10 I have been informed that in this case, as in Re Westfield Holdings Limited (2004) 49 ACSR 741, the responsible entity will, assuming all relevant resolutions have been duly passed by all relevant constituencies, return to the Court to seek further judicial advice as to implementation of the overall proposal; and that, at that stage, a procedure will be adopted which sees the substantive matters and all relevant evidence put before the court with a view to its being shown that the further judicial advice should be given and with the court being requested to defer the making of the order approving the scheme of arrangement until the lodgment under s.601GC(2) in respect of the MGI constitution has been made at ASIC.
11 Under that sequence of events there will be lodgment of the replacement constitution but its amendment will be a matter dealt with by a special resolution which has been passed in terms making the amendment it affects subject to the making of the Court order in respect of the scheme of arrangement which, as at the date of lodgment of the replacement constitution, will still lie in the future.
12 Section 601GC(1)(a) identifies a special resolution as the means by which the constitution of a registered scheme may be either "modified" or "repealed and replaced with a new constitution". Leaving aside the case dealt with by s.601GC(1)(b), the Act does not contemplate or make available any other method. Section 601GC(2), by saying that the modification, or repeal and replacement, "cannot take effect until" a copy of the modification or new constitution "has been lodged", identifies lodgement as the earliest point at which the modification or replacement is capable of being effective. This provision may be contrasted with s.137(a) which, dealing with modification or repeal of the constitution of a company "by special resolution" identifies the precise day (or "date") "on" which the modification or repeal "takes effect". Section 601GC(2) is also to be contrasted with provisions such as s.21(3) of the now repealed Companies Act 1961 which, dealing with alteration of a company's memorandum of association, required lodgment of the relevant resolution or court order and registration thereof and then said that "on such registration and not before, the alteration of the memorandum shall take effect".
13 Unlike those other provisions, s.601GC(2) does not specify the actual point at which a modification, or repeal and replacement, takes effect. It merely identifies a point before which it is incapable of taking effect. This different approach must be assumed to have been deliberate. The "cannot take effect until" specification, coupled with the recognition in s.601GC(1)(a) of a special resolution as the means of effecting the modification (or repeal and alteration) must, it seems to me, allow the special resolution itself to deal with the matter of the operative time provided, of course, that it does not attempt to make the change effective before the time of lodgment under s.601GC(2), since, in terms of that section, it "cannot take effect until" that time.
14 It is relevant to refer, in this connection, to the decision in Re Australian Estates and Mortgage Co Ltd [1910] 1 Ch 414. That case concerned a resolution to alter terms of issue of shares conferring preferential rights which Neville J described as "regulated by a special resolution which would have the effect of an original article". The resolution in question had been passed immediately after a separate resolution for reduction of capital. It began:
"That upon the said reduction of capital being sanctioned by the Court the preferential rights attaching to the preference stock and preference shares be extinguished …"