Subrogation Under Section 560 of the Corporations Act
Category: Insolvency & Restructuring, Employment Law
Date: 03 April 2017
Author: Hunt & Hunt - Genuine People
Dalma No.1 Pty Ltd ("Dalma") went into administration with employee-related liabilities of about $600,000.
Background
After the administrators were appointed a related company, Dalma Construction Pty Ltd ("DC"), made substantial payments (totalling about $160,000) in reduction of:
Date: 03 April 2017
Author: Hunt & Hunt - Genuine People
- Outstanding superannuation contributions
- Australian Construction Industry redundancy trust contributions
- and Income protection insurance contributions.
Section 560
Brereton J concluded:- When invoking Section 560, conformity with the "actual language and internal structure" is paramount
- If the apparent object of the provision (subrogation of the benefactor) cannot be achieved without doing violence to its wording, the provision is not engaged
- Because Section 560(b) talks of "an advance of money" there must be a loan by a donor to the company in liquidation which creates a debtor creditor relationship (as distinct from a gift or transfer to be held in trust)
- and Because Section 560(a) commences with the words "if a payment has been made by a company" the section only applies where the company (being the company in liquidation) pays the employee related liabilities itself using the monies lent by the donor.
Subrogation in Equity
Brereton J was also asked to consider whether:- Section 560 leaves any room for the equitable doctrine of subrogation in respect of a benefactor who discharges a priority' liability of a company in liquidation and
- If so whether the requirements of equitable subrogation were satisfied.
- the only context in which a spontaneous voluntary payment by a third party may found a claim for subrogation is in the exceptional category of the payment of existing securities
- there is no authority for extending that exceptional case to unsecured debts
- that DC made the payments on the mistaken basis that they would be entitled to subrogation under Section 560 does not affect this
- as the payments were made spontaneously and voluntarily by DC there was nothing, in the circumstances, to affect the company's conscience and
- DC could not, therefore, establish the basis for equitable subrogation.

