Can you Still Serve a Bankruptcy Notice by Email?

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Article Summary

There has been some confusion in relation to service of bankruptcy notices by email since the repeal of Bankruptcy Regulations 1996 (Cth) and the introduction of the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (Cth).

The 2021 Regulations removed reference to service “by electronic mail“, and inserted a note which said “See also section 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901″, which in turn made reference to the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (Cth).

The problem was, section 9 of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 required that the bankruptcy notice could be sent by email only with the consent of the recipient. Anyone who has worked in this field knows that very few judgment debtors will actually consent to this.

Unfortunately, this is exactly what happened in Pegios in his own capacity and as trustee for Pegios Superannuation Fund v Arambasic [2022] FedCFamC2G 17, where Judge Humphreys said “… the Court is not satisfied that the respondent ever consented to the service of any Bankruptcy Notice via email“.

The legislature then sought to correct this anomaly by amending the 2021 Regulations by way of the Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022, which removed the need for consent from the recipient when serving a bankruptcy notice by email.

This has been confirmed in the recent case of CSM Lawyers Pty Ltd v Manzo, in the matter of Manzo [2023] FCA 236, where the Court recognised the requirement for consent is no longer the case by reason of the 2022 amendment.

Can you still serve a bankruptcy notice by email? Yes, you can serve a bankruptcy notice by email.  It now looks like the CSM Lawyers case and the Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 have changed the law after the previous amendment to the regulation and the Pegios case.

This article explains this in more detail.

Can you Serve a Bankruptcy Notice by Email Queensland Insolvency LawyersCan you serve a bankruptcy notice by email?

If a creditor has received a final judgment or final order the execution of which has not been stayed, and that judgment or order is more than the statutory minimum ($10,000.00), then the creditor can apply to the Australian Financial Security Authority for a bankruptcy notice.

Once the judgment creditor has the bankruptcy notice it needs to be served on the judgment debtor.

There are a number of different ways to serve a judgment debtor with the bankruptcy notice in the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (CTH) (“the Act”) and the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (CTH) (“the Regs”).

One question we get asked is “can you serve a bankruptcy notice by email?

In this article our bankruptcy lawyers will explain if a bankruptcy notice can be served by email.

If you need to serve a bankruptcy notice then it is important to get it right and you should contact a lawyer

GET A FREE FEE ESTIMATE TODAY

OR CALL: 1300 545 133 FOR A PHONE CONSULTATION

What is a Bankruptcy Notice?

A bankruptcy notice is a formal notice issued by the Australian Financial Security Authority (“AFSA”).

It is a formal demand for payment:

  1. From a human debtor (not a company);
  2. Based upon a final judgment or final order of more than the statutory minimum ($10,000.00);
  3. The final judgment or final order must not have been stayed; and
  4. The final judgment or final order must not be more than 6 (six) years old.

A bankruptcy notice states that the judgment debtor must either pay, enter into an arrangement for payment, or apply to set the bankruptcy notice aside – all within 21 days after being served.

If they don’t do any of these things then they have committed an act of bankruptcy, allowing the judgment creditor to file creditor’s petition in the Federal Circuit Court.

Because the act of bankruptcy is calculated upon the date of service, it is important to get this date correct, and to be able to prove service.

How to Serve a Bankruptcy Notice

The old regulations (the Bankruptcy Regulations 1996 (CTH) used to say:

Regulation 4.02A of the Regs – Service of bankruptcy notices – says:

A bankruptcy notice may be served by any of the methods mentioned in regulation 16.01.

Regulation 16.01(1) of the Regs says:

(1)  Unless the contrary intention appears, where a document is required or permitted by the Act or these Regulations to be given or sent to, or served on, a person (other than a person mentioned in regulation 16.02), the document may be:

… (ii)  in such a manner (for example, by electronic mail) that the document should, in the ordinary course of events, be received by the person.

Regulation 16.01(1)(e)(ii) used to say that a bankruptcy notice can be served by another mode of electronic transmission in such a manner (for example, by electronic mail) that the document should, in the ordinary course of events, be received by the person.

However, in 2021, the bankruptcy regulations were repealed, and are now the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (CTH) (“the 2021 Regs“).

In these new bankruptcy regulations, the section in relation to service by “by electronic mail” was removed. This caused some inconsistencies with service of a bankruptcy notice, and so then the Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 (Cth) was introduced.

These amendments sought to amend the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (CTH) by adding a second note which says:

Note 2: The Electronic Transactions Act 1999 deals with giving information in writing by means of an electronic communication.

So, with all this change and amendment, can we still serve a bankruptcy notice by email?

The Problem with the Bankruptcy Regulations

In 2021, the Bankruptcy Regulations 1996 were repealed as part of the Bankruptcy and Other Legislation Amendment (Repeal And Consequential Amendments) Regulations 2021.

Section 102 of the 2021 Regs relates to the service of documents, and all reference to the electronic service have been removed.  It says:

(1) Unless the contrary intention appears, if a document is required or permitted by the Act or this instrument to be given or sent to, or served on, a person (other than the Inspector-General, the Official Receiver or the Official Trustee), the document may be:

(a) sent by a courier service to the person at the address of the person last known to the person serving the document; or

(b) left, in an envelope or similar packaging marked with the person’s name and any relevant document exchange number, at a document exchange where the person maintains a document exchange facility.

Note: See also section 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.

(2) In the absence of proof to the contrary, the document is taken to have been received by, or served on, the person when the document would, in the due course of business practice, be delivered to that address or document exchange.

This legislation was silent on service by electronic means, except to mention 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 which says:

(1) For the purposes of any Act that requires or permits a document to be served on a person, whether the expression “serve”, “give” or “send” or any other expression is used, then the document may be served:

(a) on a natural person:

(i) by delivering it to the person personally; or

(ii) by leaving it at, or by sending it by pre-paid post to, the address of the place of residence or business of the person last known to the person serving the document …

Section 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 also contains a note which says the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 deals with giving information in writing by means of an electronic communication.

Section 9 of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 deals with the requirement to give information in writing.

Section 9(1)(d) says:

(1) If, under a law of the Commonwealth, a person is required to give information in writing, that requirement is taken to have been met if the person gives the information by means of an electronic communication, where:

(d) if the information is required to be given to a person who is neither a Commonwealth entity nor a person acting on behalf of a Commonwealth entity–the person to whom the information is required to be given consents to the information being given by way of electronic communication.

Section 9(2)(d) says:

(2) If, under a law of the Commonwealth, a person is permitted to give information in writing, the person may give the information by means of an electronic communication, where:

(d) if the information is permitted to be given to a person who is neither a Commonwealth entity nor a person acting on behalf of a Commonwealth entity–the person to whom the information is permitted to be given consents to the information being given by way of electronic communication.

Under paragraphs 9(1)(d) and (2)(d) of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999, a party was required to seek the consent of the recipient to provide written information in an electronic form.  This is a move away from the Bankruptcy Regulations 1996 which did not have this requirement.

This caused confusion as to proper service of a bankruptcy notice, requiring the need for further amendment.

Therefore, pursuant to Schedule 1 of the Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 (Cth) inserts into section 102:

(3)  Paragraphs 9(1)(d) and (2)(d) of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 do not apply to documents that are required or permitted by the Act or this instrument to be given or sent to, or served on, a person.

Note: Paragraphs 9(1)(d) and (2)(d) of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 deal with the consent of the recipient of information to the information being given by way of electronic communication.

Subsection (3) is a new amendment from 2022. This subsection and its note provides some clarity in regard to electronic service, as the purpose of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 in the 2021 Regs is to deal with the consent of the recipient to receive information electronically, not in regard to service requirements.

In the Explanatory Statement of the Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 it says:

On 1 April 2021, the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (the Bankruptcy Regulations) commenced to address the sunsetting of the Bankruptcy Regulations 1996 (the 1996 Regulations). The Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 remade the 1996 Regulations in substantially the same form with minor and technical amendments aimed at modernising references and ensuring alignment with the Act. Section 102 replaced regulation 16.01 in the 1996 Regulations regarding the service of documents, which did not contain a requirement to seek consent before serving documents electronically.

Section 102 of the Regulations refers to section 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (AIA) to specify additional methods of service. Section 28A of the AIA refers to the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (ETA) in relation to service by electronic communication. Under paragraphs 9(1)(d) and (2)(d) of the ETA, a party is required to seek the consent of the recipient to provide written information in an electronic form.

A number of stakeholders including insolvency practitioners, creditors, and the Australian Financial and Security Authority (AFSA) have raised concerns that the requirement to seek consent before documents can be served electronically could be used to frustrate the administration and operation of the Bankruptcy Act, particularly if a person refuses to consent to receive documents electronically.

The Regulations amend section 102 of the Bankruptcy Regulations so that paragraphs 9(1)(d) and 9(2)(d) of the ETA do not apply to the electronic service of documents required or permitted by the Act or the Regulations. This will ensure that valid service of documents in electronic form can occur without the need for a party to seek consent from the recipient.

Looking at the cases referring to section 9 of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (CTH), there is one case that was decided on the old 2021 legislation before the 2022 amendment.

The Pegios Case

In the gap between Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (CTH) and Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 (Cth) there was a case in relation to service of a bankruptcy notice by email.

In Pegios in his own capacity and as trustee for Pegios Superannuation Fund v Arambasic [2022] FedCFamC2G 17, Judge Humphreys heard an application to set aside creditor’s petition and had to decide whether service of bankruptcy notice had been effected by sending it by email.  In this case he considered the 2021 version of:

  1. Regulation 102 of the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (Cth);
  2. Section 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth); and
  3. Section 9 of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (Cth).

In this case, Judge Humphreys said at [19]:

The Court is not satisfied that in the circumstances described above that valid service of the Bankruptcy Notice as required under Reg 102 of the Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (Cth) was effected by service via email upon the respondent. First, the Court is not satisfied that the respondent ever consented to the service of any Bankruptcy Notice via email.

Since the Pegios case, there has been another case decided in 2023 – CSM Lawyers Pty Ltd v Manzo, in the matter of Manzo [2023] FCA 236.

The CSM Lawyers Case

In the case of CSM Lawyers Pty Ltd v Manzo, in the matter of Manzo [2023] FCA 236, the Court looked at service by email and essentially confirmed that the decision in the Pegios case is no longer good law.  In this case, Downes J said at [39] and [40]:

Further, for the following reasons, the bankruptcy notice was also validly served by email.

Although the Bankruptcy Regulations did not make reference to service by other means, the note to s 28A(1) of the Acts Interpretation Act directed the reader to the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (Cth). Section 9(1)(d) of that Act relevantly permitted electronic service under laws of the Commonwealth where a party consents to electronic service (although that is no longer the case by reason of amendments to the Bankruptcy Regulations which commenced on 6 April 2022).

It would appear that there was an anomaly between Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (CTH) and Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 (Cth) which amended it which required consent. Although that is no longer the case.

Can you Serve a Bankruptcy Notice by Email?

Yes, you can serve a bankruptcy notice by email.  It now looks like the CSM Lawyers case and the Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 have changed the law after the previous amendment to the regulation and the Pegios case.  However, instead of simply relying on the bankruptcy regulations, we now have to rely on Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (CTH) & Section 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901section 9 of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (CTH).

An enforcement creditor could serve a bankruptcy notice by email pursuant to the 1996 Regulations, but this was removed from the 2021 Regulations unless the enforcement debtor had given consent (which they never or rarely would), it was only until the further amendment again in 2022 when this requirement for consent was removed, but now we have to rely on three (3) pieces of legislation instead of just one.

However, if this argument is successful, then there are a number of issues to consider.

When is an Email Received by a Judgment Debtor?

If allowable, service is effected when the document is delivered or transmitted.

Obviously, these words have different meanings, so how have the authorities decided what “received” means in the context of service of a bankruptcy notice?

The main case on this point is American Express Australia Limited v Michaels [2010] FMCA 103 where Smith FM provides commentary on the authorities and says at [23]:

The specific provisions in Bankruptcy Regulations regs.16.01(1)(e) and (2)(b) appear to be self-supporting, and appear intended to identify a deemed time of receipt of service which is simple to establish, and which is rebuttable by the recipient. In my opinion, these provisions implicitly exclude the application of ss.14(3) and (4) of the Electronic Transactions Act in relation to findings as to receipt and time of receipt.

Smith FM then went on to say at [24]:

This conclusion still leaves the possible ambiguity of the word ‘transmitted’ in reg.16.01(2)(b), which must be solved by a consideration of the context and objects of the provision. Clearly, it is intended to assist the making of findings as to receipt of an emailed document, and to dispense with proof of actual receipt of the email, “in the absence of proof to the contrary”. It takes its flavour from the language of reg.16.01(1)(e), which it is intended to assist. That provision refers to a document “sent by” electronic transmission, referring to a mode of dispatch by a sender. Regulation 16.01(2)(b) appears to make an understandable assumption that electronic transmissions will normally reach the intended destination almost instantaneously. Considering all these points, and the general context of the regulation, I accept the submission of counsel for AMEX that reg.16.01(2)(b) raises a rebuttable presumption of receipt and time of receipt occurring when the email is transmitted by its sender, being when it is irretrievably sent by the electronic mail facility used by the person serving the electronic document.

American Express Australia Limited v Michaels [2010] FMCA 103 therefore says that in relation to regulation 16.01 of the Regs, an email is presumed to be received by the judgment debtor when it is transmitted by the judgment creditor, being when it is irretrievably sent by the email facility used by the person sending the bankruptcy notice.

This was followed in Noonan v BMW Australia Finance Limited [2013] FCCA 2222 when Judge Whelan said:

With respect to the provisions of Reg.16.01(1)(e) of the Regulations, Smith FM (as he then was) considered … that the provision was intended to identify a time of receipt which is simple to establish. It raises a rebuttable presumption that receipt, and time of receipt, occurred when the email is transmitted by its sender, being when it is irretrievably sent by the electronic mail facility used by the person serving the electronic document.

It was also followed in The Council Of The New South Wales Bar Association v Archer [2012] FMCA 81 Lloyd-Jones FM said:

In American Express Australia v Michaels [2010] FMCA 103 … [H]is Honour says that the presumption arises when the notice is transmitted, not when it is received.

The legal presumption that the bankruptcy notice has been served by email when it is transmitted or sent by the person sending is rebuttable.  The judgment debtor will need to provide evidence that the bankruptcy notice was not delivered by email.

The judgment debtor will need to adduce evidence of non-delivery and not non-receipt.

Proof of Non-Delivery or Non-Receipt

The authority case on this point is the Hight Court case of Fancourt v Mercantile Credits Ltd [1983] HCA 25.  In Fancourt the High Court said:

Despite remarks in the judgments about non-receipt, it was non-delivery which was significant because the second limb of s. 26 of the Interpretation Act refers to proof of the contrary of delivery. As the present case shows, delivery may be different from receipt by the intended recipient and, provided that delivery is not disproved, the fact of non-receipt does not displace the result that delivery is deemed to have been effected at the time at which it would have taken place in the ordinary course of the post.

Fancourt was followed in relation to a bankruptcy notice and regulation 16.01(2) in Skalkos v T & S Recoveries Pty Ltd [2004] FCAFC 321 where Sundberg, Finkelstein & Hely JJ said:

If, on the proper construction of reg 16.01(2), the words “proof to the contrary” permit proof that the document was not delivered, there is no such proof in the present case. It is clear from Fancourt that proof of non-receipt as opposed to non-delivery is not permitted … Thus on either view of reg 16.01(2), the primary judge correctly said there was no point in the appellant filing an affidavit of non-receipt.

Practically this makes a lot of sense.  Debtors always say things like “we didn’t get the email” or “we didn’t get the invoice” or “we didn’t get the letter”.

So, to rebut the presumption that service was made, the judgment debtor will need to adduce evidence of non-delivery and not non-receipt of the bankruptcy notice.

Can we Serve a Bankruptcy Notice by Email?

Yes, you can serve a bankruptcy notice by email.  It now looks like the CSM Lawyers case and the Bankruptcy Amendment (Service of Documents) Regulations 2022 have changed the law after the previous amendment to the regulation and the Pegios case.  However, instead of simply relying on the bankruptcy regulations, we now have to rely on Bankruptcy Regulations 2021 (CTH) & Section 28A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901section 9 of the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (CTH).

An enforcement creditor could serve a bankruptcy notice by email pursuant to the 1996 Regulations, but this was removed from the 2021 Regulations unless the enforcement debtor had given consent (which they never or rarely would), it was only until the further amendment again in 2022 when this requirement for consent was removed, but now we have to rely on three (3) pieces of legislation instead of just one.

Best practice is to hire a process server to personally serve the bankruptcy notice.  However, it this option is unavailable, then ensure that you do everything possible to ensure that you can prove it was delivered by email and by post.

Delivery and Read Receipts

To get a delivery receipt or a read receipt you need to go to options in your Outlook, then tick the “request a delivery receipt” box and the “request a read receipt box”.

serve a bankruptcy notice by email in Queensland

For a delivery Receipt you will either get a relayed response or a delivered response.

  1. Relayed – Delivery to these recipients or groups is complete, but no delivery notification was sent by the destination server.
  2. Delivered – Your message has been delivered to the following recipients.

Either way, you can annex these receipts to your affidavit as evidence of delivery.

You may not get a read receipt as it requires the judgment debtor to click to send the read receipt, but it does happen sometimes, so it is worth a go.

Serving a Bankruptcy Notice by Email

This article explains how to serve a bankruptcy notice by email.

Don’t just serve by email if there are other avenues open to you.  If you can fax, then fax too.  If you can get the judgment debtor personally served, or you know where the judgment debtor lives, then serve him or her there too.  If you know the address, then post it to the enforcement debtor too.

An enforcement creditor could serve a bankruptcy notice by email pursuant to the 1996 Regulations, but this was removed from the 2021 Regulations unless the enforcement debtor had given consent (which they never or rarely would), it was only until the further amendment again in 2022 when this requirement for consent was removed, but now we have to rely on three (3) pieces of legislation instead of just one.

If you need to serve a bankruptcy notice then it is important to get it right and you should contact a lawyer

GET A FREE FEE ESTIMATE TODAY

OR CALL: 1300 545 133 FOR A PHONE CONSULTATION

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