To have the effect of giving the creditor a preference, priority or advantage over other creditors, the payment must ultimately result in a decrease in the net value of the assets that are available to meet the competing demands of the other creditors.
Thus, where the payment is a step in a wider transaction, "its actual business character must be seen and when it forms part of an entire transaction which if carried out to the intended conclusion will leave the creditor without any preference priority or advantage over other creditors the payment cannot be isolated and construed as a preference". If the purpose of a payment is to secure an asset or assets of equal or greater value, the payee receives no advantage over other creditors. The other creditors are no worse off and, where the value of the assets has increased, they are actually better off. Thus, a debtor does not prefer a creditor to the other creditors if he or she pays a debt, or part of it, to induce the creditor to supply goods of equal or greater value than the amount of the payment. In that situation, it is of no relevance that the debt that is discharged happens to be a stale one. If the present value of the goods supplied is equal to or greater than the payment, the other creditors are no worse off. They are in the same position that they would have been in if the parties had so structured the transaction that the debtor paid for the new supply of goods instead of discharging the old debt. Thus, a customer does not prefer his or her banker to other creditors where, pursuant to an antecedent arrangement between the banker and its customer, the customer deposits money to meet a liability already incurred in respect of specific cheques that the banker has met on the faith of the arrangement. A court, exercising jurisdiction under s 122 of the Bankruptcy Act, does not allow itself to be unsighted by the shadow of the legal form when it can see that the economic effect of the transaction does not give the creditor any preference, priority or advantage over the general body of creditors.
32 In that case the High Court was concerned with the operation of s 122 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) which was and still is expressed in different terms to s 588FA of the Act. Nevertheless, there is ample authority to establish that s 588FA should be interpreted in much the same way: see, for example, VR Dye & Co v Peninsula Hotels Pty Ltd (in liq.) [1999] 3 VR 201, [1999] VSCA 60; Beveridge v Whitton [2001] NSWCA 6; and McKern and Others v Minister Administering Mining Act 1978 (WA) (2010) 269 ALR 534, [2010] VSCA 140.