Consideration of whether the primary judge's decision is attended by sufficient doubt to warrant reconsideration by a full court
30 It is useful to note that neither party has suggested that the primary judge erred in her statement of the relevant principles to be applied to an application for summary dismissal under s 31A(2) of the Federal Court Act. Nor has any party suggested that the primary judge erred in her understanding that it was common ground that a review of a decision of a Registrar conducted under s 35A(5) and (6) of the Federal Court Act obliges the judge to conduct a hearing de novo of the application to set aside the bankruptcy notice.
31 Owners Corporation submitted that both ground 2 of Ms Kimber's application for leave and ground 1 of the proposed grounds of appeal fail to identify which findings of the primary judge are "manifestly unreasonable and unfair" or what the "errors of law" are or how the decision is "against the principles of constitutional, international laws and laws of natural justice" in relation to the power of a judge to "ensure fair conditions for a fair trial on the real issues". It also submitted that Ms Kimber failed to identify to what evidence tendered to the Court and the Registrar insufficient weight was given as mentioned in paragraph a. of the grounds of the leave to appeal application.
32 The bare claim that a decision is "manifestly unreasonable" or "manifestly unreasonable and unfair" and claims of similarly wide ambit are commonly understood to be emphatic disagreement with the outcome of a process rather than revealing of error by the primary judge. Recognising that Ms Kimber does not appear to have had any significant legal assistance in drafting the application for leave or the proposed grounds of appeal, it is necessary to look at the submissions lodged on 14 December 2016 and the material set out on pages 4 to 31 of the draft notice of appeal accepted for filing on 15 December 2016 for any particulars, taking into account the oral submissions which she made on 23 December 2016.
33 In my view, paragraph a. of the grounds of the leave application should be taken to be the particulars of ground 2 of that application. From Ms Kimber's submissions, there appear to be two matters which form the basis of Ms Kimber's claim that insufficient weight was given to evidence tendered to the Court and the Registrar on 4 May 2016.
34 The first matter is the primary judge's finding (at J[5] and J[69]) that "no evidence" was proffered by Ms Kimber to support the "vague and conclusory allegations of dishonest and other improper conduct made against the Owners Corporation and others". Ms Kimber's concern is that the affidavit filed on 30 May 2016 was taken to contain submissions rather than evidence.
35 It is plain from J[8] that the primary judge accepted that Ms Kimber relied on her affidavit filed on 30 May 2016 containing 471 pages. The affidavit is extremely difficult to follow. The first two pages contain statements by Ms Kimber in narrative form that are conclusory and at best might be accepted as statements of belief by Ms Kimber. While there are many documents annexed to the affidavit, Ms Kimber did not provide evidentiary foundation for them. Insofar as some of those documents related to negotiations for settling proceedings, they were inadmissible.
36 In my view it was open to the primary judge to find that the material did not establish a basis to "go behind" the Local Court's judgment of 7 May 2014 or lend credence to the serious allegations of misconduct by Ms Kimber against members of the management committee, the strata manager and its employees and Grace Lawyers and their employees. Those allegations are replicated in Ms Kimber's "statement of claim" dated 21 April 2016 and I see no error in the primary judge's findings concerning it. In those circumstances it was plainly open to the primary judge to find that Ms Kimber had no reasonable prospect of establishing that she had a counterclaim which would outweigh the judgment debt or that there was doubt as to the existence of that debt which formed the basis of the bankruptcy notice. Insofar as some of the material in that affidavit related to amounts claimed in the creditor's petition other than the judgment debt, that material was irrelevant to the decision whether the bankruptcy notice should be set aside. The primary judge was also plainly correct that it was inappropriate, in the context of an application which was in substance to set aside a bankruptcy notice, to bring together all of the matters to which Ms Kimber is a party in seeking to challenge the validity of the judgment debt, to seek damages from a wide range of people on the bases claimed by Ms Kimber and to dispose of the creditor's petition of which the Federal Circuit Court is seized.
37 The second matter is Ms Kimber's claim that no weight was given to an email of 1 April 2016 from Ms Kimber to Mr Scott Martin and others (1 April email) which Ms Kimber claims was handed to the Registrar on 4 May 2016 and tendered to the Court. This matter was raised in paragraph 39 of the material accepted as Ms Kimber's submissions in the document received by the Court on 15 December 2016. The email was set out at page 27 of the 30 May 2016 affidavit. Among other things, the 1 April email says (as written, material in bold indicates Ms Kimber's handwriting):
Dear Mr Martin
Thank you for sending my current Owner's Statement. (NOT the ledger!)
I have question the column displaying '00' allocation of levies. '00' set against all levies banked does not seem right and I would rather have all the details not just partial on the one pag. I have always found your accounts confusing. At at this crucial moment I seek crystal-clear clarity. SO please also SEND THE LEDGER TOO … asap? Much appreciated.
Also, I really would like to view the account/ledger dating from the'00' zero balance evident in early 2014, just before Grace Lawyers were engaged and their costs were put onto Lot 110 during the 2013-2014 small claims case, unnecessarily and unlawfully instituted by Jim McDonald's 'SOLO-ONE (?)' instructions to Grace Lawyers, Daniel Bradman in 2013.
…
Requests LISTED again?
1. For the Owners Statement/Owners Ledger (LEDGER TOO PLEASE?)
2. As Jim Donald's employer, I appeal to you to inform your manager to advise the committee about the IRREGULARITIES of the bankruptcy Notice that I shared with you. RE: OVERSTATED AMOUNT.
3. …
38 Ms Kimber submits that this email "nullified" the bankruptcy notice under ss 41(2) and (5) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth).
39 Importantly, there is no reference in the primary judge's reasons to the 1 April email or to a ground under s 41(5) of the Bankruptcy Act for setting aside the bankruptcy notice: see the primary judge's summary of the issues raised at J[29]-[32] and in particular at J[31] which is set out at [13] above. Section 41(5) provides that a bankruptcy notice is not invalidated by reason only that the amount specified in the notice exceeds the amount in fact due to the creditor unless, before the time for compliance with the notice ends, the debtor has notified the creditor that he or she disputes the validity of the notice on the basis of the misstatement. Compliance with the bankruptcy notice required Ms Kimber to make payment of the amounts claimed by Owners Corporation by 7 April 2016.
40 The amended interlocutory application filed on 11 July 2016 considered by the primary judge contained 8 pages of material. The paragraphs were unnumbered. The following material appears on pages 2 to 3 (as written):
I CLAIM THE RESPONDENT'S SOLICITORS HAVE AGAIN DENIED RELEVANT EVIDENCE IN COURT
'Where, a party is represented by competent and experienced lawyers and is opposed by a litigant in person, the party and its lawyers have a duty to assist the court to understand and give full and fair consideration to the submissions of the litigant in person. In particular such a party must refer the court to evidence in the proceedings that is relevant to those submissions"
Serobian v Commonwealth Bank of Australia [2010] NSWCA at [42]
'Failure to provide information constitutes misleading or deceptive conduct where circumstances give rise to a reasonable expectation that if a relevant fact exists it will be disclosed to the other"
Demagogue [Pty Ltd v Ramensky (1990) 39 FCR 31 at 41; 110 ALR 608 at 618] Gummow J
This precedent did not occur (again) on 4 May 2016 when the last Grace Lawyers solicitor [name] knew statements to be false, but still conscientiously argued against the 'bona fide' emails and addressee details that confirmed that the bankruptcy notice had been invalidated when the applicant had spoken to the strata manager, sending a 'CC' email to S Martin and all (available) strata committee members email addresses before 21 days on 1 April 2016 under Bankruptcy Act 1966 ss 41 (2) and (5) that related to the 'overstated' amount in the defective bankruptcy notice. 12 days later the ledger was dramatically altered ('Jimmied to-fit') the flawed bankruptcy notice.
Evidence: Ledger 3 June 2106. Manager/Committee email 1 April 2016-Court email 6 April 2016
Based on the relevant correspondence and on the 'balance of probabilities' I believe it is probable that [the Registrar's] 'irregular' and unprofessional court conduct with me, his choice to 'silently read' evidence(s) handed up in court, his need for a 'prompted response' from the solicitor to the evidence and his use of irrelevant facts and 'deliberations' to try to justify a dismissal of a valid application, was because he had pre-decided that it was "in the court's best interests" (and possibly the Registrar's) to solve the complex legal implications of how to deal with the anomalous production of the 'hybrid' creditors petition SYG 931/2016 in the circuit court of 19 April 2016 issued as a result of the court's administrative errors. A Statement of Reasons was formally requested by the applicant of the decision to dismiss, but this was refused by a duty registrar on behalf of [a named Registrar]. See Reasons To Order An Estoppel pg 4
THE ORDER MADE BY REGISTRAR [NAME] ON 4 MAY 2016 FOR THE APPLICANT TO PAY THE RESPONDENT SOLICITOR COSTS SHOULD BE ANNULLED. THE APPLICANT'S COSTS SHOULD BE MET BY THE RESPONDENTS
41 There does not appear to be a document which answers the description of "Ledger 3 June 2016" (on the assumption that 2106 is an error). There was, however, at pages 27 and 28 of the 30 May 2016 affidavit in an annexure marked "JMK 1" what purports to be a copy of the 1 April email and there is written at the top of the page "Email to "creditor" Section 41 Notifying the Creditor Re: overstated amount". This document is described in a form of table of contents to annexure "JMK 1" as "S41(5) Email to the Owners".
42 At pages 12-14, 21-23 and 24-26 of "JMK 1" are what purport to an "Owner Ledger" as at 13 April 2016, an "Owner Ledger" as at 6 January 2016 and an "Owner Ledger" as at 25 February 2015 respectively. The following is a summary of what appears in respect of accounts rendered by Grace Lawyers for "recovery action" prior to the judgment obtained in the Local Court on or before 7 May 2014:
13 April 2016 Ledger 6 January 2016 Ledger 25 February 2015 Ledger
Due Paid Due Paid Due Paid
14.02.14 See ++ $2,774.15 $2,774.15 $2,774.15 $2,774.15
03.04.14 $4,485.22 0.00 $4,485.22 $3,087.65 $4,485.22 $98.65
07.05.14 $1,234.20 0.00 $1,234.20 0.00 $1,234.20 0.00