McGrath,
Glazebrook and
Arnold JJ gave the majority judgment and
Elias CJ and
William Young J concurred in separate judgments. All three judgments overturned the Court of Appeal's decision that "gave value" did not include where a company had given value preceding the insolvent transaction.
Justice Arnold, delivering the majority judgment held,As we have said, the
Court of Appeal’s interpretation of s 296(3) does not advance the objective of providing creditors with more certainty that the transactions they enter into will not be made void but, rather, undermines it. We think it implausible that
Parliament intended the types of outcome that we have just identified. Accordingly, we consider that s 296(3) should be interpreted consistently with the Australian provision, which is consistent with the approach that was taken historically in relation to the “valuable
consideration” requirement in the
bankruptcy legislation. On that approach, “value” under s 296(3), while it must be real and substantial, can include value given when the debt was initially incurred or value arising from by the reduction or extinguishment of a liability to the creditor incurred by the debtor company as a result of an earlier transaction. In this context, it must be remembered that before a creditor can take advantage of the s 296(3) defence, it must show that it acted in good faith and there were no reasonable grounds for a creditor in its position to believe that the company was technically
insolvent. These are significant requirements, not easily met. In addition, as a
Russell McVeagh publication notes, "The majority confirmed that cash on delivery or payment in advance does not give rise to voidable transaction exposure, as no repayment of debt occurs." == Significance ==