Legal PRINCIPLES
27 Section 588FF of the Act relevantly provides:
(1) Where, on the application of a company's liquidator, a court is satisfied that a transaction of the company is voidable because of section 588FE, the court may make one or more of the following orders:
(a) an order directing a person to pay to the company an amount equal to some or all of the money that the company has paid under the transaction;
(b) an order directing a person to transfer to the company property that the company has transferred under the transaction;
(c) an order requiring a person to pay to the company an amount that, in the court's opinion, fairly represents some or all of the benefits that the person has received because of the transaction;
(d) an order requiring a person to transfer to the company property that, in the court's opinion, fairly represents the application of either or both of the following:
(i) money that the company has paid under the transaction;
(ii) proceeds of property that the company has transferred under the transaction;
(e) an order releasing or discharging, wholly or partly, a debt incurred, or a security or guarantee given, by the company under or in connection with the transaction;
(f) if the transaction is an unfair loan and such a debt, security or guarantee has been assigned - an order directing a person to indemnify the company in respect of some or all of its liability to the assignee;
(g) an order providing for the extent to which, and the terms on which, a debt that arose under, or was released or discharged to any extent by or under, the transaction may be proved in a winding up of the company;
(h) an order declaring an agreement constituting, forming part of, or relating to, the transaction, or specified provisions of such an agreement, to have been void at and after the time when the agreement was made, or at and after a specified later time;
(i) an order varying such an agreement as specified in the order and, if the Court thinks fit, declaring the agreement to have had effect, as so varied, at and after the time when the agreement was made, or at and after a specified later time;
(j) an order declaring such an agreement, or specified provisions of such an agreement, to be unenforceable.
…
(3) An application under subsection (1) may only be made:
(a) during the period beginning on the relation‑back day and ending:
(i) 3 years after the relation‑back day; or
(ii) 12 months after the first appointment of a liquidator in relation to the winding up of the company;
whichever is the later; or
(b) within such longer period as the Court orders on an application under this paragraph made by the liquidator during the paragraph (a) period.
28 As noted at [8] above, based on s 588FF(3)(a), the period for commencement of any proceeding pursuant to s 588FF(1) of the Act expired on 23 July 2018. The plaintiffs filed their originating process on 20 July 2018 prior to the expiration of the three year period specified in s 588FF(3)(a) but I made the order pursuant to s 588FF(3)(b) after the expiration of that period. Notwithstanding this, no issue arises for the SPLs.
29 In McGrath v National Indemnity Company (2004) 182 FLR 309; [2004] NSWSC 391 at [18] Barrett J held that "the ambiguity in s 588FF(3)(b)" should be resolved in favour of a construction under which an extension order made after the period of three years has expired is effective for the purposes of the section provided that the application upon which the order was made was itself, by the filing of the appropriate initiating process, within that period.
30 The SPLs sought an order in the form of what is commonly described as a "shelf order". That is an order enabling proceedings to be brought under s 588FF(1) against any party within the extended period. Such a form of order is permissible: see Fortress Credit Corporation (Australia) II Pty Ltd v Fletcher (2015) 254 CLR 489 at [24].
31 Section 588FF(3)(b) of the Act confers a discretion on the Court. In Marsden (liquidator) v CVS Lane PV Pty Limited, in the matter of Pentridge Village Pty Limited (in liq) (receiver and manager appointed) (controller appointed) (2018) 124 ACSR 100; [2018] FCA 102 at [54]-[55] Gleeson J set out the principles which guide the exercise of that discretion:
54 The Court is required to consider what is fair and just in all the circumstances: BP Australia Ltd v Brown (2013) 58 NSWLR 322; [2003] NSWCA 216 (BP Australia) at [187]. The applicant for the extension must satisfy the Court that it should be granted: BP Australia at [183].
55 The matters that ordinarily inform the exercise of the Court's discretion are:
(1) the liquidator's explanation for the delay in taking action within the three year period provided for by the statute;
(2) the merits of the foreshadowed proceeding, assessed by a "preliminary review"; and
(3) any likely prejudice that would be suffered if the extension of time is granted: Parker, Re Worldwide Specialty Property Services Pty Ltd (in liq) v Worldwide Specialty Property Services Pty Ltd (in liq) [2017] FCA 687 at [15]-[16]; Walker and Moloney v CBA Corporate Services (NSW) Pty Ltd [2012] FCA 328 (Walker) at [43].
32 In Walker and Moloney v CBA Corporate Services (NSW) Pty Limited (2012) 88 ACSR 153; [2012] FCA 328 at [44] Nicholas J said the following about the issue of the assessment of the merits of a proposed action in circumstances where an extension is sought to permit further investigation:
The preliminary review of the merits of the proposed proceedings is "an investigation as to whether such proceedings would be so devoid of prospects that it would be unfair, by granting an extension, to expose the other party to the continuing prospect of suit": Green v Chiswell Furniture Pty Ltd (in liq) [1999] NSWSC 608 at [15] (Green) per Austin J. However, a review of the merits may be unnecessary if the purpose of the application for an extension of time is to allow the liquidator time in which to properly decide whether or not to bring the proposed proceedings: Green per Austin J at para [15]; see also the summary of the relevant principles of White J in New Cap Reinsurance Corporation Ltd (in liq) v Reaseguros Alianza SA (2004) 186 FLR 175; [2004] NSWSC 787 at [52]-[55].