Wenkart v Pantzer
[2013] FCAFC 81
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia (Full Court)
Decision date
2013-07-30
Before
Foster JJ
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (40 paragraphs)
Introduction 1 The estate of Dr Thomas Richard Wenkart, who is the appellant in the present Appeal (NSD 26 of 2011) and the first cross-respondent in both of the Cross-Appeals, was sequestrated on 28 October 1999 by order of this Court. 2 Warren Pantzer, a Chartered Accountant, was appointed as Dr Wenkart's trustee in bankruptcy. Mr Pantzer is the first respondent in Dr Wenkart's Appeal, the cross-appellant in the First Cross-Appeal and the second cross-respondent in the Second Cross-Appeal. We shall hereinafter refer to Mr Pantzer as the trustee. 3 The other party to the matters presently before this Full Court is Hapday Holdings Pty Limited (Hapday). Hapday is a corporation associated with Dr Wenkart. At all relevant times, Hapday held a first registered mortgage over a residential property known as "47 Union Street, Paddington, NSW" (the Paddington property). At all relevant times, Dr Wenkart was the registered proprietor of the Paddington property. The Paddington property was charged by Dr Wenkart in favour of the trustee in order to secure Dr Wenkart's obligations under an arrangement reached with the trustee on 11 March 2002. 4 Hapday is the second respondent in the appeal, the second cross-respondent in the First Cross-Appeal and is the cross-appellant in the Second Cross-Appeal. As already mentioned, the cross-respondents in the Second Cross-Appeal are Dr Wenkart and the trustee. 5 Dr Wenkart's bankruptcy was annulled on 15 March 2002 (the annulment date) by resolution of his creditors passed on that day (see s 73(4) and s 74(5) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) (the Bankruptcy Act)). 6 During Dr Wenkart's bankruptcy, the trustee was involved in litigation concerning several proofs of debt which he had rejected and the recovery of payments made by Dr Wenkart which the trustee contended were preferences. Throughout the bankruptcy, the trustee was advised and represented by the law firm, Cutler Hughes & Harris (CHH). CHH ceased acting for the trustee immediately after the annulment meeting. For some time thereafter, Sally Nash & Co acted for the trustee. 7 As at the annulment date, the trustee claimed: (a) Approximately $220,000 as unpaid trustee's remuneration. In the period up to late December 2000, the trustee had already paid various amounts to himself and to the firm of accountants with which he was associated out of the bankrupt estate of Dr Wenkart. The total of those amounts was $226,454.70. (b) Approximately $260,000 as unpaid trustee's costs, charges and expenses. We shall refer to these types of outlays as trustee's expenses. The amount of $260,000 (approx) was claimed as unpaid fees and disbursements due to CHH. As was the case in respect of the trustee's own remuneration, in the period up to late December 2000, the trustee had made a number of payments to CHH and to Counsel retained by CHH on his behalf. Those payments totalled $249,942.29. 8 By late December 2001, Dr Wenkart was very keen to have his bankruptcy annulled. On 18 January 2001, he had submitted a concrete compromise proposal to the trustee pursuant to s 73 of the Bankruptcy Act. This followed an earlier proposal which he had submitted on 9 March 2000. By late December 2001, he had settled with his creditors but had not accepted the trustee's claims concerning the trustee's unpaid remuneration and expenses. In the period from late October 2001 to early March 2002, CHH and Hunt & Hunt, the law firm retained by Dr Wenkart and his corporate associates, had exchanged correspondence and had had discussions in an endeavour to resolve the trustee's claims. Those exchanges and discussions had not produced an agreement. 9 As at early March 2002, Dr Wenkart and his corporate associates were well aware that the trustee had no funds in his hands with which to pay his unpaid remuneration and expenses. 10 On 15 February 2002, Dr Wenkart wrote directly to Beaumont J requesting that his Honour compel the trustee to call a meeting of his creditors for the purpose of considering his annulment proposal. His Honour treated this correspondence from Dr Wenkart as the filing of an initiating process. The proceeding thereby commenced was allocated plaint No. NSD 7051 of 2002. Proceeding NSD 7051 of 2002 (the proceedings below) is the proceeding in which all of the orders which are challenged in the present Appeal and in the two Cross-Appeals were made. 11 On 1 March 2002, Beaumont J made orders requiring the trustee to convene a meeting of Dr Wenkart's creditors by no later than 15 March 2002. 12 On 11 March 2002, Beaumont J noted an agreement which had, by then, been reached among Dr Wenkart, Hapday and the trustee. That agreement provided that, post-annulment, Dr Wenkart would assume personal responsibility for the payment of the trustee's lawful entitlement to remuneration and expenses and that Dr Wenkart's obligation to do so would be secured by an equitable charge granted by him over the Paddington property. 13 At noted at [5] above, on 15 March 2002, by resolution of his creditors, Dr Wenkart's bankruptcy was annulled. 14 The annulment of Dr Wenkart's bankruptcy triggered a series of disputes between Dr Wenkart and the trustee concerning the trustee's conduct in administering Dr Wenkart's estate and the remuneration and expenses which he claimed for administering that estate. Those disputes have been ongoing since 2002. The litigation between Dr Wenkart and the trustee since 2002 has been confined to attempts by the trustee to be paid his remuneration and expenses (both in respect of his administration of the estate during the period of the bankruptcy and in respect of his recovery attempts post-annulment) and Dr Wenkart's unwavering resistance by any and all means available to him (whether reasonable or not) to making any payments whatsoever to the trustee. Despite its confined scope and subject matter, the litigation between Dr Wenkart and the trustee post-annulment has so far led to the delivery of 19 judgments by single judges of this Court, three judgments by Full Courts of this Court and one set of reasons and a Certificate by a Registrar of this Court. There have been two applications to the High Court for special leave to appeal, one of which was discontinued and the other of which was refused. This litigation was justifiably described as "scandalous" by Flick J at 642-643 [5]-[6] in his judgment delivered on 13 August 2010 (Wenkart v Pantzer (2010) 269 ALR 641; [2010] FCA 866). 15 Dr Wenkart has taken every point available to him to challenge the trustee's claims for remuneration and expenses. He has attempted to compel the trustee to tax his remuneration under the Bankruptcy Act and the Bankruptcy Regulations 1996 (Cth) (the Bankruptcy Regulations) and to require CHH to tax its unpaid fees and disbursements pursuant to s 167 of the Bankruptcy Act. 16 On 31 October 2002, having not received satisfaction from Dr Wenkart, the trustee filed a Notice of Motion in the proceedings below. By that Notice of Motion, the trustee sought the appointment of himself as trustee for the sale of the Paddington property and ancillary relief. That Notice of Motion was subsequently ordered to stand as a Cross-Claim for substantive relief in the proceedings below. 17 The filing of the trustee's Cross-Claim spawned a plethora of litigation. In three judgments delivered in 2007 and 2008, Branson J endeavoured to bring this unfortunate litigation to an end. Her Honour did not succeed in doing so. 18 By four judgments delivered in 2009 and 2010, Flick J brought the proceedings below to an end. On 24 December 2010, his Honour made the following orders: THE COURT: 1. Declares that the First Respondent is lawfully entitled to be paid the sum of $173,079.71 by the Applicant. 2. Orders that the Applicant pay interest on the sum of $173,079.71 from 16 September 2008 pursuant to section 51A of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth), such interest calculated as $32,682.75. 3. Subject to the order made in paragraph 11 of these orders, orders that the Applicant pay 90% of the First Respondent's costs of these proceedings as taxed on a party/party basis (noting that this order does not vary existing orders of this Court as to costs). 4. Orders that judgment be entered for the First Respondent against the Applicant in the sum of $205,762.46, including interest. 5. Declares that upon the issue of a certificate of taxation by a taxing officer under section 167 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 and/or Bankruptcy Regulation 8.09 in respect of any claim for remuneration in relation to the estate in bankruptcy of the Applicant for the period after 21 October 2003, the First Respondent will be lawfully entitled to payment of such amounts. 6. Declares that upon the issue of a certificate of taxation by a taxing officer under section 167 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 and/or Bankruptcy Regulation 8.09 in respect of legal services provided by Cutler Hughes & Harris to the First Respondent in relation to the estate in bankruptcy of the Applicant (such legal services not being the subject of the certificate of taxation issued on 17 February 2003), the First Respondent will be lawfully entitled to payment of such amounts. 7. Declares that upon the issue of a certificate of taxation by a taxing officer under section 167 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 and/or Bankruptcy Regulation 8.09 in respect of legal costs and other expenses incurred by the First Respondent in relation to the estate in bankruptcy of the Applicant since 21 October 2003 not covered by the orders in paragraphs 3 and 11 of these orders, the First Respondent will be lawfully entitled to payment of such amounts. 8. Orders pursuant to Order 37 of the Federal Court Rules and section 30 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966, as amended, in aid of the order and agreement made on 11 March 2002 in these proceedings, that if the judgment entered pursuant to the order in paragraph 4 of these orders is not satisfied within 28 days of entry: 8.1 David Young, official liquidator be appointed as trustee ("the trustee") for sale of the whole of the land and improvements in certificate of title folio identifier G/33817 known as 47 Union Street, Paddington ("the property") for the purpose of realising the property to enable payment to the First Respondent of the amounts to which the First Respondent is lawfully entitled to payment or becomes lawfully entitled on the issue of certificates of taxation. 8.2 Directs that the Second Respondent and the Applicant forthwith deliver to the trustee for the purpose of the sale of the property certificate of title folio identifier G/33817 and a discharge of mortgage 3965299 in registrable form. 8.3 Orders that the Applicant forthwith give the trustee vacant possession of the property. 8.4 Orders that a writ of possession of the property issue 28 days after the date of this order. 8.5 Orders that the trustee have the following powers: (a) To sell the property by public auction after marketing it for not less than 4 weeks in a manner recommended by a real estate agent retained by the trustee to procure the sale of the property. (b) To set a reserve. (c) To negotiate with the two highest bidders if the property is passed in at the public auction. (d) To sell by private treaty (or public auction again) if the property is passed in and there is no negotiated sale. (e) To act and do all things in a manner appropriate to a trustee for sale in the marketing and sale of the property. (f) To sign a transfer and all other documents required to convey good title to the property. (g) To forthwith deduct and pay from the proceeds of sale: (i) the commission and other expense of any real estate agent retained by the trustee to procure the sale of the property; (ii) the legal expenses of the trustee in respect of the sale of the property; (iii) the other costs, expenses and outgoings (including rates and taxes charged on the property) of transferring the property to the purchaser; and (iv) the remuneration and expenses of the trustee and his employees incurred in relation to the sale of the property; 8.6 Directs that the trustee pay any surplus to the Second Respondent after he has accounted for all of the monies referred to in these orders. 8.7 Directs that the trustee file with the Court and serve on the Applicant and the Second Respondent an affidavit deposing to his receipts and payments as trustee for sale of the property on or before the later of 60 days from completion of the sale of the property and the date of payment of the surplus pursuant to the direction in paragraph 8.6 of these orders. 9. Orders that the Notice of Motion filed by the First Respondent on 23 November 2010 is dismissed. 10. Orders that the Notice of Motion filed by the Applicant on 23 November 2010 is dismissed. 11. Orders that there be no order as to costs in respect of the issues canvassed during the hearings on 28 October, 18 November and 23 November 2010. 12. Orders that the Second Respondents (Hapday Holdings Pty Ltd, Macquarie Health Corporation Ltd and Throvena Pty Ltd) bear their own costs of the proceedings. 19 Dr Wenkart appealed from those orders. Each of the trustee and Hapday filed a Cross-Appeal from those orders. In addition, the trustee sought to challenge an earlier order made by Branson J on 16 September 2008. 20 In January 2011, Dr Wenkart paid the judgment debt of $205,762.46 to the trustee. For that reason, Order 8 made by Flick J on 24 December 2010 has not been activated. In his Appeal, Dr Wenkart seeks an order for the refund of that amount. 21 To some extent, the reasons which Flick J gave for making the final orders incorporate reasons given by Branson J in the judgments which her Honour delivered in 2007 and 2008. In this way, there are challenges in the present Appeal and Cross-Appeals to her Honour's reasoning in those judgments even though the relief which is under attack is, with one exception, the relief granted by Flick J on 24 December 2010. 22 Before we explain the judgments appealed from and set out the issues which arise for determination in the Appeal and in the Cross-Appeals, it is necessary to provide a chronological account of the parties' relevant dealings and of the important milestones in the proceedings below. We now turn to provide that account.