Suspension of payment of debts
15 As mentioned, Mr Monks relies on conversations that he had with Mr Mawhinney on 16 and 27 September 2023 to establish the act of bankruptcy in s 40(1)(h) of the Act. In order to assess whether that is indeed established it is necessary to deal with the events relevant to that issue chronologically.
16 Mr Monks and Mr Mawhinney had a telephone conversation with each other on 16 September 2023. Mr Monks recorded that conversation without Mr Mawhinney's knowledge. A transcript of the conversation and the recording are in evidence. The conversation lasted about 15 minutes. Relevantly it included the following exchange - where "A" is Mr Monks and "J" is Mr Mawhinney:
A: Well, look I'm happy to help but there's a couple of things I've got to clarify alright? So mate, you Like obviously, we suspended payments in January 2020, um and you were say you agree to pay me 3.9 but you don't want to pay any interest on the money that was outstanding is that right?
J: right …
A: so I just want to try and get to a point where you agree your gonna pay, give me a way you're gonna pay and how can I help you get to that point.
J: Sure, Yeah, I mean I'm happy to do that but I'm just not in a position to really do anything at this sort of immediate moment. That's the issue.
A: yeah, but what I'm saying is you agree that, you agree that you suspended payments and you owe me $3.9 million but you just don't know how you're gonna get me paid?
J: Well yeah that's exactly right, I can't remember what the total was but It was 3 point something, and so that, that's why I'm talking to you because I acknowledge that its there. Yeah no issues in that respect.
17 There is a clear acknowledgement by Mr Mawhinney in the last two entries in that exchange that he owes Mr Monks and/or his companies "3 point something" million dollars and that he had suspended payments. There is, however, no statement to the effect that Mr Mawhinney had suspended payment of his debts to all his creditors.
18 On 27 September 2023, there was a meeting between Mr Monks and Mr Mawhinney in Mr Mawhinney's office in Melbourne. I will return to what they each said about what was said in that conversation.
19 On 28 September 2023, the creditor's petition was filed and it was served on Mr Mawhinney. The petition, which was verified on affidavit by Mr Monks, did not state in terms that Mr Mawhinney had suspended payments to his creditors. It relevantly stated as follows:
3. The Respondent debtor has suspended and given notice of suspension as to the payment of his debts, having made no payments under the Deed at any time, …
20 The reference to having made no payments under the Deed implies that the suspension of payments referred to immediately before that is to the suspension of payments of the debt under the Deed rather than the suspension of payments to creditors generally.
21 Mr Monks affirmed another affidavit on 28 September 2023 in support of the creditor's petition. In it Mr Monks stated that he had had a number of conversations with Mr Mawhinney as to the latter's obligations to make payment under the terms of the Deed. He stated that they had had discussions in the following terms:
I said, "You owe me at least $3,900,000, plus interest under the deed".
The Respondent said, "yes, I know that I owe you at least $3,500,000, I cannot pay you right now, but I want to work something out for you."
I said, "Are you suspending payments of the debt for now?"
The Respondent said, "I cannot pay anything at the moment."
I said, "I can help you out. I want to put you in a position to pay me".
The Respondent said, "Well, I cannot pay you now. I'm happy to talk to you but I cannot pay you now."
I said, "When will you be able to pay?"
The Respondent said, "I do not know. Not now."
22 Notably, Mr Monks did not reproduce extracts from the recorded conversation on 16 September. Also, he did not say that Mr Mawhinney had said that he had suspended payment of his debts to his creditors. In cross-examination, he said that the conversation reflected in that paragraph was in Mr Mawhinney's office in Melbourne on 27 September (T23:39), but he later said that the statements were extracted from conversations on different occasions (T24:8), and yet later he said that it was the conversation on 16 September (T29:47-30:1; 31:4-13).
23 On 20 October 2023, Mr Mawhinney's solicitors, Roberts Gray Lawyers, sent a letter to Mr Monks' solicitor, Trevor Hall of Hall Partners. The letter cited authorities to the effect that to commit the act of bankruptcy constituted by giving notice of suspension of payment of debts under s 40(1)(h) of the Act, a debtor must give notice that they have suspended or are about to suspend payment of their debts generally, not just that they do not propose to pay the debt due to one creditor. The letter argued that Mr Monks' petition and evidence was deficient in that respect.
24 On 31 October 2023, Mr Mawhinney filed a notice stating his grounds of opposition to the creditor's petition. The grounds of opposition articulated in the notice, consistently with the letter, include that on the facts alleged in the petition and supporting affidavit, Mr Mawhinney had not committed an act of bankruptcy within the meaning of s 40(1)(h) of the Act.
25 On 1 November 2023, Mr Mawhinney filed his affidavit in opposition to the petition in which he disputed Mr Monks' version of the conversations set out in Mr Monks' affidavit.
26 On 16 November 2023, Mr Monks affirmed a further affidavit that was filed that day. In the affidavit he set out extracts from the transcript of the conversation between him and Mr Mawhinney on 16 September 2023, including the extract reproduced at [21] above. He also stated that in the meeting between him and Mr Mawhinney in Melbourne on 27 September 2023 the following words were stated - where "AM" is Mr Monks and "JM" is Mr Mawhinney:
AM: You are going to keep my payments suspended for now and you can't even pay $100 a week, for now?
JM: I can't pay anything now and $100 is just embarrassing.
AM: What about your other creditors, are you paying them?
JW: I am not paying them.
AM: Have you suspended them?
JW: I have had to. The same.
27 That is the exchange on which Mr Monks relies to establish that Mr Mawhinney gave notice that he had suspended payment of his debts to his creditors. The critical question is whether Mr Monks' account of that conversation is reliable. Needless to say, Mr Mawhinney denies having had a conversation in those terms.
28 When cross-examined on why he did not include evidence of Mr Mawhinney having said that he had suspended payments to his creditors in his two affidavits of 28 September 2023, and only included that on 16 November 2023, Mr Monks said that he had had a conversation with his lawyer about what to say in the later affidavit (T34:30-34). Indeed, Mr Monks repeatedly said that what he had discussed with Mr Mawhinney in the two conversations in order to extract admissions, including the recording of the 16 September conversation, had been on his lawyer's instructions (see, eg T22:14-24, 25:1, 25:40, 26:47, 28:19-26). That is to say, Mr Monks was very deliberate about getting Mr Mawhinney to agree to what was necessary, ie to admit the debt and to commit an act of bankruptcy. That is borne out by his use of the terminology of "suspension" of payments which was drawn from the Act.
29 The principal difficulty that I have with Mr Monks' version of the conversation that he had with Mr Mawhinney on 27 September is that he said that what he canvassed in that conversation was specifically on the instructions of his lawyer, yet when he affirmed an affidavit the very next day as to what was said in the conversation he omitted the critical point that Mr Mawhinney had suspended payment of his debts to his creditors. If Mr Mawhinney had indeed said that he had suspended payment of his debts to his creditors as he alleged in his affidavit some six weeks later, that would have been a critical fact to depose to in the affidavit the next day. However, that fact was not included in the petition or in the affidavit which rather suggests it was at that time not appreciated by Mr Monks that that was a necessary admission to extract from Mr Mawhinney.
30 It was only after Mr Mawhinney's lawyers had raised the absence of the necessary allegation in correspondence, that Mr Monks then in his later affidavit sought to remedy the deficiency by including the relevant statement by Mr Mawhinney. The lateness of the allegation as to Mr Mawhinney's suspension of payment of his debts to creditors raises substantial doubt as to its reliability.
31 Also, as indicated above, there was some confusion by Mr Monks in the witness box about what had been said in which of the conversations. That raises further doubt as to the reliability of his account.
32 In all those circumstances, I am simply not satisfied that Mr Mawhinney was asked whether he had suspended payments to his creditors, or that he said that he had. I am also not satisfied that such a statement was made, if at all, with the required deliberateness and not merely haphazardly or casually.
33 I do not consider that the fact that Mr Mawhinney was apparently indebted to the Commissioner of Taxation for a director's penalty in the amount of about $30,000 which had remained unpaid since October 2019 supports Mr Monks' case that Mr Mawhinney had given notice that he had suspended payments to his creditors. That is to say, even if Mr Mawhinney had not paid his other known creditor over a long period of time, that does not mean that he had given notice that he had suspended payments to his creditors.
34 Also, I do not accept that if Mr Mawhinney's version of the relevant conversation is to be excluded as unreliable, as submitted on behalf of Mr Monks, that has the effect that Mr Monks' version must be accepted. There is nothing to support such an approach. Even assuming Mr Mawhinney's version to be self-serving and unreliable, which I do not need to decide, I am not sufficiently satisfied as to the reliability of Mr Monks' version to be able to accept it as establishing the act of bankruptcy relied upon.