Consideration
148 It is common ground that at the time that Mr Mandalinic filed the Revocation Affidavit in the Supreme Court Proceedings; the Company was under external administration, Mr Mandalinic remained an officer of the Company and Mr Mandalinic did not have the written approval of the Liquidator or the Court.
149 If, contrary to my conclusion above, Mr Mandalinic contravened s 198G of the Corporations Act by filing the Revocation Affidavit, it is necessary to consider whether Mr Mandalinic should be given approval by the Court, nunc pro tunc, for the filing of the affidavit.
150 It is first necessary to consider whether in the present circumstances the Court can grant leave to Mr Mandalinic on a nunc pro tunc basis for the filing of the Revocation Affidavit.
151 In Land Enviro Corp, Foster J stated at [15]:
For reasons which I shall explain below, I have come to the view that s 471A(1A)(d) requires that, if the approval of the court to the performance or exercise of a function or power as an officer of a company in liquidation is to be sought by such an officer, that approval must be sought and obtained before the performance or exercise of the relevant function or power is undertaken. In the present case, the relevant step taken by Mr Zdrilic was the filing of the two Notices of Appeal. Although he endeavoured to file an Application whereby he sought the requisite approval pursuant to s 471A(1A)(d) on 21 January 2015, at the same time as he in fact filed the two Notices of Appeal, he had not obtained that approval prior to filing those Notices of Appeal. The consequence of that failure is that the appeals purportedly commenced by the filing of each of those Notices of Appeal are incompetent and must be dismissed. In due course, I propose to make orders summarily dismissing both appeals.
152 Section 471A(1A)(d) of the Corporations Act was the predecessor provision to s 198G(1) and was relevantly in the same terms.
153 After considering authorities in which leave had been given to directors to oppose the making of winding up orders, Foster J explained at [39] to [41] the basis for his conclusion that approval could not be granted retrospectively to a director that does an act that a director is prohibited from doing:
39 Section 471A(2B) of the Act provides that an offence based on subs (1) or subs (2) of s 471A is an offence of strict liability.
40 Section 1311(1) is a general provision providing that (inter alia) a person who does an act or thing that that person is forbidden to do by or under a provision of the Act is guilty of an offence by virtue of s 1311(1). Section 1311(1A) provides that s 1311(1) applies only to offences which are listed in Sch 3 to the Act. Section 471A is specified as an offence in Sch 3 to the Act at Item 129 of that Schedule. These circumstances suggest that the approval contemplated by s 471A(1A)(d) must be in place before the forbidden act is done because it is unlikely that the legislature contemplated that approval could be given to criminal conduct even after that conduct had been engaged in.
41 In my view, none of the authorities to which I have made reference suggest that approval pursuant to s 471A(1A)(d) to the performance or exercise of the particular function or power in question can be given retrospectively. In HVAC, in particular, the application made by the director/plaintiff was for an order granting the necessary approval under s 471A(1A)(d) as well as for other relief in the name of the corporation in liquidation. These claims for relief were all made in the one court process. Although it may be desirable that the s 471A(1A)(d) application be made separately from and in advance of any application for substantive relief, I do not consider that this must always be so. The need for the court to act in HVAC was urgent and French J quite properly, in my judgment, entertained all of the director/plaintiff's claims for relief at the one time although he dealt with the s 471A(1A)(d) first as, logically, he ought to have done. If the director/plaintiff in HVAC, had failed to secure an order approving his conduct in bringing forward the remainder of his application in the name of the corporation in liquidation, the whole of that application would have been dismissed.
154 Given that a contravention of s 198G(1) is an offence by reason of s 198G(2), the reasoning of Foster J in Land Enviro Corp would be equally applicable in the present case and leads to the conclusion that the Court cannot grant leave, nunc pro tunc, to Mr Mandalinic for the filing of the Revocation Affidavit if Mr Mandalinic otherwise contravened s 198G of the Corporations Act by filing the affidavit.
155 Moreover, even if this conclusion is incorrect and the Court has a residual discretion to grant leave nunc pro tunc for the commission of an act that constitutes an offence, I am not satisfied that leave should be given to Mr Mandalinic for the filing of the Revocation Affidavit.
156 It has been said that the Court has an "unfettered" power to grant leave under s 198G(3) of the Corporations Act: Heyns v Gedling Pty Ltd as trustee for the Forrest Highway Unit Trust [2019] WASC 312 at [21] (Master Sanderson). Nevertheless, the occasions when the Court has granted leave pursuant to s 198G of the Corporations Act (or its predecessor s 471A(1A)(d)) have been limited to directors of companies in liquidation seeking leave to appear on behalf of a company for the purpose of contesting the making of a winding up order, particularly in circumstances where there would otherwise be no proper contradictor: see, by way of example, Binetter v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation [2011] FCA 184 at [7] (Perram J); Day & Night at [22] (Gleeson JA); Metledge at [98] (White J).
157 The grant of leave to Mr Mandalinic would have the effect of expanding the circumstances where the Court considers the grant of leave to encompass circumstances where a director of a company in liquidation seeks to exercise their powers as director of the company to affect the liabilities of the company, without the consent of the liquidator. In this regard, I accept the plaintiffs' submission that to do so would be contrary to the principles of insolvency law.
158 Further, contrary to the submissions of Mr Mandalinic, I do not accept that the alleged refusal of the Liquidator to take steps "plainly in the interests" of the Company provides a "particularly strong reason" for the Court to give Mr Mandalinic approval, nunc pro tunc, to file the Revocation Affidavit. The statutory regime provides a limited but important opportunity for a company to challenge an estimate. Mr Mandalinic did not avail himself of this opportunity despite his admission that he was aware of the PAYGW Estimate prior to the winding up order on 13 November 2019.
159 It is regrettable that Mr Mandalinic, as a director of the Company, failed to take any steps prior to the appointment of the Liquidator, pursuant to s 268-40, to challenge the PAYGW Estimate. However, pursuant to the statutory regime explained above, it is now the liquidator who is the relevant person for the purposes of Division 8 of Schedule 1 to the TAA.
160 An additional reason weighing in favour of a conclusion that leave should not be granted nunc pro tunc for the filing of the Revocation Affidavit is the prejudice that the grant of such leave would have on the winding up of the Company. As the plaintiffs submit, the liquidator has been conducting the winding up of the Company since November 2019, these proceedings have been underway since 4 September 2020 and considerable costs have been incurred in relation to them. It is in that context significant that Mr Mandalinic did not file the Revocation Affidavit until 29 October 2021.