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Keung v Official Assignee [2021] NZCA 92 (26 March 2021)
Last Updated: 30 March 2021
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW
ZEALANDI
TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
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BETWEEN
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SENG BOU (PAUL) KEUNG Appellant
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AND
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OFFICIAL ASSIGNEE First Respondent
WESTPAC NEW ZEALAND
LIMITED Second Respondent
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Hearing:
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29 September 2020
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Court:
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Brown, Venning and Katz JJ
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Counsel:
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M J Tingey for Appellant M Deligiannis and O L Wilkinson for First
Respondent No appearance for Second Respondent
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Judgment:
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26 March 2021 at 10.30 am
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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
A The appeal is
dismissed.
B There is no order as to
costs.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Katz J)
Introduction
- [1] Seng Bou
(Paul) Keung appeals a decision of Associate Judge Bell, in the High Court
at Auckland, declining to annul Mr Keung’s
bankruptcy adjudication.
- [2] Mr Keung was
adjudicated bankrupt on 20 September 2010, on the basis that he had not paid a
non-party costs order against him
in the sum of $66,155.
- [3] Mr Keung
filed his statement of affairs with the Official Assignee on 9 November
2010. He was automatically discharged from bankruptcy
on
9 November 2013. Almost five years later, in September 2018, Mr Keung
applied to have his bankruptcy annulled under s 309 of
the Insolvency Act 2006
(the Act). That section provides that the Court may, on the application of the
Official Assignee or any
person interested, annul a bankruptcy in certain
circumstances. Under s 309(1)(a) the Court can do this if it considers that the
bankrupt should not have been adjudicated bankrupt. An annulment on that basis
operates retrospectively — it is effective
from the date of
adjudication.[1] Alternatively, if a
bankrupt has fully paid or satisfied all of their debts, and agreed to meet the
Official Assignee’s fees
and costs, they can seek an annulment under
s 309(1)(b). Such an annulment operates only from the date of the order of
annulment.[2]
- [4] Although Mr
Keung meets the criteria for a s 309(1)(b) annulment, he does not seek an
annulment on that basis. Mr Keung wants
to completely remove the
“stain” of bankruptcy from his record. He believes that the only
way to do this is by obtaining
a retrospective annulment under s 309(1)(a).
- [5] Associate
Judge Bell found that the non-party costs order was made in breach of natural
justice and that Mr Keung should not therefore
have been adjudged bankrupt based
on that debt.[3] Those findings are
not appealed. The Judge declined to annul Mr Keung’s bankruptcy,
however, on the basis that Mr Keung lacked
standing to attack the non-party
costs order by asking the court to “look behind” the relevant
judgment. The Judge further
found that, even if Mr Keung had standing, it would
not have been appropriate in all the circumstances for the Court to have
exercised
its discretion to grant an annulment.
- [6] The key
issues raised by Mr Keung’s appeal are:
(a) whether the Judge
made an error of law in finding that Mr Keung lacked standing to seek an
annulment of the bankruptcy adjudication
on a basis that required the Court to
go behind the judgment debt; and
(b) whether the Judge erred in concluding that (regardless of the issue of
standing) this would not have been an appropriate case
for the exercise of the
Court’s discretion to grant an annulment.
- [7] We propose
to consider these issues in reverse order. We do so on the basis that if the
Judge was correct in his conclusion that
it would not be appropriate to annul Mr
Keung’s bankruptcy, regardless of any standing issues, then the issue of
standing is
academic. In that event, it would be more appropriate for the issue
of standing to be considered and determined by this Court in
a future case in
which it has real practical significance.
Further background
- [8] Mr Keung had
previously been (voluntarily) bankrupted in 1997. He was discharged from that
bankruptcy in 2000. Mr Keung, or
interests associated with him, subsequently
acquired a farm near Kaikoura (the Goose Bay Ranch) that he planned to develop
into a
tourism business and sustainable hunting game park. In 2007,
GBR Investment Ltd (a company associated with the Koulanov family)
acquired
an interest in the Goose Bay property. This was achieved by the property being
sold to Goose Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd. GBR
Trustees Ltd (a trustee company
associated with the Keung family) owned the majority of the shares in that
company. GBR Investment
Ltd owned a significant minority interest.
- [9]
Unfortunately, the relationship between Mr Keung and the Koulanov family broke
down. GBR Investment Ltd successfully applied
for Goose Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd
to be put into liquidation.[4]
Although Mr Keung was not a defendant in that proceeding, he gave evidence as a
director of Goose Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd.
- [10] GBR
Investment Ltd, as the successful plaintiff, sought costs against Goose Bay
Ranch Holdings Ltd and also three non-parties
— GBR Trustees Ltd, Mr
Keung, and another company associated with Mr Keung. The non-parties were not
served with the costs
application/memorandum (although Goose Bay Ranch Holdings
Ltd was). Goose Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd filed a memorandum on costs, but
the
non‑parties did not. Associate Judge Gendall nevertheless ordered costs
against the non-parties on the basis
that:[5]
...I am satisfied
that Mr Keung, although a non-party, through his interests is likely to have
funded the defence to the present application
and it is clear he also clearly
controlled and directed this defence and must have believed that he and his
interests stood to benefit
from the litigation... Under all the present
circumstances, I take the view that it is entirely fair and proper for the costs
order
which is to follow in favour of the plaintiff to be made also against
Mr Keung as a non-party jointly and severally...
Mr Keung disputes that he funded the defence and says that, if he had been
given the chance, he would have given evidence about the
source of the funding.
- [11] Mr Keung
appealed both the liquidation decision and the non-party costs decision. He
also sought a stay of execution of the
costs order. His stay applications were
declined by the High Court[6] and by
this Court.[7] It appears that the
natural justice argument (that the non-parties had not been served with the
costs memorandum) did not feature
to any significant degree in the arguments
advanced at the stay hearings.
- [12] Mr Keung
did not comply with GBR Investment Ltd’s bankruptcy notice, which was
based on the non-party costs order. Although
there is a dispute about whether
Mr Keung was formally served with the bankruptcy application, it is of no
practical consequence
as the application clearly came to Mr Keung’s
attention. He was represented by counsel at a call of the bankruptcy
application
on 2 August 2010, but Mr Keung was not represented at
subsequent hearings. On 20 September 2010, Associate Judge Osborne
adjudicated
Mr Keung bankrupt in his absence. Mr Keung was clearly aware
of that hearing, as he had corresponded with the Registry to seek an
adjournment.
- [13] On 13
October 2010, the Official Assignee discontinued Mr Keung’s costs appeal.
Mr Keung first contacted the Official
Assignee two days later, at which time he
objected to the discontinuation of his appeals, to no avail.
- [14] In
November 2013, just before his discharge from bankruptcy, Mr Keung applied under
s 226 of the Act to reverse the decisions
of the Official Assignee to
discontinue the liquidation and non-party costs appeals. Subsequently, however,
in a deed dated 26 July
2016, Mr Keung agreed to discontinue those applications.
In exchange, the Official Assignee agreed to take a neutral stance on any
actions Mr Keung might take to restore the appeals in his capacity as a
trustee or director of a third
party.[8]
If Mr Keung
had the necessary standing, would this be an appropriate case for the exercise
of the Court’s discretion to grant
an annulment under s 309(1)(a)?
- [15] As the
Judge noted, even if one of the s 309(1) grounds are made out, the Court has a
residual discretion whether to annul the
adjudication. The Judge indicated that
he would not have exercised that discretion in Mr Keung’s favour. He
identified three
factors that weighed against granting an
annulment:[9]
(a) that Mr
Keung was clearly insolvent when he was made bankrupt;
(b) that Mr Keung had delayed in his application for annulment; and
(c) that Mr Keung had been bankrupt before.
- [16] Mr Tingey
submitted, on behalf of Mr Keung, that a properly balanced exercise of
discretion would favour the annulment being
granted. The Judge, he submitted,
gave improper weight to factors which he considered weighed against an annulment
being granted
and failed to take into account other relevant factors. Further,
he submitted, the decision is “plainly wrong”.
- [17] Although Mr
Tingey’s written submissions tended to approach this aspect of the appeal
as an appeal from the exercise of
a discretion, he submitted at the appeal
hearing that the Court should treat it as a general appeal, because the Judge
was ultimately
not required to exercise his discretion given his view that Mr
Keung lacked standing. Rather, the Judge simply set out how he would
have exercised his discretion if Mr Keung had had standing. Mr Tingey
acknowledged, however, that little is likely to turn on the
approach the Court
adopts.
- [18] In our view
this aspect of the appeal is appropriately treated as an appeal against the
exercise of a discretion.[10] The
Judge conducted a careful analysis of the factors he saw as relevant to the
exercise of the Court’s discretion, and provided
a reasoned decision for
his view that it would not have been appropriate for the Court to exercise its
discretion to grant an annulment
if he were wrong on the issue of standing. We
share Mr Tingey’s view, however, that little turns on the precise
approach.
Mr Keung’s solvency at the time of his
adjudication
- [19] The first
factor that the Judge identified as weighing against an annulment was that Mr
Keung was insolvent at the time of his
bankruptcy. The Judge made the
following observations on this
issue:[11]
[73] Mr
Keung’s statement of assets and liabilities made in October 2010 showed
that he had minimal assets and that his liabilities
were large - $830,000. The
claims notified to the Official Assignee were much larger, although most were
not examined. While Mr
Keung contested some of them, especially that made by GBR
Investment Ltd, he was clearly insolvent. Even if no costs order had been
made
against him, he still faced a serious solvency problem. That may have arisen
from the liquidation of Goose Bay Ranch Holdings
Ltd, which Mr Keung sees
as having caused a major loss of value, but that does not take away from the
fact that he was broke. While
the Koulanovs may have pursued him zealously, his
bankruptcy does appear inevitable. He seems to have recognised that by not
opposing
the bankruptcy application. If he was going to be made bankrupt
anyway, there is less reason for annulling his adjudication.
- [20] Mr Tingey
submitted that the Judge erred in focussing on the fact that
Mr Keung’s liabilities exceeded his assets, rather
than whether he
could meet his liabilities when they fell
due.[12] He argued that it is
speculative to assume that Mr Keung would not have been able to meet his
debts and, further, that the Judge
failed to take into account other assets
listed in Mr Keung’s statement of position.
- [21] We
accept Ms Deligiannis’s submission, however, that the “other
assets” listed in Mr Keung’s statement
of position are speculative
claims based on uncertain future events. They include, for example, a claimed
indemnity from Goose Bay
Ranch Holdings Ltd. That company has been in
liquidation since November 2009 and remains in liquidation. Although Goose Bay
Ranch
Holdings Ltd may have had some fairly limited assets available to it,
there is no evidence that it was in a position to provide any
significant
financial support to Mr Keung relative to the level of his debt.
- [22] Mr Keung
also claimed a possible recovery from GBR Investments Ltd as an asset. He had
apparently failed to advance such a claim
at the time of his bankruptcy,
however. The prospect of any such recovery was therefore speculative and
remote. Little or no weight
could reasonably have been given to the prospect of
significant recoveries from these types of prospective claims.
- [23] Evidence
supporting the inference that Mr Keung was unable to meet his debts at the time
he was adjudicated bankrupt includes
the
following:
(a) On 21 May 2010, French J
issued a teleconference minute declining Mr Keung’s application for a
stay of execution of the
non-party costs order pending an appeal. She records
that Mr Keung’s lawyer had advised the Court that it would not be possible
for Mr Keung to either make payment or provide security pending the appeal. GBR
Investments Ltd accordingly opposed a stay “given
Mr Keung’s
obviously perilous financial
position”.[13]
(b) On 16 September 2010, Mr Keung sent an email to the High Court Registry
seeking an adjournment of his bankruptcy hearing, which
was scheduled for
20 September 2010. He advised that he was seeking legal aid and, further,
that his lawyer was “preparing
a Creditors Proposal on my behalf and
on behalf of the two companies”. However, “[u]ntil legal aid
is accepted we are
required to raise funds for each part of advice and legal
work undertaken and this is slowing down the process”. Mr Keung
sought
time “to find ways to achieve a more robust financial solution” for
his creditors and stated that his personal
assets totalled only $8,500, although
he had managed to get some outside support from a family business for a
creditor’s proposal.
Mr Keung noted that his associated trustee
companies also had no assets, only an ability to sue and claim against GBR
Investments
Ltd.
(c) Having failed to obtain an adjournment, Mr Keung did not appear in Court
on 20 September 2010 to oppose being adjudicated bankrupt.
Nor did he appeal
the bankruptcy adjudication.
(d) On 15 October 2010, Mr Keung stated in an email to the Official Assignee
that:
... I have nothing Robert but an old car and my dive gear, I have no funds at
this time personally, and recently asked a friend to
send me some as I
can’t even afford to come home in reality although I have a return ticket
that I brought. I have been living
with a family friend in England and with my
friends family in Norway ... Over my life I have supported a lot of people and
charities
now I suppose it is my turn to be looked after.
During my time in NZ I have been battling [health issues] .... my doctor has
me off work and I was on the sickness benefit and she
told me to get away from
all the Court work until I was better, so I did just over two months ago, that
is what I am doing, but then
I was made bankrupt, so I have not really had a
break.
...
... I am not directly or indirectly in control of assets, I am not a
beneficiaries of any Trust or organization that I know of that
has any assets.
I am not a settler of any active or asset owning Trust. No one is holding
assets for me. I am not owed any money
personally from any company or Trust. I
have no assets overseas or in NZ .
...
It is my sincere request that you help me find a way to make a claim in
relation to the matters at hand [i.e. a claim against the
Koulanov interests], I
am counting on that as my only way to find any funds to address creditors and
... restore my financial situation.
(e) The statement of assets, debts and liabilities dated 21 October 2010 that
Mr Keung provided to the Official Assignee lists assets
(excluding
the “other assets” referred to at [21] above) of $4,500 (comprising
furniture, personal property and a motor vehicle) and liabilities of $830,000,
including significant
debts owing to Westpac.
(f) Mr Keung’s statement of affairs of 9 November 2010 recorded that
Mr Keung was currently on a sickness benefit, had been
unemployed for two
months (predating his bankruptcy) and was unlikely to gain paid employment in
the next 12 months. The type of
income he was receiving was noted as
“Gifts/Friends/Family/Woofing”. He stated that he was paying off
outstanding court
fines at the rate of (only) $7.00 per week. He said that he
had sought budget advice and tried to settle his debts. In response
to the
question “When did you become unable to pay your debts as they became due?
What made you choose this date?” Mr
Keung did not dispute that he was
unable to pay his debts. Rather, he simply stated, “Not sure –
Judgment was by Court
Order in my absence”.
(g) In an email to the Official Assignee dated 20 July 2011, Mr Keung stated
that:
I still hv no property or assets, other than my car and some personal
belongings and still hope things will turn around in my bankruptcy
for the
better.
- [24] Mr
Keung’s own evidence therefore paints a dire picture of his financial
position at the relevant time.
- [25] Mr Tingey
submitted, however, that there is clear evidence that Mr Keung would have been
able to meet his debts, because during
his bankruptcy (and subsequently) he
did settle all his debts, including those owing pursuant to personal guarantees.
This was despite
the financial difficulties he faced as a result of being
adjudicated bankrupt. In total Mr Keung paid over $500,000 to creditors,
over
$100,000 for the liquidators’ costs and $101,000 to the party who issued
the bankruptcy notice.
- [26] The
Official Assignee, on the other hand, realised only $665.13 in assets
(a tax refund) and was notified of potential claims
in excess of $5
million. Of this, $3,706,440 was a claim from GBR Investment Ltd. Mr Keung
challenged this under s 238 of the Act.
Eventually, by deed dated 24 May 2017,
the matter was settled and GBR Investment Ltd and the Koulanov interests
withdrew any claims
in relation to Goose Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd and the Keung
interests and agreed to not oppose any application to annul Mr Keung’s
bankruptcy.
- [27] Mr Keung
filed his annulment application on 16 September 2018, and an amended application
on 12 April 2019.
- [28] By late
2018, Mr Keung appears to have settled all of the claims against him (including
claims pursuant to personal guarantees)
apart from a claim by Westpac, which was
settled subsequently. A number of these claims were settled during the period
of Mr Keung’s
bankruptcy, with the remaining claims being settled after
Mr Keung’s discharge. Although the source of the funds to settle
those debts is not entirely clear, they were not settled by the Official
Assignee. Nor is there any suggestion that they were otherwise
settled from Mr
Keung’s personal assets. Mr Tingey submitted that the appropriate
inference, including from the evidence referred
to at [23(b)] above, is that Mr
Keung has access to family money and used this resource to settle his debts. Mr
Tingey submitted
that, in assessing Mr Keung’s solvency at the
relevant time, the Court should take into account his ability to access funds
through his family interests.
- [29] We reject
that submission. At the time of Mr Keung’s bankruptcy
(and subsequently) there is no evidence that his family
interests had
entered into any binding commitment to meet Mr Keung’s debts as they fell
due. Mr Keung’s solvency must
therefore be assessed with reference to his
ability to meet his debts from his own resources. As set out above, even on Mr
Keung’s
own analysis, his assets and income were negligible, and his
debts very significant. Mr Keung clearly had no realistic prospect
of paying
his debts (which included outstanding legal fees and credit card bills) as they
fell due.
- [30] It is also
of note that the negotiations that took place between Mr Keung and his creditors
occurred against the backdrop of
Mr Keung’s bankruptcy. Most or all of
his creditors appear to have settled for significantly less than the full amount
of
their claims.
- [31] Mr
Keung’s settlement of his debts over a period of many years, apparently
using money provided by family interests, does
not therefore support the
conclusion that, at the time of his bankruptcy, Mr Keung was able to meet his
debts as they fell due.
- [32] Taking the
various matters we have outlined into account, the Judge was correct in our view
to conclude that Mr Keung was insolvent
at the time of his bankruptcy. This is
a factor that weighs heavily against annulling his adjudication.
Delay in seeking an annulment
- [33] The second
factor that the Judge said weighed against annulling Mr Keung’s
bankruptcy was his significant delay in seeking
an annulment. The Judge noted
that Mr Keung did not file his annulment application until eight years after he
had been adjudicated
bankrupt. The Judge considered that after “such a
long time the value of finality should not be
disturbed”,[14] with reference
to a number of previous cases where annulment had been refused on the grounds of
delay.[15]
- [34] Mr Tingey
accepted that delay may be a factor weighing against an annulment but submitted
that the Judge had placed undue weight
on delay in this case.
In particular, he submitted, the importance of finality is significantly
diminished here because no third
parties would be practically affected by an
annulment. Mr Tingey further submitted that the delay must be seen in the
context that
Mr Keung was facing significant stress-related health issues at the
time of his adjudication. Subsequently, his ability to attend
to legal matters
was affected by earthquakes in Christchurch (2010) and Kaikoura (2016) and
changes in his legal team. Mr Keung
also hoped that other legal proceedings he
was involved in may have assisted in a later annulment application.
- [35] We do not
find any of these arguments persuasive. As we have noted above, Mr Keung
compromised the various claims against him
(apparently using family resources)
against the backdrop of his bankruptcy. As a result, he was in a very strong
negotiating position,
because the likely alternative was that his creditors
would receive nothing. The submission that no third parties would be
practically
affected by an annulment, and that his bankruptcy should therefore
be annulled retrospectively (rather than prospectively under s
309(1)(b)), must
be assessed in this broader context. Having obtained a significant advantage
from his bankruptcy in terms of his
dealings with third party creditors, Mr
Keung now seeks to annul it retrospectively, on the basis that third parties
will not be
affected.
- [36] As for the
various explanations provided for the delay, they are far from compelling and
certainly cannot justify an eight-year
delay in seeking an annulment. As the
Judge noted, for the purposes of considering the delay factor, time will not run
against a
bankrupt until he becomes aware of the circumstances that allow him to
apply for an annulment.[16] In Mr
Keung’s case time started running from the day he was adjudicated
bankrupt.
- [37] The
principle of finality is accorded significant weight in the insolvency context,
due to the need to promote commercial
certainty.[17] The principle is
reflected in various provisions of the Act. For example, a bankruptcy
adjudication is final, unless set aside
on
appeal.[18] Similarly, an
adjudication of bankruptcy cannot be recalled or rescinded under s 414 or
through the Court’s inherent jurisdiction.
Rather, the only course is to
annul the bankruptcy under s
309.[19]
- [38] In our view
the Judge was correct to conclude that Mr Keung’s delay of eight years in
filing the annulment application
weighed strongly against granting it.
Mr Keung’s previous bankruptcy
- [39] The third
factor that the Judge suggested weighed against an annulment was that this was
Mr Keung’s second
bankruptcy:[20]
[77] Mr Keung has been bankrupt once before – from 15
September 1997 to 15 September 2000. A retrospective annulment may be
justified to clear the stain of bankruptcy, if there was no basis for the
adjudication, but that argument is harder if the debtor
has been bankrupt before
and was insolvent when he was adjudicated a second time.
In essence, the Judge found that the effect of an annulment on Mr
Keung’s reputation would be less as it was already “stained”
by the first bankruptcy (a voluntary bankruptcy).
- [40] Mr Tingey
submitted that the Judge erred in failing to take into account that, as a second
bankruptcy, the record of it would
never be removed from the Insolvency
Register[21] and so would continue
to have a significant adverse effect on Mr Keung and his business dealings.
- [41] Mr Tingey
also referred to the following passage of Mr Keung’s
evidence:
Each day I am forced to deal with the stigma and
oppressive internet advertising under my name search which stem from these
injustices.
The prejudice this causes are of a major concern to me and
those I associate with. I am only seeking to find the best solutions
to ease
the burden and bring an end to the undermining of many positive achievements I
am a part of.
- [42] Mr Keung
further explained in cross-examination that he is still involved in property and
investment affairs and “would
like to achieve an exoneration”. He
expressed concern that the series of proceedings relating to his association
with the
Goose Bay investment and the Koulanov family interests had lasted over
10 years and “has constantly brought into question my
character”.
- [43] Ms
Deligiannis submitted that, given Mr Keung’s prior bankruptcy, a
retrospective annulment would not clear the stain of
bankruptcy from his name.
Even if his second bankruptcy was annulled and the record of the bankruptcy
removed from the Insolvency
Register, the fact that he has been adjudicated
bankrupt will always be available information on the internet for anyone who is
interested
enough to search for it. The stain of being adjudicated bankrupt
will remain.
- [44] Although
the annulment of Mr Keung’s second bankruptcy would likely reduce the
“stain” against his name to
some extent, some stain will inevitably
remain. Any media or other reports of both Mr Keung’s bankruptcies will
likely remain
on the internet (regardless of the removal of such information
from the Insolvency Register). Permanently removing information from
the
internet is likely to be challenging, if not impossible. Further, it is
apparent from Mr Keung’s evidence that his concerns
about adverse
publicity extend far beyond the fact of his second bankruptcy. An annulment
will have little or no effect on the availability
on the internet of media
coverage of the protracted litigation between Mr Keung (and his associated
interests) and the Koulanov interests
which Mr Keung says has
“constantly” brought into question his character.
- [45] Taking
these matters into account, in our view the Judge was correct to find that Mr
Keung’s previous bankruptcy weighs
against an annulment, although this
factor does not carry as much weight as the other two factors the Judge
identified.
Is the absence of moral wrongdoing a relevant
factor?
- [46] Mr Tingey
referred to two other factors (not considered by the Judge) that, he submitted,
weighed in favour of an annulment.
- [47] First, Mr
Tingey submitted that the Judge ought to have considered the absence of moral
wrongdoing by Mr Keung as a factor balancing
in favour of annulment, as
Woodhouse J did in Re
Wallace.[22] In particular, Mr
Tingey submitted that, following his second bankruptcy, Mr Keung did his utmost
to ensure all rightful creditors
were paid and has settled all his debts.
- [48] There is no
discussion in Wallace of the significance of the absence of
“moral misconduct” in that case. That fact was only mentioned
in passing and does
not appear to have formed a material (or possibly any) part
of the Court’s reasoning. The annulment in Wallace was sought on
the basis that the debts of the bankrupt had been fully paid or satisfied (the
ground now set out in s 309(1)(b)).
The Court was satisfied that Mr Wallace had
fully paid all of his debts, apart from a proof of debt lodged by his
family which had been rejected by the Official Assignee. An annulment
was
granted accordingly.
- [49] This case
differs from Wallace in that Mr Keung has not fully paid his creditors
but has instead reached a compromise with each of them. As we have noted
previously,
the quantum of those compromises was no doubt influenced by
Mr Keung’s bankruptcy.
- [50] In any
event, we do not find it helpful to view this issue through a
“moral wrongdoing” lens. The Act clearly recognises
that the
fact that a bankrupt has fully paid or satisfied his debts may be relevant to an
application for an annulment. Indeed,
that is the basis for an annulment under
s 309(1)(b). We also accept that this factor may be relevant to the exercise of
the discretion
under s 309(1)(a), and that it is a factor weighing in favour of
an annulment in this case. As noted, however, this factor carries
less weight
in circumstances where the debts have been compromised rather than fully paid.
Is annulment the appropriate remedy for the breaches of Mr
Keung’s rights?
- [51] Mr
Tingey’s final argument was that the Judge ought to have considered the
role that annulment would play in remedying
the breaches of
Mr Keung’s rights, namely:
(a) the breach of his right to
natural justice by not being served with the non-party costs’ application;
and
(b) the breach of his right of access to the court by being adjudicated
bankrupt when he ought not to have been.
- [52] Mr Tingey
submitted that the only realistically available remedy for the breach of these
rights that is sufficient and would
grant any relief to Mr Keung would be an
annulment of his bankruptcy.
- [53] Mr
Wilkinson, who addressed this particular argument on behalf of the Official
Assignee, acknowledged that the Judge did not
explicitly consider the
infringement of s 27 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, but submitted
that there was no need for
him to do so. Rather, that part of the judgment was
premised on the established breach of Mr Keung’s natural justice
rights.
- [54] Mr
Wilkinson further submitted that, in any event, the Bill of Rights Act does not
necessarily lead to an annulment because there
were other effective remedies
available to Mr Keung. This case is therefore distinguishable from both
Baigent’s Case[23] and
Attorney-General v Taylor[24]
in that Mr Keung can receive a remedy under the Act if he follows the
appropriate process. Specifically, Mr Keung could have:
(a) opposed the bankruptcy and sought an adjournment until the
appeal against the non-party costs judgment had been determined;
(b) appealed the bankruptcy order and sought an order under s 416 of the Act
suspending the adjudication pending the appeal to this
Court;
(c) applied at any time for an order for discharge from bankruptcy under
s 294(1) of the Act; and/or
(d) filed judicial review proceedings against the decision of the Official
Assignee.[25]
- [55] In November
2013 (three years out of time and just prior to his discharge), Mr Keung
did apply under s 226 of the Act to reverse
the decisions of the Official
Assignee to discontinue the appeals against the liquidation and costs decisions.
Subsequently, however,
in a deed dated 26 July 2016, Mr Keung agreed to
discontinue those applications.
- [56] We accept
Mr Wilkinson’s submission that the Act provided other remedies for the
breaches of Mr Keung’s rights.
Mr Keung elected not to pursue those
remedies in a timely fashion, or at all. The remedy he did pursue (albeit
belatedly) was discontinued.
- [57] The Court,
of course, retains a residual discretion to grant Mr Keung the particular remedy
he seeks (an annulment), but the
fact that there were other avenues of redress
available, that Mr Keung elected not to pursue, is relevant.
Conclusion on the exercise of the Court’s
discretion
- [58] Mr Keung
was clearly insolvent at the time of his adjudication. This is a factor that
weighs heavily against an annulment, as
is the eight-year delay in seeking an
annulment. Further, given Mr Keung’s previous bankruptcy, it will not be
possible to
entirely remove the “stain” of bankruptcy from his name,
although we accept that that stain is significantly compounded
by the second
bankruptcy.
- [59] Mr Keung
has now satisfied all of his debts — a factor that weighs in favour of an
annulment. Indeed, Mr Keung would have
strong grounds for an annulment under s
309(1)(b) on this basis. Mr Keung, however, wants a retrospective annulment
under s 309(1)(a).
As we have explained, the fact that Mr Keung has satisfied
all of his debts carries somewhat less weight when seeking a retrospective
annulment, as Mr Keung has had the benefit of being able to compromise his debts
in circumstances where his creditors had minimal
negotiating power due to his
bankruptcy.
- [60] Finally,
while an annulment is an available remedy for the breach of
Mr Keung’s rights, there are other remedies available
under the Act.
It is significant that Mr Keung chose not to avail himself of most of these, and
discontinued the one remedy he did
pursue (the s 226 application).
- [61] Taking all
of these matters into account, it is our view that the Judge did not err in
concluding that if Mr Keung had the necessary
standing this would not be an
appropriate case for the exercise of the Court’s discretion to annul his
bankruptcy under s 309(1)(a).
- [62] Given our
conclusion on this issue, it is not necessary for us to determine whether the
Judge was correct to find that Mr Keung
lacked standing to seek an annulment on
a basis that required the Court to go behind the petitioning creditor’s
judgment debt.
We accordingly do not propose to address that
issue.
Result
- [63] The appeal
is dismissed.
- [64] As neither
party sought costs, there is no order as to
costs.
Solicitors:
Ronald W. Angland & Son,
Leeston for Appellant
Crown Law Office, Wellington for First Respondent
[1] Insolvency Act 2006, s
309(3)(a).
[2] Section 309(3)(b).
[3] Keung v Official Assignee
[2020] NZHC 32 [High Court judgment].
[4] GBR Investment Ltd v Goose
Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd [2009] NZHC 2385; [2010] NZCCLR 11 (HC).
[5] GBR Investment Ltd v Goose
Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd HC Christchurch CIV-2009-409-613, 21 April 2010
at [20].
[6] GBR Investment Ltd v Goose
Bay Ranch Holdings Ltd HC Christchurch CIV-2009-409-613, 21 May 2010
(Minute of French J).
[7] Keung v GBR Investment Ltd
[2010] NZCA 396, [2012] NZAR 17.
[8] In the High Court, the Judge
said Mr Keung did not have standing as either director or trustee to challenge
the costs order at issue:
see High Court judgment, above n 3, at
[64]–[69]. That aspect of the decision has not been appealed.
[9] High Court judgment, above n
3, at [72].
[10] Kacem v Bashir
[2010] NZSC 112, [2011] 2 NZLR 1 at [32] per Blanchard, Tipping and
McGrath JJ. See also May v May (1982) 1 NZFLR 165 (CA) at
169‑170.
[11] High Court judgment, above
n 3.
[12] See Holdgate v Blocassa
Ltd [2007] NZCA 132 at [19].
[13] Minute of French J, above n
6, at [7].
[14] High Court judgment, above
n 3, at [76].
[15] See Re Ponsford, ex
parte Ponsford [1904] UKLawRpKQB 159; [1904] 2 KB 704 (CA) where a delay of three months was held
fatal. See also Re Williams (1968) 13 FLR 10 (Federal Court of
Bankruptcy), and domestically Creser v Creser [2014] NZHC 3267 at [50]
where a two-year and a ten-year delay respectively weighed against the Judge
exercising their discretion to annul a bankruptcy.
[16] High Court judgment, above
n 3, at [75].
[17] See Creser v Creser,
above n 15, at [45]–[48]; and Re Guest, ex parte BNZ Finance Ltd
[1991] 1 NZLR 250 (HC) at 255.
[18] Insolvency Act, s 61.
[19] See Re Byron (a debtor),
ex parte Commissioner of Inland Revenue [1964] NZLR 508 (SC); and
Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Faloon [2016] NZHC 990.
[20] High Court judgment, above
n 3.
[21] Insolvency Act, s 449A.
[22] Re Wallace (a bankrupt)
[1964] NZLR 863 (SC).
[23] Simpson v
Attorney-General [1994] 3 NZLR 667 (CA) [Baigent’s Case] at 676
per Cooke P.
[24] These were cases when the
Court resorted to unprecedented remedies for Bill of Rights Act breaches as no
other effective remedy
was available: see Attorney-General v Taylor
[2018] NZSC 104, [2019] 1 NZLR 213 at [41] per Glazebrook and Ellen
France JJ and [104] per Elias CJ.
[25] Mawhinney v Environment
Court [2015] NZHC 1663 at [14]–[21].
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