Liquidator "fabricated" key document – High Court
Liquidator "fabricated" key document – High Court
28 July 2016
A High Court finding this month that a liquidator fabricated a key document and failed to account for receipts of over half a million dollars highlights the need for regulation of the insolvency profession.
The
case
The liquidator, Geoff
Martin Smith, claimed to have sent a notice under section
305 of the Companies Act to the bank holding security over
the company in liquidation. The notice required the
bank’s election, in default of which its security would be
deemed surrendered. The bank said it never received the
notice.
The Court was satisfied that the document had been fabricated:
• expert forensic evidence, after examining
the relevant computer, was that it had been created only
recently
•
• it was addressed to an officer of
the bank whose first contact with Mr Smith was not until
about four months after the date of the alleged
notice
•
• the photo allegedly proving service
depicted a stamp which had not been published until 22
months after the event, and
•
• Mr Smith had a
history of dishonesty, including convictions for tax
evasion, theft, fraud and falsifying
documents.
•
The Court ordered him to pay
$540,402.82 plus interest, being funds he had received which
were subject to the bank’s security.
View the case here.1
The current
regime
Previous case law
has confirmed that liquidators are officers of the Court and
as such are:2
“obliged to act in a manner consistent
with the highest principles”,
and
“not permitted to take advantage
of the strict legal rights available to them if to do so
would mean that they were acting unjustly, inequitably, or
unfairly”.
In 2012 the High Court held
that the Court's oversight applies whether the liquidator is
appointed by the court or by shareholders:3
“The
intention of the New Zealand Parliament, when the 1993 Act
was enacted, was to put all liquidators on an equal footing.
That means that the Court’s ability to exercise its
inherent jurisdiction to supervise liquidators, previously
restricted to those appointed by the Court, now applies to
all, however appointed”.
The Court
therefore holds all liquidators to particularly high
standards of conduct.
Mr Smith fell below those high standards.
Chapman Tripp
comments
This case, which
has involved a significant amount of litigation over time,
shows the delay and cost that can be caused by liquidators
who do not act with propriety.
Currently there is no “fit and proper person” test for liquidators. No training, qualification, registration or licensing is required.
New Zealand is unusual in that regard. It is a situation that ought to change.
For further information, please contact the lawyers featured.
Footnotes:
1
McKay v Johnson & Smith [2016] NZHC
1691
2 Strategic Finance Ltd (in rec & in
liq) v Bridgman & Ors [2013] 3 NZLR 650
(CA)
3 ANZ National Bank Ltd v Sheahan
[2012] NZHC 3037, [2013] NZLR 674
(HC)
ends