CONCLUSIONS ON THE APPLICATION
With respect to the exercise of the discretion under s 60(1)(b), Gibbs CJ said in Storey (at 558):
"Of course, under s 60(1)(b) the Court has a discretion to exercise, but it seems to me clear that in the circumstances of the present case, where the applicant is bankrupt, and unable to comply with the orders made by the industrial magistrate, the Court should exercise the power under s 60(1)(b) and discharge him out of the custody in which he has been placed as a result of the orders made on his conviction …"
As Burchett J noted in Re Keogh (at 596), this statement suggests that the emphasis in the exercise of the discretion is on the bankruptcy and the inability to pay. Justice Pincus went further still, and said in Re Lenske (at 535) that there was substance in the notion that the views expressed in Storey v Lane "practically compel an exercise of the discretion in [the applicant's] favour". There was some suggestion in the written submissions filed on behalf of the applicant that these comments effectively removed the court's discretion. I do not accept this. Each application must be considered on its merits.
Although s 60(1)(b) does not require the existence of some further positive basis for the making of an order in addition to the bankruptcy, there nevertheless will of course be factors "tending to negate the justice of an order [which] (if present) would have to be taken into account" (as Burchett J noted in Re Keogh (at 596)). As the Full Court observed in Re Lattouf (at 153):
"It is important to emphasise that s 60(1)(b) confers a discretion on the Court. It ought not be thought that this power must be exercised in favour of a bankrupt in every case. To take that view would be to risk turning the paragraph into a 'rogue's charter' whereby unmeritorious bankrupts could avoid the usual incidents of the criminal law. The exercise of the discretion must be carefully considered in each case."
Burchett J in Re Keogh (at 599) referred to a "special feature", the presence of which suggests that the discretion should not be exercised in favour of the applicant. One such special feature suggested by Pincus J in Re Lenske is where a case is "inherently of great heinousness", as where "compensation or restitution is ordered by reason of some truly vicious crime". The present case is not of such an exceptional kind.
Another special feature is where there has been some form of serious deception of the court. Burchett J said in Re Keogh (at 599):
"I think the reference to a "rogue's charter" in Re Lattouf is a reference to a case raising some special feature, such as the "heinousness" to which Pincus J referred, or a case where a debtor might be shown to have inveigled a criminal court into granting a bond upon representations made without any intention of honouring them and, perhaps, in circumstances of gross deception of the court."
Sackville J adverted to deliberate deception as a factor to be considered in Re Noel Michael Lattouf; Ex parte New South Wales Director of Public Prosecutions v Lattouf, 20 September 1995, unreported at 26, observing:
"If the bankrupt had deliberately misled Judge Gibson, or had given an undertaking intending to circumvent it immediately by reliance on the bankruptcy laws, I would have regarded those factors as most material to the exercise of my discretion."
Any suggestion that the applicant may have misled the District Court arises from evidence he gave that Court in relation to his financial position. It might then be inferred that the applicant had no bona fide intention of making any payments as required by his recognisance, or even that he intended to use the bankruptcy laws to escape imprisonment.
Mr Tatt gave the following evidence in chief, before Twigg J on 11 April 1996:
"HIS HONOUR: Q. You said that you could earn, earlier on, $5000 a week?
A. That's right.
Q. How much are you earning per week from it now?
A. Only about around the $3000 mark. I've done a lot of my work through what I've done.
BURGESS: Q. That $3000, is that a gross figure?
A. That'd be gross, yeah that's right.
HIS HONOUR: Q. Well what's the nett you earn from the use of this truck per week?
A. Probably about - oh, it sort of fluctuates, it depends on the loads and how busy it get, sometimes -
Q. Of course it does, but over an average, what nett per week do you earn from this truck?
R. Probably about 3000.
BURGESS: Q. This is after tax?
A. Probably about -
HIS HONOUR: Q. It was a difficult question. An unwise question to ask Mr Burgess.
BURGESS: Well I know -
WITNESS: Probably about two and a half you could say, safely anyway.
BURGESS: Q. You say $3000 nett anyway?
A. That's right."
He said that he has had discussions with his legal representatives about his capacity to pay this amount off, and affirmed that he was capable of paying $3,000 a month if required.
In cross-examination, the applicant stated that he owned no assets that were not subject to finance. He was unclear on the exact extent of his debts, but they exceeded $60,000. Similarly, he was unsure of exactly what monies were owed to him, but estimated $5,000 to $10,000. When questioned on his failure to pay Truck Art anything further, given that $10,000 was realised on the sale of a trailer, he stated that he "had to spend [his money] on the truck to keep it going". When asked about his earnings from his truck, he admitted that they fluctuated. In re-examination, he acknowledged that earnings could be as low as $1,500 per week; but, as to the regularity of work, he said "generally you pick up something".
The prospect of him instituting bankruptcy proceedings was raised in cross-examination:
"LERVE: Q. Do you propose to institute bankruptcy proceedings in respect of yourself?
A. I'm sorry, I don't understand.
HIS HONOUR: Q. Are you going to seek your own bankruptcy, on your own petition he's asking you?
A. No, I don't have any plans to do it, no."
The applicant also gave evidence on the hearing of this application as follows:
"Can you tell the court what you meanwhen you said, 'That would be after fuel and expenses?'--- Well, that would be - if I had a good week, that would be what I'd earn in a top week would be $3000, but when this all went - when I got the truck back and things got around that I was a thief, well, my work dropped right off just after that. I think it was about the same time.
…
So, at the time you told the court on 11 April 1996 that you were earning between $1500 and $3000 per week net, in fact, what you were earning was less than $200 per week net. Is that right?--- Myself, yes. I thought they were talking about the truck - what the truck was earning each week. This is what I've actually earned for myself.
Very well. You do understand the difference between net and gross?---Yes, I do, yes.
When you were answering the court on 11 April 1996, you were answering questions about your net income, did you understand then what net income meant?--- Yes. I think they were asking what the truck was capable of earning each week at that stage. That's why I said---
They were not the questions asked?--- I might have misunderstood. I might have thought they were - I'm nearly sure they were asking what the truck earned each week… with the cost of running it.
Why do you think you were being asked questions about your earning capacity at that stage?--- I suppose ability to paid the debt off---
Whose ability to pay that debt off would the court have been concerned with?--- Mine, I guess, yes.
So why would you think it was the truck's earning capacity rather than your own that the court would be concerned with?--- I never used to take much money for myself at all. It was always put back into the business."
In Re Lattouf, Sackville J dealt with a similar issue. Mr Lattouf was required, as a condition of his recognisance, to pay compensation to an insurance company under s 558 of the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW). He failed to meet that condition, but as he was bankrupt he made an application under s 60(1) and a stay was granted, unopposed. The application had not been served on the DPP. The DPP then sought to challenge the orders made, so that the question before Sackville J was whether the discretion had been properly exercised.
One of the issues raised during the proceedings was whether Mr Lattouf had misled the District Court. Sackville J made the following findings (at 22-23). Mr Lattouf was well aware of the dire nature of his financial position, that his liabilities exceeded his assets, and that it was unlikely he could pay the requisite monthly instalments from his own resources. Nevertheless, he hoped and believed that he could obtain funds to make those payments, and intended to take steps to ensure he could do so in order to avoid gaol. He did not intend at that time to use the bankruptcy laws to avoid or evade his obligation to make the compensation payments. Mr Lattouf was aware at the time that there was a risk that he might not be able to make the payments, but considered that he had no alternative. The motivation, in part, for Mr Lattouf's filing of a debtor's petition was his desire to avoid making the compensation payments, but he was also motivated by a wish to be relieved of his liabilities. He became aware that, as a bankrupt, he did not have to keep making the payments shortly before he filed for bankruptcy.
Sackville J (at 26) said:
"… on the findings I have made, an exercise of discretion in the respondent's favour would not make s 60(1)(b), in its application to the present case, a "rogue's charter". The respondent signed an acknowledgment of debt intending (for entirely non-altruistic motives) to adhere to its terms. He subsequently changed course on learning of the likely operation of the bankruptcy laws on the debt due to Suncorp. Since the respondent had been unable to pay his debts for a considerable period, the lodging of the debtor's petition was by no means an inappropriate course for him to follow.
Mr Aitken criticised the respondent for not revealing to Judge Gibson the full extent of his desperate financial situation, and suggested that he had made a "reckless" statement "as to his capacity to pay". But, as I have explained, the respondent was confronted with a stark choice. It was hardly surprising that he was prepared to enter the acknowledgment in favour of Suncorp. In any event the respondent's financial situation was not explored in depth in the evidence before Judge Gibson. The respondent was not asked to give an unequivocal assurance that he had sufficient resources to ensure that Suncorp was paid in full. I do not think this argument provides a basis for finding that the discertion should not be exercised in the respondent's favour."
Returning to the present application, it does not appear that Mr Tatt misled the District Court. The facts that the applicant gave evidence that the debt could be repaid, and then subsequently failed to meet the compensation conditions of his recognisance are themselves not sufficient grounds to refuse to exercise the statutory discretion to grant a stay. There has not been demonstrated any deliberate or conscious deception, or any attempt to inveigle the sentencing court. The applicant was unduly optimistic in his assessment of his financial situation, but there was no conscious intention to employ the bankruptcy laws to circumvent or defeat the sentencing process. Although it now appears, from his own affidavit sworn 19 March 1998, that Mr Tatt was "at no time … in a position to make the payments ordered", it nevertheless seems that at the time he decided that he could (somehow) make the repayments. Moreover, some repayments were made once the monthly sums were reduced to $1,500. The applicant sold a smaller truck and made a $10,000 payment prior to his recognisance. He also attempted to sell his trucking business in the hope at least of repaying more.
The applicant did not file his debtor's petition until, some seventeen months after the District Court imposed the recognisance. The petition was only filed on the advice of an insolvency consultant. It appears that the applicant did not become aware of the possibility of obtaining a stay until August 1997 when his financial consultant raised it with him and referred him to the insolvency consultant.
In all the circumstances, the discretion should be exercised in favour of the grant of the stay.