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Frauenstein v Farinha [2009] FCA 469 (23 March 2009)
Last Updated: 14 May 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Frauenstein v Farinha [2009] FCA 469
COSTS – Calderbank offer –
whether unreasonable to reject offer
COSTS – conduct of proceeding – whether unnecessarily
burdensome – whether distinction should be drawn between costs of
pleadings and costs the hearing
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
Federal Court Rules
CARL FRAUENSTEIN and ANOR v TOBIAS FARINHA and
ORS
NSD2135 of 2006
EMMETT J
23 MARCH 2009
SYDNEY
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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NSD 2135 of 2006
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CARL FRAUENSTEINFirst
Plaintiff
CARPE DIEM INITIATIVES PTY LTD ACN 091 071 359 Second
Plaintiff
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AND:
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TOBIAS FARINHAFirst
Defendant
MIGUEL FARINHA Second Defendant
MARCO AZGATO Third Defendant
SAN MARCO BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Fourth Defendant
SAN MARCO PICOLLO PTY LTD Fifth Defendant
SAN MARCO WORLD SQUARE PTY LTD Sixth Defendant
COCKLE BAY SAN MARCO PTY LTD Seventh Defendant
EQUAL 54 LTD Eighth Defendant
JAMES PANAGOPOULOS Ninth Defendant
TOBY BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Tenth Defendant
MARCO BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Eleventh Defendant
MIGUEL BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Twelfth Defendant
CINE SAN MARCO PTY LTD Thirteenth Defendant
ANDREW ALAN JOHNSON Fourteenth Defendant
CHIEF COMMISSIONER OF STATE REVENUE DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATION Supporting Creditor
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
Defendants pay the Plaintiffs costs up to and including 10 December 2007.
- The
Plaintiffs pay any costs of the Defendants thrown away by any amendments of the
originating process or statement of claim.
- The
Plaintiffs pay 50% of the Defendants’ costs of the proceeding after 10
December 2007.
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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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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NSD 2135 of 2006
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BETWEEN:
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CARL FRAUENSTEIN First Plaintiff
CARPE DIEM INITIATIVES PTY LTD ACN 091 071 359 Second
Plaintiff
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AND:
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TOBIAS FARINHA First Defendant
MIGUEL FARINHA Second Defendant
MARCO AZGATO Third Defendant
SAN MARCO BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Fourth Defendant
SAN MARCO PICOLLO PTY LTD Fifth Defendant
SAN MARCO WORLD SQUARE PTY LTD Sixth Defendant
COCKLE BAY SAN MARCO PTY LTD Seventh Defendant
EQUAL 54 LTD Eighth Defendant
JAMES PANAGOPOULOS Ninth Defendant
TOBY BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Tenth Defendant
MARCO BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Eleventh Defendant
MIGUEL BONDI JUNCTION PTY LTD Twelfth Defendant
CINE SAN MARCO PTY LTD Thirteenth Defendant
ANDREW ALAN JOHNSON Fourteenth Defendant
CHIEF COMMISSIONER OF STATE REVENUE DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF
TAXATION Supporting Creditor
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JUDGE:
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EMMETT J
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DATE:
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23 MARCH 2009
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- I
have already expressed my concern that this litigation has caused considerable
expense in order to resolve issues that should sensibly
have been resolved by
mediation or other means. The litigation results from the souring of a
relationship of trust and cooperation
that existed between the individuals
involved in the litigation. The background is set out in my reasons of 10
December 2007. Some
further issues concerning the litigation are outlined in my
reasons of 6 February 2009. The proceeding has now been resolved among
the
parties apart from the question of costs. For matters of convenience in these
reasons I shall use the terms that were defined
for the purposes of the reasons
of 10 December 2007, which are summarised in my reasons of 6 February 2009.
- The
issue which remains concerns the question of whether the Farinhas should be
ordered to pay any part of the costs of the proceeding
and whether Carl and
Carpe Diem should be required to bear any of the costs of the proceeding. The
Farinhas emphasised the fact
that there has been no relief granted against them
personally. On the other hand, it cannot be doubted that Carl has achieved a
considerable measure of success in the proceeding, albeit that he has not
recovered, in the events that have occurred, any relief
against the Farinhas.
- The
proceeding continued by way of pleadings after directions were given by the
Court. The proceeding was finally determined on
the basis of a fifth further
amended originating process, which contained approximately 140 separate prayers
for relief. Many of
those were in the alternative and prayers were sought in
respect of three different companies, namely, Bondi Junction, Piccolo and
World
Square. The third further amended statement of claim ran to 117 pages with some
366 allegations leading up to the claim for
relief in the fifth further amended
originating process.
- It
is desirable to say something about the structure of the final version of the
statement of claim. Section A contains in excess
of 16 paragraphs and describes
the parties to the proceeding. Section B runs from paragraph 17 to paragraph
193 and is headed “Material Facts”. It describes in
considerable detail and with considerable particularity much of the factual
background in respect of which
I made findings in my reasons of 10 December
2007.
- Section
C consists of paragraphs 194 to 289 and is headed “Oppressive
Conduct”. It makes a series of allegations under various subheadings
as follows:
(1) Agreement, common understanding and fiduciary duties.
(2) Breach of common understanding.
(3) Breach of fiduciary duty.
(4) Misleading conduct by the Farinhas.
(5) Under-reporting of revenue or failure to account.
(6) Dilution of Carl’s shares in World Square.
(7) Breach of section 286 of the Corporations Act [relating to the keeping of
financial records].
(8) Excessive expenses and payments to associated entities.
(9) Reclassification of the $550,000 loan.
(10) Failure to provide financial information.
(11) The Letter Agreement.
(12) Failure to pay Carl the value of his shares in World
Square.
Section D is headed “Contrary to the interest
of the members and oppressive, unfairly prejudicial and/or unfairly
discriminatory conduct of affairs”. That section really asserts no
more than the consequences of the detailed conduct alleged in Section C.
Section E is entitled
“Misleading or deceptive conduct” and
relies upon the facts alleged in section C.
- Section
F is concerned with the Letter Agreement, to which reference is made in my
reasons of 10 December 2007. Section G is concerned
with the $550,000 loan made
by Carpe Diem and consists of paragraphs 336 to 342. Section H and the second
Section G, incorrectly
labelled, both inserted late in the piece, are concerned
respectively with monies lent and monies had and received and consist of
paragraphs 343 to 366.
- As
I have said, the originating process and the statement of claim have been
amended on a number of occasions. Clearly, any costs
thrown away by those
amendments, if they have not already been ordered, should be paid by the
plaintiffs.
- The
Farinhas describe the originating process and the statement of claim as adopting
a scatter-gun approach, which may not be an
unfair description. However, it
does not necessarily follow that that approach was inappropriate. In par [24]
of my reasons of
10 December 2007, I indicated that, in his written
submissions to the Court following many days of the taking of evidence,
Carl
formulated a number of factual issues. The Farinhas did not quarrel with that
formulation. In the way in which I summarised
the issues there were seven for
resolution. My reasons then were structured around those issues.
- It
is common ground that a very considerable part of the hearing time was taken up
with Issues 1 and 2; namely, whether the Moda,
Momo and Equilibrium businesses
were owned by Bondi Junction, Piccolo and World Square beneficially, or whether
those three companies
were nominees of partnerships. Interrelated to those
issues was whether payments made by Carl in connection with the businesses
should be characterised as contributions to equity or as advances on loan
account and, if the latter, to whom. While ultimately
the detail of the second
question, namely the characterisation of the payments, did not take as much time
as the question of the
nature of the business relationship those matters were
all put in issue by the pleadings.
- As
directors of the companies, the Farinhas were properly joined as defendants,
since there were allegations of breaches of fiduciary
duty against them. That,
together with other alleged circumstances, constituted conduct that would
attract the exercise of jurisdiction
under s 461 of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth) (the Act), namely, jurisdiction to order the winding up of
the companies in question, the appointment of receivers or to order one or other
of the parties to buy shares of other parties at a price to be determined by the
Court. The prayers for relief in the fifth further
amended originating process
included prayers that Cockle Bay or, alternatively, the Farinhas, purchase
Carl’s shares in Bondi
Junction, Piccolo and World Square. That question
was the subject of my further reasons of 6 February 2009.
- In
my substantive reasons I concluded as follows in relation to the seven issues
that I formulated:
(1) No partnership had come into existence and
the Moda, Momo and Equilibrium ventures were carried on by Bondi Junction,
Piccolo
and World Square respectively in their own rights.
(2) The payments made by Carl should be characterised as advances or loan
accounts to one or other of World Square, Bondi Junction
or Piccolo either
jointly or severally.
(3) There was no entitlement for the Farinhas under the Letter Agreement to
acquire Carl’s shares in World Square.
(4) The purported allotment of shares in the capital of World Square was made
in contravention of its Constitution and would be liable to be set aside.
(5) The accounts of the Moda and Momo businesses underestimate the revenues
earned by them and management fees, consultancy fees,
administration expenses
and training costs charged to the businesses had not been properly charged.
(6) The Farinhas or entities associated with them should be required to
purchase Carl’s shares in Bondi Junction, Piccolo and
World Square for a
consideration to be determined.
(7) Carpe Diem is entitled to recover the sum of $550,000 from Cockle
Bay.
Following the publication of my reasons of 10 December 2007, the question of
who should be required to purchase Carl’s shares
and for what
consideration was still outstanding.
- On
14 December 2007, the Farinhas were ordered to file and serve an affidavit that
disclosed relevant financial information with
respect to Bondi Junction, Piccolo
and World Square for the years ended 30 June 2004 to 30 June 2007. Carl
was ordered to file
and serve no later than 1 February 2008 submissions as to
the basis upon which the valuation of the shares in Bondi Junction, Piccolo
and
World Square should be made and as to which of the defendants should be ordered
to purchase Carl’s shares in those companies.
The defendants were ordered
to respond no later than 8 February 2008. On 26 February 2008 the Court ordered
a regime for the carrying
out of a valuation of the shares in Bondi Junction,
Piccolo and World Square. Successive hearing dates to deal with those questions
were vacated; some 10 or 15 different hearings occurred. Ultimately the orders
for the valuation of shares were discharged by consent.
- As
I said in my reasons of 6 February 2009, circumstances have changed considerably
since the hearing in 2007 and my reasons of 10 December
2007. The changes
included the fact that Bondi Junction is now the subject of a deed of company
arrangement, Piccolo is the subject
of a creditors’ voluntary winding up
and World Square is being wound up by the Court. In my reasons of 6 February
2009, I
indicated that, while I would not be prepared to make any order against
the Farinhas personally at that stage, I would not rule that
out as a
possibility. I considered that the precise nature and terms of any order would
depend upon detailed examination of such
further evidence as the parties wished
to adduce. I therefore directed the parties to bring in short minutes of
directions for the
further conduct of the proceedings. However, on 23 February
2009, I made an order, at the request of the parties, that the proceeding
be
otherwise dismissed and listed the question of costs for hearing today.
- In
the course of the conduct of the proceeding, various proposals were put forward
by the parties that are now relied upon by them
on the question of costs. I
would draw the inference that there were probably other discussions beyond those
that have been put
in evidence before me. I make no criticism of anybody for
any failure to adduce evidence as to other discussions that have taken
place
without prejudice. It is desirable however for me to say something about the
proposals that are in evidence before me.
- On
21 March 2007, Carl’s solicitors wrote to the solicitors then appearing
for the Farinhas and the other defendants. In that
letter Carl’s
solicitors stated that they expected that their clients will be successful in
obtaining the relief they seek,
including orders for the appointment of
receivers and managers of the companies or, alternatively, orders for the
winding up of the
companies. Further, they said that they expected that their
clients would obtain orders that one or more of the defendants would
pay
compensation, equitable compensation, damages, interest and costs to the
plaintiffs. They therefore were instructed to make
what they characterised as a
“once only” offer to settle the proceedings on the following
basis:
(1) Payment to Carpe Diem within 28 days of the loan of
$550,000 plus interest from 1 April 2006 to the date of payment.
(2) Repayment to Carl within 28 days of the sum of $666,045 invested by him
in the World Square project plus interest at 15% per annum
from 13 October 2005
to the date of payment.
(3) The defendants provide acceptable security for the amounts of the
payments referred to in (1) and (2).
(4) The defendants arrange for all guarantees given by Carl to any financiers
or landlords in respect of the ventures be released
and replaced with substitute
guarantees that are acceptable to the relevant parties.
- The
letter indicated that the proceedings would be discontinued by consent and that
the plaintiffs would be prepared to consider
reasonable terms for the payment in
the amounts referred to in (1) and (2). The letter also required the defendants
to pay the plaintiffs’
costs of the proceeding. That offer was apparently
not accepted.
- On
25 May 2007, the Farinhas’ then solicitors wrote to Carl’s
solicitors setting out in some detail the approach that
the defendants proposed
to take to the claims for relief that were then made in the originating process.
Specifically, the letter
said that the defendants were prepared to consent to an
order that they pay to Carl the amount lent to World Square by him, being
the
sum of $665,045 contended for by the plaintiffs, on the basis that the
plaintiffs withdraw from the position that the option
in the Letter Agreement
had not been validly exercised. The letter indicated that, in the alternative,
if Carl persisted in his
position in relation to the Letter Agreement, the
defendants would agree to an order that they pay Carl the value of his 30% share
in World Square as at the date of the issuing of the further shares as
determined by the Court.
- The
letter also indicated that the defendants would be prepared to arrange for the
transfer of the outstanding shares in Bondi Junction
and Piccolo to Carl if they
were released from their guarantees in respect of the obligations of the Moda
and Momo businesses. The
letter further contained an admission that the loan of
$550,000 had been made to Cockle Bay and that that loan remained unpaid.
The
letter did not dispute that the plaintiffs would be entitled to a reasonable
amount in respect of the costs they had incurred
up to that stage, taking into
account the factors that were outlined in the letter. In particular, the letter
asserted that the
commencement of the proceeding by interlocutory process was
unnecessary and could have been avoided and that the costs of the proceeding
had
been unnecessarily increased by the way in which the plaintiffs were conducting
the litigation. The letter ended by saying that
the defendants would, if the
proceeding were discontinued forthwith, be willing to discuss an appropriate
amount of costs and, failing
that, to refer the issue to a costs assessor or the
Court for adjudication. That offer was not accepted by the plaintiffs.
- On
12 July 2007, in the course of the hearing, counsel for the defendants proffered
three alternative versions of proposed orders
intended to shorten the
proceeding. By the first proposal there would be a declaration that the
partnerships that were the subject
of the defendants’ cross claims were
dissolved on 14 November 2005 and an order that there be an account of profits
and losses.
The proposal also involved the entry of judgment against Cockle Bay
in the amount of $550,000 in respect of the loan.
- The
second proposal involved orders that the Court direct that the question of
whether the business structure of Moda, Momo and Equilibrium
was as contended
for by Carl be determined before the remaining questions in the proceeding. If
the Court determined that Carl had
established his primary case as to the
business structure, there would be appropriate declarations concerning loan
accounts in favour
of Carl. The defendants would transfer their shares in Bondi
Junction and Piccolo to Carl for a nominal sum and the defendants would
be
ordered to purchase Carl’s shares in World Square at their value as at 14
November 2005. The proposal also involved the
entry of judgment against Cockle
Bay in the amount of $550,000. In the alternative, if the Court determined that
Carl had not established
his primary case as to the business structure, there
would be declarations for the dissolution of the partnerships and an order for
the taking of accounts.
- The
third proposal involved a Court appointed qualified accountant to act as a
referee and report on whether Bondi Junction, Piccolo
and World Square had kept
written financial records as required by the Act, what contributions were made
by Carl to each of the three
businesses, what contributions were made by the
defendants to the three businesses and what the financial position of Bondi
Junction,
Piccolo and World Square were as at the three relevant dates.
- None
of the three proposals had been foreshadowed to the plaintiffs prior to that
day. However, some time was given to counsel for
the plaintiffs to obtain
instructions. None of the proposals was accepted and the hearing proceeded.
- On
10 December 2007, following 17 hearing days, I published my conclusions on the
seven issues that I had identified. In the course
of the communications as
between the parties during 2008, there was an exchange of correspondence in
April 2008 between Carl’s
solicitors and the solicitors then acting for
the defendants. A proposal was outlined in a letter from Carl’s
solicitors of
8 April 2008 that was rejected by a letter of 14 April 2008
which outlined alternative proposals. The alternatives were rejected
by a
letter of 15 April 2008 in which further alternatives were put forward.
- The
exchanges of April brought into consideration matters that were not the subject
of the proceeding. However, it is clear enough
that the exchange was directed
to endeavouring to achieve a complete resolution of the outstanding issues in
the proceeding. The
proposal ultimately put on behalf of the plaintiffs was
that the sum of $700,000 be paid to the plaintiff within three months from
the
date of execution of a deed of settlement or by 22 July 2008, whichever was
the earlier. The plaintiffs were to be secured
by a second ranking fixed and
floating charge over the assets and undertaking of Cockle Bay or any new entity
to which the business
of that company might be transferred. Payment of that sum
was to be jointly and severally guaranteed by the Farinhas and by Cockle
Bay and
the new entity. Apart from other subsidiary terms, Carl was to transfer his
shares in World Square, Bondi Junction and Piccolo
to the defendants or their
nominees. The proposals led to nought.
- It
is against that background that the parties have now debated at some length the
question of the costs of the proceeding. The
Farinhas divide the question of
costs into three aspects. The first aspect, which they describe as pre-hearing
costs, is effectively
limited to the question of the pleadings. The second
aspect is the costs of the hearing. The third aspect is the costs incurred
following the publication of my reasons of 10 December 2007.
- The
principal contention of the Farinhas is that they have been completely
successful in their defence of the proceeding, in so far
as no relief has been
granted against them. However, they say that if they should be required to bear
any part of the hearing costs,
the pre-hearing costs should be subject to what
they describe as a general discretion allowance and an excessive disallowance.
- The
general discretion allowance is said to reflect what should be disapproval of
the way in which the proceedings have been conducted.
The excessive
disallowance is said to be justified on the basis that the litigation was
conducted in an unnecessarily burdensome
manner for the Farinhas, given the
extent of the relief sought in the proceeding, which, they say, was
disproportionate to the commercial
interests of Carl. The two seem to be
connected and it is not entirely clear to me precisely what difference is
intended.
- As
I apprehend it, the Farinhas complain about the prolixity and verbosity of the
pleading and what they describe as the scatter-gun
approach. Putting aside the
question of whether or not the pleading is unnecessarily prolix, I am not
persuaded that there is any
real distinction to be drawn between the costs of
the pleadings on the one hand, and the costs incurred up to the date of the
hearing
and the hearing costs, on the other hand. As I have said, it is
accepted on behalf of the Farinhas that the vast bulk of the hearing
was related
to the question of the business structure that existed among the various parties
to the proceeding. The Farinhas, as
directors of the companies that were the
subject of the suit, were properly joined. Serious allegations were made
against them of
breach of fiduciary duty and failure to maintain proper business
records.
- Carl
made it clear that he was seeking orders against the Farinhas for compensation
and that he was seeking orders in the alternative
that they purchase his shares
in the companies. It is significant that the Farinhas joined together with all
of the defendants in
putting in issue the substantive matters that were the
subject of the hearing. Ultimately, the vast bulk of the costs of the hearing
were directed to the question of whether there was a partnership between
companies or individuals on the one hand or whether Bondi
Junction, Piccolo and
World Square conducted the three businesses in their own rights.
- Had
the defendants succeeded in their contention that there were partnerships, the
claim of oppression under the Act would have failed.
It is no doubt for that
reason that the Farinhas denied most of the allegations made in the statement of
claim by Carl. Further,
the notion that the Farinhas may have made admissions
but nevertheless, as directors, caused the companies to continue to litigate
the
issues that were raised by the statement of claim, is unrealistic. That is to
say, they quite clearly joined in with the corporate
defendants in disputing the
allegations that were made by Carl that, having regard to the various matters
described in the statement
of claim to which I have referred above, the affairs
of the three companies have been conducted contrary to the interests of the
members and in a manner that was oppressive, unfairly prejudicial and unfairly
discriminatory against the interests of the members.
- There
were allegations of breaches of fiduciary duties. In substance, those
allegations have been made out, in the sense that the
allegation was that there
was a failure to ensure proper accounting. More significantly, income was not
brought to account and charges
were made in favour of companies associated with
the Farinhas without justification. As I said in my earlier reasons, it may
well
be that some charge could have been justified, but no attempt was ever made
to do so. In the events that occurred, I concluded in
December 2007 that the
matters that had been litigated up to that time had been resolved substantially
in favour of the plaintiffs.
As I indicated in my reasons of 6 February 2009,
there had been significant change in circumstances since those issues were
litigated.
- In
all of the circumstances I am not persuaded that any of the offers to which I
have referred should interfere with the making of
appropriate orders. While the
offers that were made may have been reasonable, I am not persuaded that it was
unreasonable for the
recipient of any of the offers to fail to accept the
relevant offer. It may well be that, had one or other of the offers been
accepted
or pursued, substantial and significant costs would have been avoided.
That however is not the criterion. The question is whether
it was unreasonable
for any of the offers to have been rejected. I consider that it is a great pity
that one or other of them was
not accepted, but I do not consider that the
failure to accept it interferes with the ordinary exercise of discretion for the
making
of a costs order.
- I
have no information as to the quantum of the costs for any particular stage of
the proceeding. However, I consider that it is
appropriate that all of the
defendants who resisted the proceeding by contesting the hearing should be held
liable for the costs
of the proceeding up to that time. I have made no order
under Order 29 of the Federal Court Rules for the separate determination of
questions and the matter remained part heard after 10 December 2007.
It may be that
significant costs have been incurred after that time, but I have
no way of knowing the quantification of the costs.
- Nevertheless
it was open to Carl to pursue, if he wished, the relief that he had originally
claimed in the originating process and
the statement of claim. That is to say,
there was a claim for the recovery of equitable compensation from various
parties including
the Farinhas. In circumstances that are not before the court
in their entirety Carl has, one would conclude, decided to cut his
losses and
not pursue the matter any further. While he pursued the relief that he
originally claimed, in the light of the findings
that were made against the
defendants, at some stage, the decision appears to have been made to abandon the
pursuit of any further
relief against the Farinhas personally. In one sense my
conclusion of 6 February 2009 resolved no issue between
the
parties. In another sense, it did so, in that I indicated that I was not able
to conclude that no order could be made against
the Farinhas personally.
Nevertheless, Carl pressed his claim for relief under s 461 of the Act in
circumstances where, for reasons unconnected with the litigation, the conduct
about which he complained had come to
an end.
- The
question is whether there is a basis for making any order as to the costs of the
proceeding after 10 December 2007. It is of
course inappropriate for the Court
to decide a hypothetical case simply to resolve the question of costs. Further,
if both parties
act reasonably in commencing and defending a proceeding, and the
proceeding is ultimately resolved by settlement, it is appropriate
that there be
no order as to the costs of the proceeding. However, that is not the present
case.
- It
is clear enough that Carl has obtained no relief against the Farinhas
personally. In all of the circumstances, I consider that
it would be
appropriate to order the defendants to pay the plaintiffs’ costs up to and
including 10 December 2007 and to order
Carl to bear 50% of the costs that have
been incurred since 10 December 2007. The plaintiffs should, as I have said,
pay any costs
of the defendants thrown away by any of the amendments of the
originating process or the statement of claim.
I certify that the preceding thirty-six (36)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Emmett.
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Associate:
Dated: 12 May 2009
Counsel for the
Plaintiffs:
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Solicitor for the Plaintiffs:
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Foulsham and Geddes
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Counsel for the Defendants:
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Mr D Cook
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Solicitor for the Defendants:
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Raj Lawyers
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