The exercise of the discretion
85 In circumstances of the present kind, it is open to the Court to exercise the discretion granted by ss 459A and 467(1)(c) to refuse the winding up: Motor Terms Company at 194-5; D.M.K. Building Materials Pty Ltd v Baker Timbers Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 711 at 714; Australian Beverage Distributors Pty Ltd v The Redrock Co Pty Ltd [2007] NSWSC 966, (2007) 213 FLR 450 at [33]-[34]. In D.M.K. Building Materials, Needham J noted, at 714:
It is of course plain enough that a plaintiff seeking the winding up of a company who is unable to rely upon his own debt at the date of the hearing of the proceedings is unlikely to obtain an order to wind up the defendant.
86 There are numerous authorities to the effect that an application for winding up will be dismissed, as I understand it, in the exercise of the discretion under ss 459A and 467(1)(c) if, by the time of the hearing, the original applicant is no longer a creditor and there is no one else seeking (and entitled) to be substituted as a creditor. Thus, in Bidald Consulting Pty Ltd v Miles Special Builders Pty Ltd [2005] NSWSC 397; (2005) 189 FLR 309, Barrett J said, at [15]:
[I]n a case such as this involving a presumption of insolvency because of non-compliance with a statutory demand, the matter of standing as such is to be judged at the time the winding up application is initiated … Thereafter, the proceeding remains extant for the benefit of any creditor the court sees fit to allow to pursue it. If the only person seeking to pursue it by the time it eventually comes before the court for determination is the original plaintiff but that plaintiff is not then a creditor, the application will be dismissed. If any person who is a creditor at that time (whether the plaintiff or someone else) then has the ability and standing to press for the making of a winding up order, the court will entertain the application and may make the order …
(Citation omitted)
87 In Treadtel International Pty Ltd v Cocco [2016] NSWCA 360, Barrett AJA (with whom Gleeson and Leeming JJA agreed) said at [57]:
… It is a well-established rule of practice that a person who claims to be a creditor but whose debt is disputed on genuine grounds will not be permitted to initiate or pursue a winding up application …
(Emphasis added)
88 This statement was made in relation to an application for winding up commenced under s 461 but can be taken to be a proposition of general application. Barrett AJA referred in this respect to the judgment of Ungoed-Thomas J in Mann v Goldstein [1968] 1 WLR 1091 at 1098-9:
I would prefer to rest the jurisdiction directly on the comparatively simple propositions that a creditor's petition can only be presented by a creditor, that the winding-up jurisdiction is not for the purpose of deciding a disputed debt (that is, disputed on substantial and not insubstantial grounds), since, until a creditor is established as a creditor he is not entitled to present the petition and has no locus standi in the Companies Court; and that, therefore, to invoke the winding up jurisdiction when the debt is disputed (that is, on substantial grounds) or after it has become clear that it is so disputed is an abuse of process of the court.
89 However, account must be taken of s 459S to which I referred earlier. That section has the effect that, without the leave of the Court, Living Australia cannot rely on a ground on which it could have relied had it applied to set aside the statutory demand. Further, the Court may grant that leave only if satisfied that the ground is material to proving that Living Australia is solvent. Thus, if leave is sought on the basis that a debt is disputed, the existence or amount of the debt must be relevant to a conclusion as to the company's solvency: ASIC v Lanepoint at [27].
90 There is a line of authority to the effect that the ground to which s 459S refers must be one that was actually available to be asserted according to the facts and circumstances existing at the relevant time: Perpetual Nominees Ltd v Masri Apartments Pty Ltd [2004] NSWSC 551, (2004) 49 ACSR 719; Grant Thornton Services (NSW) Pty Limited v St. George Wholesale Distributors Pty Ltd [2008] FCA 1777; Willard King Organisation (1978) Pty Ltd v CT Franchises Pty Ltd [2009] NSWSC 97; and Re Tomic Industries Pty Ltd [2012] NSWSC 1478. Thus, if a statutory demand which was properly served did not come to the attention of the company's directors through no lack of diligence on their part, it may be said that issues about the statutory demand or the debt on which it was based could not have been relied on in an application to set it aside.
91 In AXF Entertainment Pty Ltd v AXF Group Pty Ltd (No 2) [2019] VSC 753, Efthim AsJ took a different view holding that, in light of the decision in ASIC v Lanepoint referred to earlier, the lack of actual opportunity to seek the setting aside of the statutory demand did not relieve the company of the obligation to prove its solvency. His Honour noted, at [36], that "the focus of the present Australian legislative scheme is on a company's solvency" and that "if a statutory demand has been served and not complied with, then a debt can only be challenged if a company demonstrates solvency in accordance with s 459S of the Act".
92 Living Australia did not seek to rely on the Perpetual Nominees line of authority. Nor did it seek a grant of leave under s 459S. Its submission instead was that it could not, on an application to set aside a statutory demand, have challenged Rans Consulting's status as a creditor as it was, at the relevant times, a judgment creditor. It was only on the setting aside of the default judgment on appeal that the status of Rans Consulting changed. That submission cannot be accepted. Living Australia could have applied to set aside the statutory demand on the basis that it was disputing its indebtedness to Rans Consulting and was seeking to have the default judgment set aside. As noted earlier, it could then have sought an extension of the 21 day period fixed by s 459G until the steps which it was taking to that end had concluded.
93 Living Australia submitted next that the continuance of the petition by Rans Consulting after the setting aside of the default judgment is an abuse of the Court's process. That submission was not developed in any detail. In particular, the precise nature of the abuse was not identified. I understood it as a submission that the Court should, in the exercise of the more general discretion, set aside the winding up order made by the Registrar.
94 The parties' submissions did not address, at least in any detail, the matters bearing on the exercise of the discretion. I have already referred to the general principle that a winding up order will not, as a matter of discretion, be made on a debt which is subject to dispute, provided that the dispute is based on some substantial ground. If the presumption of insolvency and s 495S are put to one side, a number of matters could support an exercise of the discretion to set aside the winding up order made by the Registrar:
(1) the judgment debt on which the statutory demand was based has been set aside;
(2) moreover, there is an unchallenged curial finding that the debt claimed by Rans Consulting is genuinely disputed. That is to say, that is not a matter of evaluation now. The parties have known that that was so since the judgment in the Supreme Court delivered on 24 May 2019;
(3) as was observed by Hammerschlag J in TQM Design & Construct at [6], "[i]t would be inimical to the policy lying behind the statutory scheme for the defendant to obtain the benefit of the statutory presumption of insolvency based on a judgment debt where the judgment has been set aside";
(4) the sorry saga of this litigation commenced with the institution of proceedings by Rans Consulting against Living Australia in the Magistrates Court. Rans Consulting relied upon the service by post of the Magistrate Court proceedings at the registered office of Living Australia. Mr Cakar, the sole director of Living Australia, has deposed that he did not receive the summons. The service of the proceedings by Rans Consulting at the registered office of Living Australia cannot be criticised. However, it is unfortunate that Rans Consulting did not, at the same time, give notice of its institution of the proceedings to the solicitors who it knew were acting for Living Australia in relation to the same dispute. Had it done so in accordance with the usual professional practice, it is probable that Living Australia would have entered an appearance to the Magistrates Court action in a timely way and the default judgment on which Rans Consulting relied never obtained;
(5) Rans Consulting, by its conduct in the present litigation, accepted that the setting aside of the default judgment was a critical matter. This is evidenced, for example, by its agreement that the hearing of the winding up petition should be deferred pending the judgment of the Supreme Court on the appeal; and
(6) Rans Consulting acquiesced in the substitution of the Muttons as the applicant for the winding up, even though they were not, on my findings, a contingent or prospective creditor at 11 February 2019.
95 However, the presumption of insolvency does apply and Living Australia is required to prove the contrary of the presumption: ASIC v Lanepoint at [28]. It is fair to say that the evidence which Living Australia adduced in support of its solvency was not extensive.
96 Section 95A of the Act provides that a person is solvent if, and only if, the person is able to pay all the person's debts as and when they become due and payable. This cashflow test of insolvency focuses on the liquidity and viability of the company's business.
97 The solvency of a company is a question of fact to be supported by evidence of the company's financial position taken as a whole: First Equilibrium Pty Limited v Bluestone Property Services Pty Limited (in liq) [2013] FCAFC 108, (2013) 95 ACSR 654 at [33]; Southern Cross Interiors Pty Ltd v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation [2001] NSWSC 621; (2001) 53 NSWLR 213 at [54].
98 Counsel for the plaintiff referred to the statement of the relevant propositions by Weinberg J in Ace Contractors & Staff Pty Ltd v Westgarth Development Pty Ltd [1999] FCA 728 at [44]:
• The respondent is presumed to be insolvent and as such bears the onus of proving its solvency …
• In order to discharge that onus the Court should ordinarily be presented with the "fullest and best" evidence of the financial position of the respondent …
• Unaudited accounts and unverified claims of ownership or valuation are not ordinarily probative of solvency. Nor are bald assertions of solvency arising from a general review of the accounts, even if made by qualified accountants who have detailed knowledge of how those accounts were prepared…
• There is a distinction between solvency and a surplus of assets. A company may be at the same time insolvent and wealthy. The nature of a company's assets, and its ability to convert those assets into cash within a relatively short time, at least to the extent of meeting all its debts as and when they fall due, must be considered in determining solvency …
• The adoption of a cash flow test for solvency does not mean that the extent of the company's assets is irrelevant to the inquiry. The credit resources available to the company must also be taken into account …
• The question of solvency must be assessed at the date of the hearing. However, this does not mean that future events are to be ignored …
• It is no abuse of process for an applicant to seek to wind up a company presumed to be insolvent by reason of its failure to comply with a statutory demand merely because that company contends that it is solvent, or because there may be alternative means available to the applicant to vindicate its rights …
(Citations omitted)
99 The evidence which Living Australia provided concerning its solvency comprised an affidavit from Mr Gary Olsen (its accountant and business advisor) and two affidavits from Mr Cakar, its sole director. Both Mr Olsen and Mr Cakar opined that Living Australia is presently solvent. However, Living Australia did not provide any source documents such as bank statements, ledgers, cashflow statements or the like. It is also evident that nearly all of the material on which Mr Olsen relied was historical, that is, relating to the financial year ending on 30 June 2018. Mr Olsen did not express any opinion as to the position as at 30 June 2019 or even provide evidence on which an opinion as to Living Australia's solvency as at that date could be based.
100 Mr Cakar deposed that Living Australia carries on business managing the operations and activities of nine related entities, each of which is controlled by him. All of the management services provided by Living Australia are provided by Mr Cakar and it does not have any employees. Further, Living Australia does not carry on any business activity other than acting as the management company for the related entities. Mr Cakar deposed that for that reason Living Australia is not currently incurring any "trade creditors" from its activities. It is instead the related entities which incur the debts. Living Australia's sole source of income is from the management fees paid by the related entities, some of which are engaged in property development.
101 Mr Cakar did not disclose the contractual arrangement between Living Australia and himself pursuant to which he provides the management services of Living Australia to the related entities. Nor did he provide any evidence as to his billing of Living Australia or as to the making of payments by Living Australia to himself.
102 The financial statements for Living Australia for the financial years ending on 30 June 2017, 2018 and the draft financial statements for the financial year ending on 30 June 2019, reveal the following:
Description 2017 $ 2018 $ 2019 $
Total Income 470,043.00 698,677.00 504,890.13
Total expenditure 235,823.00 570,573.00 327,912.09
Net Profit 234,220.00 128,104.00 176,978.04
Net operating profit after income tax 167,024.00 90,484.00 (Not shown)