Whether prima facie absence of mutuality can be resolved by equitable set-off
24 In a novel and somewhat ingenious argument, counsel for Mr Prentice argued that the prima facie absence of mutuality is not to be maintained upon closer examination. It was submitted that, in circumstances where any payment of Fewin's debt is to be paid into trust funds held by Mr Prentice, being the same fund from which he may claim an indemnity in meeting the debt he owes to Fewin, equity would recognise a right of set-off as an answer to Fewin's claim. Such an equitable set off was said to be either:
(1) a set-off of the type contemplated by ss 40(1)(g) and 41(7) of the Bankruptcy Act;
(2) or alternatively, a counter-claim in equity; or
(3) or alternatively, a cross demand.
25 The reason for the alternative characterisations is that a "set-off" in the bankruptcy setting has been regarded as referring to claims that might be the subject of set-off at common law, a "counter-claim" as referring to claims that might be the subject of a counter-claim in equity, and a "cross demand" as referring to claims other than those two categories: see Re Judd; Ex parte Pike (1924) 24 SR (NSW) 537 at 539-540.
26 In support of Mr Prentice's argument, reliance was placed on a decision of the Chancery Division of the High Court of England and Wales in Re V P Developments Ltd; Penwith District Council v V P Developments Ltd [2005] EWHC 259 (Ch); [2005] BCLC 607. In that case, a company under a "company voluntary arrangement" (CVA) sought to rely upon a cross-claim arising under continuing arbitration to offset a debt owed to the petitioning council. Counsel for the petitioning council argued that the competing debts were not mutual, because the petition debts were owed by the company on its own behalf in favour of the petitioner, whereas the asserted cross-claim debt (if any) was held by the company as trustee for the creditors of the CVA, the company having no beneficial interest in that debt.
27 In striking out the creditor's winding up petition, Laddie J rejected the argument that the debts were not mutual. His Lordship held that the relevant question was whether the cross-claim was closely related to the petition debt. If so, the insolvency court would recognise the equitable set-off. In reaching this conclusion, his Lordship relied upon a textbook, Derham on the Law of Set-Off by Rory Derham (3rd Edition), at [17.90] and [17.93] (the author practices at the New South Wales Bar). Counsel for Mr Prentice furnished copies of the equivalent updated passages from the 4th Edition of Derham, being [17.122] and [17.125] respectively.
28 The passage at [17.90] of the 3rd Edition of Derham (and substantially repeated at [17.122] of the 4th Edition) cited the New South Wales Supreme Court Equity Division decision in Murphy v Zamonex Pty Ltd (1993) 31 NSWLR 439 and the Victorian Court of Appeal decision in Doherty v Murphy [1996] 2 VR 553. In the passage quoted below from Penwith, it was said of those cases that an equitable set-off was justified "on the ground that the beneficiaries of a trust should not have the benefit of the transaction without also bearing the burden of the trustee's conduct". Laddie J quoted from Murphy v Zamonex at 465 as follows:
Equitable set-off is available where the defendant establishes an equitable ground for being protected from the plaintiff's claim. That has been expressed in language to the effect that the defendant's set-off goes to the root of or impeaches the title of the plaintiff's claim, but also in language to the effect that the counter-claim is so directly connected with the claim that it would be unjust to allow the plaintiff to recover without taking into account the defendant's counter-claim. It is sufficient to refer to AWA Ltd v Exicom Australia Pty Ltd (1990) 19 NSWLR 705, James v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1992) 37 FCR 445 sub nom Re Just Juice Corporation Pty Ltd; James v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1992) 109 ALR 334 and the discussion in Meagher, Gummow and Lehane, paras 3709-3710 at 817-823 without going into whether the latter approach is an illicit departure from principle and authority. Accordingly, if a court of equity will restrain A in his capacity as trustee from recovering his claim against B without allowing for B's counter-claim against A in A's capacity as trustee there will be set-off in equity. That B could not have levied execution against the trust property may be relevant to whether the court will intervene, but why should it necessarily prevent set-off? Depending on the circumstances, it may not be right for the beneficiaries to have the fruits of A's activity as their trustee without bearing the burden of A's conduct in so acting.
29 The passage from Derham at [17.93] grounded the "mutuality in equity" upon the existence of the trustee's entitlement to indemnity. The later version of that passage at [17.125] of the 4th Edition is reproduced in part is as follows (footnotes omitted; emphasis added):
A trustee who properly incurs a debt in the execution of the trust is entitled to be indemnified from the trust assets, and for the purpose of giving effect to the indemnity the trustee has an interest which has been described as a first charge or a lien over the assets. This is not a mere right of retainer, but rather it confers an equitable proprietary interest in those assets which has priority over the interests of the interests of the beneficiaries. In an appropriate case the court may order a sale of trust property in order to satisfy the trustee's claim. The trustee's first charge should extend to a trust asset in the form of a debt owing to the trustee in his or her capacity as such. Furthermore, it is not necessary that the trustee should first have paid the debt before claiming against the trust assets. If the trustee has not paid the debt from his or her personal assets, the trustee is entitled to apply the trust property in discharging it, in other words the trustee has a right to exoneration, and he or she has a charge on the trust property in that circumstance as well.
Accordingly, when a trustee is sued by a third party for payment of a debt properly incurred in the execution of the trust, and at the same time the trustee, as a result of a consequent right of indemnity, has a charge on a debt owing to the estate by the third party, there is much to be said for the view that the trustee's interest may suffice to bring about mutuality in equity for the purpose of equity acting by analogy with the Statutes. This should also be relevant to insolvency set-off. It assumes, however, that the trustee has a right of indemnity …
30 The concepts advanced in the above passage appear to fall within the category of what has been described in Meagher, Gummow & Lehane's Equity Doctrines and Remedies (5th Edition) (MGL) at 1104 [39-055 (d)] as the "fourth kind of equitable set-off". The learned authors refer to Rawson v Samuel (1841) 41 ER 451 at 458 in support of this being a kind of equity that is recognised when "the party seeking the benefit of it can show some equitable ground for being protected against his adversary's demand". It is also described as "true equitable set-off", because the other three types are in the nature of acknowledgment by equity of other rights rather than true equities, being recognition of common law set-off, recognition of set-off by analogy with legal-set off - e.g. by imitation of statutory rights - and recognition of equitable set-off created by agreement between the parties.
31 Two key features of this true equity are that it does not insist upon mutuality and is more fully substantive than legal set-off, which is more procedural in nature: MGL at 1107 [39-060 (e) and (f)]. Equity, however, imposes limits which are absent from common law set-off and its statutory cousins. For example, the party relying on the set-off must show that it in some way impeaches the title of the other party's claim, a requirement absent at common law: MGL at 1108 [39-060(g)] and the cases there cited.
32 Critically, some equitable right to be protected from the other party's claim must be established. In Hill v Ziymack (1908) 7 CLR 352, execution to enforce the recovery of damages for conversion was not restrained by reason of unsettled accounts between the parties. In that case, Griffiths CJ at 360-2, quoting and relying upon the passage from Rawson v Samuel referred to above, held that the existence of unliquidated countervailing claims was not sufficient to give rise an equitable set-off because no right to be protected from the plaintiff's claim was established.
33 Applied to the present case, the $16,500 claim of Fewin against Mr Prentice in person can properly be regarded as being able to be the subject of an equitable set-off by (at least) the $25,000 debt owed by Fewin to him in his capacity as trustee when due and proper regard is had to the impact of his right of indemnity, there being no argument advanced that the indemnity would not apply. Had that argument been advanced, in the nature of, for example an assertion that the statutory notice was not properly served, it likely would have received short shrift by reason of the following paragraph indicating that the outcome unsuccessfully argued for before Brereton J was at least tenable and, based on my contrary conclusion, in substance arguably correct. The absence of formal mutuality between the competing claims is met by the substantive reality that equity is able to recognise rights in ways that common law claims cannot. In an equitable sense, Fewin's claim is matched - and exceeded - by Mr Prentice's claim.
34 A hint or suggestion was made on behalf of Fewin that some kind of res judicata or issue estoppel arose as a result of Brereton J's decision to set aside Mr Prentice's statutory demand by reason of a defect that his Honour found in the underpinning certificate of taxation. While this point was not developed, it should be addressed for completeness and for the benefit of any further litigation on this bankruptcy notice. There are several barriers to this argument. The first and most obvious is that the defect found by his Honour has been remedied by obtaining a fresh certificate of taxation without the problem identified. Accordingly the "res" is not the same and the prior issue no longer exists.
35 Secondly, his Honour's decision was reached in an ex tempore judgment, as yet not published, following a very brief hearing. I came to a different view following a much lengthier hearing in a detailed reserved judgment.
36 Thirdly, the hearing before his Honour and the ex tempore decision took place after I had reserved. No attempt was made to relist that matter and seek to persuade me to follow that bare outcome without the benefit of reasons, rather than to properly adjudicate upon the issue for myself in the absence of such reasons. It seems that the decision was reached on the basis that the impugned certificate of taxation did not have on its face the signature of a registrar, yet as I have concluded at [132] in Coshott v Prentice (No 2) [2016] FCA 153, regard was also required to be had to the document as a whole, including the notice of filing, which was relevantly affixed with the seal of the Court and the principal registrar's electronic signature. It should be noted that my decision is under appeal. I am not aware whether this is an issue in that appeal. But even if I am wrong and overturned, it has no bearing on this case by reason of the fresh certificate of taxation now relied upon (a challenge to which was mentioned but not pressed or argued).
37 If I had a free hand, I would have been inclined to apply reasoning similar to the cases detailed above and recognise an equitable right of set-off sufficient to ground an offsetting claim for the purposes of ss 40(1)(g) and 41(7) of the Bankruptcy Act. Derham 4th Edition at [17.125] points out in footnote 627, that such reasoning may account for the decision in Re Last; Ex parte Butterell (1994) 124 ALR 219. In Re Last, a family trust company indebted to the bankrupt with a cross-claim against him for an indemnity consequent upon a payment under a guarantee was permitted a set-off in the bankruptcy in relation to the cross-claims notwithstanding that it was the trustee of a family trust. The suggested interpretation of Re Last in Derham is perhaps somewhat stretched. The mutuality distinction here seems especially artificial and no less meritorious than in Re Last.
38 The bankruptcy debt arises out of a costs order of $16,500 made against Mr Prentice from a failed statutory demand. That statutory demand was based on costs ordered to be paid by Fewin to Mr Prentice. There is no issue as to the fact of the costs order in favour of Mr Prentice or its quantum of $25,000. The only issue giving rise to the failure of the statutory demand was a purported defect in the certificate of taxation, since remedied (and in my view, not a defect at all upon closer analysis: see Coshott v Prentice (No 2) at [132]). Mr Prentice seeks to rely on the same $25,000 debt to offset the costs order debt of $16,500, albeit by a fresh certificate of taxation. The competing debts are therefore very closely associated.
39 As a matter of applying first principle reasoning, I would be attracted to the notion that equitable doctrines can be applied to overcome prima facie problems of mutuality in a narrow and confined class of cases in order to avoid absurd and unfair outcomes, especially having regard to the public interest in making the difficult task of acting as a trustee in bankruptcy (including any subsequent trusteeship as in this case) more workable. The concept of mutuality would then align with reality, in circumstances where Mr Prentice would otherwise account to the trust for what he recovers from Fewin and look to indemnity from the trust for what is obtained or sought from him in person by Fewin.
40 However, the problem is that the reasoning in Penwith does not answer the fundamental legal requirement of mutuality for the purposes of the Bankruptcy Act as expressed in Stec at [24], which is directed to the "capacities in which the claimants claim". Stec at [24] is binding and inescapable. There is no room for a finding that the conclusions reached were arrived at per incuriam by reason of the Full Court overlooking the possibility that difference in capacities in which competing claims are made or received could be overcome by resort to equitable set-off. Even if it might be concluded that such a principle had been in some way overlooked per incuriam so as to render the conclusion reached distinguishable because of the absence of consideration of such equitable principles, it is not open to a single judge to disregard a prior Full Court decision upon that ground. The ambit of the decision of Stec cannot be sidestepped in that way. I cannot improve upon what was said on this topic by the Full Court in Algama v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs [2001] FCA 1884; (2001) 115 FCR 253 at 261:
[39] In Foster v Northern Territory [1999] FCA 1235 at [32] (French, Tamberlin and Sackville JJ, 31 August 1999, unreported), a Full Court of this Court exercising original jurisdiction described submissions made by the applicants before it that a particular decision of the High Court of Australia did not bind the Full Court as "an invitation to revisit the decision on the basis that not all materials or arguments that could have been put before the Court were put before it". The Full Court continued, "The applicants' submissions amount to an invitation to find that the decision of the High Court was made per incuriam". In rejecting that invitation, the Full Court quoted approvingly what Moffitt P had said in Proctor v Jetway Aviation Pty Ltd [1984] 1 NSWLR 166 at 177:
"The per incuriam rule is not available to a court in relation to a decision of a court superior in the hierarchy. It is a rule which applies only to a review by a court of its own decision. An equivalent result cannot be achieved by regarding a binding decision of the superior court as distinguishable on the basis that it did not decide the question which it did by making the order that it did, but that it only decided the question apparently argued before it or on the basis that its reasons were its decision."
The Full Court in Foster also, without quoting it, invited attention to what Lord Diplock had said in Cassell & Co Ltd v Broome [1972] AC l027 at 1131. Lord Diplock's remarks, which had been quoted by Moffitt P in Proctor at 179, had foreshadowed those later made by Moffitt P in Proctor.
[40] In addition to what had been said by Moffitt P in Proctor and by Lord Diplock in Cassell, we note that a majority of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (Lords Diplock, Simon of Glaisdale and Cross of Chelsea and Sir Thaddeus McCarthy), relying on Cassell, had expressed a similar view about the operation of the per incuriam rule in Baker v The Queen [1975] AC 774 at 788 (as had the sole dissentient, Lord Salmon, at 795). The majority had pointed out that to permit the use of the per incuriam rule by a court inferior to the court the precedential effect of whose decision was in issue "would open the door to disregard of precedent by the court of inferior jurisdiction by the simple device of holding that decisions of superior courts with which it disagreed must have been given per incuriam".
[41] We agree with the approach to the per incuriam rule taken by the courts (including a Full Court of this Court) to which, and the judges to whom, we have referred above …
41 It follows that I am, regrettably, bound to reject the argument that an equitable right of set-off might resolve a prima facie absence of mutuality. Mr Prentice has therefore failed to establish an offsetting claim for the purposes of ss 40(1)(g) and 41(7).