JURISDICTION
37 The respondents' written submissions largely address the topic of the Court's power to make the orders sought on the Trustee's originating application. The submissions were filed at a time when the respondents' solicitor remained on the Court file. They appear to be incomplete and are somewhat jumbled. The respondents' argument, as I understand it, proceeds as follows:
(1) jurisdiction is vested in the Federal Court of Australia by s 39B(1A)(a) of the Judiciary Act with respect to any matter in which the Commonwealth is seeking an injunction or declaration;
(2) the Trustee is not the Commonwealth and the matter may therefore be distinguished from Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Edensor Nominees Pty Ltd [2001] FCA 1; (2001) 204 CLR 559;
(3) the originating application is made in respect of a matter "arising out of and exclusively governed by" a State law (namely the LP Act) and there is no corresponding provision in a Commonwealth statute;
(4) the LP Act defines the word "court" to mean the Supreme Court of South Australia and the District Court of South Australia;
(5) the Federal Court does not fall within the definition of a "court" for the purposes of the LP Act, and even if it did "State jurisdiction cannot be conferred on the Federal Court".
38 The second of these propositions may be accepted in part. The Trustee is not the Commonwealth.
39 Subject to what is said below about the operation of s 79 of the Judiciary Act, it may also be accepted that the word "court" is defined in the LP Act in terms that do not include this Court.
40 The respondents' submissions must otherwise be rejected.
41 The conclusion that this Court has jurisdiction in this matter and the power to make the orders sought by the Trustee may be reached by two alternate paths of reasoning.
42 First, this Court has such original jurisdiction as is vested in it by laws made by the Parliament: Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) (FCA Act), s 19(1). Section 22 of the FCA Act provides:
22 Determination of matter completely and finally
The Court shall, in every matter before the Court, grant, either absolutely or on such terms and conditions as the Court thinks just, all remedies to which any of the parties appears to be entitled in respect of a legal or equitable claim properly brought forward by him or her in the matter, so that, as far as possible, all matters in controversy between the parties may be completely and finally determined and all multiplicity of proceedings concerning any of those matters avoided.
43 Subsection 32(1) of the FCA Act provides that, to the extent that the Constitution permits, the Court has jurisdiction in respect of matters not otherwise within its jurisdiction that are associated with matters in respect of which the jurisdiction of the Court is invoked.
44 Section 39B(1A)(c) of the Judiciary Act provides that the original jurisdiction of this Court includes jurisdiction in any matter arising under any laws made by the Parliament (subject to certain exceptions that do not apply).
45 The present "matter" is a controversy principally between the Trustee and Mrs Jeffery as to whether the land should be partitioned or sold so that the interest in the land that is vested in the Trustee by virtue of s 58(1) of the Bankruptcy Act may be converted into money for distribution among Mr Jeffery's creditors. Also in dispute is the question of whether Mr Jeffery should be ordered to vacate the land and to remove his personal possessions from it, and as to whether he should be required to execute such instruments as are necessary to effect or facilitate the sale.
46 There can be no doubt that the Trustee's interest in the land is property that is divisible among Mr Jeffery's creditors pursuant to s 116(1)(a) the Bankruptcy Act.
47 Also vested in the Trustee is the capacity to exercise, and to take proceedings for exercising all such powers in, over or in respect of property as may be exercised by the bankrupt for his or her own benefit at the commencement of the bankruptcy: Bankruptcy Act, s 116(1)(b).
48 At the commencement of his bankruptcy, Mr Jeffery had the capacity to exercise, for his own benefit, powers in and over or in respect of his interest in the land, which included a capacity to bring an application for the partition or sale of the land under s 69 and s 70 of the LP Act. In my view, the severance of the joint tenancy and the conversion of each co-owners' interests into that of tenants in common did not affect the rights of either co-owner to issue proceedings for the partition or sale of the land so as to realise their respective interests in it.
49 The Trustee's duties, functions and powers in connection with Mr Jeffery's property are conferred by the Bankruptcy Act. They include:
(1) a duty to determine whether the bankrupt's estate includes property that can be realised to pay a dividend to creditors (s 19(1)(a));
(2) a duty to take appropriate steps to recover property for the benefit of the estate (s 19(1)(f));
(3) a duty to apply the proceeds of the property of the bankrupt in the order prescribed in s 109 of the Bankruptcy Act;
(1) a duty to declare and distribute dividends amongst the creditors who have proved their debts, with all convenient speed (s 140(1));
(2) a duty to distribute as dividend all moneys in hand (s 140(2));
(3) the power to sell all or any part of the property of the bankrupt (s 134(1));
(4) the power to otherwise administer the property of the bankrupt in any way specified in ss 134(1)(a) to (n), or in any other way (s 134(1)(m)).
50 The Trustee seeks relief in this proceeding for the purpose of exercising powers and functions conferred by a law of the Parliament in respect of the Trustee's interest in property, being an interest that owes its existence to a law of the Parliament. The Trustee's capacity to commence proceedings in respect of the land is a capacity that itself is exercisable by virtue of (at least) s 19(1)(f), s 58(1), s 116(1)(a) and (b) and s 134(1)(m) of the Bankruptcy Act.
51 The "matter" is one in which the sale of the whole of the land is resisted by the co-owner, a non-bankrupt, as well as by the bankrupt himself.
52 In the circumstances I have described, the matter arises under a law made by the Parliament within the meaning of s 39B(1A)(c) of the Judiciary Act and the Court is exercising federal jurisdiction in respect of it. The jurisdiction being exercised is equivalent to that conferred by the High Court by s 76(ii) of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act. By this path of reasoning, jurisdiction is attracted whether or not the power to make the orders sought by the Trustee in the resolution of the controversy is conferred in direct terms by the Bankruptcy Act or another law of the Commonwealth Parliament. In the exercise of federal jurisdiction, the Court must look to ss 79 and 80 of the Judiciary Act to supply the applicable law.
53 Secondly, the Court has jurisdiction to determine the whole of the controversy because the relief sought by the Trustee includes orders under s 30 of the Bankruptcy Act for the enforcement of Mr Jeffery's obligations under s 77 of the Bankruptcy Act. Those orders relate not only to the land and Mr Jeffery's occupation of it, but to certain water entitlements that do not run with the land in a proprietary sense, as discussed elsewhere in these reasons. The orders would also require Mr Jeffery to permit a licensed land agent to attend on the land for the purpose of effecting its sale. Transfer of the water entitlements to an incoming purchaser of the land is sought for the purpose of achieving a higher purchase price for the whole of the land so as to maximise the proceeds of the sale of the Trustee's interest in the land for distribution among Mr Jeffery's creditors. It follows from these considerations that the Court has jurisdiction in the matter by virtue of ss 19(1), 22 and 32 of the FCA Act together with ss 27, 30 and 77 of the Bankruptcy Act, whether or not regard is had to s 39B(1A)(c) of the Judiciary Act. The realisation by the Trustee of the monetary value of the water entitlements and Mr Jeffery's interests as an occupier of the property form inextricable parts of a single controversy, of which the proposed sale of the land against Mrs Jeffery's wishes as co-owner also forms a part.
54 Whichever path of reasoning is adopted, the Court is exercising federal jurisdiction. As has been said, in the exercise of federal jurisdiction, the laws to be applied are those identified by s 79 and 80 of the Judiciary Act. Neither the Trustee nor the respondents submitted that the law to be applied was that to be identified by reference to s 80 although it may be that the same result would ensue if that provision were first to be applied.
55 As to s 79, the case is one in which the LP Act is "applicable" within the meaning of that provision because it establishes a regime by which the respective rights of two or more persons having an interest in land may be identified, contested and adjusted.
56 It is the Trustee's position that there is no Commonwealth law that establishes an alternate regime by which the co-owner of land may obtain orders for the sale of the whole of the land so that the co-owner's interest in the land may be converted into money. Whilst a person holding an interest as tenant in common in land is entitled at law to deal with that interest, that circumstance does not preclude the person from seeking an order that the land be partitioned or sold. I am satisfied that, for the purposes of s 79 of the Judiciary Act, there is no law of the Commonwealth that "provides otherwise". In this regard it is necessary to explain why the Trustee has not sought an order for the sale of the land pursuant to s 30 of the Bankruptcy Act.
57 In Coshott v Prentice (2014) 221 FCR 450 (at [94], [119] to [122]) the Full Court determined an appeal from orders that provided for the sale of land on the application of the trustee of a bankrupt estate. Immediately prior to the bankruptcy, the land had been jointly owned by the bankrupt and his wife. The principal issue at trial and on the appeal was whether the bankrupt held his interest in the land on trust for a private superannuation fund or otherwise pursuant to a resulting trust in favour of a third party. The primary judge held that he had not, with the consequence that the bankrupt's interest in the land was property that had vested in the trustee under s 58(1) and was divisible among the bankrupt's creditors. On the application of the trustee made within the same proceeding, the primary judge made orders for the sale of the land under s 66G of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW).
58 On appeal it was argued that neither s 30 of the Bankruptcy Act nor s 66G of the Conveyancing Act conferred power on the primary judge to make an order for the sale of the land.
59 The Full Court held (at [100]) that the general power in s 30(1) of the Bankruptcy Act did not extend to the making of orders for the sale of property which was co-owned by a person who is not the bankrupt, thereby destroying that person's rights in the property. The reasoning of the Full Court toward that conclusion is set out at length at [91] to [104] of the reasons for judgment. It is unnecessary to extract the Court's reasoning here.
60 The Full Court went on to conclude that as the Court was exercising federal jurisdiction, s 79 of the Judiciary Act supplied the law by which an order for the sale of the property may be made as against the interests of a co-owner, that law being the Conveyancing Act. Accordingly, whilst s 30 of the Bankruptcy Act did not confer power on the Court to make the order for sale, the power was conferred by the law of the State in which the Court was sitting, in accordance with s 79 of the Judiciary Act.
61 In Coshott the Court had jurisdiction under s 39B(1A)(c) of the Judiciary Act because there was a controversy between the parties as to whether the bankrupt's interest in the property had vested in the trustee, such that the matter was one in which an issue arose under a law made by the Parliament, namely the Bankruptcy Act. The trustee in that case had sought declaratory relief to confirm the existence of the interest he claimed had vested in him. The trustee's application for orders for sale of the property formed a part of the same "matter".
62 I have not overlooked the circumstance that, in the present case, there is no antecedent controversy as to whether the interest of Mr Jeffery has vested in the Trustee. Here, the trustee of a bankrupt estate makes an application for orders for sale of land in which he has an undisputed interest and so the "matter" must be conceived of differently than the matter that attracted the Court's jurisdiction in Coshott. It is, notwithstanding that difference, a matter that the Court has jurisdiction to hear and decide by either path of reasoning I have identified above. This is, as I have said, a matter involving the exercise of federal jurisdiction within the meaning of s 79 of the Judiciary Act.
63 The Full Court in Coshott went on (at [109] to [114]) to explain the operation of the Judiciary Act in that case in a way that conveniently (and by analogy) disposes of any remaining challenge made by the respondents in respect of the Court's jurisdiction and powers:
The power to appoint trustees for sale is conferred upon the "court". That term is defined in s 7(1) of the Conveyancing Act to mean the Supreme Court. On its face, the power conferred by s 66G does not extend to this Court. Nor in any event could a State law operate directly and of its own force in the exercise of federal jurisdiction: APLA Ltd v Legal Services Commissioner of New South Wales (2005) 224 CLR 322 at 406 [229] (Gummow J); Re Wakim; Ex part McNally (1999) 198 CLR 511 (Re Wakim) at 558 [59], 559 [61].
It is at this point that s 79 of the Judiciary Act comes into play. The section provides that:
The laws of each State or Territory, including the laws relating to procedure, evidence, and the competency of witnesses, shall, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution or the laws of the Commonwealth, be binding on all Courts exercising federal jurisdiction in that State or Territory in all cases to which they are applicable.
The High Court has held that s 79 operates to pick up and apply both procedural and substantive State law as a surrogate federal law, thereby enabling courts exercising federal jurisdiction to provide remedies afforded otherwise only under State law in the exercise of State jurisdiction. To the extent that it was pressed, the appellants' argument that s 79 is limited to procedural laws must be rejected. As Gleeson CJ, Gaudron and Gummow JJ explained in Australian Securities Investment Commission v Edensor Nominees Pty Ltd (2001) 204 CLR 599 (Edensor) at 591-592 [68]:
It is well established from the decisions under s 79 of the Judiciary Act, most recently that in Austral Pacific Group Ltd (In liq) v Airservices Australia [(2000) 203 CLR 136 at 143 [13]], that a State statute may be applicable as a source of rights and remedies in federal jurisdiction even though, on its own terms, that law identifies only the courts of the enacting State as the courts to provide those remedies.
(Emphasis added)
Their Honours continued to explain that, if s 79 did not operate in this way:
…the operation of Federal jurisdiction might readily be stultified. There might be withdrawn from courts exercising federal jurisdiction (including this Court) the effective authority to quell controversies in respect of which, by reason, for example, of the identity of parties, s 75 of the Constitution had conferred original jurisdiction upon this Court and s 77 empowered the Parliament to grant authority to the other federal courts and to State courts exercising federal jurisdiction. An attempt by State law to achieve that result would, as to this Court, be repugnant to s 75 of the Constitution. Where jurisdiction was conferred by a law made by the Parliament in exercise of its powers under s 77 of the Constitution, the State law also would be invalid for inconsistency under s 109 of the Constitution.
Thus, while s 79 of the Judiciary Act does not enlarge the reach of State laws as a matter of construction of the State law, the fact that the State law provides only for State courts to enforce its provisions is no impediment to the operation of s 79. As McHugh J explained in Edensor at 612 [137], "The fact that a State statute either expressly or as a matter of construction provides only for State courts to enforce its provisions does not mean that it cannot be 'picked up' and applied by s 79 of the Judiciary Act in the exercise of federal jurisdiction."
The position is different, however, if the State law is not applicable for some other reason. As McHugh J also explained, "courts exercising federal jurisdiction should operate on the hypothesis that s 79 will apply the substance of any relevant State law in so far as it can be applied": Edensor at 613 [141] (emphasis added).
64 The Full Court went on to reject the appellants' arguments as to why the Conveyancing Act was not "applicable".
65 I now turn to consider whether the evidence bearing on the question of whether the order for sale should be made.