The present application for provisional relief
14 The plaintiffs relied on an affidavit of Damian John Templeton sworn 12 November 2009 (the Templeton affidavit). Mr Templeton is a chartered accountant and a partner in the Australian KPMG partnership. He is a member of the Insolvency Practitioners Association of Australia and an official liquidator and has approximately 18 years' experience as an insolvency practitioner.
15 Mr Templeton's firm was contacted by KPMG LLP of the United Kingdom which is retained by Lloyds TSB Commercial Finance Limited (LTSB). LTSB is security trustee and agent for a syndicate of banks. It holds fixed and floating charges over, among other things, the defendant's assets that are located in Australia. KPMG LLP was retained by LTSB to investigate the affairs of the defendant and its parent company, Aero Inventory Plc. The banks had made financial accommodation available to the defendant and to its parent company in the form of a USD500 million revolving facility, and there were certain breaches of financial covenants under the terms of that facility by the defendant and its parent company.
16 The Templeton affidavit shows that the defendant's principal activity has been to provide a comprehensive procurement and inventory management service. The defendant sources, distributes and sells, in various countries around the world, numerous consumable and expendable parts that are required in the maintenance of commercial aircraft. The defendant's customers include airline and aerospace maintenance and repair companies.
17 According to the Templeton affidavit, the defendant entered into an agreement in or about October 2006 with Qantas Airways Limited (Qantas) pursuant to which it purchased from Qantas a certain inventory of spare parts, agreed to supply Qantas with certain aircraft parts, and agreed, among other services, to maintain and manage an aircraft parts consignment inventory at certain Qantas locations in Australia.
18 The Templeton affidavit satisfies me that:
(a) The plaintiffs were appointed, on an urgent basis, as joint administrators of the defendant in the UK Proceeding on 11 November 2009;
(b) The UK Proceeding is both a foreign proceeding and a foreign main proceeding within the meaning of those terms in Article 2(a) and (b) (it has its registered office in the United Kingdom and its headquarters there);
(c) The plaintiffs are foreign representatives in respect of the defendant within the meaning of Article 2(d);
(d) The plaintiffs have satisfied the requirements of s 13 of the Act as to the existence of any proceedings under Ch 5 or s 601 CL of the Corporations Act and any appointment of a receiver (according to the Templeton affidavit the defendant is not registered as a foreign company under that Act);
(e) The plaintiffs have satisfied the requirements of Article 15(3) with respect to the identification of all foreign proceedings in respect of the defendant that are known to them (according to the Templeton affidavit, recognition proceedings either exist or are anticipated in 12 named States in respect of the UK Proceeding in the light of the making of the orders made on 11 November 2009 in that Proceeding, and on that date Aero Inventory (Australia) Pty Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of the defendant, appointed Mr Templeton and Damien Mark Hodgkinson of KPMG joint and several administrators of that subsidiary pursuant to s 436A of the Corporations Act);
(f) The centre of the defendant's main interests is the United Kingdom, and therefore, as noted at (b) above, the UK Proceeding is a foreign main proceeding;
(g) The defendant carries on business and has assets in Australia (see above and below);
(h) The plaintiffs are concerned that, if urgent interlocutory relief is not granted, their ability to take possession of, collect and get in assets of the defendant might be prejudiced (see below).
19 The reason why the plaintiffs have sought provisional relief urgently and before notification of the substantive application to Australian creditors of the defendant is that the plaintiffs are concerned that otherwise the aircraft parts inventory presently stored at locations in Australiacontrolled by Qantas having a value of approximately US$130 million may be at risk.
20 There was in evidence correspondence between the plaintiffs and Qantas which suggests that there may be a dispute as to the entitlement to the parts. That correspondence is contained in Annexures D and E to the Templeton affidavit which I ordered remain confidential to the parties until further order.
21 At least it can be said that Qantas has purported to exercise a right under the agreement between it and the defendant to purchase six months' worth of stock. As the plaintiffs submitted, while it remains to be determined how that step is to be characterised as between Qantas, the plaintiffs as joint administrators, and the secured creditor who had already given notice of a floating charge having crystallised over the stock, the determination of that question is not prejudiced by the granting of the provisional relief sought.
22 I was satisfied that the plaintiffs had demonstrated a proper basis for provisional relief. That relief was designed to preserve the position and assets of the defendant in Australia for a limited period pending the hearing of the application seeking recognition of the UK Proceeding. On the evidence, it was likely that recognition would be granted. Upon recognition being accorded to the UK Proceeding, the automatic effects provided for in Article 20 commence. Those effects are as follows:
(a) Commencement or continuation of individual actions or individual proceedings concerning the debtor's assets, rights, obligations or liabilities is stayed;
(b) Execution against the debtor's assets is stayed;
(c) The right to transfer, encumber or otherwise dispose of any assets of the debtor is suspended.
The purpose of the provisional relief sought was to ensure that those effects, in particular the last, would not be rendered nugatory.