Ground 2: counter-claim, set-off or cross demand
60 It is worth briefly making some observations at the outset as to what the phrase "counter-claim, set-off or cross demand" in ss 40(1)(g) and 41(7) of the Bankruptcy Act means and also certain fundamental requirements of such an offsetting claim, including mutuality.
61 The clearest exposition of the meaning of the phrase "counter-claim, set-off or cross demand" that I have come across is from a textbook, and not from a case. In Keay's Insolvency: Personal and Corporate Law and Practice (Ninth edition) by Michael Murray and Jason Harris at page 97 [3.315] it is clearly and helpfully stated:
In relation to the meaning of the three terms, "cross-demand" has a wider meaning than set-off and counter-claim. A set-off provides a defence to a claim, in that it diminishes or wipes out the amount claimed. A counter-claim is not a defence but because it directly answers the claim, it can result in relief being ordered in favour of the counter-claimant against the claimant. A cross-demand is neither a set-off nor a counter-claim, but a more general term describing a claim which can be specified and which equals or exceeds the amount of the judgment debt.
62 That clear exposition is in accordance with the long-standing and much cited statement in Re Judd; Ex parte Pike (1924) 24 SR (NSW) 537 at 539-540:
There is no authority of which I am aware deciding what limits (if any) ought to be placed on the words "counter-claim, set-off or cross demand". I think that the Legislature by the word "counter-claim" probably referred to those claims which might be the subject of a counter-claim in equity and by the word "set-off" to those claims which might be the subject of a set-off at common law. The other term "cross-demand", however, is not a technical term and must in my opinion refer to claims other than those which would be comprised in the two expressions "counter-claim" and "set-off".
Taking the ordinary meaning of the word itself, I can see no reason why "cross-demand" should not be held to include a claim for unliquidated damages for a tort. The case of Re Griffin; Ex parte Soutar (1 B.C. 29) shows that "cross-demand" includes a claim for unliquidated damages for breach of contract. In the case of Re Smyth; Ex parte North (3 B.C. 17) a common law action of Smyth v. North is referred to as constituting a cross-demand. I have sent for and perused the papers in this case and here again it appears that the cause of action was a claim for unliquidated damages for breach of contract. Two recent cases in England - In re G.E.B. ([1903] 2 K.B. 340) and In re A Debtor ([1914] 3 K.B. 726) - show that the cross-demand need not have any connection with the cause of action out of which the judgment debt arose - so much so, that a judgment debtor may even buy up a claim against the judgment creditor in order to have a "cross-demand". These cases are all in favour of an unrestricted meaning being given to the word.
63 It follows that the particular offsetting claim relied upon by Mr Tu may best be characterised as a "cross demand", or perhaps even a set-off, although nothing turns on this. These reasons will therefore continue to use the generic term offsetting claim as the relevant principles do not change according to the particular type relied upon.
64 A key aspect of the requirement of an offsetting claim is that it and the bankruptcy debt must be "mutual and due in the same right". As was stated by the Full Court in Stec v Orfanos [1999] FCA 457 at [24]:
… Where a debtor seeks to set aside a bankruptcy notice on the ground that the debtor has a cross demand which equals or exceeds the amount of the judgment or order on which the bankruptcy notice is founded, the judgment on the one hand and the cross demand on the other must be mutual and due in the same right: Re Anderson; Ex parte Alexander (1927) 27 SR (NSW) 296; James v Abrahams (1981) 51 FLR 16 at 27. The requirement that the two claims be "in the same right" is directed to the capacities in which the claimants claim. Thus a claim by a judgment creditor personally cannot be answered by a claim against the creditor as a member of a partnership or as an executor or trustee. See Re Wedd; Ex parte Wedd (1961) 19 ABC 36; Re Molesworth (1907) 51 Sol J 653; Vogwell v Vogwell (1939) 11 ABC 83 at 89. But the requirement relevant to the present case is that the claims be mutual; that is that they be of the same kind or nature. Thus joint debts cannot be set off against several debts: Middleton v Pollock (1875) LR 20 Eq 515 at 518. …
65 Mr Tu contends that his offsetting claim substantially exceeds the costs debt by reason of Ms Chang's failure to honour a contractual obligation to repay to him the balance of a loan. The difference between what she claims by the bankruptcy notice and what he claims by way of repayment of the balance of the loan exceeds $200,000. On its face, that offsetting claim satisfies the requirement of mutuality.
66 In addition to that contractual claim, Mr Tu brings alternative actions in monies had and received and unjust enrichment, but that claim cannot be advanced by him alone and would have to include his ex-wife, which would then create problems with mutuality. It was common ground that I should confine this part of the application to the contract claim.
67 The problem for Mr Tu is that his contract claim has been dismissed in the District Court of New South Wales, a decision which he has appealed to the New South Wales Court of Appeal. I was told at the hearing that this appeal is listed for hearing on 3 February 2017.
68 Mr Tu filed and served a notice of intention to appeal to the Court of Appeal on 16 March 2016, six weeks before the bankruptcy notice was issued on 3 May 2016. A notice of appeal to the Court of Appeal was filed on 19 May 2016, two days before the bankruptcy notice was apparently served on Mr Tu. Ms Chang was not dissuaded by that pending appeal from pressing ahead with the bankruptcy notice. That was her right, but it was a course that always had the potential to carry consequences in relation to the bankruptcy notice being allowed to stand pending that appeal and any retrial. It also has a bearing on the question of costs as discussed below.
69 The contract claim sought to be re-litigated by Mr Tu against Ms Chang in the District Court of New South Wales plainly sounds in money and exceeds by a very considerable margin the judgment debt referred to above upon which the bankruptcy notice is founded. Indeed it exceeds as well the only other debt in evidence before me that would be provable in the event of bankruptcy, being a further sum of around $20,000 owed to Mr Tu's former solicitors. While it is not disputed that the contract claim itself sounds in money, one of the points made by Ms Chang is that this is too far removed to meet the description in ss 40(1)(g) and 41(7) of the Bankruptcy Act of being a "counter-claim, set-off or cross demand" equal to or in excess of the amount claimed by the bankruptcy notice because of the need: for Mr Tu to succeed in the Court of Appeal so as to secure a retrial in the District Court; and then for Mr Tu to succeed in the retrial.
70 Mr Tu's claim is that he could not have set up his offsetting claim in the action or proceeding in which the judgment or order was obtained because it was obtained ex parte by the administrative process described above. That contention was not disputed, such that this issue does not need to be considered further.
71 Ms Chang accepted that Mr Tu was correct in stating in his written submissions, supported by references to well-established authority, that he must satisfy this Court that he had a prima facie case for the offsetting claim relied upon even if he does not adduce evidence which would be admissible in a final hearing making out that case, that he has a fair chance of success or is fairly entitled to litigate his claim and that his claim is genuine or bona fide. The authorities cited by counsel for Mr Tu and accepted by counsel for Ms Chang include Ebert v The Union Trustee Company of Australia Limited (1960) 104 CLR 346 at 350 and Re Brink; Ex parte The Commercial Banking Company of Sydney Ltd (1980) 30 ALR 433 at 438, along with numerous cases that have followed that authority, including Gomez v State Bank of New South Wales Limited [2002] FCAFC 101 sub nom Gomez v State Bank of New South Wales Limited [2002] FCA 442 at [17]-[18].
72 Re Brink at 438 is also accepted and much-cited authority to the effect that while this Court does not need to conduct a preliminary trial, there must be some kind of preliminary assessment falling short of a final determination. Mr Tu must satisfy the Court that there is sufficient substance to make it a case which he should, in justice, be permitted to have heard and determined in the usual way, rather than be forced to comply with the bankruptcy notice or commit an act of bankruptcy.
73 Mr Tu, having failed in an earlier District Court action commenced in February 2010 to recover the debt he claimed from Ms Chang (due, it seems, to not prosecuting his claim), which gave rise to the adverse costs order relied upon much later for the issue of the bankruptcy notice, commenced fresh proceedings in June 2014, also in the District Court (second proceedings). By the time the second proceedings came to trial, they were advanced by way of an amended statement of claim filed on 8 February 2016 in accordance with an order of a judicial registrar made on 5 February 2016.
74 The matter was listed for trial in the Sydney District Court on 18 February 2016. On that day the trial was listed before her Honour, Judge Gibb, the trial judge. The transcript reveals that her Honour appeared to take an immediately adverse view of Mr Tu's case and was highly critical of what seemed to be largely procedural matters and deficiencies, such as the processes involved in appointing a litigation guardian for Mr Tu (which I note was a procedure that took place at the commencement of the hearing in this case, albeit in response to an application filed at the outset: see the ex tempore judgment in Tu v Chang [2016] FCA 1567). Her Honour was critical of her fellow judges who had dealt with the matter in the past in terms of procedure, expressed in quite strong language. Her Honour refused what appeared to be quite reasonable applications and submissions made on behalf of Mr Tu in relation to those procedural issues.
75 One of the concerning aspects of the conduct of the hearing of the second proceedings in the District Court was that the trial judge insisted upon the statement of claim being re-filed at the hearing on 18 February 2016 due to formal steps to appoint a litigation guardian not having been taken earlier. While that appointment was an important procedural step and should have been attended to sooner, the approach taken by the trial judge seemed harsh and out of proportion to the real issues in dispute, especially as no point was taken about this not having happened sooner by Ms Chang (noting she was self-represented). There was no indication of any prejudice and no reason why such an appointment could not have been dealt with on the spot and made nunc pro tunc.
76 In significant part, the trial judge appeared to take the running of the case on behalf of Ms Chang, raising and determining legal and evidentiary issues on her own initiative. It seems that in part that was due to Ms Chang not being legally represented, but if so, that approach is out of step with authority in this area which makes it clear that an unrepresented litigant is not to be put at an advantage (or disadvantage) by the Court by reason of not having a lawyer.
77 Beyond those general observations, it is not appropriate for me to make any detailed comment about what transpired procedurally before the trial judge, save to observe that the summary dismissal of Mr Tu's case was at least unconventional. The above observations set the scene for her Honour's assessment of the evidence and assist in assessing Mr Tu's prospects of success on appeal, especially as numerous grounds of denial of procedural fairness and legal error are advanced. As there was no oral evidence before the trial judge I am at no disadvantage to her Honour in assessing the case presented and thereby the prospects of Mr Tu succeeding in the Court of Appeal and succeeding also in a retrial before a different judge in the District Court.
78 A critical aspect of the approach taken by the trial judge was a view that her Honour formed that the asserted loan from Mr Tu to Ms Chang was in fact a loan by both Mr Tu and his ex-wife, who was not a party to the proceedings. It seems that this was fatal to Mr Tu's case, although it is hard to be sure because her Honour's judgment is not before me and I am relying upon only the hearing transcript. That transcript does, however, reveal her Honour's thought processes.
79 Ms Chang's primary argument in this Court to challenge the application to set aside the bankruptcy notice is that the offsetting claim lacks mutuality because the debt upon which the bankruptcy notice is based is as between only Ms Chang and Mr Tu, whereas the offsetting claim is between both Mr Tu and his ex-wife as creditors and Ms Chang as debtor.
80 The principles in relation to mutuality, as set out above, are not in doubt, and Ms Chang's arguments would have real cogency if that was the case that Mr Tu sought to bring. However, that is not so. That was the argument which the trial judge sought to impose upon Mr Tu. It is not the case pleaded by Mr Tu in the amended statement of claim before her Honour. It is not the case that is being asserted in the Court of Appeal on behalf of Mr Tu. It is not to the point that counsel for Mr Tu, in what appears to have been an act of desperation in difficult circumstances, sought an adjournment towards the end of the second and final day of the hearing to obtain instructions as to whether to join Mr Tu's wife as a co-plaintiff. That adjournment request was refused.
81 This view of the case sought to be brought by Mr Tu in the District Court is supported by the evidence that was before the trial judge. In that regard it should be noted that at the hearing of this application, Ms Chang opposed the tender of her affidavits filed in the first and second District Court proceedings. That objection was based upon those affidavits not having been read or tendered in the District Court, so as to be bound by the usual implied undertaking precluding their use in other proceedings: Hearne v Street [2008] HCA 36; (2008) 235 CLR 125 at 154 [96], 157 [103], and 158 [106]; see also Harman v Secretary of State for the Home Department [1983] 1 AC 280 (Harman v Home Office). There was no way around that conclusion for the first affidavit (styled as a 'statement').
82 The second of those affidavits by Ms Chang was sought to be tendered before the trial judge. While the refusal of that tender is challenged in the Court of Appeal, the contents of that affidavit do not advance an appreciation of that ground, turning on issues to do with due process and procedural fairness, some of which at least seem to me to have some substance. Thus the second affidavit of Ms Chang really only goes to the assessment of the case Mr Tu seeks to bring at a retrial. That affidavit is therefore really relied upon as to its substance, for which again the implied undertaking must prevail. For that reason Ms Chang's objection to the tender of that second affidavit was upheld, even though parts of it may also have helped her case in this application as it would have put forward her version of events. She was represented by solicitor and counsel in these proceedings and is bound by their tactical decisions on her behalf.
83 Mr Tu's affidavit evidence and documents which were before the trial judge establish at least a prima facie case for the claim that he previously brought and seeks to renew in the District Court. That is so even though there is, upon the basis of Ms Chang's filed defence in the second proceedings, which is the only material I have before me as to what her case is, an alternative case to be mounted. Mr Tu's evidence before her Honour establishes, prima facie and therefore to a sufficient degree for present purposes, the following:
(1) On 3 April 2006, Mr Tu executed a loan agreement between himself and Ms Chang. Mr Tu witnessed Ms Chang sign that document. He produced his signed counterpart of that loan agreement. That two-page document entitled "loan agreement" bears the date 3 April 2006 and bears both his and Ms Chang's names on both pages. Ms Chang is described as "the borrower" on the second page.
(2) The term of the loan was expressed to be until 5 April 2009. It required repayment in full on the day of the expiry of the loan term and for interest to be paid. The loan agreement was signed by Mr Tu. While it did not record the amount of the loan, that was remedied by the actual moneys ($359,324.67) advanced a short time later, by direct deposit to Ms Chang's personal bank account. There was no evidence before me to show or even indicate that Ms Chang's company, rather than Ms Chang herself, was the other party to the loan agreement, as pleaded in her defence.
(3) Mr Tu said he was not provided with a copy of the loan agreement to keep for his records and did not obtain a copy until after Ms Chang had begun defaulting on interest payments to him.
(4) At the time Mr Tu signed the loan agreement, he did not notice that Ms Chang had not indicated the amount of the loan, but he knew he would be lending her 70% of the equity of his house. He did not look at or read the documents prior to signing them, placing complete trust in Ms Chang to prepare the documents and explain the contents to him. He understood it was a term of the loan agreement that he would be repaid the funds he advanced to Ms Chang by 5 April 2009 and that interest would accrue on the loan monies at a rate of 10% per year.
(5) On 11 April 2006, Mr Tu signed another document prepared by Ms Chang which he now knows was a funds transfer document in the sum of $359,324.67 from the mortgage company from whom he had obtained finance to the account held by Ms Chang. He produced a document which he executed with his ex-wife authorising the transfer. On 18 April 2006, that amount was transferred into Ms Chang's personal account. The loan transaction was therefore given effect to just over two weeks after the loan agreement was signed.
(6) On 10 July 2006 Mr Tu received a payment of $85,000 to reduce the loan. Over the next year, he was repaid some of the interest that he was owed on the loan. However, the payment of interest was not consistent. When interest was paid, the payment was sometimes made in cash and at other times by direct transfer into his ex-wife's bank account. That had taken place because Mr Tu's ex-wife's bank account details were provided at the time when the loan agreement was signed. Mr Tu had no issue with Ms Chang repaying interest in this manner.
(7) On or about 13 April 2009, Mr Tu met with Ms Chang to discuss the loan. Ms Chang sought to extend the term of the loan by a further 12 months and provided Mr Tu with a document to that effect. Mr Tu did not agree to this extension and did not sign the document provided.
(8) This meant that the loan was, on Mr Tu's account, still due to be repaid by April 2009. It follows there was no limitation problem in commencing the proceedings in the District Court, even the second time.
(9) Ms Chang, in a letter dated 14 April 2009, albeit on the letterhead of her company, acknowledged the existence of the debt, but asserted an extra year in which to repay it had been agreed to. Mr Tu disputes that extension of time was agreed to.
84 None of the above account was contradicted by any evidence for or from Ms Chang. On its face it established an apparently credible and relatively straightforward suit for repayment of a loan.
85 On the basis of the documents that are before me in evidence, and that were before the trial judge in evidence, I have some difficulty in seeing how her Honour was able to conclude that Mr Tu's ex-wife was a party to the loan agreement. On a perusal of the transcript it appears that her Honour took that view on the somewhat fragile basis that the source of the moneys advanced was a mortgage over Mr Tu's house, which it seems he jointly owned at the time with his now ex-wife.
86 Although there are situations where the way in which money advanced for a loan was obtained may be a telling indication of who was really making that loan, in this case the loan agreement before her Honour seems to me to contradict that conclusion. The primary basis for deciding who has made a loan will ordinarily be the loan documentation. As Ms Chang did not to go into evidence before her Honour at all, and did not cross-examine Mr Tu (observing in fairness again that she was self-represented), his account, none of it inherently improbable and supported by contemporaneous documents, has been made out to the extent necessary for these proceedings.
87 It is difficult to see how Mr Tu's description of what took place in his affidavit, coupled with the loan agreement document, was able to result in anything other than a verdict in his favour. That does not mean it was the inevitable outcome; I do not need to go that far. It suffices for present purposes for me to form a view that the advice of senior counsel provided to Mr Tu, which was also before me, stating that Mr Tu had a better than even chance of success on his appeal, is well founded, and perhaps even somewhat conservative.
88 Nor is it necessary to go so far as to conclude that the appeal will necessarily succeed; nor go so far as to conclude that a retrial in the District Court will necessarily succeed. What matters is that Mr Tu has a case with sufficient merit and sufficient prospects of a successful outcome, both as to the appeal and as to the retrial, which if realised would result in a judgment in his favour equal to or in excess of the judgment debt upon which the bankruptcy notice is based. I am comfortably satisfied to that degree.
89 Mr Tu has demonstrated that he should be able to run his appeal and any retrial without the burden of meeting or defaulting on a premature bankruptcy notice. It follows that the second ground advanced by Mr Tu succeeds and the bankruptcy notice must be set aside.