Whether sufficient doubt to warrant reconsideration
30 There is considerable overlap between Mr Reaper's grounds supporting his application for leave, his draft grounds of appeal, and his submissions. In my view however, and even assuming the effect of his Honour's orders on the status of the relevant property, none of Mr Reaper's arguments supports a finding that his Honour's judgment was attended by sufficient doubt to warrant reconsideration.
31 First, I note that Mr Reaper seeks leave to appeal against only paragraph 1 of the orders of the primary Judge. Therein the primary Judge ordered:
1. Paragraphs 1 and 3 of the application in a case filed by the respondent on 13 September 2016 is dismissed.
32 Mr Reaper claims that the order is invalid because it incorrectly refers to "the application in a case filed by the respondent on 13 September 2016". I note that, on the face of his application in a case, it was lodged for filing in the Federal Circuit Court on 3 September 2016, but accepted for filing in that Court on 13 September 2016. It is clear however that the "application in a case filed by the respondent" to which his Honour referred in the order was that lodged by Mr Reaper on 3 September 2016. The fact that his Honour in these particular orders identified the filing date of Mr Reaper's application in a case by reference to the date of acceptance by the Registry rather than lodgement by Mr Reaper is, in my view, immaterial on the facts of this case. The orders sought by Mr Reaper in his application in a case were:
1. An order staying paragraph 6 of the orders made by his Honour Judge Burchardt on 18 September 2015 as amended on 9 October 2015;
2. …
3. Alternatively, an injunction restraining the trustee from acting on the orders of his Honour Judge Burchardt made on 18 September 2015 as amended on 9 October 2015.
33 Order 1 of his Honour clearly related to paragraphs 1 and 3 of Mr Reaper's application in a case lodged on 3 September 2016 and accepted on 13 September 2016. There is no ambiguity in his Honour's order, which in my view is valid.
34 Second, an order to stay or refusing to stay proceedings involves an exercise of judicial discretion (note for example Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Lanepoint Enterprises Pty Ltd [2011] HCA 18; Puttick v Tenon Limited [2008] HCA 54; Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd (1990) 171 CLR 538). Principles applicable to consideration of an appeal from a decision of a primary Judge exercising judicial discretion were explained by Dixon, Evatt and McTiernan JJ in House v R (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 504-505 where their Honours said:
The manner in which an appeal against an exercise of discretion should be determined is governed by established principles. It is not enough that the judges composing the appellate court consider that, if they had been in the position of the primary judge, they would have taken a different course. It must appear that some error has been made in exercising the discretion. If the judge acts upon a wrong principle, if he allows extraneous or irrelevant matters to guide or affect him, if he mistakes the facts, if he does not take into account some material consideration, then his determination should be reviewed and the appellate court may exercise its own discretion in substitution for his if it has the materials for doing so.
35 It follows that the key question in any appeal from the primary judgment would be whether an error was made by his Honour in exercising his judicial discretion to refuse a stay of Judge Burchardt's judgment.
36 Mr Reaper claimed that the primary Judge acted on wrong principles in relation to whether a stay ought have been granted in respect of Judge Burchardt's orders. The onus of proof rests upon an applicant for a stay to demonstrate that it is an appropriate case for a stay: Berg v Director of Public Prosecutions [2011] QCA 302. Generally a successful party in litigation is entitled to the fruits of its judgment, and decisions at first instance are not to be treated as merely provisional: Alexander v Cambridge Credit Corp Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 685 at 694-5; Cook's Construction Pty Ltd v Stork Food Systems Australia Pty Ltd [2008] 2 Qd R 453 at [12]. However it is also clear that the Court is empowered with a broad discretion to grant a stay of a decision in appropriate circumstances, including where an appeal has been commenced. As Greenwood J observed in Citrus Queensland Pty Ltd v Sunstate Orchards Pty Ltd [2008] FCA 1867 at [39]:
A reason tipping the balance in favour of an applicant in an appropriate case will take account of whether the applicant has discharged an onus of demonstrating that a stay order, in the terms proposed, is "fair to all parties" (Alexander v Cambridge Credit at 694F) having regard to the balance of convenience (ie the balance of risks and irremediable harm) and the competing rights of the parties …
37 In this case his Honour was clearly satisfied that Mr Reaper was, in substance, reagitating matters unsuccessfully raised by him in previous litigation, or which could be raised by him in another of his applications listed before the Federal Circuit Court. In the context of this matter I am unable to identify an obvious error of his Honour in doing so.
38 Third, no error is apparent in respect of his Honour's references to decisions of Davies J and Pagone J in other, contemporaneous, litigation between Mr Reaper and Baycorp, particularly in light of the apparent similarity of issues arising in the case before his Honour and those in the Federal Court.
39 Fourth, it seems that before his Honour Mr Reaper sought to invite his Honour to go behind the judgment debt on which the bankruptcy was based. His Honour noted his exchange with Mr Reaper during the course of the hearing, in particular his reference to the decision of the Full Court in Compton v Ramsay Health Care Australia Pty Ltd [2016] FCAFC 106. His Honour observed that proceedings were imminent before Judge Hartnett of the Federal Circuit Court in which her Honour was expected to hear Mr Reaper's application to set aside the creditor's petition which led to the making of the sequestration order on 7 March 2013 pursuant to which Mr Reaper was made a bankrupt. Further, his Honour noted that Mr Reaper did not seek to address the Court in respect of Compton [2016] FCAFC 106.
40 Notwithstanding Mr Reaper's submissions to the contrary, in these circumstances it is not surprising that his Honour did not consider any counter-claims Mr Reaper might have advanced in respect of the judgment debt, or investigate whether it was appropriate to set aside the bankruptcy notice. Not only does it appear that, at that stage, another Judge of the Court was listed to deal with relevant matters approximately five weeks after the hearing before the primary Judge, it further appears Mr Reaper did not properly pursue the matter before his Honour.
41 Fifth, his Honour dealt with Mr Reaper's assertion that the Mr Vrsecky was "associating himself with a proof of debt he knows and is taken to have admitted, contains false or misleading documents". As his Honour (as well as apparently other Judges in related cases) observed, this is an allegation tantamount to fraud which the respondents hotly denied. Indeed his Honour notes that in correspondence to the trustee Mr Reaper bluntly accused Baycorp of fraud and Mr Vrsecky of having a conflict of interest. His Honour clearly discounted these allegations on the basis that similar allegations had been made by Mr Reaper in other litigation, and similarly rejected. In the circumstances it was open to his Honour to do so.
42 Sixth, it is unclear exactly to which extraneous or irrelevant issues raised by the petitioning creditor's lawyer his Honour allegedly (in Mr Reaper's submission) attributed weight instead of to material before the Court.
43 Seventh, it is not apparent to me that the primary Judge made findings in respect of Judge Burchardt's judgment contrary to that decision.
44 Eighth, his Honour discussed in detail the three notices to admit facts filed by Mr Reaper in July 2016. His Honour concluded that the documents described in the 22 July 2016 notice to admit did not provide any foundation for the assertions Mr Reaper had made, and rejected Mr Reaper's contention that any alleged admission said to be founded by Baycorp's admission of the authenticity of the documents was "fresh evidence". Examining comments of Davies J in Reaper v Baycorp Collections [2016] FCA 579 at [18] it is clear why the primary Judge was satisfied that her Honour's comments had "full force and effect to the facts of" the application before him.
45 Ninth, it is, with respect to Mr Reaper, somewhat embarrassing that he should have accused the primary judge of "re-raising matters previously dealt with" and causing "the parties to reagitate the same matters". I note that the long and protracted history of litigation between Mr Reaper, Baycorp and Mr Vrsecky set out in the judgments of Pagone J and Davies J appears substantially to have been at the instigation of Mr Reaper. Indeed as his Honour observed, substantive matters before him had either been before other Courts (for example, the "deemed admissions" claim and Mr Reaper's claim that his bankruptcy should be annulled) or were due to go before another Judge of the Federal Circuit Court (for example, Mr Reaper's claim that he had a counter-claim in respect of the judgment debt founding the bankruptcy). To the extent that his Honour was required to consider such matters, it is reasonable to say that any fault lies largely at the feet of Mr Reaper.
46 Tenth, in the circumstances where there has been long and protracted litigation between the parties, it was open to the primary Judge to find that Mr Reaper's purpose in requesting the Court to require the trustee to adjudicate upon Baycorp's proof of debt was a tactic to exhaust the trustee's willingness to pursue the trustee's rights against Mr Reaper, and to further exhaust the trustee's funds. I accept that his Honour was entitled to take into account Mr Reaper's conduct in considering the exercise of the judicial discretion to refuse to stay Judge Burchardt's orders. In any event, it is somewhat surprising that, in his submissions, Mr Reaper criticised the manner in which Honour dealt with this aspect of the case. Mr Reaper's claim for adjudication, investigation and verification of the petitioning creditor's debt was the subject of paragraph 2 of his Honour's orders, in respect of which Mr Reaper has specifically not sought leave to appeal.