E.3. Lundy Granite principle
80 I turn now to address the question of the potential application of the Lundy Granite principle to the plaintiffs' application for judicial advice.
81 Re Lundy Granite Co; Ex parte Heaven (1871) LR 6 Ch App 462 concerned a landlord's distraint of items belonging to a company that had been left upon a tenant's property. The tenant had agreed to assign the lease to the company, but the assignment was not effected and the company was nonetheless permitted into possession of the property. After a winding up order was made, the liquidator of the company retained possession of the land with a view to selling the company's assets on the land. The distraint was allowed to proceed because, inter alia, the liquidator had retained possession of the land for the purposes of the liquidation. Lord Justice James observed at 466:
[I]f the company for its own purposes, and with a view to the realization of the property to better advantage, remains in possession of the estate, which the lessor is therefore not able to obtain possession of, common sense and ordinary justice require the Court to see that the landlord receives the full value of the property.
82 In Re Oak Pits Colliery Co (1882) 21 Ch D 322, the owner of a colliery sought to distrain or be paid the proceeds of sale of the plant and machinery held on land adjoining the colliery. The colliery and the minerals in the adjoining land, but not the surface of the adjoining land, had been leased to a company that brought the plant and machinery on to the surface of the adjoining land and sank three trial pits. The company subsequently mortgaged their lease by way of a sublease. Relevantly, the liquidator had left the company's plant and machinery where he found them until he sold them in July 1881. The liquidator had the plant and machinery valued with a view to a sale which was not carried out, and he took no steps to surrender the company's interest in the colliery. Lord Justice Lindley was not satisfied that these facts were sufficient to show that the liquidator had retained the property for the purpose of advantageously disposing of it or had continued to use it so as to entitle the lessor to payment in full of the rent. His Lordship stated at 330:
When the liquidator retains property for the purpose of advantageously disposing of it, or when he continues to use it, the rent of it ought to be regarded as a debt contracted for the purposes of winding up the company, and ought to be paid in full like any other debt or expense properly incurred by the liquidator for the same purpose. and in such a case it appears to us that the rent for the whole period during which the property is so retained or used ought to be paid in full without reference to the amount which could be realised by a distress. This was the view taken by Lord Justice James in the case of the Lundy Granite Company and by Mr Justice Fry in In re Brown, Bayley & Dixon, and by Mr Justice Kay in the present case. But no authority has yet gone the length of deciding that a landlord is entitled to distrain for or be paid in full rent accruing since the commencement of the winding up, where the liquidator has done nothing except abstain from trying to get rid of the property which the company holds as lessee. If the landlord had endeavoured to re-enter and the liquidator had objected, the case might be different, but having regard to the provisions of the Companies Act, 1862 , we are of opinion that in the case now supposed the landlord must rely on his right, if any, to re-enter and prove for the arrears due to him, and that he is not entitled to anything more.
(Emphasis added, footnotes omitted.)
83 In explaining how the Lundy Granite principle applies, Lindley LJ held that a landlord seeking to distrain after a winding up order or seeking to be paid their rent in priority to other creditors "must show why he should have such an advantage over the other creditors": Oak Pits Colliery at 329. His Lordship stated that if, however, the liquidator has kept possession for their benefit and for the benefit of the company, by an arrangement with the landlord, and there is no agreement with the liquidator that they are to pay rent, the landlord is not allowed to distrain: at 330.
84 An immediate difficulty with any application of the Lundy Granite principle, at least any direct application, is that it has never been applied outside of a winding up or voluntary administration context in England or a winding up context in Australia. The principle can fairly be characterised as an extension of the rationale for s 419 and s 556 of the Corporations Act. It seeks to impose liability on a liquidator by treating continuing obligations under contractual arrangements entered into before a winding up as debts incurred by the liquidator and entitled to payment in priority to other unsecured creditors, if those obligations arise during a period in which the Company holds property for its own advantage.
85 The underlying rationale and potential scope of the Lundy Granite principle has been the subject of extensive consideration in case law.
86 In Re ABC Coupler and Engineering Co Ltd (No 3) [1970] 1 WLR 702, claims were made against a company in liquidation in respect of a lease entered into prior to a winding up. Justice Plowman observed that, generally, rent accruing after the commencement of a winding up was not payable in full, and was provable in the winding up rather than being treated as an expense of the winding up. His Honour observed at 709 that rent may be payable in full where:
[T]he liquidator has retained possession "for the convenience of the winding up", and that whether he has done so or not, depends upon his purpose in retaining possession.
87 On his appointment, the liquidator had closed down the business conducted by the company, arranged for a valuation of the company's plant and machinery and considered what further steps he should take. It was only after the liquidator had subsequently been given leave to sell the company's assets and determined to put the company's assets on the market that Plowman J held that he was retaining the premises for the benefit of the winding up and was liable to pay rent in full. His Honour concluded at 720:
In my judgment the inference is irresistible that from the time when the official receiver had been given leave to sell the company's assets and had taken advice as to the best method of doing so, his tactics were directed to carrying out that advice and that he retained the lease for the purpose of carrying it out and for the benefit of the liquidation. In those circumstances "common sense and ordinary justice" (to quote James L.J. at 6 Ch.App. 466 ) seem to me to require that from the end of July until November 19 the applicants should be entitled to be paid their rent in full unless the retention of the lease can, on the facts, fairly be regarded as having been for the joint benefit of the applicants and the company.
88 In Re Toshoku Finance UK plc [2002] 1 WLR 671; [2002] UKHL 6, Lord Hoffman provided the following explanation at [27] as to how the Lundy Granite principle should be understood, by reference to the statements of Lindley LJ in Oak Pits Colliery at 330:
My Lords, it is important to notice Lindley LJ was not saying that the liability to pay rent had been incurred as an expense of the winding up. It plainly had not. The liability had been incurred by the company before the winding up for the whole term of the lease. Lindley LJ was saying that it would be just and equitable, in the circumstances to which he refers, to treat the rent liability as if it were an expense of the winding up and to accord it the same priority. The conditions under which a pre-liquidation creditor would be allowed to be paid in full were cautiously stated. Lindley LJ said, at p 329, that the landlord "must show why he should have such an advantage over the other creditors". It was not sufficient that the liquidator retained possession for the benefit of the estate if it was also for the benefit of the landlord. Not offering to surrender or simply doing nothing was not regarded as retaining possession for the benefit of the estate.
(Emphasis in original.)
89 Lord Hoffman then referred to the origin and scope of the Lundy Granite principle in the following terms at [29]:
The principle evolved from Exhall Coal Mining Co Ltd 4 De GJ & S 377 and Lundy Granite Co LR 6 Ch App 462 is thus one which permits, on equitable grounds, the concept of a liability incurred as an expense of the liquidation to be expanded to include liabilities incurred before the liquidation in respect of property afterwards retained by the liquidator for the benefit of the insolvent estate. Although [it] was originally based upon a statutory discretion to allow a distress or execution against the company's assets, the courts quickly recognised that its effect could be to promote a creditor from merely having a claim in the liquidation to having a prior right to payment in full. As in the case of other equitable doctrines, the discretion hardened into principle. By the end of the 19th century, the scope of the Lundy Granite Co principle was well settled.
90 In Timbercorp Securities Ltd (in liq) v Plantation Land Ltd (2009) 72 ACSR 620; [2009] FCA 741, Finkelstein J reviewed the case law relevant to the Lundy Granite principle and then stated at [19]:
The point of these cases is that distress for rent is allowed when the liquidator has "elected" to retain possession of the leased land: Re Silkstone & Dodworth Coal and Iron Co (1881) 19 Ch D 158 at 161 per Fry J; see also Re ABC Coupler and Engineering Co Ltd (No 3) [1970] 1 All ER 650; [1970] 1 WLR 702 per Plowman J. Whether or not the liquidator has elected to retain possession (that is whether or not he has decided to do so) may involve a subjective assessment of the state of mind of the liquidator but, more usually, will be determined objectively based on what the liquidator has said and done: In Re Downer Enterprises Ltd [1974] 1 WLR 1460 at 1466.
91 Justice Finkelstein observed that the rationale for the principle was not that pre-liquidation rental expenses were "incurred" in the winding up, but that in the particular circumstances of the case, courts have on occasions decided that in appropriate cases, as the landlord was deprived of enjoyment of the property, it would be "just and equitable" to treat a rent liability as if it were an expense of the liquidation and to accord it the same priority: Timbercorp at [20]. His Honour held that the principle did not apply where, as in the case before him, the liquidators were considering whether to retain possession of the leased land for the purposes of the liquidation, but had not yet decided whether to do so: Timbercorp at [21].
92 In Grapecorp, Sifris J considered the scope of the principle, in the context of a winding up, and observed:
[83] In the lease cases, whether the liquidator has elected to retain possession will be determined objectively by what she or he has said and done. The fact that the liquidator retains possession of the land is not, of itself, sufficient to render the rent an expense of the winding-up. The possession must be for the benefit of the winding up. Thus, it will not be sufficient that possession was maintained if it was also for the benefit of the landlord. Furthermore, not offering to surrender or simply doing nothing will not be regarded as retaining possession for the benefit of the estate.
[84] Commonly, a liquidator may elect to continue occupation of rented premises in order, for example, to continue the company's business pending its sale as a going concern, or as a place to store or auction stock or plant and equipment. In such cases, the incidental liabilities, including rent, rates and other taxes, will be incurred by the liquidator as if they were an expense of the liquidation, notwithstanding that the lease of the premises was entered into prior to the liquidation.
(Footnotes omitted, emphasis in original.)
93 In Jervis v Pillar Denton Ltd [2015] Ch 87; [2014] EWCA Civ 180, the Court of Appeal of England and Wales applied the Lundy Granite principle to an administration where rent due under leases was payable in advance and had fallen due for payment prior to a company's entry into administration. In reaching their conclusion, Lewison LJ (with whom Sharp and Patten LJJ agreed) observed at [8]:
It is also common ground that whether rent is payable as an administration expense is not a question of an exercise of the court's discretion. Either it counts as an expense, or it does not. If rent falls within the principle known variously as the "salvage principle", the "liquidation expenses principle" or "the Lundy Granite principle" it is an administration expense. If not, not. The origins and development of the principle, which I shall call the "salvage principle", were explained by Lord Hoffmann in In re Toshoku Finance UK plc [2002] 1 WLR 671.
94 His Lordship further observed at [77]:
I accept that whether the salvage principle applies is not a matter of discretion. As Lord Hoffmann explained in In re Toshoku Finance UK plc it is a principle that informs the interpretation of the rules which contain the complete list of what could rank as expenses of the relevant insolvency process: see para 16 above. Thus in order to rank as an expense a liability must fall within the rules as interpreted in the light of the salvage principle. But it does not follow from that that the principle, once understood, is incapable of being applied to factual situations that did not confront our Victorian forebears. Although the salvage principle owes its origins to applications relating to distress for rent, it has long outgrown those origins. I agree with [the appellant's counsel] that the rationale is a judge-made deeming provision under which the office holder is deemed to have incurred the liability in the course of the winding up or administration. The foundation of the principle is the application of equity. Lord Hoffmann makes this clear not only in the passage just cited ("it would be just and equitable, in the circumstances to which he refers, to treat the rent liability as if it were an expense of the winding up and to accord it the same priority"), but in other passages as well. Thus he said, at para 29:
"The principle evolved from the … cases is thus one which permits, on equitable grounds, the concept of a liability incurred as an expense of the liquidation to be expanded to include liabilities incurred before the liquidation in respect of property afterwards retained by the liquidator for the benefit of the insolvent estate." (Emphasis added.)
(Emphasis in original.)
95 In Ford (Administrator), in the matter of The PAS Group Limited (Administrators Appointed) v Scentre Management Ltd (2020) 145 ACSR 654; [2020] FCA 1023, administrators sought directions as to the priority which rent would have over other debts or claims in a winding up. The principal question to be determined was whether the rent incurred by the companies in administration during the standstill period would be a debt or claim entitled to priority in a winding up. Justice O'Callaghan observed at [22] that the provisions relating to an administrator's liability in Pt 5.3A of the Corporations Act would not bear on the question of the ranking of claims in a liquidation under s 556, in a winding up. His Honour concluded at [33]:
[W]here an administrator (or a liquidator) elects to cause the company to continue in occupation of leased premises for the purposes of the administration (or liquidation), referred to in some cases as the period of "beneficial occupation", the rent is payable as an expense of the administration or liquidation properly incurred in carrying on the company's business within the relevant governing provisions (in Australia, s 556(1)(a) of the Act).
96 As a matter of principle, I see no reason why the Lundy Granite principle should be confined to liquidations or English voluntary administrations. It is in substance an equitable principle that seeks to ameliorate the inherent unfairness in a company in liquidation continuing to enjoy the benefits of a contract entered into prior to its winding up for the benefit of the insolvent estate, beyond simply realising the assets for sale, but not treating further liabilities accruing on that contract as an expense of the liquidation. Fundamentally different considerations apply to the pari passu entitlement afforded to unsecured creditors for liabilities that had accrued prior to a winding up of a company. The conferral of a priority pursuant to s 556 of the Corporations Act to creditors with whom a liquidator has incurred liabilities enables a liquidator to continue to operate the business of a company, pending the sale of its assets for the benefit of creditors, and to distribute any surplus to shareholders, or in the case of a trust, to beneficiaries. The Lundy Granite principle extends that conferral of priority for, at least, leases entered into prior to a winding up of a company. The same rationale is equally applicable to a receiver appointed by the Court for the purpose of realising assets or for the purpose of enforcing a charge.
97 In my view, it would be incongruous to conclude that a receiver appointed by a secured creditor for the purpose of enforcing a charge could incur liabilities pursuant to s 419 of the Corporations Act, but a receiver appointed by a Court to realise trust assets for the benefit of trust creditors would not be in an equivalent position. It would be incongruous, not least because the enforcement of a charge would typically include the realisation of assets for the benefit of the secured creditor and priority creditors, and to the extent of any surplus, unsecured creditors.
98 In Melbourne Aircraft Leasing (UK) Ltd v Algeri in their capacity as joint and several Trustees of Project Volar Creditors' Trust (2022) 161 ACSR 569; [2022] NSWSC 443, the plaintiffs sought to recover from a trustee of a creditors' trust, as priority creditors, unpaid rent following the companies' entry into voluntary administration and subsequently into deeds of company arrangement that culminated in the establishment of the creditors' trust. The plaintiffs were lessors of aircraft and aircraft engines to companies in the Virgin Australia Group of companies.
99 The plaintiffs sought to rely on the Lundy Granite principle in support of their claims. After a comprehensive review of the case law, Black J concluded that the plaintiffs had not established that the Lundy Granite principle should be applied in admitting proofs of debt against the trust: at [94]. His Honour reached that conclusion for three principal reasons.
100 First, Black J pointed to the absence of any previous application of the Lundy Granite principle outside a winding up or English voluntary administration, stating at [94]:
First, the Plaintiffs identified no English or Australian authority which has extended that principle beyond a winding up, or a distribution of assets on the same basis in an English voluntary administration, and I can see no reason in policy to extend that well-established principle beyond the circumstances in which it arose.
101 Second, Black J did not accept that the "sense of deprivation" that was a substantial theme of the plaintiffs' submissions in comparing the position that would have applied in a winding up supported an application of the Lundy Granite principle. His Honour stated at [95]:
There was, of course, no winding up of the Virgin companies, because the airline business was sold and the Trust was established, and the position in a winding up would have been very different, not least because the proceeds of the sale of the business as a going concern which will be distributed to the Plaintiffs and other creditors under the Trust would likely not have been available. There is no requirement that a deed of company arrangement, still less a creditors' trust, replicate the position that would have occurred in a winding up, although creditors may challenge a deed of company arrangement which departs from that order in an appropriate case. No such challenge was brought by the Plaintiffs here. The Plaintiffs did not seek to establish that their economic return from the Trust, which has benefited from the sale proceeds of the business as a going concern, will be worse than their return had they been allowed priority in a winding up where those increased proceeds would likely not have been received.
102 Third, his Honour concluded that the priority to be afforded to the plaintiffs' claims was to be determined by the proper construction of the trust deed on the relevant facts, having regard to its text, context and purpose: Melbourne Aircraft Leasing at [96]. The trust deed expressly provided that the trust fund was to be paid to all Pool A Creditors (which included the plaintiffs) on a "pro rata" basis and there were no express provisions for the plaintiffs to have priority, unlike the position for creditors pursuing an insurance claim and obtaining payments from an insurer, and claims by employees for their entitlements: at [97]-[98].
103 The decision in Melbourne Aircraft Leasing can readily be distinguished from the present case. Unlike the position in Melbourne Aircraft Leasing, (a) no creditors' trust had been established that expressly provided for pro rata payments to all creditors, (b) there is a winding up of a corporate trustee, (c) the creditors have rights of recourse against the assets of the Trust, including the proceeds of the sale of Lots 2 and 5, and (d) the economic return achieved by the owners, including White Hills, will be higher if their claims for priority are upheld.
104 Further, I am satisfied that an ongoing liability imposed on a company to pay a strata levy pursuant to a strata management statement entered into prior to a winding up is not relevantly distinguishable in principle from an ongoing obligation to pay rent on a lease entered into prior to a winding up. As a practical matter, membership of a strata plan is no less necessary to continue to occupy premises than a lease. The considerations relevant to an application of the Lundy Granite principle are equally applicable to strata levies. The position of the landlord in the context of a lease is replaced by an owners' corporation and owners in the context of strata levies.
105 I accept that unlike the position with a lease, a liquidator has no power to disclaim a strata management statement, but I do not consider that difference in isolation is sufficient to preclude the potential application of the Lundy Granite principle to a strata management statement. The power to disclaim is an important consideration in any assessment of whether it is just and equitable that ongoing rental obligations with respect to leases entered into prior to a winding up should be treated as costs of the liquidation, but it is not determinative. Moreover, in my view it would also not be appropriate to preclude any application of the Lundy Granite principle for rental payments arising after a winding up incurred by a receiver on the basis that, unlike a liquidator, the receiver had no power to disclaim the lease. The underlying rationale for the Lundy Granite principle focuses on conduct sufficient to give rise to a beneficial occupation, not the narrower question of whether or not there has been a disclaimer of the lease by a liquidator.
106 The issue thus becomes whether the Company, by remaining the owner of Lots 2 and 5, retained the benefits of the Strata Management Statement for the mutual benefit of the Company, the owners corporation and the owners. More specifically, it is necessary to consider whether it is just and equitable that the strata levies be treated as an expense of the receivership because they arose from the continuing ownership by the Company of Lots 2 and 5. This in turn requires a determination of whether continuing legal ownership of Lots 2 and 5 could be characterised as a "beneficial occupation", an issue to be determined objectively by reference to what the plaintiffs have said and done or subjectively by reference to the state of mind of the plaintiffs.
107 While it might be thought likely that the remediation works undertaken by Karellas, as the agent of the Company (in liquidation), as the legal owner of the Lots as a bare trustee, pursuant to the Deed of Compromise and Disclaimer must have necessarily involved access and utilisation of common areas, there was no evidence that this was in fact the case. Rather, the relevant context in which to consider whether there had been a "beneficial occupation" was that continuing ownership of Lots 2 and 5 necessarily gave rise to an ongoing liability to the BMC for strata levies.