The legislative regime
40 Employees of companies that become insolvent have always enjoyed special priority for their unpaid entitlements, primarily in recognition that their contribution to a company may enhance the value of assets the subject of a creditor's security: Stein v Saywell [1969] HCA 66; (1969) 121 CLR 529 at 544, 550; Jones v Matrix Partners at [112]-[120]; Great Southern (Saker) at [26]-[29].
41 Part 5.6 of the Act is headed 'Winding up generally'. Subdivision D of Division 6 of Part 5.6 deals with priorities of claims in a winding up, and is headed 'Priorities'. Both s 556 and s 561 fall within this subdivision.
42 As is apparent from its terms, s 556(1) is concerned with the priority of the payment of debts (including employee entitlements) but does not identify the assets that might be available to meet such payments. Section 556(1) relevantly provides as follows:
Priority payments
(1) Subject to this Division, in the winding up of a company the following debts and claims must be paid in priority to all other unsecured debts and claims:
(a) first, expenses (except deferred expenses) properly incurred by a relevant authority in preserving, realising or getting in property of the company, or in carrying on the company's business;
(b) if the Court ordered the winding up - next, the costs in respect of the application for the order (including the applicant's taxed costs payable under section 466);
(ba) if:
(i) during the period of 12 months ending when the winding up commenced, an application (the first application) was made under section 459P for the company to be wound up in insolvency; and
(ii) when the first application was made, the company was not under administration; and
(iii) the company began to be under administration at a time after the first application was made; and
(iv) the first application was not withdrawn or dismissed before the administration began; and
(v) the Court did not, in response to the first application, make an order under section 459A that the company be wound up in insolvency;
next, the costs in respect of the first application;
(c) next, the debts for which paragraph 443D(a) or (aa) entitles an administrator of the company to be indemnified (even if the administration ended before the relevant date), except expenses covered by paragraph (a) of this subsection and deferred expenses;
(da) if the Court ordered the winding up - next, costs and expenses that are payable under subsection 475(8) out of the company's property;
(daa) if the company resolved by special resolution that it be wound up voluntarily - next, costs and expenses that are payable under subsection 446C(8) out of the company's property;
(db) next, costs that form part of the expenses of the winding up because of subsection 539(6), or subsection 70-15(5) (audit of administration books by ASIC) or section 90-27 (review by another registered liquidator) of Schedule 2;
(dd) next, any other expenses (except deferred expenses) properly incurred by a relevant authority;
(de) next, the deferred expenses;
(df) if a committee of inspection has been appointed for the purposes of the winding up - next, expenses incurred by a person as a member of the committee;
(e) subject to subsection (1A) - next:
(i) wages, superannuation contributions and superannuation guarantee charge payable by the company in respect of services rendered to the company by employees before the relevant date; or
(ii) liabilities to pay the amounts of estimates under Division 268 in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 of superannuation guarantee charge mentioned in subparagraph (i);
(f) next, amounts due in respect of injury compensation, being compensation the liability for which arose before the relevant date;
(g) subject to subsection (1B) - next, all amounts due:
(i) on or before the relevant date; and
(ii) because of an industrial instrument; and
(iii) to, or in respect of, employees of the company; and
(iv) in respect of leave of absence;
(h) subject to subsection (1C) - next, retrenchment payments payable to employees of the company.
43 Other provisions in Subdivision D also address the position of employees. For example, s 560 provides a right of subrogation for a third party that advances a payment so that the company can make a payment on account of employee entitlements.
44 Section 561, the provision central to this application, provides as follows:
Priority of employees' claims over circulating security interests
So far as the property of a company available for payment of creditors other than secured creditors is insufficient to meet payment of:
(a) any debt referred to in paragraph 556(1)(e), (g) or (h); and
(b) any amount that pursuant to subsection 558(3) or (4) is a cost of the winding up, being an amount that, if it had been payable on or before the relevant date, would have been a debt referred to in paragraph 556(1)(e), (g) or (h); and
(c) any amount in respect of which a right of priority is given by section 560;
payment of that debt or amount must be made in priority over the claims of a secured party in relation to a circulating security interest created by the company and may be made accordingly out of any property comprised in or subject to the circulating security interest.
45 Ordinarily, unsecured creditors have no claim to assets otherwise the subject of a valid and undischarged security until the secured debt is extinguished. Where it applies, s 561 therefore elevates the claim of a priority creditor above the secured creditor so that the priority creditor's claim may be paid out of property the subject of a circulating security interest. Section 561 does not elevate all claims that are accorded priority under s 556(1): the elevation is limited to the claims listed in s 561(a) to (c). Those claims include, relevantly, employee claims.
46 There are also provisions in Part 5.2 of the Act ('Receivers, and other controllers, of property of corporations') that apply to receivers that expressly impose on a receiver the obligation to make similar priority payments to employees from proceeds in their hands before applying funds towards the secured creditor's debt. Relevantly, s 433 of the Act provides:
Property subject to circulating security interest - payment of certain debts to have priority
(2) This section applies where:
(a) a receiver is appointed on behalf of the holders of any debentures of a company or registered body that are secured by a circulating security interest, or possession is taken or control is assumed, by or on behalf of the holders of any debentures of a company or registered body, of any property comprised in or subject to a circulating security interest; and
(b) at the date of the appointment or of the taking of possession or assumption of control (in this section called the relevant date):
(i) the company or registered body has not commenced to be wound up voluntarily; and
(ii) the company or registered body has not been ordered to be wound up by the Court.
(3) In the case of a company, the receiver or other person taking possession or assuming control of property of the company must pay, out of the property coming into his, her or its hands, the following debts or amounts in priority to any claim for principal or interest in respect of the debentures:
(a) first, any amount that in a winding up is payable in priority to unsecured debts pursuant to section 562;
(b) next, if an auditor of the company had applied to ASIC under subsection 329(6) for consent to his, her or its resignation as auditor and ASIC had refused that consent before the relevant date - the reasonable fees and expenses of the auditor incurred during the period beginning on the day of the refusal and ending on the relevant date;
(c) subject to subsections (6) and (7), next, any debt or amount that in a winding up is payable in priority to other unsecured debts pursuant to paragraph 556(1)(e), (g) or (h) or section 560.
47 The application of s 433 is limited to circumstances where the receiver is appointed prior to the commencement of a voluntary winding up or prior to any winding up order. It does not apply in the circumstances of the Company, because the Receivers were appointed after the commencement of the winding up. It is accepted by the parties that in this case s 433 has no application. However, the Liquidators refer to s 433 in support of their statutory construction argument.