SOLVENCY
11 The applicant has asserted that he was solvent at the time of the making of the sequestration order.
12 It is difficult to see how such a submission could be maintained given:
(a) the sequence of events that I have just described concerning the Part X proposal;
(b) the fact that the disclosures made in his various statements of affairs indicate a substantial excess of liabilities over assets at the time of the making of the sequestration order (see for example his statement of affairs dated 2 February 2015 disclosing assets of $26,400 and liabilities of $930,000 although the applicant now says that this provided an "incomplete overview"), indeed now;
(c) the Trustees' investigations and reports to date, which demonstrate that he was at the time of the making of the sequestration order and is now insolvent.
13 Nevertheless, the applicant asserts that he was solvent at the time of the making of the sequestration order. To support that position, he relies upon an arrangement he had with his father by way of gift. He also relies upon this arrangement to say that he is now or can become solvent.
14 His father has deposed to the following at [9] to [18] of his affidavit:
9. In or around December 2014, I became aware of my son's financial difficulties in paying his creditors.
10. On or around 22 December 2014, during a telephone conversation with my son, I indicated to him that, upon his request, and so long as it was within my financial capacity, I would be prepared to gift to him any sum of money he required to pay his debts.
11. I also indicated to my son that, before I made any gift of money to him, he would need to visit me in Hong Kong. This was so that I could better understand his financial difficulties, and the logistics of effecting a gift of money to him.
12. On or around 6 January 2015, I met my son in Hong Kong to discuss his financial difficulties and the logistics of my proposed gift. We agreed at that meeting that, upon my son's request and subject to my financial capacity:
(a) I would gift to him any amount of money he required to pay his debts; and
(b) this gift would be effected through an immediate bank transfer from my bank account with Hang Seng Bank Limited to my son's Australian bank account.
13. In accordance with this agreement, as at 22 January 2015, had my son requested, I would have gifted him the amount of money he required to pay his debts then due and payable.
14. Annexed and marked "WSY-1" is a true copy of a bank statement issued by Hang Seng Bank Limited on 27 March 2015 setting out the balance of the deposits held in my name with the bank as at the close of business on 22 January 2015.
15. As noted on page 3 of this bank statement, the total value of the deposits noted in the statement is equivalent to HKD 23,533,384.81 applying the exchange rate offered by Hang Seng Bank Limited on 22 January 2015.
16. As at 22 January 2015, using the Reserve Bank of Australia HKD/AUD exchange rate for that day as noted on the spreadsheet "Exchange Rates-Daily-2014 to Current" downloadable from the Reserve Bank of Australia website (namely, HKD 6.2574 = AUD 1), HKD 23,533,384.81 equated to AUD 3,760,888.68. Annexed and marked "WSY-2" is a copy of an extract of the spreadsheet downloaded from the Reserve Bank of Australia website.
17. The deposits held in my name with Hang Seng Bank Limited on 22 January 2015 were readily available to be transferred to my son to allow him to pay his debts then due and payable.
18. If the Court does order my son's bankruptcy to be annulled, and should my son require it to remain solvent, I will gift him sufficient money for him to pay his creditors to the extent that the claims of his creditors relate to debts which are due and payable.
15 I have a number of difficulties with this arrangement in terms of whether it establishes that the applicant was solvent at the time of the sequestration order or now.
16 First, even though the father had such money at the time of the sequestration order, there is no evidence as to the father's overall financial position then and now and other demands that may have been or may be placed on such funds by the father's other creditors, notwithstanding what was said at [17].
17 Second, the conversation in or around 6 January 2015 had the qualification "subject to my financial capacity".
18 Third, the arrangement seems to have been qualified in terms of paying "his debts then due and payable" (see at [13]). Given the incorrect characterisation by the applicant of Zhenfa's debt as only contingent, which I later discuss, this statement has a latent and important qualification.
19 Fourth, as this was an agreement to confer a gift, its enforceability is problematic to say the least.
20 Fifth, if this was truly property available to the applicant, it should have been disclosed in the applicant's statement of affairs as an asset which was then available to the Trustees to deal with. It was not disclosed in that context.
21 Sixth, in terms of addressing the question of solvency now, the conditionality of what was said in [18] does not suggest that the applicant is presently solvent.
22 Seventh, and relatedly, the gift is not and has never been unconditional. In addition to the father's description, the applicant's description of his father's proposed gift is in the hypothetical phraseology of "would gift to me any sum of money I required", "if he were to proceed with his proposed gift", and "upon my request … he would gift to me".
23 Generally, apart from this arrangement with the father, there is no other material to demonstrate that at the time of the making of the sequestration order or now, the applicant was solvent.