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View/Open - Research Commons - The University of Waikato

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For disqualification under section 206D, in addition to the issues discussed in the<br />

preceding paragraph, the court has to ensure that the manner in which the affairs <strong>of</strong><br />

the company or companies were conducted were what caused the failures. 302 <strong>The</strong><br />

issue was explored in Australian Securities and Investments Commission v<br />

Maxwell, 303 where the court observed the causes <strong>of</strong> the company‘s liquidation and<br />

then determined whether they were aspects <strong>of</strong> the management <strong>of</strong> the company. <strong>The</strong><br />

court concluded that the engagement in illegal fundraising, the application <strong>of</strong> loan<br />

moneys in payments other than to the particular project, the incurring <strong>of</strong> liabilities in<br />

excess <strong>of</strong> available assets and the resort to borrowing at very high interest rates were<br />

aspects <strong>of</strong> management which contributed to the ultimate insolvency, winding up and<br />

failure <strong>of</strong> the company. 304<br />

In Malaysia, the provision is relatively new, and it is submitted that since it is<br />

derived from section 300 <strong>of</strong> the UK Companies Act 1985, courts in Malaysia will<br />

adopt the UK decisions in their interpretation <strong>of</strong> the section.<br />

302 Failures in this context refers to section 206D(2) <strong>of</strong> the Australian Corporations Act 2001: ― For<br />

the purposes <strong>of</strong> subsection (1), a corporation fails if:<br />

(a) a Court orders the corporation to be wound up under section 459B because the Court is satisfied<br />

that the corporation is insolvent; or<br />

(b) the corporation enters into voluntary liquidation and creditors are not fully paid or are unlikely to<br />

be fully paid; or<br />

(c) the corporation executes a deed <strong>of</strong> company arrangement and creditors are not fully paid or are<br />

unlikely to be fully paid; or<br />

(d) the corporation ceases to carry on business and creditors are not fully paid or are unlikely to be<br />

fully paid; or<br />

(e) a levy <strong>of</strong> execution against the corporation is not satisfied; or<br />

(f) a receiver, receiver and manager, or provisional liquidator is appointed in relation to the<br />

corporation; or<br />

(g) the corporation enters into a compromise or arrangement with its creditors under Part 5.1; or<br />

(h) the corporation is wound up and a liquidator lodges a report under subsection 533(1) about the<br />

corporation‘s inability to pay its debts."<br />

303 (2006) 59 ACSR 373.<br />

304 Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Maxwell (2006) 59 ACSR 373 at [119].<br />

384

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