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Blog 86. Where a director’s spouse has given a charge, is lodgment of a caveat by the chargee prohibited during a company administration?

Langdon v Tradelink Pty Ltd [2024] VSC 113, Gray J.

The facts were –

Section 440J of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) provided –

‘440J  Administration not to trigger liability of director or relative under guarantee of company’s liability

except with the leave of the Court …’

Gray J dismissed the application, holding –

  1. A caveat lodged under the Transfer of Land Act s. 89 was a statutory injunction, in the sense of preventing registration of new dealings with the title on the Register pending an application under s. 90 or administrative action under s 89A. [41]
  2. In determining whether lodgment of a caveat was prohibited by s. 440J(1)(a) the principles of statutory interpretation were to be applied.  These included: the statutory interpretation process must begin and end with the text used; where the words of a provision were clear, unambiguous, and could be intelligibly applied to the subject matter, the provision must be given its ordinary and grammatical meaning; the text must be interpreted in its context, and context should be considered at first instance, rather than at a later stage when ambiguity might arise; the context included the purpose Parliament intended to achieve, as discerned from the legislation itself, and relevant extrinsic material; the legislative context included the statute as a whole, with an assumption that Parliament intended interrelated provisions to operate coherently, giving effect to ‘harmonious goals’. [25]
  3. By reason of s. 13 of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) section headings were part of the Act. [27]
  4. The principal purpose of s. 440J was to remove any inhibition on directors commencing a voluntary administration. [35]-[36]
  5. Lodgment or extension of a caveat relating to a charge or guarantee did not amount to enforcement, but to prioritisation, of security interests.  The policy underlying s. 440J did not include that a secured creditor could not maintain this priority, even if that were thought necessary or desirable to facilitate a deed of company arrangement. [39]
  6. There was at least a prima facie case that the caveator had an interest in the property as chargee.  Accordingly lodgment of the caveat was permissible from the time the agreement and charge first applied to the property, well before any suggestion of the Guarantee being enforced.  The subsequent commencement of company administration could not alter the fundamental character of the caveat’s lodgment as a step in protecting the chargee’s security interest from a loss of priority but not a step in enforcement of the Guarantee.  Accordingly the lodgment of the caveat did not breach s. 440J(1). [20], [42]-[45]
  7. This case was distinguishable from Waco Kwikform Ltd v Jabbour [2010] NSWSC 1379, being an application under s. 74K of the Real Property Act 1900 (NSW), in response to a lapsing notice, to extend the operation of a caveat lodged before the commencement of a company administration, which decided that s. 440J(1)(a) did not prohibit that application but that it was prohibited by s. 440J(1)(b) so as to require the grant of retrospective leave for extension. [30]-[34]
  8. The balance of convenience favoured maintenance of the caveat.  On the one hand, it was unclear whether the bank would not consent to, or allow the funds needed for, the DOCA.  On the other hand the caveator had established a real risk of prejudice if its caveat was removed, in that it appeared likely that equity in the property may be diminished and there was a real risk that priority might be lost.  The mere fact that removal of the caveat might help bring the DOCA proposal closer to operation did not outweigh this entitlement to priority.  Further, because the DOCA was subject to other conditions precedent there was force in the caveator’s submission that the court could not be satisfied that even if the caveat was removed the DOCA would necessarily proceed – it weighed heavily against the plaintiff that if the caveat was removed the caveator could lose its priority yet the DOCA still not proceed. [49]-[53]

Philip H. Barton

Owen Dixon Chambers West

Friday, November 8, 2024

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