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    Variations to charges: High Court dismisses the appeal in Octaviar
    2011-02-02

    Key Points: The High Court held there was no variation in the terms of the Charge and therefore no registration was required.

    On 1 September 2010 the High Court handed down its much anticipated decision in the appeal from the Queensland Court of Appeal in Re Octaviar Ltd (No 7) [2009] QCA 282, unanimously dismissing the appeal in Public Trustee of Queensland v Fortress Credit Corporation (Aus) 11 Pty Ltd [2010] HCA 29.

    The fixed and floating charge

    Filed under:
    Australia, Banking, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Clayton Utz, Credit (finance), Surety, Debt, Deed, Liability (financial accounting), Legal burden of proof, Capital punishment, Subsidiary, Corporations Act 2001 (Australia), Queensland Supreme Court, High Court of Australia
    Authors:
    John Loxton
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Clayton Utz
    Legislation reversing Sons of Gwalia reintroduced into Parliament
    2010-10-29

    The Government has reintroduced the Corporations Amendment (Sons of Gwalia) Bill 2010 into Parliament to give effect to the Government's decision to reverse the High Court's decision in Sons of Gwalia v Margaretic.

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Bell Gully, Shareholder, Unsecured debt, Liquidation, High Court of Australia
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Bell Gully
    The possibilities of Part X deeds of arrangement
    2010-11-09

    Introduction
    Facts
    High Court judgment


    Introduction

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Insurance, Litigation, Piper Alderman, Beneficiary, Debt, Deed, Australian dollar, Australian Securities and Investments Commission, Trustee, High Court of Australia
    Authors:
    Amanda Banton
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Piper Alderman
    High Court warns: receivers should not give 'usual undertaking as to damages' lightly
    2010-03-18

    Introduction

    The High Court recently considered, in European Bank Limited v Robb Evans of Robb Evans & Associates, the nature and extent of a "usual undertaking as to damages" given by a receiver in accordance with Part 28, rule 7(2) of the Supreme Court Rules 1970 (NSW). In doing so, it overturned the decision of the NSW Court of Appeal to reinstate the trial judge's finding that the receiver was liable for substantial losses suffered by a third party deprived of the funds which were at the heart of the dispute.

    Background

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Norton Rose Fulbright, Injunction, Breach of contract, Citibank, Court of Appeal of England & Wales, High Court of Justice (England & Wales), High Court of Australia, New South Wales Court of Appeal
    Authors:
    Mitchell Mathas , John Holmes , Nino Di Bartolomeo
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Norton Rose Fulbright
    City of Swan v Lehman Brothers: deed of company arrangements and third party releases
    2010-03-26

    The High Court of Australia is expected soon to hand down its judgment in Lehman Brothers v City of Swan. It is likely that this judgment will definitively determine whether Deeds of Company Arrangement under Pt 5.3A of the Corporations Act (“the Act”) are able to force creditors to give releases to third parties. 

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Piper Alderman, Bankruptcy, Statutory interpretation, Dividends, Deed, Liquidator (law), Collateralized debt obligation, Bankruptcy discharge, Right to property, Lehman Brothers, Corporations Act 2001 (Australia), High Court of Australia
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Piper Alderman
    High Court rules on third-party releases within deeds of company arrangement
    2010-05-25

    Background
    Judgment
    Schemes of arrangement
    Costs

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Piper Alderman, Statutory interpretation, Consideration, Debt, Deed, Liquidation, Majority opinion, Lehman Brothers, Corporations Act 2001 (Australia), High Court of Australia
    Authors:
    Amanda Banton
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Piper Alderman
    Victorian Court of Appeal clarifies preference law
    2010-07-01

    Before 1993, the question of whether a creditor of a corporation being wound up had received an unfair preference from that corporation was determined under section 122 of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth). In 1993, a new Part 5.7B was inserted into the Corporations Act to deal with voidable transactions such as unfair preferences. Since then two lines of divergent judicial authority have developed:

    Filed under:
    Australia, Victoria, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Norton Rose Fulbright, Unsecured debt, Debt, Reinsurance, Liquidation, Liquidator (law), Subsidiary, MetLife, Corporations Act 2001 (Australia), Victoria Supreme Court, High Court of Australia
    Authors:
    David Porter , Steven Palmer
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Norton Rose Fulbright
    Bankruptcy and your super: getting it right
    2009-09-01

    The Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) was amended to address the outcome of the High Court's decision in Cook v Benson1. It was held in that case that a trustee in bankruptcy could not recover amounts transferred from a retirement fund to another superannuation fund after the bankruptcy of the member as the amounts rolled over to the fund by or on behalf of the member were made in good faith and for consideration (ie the member had a right to receive benefits on retirement).

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Hall & Wilcox, Share (finance), Bankruptcy, Consideration, Retirement, Liquidation, Good faith, Default (finance), Annuity, Australian Taxation Office, Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, Trustee, High Court of Australia
    Authors:
    Andrew O'Bryan
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Hall & Wilcox
    Bruton Holdings – ATO has no power to garnishee debt after commencement of winding up
    2009-10-07

    Introduction

    By unanimous decision in Bruton Holdings Pty Limited (in liquidation) v Commissioner of Taxation1, five members of the High Court have reversed a controversial decision of the Full Federal Court to confirm that the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) cannot ‘leap-frog’ other creditors in a liquidation.2

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Tax, Herbert Smith Freehills LLP, Debt, Liability (financial accounting), Liquidation, Liquidator (law), Australian Taxation Office, Commissioner of Taxation (Australia), Corporations Act 2001 (Australia), Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Australia), High Court of Justice (England & Wales), Federal Court of Australia, High Court of Australia
    Authors:
    Paul Wenk
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Herbert Smith Freehills LLP
    Federal government steps in to overturn Sons of Gwalia ruling
    2010-02-17

    The High Court of Australia’s Sons of Gwalia Ltd v Margaretic (Sons of Gwalia) decision recognised an aggrieved shareholder’s claim for damages (in relation to the acquisition of shares) on equal footing with those of an insolvent company’s other unsecured creditors. Dispute Resolution Associate, Justin Le Blond, examines the Government’s response to the decision.

    Filed under:
    Australia, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Piper Alderman, Bond market, Shareholder, Unsecured debt, Debt, Misrepresentation, Liquidation, Corporate bond, Distressed securities, Corporations Act 2001 (Australia), High Court of Australia
    Location:
    Australia
    Firm:
    Piper Alderman

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