The Supreme Court proceeding
4 Mrs Frigger commenced the Supreme Court action against Mr Kitay and CAT in 2010. The present issues are defined by an amended substituted statement of claim (SOC), a further re-amended substituted defence and counterclaim (DAC), and an amended substituted reply and defence to counterclaim.
5 The Friggers were directors of CAT and say that they are trustees of their self-managed superannuation fund, the Frigger Super Fund (FSF). Mr Kitay became liquidator of CAT on 6 May 2010. CAT is the registered proprietor of real property in Perth and real property in Armadale. It is common ground that CAT was trustee of the FSF at material times (it claims that it is and has been the only trustee). The Friggers made claims, among others, that they contributed the Perth and Armadale properties to the FSF as in specie contributions to be held on trust by CAT or that, in other ways, CAT came to hold the properties on trust on the terms of the FSF.
6 The DAC is a long and involved document and it would be a substantial task to describe fully all of the different claims made in it. There are claims that CAT owns the Perth land in its own right and is entitled to the proceeds from the sale of the Armadale land, which are held in an escrow account. There are also claims to the proceeds of the sale of a business conducted on the Armadale land, claims of estoppel, claims to rights of indemnity out of assets as trustee, claims about the identity of trustees and members of the FSF at certain times and claims of breach of fiduciary duty and voidable transactions. But it is not necessary to go into detail about these, because for reasons that appear below it is sufficient in this application to focus on a claim based on an alleged loan account between CAT and the Friggers, and the manner in which that claim is dependent on other issues of fact and law in the Supreme Court action.
7 The DAC claims a declaration that the Friggers owe CAT $2,600,801, alternatively $2,356,283, as the balance of the loan account. The loan account is said to be comprised of a large number of transactions; it is only necessary to focus on the most material ones here. The first of these is an amount of $435,000 which the Friggers are said to have provided to CAT for the purchase of the Perth property. The second is a sum of $665,000 which they are said to have provided to CAT for the purchase of the Armadale property. The DAC pleads that both of these advances are properly characterised as loans by the Friggers to CAT. The third is a sum of $80,000 which Mrs Frigger is said to have paid to St George Bank to secure a bank guarantee needed for the service station business operated on the Armadale land. This too is said to be a loan from Mrs Frigger. (Note, the DAC has a schedule which appears to contain all alleged transactions concerning the loan account. There are discrepancies between the figures in that schedule and corresponding figures in the body of the pleading, but they are not material for present purposes.)
8 The fourth transaction material to the loan account was an alleged transfer by CAT to the Friggers, in January 2009, of a sum of $999,999 which CAT had on deposit with ING Direct Bank. The fifth material transaction is an alleged payment by CAT to the Friggers, on or about 30 June 2009, of the entire amount of a sum paid to CAT pursuant to judgment in different Supreme Court proceedings, alternatively $900,000 of that judgment sum. These are both pleaded (as one of many alternative pleas) to be unsecured loans by CAT to the Friggers.
9 However these transactions are not the only matters potentially material to the balance of the loan account that are pleaded in the DAC. For example there are allegations raised in the alternative that, when alleged in specie contributions of the real property were made to the FSF, they occurred via transfers of the land from CAT to the Friggers, in return for the reduction of money which at that time CAT owed to the Friggers, so that the Friggers could then personally contribute the land to the FSF. The reductions of CAT's debt to the Friggers are claimed to have taken place at a time when CAT was insolvent, and so to have been unfair preferences or otherwise voidable. If that allegation is made good, it may result in the effective reversal of the decreases in moneys owing to the Friggers, and so will affect the ultimate balance of the loan account. Allegations are also made that the alleged payment to the Friggers of the ING amount of $999,999 in January 2009, and of some or all of the judgment sum on 30 June 2009, are both voidable transactions. If those claims are established, that will also affect the balance of the loan account.
10 Mrs and Mr Frigger became bankrupt by order of this court on 20 July 2018. On 1 November 2018, Mr Kitay's solicitor gave notice under s 60(3) of the Bankruptcy Act effectively requiring Mrs Trenfield to elect within 28 days whether to prosecute or discontinue Supreme Court action CIV 2765 of 2010. She did not make that election within that time so, Mr Kitay asserts, pursuant to s 60(3) she is deemed to have abandoned the claims made in the SOC. But if that is so, it does not directly affect the status of the counterclaim; although it could conceivably require amendment, the counterclaim remains a distinct claim which (subject to s 58(3)) remains on foot: see Frigger v Kitay (Liquidator) [2020] FCA 482 at [27]-[28].