Bankruptcy by sequestration order

Official Receiver Practice Statement 3 explains bankruptcy by sequestration order.

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  1. Introduction

    1. The Bankruptcy Act 1966 permits a creditor who is owed money to apply to the Court to make a person who owes the money (“the debtor”) bankrupt.  The application to the Court is called a creditor’s petition and, if the Court makes the debtor bankrupt, the order of the Court is called a sequestration order.
    2. Scope of this practice document

    3. This practice document deals with the role of the Official Receiver[1] in registering creditors’ petitions and sequestration orders, as provided by the Bankruptcy Act and the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021.  It also provides an overview of the creditor’s petition process and provides links to the Federal Court of Australia and Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia websites.
    4. This practice document has been prepared to provide detailed information about the legislative and practice requirements relating to creditors’ petitions and sequestration orders for debtors, bankrupts, creditors and insolvency practitioners.  If you would like more general overview, you may wish to read the information on AFSA’s website.
    5. This practice document does not deal with petitions for administration of insolvent deceased estates under Part XI of the Bankruptcy Act.  Information on these can be found in Administration of estates of deceased persons.
    6. For more information about the treatment of property and other related topics after a sequestration order has been made, you may wish to refer to the practice documents on AFSA’s website.
  2. When can a creditor petition the court for a person’s bankruptcy?

    1. Conditions

    2. There are three conditions a creditor must satisfy before they can petition for a person’s bankruptcy:
      • the creditor must be owed an amount of $10,000 or more (or, where the petition is being presented by two or more creditors, the total amount owed to these creditors must be $10,000 or more)[2]
      • the amount(s) owed is a liquidated sum (i.e. the amount payable is ascertainable and not dependent on the outcomes of other events) and is payable immediately or at a certain future time
      • an “act of bankruptcy” (one of several events defined in section 40 of the Bankruptcy Act that could indicate that the debtor is unable to pay their debts) has been committed by the debtor within the six-month period before the presentation of the creditor’s petition.  (Most creditors’ petitions are based on non-compliance with a bankruptcy notice.  More information about bankruptcy notices is available in Applying for a bankruptcy notice.)
    3. The $10,000 minimum is provided for in section 10A of the Bankruptcy Regulations.
    4. Petition by a secured creditor

    5. A secured creditor can petition for a debtor’s bankruptcy (or join one or more other creditors) in accordance with paragraph 2.1 above if:
      • the amount owing exceeds the value of the security held by $10,000 or more, or
      • the amount owed is $10,000 or more, if the secured creditor states that they are willing to surrender the security for the benefit of creditors generally in the event that a sequestration order is made against the debtor.
    6. Petition against a partnership

    7. If a creditor is entitled to present a petition against any one of the members of a partnership, the creditor may present a petition against the partnership itself, or any one or more members of the partnership.
    8. Petition against joint debtors

    9. A creditor who is owed money by two or more joint debtors (whether partners or not) may present a petition against all of the debtors.  The Court can decide whether to make all the joint debtors, some of the debtors, one debtor or none of the debtors bankrupt.
    10. Substitution of a petitioning creditor

    11. Should a creditor who has initiated a petition not want to proceed with the petition, another creditor or group of creditors may seek the permission of the Court to continue with the petition.  To seek an order for substitution, the new creditor(s) must show that they are due a liquidated sum of $10,000 or more.  A further act of bankruptcy is not required to be shown in this situation, as the original petition already relies on an act of bankruptcy that has been committed by the debtor.
  3. How to petition the court

    1. A creditor can file a petition with either the Federal Circuit and Family Court or the Federal Court.  Most creditors’ petitions are heard in the Federal Circuit and Family Court.  The rules, forms and procedures are virtually the same in both Courts.
    2. Information on the Court process for making a person bankrupt and the relevant forms are available on the Courts’ websites:
    3. If a creditor is unfamiliar with bankruptcy and Court processes, it is recommended that they seek independent legal advice.
  4. Copy of petition to be given to the Official Receiver

    1. A creditor who presents a petition to the Court must give a copy of the petition to the Official Receiver within 2 business days after the petition is filed by the Court (pursuant to section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations).  This enables the Official Receiver to record the details of the petition on the National Personal Insolvency Index (“NPII”).
    2. The copy of the petition can be filed with the Official Receiver via email sent to registry@afsa.gov.au to prevent potential postal delays and to ensure expediency in having the petition recorded on the NPII.
  5. Obtaining an interim property control order

    1. If a creditor believes that there is a risk of the debtor selling or otherwise disposing of property before the Court can hear the creditor’s petition, the creditor can apply to the Court at any time after a bankruptcy notice is issued or a creditor’s petition is presented to have a trustee appointed to take interim control over the debtor’s property (pursuant to section 50 of the Bankruptcy Act).
    2. The Court can make an interim property control order and appoint a trustee if the Court believes that it is in creditors’ interests and if it is shown that the debtor has not complied with the bankruptcy notice.
    3. The interim control order is in place for a period fixed by the Court or until the debtor becomes bankrupt, whichever occurs first.  The trustee’s role is to preserve the debtor’s property until the period of control ends.
    4. The section 50 order must be filed with the Official Receiver within 2 business days (pursuant to section 14 of the Bankruptcy Regulations) and can be filed via email sent to registry@afsa.gov.au.
    5. Further information about section 50 orders is available in Section 50 interim control orders.
  6. Court hearing and sequestration order

    1. Requirements

    2. At the creditor’s petition hearing, the Court requires the creditor to prove:
      • the matters stated in the creditor’s petition (evidence of the judgment debt, evidence of the act of bankruptcy etc.)
      • that the debtor was served with the petition at least 5 days before the hearing (pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 4.05[3])
      • that the debtor still owes the money.
    3. The Court also requires the petitioner to provide an extract of the NPII showing the debtor’s insolvency history at the time of the hearing.  The NPII search needs to be performed no earlier than the day before the hearing (pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 4.06).
    4. If the debtor disputes the creditor’s claims, the debtor can oppose the creditor’s petition.  Common grounds of opposition are:
      • the debt is not owing and/or a set-off exists
      • an act of bankruptcy has not been committed, or the act of bankruptcy relied on by the creditor is deficient
      • the debtor is in fact solvent and able to pay the debt.
    5. The Court considers the evidence before it and makes a decision as to whether the debtor ought to be made bankrupt.  If the Court is not satisfied, based on the evidence before it, that the creditor has met the requirements of the Bankruptcy Act and/or proved that the debt is owed, the Court may dismiss the petition.
    6. Where a petition has been dismissed by the Court, the creditor must give a copy of the order to the Official Receiver within 2 business days after the Court has entered the order (pursuant to section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations).
    7. If the Court is satisfied that the creditor has met the requirements of the Bankruptcy Act and proved that the debt is owed, the Court makes a sequestration order and the debtor becomes bankrupt.
    8. The creditor is required to file a copy of the sequestration order with the Official Receiver before the end of the period of 2 days beginning on the day the order was made (subsection 52(1A) of the Bankruptcy Act).
    9. If there is a delay in obtaining a sealed or endorsed copy from the Court, the creditor may file an unendorsed or unsealed copy with the Official Receiver to enable entry of the sequestration order on the NPII.  The creditor should subsequently provide the Official Receiver with a sealed or endorsed copy of the order once they have obtained one from the Court.
    10. As with the filing of a creditor’s petition, the Official Receiver will accept notices of dismissal and sequestration orders via email sent to registry@afsa.gov.au.
    11. Adjournments

    12. Either party can request an adjournment if further time to establish a case is required.  Granting of an adjournment is at the Court’s discretion.
    13. Where an adjournment of the hearing of the petition is granted by the Court, the creditor must give a copy of any order to the Official Receiver within two business days after the Court has filed the order (pursuant to section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations).  The filing of the order enables the Official Receiver to update the NPII.
    14. Where the Court grants an adjournment but does not issue any order to this effect, the petitioning creditor may advise the Official Receiver by email sent to registry@afsa.gov.au.  The date of the next hearing must be included in the petitioning creditor’s notification to the Official Receiver.
    15. Lapsing of the petition

    16. A creditor’s petition lapses 12 months from the date it was presented to the Court, unless an extension is granted by the Court.
    17. Where an extension is granted by the Court, the creditor must give a copy of the order to the Official Receiver within 2 business days after the Court has entered the order (pursuant section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations).  The filing of the order enables the Official Receiver to update the NPII.  If an extension is granted, the creditor’s petition will lapse after the expiration of the period of extension.
    18. Stay of creditor’s petition

    19. The Court may make an order staying a creditor’s petition.
    20. Where a stay of the petition is granted by the Court, the creditor must give a copy of the order to the Official Receiver within 2 business days after the Court has entered the order (pursuant to section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations).  The filing of the order enables the Official Receiver to update the NPII.
    21. Stay of sequestration order

    22. The Court may make a sequestration order but stay its operation for a period not exceeding 21 days.  The Court may decide to stay the operation of the sequestration order for various reasons including, for example, if a debtor claims that they are solvent and has produced reasonable evidence to suggest that they will be able to pay the debt immediately.
    23. The stay is effective until it lapses or is lifted by the Court.
    24. A stay does not have the effect of preventing the change of a person’s status to bankrupt.  The bankrupt’s property will vest in the trustee when the sequestration order is made, but the stay will generally prevent the trustee from dealing with the property or investigating the bankrupt’s affairs, subject to any contrary intention in the order itself.
    25. In this situation, the sequestration order will be recorded on the NPII.  There is no record of the stay of the sequestration order on the NPII.
  7. The petitioning creditor’s costs

    1. What are petitioning creditors’ costs?

    2. A petitioning creditor’s costs are the costs incurred by the creditor in presenting a creditor’s petition to the Court with a view to having a sequestration order made.
    3. Where a sequestration order is made and sufficient money realised in a bankrupt estate, the costs of the petitioning creditor will be treated as a priority payment in accordance with subsection 109(1)(a) of the Bankruptcy Act and item 7 of section 25 of the Bankruptcy Regulations, if either:
      • the sequestration order provided for the priority, or
      • if the sequestration order did not provide for the priority, where the petitioning creditor has returned to the Court and obtained an amended order providing for the priority.
    4. To avoid the need to return to the Court to obtain an amended order providing for the priority or to have the costs taxed, petitioning creditors are encouraged to obtain a sequestration order that fixes the total costs.  This is provided for in the Courts’ sequestration order templates (Form B7).
    5. Example image for a court order document

    6. Where the sequestration order requires the petitioning creditor to have its costs taxed, this process is undertaken by the Court and does not involve the Official Receiver.
    7. A creditor whose petition was afoot when a debtor’s petition was presented

    8. Section 25 of the Bankruptcy Regulations refers to a creditor who applied for a sequestration order, and is not limited to only the creditor whose petition resulted in the making of the sequestration order.  This means that, where one petitioning creditor obtained a sequestration order, the taxed costs of a separate creditor who also had a petition on foot can also be paid out of the estate in accordance with the order of payments  priorities specified in the legislation where sufficient money is realised.
    9. Petitioning creditor’s costs in joint estates

    10. In the case of a sequestration order made against more than one debtor, unless the sequestration order provides to the contrary, the payment of the petitioning creditor’s costs will depend on the nature of the liability of the debtors to the petitioning creditor (i.e. joint and several versus joint).
    11. Where the debt was joint and several, the petitioning creditor will be entitled to recover its costs out of any one or more of the joint and separate estates, where sufficient money is realised.  The only exception to this would be if the sequestration order itself placed a restriction from which estate the costs could be paid.
    12. A petitioning creditor that is owed a debt jointly, as opposed to jointly and severally, will generally be able to recover its costs out of the joint estate where sufficient money is realised.  Where there is a surplus  in one or more of the separate estates (following payment of all fees, charges, costs, remuneration, debts and interest claims in those estate(s)), that surplus can be used to satisfy the costs.
    13. Where the costs specified in the order or the taxed costs do not reflect actual costs

    14. Where the taxed costs of the petitioning creditor or the amount specified in the order are less than the total costs the petitioning creditor claims it incurred, the remainder of the costs do not constitute a provable debt in the estate.  The amount was not a debt to which the bankrupt was subject and is an amount to be borne by the petitioning creditor (pursuant to section 51 of the Bankruptcy Act).
    15. Interest on the petitioning creditor’s taxed bill of costs

    16. Interest on a petitioning creditor’s taxed bill of costs can only be claimed in the estate in the case of a section 153A annulment, unless the Court order providing for the costs specifically excludes interest.
  8. Appointment of a trustee

    1. Once a person is made bankrupt, their bankrupt estate must be administered by a bankruptcy trustee.  The trustee investigates the bankrupt’s affairs, reports to creditors, recovers property (if any is available) and makes a distribution to creditors (if sufficient money is realised).  The extent of investigations can depend on the type of property that forms part of the estate, the value of that property, the complexity of the bankrupt’s affairs and other factors.  Trustees charge for their services.
    2. A creditor who is petitioning the Court to make a debtor bankrupt is able to select a trustee and obtain the trustee’s consent to administer the estate in the event that the Court makes a sequestration order (pursuant to section 156A of the Bankruptcy Act).  AFSA’s website contains contact details for registered trustees in each State and Territory and the Form 12 – Trustee consent to act declaration for the nominated trustee to complete.
    3. Where a registered trustee has consented to act as trustee in the event that a sequestration order is made, the signed consent must be served on the debtor along with the creditor’s petition at least 5 days before the Court hearing date (pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 4.05(d)).
    4. The creditor must file the trustee’s consent to act with the Official Receiver before the day on which the sequestration order is made (see section 47 of the Bankruptcy Regulations).
    5. If a creditor does not obtain a registered trustee’s consent, the Official Trustee becomes the trustee of the estate.  Similarly, if a registered trustee consents to act but the consent is not filed with the Official Receiver before the day on which the sequestration order is made, the Official Trustee will become the trustee of the estate.  However, creditors can subsequently appoint another trustee, either on their own initiative or upon the Official Trustee’s initiative.
  9. Bankrupt’s statement of affairs 

    1. Where the Court has made a sequestration order, section 54 of the Bankruptcy Act requires the bankrupt to complete and file a statement of affairs with the Official Receiver within 14 days of being advised of the bankruptcy.
    2. A bankrupt can request a copy of the statement of affairs by contacting us or requesting a copy from their trustee.
    3. It is important that the bankrupt files a statement of affairs as soon as possible as the earliest a bankrupt can be discharged from bankruptcy is 3 years and 1 day from the date that they filed a statement of affairs that is accepted by the Official Receiver.
    4. The Official Receiver will assess the statement of affairs for adequacy and consider whether the information included by the bankrupt would allow a sufficient understanding of their affairs to allow a trustee to administer their estate.
    5. Where a statement of affairs is not accepted, the bankrupt will be advised, via the contact details provided, of the reason it was refused. The Official Receiver will provide information why it was considered inadequate, invite the bankrupt to file an updated statement of affairs, and identify what information the updated statement of affairs must address. Copies of the inadequate statement of affairs are retained by the Official Receiver, but the statement of affairs is not available for public inspection.
    6. Where a statement of affairs is refused by the Official Receiver, the bankrupt will not have complied with their obligation to complete and file a statement of affairs, and the obligation to comply remains. Delays in providing an updated statement of affairs will postpone the end of the bankruptcy and penalties apply if an adequate statement of affairs is not filed.
    7. Filing date of a statement of affairs

    8. Where the Official Receiver accepts a statement of affairs, the date entered on the NPII is the date that accepted statement of affairs was filed with or given to the Official Receiver.
    9. A person may make an application to the Court under section 33A of the Bankruptcy Act to alter the filing date of their statement of affairs.  If the Court is satisfied that the person believed, on reasonable grounds, that the statement of affairs had already been filed at a time before it was actually filed, the Court may order that the statement of affairs is to be treated as having been filed at a time before it was actually filed.  The Court cannot make an order that would result in the bankrupt being discharged from bankruptcy earlier than 30 days after the order is made.
  10. Presentation of a debtor’s petition for bankruptcy before the hearing of the creditor’s petition

    1. A debtor may choose to voluntarily become bankrupt before the Court hears the creditor’s petition by presenting a debtor’s petition to the Official Receiver.  It is important that the debtor does not wait until just before the hearing date to present the petition as the Official Receiver may not be able to process the debtor’s petition before the Court hearing.
    2. The Official Receiver will notify the Court and the petitioning creditor (or their solicitor/agent) if a debtor’s petition is accepted prior to the hearing of the creditor’s petition.
    3. More information about debtors’ petitions is available in Bankruptcy by debtor’s petition.
  11. Resources

Annexure A – Documents that must be filed with the Official Receiver

Document name/ event Filing time Reference Must be filed by
Creditor’s petition Within 2 business days after the Court files the petition Section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations Creditor
Section 50 order Within 2 business days of the Court giving a direction or making an  order  Section 14 of the Bankruptcy Regulations Creditor
Extension of creditor’s petition Within 2 business days after the Court enters the order Subsection 52(5) of the Bankruptcy Act, section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations Creditor
Stay of creditor’s petition Within 2 business days after the Court enters the order Subsection 52(3) of the Bankruptcy Act, section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations Creditor
Dismissal or withdrawal of creditor’s petition Within 2 business days after the Court enters the order Subsections 47(2) and 52(2) of the Bankruptcy Act, section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations Creditor
Adjournment of hearing of creditor’s petition Within 2 business days after the Court enters the order Section 13 of the Bankruptcy Regulations Creditor
Sequestration order Before the end of the period of 2 days beginning on the day the order was made Subsection 52(1A) of the Bankruptcy Act Creditor
Trustee’s consent to act Before the day on which the sequestration order is made

Section 156A of the Bankruptcy Act,

section 47 of the Bankruptcy Regulations

Trustee
Statement of Affairs Within 14 days of the bankrupt being notified of their bankruptcy Subsection 54(1) of the Bankruptcy Act Bankrupt

Footnotes

[1] A reference to the Official Receiver in this practice document also refers to a delegate of the Official Receiver

[2] Note that, for the period 25 March 2020 to 31 December 2020, the amount was $20,000, pursuant to temporary coronavirus changes

[3] Bankruptcy Rule refers to the Federal Court (Bankruptcy) Rules 2016 and the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2) (Bankruptcy) Rules 2021

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