Precision and Genuine Disputes: Setting Aside a Statutory Demand
Category: Australia, Litigation & Dispute Resolution, Victoria (VIC)
Date: 13 August 2025
Author: Alice Rudaya - Genuine People
Date: 13 August 2025
Author: Alice Rudaya - Genuine People
What is a Statutory Demand?
A statutory demand is a creditor's formal, written request requiring a company to pay a debt within the statutory period (currently 21 days). A statutory demand must be:- in writing;
- in the prescribed from (Form 509H);
- relate to a debt or debts that are due and payable and total at least the statutory amount (currently $4,000); and
- be signed by or on behalf of the creditor,
How do you respond to a Statutory Demand?
Upon being served with a statutory demand, a company has 21 days to respond. The company has two options:- pay the amount the subject of the statutory demand; or
- make an application to the Court, pursuant to section 459G of the Act, to set aside the statutory demand on the basis that there is a genuine dispute about the existence or amount of the debt or that the company has an offsetting claim (s459H of the Act).
Setting aside a Statutory Demand
An application to set aside a statutory demand must be both filed and served within 21 days of the statutory demand being served on the company. The application must also be supported by an affidavit ("Supporting Affidavit") which sets out either:- that the company has an offsetting claim; or
- that there is a genuine dispute between the company and the creditor about the existence or the amount of the debt.
Re BRC Group
On 12 March 2024, Watagan Park Pty Ltd ("Watagan Park") served a statutory demand on BRC Group Pty Ltd ("BRC Group"), claiming a debt of $1,044,372.42 pursuant to a loan agreement with a principle sum of $900,000 and $144,372.43 owing on account of interest. BRC Group filed an application in the Supreme Court of Victoria to have the statutory demand set aside.' BRC Group disputed the debt on the basis that the "loan agreement was never finalised and as such, a final agreement as to the terms of the loan agreement was never reached"[3]. In 2021, the parties entered into and discussed a number of documents/agreements including:- an unsigned loan agreement upon which the statutory demand is based;
- a consultancy agreement dated on or about January 2021;
- a letter dated 1 January 2021 which invited to Watagan Park to apply for an equity right in BRC Group, completed by the director of Watagan Park on or about 31 March 2021; and
- a signed Equity Right Agreement dated on or about 31 March 2021.
- in its Supporting Affidavit, BRC Group relied on the ground of dispute that there was no concluded loan agreement; and
- that the subsequent affidavit material and submissions sought to go beyond this ground and contended that there was an agreement, but on different terms.
Court of Appeal
BRC Group sought leave to appeal the decision in BRC Group Pty Ltd (as trustee for the BRC Group Unit Trust) v Watagan Park Pty Ltd (as trustee for Clancy Family Trust MKT2) [2025] VSCA 36. The key ground of appeal was that the judge at first instanced had "erred in holding that there was no serious question or plausible contention on a ground raised" in the Supporting Affidavit[5]. BRC Group contended that the Supporting Affidavit was an "an affidavit 'supporting the application' in relation to the additional dispute" and that the "threshold requirement for the contents [of a Supporting Affidavit]'€¦ is low"[6]. The Court of Appeal refused leave to appeal, and agreed with the judge at first instance ' that the statement in the Supporting Affidavit to the effect that the debt was 'not payable' did not delineate a dispute that the debt was payable but on different terms. Furthermore, the Court of Appeal agreed that the statement in the Supporting Affidavit that there is no agreement was plainly inconsistent with the later assertion that there was an agreement but on different terms.Conclusion
If you intend to make an application to set aside a statutory demand, make sure that the Supporting Affidavit identifies the ground(s) of the genuine dispute with precision. If filing an application to set aside a statutory demand in the Supreme Court of Victoria, a Notice to the Profession was published on 11 July 2025 which seeks to facilitate the just, efficient, timely and cost-efficient resolution of such an application by setting out a timetabling procedure[7].By Vivienne Williams and Alice Rudaya
[1] Re BRC Group [2024] VSC 563 [77]. [2] Thomson v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2024] QCA 73 [40]. [3] Re BRC Group [2024] VSC 563 [16] [4] Scream Construction Pty Ltd v Clyne (2021) 64 VR 404 [43]. [5] BRC Group Pty Ltd (as trustee for the BRC Group Unit Trust) v Watagan Park Pty Ltd (as trustee for Clancy Family Trust MKT2) [2025] VSCA 36 [3]. [6] Ibid, [5] & [22]. [7] Notice to the Profession - Statutory Demands | The Supreme Court of Victoria

