37 Contrary to Ms Kimber's submissions, this is a clear case where the application should be summarily dismissed. The application for an annulment is respectfully without any merit.
38 First, the annulment application contains scandalous, vexatious and frivolous material. The respondents submit that part of the basis upon which the application is made is that the first respondent engaged in misleading and wrongful conduct. However, the respondents correctly submit that these allegations are not supported by any admissible or persuasive evidence and do not rise above bare assertion, despite their seriousness. As such, the allegations should not have been made.
39 Secondly, the respondents submit that the annulment application fails to disclose a reasonable cause of action. While the respondents accept that the Court has a discretion to annul a bankruptcy, they contend that there is no reasonable prospect that the Court would exercise its discretion to do so. I agree for the following reasons.
(1) The Court requires a compelling basis on which to annul a bankruptcy such as a satisfactory proposal to pay out creditors and meet the costs of administering the estate. However, Ms Kimber seeks an annulment without conditions and therefore a complete immunity from the debts proved in the bankruptcy and the costs of the administration of the estate. She has led no evidence of any proposal that will benefit creditors or address the trustees' remuneration and costs. Nor, indeed, has she led any evidence of her financial position. This is so notwithstanding the very significant amount required to annul the bankruptcy. As at 16 August 2023, the estimated amount required to annul the applicant's bankrupt estate was $1,105,547.97.
(2) Ms Kimber asserts in her evidence that her assets exceeded her debts when she presented her petition and seeks to rely upon the solvency report from BSF Partners. However, that report considers Ms Kimber's financial position as at March 2019 and therefore does not establish her solvency at the time when she presented her debtor's petition in August 2019. The bare assertion by Ms Kimber that her financial position in August 2019 was the same as in March 2019 takes the matter no further. Nor, in any event, does the solvency report take into account the known creditors which are set out in Mr Clark's August 2023 affidavit. If those debts had been factored in, the report by BSF Partners would have been different. I also agree with the respondents that, even if Ms Kimber had not presented her petition, the creditor's petition would have been likely to succeed, as the costs order against her in that proceeding indicates and there being no evidence before the Court that Ms Kimber was solvent when she presented the debtor's petition (or indeed that she is today). As Bromwich J stated in Kimber v Clark in his capacity as trustee of the property of Kimber [2023] FCA 310 (Kimber [2023]) at [15]:
…I readily infer that had the debtor's petition not been presented, the most likely outcome was that the creditor's petition would have resulted in the making of a sequestration order and thereby Ms Kimber's bankruptcy in any event. That alone is a telling indicator against the discretion being likely to be exercised to annul the debtor's petition.
(3) Ms Kimber also contends that she was solvent at the time of the debtor's petition on the basis that there were no valid debts. Leaving aside the absence of any apparent basis on which to contest the validity of the other debts, Ms Kimber contended that this Court should go behind the original judgment debt to the Strata Owners in the Local Court. While the parties are not identical and there is (as the respondents submitted) therefore no res judicata between the parties to this proceeding, nonetheless the respondents pointed to the detailed consideration by Markovic J of the application in that case by Ms Kimber to go behind the Local Court judgment. The respondents submitted that this Court should find that any such application would be unsuccessful for the same reasons which her Honour gave in that case for declining to do so. I agree with this submission. As Markovic J held in Kimber v The Owners Strata Plan No 48216 (No 2) [2018] FCA 406 at [104]-[106]:
Ms Kimber did not appeal the Local Court Judgment. There is evidence that Ms Kimber prepared a notice of intention to appeal for filing in the District Court but she accepted that it was never filed and she never pursued an appeal. The Local Court Judgment was obtained after a contested hearing. It is evident from the material relied on before me that the parties were given an opportunity to provide evidence and to make submissions to that court. The Local Court Judgment was not obtained by default or in the absence of Ms Kimber nor could it be said that there was any fraud or collusion which resulted in the obtaining of that judgment, being the most frequent, but not the only circumstance in which the Court will go behind a judgment: Ramsay at [48]-[49].
Ms Kimber is not satisfied with the outcome of the contested hearing. Her submissions suggest that the result was wrong in law but she did not appeal the Local Court Judgment, which she was entitled to do. Ms Kimber complains that she was not aware of the Local Court Proceeding. That may have been so at the time of its commencement but the evidence shows that by 19 March 2009 she was aware of the proceeding and was on notice that, if she did not pay the full amount due, judgment would be entered against her. The Default Judgment was then entered because Ms Kimber failed to pay the full amount due, albeit only by a small amount. The Default Judgment was successfully set aside by Ms Kimber some four years later and, after several interlocutory steps and a contested hearing, the Local Court Judgment was entered.
Ms Kimber was not legally represented in the Local Court Proceeding and in particular at the hearing which resulted in the Local Court Judgment. The evidence discloses that she has had no legal representation in any of the proceedings referred to above, either before the Local Court, NCAT, the Supreme Court or in this Court. I accept that self-represented litigants face challenges in presenting their case to the court but that fact in and of itself does not mean that Ms Kimber was not able to argue her case on the merits before the Local Court. Ms Kimber has not provided any evidence to suggest otherwise nor has she satisfied me that there was any other reason for the Court to go behind the Local Court Judgment, for example, by establishing that there was any arguable error in that judgment. There are no special circumstances evident here. Taking account of all the circumstances, I am not satisfied that I should exercise my discretion to go behind the judgment.
(4) The Bankruptcy Act is intended to serve the public interest in the orderly and just administration of insolvent persons by gathering in, and realising, the assets of the bankrupt and distributing them in accordance with the Act in a manner that endeavours to meet their debts. Ms Kimber, however, seeks to set all that has occurred in the administration of her estate to nought since she lodged her debtor's petition, to ignore the interests of creditors, and to leave the trustees unremunerated. That outcome would be contrary to the public interest underlying bankruptcy.
(5) In the exercise of the discretion in s 153B, the Court should also have regard to the fairness and justice of the situation. In this case, administration of the bankruptcy has been lengthy and complex in part due to the large number of applications which Ms Kimber has made in connection with the administration of the bankruptcy. As such, I agree with the respondents that Ms Kimber is in part responsible for making the administration of the estate more lengthy and expensive than ought to have been the case. I also agree that it would be unfair to deprive the trustees of any remuneration which would be the consequence of an annulment of the bankruptcy without conditions.
(6) Delay in seeking the annulment is also a significant factor. As the respondents submit, it is far too late now for Ms Kimber to seek an annulment on the basis of a debt which is many years old, especially where Ms Kimber presented her own petition for bankruptcy. In this regard, Bromwich J similarly observed in Kimber [2023] at [16] that:
It is noteworthy that the application for annulment of the debtor's petition was not made until over three and a half years after it was presented, with no suggestion made by Ms Kimber that she had not been aware of the alleged circumstances upon which she now relies for a very considerable period of time, measured in years. Her explanation for this delay was that she believed that Mr Clark was going to make the application for annulment on her behalf. Despite the extensive, although meandering, cross-examination of Mr Clark, Ms Kimber did not come close to establishing any sound basis for her holding any such belief, no matter how genuine and heartfelt. The trustees rely on that delay as an important discretionary reason for refusing relief by way of the stays sought if that point was reached. Had that point been reached, I would have been most unlikely to have exercised the discretion in Ms Kimber's favour by reason of that delay, which was left without any satisfactory explanation.
(7) While an annulment generally results in a re-vesting of the property of the bankrupt, this cannot occur for the reason that the sole asset of the bankrupt estate has already been sold. There cannot therefore be restitution in that sense.
40 Finally, the respondents submit that the annulment application constitutes an abuse of process. The respondents submit that Ms Kimber was on notice from at least 31 March 2023 that her application was doomed to fail when Bromwich J held in Kimber [2023] at [17] that:
Ms Kimber has fallen well short of establishing that she has any arguable prospect of obtaining an annulment of her bankruptcy … That is because the allegations of error and impropriety upon which she relies rise no higher than that - bare allegations - mostly based upon assertions made upon her subjective interpretation of documents and events, rather than the proper proof of the factual assertions upon which she relies.
41 The respondents submit that in circumstances where the applicant has nonetheless sought to continue to prosecute her application, and continued to file irrelevant evidence, the annulment application is without merit and should fail as an abuse of process. In my view, that submission is plainly correct. In all of the circumstances, therefore, it would be fruitless to allow the applicant an opportunity to amend her application.