3.4 The grounds advanced as evident from Mr Rafidi's submissions
36 I now turn to the submissions made on behalf of Mr Rafidi in support of his application for leave to amend. In them he contends that this Court would not permit the CBA to rely on the Bankruptcy Notice in circumstances where the Consent Orders were obtained irregularly, illegally, in bad faith or improperly. He cites Ramsay Health Care Australia Pty Ltd v Compton [2017] HCA 28; (2017) 345 ALR 534 (Ramsay) in support of the proposition that the Court must satisfy itself that the debt on which the creditor proceeds is a just and proper debt and submits that s 52(1) of the Act imposes an obligation on the Court to be satisfied that the debt on which the petitioning creditor relies is still owing. Mr Rafidi submits that the Court is not bound by the way that he conducted the Supreme Court Proceedings, or forensic decisions made in that Court. Mr Rafidi submits that the Court in the present case cannot be satisfied that the Consent Orders provide a reliable statement of a debt owed by him to the CBA. The reasons advanced for this proposition are opaque, but after having close regard to the written and oral submissions made by Mr Hall and the affidavit material filed, Mr Rafidi's contentions appear to be as follows.
37 First, at the time the Consent Orders were made, Mr Rafidi owed obligations to an insurer as to what he would do in the event that he and BBC were advised that they were unlikely to succeed in the Supreme Court Proceedings. In his first affidavit Mr Rafidi says that he agreed to the Consent Orders because the cross-claim was covered by an insurance policy in the event of adverse costs and because for other reasons it appeared to him that it was quite impossible that the trial would proceed to a fair hearing.
38 Secondly, following his entry into the Consent Orders, allegations of criminal wrongdoing were then made against Mr Rafidi by the CBA. I interpolate here that the allegations to which Mr Rafidi refers are that he had fabricated the 14 January 2009 letter which was central to his defence to the claim advanced by the CBA in the Supreme Court Proceedings. He appears to contend that if he had known that these allegations were to be made, he would not have entered into the Consent Orders.
39 Thirdly, the CBA has, in its case against Mr Rafidi, engaged in the "worst kind of conduct that a banking institution in Australia can do, namely, intentionally take down customer loans for the objective purpose of removing them from its loan book because the bank no longer wished to hold them". The precise ambit of the allegations made against the CBA in the context of this submission is unclear. It appears to arise from the affidavits filed and in particular from the affidavits of Mr Mastronado, Mr Evanian and Mr Andersen. To understand the nature of the contention it is necessary to address the submissions advanced on behalf of Mr Rafidi in some detail.
40 In his written submissions, Mr Rafidi states that his evidence raises very serious allegations against the CBA. He submits that for the most part those allegations have been:
…admitted by the Bank as part of the narrative that arises from the documents referred to in the expert report of Mr Andersen as being the "analysts calls", that reveal the identification by value of loans on the commercial loan book of BankWest identified as being non-core assets and the deliberate reduction in the level of those loans at an annualised rate of 29% per annum…
41 The source of the asserted "admission" by the CBA is not clear.
42 During the hearing of the present interlocutory applications Mr Rafidi tendered in evidence (subject to objections as to relevance) a further amended statement of claim in New South Wales Supreme Court proceedings 2016/8690 between Australian Retirement Group Pty Ltd and P Walsh as plaintiffs and the CBA as the defendant (Representative Proceedings) in which the plaintiffs bring the action on their own behalf and on behalf of certain represented persons who are said to be small business customers who entered into loan facility agreements with Bankwest prior to December 2008 and whose loan facilities were subsequently placed in to the CAM division of Bankwest. I was informed by Mr Hall, who is also named as the solicitor for the plaintiffs in the Representative Proceedings, that Mr Rafidi has not been, but is likely to be joined as a group member in those proceedings.
43 In summary, in the Representative Proceedings the group members include businesses that entered into facility agreements with BankWest, and the guarantors of those facilities, each of which was entered into prior to 19 December 2008. The group members allege that following the acquisition of BankWest by the CBA, and between 19 December 2008 and 1 October 2012, BankWest undertook a review of about 1,958 files relating to, inter alia, commercial facilities provided by BankWest, including the facilities guaranteed by group members. The review was part of a system designed by BankWest to enable it to identify and remove from its books certain commercial loans, including loans to the group members. As a result, BankWest's original credit policy applicable at the time that the original facilities were executed was materially altered, such that these 1,958 loans had their credit risk downgraded to between "substandard" and "loss-actual" and were classified as non-performing loans. Thereafter, BankWest hindered or prevented group members from performing their obligations under their respective facility agreements, placed the loans with BankWest's CAM department and wrote off the loans, with the purpose of removing the facility from BankWest's loan book and bringing to an end the banking customer relationship between BankWest and the various group members. At the time the facilities were placed with CAM, they were "performing loans" and the group members were meeting their obligations under those agreements. Thereafter, BankWest ceased or delayed the making of payments so that the group members were unable to complete their projects and otherwise were hindered or prevented from performing their obligations under their particular facility agreement. Further, once a facility had been placed with CAM, BankWest engaged in unfair practices including charging higher default rates of interest, imposing fees and issuing unreasonable payment demands, issuing notices of default requiring payment of the loans in full within short periods of time, and terminating the facility agreement. BankWest then appointed receivers over the assets of the group members and proceeded to sell their secured property and assets, causing loss and damage. BankWest then made demands against those group members who were guarantors in respect of any shortfall.
44 It may be observed that many of the allegations set out in the Representative Proceedings have points of similarity to those set out in the now abandoned statement of claim.
45 Mr Rafidi submits that the fact that the CBA has filed a defence in the Representative Proceedings, and not sought to strike it out or otherwise complain about the form in which it is constituted, should be taken to mean that this Court can assume that there is necessarily a serious question to be tried in the present application to set aside the Bankruptcy Notice (it may be that this is the source of the "admission" referred to by Mr Rafidi, as quoted in paragraph [40] above). Mr Rafidi appears to adopt the Representative Proceedings as equivalent to the claim that he wishes in his draft amended application to advance against the CBA as one of the bases for setting aside the Consent Orders.
46 The way that Mr Rafidi puts it in his written submissions should be directly quoted:
41. It follows that, even as [sic, if] the Bank would hasten to point out, the prospects of success for Mr Rafidi in the trial court [that is, in the Supreme Court Proceedings] were poor, and even if bank employees called in his case went back on their evidence for reasons which are wholly unexplained, (although there may be a myriad of reasons why a banking officer still in the industry may succumb to pressure and persuasion in the witness box), it is apparent now that even the Bank concedes that in so far as its claims are pressed against guarantors, of which Mr Rafidi is one, those clams will proceed to trial.
42. For these reasons, and the objections that the Bank made the raising of allegations in the trial court, and which Mr Rafidi now seeks to raise, there are now 'special circumstances", such as go well beyond those that existed in Ramsay Health Care. The present circumstances arise in the context that the Bank engaged in a pleaded system of conduct that was deliberatively [sic] causative of loss to its customers.
47 Discerning the true meaning of this submission presents some challenges, but it would appear that Mr Rafidi intends to submit that:
(1) In the trial of the Supreme Court Proceedings Mr Rafidi's prospects of success may have been poor, but because the CBA has not sought to strike out the Representative Proceedings and instead filed a defence, the claims in the Representative Proceedings must proceed to trial. This should be taken to amount to a "special circumstance" that means, consistent with Ramsay, that the Court should go behind the Consent Orders;
(2) Another special circumstance, obliquely identified in [42], but more directly raised in the affidavit evidence of Mr Rafidi, is that the CBA objected to him raising certain allegations during the conduct of the Supreme Court Proceedings and ultimately prevented him from advancing an amended form of cross-claim against the Bank to raise similar allegations.
48 Mr Rafidi's written submissions in this respect conclude with the contention that the evidence which he seeks to advance in the present proceedings provides a rational basis to conclude that there is in truth no debt due by Mr Rafidi to the CBA and that the CBA is seeking to invoke an act of Bankruptcy "for an abusive purpose and part of the overall process of wrong doing that is otherwise set out in the Representative action".