A genuine dispute
6 The requirement in s 459H(1)(a) that the dispute be "genuine" has been the subject of extensive judicial commentary. In Eyota Pty Ltd v Hanave Pty Ltd (1994) 12 ACSR 785, McLelland CJ in Eq, said at 787:
In my opinion that expression connotes a plausible contention requiring investigation, and raises much the same sort of considerations as the "serious question to be tried" criterion which arises on an application for an interlocutory injunction or for the extension or removal of a caveat. This does not mean that the court must accept uncritically as giving rise to a genuine dispute, every statement in an affidavit "however equivocal, lacking in precision, inconsistent with undisputed contemporary documents or other statements by the same deponent, or inherently improbable in itself, it may be" not having "sufficient prima facie plausibility to merit further investigation as to [its] truth" … or "a patently feeble legal argument or an assertion of facts unsupported by evidence" …
But it does mean that, except in such an extreme case, a court required to determine whether there is a genuine dispute should not embark upon an inquiry as to the credit of a witness or a deponent whose evidence is relied on as giving rise to the dispute. There is a clear difference between, on the one hand, determining whether there is a genuine dispute and, on the other hand, determining the merits of, or resolving, such a dispute.
7 The authorities all accept the distinction between determining whether a claim is genuine and determining the claim on the merits and that the Corporations Act does not require the court to determine whether the alleged claim will succeed. That, as Northrop J said in Greenwood Manor Pty Ltd v Woodlock (1994) 48 FCR 229 at 233, is quite clear. His Honour elaborated at 234:
Although it is true that the Court, on an application under ss 459G and 459H is not entitled to decide a question as to whether a claim will succeed or not, it must be satisfied that there is a genuine dispute between the company and the respondent about the existence of the debt. If it can be shown that the argument in support of the existence of a genuine dispute can have no possible basis whatsoever, in my view, it cannot be said that there is a genuine dispute. This does not involve, in itself, a determination of whether the claim will succeed or not, but it does go to the reality of the dispute, to show that it is real or true and not merely spurious.
8 The criteria for determining if a dispute is genuine have been formulated in many ways, such as: the dispute must be "bona fide and truly exist in fact" and that the grounds for alleging the dispute be "real and not spurious, hypothetical, illusory or misconceived", Spencer Constructions Pty Ltd v G&M Aldridge Pty Ltd (1997) 76 FCR 452 at 464, also Giacci Holdings Pty Ltd v Giacci [2007] WASC 187 at [4] and Kirrak Pty Ltd v Compass Scaffolding and Plant Hire Pty Ltd [2007] NSWSC 1002 at [3]; "not plainly vexatious or frivolous", Chadwick Industries (South Coast) Pty Ltd v Condensing Vaporisers Pty Ltd (1994) 13 ACSR 37 at 39; the dispute is genuine unless the claim is "so devoid of substance that no further investigation is warranted"; Roadships Logistics Ltd v Tree [2007] NSW SC 1084 at [24].
9 Although the onus to show that the dispute is genuine falls on the party on whom the statutory demand is served, it is well accepted that the burden is not heavy. In Solarite Air Conditioning Pty Ltd v York International Australia Pty Ltd [2002] NSWSC 411 at [23] Barrett J observed that the task of a company seeking to set aside a statutory demand "is by no means at all a difficult or demanding one". In Rohalo Pharmaceutical Pty Ltd v RP Scherer SpA (1994) 15 ACSR 347, Lindgren J likened the burden of an application to set aside a statutory demand to the burden of a creditor applying for summary judgment. As his Honour expressed it, at 353-4:
The creditor would not be entitled to summary judgment if the company raised a defence or cross-claim deserving of a trial, and, concomitantly, a defence or cross-claim would not be struck out or dismissed if it raised an issue deserving of a trial. … The task confronting a company applying to set aside a statutory demand of establishing the "genuineness" of a dispute or claim is, in my opinion, no more onerous than that which would confront it if it were seeking to meet an application by the creditor for summary judgment.