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Monday 25 June 2018

Is a PPSR registration still necessary to defend against Preference claims?

In June 2016, I posted an article discussing, among other things, Justice Edelman’s ruling in Hussain v CSR Building products Limited concerning alleged preference payments made by FPJ Group Pty Ltd. 

The Corporations Act allows liquidators to claim back payments made by the insolvent company during the 6 months prior to their appointment – provided that those payments were in respect of an unsecured debt.

In Hussein v CSR,  Justice Edelman found that there were sufficient references in the Corporations Act to a Retention of Title right being, in substance, a form of security that, while in the circumstances CSR may not satisfy the definition of a ‘secured creditor’, their Retention of Title right was sufficient to render the debt they were owed ‘not unsecured’.  This, against the background of CSR not having registered their ROT on the PPSR!

This was a pretty controversial decision at the time but, two years later, we’ve finally got ourselves another judgment effectively reinforcing the idea that a Retention of Title right (whether registered on the PPSR or not) represents sufficient security to ensure that payments made against that security right are not treated as unsecured for the purposes of the Corporations Act.

Trenfield v HAG Import Corporation (Australia) Pty Ltd [2018] QDC 107 wasn’t an entire success for the supplier, however, because even though their ROT was sufficient to make payments eligible for consideration as being ‘not unsecured’, the question as to how much value in payments those ROT rights actually supported needed to be addressed. 

If a supplier sends goods worth $10,000 and invoices accordingly, at ‘day 1’ the supplier (assuming an ROT) will be secured for the full amount owed, however, if, by the time payment falls due $8,000 of those goods have been on-sold, then the supplier will only be a secured creditor for $2,000 of the money owed and an unsecured creditor for the balance. (Note: there's an earlier post looking at the 'value' of security here.)

Using this approach, the Court found that $473,291 of the $696,298.72 of payments received were paid in relation to an unsecured debt and thus were recoverable by the liquidators as the fruits of an unfair preference.

With both legal precedents involving ROTs that were not perfected under the PPSA’s rules, there is a lifeline for suppliers who either haven’t registered on the PPSR or lodged too late or with serious errors – at least as far as defending against preference claims is concerned. 

When it comes to attempting to recover unpaid for goods or their equivalent value from administrators and liquidators, suppliers had best make sure they have a valid PPSR registration in place (lodged in good time) because claiming that their ROT makes them ‘not unsecured’ will not cut it!


Friday 8 June 2018

When should a PPSR registration be lodged?

In general terms, the answer is ‘as soon as possible’ and, in this context, that means, as soon as the supplier has a reasonable belief that they may be doing business with the grantor in question and that such business will involve the granting of a security interest.

In order to avoid falling foul of the Corporations Act, the supplier’s registration should be lodged within 20 business days of their security agreement being formed. For trade credit suppliers, that security agreement will usually be represented by the signing of the initial credit application by which the supplier’s Terms & Conditions of trade are accepted (provided, of course, that those T&Cs contain the supplier’s security rights – usually in the form of a Retention of Title clause).

If the registration is not lodged within that 20 business day period, the supplier runs the risk that, if their customer falls insolvent in the next 6 months, a liquidator will be able to use section 588FL of the Corporations Act to, effectively, ignore the registration.

I’ve written at greater length on the implications of section 588FL HERE.

Obviously, if the supplier misses that 20 business days window, they should still go ahead and register on the PPSR as soon as possible, it just means that they’ll need to keep their fingers crossed that a liquidator doesn’t get appointed during the next 6 months – once 6 months have elapsed with no liquidator in sight, the supplier can relax.

If we put aside for one moment the Corporations Act provisions, the other key timing issue concerns the effectiveness of your Purchase Money Security Interest (PMSI) rights.

As we know, Retention of Title suppliers, those providing goods on a Consignment Stock basis, and long-term leasers of equipment automatically qualify for having the security arrangements that those trading practices represent designated as PMSIs, thus entitling them to a super-priority over any earlier (or later) registered general security interests.

However, in order to ensure their PMSI right is effective, the registration must be lodged within specific time frames:

Where the Collateral is Inventory
Before the grantor takes possession of the goods
Where the Collateral is not Inventory
Within 15 business days of the grantor taking possession of the goods

Any registration lodged outside of those time frames will still be valid, but it won’t benefit from the super-priority that the PMSI designation would otherwise afford.

If repeat supplies are involved, suppliers should remember that even though they may have registered too late for the first few deliveries, a registration will still be effective over later deliveries.