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Kowalski v Mitsubishi Motors Australia Ltd [2009] FCA 1289 (9 November 2009)
Last Updated: 17 November 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Kowalski v Mitsubishi Motors Australia
Ltd [2009] FCA 1289
KAZIMIR KOWALSKI v MITSUBISHI MOTORS AUSTRALIA
LTD
SAD 133 of 2009
MANSFIELD J
9 NOVEMBER 2009
ADELAIDE
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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KAZIMIR KOWALSKIApplicant
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AND:
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MITSUBISHI MOTORS AUSTRALIA
LTDRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Compliance
with the Federal Court Rules is dispensed with insofar as the Respondent
is required to file a Notice of Appearance prior to filing its Notice of Motion
of 2 October
2009, such order to operate effective from 2 October 2009.
- On
the Notice of Motion of the Respondent of 2 October 2009:
(a) as to
paragraph 1 of the Notice of Motion, the motion be referred to the Full Court,
to be heard and determined at the same time
as the “Notice of
Appeal” the Applicant;
(b) as to paragraph 2 of the Notice of Motion, the words “he perverted
the course of justice and” (or words to that effect)
in paragraphs 2.1 to
2.17 and 4.1 to 4.20 of the “Notice of Appeal” be struck out;
and
(c) the costs of the motion be referred to the Full Court for
determination.
3. On the Notice of Motion of the Applicant of 12 October 2009:
(a) the motion be referred to the Full Court for determination to the extent
necessary; and
(b) the costs of the motion be referred to the Full Court for determination.
- On
the oral application of the Applicant for leave to appeal from Order 2(b)
hereof, leave to appeal therefrom is refused.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
eSearch on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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SAD 133 of 2009
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BETWEEN:
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KAZIMIR KOWALSKI Applicant
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AND:
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MITSUBISHI MOTORS AUSTRALIA LTD Respondent
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JUDGE:
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MANSFIELD J
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DATE:
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9 NOVEMBER 2009
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PLACE:
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ADELAIDE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- On
3 September 2009, Besanko J delivered a judgment in proceedings between
Mr Kowalski and Mitsubishi Motors Australia Limited
(Mitsubishi) in which
his Honour ordered that certain Notices of Motion be dismissed, that the Amended
Statement of Claim filed in
that proceeding be struck out and that the
proceeding itself be dismissed: Kowalski v Mitsubishi Motors Australia Ltd
[2009] FCA 991. The following day, Mr Kowalski applied by a document
entitled “Notice of Appeal” to appeal from that decision. That
application
is this proceeding. It is listed for hearing before the Full Court
in the February session of the Full Court. The “Notice
of Appeal”
set out the orders sought, including in paragraph 3.1 of the “Notice of
Appeal”, an order for leave
to appeal if the decision he sought to appeal
from was an interlocutory decision.
- Mitsubishi,
by Notice of Motion of 2 October 2009, has applied to the Court that the
“appeal” be dismissed as incompetent
on the ground that the judgment
sought to be appealed from is interlocutory, and that leave to appeal is
required and that no leave
to appeal application has been made in accordance
with O 52 r 10 of the Federal Court Rules, and that leave to appeal has
not been granted. The second part of Mitsubishi’s Notice of Motion was
that the “Notice
of Appeal” be removed from the Court file pursuant
to O 41 r 5 of the Federal Court Rules on the ground that it contains
scandalous matter, or alternatively that the scandalous matter be struck out. It
appears from the submissions
made today that Mitsubishi’s application in
that regard is to have the words “he perverted the course of justice
and”
(or words to that effect) variously appearing in the “Notice of
Appeal” removed as scandalous. Mr Kowalski disputes that
those words are
scandalous.
- Mr
Kowalski himself then brought a Notice of Motion on 12 October 2009 seeking to
dismiss Mitsubishi’s Motion of 2 October
2009, but really asserting that
it is a final judgment from which the appeal is purportedly brought, and
alternatively that the “Notice
of Appeal” seeks leave to appeal in
any event.
- At
the commencement of the hearing of the Notices of Motion, Mr Kowalski took a
technical point, that Mitsubishi’s Motion was
filed before Mitsubishi had
filed a Notice of Appearance. To the extent necessary, I waive compliance with
the Federal Court Rules to enable the filing and service of
Mitsubishi’s Notice of Motion before it had filed an appearance. It is a
technical point.
It can now cause no unfairness to either party to make that
order. That order will operate nunc pro tunc.
- There
is one other matter I mention before addressing the two Motions. Mr Kowalski
asserted that he had a right to have an application
for leave to appeal under s
24(1A) of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) (the FCA Act)
heard by a Full Court at his election. That is not the jurisprudence of the
Court. Order 52 r 10 of the Federal Court Rules provides for the means by
which leave to appeal is to be sought if the appeal is from an interlocutory
judgment. This Court has decided
that it is not a matter of election as of right
on the part of an applicant for leave to appeal to have that application for
leave
to appeal heard by a Full Court as distinct from a single judge of the
Court. The cases dealing with that principle are assembled
in the
Butterworth’s annotation of O 52 r 10 of the Federal Court Rules at
[47,055.2]. I will not repeat them.
- In
the present circumstances, it does not matter because, on its Notice of Motion,
Mitsubishi through counsel has made it plain that
Mitsubishi is content for the
“appeal” to proceed as if it were an application for leave to appeal
from an interlocutory
decision of Besanko J, and if leave to appeal is given,
then for the appeal to be heard at the same time. That is the process which
is
presently being adopted. Mitsubishi indicated in its submissions that it has
brought this motion to protect its position on the
question of costs before the
Full Court.
- Counsel
for Mitsubishi pointed out that there is still some possible room to debate as
to the jurisdiction of a single judge of the
Court to determine an application
such as the main, that is the first application of Mitsubishi on its Motion
where the “Notice
of Appeal” asserts primarily that the judgment
appealed from is not interlocutory but is final. In those circumstances, I adopt
the invitation of counsel for Mitsubishi to refer paragraph 1 of its Notice of
Motion to the Full Court, to be heard and determined
at the same time as the
“appeal” of Mr Kowalski. At that time the Full Court will decide
whether the judgment appealed
from is an interlocutory judgment only, and if so,
address the question of whether leave to appeal should be given. If it is a
final
judgment, or leave to appeal is given, the Full Court will no doubt also
address the merits of the appeal.
- That
acknowledgement by counsel for Mitsubishi in the course of her helpful
submissions made much of what Mr Kowalski wanted to say
unnecessary. I pointed
that out to him at the commencement of his submissions. He nevertheless
persisted in making submissions asserting
the incorrectness of the position
taken by Mitsubishi. He spent some time attacking the honesty and candour of the
legal practitioners
representing Mitsubishi, without there being on the material
before me any foundation for doing so, and despite my attempts to get
him to
stop. It was an entirely unnecessary attack in the context of the Motions, and
on the material before me, it was quite unfounded.
I make those observations
because I propose also to refer the costs of these two Notices of Motion to the
Full Court (as well as
the two Motions themselves). No doubt my observations
will be brought to the attention of the Full Court.
- I
have also decided to refer the first part of Mitsubishi’s Motion to the
Full Court for an additional reason. I make no comment
upon the correctness or
otherwise of the argument that Besanko J ought to have disqualified himself at
all on the ground of ostensible
bias. If Mr Kowalski is correct, and
satisfies the Full Court that Besanko J should have disqualified himself from
hearing the
proceeding at first instance, there is an additional issue as to
whether in those circumstances the refusal to do so leading to the
dismissal of
the proceeding should entitle him to an appeal as of right, even if otherwise
the orders which his Honour made were
interlocutory. He took the objection to
Besanko J hearing the matter at an appropriate time. As I have indicated, I am
not deciding
that question one way or another, but there seems to me to be some
difference between simply striking out a Statement of Claim, as
was done under O
20 or O 11 of the Federal Court Rules, and refusing to disqualify oneself
because of a claim of ostensible bias.
- On
the second part of Mitsubishi’s Motion, I agree that the way in which the
“Notice of Appeal” is expressed is
scandalous. There is absolutely
no foundation for asserting that Besanko J “perverted the course of
justice” in the way
alleged, and no foundation is shown in what it is
alleged in the “Notice of Appeal” to support such an allegation. I
propose to strike out from the “Notice of Appeal” the words
“he perverted the course of justice and” or words
to that effect in
paragraphs 2.1 to 2.17 and 4.1 to 4.20 of the “Notice of
Appeal”.
- I
point out, in particular to Mr Kowalski, that that will not effect his right to
argue the principal matters that he wants to argue
on the appeal, or the leave
to appeal application, because his points essentially appear
twofold:
(1) that Besanko J, in circumstances which are discussed in
his Honour’s reasons, should have disqualified himself on the grounds
of
ostensible bias; and
(2) in any event, on the material before his Honour, he erred at law in
reaching the conclusions and making the orders that he did.
Both grounds remain available for argument by Mr Kowalski before the Full
Court.
- Be
that as it may, the orders I propose to make on Mitsubishi’s Motion are:
as to paragraph 1 of the Notice of Motion, refer
the motion to the Full Court,
to be heard and determined at the same time as the “Notice of
Appeal” of Mr Kowalski; and
as to paragraph 2 of the Notice of Motion,
order that the words “he perverted the course of justice and” (or
words to
that effect) in paragraphs 2.1 to 2.17 and 4.1 to 4.20 of the
“Notice of Appeal” be struck out.
- Section
25(2B)(c) of the FCA Act provides that a single judge may give directions about
the conduct of an appeal to the Court. Order
41 r 5(b) of the Federal Court
Rules provides that if there is matter which is, having regard to the issues
in the proceeding, scandalous, vexatious or oppressive, the
Court may order that
the matter be struck out of the document. I make the order on paragraph 2
of Mitsubishi’s Motion pursuant to s 25(2B)(c) of the FCA Act and O 41 r
5(b) of the Federal Court Rules. It is better that the costs of that
Motion be dealt with fully by the Full Court, rather than piecemeal.
- On
Mr Kowalski’s Motion of 12 October 2009, I also to refer it to the Full
Court, and I refer the costs of that motion to the
Full Court. In effect,
however, it seems to me that that Motion was unnecessary, because the matters
raised in paragraphs 1.1 and
1.2 and paragraph 2 of that Motion are equally able
to be said by Mr Kowalski in opposition to Mitsubishi’s Notice of Motion,
without the further Motion of Mr Kowalski needing to be addressed. However, in
the circumstances I propose to refer that motion to
the Full Court.
- After
I had indicated my intention to make those orders, Mr Kowalski indicated that he
sought leave to appeal from the order striking
out parts of his “Notice of
Appeal” as scandalous. I said that I would deal with that application for
leave to appeal
from my orders in these written reasons. In my view, there is
nothing to be gained by granting the leave sought by Mr Kowalski to
appeal from
that order. The substantive issues which he seeks to ventilate can all be dealt
with by the Full Court in any event,
on his “Notice of Appeal”. To
grant leave would be futile. Nor would any substantial injustice flow from the
refusal
of leave to appeal from that order. Nor has anything been identified in
submissions or on the material presented in support of the
oral application for
leave to appeal to indicate any foundation at all for the assertion which has
been struck out. See generally
Décor Corp Pty Ltd v Dart Industries
Inc [1991] FCA 655; (1991) 33 FCR 397.
I certify that the preceding fifteen (15)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Mansfield.
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Associate:
Dated: 10 November 2009
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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The applicant appeared in person
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Ms V Heath
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Thomson Playford Cutlers
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