Particulars of the debt are then stated in tabular form. The first column headed "Date" has "May 2003" pre-printed in it. The next, headed "Consideration (State how the debt arose") has pre-printed in it:
"Cost price goods for which no refund has been received. Items:-"
55 There also appear in the second column several entries in handwriting, one above the pre-printed wording I have just quoted and the others below. These are:
"Daily High Vita
3 x 24.50
Heart Guard
1000mg 300 x 2
Fish Oil NO 200
25.50 X 2
Executive Antistress 120
2 x 27.20
Fat Blaster 60 NAP
3 x 36.80"
56 There is then a column for "Amount (GST incl)" in which a sum of money appears in handwriting against each handwritten entry. The second document signed by C & T Vithal was a form of proxy for the 23 September 2003 meeting in favour of Mr Schildkraut or, in his absence, Mr Bart.
57 I was not taken during the hearing to other examples of these consumer proofs and proxy forms. It was said by Mr Sheahan (and not disputed by Mr Newlinds) that the Vithal documents were among the better examples, in that, in a comparative sense, they contained comprehensive particulars; while others were less detailed and some contained no particulars at all. I have taken the trouble to look through all the forms in evidence. I mention several of them. One (page 4261 of the tendered documents) refers simply to "ginseng". Another (page 4224) refers to "vitamin C 100 mg". In other cases, there are references to "glucosamine" (page 4335) and "evening primrose" (page 4302), being respectively, according to the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, a sugar derived from glucose and a particular plant or flower and thus generic descriptions rather than brand or trade names. At page 4471 there appears a claim for $80.95 in which the second column (being the column for details of items the cost of which is claimed) is entirely blank except for the pre-printed words. I mention all these merely as examples.
58 The 470 documents (or sets of documents) assembled under the direction of Mr Schildkraut bear dates from 4 September 2003 onwards. All were deposited together on the morning of the adjourned meeting, 23 September. There was a delay in the resumption of the adjourned meeting while Mr McGrath dealt with the 470 claims that had been presented to him. In doing so, he took advice from Mr Sloan of BDW who, in turn, consulted with Mr Sheahan. Mr Sloan prepared in handwritten from what was, in effect, a suggested script for Mr McGrath in relation the new proofs, having settled the wording with Mr Sheahan. I set it out in full:
"This morning I received approximately 500 proxy forms purporting to be from:
· Retailers
· Consumers
· Doctors and Dentists
I immediately sought legal advice from my lawyers in relation to the admission of the claims for voting purposes. My lawyers have sought advice from Senior Counsel retained by them for the purposes of giving advice on voting issues.
On the basis of that advice I have adjudicated on the claims on the following basis:
- Where a creditor has not lodge appropriate particulars of a proof of debt, that creditor has not been allowed to vote
- Pursuant to Regulation 5.6.23(2), where claims are unliquidated or at a value which has not been established, it has not been possible to make to make just estimate and the creditor has not been allowed to vote.
Creditors who have lodged sufficient particulars have been allowed to vote.
The claims filed today are generally, according to legal advice from Senior Counsel, of a different nature from the claims on which adjudication has been made of the Pharmacy Guild. In the case of the Pharmacy Guild a legal basis, process and mechanism was put in place prior to the receipt of the proofs which enabled a just estimate to take place on a proper factual and legal basis.
Where pharmacists have lodged a proof of debt in a form similar to those provided by the Pharmacy Guild, their proof has been adjudicated in the same manner as the adjudication of the Pharmacy Guild vote.
Total number 470
Total claimed $437,715 estimate
Total admitted 53
Amount admitted $52,042.98"
59 Mr McGrath says in his affidavit that, having read this, he asked Mr Sloan some questions and a conversation occurred as follows:
" Tony McGrath ' What particulars are lacking in the proofs?'
Michael Sloan ' The proofs do not actually provide details of the precise product. A lot merely say 'vitamin C' or 'stress relief' or 'Fat-Blaster'. There is no proof that they are actually Pan products. Most have the date May 2003 pre-printed on them. No supporting documents are attached. They have not set out the legal basis of the claim. In the time available it has not been possible to make a just estimate or to seek particulars. We have previously only allowed consumers to prove if they have suffered ill health from consumption.'
Tony McGrath ' Is this consistent with our previous advice?'
Michael Sloan ' Yes. I have set out the advice in accordance with the approach in cases such as Bovis. Where the same information has been provided by pharmacists as by the members of the Pharmacy Guild, they have been allowed to vote in the same way as the Guild members.' "
60 After the meeting, Mr McGrath asked that this oral advice be confirmed in writing. The confirmation was given in a letter from BDW to Mr McGrath and Mr Honey dated 29 September 2003. The letter described the documents as follows:
"2.2 The nature of the proofs of debt and proxies were broadly as follows:
(a) Consumers - the proofs of debt provided by consumers consisted of an assertion that a particular vitamin or supplement was purchased and the amount paid for, or presumably lost in relation to, the product.
In most cases there were no details of the date on which the product was purchased (a generic date of May 2003 had been pre-printed on most of the forms); in many cases the details of the purported creditor were incomplete; in some cases the details of the product purchased were incomplete and it was inconclusive as to whether the product purchased was in fact a Pan product. Most products were generic in nature such as vitamin C or multi-vitamins and were not identified by brand.
None of the consumers claimed to have suffered personal injury from consumption of any product.
(b) Retailers - the proofs of debt lodged by retailers were provided by a number of pharmacists.
In some cases these particulars had been completed; however, in many cases the particulars included on the proofs of debt were undated, insufficiently detailed, incomplete or otherwise unclear.
A large number of the completed forms were in an almost identical form to the statements of loss completed by the Pharmacy Guild of Australia ( Guild ).
(c) Doctors, dentists and other health care professionals - these proofs of debt purported to be claims for losses arising out of the purchase of Pan products and the consequential effects on the businesses of the relevant professionals.
Essentially these proofs of debt only set out the product claimed to have been purchased and the amount paid or lost. In a similar way to the consumer claims, these claims often lacked details as to date of purchase and were often inconclusive as to the product purchased. There were no details as to the means by which the products were used in any professional capacity, nor were there any details of any consequential loss of profits claimed or alleged."
61 The letter went on to confirm advice previously given, including the following:
"3.1 (d) The claims lodged immediately prior to the
meeting were of a different nature to those lodged by the Guild on behalf of the individual pharmacists they represent. In the case of the Guild a legal basis, process and mechanism were put in placed, based on our discussions and correspondence with their lawyers, Minter Ellison, prior to the receipt of formal proofs of debt which enabled their proofs to be adjudicated on and, where necessary, a just estimate of the value of any contingent claim to be made on a proper factual and legal basis.
(e) The late hour at which these more recent claims were submitted meant that it was impossible to liaise with the purported creditors in order to clarify the claims and seek further particulars which might have allowed us to have clarified the factual and legal basis on which they were seeking to vote."
62 The letter then reports the result, under a heading "Outcome of adjudication":
"Accordingly, based on the advice given, the adjudication of the 470 proxies and proofs of debt received proceeded in the following way:
(a) We obtained a representative sample of the proofs to determine what (if any) issues were relevant to the adjudication of the proofs.
(b) We determined, in consultation with senior counsel, the general principles concerning the adjudication based upon the relevant authorities, our previous advice (in particular relating to Pan's liability to consumers and to our voting advice) and the regulations.
(c) The proofs were sorted into the categories of consumers, retailers and doctors/dentists.
(d) We ensured that the staff undertaking the review were familiar with the relevant legal principles as to the adjudication of proofs of debt, including as to the application, where necessary of a just estimate to contingent claims, and applied a consistent approach to the adjudication process. Those staff had also been involved in the design of the questionnaire to consumers and had dealt with issues relevant to claims by consumers.
(e) Consumers - all claims were rejected on the basis of a lack of appropriate particulars and the inability to make a proper adjudication or a just estimate in the time available.
(f) Retailers - where retailers' claims were sufficiently completed with appropriate particulars, and were in a form broadly similar to the claims submitted by the Guild, those proofs were admitted to vote in the same way as the claims of the Guild had been previously admitted.
Other claims by retailers which were incomplete or otherwise lacking in appropriate particulars were rejected.
(g) Doctors, dentis, health care professionals - as these claims were in the same form as the consumer claims and were lacking in the appropriate particulars and detail required to allow them to be admitted for voting purposes, all of the claims were rejected.
(h) There were a small number of proofs from trade creditors which were dealt with consistently with the principles outlined above and in the same way that other claims by trade creditors had previously been dealt with."
63 The 417 proxies rejected were part of a total of 470 rejected. The 53 admitted related in the main to pharmacists analogous to the Pharmacy Guild members. There were also some proofs from health professionals. I have not checked all these 53 admitted proofs against the poll results on the resolution for approval of the deed of company arrangement. A sample check shows, however, that a number of positive votes were cast by Mr Schildkraut as proxy for persons within the group of 53.
Who are "creditors"?
64 I turn now to a brief analysis of the first of the legal issues raised in the proceedings. The Corporations Act does not define "creditors" for the purposes of Part 5.3A (or, indeed, at all). It is therefore appropriate to approach the search for the meaning of "the company's creditors" in s.439A by considering the context. Looking at s.439A itself, there is a clear expectation and contemplation that an administrator will be able, as a matter of reasonable practicability, to identify at least some creditors in such a way as to be able to give them notice in writing (see s.439A(3)(a)) but also that others may be capable of being contacted only through the insertion of a notice in a newspaper (see s.439A(3)(b)). The same message emerges from regulation 5.6.12 which proceeds on the footing that there will be "persons appearing on the company's books or otherwise" as its creditors and that those persons will be capable of being identified so as to be served in one of the ways specified. There may be a question whether, in light of s.439A(3)(b) and regulation 5.6.11(3)(c), the regulation 5.6.14A requirement with respect to a newspaper advertising applies to a s.439A meeting, but the better view is that it does: see Re Ansett Australia Ltd (2002) 115 FCR 395. In any event, the co-existence of regulation 5.6.14A with regulation 5.6.12 reinforces the notion that there will be cases in which creditors are not confined to "persons appearing on the company's books or otherwise" to be creditors - in other words, that there may be creditors of whom those in charge of the company's affairs are not aware and have no ready means of discovering internally.
65 The second contextual element to be mentioned is found in regulation 5.6.23 headed "Creditors who may vote". It is there contemplated that a creditor is a person who has a "debt or claim". Creditor status may thus derive from a "claim" as distinct from a "debt"; and the "claim" may be "unliquidated or a contingent claim". Regulation 5.6.26 proceeds on the basis that the chairperson of a meeting will, in respect of each person who seeks to vote at a meeting, "admit or reject a proof of debt or claim for the purposes of voting".
66 A person having an unliquidated claim or a contingent claim against the relevant company is within the relevant concept of "creditor" for the purposes of the provisions with which I am now dealing. Such a conclusion is consistent with the decision of the Victorian Court of Appeal in Brash Holdings Ltd v Katile Pty Ltd (1996) 1 VR 24 where it was held that, unless a particular provision otherwise indicates, the "creditors" of a company for Part 5.3A purposes are "those who would have been creditors had the company gone into liquidation", thus importing into Part 5.3A the criteria laid down by s.553 in relation to winding up:
"In short, we think that whatever the ambit of the words of s.553, the same will be so in relation to s.444D."
67 Since the enactment of the Corporate Law Review Act 1998 (Cth), all claims against the company (present or future, certain or contingent, ascertained or sounding only in damages) are provable in a winding up. This includes claims sounding in tort only which were previously excluded through the application of s.82(2) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth). For these purposes, I think that claims for damages based on statutory provisions such as ss.82 and 87 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) must be treated in the same way as claims for damages in tort. The close analogy between the two, so far as proof in a winding up is concerned, was noted in Fielding v Vagrand Pty Ltd (1992) 9 ACSR 505.
68 In summary, therefore, "creditors", for the purposes of a s.439A meeting of creditors in a voluntary administration are all persons who have, as against the company concerned, "debts" or "claims" provable in a winding up. The boundaries are therefore those set by s.553(1) which refers to "all debts payable by, and all claims against, the company (present or future, certain or contingent, ascertained or sounding only in damages) …".
69 In the end, there was no real debate before me as to the creditor status of either the pharmacists represented by the Pharmacy Guild or the various persons on whose behalf the 470 proofs were lodged on the morning of the adjourned meeting. Claims in negligence were apparently accepted as sufficiently open. I therefore do not pursue the matter, except to observe that the assumption that all the persons in question were creditors is one that I am content for present purposes to accept, particularly in light of the references to "claims" as well as debts in the legislation.
The role of the Corporations Regulations
70 It is necessary to refer next to the role played by provisions of the Corporations Regulations 2001 (Cth) in Part 5.3A administrations. Regulation 5.6.11(2) says that, subject to regulation 5.6.1l(3), regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A apply to the convening and conduct of and voting at various meetings called for by provisions of the Act, including "a meeting convened under Part 5.3A … that is … a meeting of … creditors … of a company …". A meeting called for by s.439A is, of course, a meeting of that description.
71 The effect of regulation 5.6.11(3), in the particular context, is that regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A "do not apply to" a meeting of the kind I have just mentioned "if those regulations are inconsistent with a particular requirement of the Act, these Regulations or the rules". Although the wording here is perhaps not entirely clear, it seems, as I have already said, that the effect of regulation 5.6.11(3), in the case of an inconsistency of the kind to which it refers, is to disapply regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A only to the extent necessary to resolve the inconsistency and to allow the contrary provision elsewhere to operate. It seems unlikely that it is intended that one such inconsistency will displace the whole of regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A.
The requirements as to notice of meeting
72 The provisions with respect to s.439A meetings do not - indeed, cannot - work on the principle reflected in s.249J concerning meetings of members. It is there assumed that the company knows the name and address of each member. That assumption is understandable in light of the requirements for the keeping of a register of members and the concept that membership as such is reflected by entry in the register. In the case of creditors, and particularly since persons with "claims" are within the creditor concept, there can be no corresponding assumption that all names and addresses will be known to the company. Some will be known, others will not. This explains the quite different system of notification adopted by the legislation in relation to meetings of creditors.
73 The leading requirement concerning notice of a s.439A meeting is imposed by s.439A(1)(a):
"The administrator must convene the meeting by:
(a) giving written notice of the meeting to as many of the company's creditors as reasonably practicable …"
74 One element of the practicality to which s.439A(3)(a) refers must be the administrator's ability to identify creditors and to ascertain ways of making contact with them. The company's records will no doubt contain details of creditors such as employees, suppliers and lenders. Those records may also identify some persons who have made claims of certain kinds that bring them within the creditor class to which reference has already been made.
75 This aspect of s.439A is confirmed by regulation 5.6.12 which requires that notice in writing be given to every person "appearing on the company's books or otherwise" to be a creditor. The requirement is imposed on the "convenor" being, by virtue of s.439A(3), the administrator. It is the administrator who must resort to the company's books and, with the aid of information found there and any other available information, come to a view as to who the company's creditors are for the purposes of direct notification. Regulation 5.6.12(2) reflects an important assumption about this identification process, namely, that it will bring to light not only a creditor's identity but also a place at which personal service can be effected, an address to which notice may be posted, a fax number to which notice may be transmitted or a document exchange number through which notice may be sent. This assumption carries with it a message that the only creditors who are to become the subject of notification in accordance with regulation 5.6.12 are those for whom some such point of contact is available.
76 The qualification is s.439A(3) arising from the words "as many of the company's creditors as reasonably practicable" does not, in my view, extend the requirement for one-to-one notification beyond those creditors for whom a means of direct contact is readily ascertainable. Its effect, rather, is to cater for situations where considerations of practicality may affect the ability to comply fully with that requirement. This view is consistent with the decision in Ansett Australia Ltd (above).
77 The second and equally important part of the s.439A(3) notification process is advertising in the press. This is dealt with by s.439A(3)(b). The notice of meeting must be published in a "national newspaper" (as defined by s.9) or in a daily newspaper of general circulation in each State or Territory in which the company has its registered office or carries on business. There is a similar, although somewhat wider, requirement in regulation 5.6.14B but that requirement must be regarded as inconsistent with the "particular requirement" of s.439A(3)(b), as referred to in regulation 5.6.11(3), so that the s.439A(3)(b) requirement alone applies.
Proof of debts in voluntary administration
78 It is next necessary to consider the part that a system of proof of debts plays in the system of voluntary administration created by Part 5.3A. Leaving to one side the possibility that a deed of company arrangement may, for purposes of recognising and quantifying debts, incorporate a proof regime that attains binding force through s.444D (and see MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon Pty Ltd (1999) 195 CLR 636), Part 5.3A does not contemplate that creditors will prove their debts or claims or that creditor recognition and rights are dependent on any system of proof of debts. In this, Part 5.3A is to be contrasted with the winding up provisions where the Act proceeds on the basis that, in the final analysis, recognition as a creditor (as distinct from a mere claimant to creditor status) will be determined by adjudication of a proof of debt submitted by the claimant.
79 Regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A are applied not only to meetings of creditors under Part 5.3A but also to a variety of other meetings required by the Act, including meetings of creditors in a winding up. As a result, the provisions of those regulations have a tendency to assume certain fundamentals with respect to winding up that have no parallel in Part 5.3A administration, not the least of them being a system of proof of debts which, as I have said, plays no part under Part 5.3A except to the limited extent contemplated by regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A for the purposes of meetings of creditors under Part 5.3A. This, coupled with the approach to the meaning of "creditors", for Part 5.3A purposes, emerging from Brash Holdings Ltd v Katile Pty Ltd (above), seems to me to indicate that certain aspects of well established processes in a winding up may be taken to be adopted, by implication and so far as necessary, by the provisions in regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A. At the same time, however, the summary nature of the Part 5.3A process and the fact that proof is for voting purposes only means that there are also differences.
80 The way in which the chairperson of a meeting to which regulations 5.6.12 to 5.6.36A apply is to deal with proofs for the purposes of voting is stated in regulation 5.6.26:
"(1) The chairperson of a meeting has power to admit or reject a proof of debt or claim for the purposes of voting.
(2) If the chairperson is in doubt whether a proof of debt or claim should be admitted or rejected, he or she must mark that proof as objected to and allow the creditor to vote, subject to the vote being declared invalid if the objection is sustained.
(3) A decision by the chairperson to admit or reject a proof of debt or claim for the purposes of voting may be appealed against to the Court within 14 days after the decision."
81 It is clear, despite these unqualified references to proofs being admitted or rejected, that a concept of partial admission of a debt exists. This is referred to in regulation 5.6.23:
"(1) A person is not entitled to vote as a creditor at a meeting of creditors unless:
(a) his or her debt or claim has been admitted wholly or in part by the liquidator or administrator of a company under administration or of a deed of company arrangement; or
(b) he or she has lodged, with the chairperson of the meeting or with the person named in the notice convening the meeting as the person who may receive particulars of the debt or claim:
(i) those particulars; or
(ii) if required---a formal proof of the debt or claim.
(2) A creditor must not vote in respect of:
(a) an unliquidated debt; or
(b) a contingent debt; or
(c) an unliquidated or a contingent claim; or
(d) a debt the value of which is not established;
unless a just estimate of its value has been made.
(3) A creditor must not vote in respect of:
(a) a debt or a claim on or secured by:
(i) a bill of exchange; or
(ii) a promissory note; or
(iii) any other negotiable instrument or security;
held by the creditor unless he or she is willing:
(b) to treat the liability to him or her on the instrument or security of a prescribed person as a security in his or her hands; or
(c) to estimate its value; and
(d) for the purposes of voting (but not for the purposes of dividend), to deduct it from his or her debt or claim.
(4) For paragraph 5.6.23 (3) (b), a prescribed person is a person whose liability is mentioned in paragraph 5.6.23 (3) (a) who:
(a) is liable to the company directly; or
(b) may be liable to the company on the default of another person with respect to the liability;
at the time of voting, but who is not:
(c) an insolvent under administration; or
(d) a person against whom a winding up order is in force."
Decided cases on regulations 5.6.23 and 5.6.26
82 The way in which regulations 5.6.23 and 5.6.26 operate in the context of a Part 5.3A meeting of creditors has been considered in a number of cases. The effect of those provisions and the treatment of them in earlier case law (particularly Vincent White & Associates Pty Ltd v Vouris (1998) 28 ACSR 93 and Re Oriel Homes Pty Ltd (1997) 15 ACLC 564) were recently reviewed by Austin J in Bovis Lend Lease Pty Ltd v Wily (2003) 45 ACSR 612. It is instructive to quote at some length from his Honour's judgment:
"Regulation 5.6.23(1) provides that a person is not entitled to vote as a creditor at a meeting of creditors of a company in voluntary administration unless his or her debt has been admitted wholly or in part by the administrator, or he or she has lodged with the chairperson particulars of the debt or a formal proof of debt. By reg 5.6.23(2), a creditor must not vote in respect of a contingent or unliquidated debt, or a debt the value of which is not established, unless a just estimate of its value has been made.
Regulation 5.6.26(1) states that the chairperson of a meeting has power to admit or reject a proof of debt or claim for the purposes of voting. Regulation 5.6.26(2) states that if the chairperson is in doubt whether a proof of debt or claim should be admitted or rejected, he or she must mark that proof as objected to and allow the creditor to vote, subject to the vote being declared invalid if the objection is sustained.
The meaning of these provisions was considered by Hodgson CJ in Eq (as his Honour then was) in Vincent, White & Associates Pty Ltd v Vouris (1998) 28 ACSR 93. There a plaintiff lodged a proof of debt for over $1.4 million, and the administrator decided that he would allow the plaintiff to vote in respect of only about $420,000, on the basis that this was a just estimate of the value of the debt for the purpose of voting. A motion for the company to execute a deed of company arrangement was defeated, but it would have been carried on a poll if the proof had been admitted for the full amount of the claim. The plaintiff's appeal against the administrator's decision was unsuccessful.
The plaintiff argued that, because the administrator was in doubt as to the amount of the debt, reg 5.6.26(2) meant that he should have marked the claim as objected to, allowing the plaintiff to vote for the full amount claimed. The plaintiff relied on the following observations by Thomas J in Re Oriel Homes Pty Ltd (1997) 15 ACLC 564, 565:
'I interpret the effect of [the relevant regulations] as follows. Under reg 5.6.26(1) the power to admit includes the power to admit in part. If the position is clear, the chairperson should make a just estimate of the value of the debt. If, however, he or she is in genuine doubt, the claim must be allowed at the amount that the creditor has claimed and should thereupon be marked as "objected to". The creditor should then be allowed to vote at that value. Any error, and any effect that the error may have on the result, may be corrected in due course by an appeal to the Court under reg 5.6.26(3).'
I respectfully agree with Hodgson J that this passage is not authority for the proposition that, whenever there is genuine doubt as to the correct amount of the debt, the chairman must allow the creditor to vote in the amount claimed. I would add that in Re Oriel Homes itself, the Court held that the proof should be admitted at a nominal value rather than for the amount claimed.
In light of these cases, and the wording of the regulations, the position may be summarised as follows:
(a) a creditor is not entitled to vote at a meeting convened under s 439A unless either the debt or claim has been admitted wholly or in part by the administrator, or the creditor has lodged with the chairman of the meeting or other appropriate person "particulars of the debt or claim" or (if required) a formal proof of the debt or claim (reg 5.6.23(1));
(b) the chairman of the meeting has a discretion to admit the debt or claim wholly or in part, or to reject it for the purposes of voting (reg 5.6.26(1)) and that decision may be the subject of an appeal to the Court under reg 5.6.26(3);
(c) if the chairman is in doubt whether a proof of debt or claim should be admitted or rejected, the proper procedure is to mark the proof as objected to and allow the creditor to vote (reg 5.6.26(2));
(d) if the debt or claim is for an unliquidated amount, or it is contingent, or it is a debt the value of which is not established, a just estimate of the value of the debt or claim must be made by the chairman of the meeting, acting reasonably, before the creditor is permitted to vote (reg 5.6.23(2); Oriel Homes at 565; Vincent, White at 101);
(e) if a just estimate cannot be made at all, in circumstances where reg 5.6.23(2) applies, then the creditor should not be permitted to vote at all, and reg 5.6.26(2) has no application ( Vincent, White at 101);
(f) if the claim cannot be quantified by a just estimate, but it appears that the creditor is a creditor for at least some amount (for example, where a debt is subject to an uncertain contingency), it is appropriate to admit the creditor for voting purposes at a nominal value of $1 ( Oriel Homes at 566; Re Zambena Pty Ltd (1995) 13 ACLC 1020);
(g) if a just estimate has been made as required by reg 5.6.23(2), but the administrator remains in doubt as to whether the creditor should be allowed to vote on the basis of the just estimate, then the administrator must mark the proof as objected to and allow the creditor to vote under reg 5.6.26(2) ( Vincent, White at 101)."
83 The approach taken by Hodgson CJ in Eq in Vincent White & Associates Pty Ltd v Vouris (above) was approved by Giles JA in Kirwan v Cresvale Far East Pty Ltd (2002) 44 ACSR 21 and, more recently, by Hansen J in Spiteri v Lindholm [2003] VSC 42. The judgment of Giles JA in Kirwan contains the following passage:
"Regulation 5.6.23(2) of the Corporations Regulations provides that a creditor must not vote in respect of an unliquidated debt or a contingent debt, an unliquidated claim or a contingent claim, or a debt the value of which is not established, unless 'a just estimate of its value has been made'. Regulation 5.6.26 of the Corporations Regulations gives the chairperson of a meeting of creditors the power to admit or reject a proof of debt for the purposes of voting. By regulation 5.6.26(2) -
'If the Chairperson is in doubt whether a proof of debt or claim should be admitted or rejected, he or she must mark that proof as objected to and allow the creditor to vote, subject to the vote being declared invalid if the objection is sustained.'
In Vincent White & Associates Pty Ltd v Vouris (1998) 28 ACSR 93 Hodgson CJ in Eq noted the difference between not voting because a just estimate of the value of an unquantified debt or claim has not been made, on the one hand, and not voting because of doubt whether a proof of debt or claim should be admitted or rejected, on the other hand. The two regulations address different matters, and admission or rejection of a proof of debt or claim comes before any question of making a just estimate of the value of an unquantified debt or claim once the proof of debt or claim has been admitted."
84 Later, dealing with the particular facts of the case before him, Giles JA said:
"Did Mr Gould act improperly in ruling that a just estimate of the value of Newland's claim could not be made? On the information he had, it was an all or nothing claim. If representations justifying termination of the underwriting agreement had been made, there was no liability. If the underwriting agreement remained, there was a liability of $1,576,277. On one view, it was not a question of valuing the claim at all, because it was not a true contingent debt or claim or one the value of which (if there was a debt or claim at all) was not established: Mr Gould's doubtful use of 'contingent' in the report to creditors has earlier been noted. (According to the minutes of the meeting, however, Mr Dubler shared this use of the word.) On another view, it would have been appropriate to give the claim a justly estimated nominal value, see re Zambena Pty Ltd (1995) 13 ACLC 1020 and National Australian Bank Ltd v Market Holdings Pty Ltd (2001) 161 FLR 1. On another view, a just estimate of the value could not be made because it was all or nothing and there was no realistic in-between figure. The inter-action between regulation 5.6.23 and 5.6.26(2) is not clear, and has exercised judicial minds."
85 The interaction between regulations 5.6.23 and 5.6.26 was also mentioned by Young CJ in Eq in Kirwan:
"There is some tension between the two regulations. However, even if the administrator was correct in applying in 5.6.23, it is not permissible to refuse to allow a creditor to vote at all by not making a just estimate of the value of the claim. If 5.6.23 is to be applied, then there is an obligation on the chairman to make 'for the purpose of voting' a just estimate. If the chairman finds it almost impossible to ascribe a value to the claim, then it should be valued at a dollar which at least would allow the claimant to be recorded amongst the number of creditors voting on the resolution."
86 In Young v Sherman (2001) 166 FLR 96, Austin J considered the phrase "If the chairperson is in doubt whether a proof of debt or claim should be admitted or rejected". His Honour said that a chairperson presented with a proof unaccompanied by supporting information sufficient to enable him to determine how the amounts claimed had been calculated and whether those amounts reflected the arrangements in place between the companies was not, by that circumstance alone, placed in "doubt" as to whether the debt or claim should be admitted or rejected. In the particular case, there was nothing in the evidence to indicate that the chairperson was in fact (or should as a reasonable person have been) in doubt on the question whether to admit or reject.
87 Austin J also dealt with the situation where there is a dispute about a debt. He identified three possible approaches in such a case, noting that the existence of a dispute does not of itself make the asserted debt "contingent". The three possibilities were described as follows:
"First, the existence of a genuine, unresolved dispute about a debt of which the creditor has given particulars will frequently provide reasonable grounds for doubt as to whether the creditor's claim should be admitted or rejected. Where that is so, the proper approach for the chairman will normally be to mark the proof as objected to and allow the creditor to vote, under reg 5.6.26 (2). Secondly, where the chairman receives a claim that has not been adequately particularised, and believes that the claim (whatever precisely it may be) is disputed, the correct approach may be to reject the claim for voting purposes on the ground of lack of particulars. Finally, it may happen, though probably much less frequently, that the chairman recognises the existence of a genuine dispute but decides on reasonable grounds that he or she is in a position to form a view as to the merits of the dispute, in which case the proper approach may be to admit the proof for the amount (if any) which the chairman believes is the correct amount."
Analysis of regulations 5.6.23 and 5.6.26
88 As Giles JA observed in Kirwan, the interaction between regulations 5.6.23 and 5.6.26(2) is not clear "and has exercised judicial minds". It is therefore appropriate that another judicial mind should undertake a brief analysis of what the provisions say and how they operate.
89 In the case of a meeting of creditors of a company under administration, a person is not entitled to vote as a creditor at the meeting unless one of two things has happened (regulation 5.6.23(1)) - either the person's debt or claim (being, clearly enough, the debt or claim by reference to which the person claims the status of creditor) has been admitted wholly or in part by the administrator of the company (regulation 5.6.23(1)(a)); or the person has lodged particulars of the person's debt or claim (or, if required, a formal proof of the debt or claim) with either the chairperson of the meeting or a person named in the notice of meeting as the person who may receive such particulars (regulation 5.6.12(1)(b)). The entitlement under regulation 5.6.23(1) to vote at a particular meeting thus turns upon a prior act of the administrator (admission of the debt or claim wholly or in part) or receipt of either particulars or, "if required", a formal proof by either the chairperson of the meeting or a person specifically named in the notice of meeting. It has been held by the Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia that the decision whether a formal proof of debt should be "required" is a decision to be made by the convenor of the meeting: Health and Life Care Ltd v South Australian Asset Management Corporation (1995) 18 ACSR 153.
90 Regulation 5.6.26 both confers and regulates a power exercisable by the chairperson of a meeting. In the case of a meeting of creditors of a company under administration, the chairperson will be the administrator (or, if there are several administrators, one of them: s.451A(2)) or a person nominated by the administrator: regulation 5.6.17. It follows that, in a particular case, the three roles envisaged by regulation 5.6.23, being the role of the administrator in admitting debts and claims wholly or in part, the role of the chairperson in receiving lodgment of particulars or formal proofs and the role of a person named in the notice of meeting in receiving such lodgment, may be played by one person (the administrator) or by two persons (the administrator and either a person nominated by the administrator who acts as chairperson or a person named in the notice of meeting for lodgment purposes) or three persons (the administrator, a person nominated by the administrator who acts as chairperson and a person named in the notice of meeting for lodgment purposes).
91 The power conferred and regulated by 5.6.26 is a power exercisable solely by the chairperson of the relevant meeting. The administrator, as administrator, may not exercise the power but, of course, the administrator, if chairperson, may. Likewise, a person named in the notice of meeting for lodgment purposes may not exercise the power unless, coincidentally, that person is also the chairperson. It is a person's status of chairperson, dissociated from any other role, that causes the power to be exercisable by the person.
92 The power conferred by regulation 5.6.26(1) is a power exercisable "for the purposes of voting" being, clearly enough, voting at the meeting at which the chairperson invested with the power presides. The power is confined to "a proof of debt or claim". In a case of the present kind, the regulations do not explain the concept of "proof". The definition of "proof of debt or claim" in regulation 5.6.11(1) (which is, in any event an inclusive or explanatory definition only), refers to a winding up provision of no direct relevance to a case of the present kind. But the reference in regulation 5.6.23(b)(ii) to the possibility that "a formal proof of the debt or claim" may be "required" indicates that a system of informal proof is also contemplated. It must accordingly be accepted that the process of lodgment of "particulars of the debt or claim" referred to in regulation 5.6.23 is within the "proof" concept employed in regulation 5.6.26. In other words, that "proof" concept embraces not only "formal" proof but also informal proof by way of lodgment of "particulars". The notion that "proof", in relation to debts of an insolvent company, may be either formal or informal is of long standing in company law. In England, the distinction between the formal process of proof and the informal process of lodgment of particulars was recognised in the rules of court issued on 11 November 1862 under the Companies Act 1862 (compare the present s.553D).
93 The regulation 5.6.26 power, being a power exercisable by "the chairperson of a meeting" cannot be exercised except in the context of the meeting. This is because, unless and until a meeting takes place, no person can be its chairperson; and this is so despite the specification in regulation 5.6.17 as to who "must chair the meeting". Until the meeting occurs, it is not possible to say which of the several persons within that specification will be its chairperson.
94 Under regulation 5.6.26, the chairperson may either admit or reject "particulars of the debt or claim" or "a formal proof of the debt or claim" lodged either with the chairperson in the context of the meeting itself or with the person named in the notice of meeting. It is at this point that an apparent disconnect between regulation 5.6.23 and regulation 5.6.26 emerges. Regulation 5.6.23 does not expressly contemplate admission or rejection of particulars or a proof lodged in the way regulation 5.6.26(1) describes. Rather, it contemplates that lodgment alone will secure the entitlement to vote, regardless of the quality or credibility of the information lodged. It is difficult to reconcile the two, but the reconciliation that seems to me most sensible is that lodgment as referred to in regulation 5.6.23(1)(b) is the essential first step and that that secures the voting entitlement, subject to that entitlement being negated by rejection under regulation 5.6.23(1)(b). Another way of looking at this is to say that the concept of lodgment involves something beyond mere delivery. Because regulation 5.6.26 empowers the chairperson to admit or reject a claimant's particulars or proof, it must, I think, follow that the question whether the particulars or proof has been lodged for the purposes of regulation 5.6.23(1)(b) is to be determined by whether the chairperson has admitted the particulars or proof under regulation 5.6.26. If it has been admitted (with or without a regulation 5.6.26(2) marking), the clear implication is that lodgment has occurred and the voting entitlement under regulation 5.6.23(1) has been secured, subject to the possibility that a prohibition affecting the exercise of that voting entitlement may arise under regulation 5.6.23(2), a matter to which I shall return. If the particulars or proof is rejected by the chairperson, the result must be that the person is excluded from voting, at least insofar as he or she relies on the particular debt or claim as a basis for voting entitlement.
95 It follows from all that I have said to this point that every person within either of the two classes mentioned in regulation 5.6.23(1) is entitled to vote simply by virtue of having satisfied the requirement for inclusion in the relevant class, provided that, in the case of a person within the regulation 5.6.23(1)(b) class, there has been no rejection by the chairperson under regulation 5.6.26(1).
96 The power conferred on the chairperson by regulation 5.6.26(1) is merely a power to admit or reject. As I have already said, the concept of admission "wholly or in part" expressly recognised in regulation 5.6.23(1)(a) has no part to play under regulation 5.6.26(1): it is all or nothing. If the chairperson entertains the kind of doubt referred to in regulation 5.6.26(2), the proof must be admitted, but on the marked basis. At the level of the chairperson's decision making, therefore, the result must always be admission or rejection, although admission may be accompanied by an expression of doubt resulting in adoption of the regulation 5.6.26(2) marking procedure. No process of evaluation by the chairperson is envisaged beyond a decision whether or not the debt or claim exists, that being the only factor relevant to the alternatives of admission and rejection to which regulation 5.6.26 is confined. If the chairperson's decision is that the debt or claim does not exist, rejection follows and the voting entitlement that would otherwise have arisen under regulation 5.6.23(1)(b) by virtue of lodgment is denied. In every other case, admission follows, with cases of doubt being dealt with in accordance with regulation 5.6.26(2).
97 I have dwelt at some length on the chairperson's power under regulation 5.6.26(1) to admit or reject a proof of debt, whether formal or informal. But it must not be overlooked that, as regulation 5.6.23(1)(a) recognises, an entitlement to vote may arise from the action of the administrator, as administrator, admitting "wholly or in part". The power of the administrator to admit "wholly or in part" is a power relating to a "debt or claim" as distinct from a "proof", whether formal or informal. It follows that if the administrator, as administrator, takes action that is properly regarded as causing a person's debt or claim to be "admitted wholly or in part", that person attains the regulation 5.6.23(1) entitlement to vote without the need for any action of the chairperson under regulation 5.6.26(1).
98 I turn now to regulation 5.6.23(2). That provision imposes a prohibition upon a creditor: "A creditor must not vote". The provision does not specify the effect of a vote cast in disobedience to the prohibition. In this, it is to be contrasted with, for example, regulation 64 of Table A in the Fourth Schedule to the Companies Act 1961:
"A director shall not vote in respect of any contract or proposed contract with the company in which he is interested, or any matter arising thereout, and if he does so vote his vote shall not be counted" [emphasis added].