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Hughes, in the matter of Firepower Operations Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (No 3) [2010] FCA 141 (26 February 2010)
Last Updated: 26 February 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Hughes, in the matter of Firepower
Operations Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (No 3) [2010] FCA 141
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Citation:
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Hughes, in the matter of Firepower Operations Pty Ltd (In Liquidation)
(No 3) [2010] FCA 141
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Parties:
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IN THE MATTER OF FIREPOWER OPERATIONS PTY LTD
(ACN 112 074 549) (IN LIQUIDATION)BRYAN KEVIN HUGHES AS LIQUIDATOR OF
FIREPOWER OPERATIONS PTY LTD (ACN 112 074 549) (IN
LIQUIDATION)
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File number:
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WAD 197 of 2009
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Judge:
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SIOPIS J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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COSTS – examinee failed to attend
Court in answer to an examination summons – whether Court has power to
award costs against
a non-party in respect of proceeding brought under the
Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) – indemnity costs – whether costs
are payable forthwith.
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Hughes, in the matter of Firepower Operations
Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (No 2) [2009] FCA 1457In the
matter of Charles Henry Pty Ltd (In Liquidation): Burness (in his capacity as
Liquidator) v Latimer [2005] FCA 343 Crosby and Bryant, in the
matter of Australian Motor Finance Limited (Receivers and Managers Appointed)
and Australian Motor Finance
Corporate Pty Ltd (Receivers and Managers
Appointed) [2009] FCA 707Consolidated Byrnes Holdings Ltd v Hardel
Investments Pty Ltd [2009] FCA 399; (2009) 176 FCR 348UTSA Pty Ltd (In liquidation) v
Ultra Tune Australia Pty Ltd [1998] VSC 13; [1999] 1 VR 204Re Struthers,
Liquidator of Project Management, Architecture and Construction Interior (PACI)
Pty Ltd (No 3) (2005) 64 NSWLR 392Re Wridgemont Display Homes
Pty Ltd [1992] FCA 604; (1992) 39 FCR 193Australian Forest Managers Limited (in liq)
v Bramley (1996) 65 FCR 13Colgate-Palmolive Company v Cussons Pty
Limited (1993) [1993] FCA 536; 46 FCR 225
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Date of last submissions:
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8 December 2009
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Plaintiff:
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Solicitor for the Plaintiff:
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Jarman McKenna
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Counsel for Mr Johnston:
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The Hon T Carmody SC
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Solicitor for Mr Johnston:
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Russo Lawyers
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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IN THE MATTER OF FIREPOWER OPERATIONS PTY LTD
(ACN 112 074 549) (IN LIQUIDATION)
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BRYAN KEVIN
HUGHES AS LIQUIDATOR OF FIREPOWER OPERATIONS PTY LTD (ACN 112 074 549)
(IN LIQUIDATION)Plaintiff
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Mr
Timothy Francis Johnston is to pay:
(a) the wasted costs of the
liquidator in respect of his failure to appear at the examination in this Court
on 26 November 2009;
(b) the costs of the liquidator of the notice of motion dated 26 November
2009.
- Mr
Timothy Francis Johnston is to pay the costs of the liquidator referred to in
Order 1(a) and Order 1(b) above on an indemnity
basis, such that Mr
Johnston is to pay the liquidator’s costs save insofar as they were
unreasonably incurred.
- The
costs referred to in Order 1 and Order 2 are to be paid forthwith.
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
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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WAD 197 of 2009
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IN THE MATTER OF FIREPOWER OPERATIONS PTY LTD
(ACN 112 074 549) (IN LIQUIDATION)
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BRYAN KEVIN HUGHES AS LIQUIDATOR OF FIREPOWER OPERATIONS
PTY LTD (ACN 112 074 549) (IN LIQUIDATION) Plaintiff
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JUDGE:
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SIOPIS J
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DATE:
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26 FEBRUARY 2010
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
plaintiff (the liquidator) served an examination summons issued under s 596A of
the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) on Mr Timothy Francis Johnston. The
examination summons required that Mr Johnston attend for examination before
this
Court on 26 November 2009.
- Mr
Johnston did not appear at the Court on 26 November 2009 in answer to the
examination summons.
- On
26 November 2009, the liquidator filed a notice of motion for the issue of a
warrant for the arrest of Mr Johnston pursuant to
r 11.10 of the Federal
Court (Corporations) Rules 2000 (the Corporations Rules). This notice of
motion was returnable on 27 November 2009 and was served on Mr Johnston.
- On
27 November 2009, I made directions for the hearing of the notice of motion.
Mr Johnston was represented by senior counsel
at that directions hearing.
Mr Johnston filed a notice of appearance. In accordance with the directions, Mr
Johnston filed affidavits
in opposition to the issue of a warrant for his
arrest.
- At
the hearing of the motion on 2 December 2009, Mr Johnston was again represented
by senior counsel. Mr Johnston read and relied
upon affidavits sworn by himself
and Dr Robert Hugo Mackay. Mr Johnston and Dr Mackay were cross-examined.
At the conclusion
of the hearing, I made orders for the issue of a warrant for
the arrest of Mr Johnston (Hughes, in the matter of Firepower Operations
Pty Ltd (In Liquidation) (No 2) [2009] FCA 1457 (Firepower
Operations (No 2)). I also ordered both parties to file
further submissions on the question of costs.
- The
following issues have emerged from the submissions.
- First,
whether the Court has jurisdiction to order that Mr Johnston pay the
liquidator’s costs in respect of the notice
of motion and his wasted
costs in respect of Mr Johnston’s failure to attend this Court on 26
November 2009.
- Secondly,
if the Court does have such jurisdiction:
(a) whether costs should
be awarded on an indemnity basis;
(b) whether the costs should be ordered to be paid to forthwith.
DOES THE COURT HAVE JURISDICTION TO ORDER THAT MR JOHNSTON PAY THE
LIQUIDATOR’S COSTS?
- Mr
Johnston contended that the Court had no jurisdiction to order that Mr Johnston
pay the liquidator’s costs.
- The
statutory provisions relevant to Mr Johnston’s contention read as
follows:
(1) Section 43 of the Federal Court of Australia Act
1976 (Cth) (the Federal Court Act):
(1) ...the Court or a Judge has jurisdiction to award costs in all proceedings
before the Court...other than proceedings in respect
of which this or any other
Act provides that costs shall not be awarded.
(1A) ...
(2) Except as provided by any other Act, the award of costs is in the discretion
of the Court or Judge.
(2) Section 1335(2) of the Corporations Act:
(2) The costs of any proceeding before a court under this Act are to be borne by
such party to the proceeding as the court, in its
discretion,
directs.
(3) Rule 11.10 of the Corporations Rules:
(1) This rule applies if a person is summoned or ordered by the Court to attend
for examination, and:
(a) without reasonable cause, the
person:
(i) fails to attend at the time and place appointed;
or
(ii) fails to attend from day to day until the conclusion of the examination;
or
(iii) refuses or fails to take an oath or make an affirmation;
or
(iv) refuses or fails to answer a question that the Court directs the person to
answer; or
(v) refuses or fails to produce books that the summons requires the person to
produce; or
(vi) fails to comply with a requirement by the Court to sign a written record of
the examination; or
(b) before the day fixed for the examination, the person who applied for the
summons or order satisfies the Court that there is reason
to believe that the
person summoned or ordered to attend for examination has absconded or is about
to abscond.
(2) The Court may:
(a) issue a warrant for the arrest of the person summoned or ordered to attend
for examination; and
(b) make any other orders that the Court thinks just or
necessary.
- Mr
Johnston contended that he was not a party to the notice of motion, nor to the
examination proceeding, and, therefore, the Court
had no jurisdiction to award
costs against him as a “non-party”. This was because the
liquidator’s examination
and motion were proceedings brought under the
Corporations Act and, in those circumstances, s 43 of the Federal Court
Act, did not afford jurisdiction to the Court to award costs against a non-party
in respect of those proceedings. Mr Johnston contended that when s 43 of the
Federal Court Act was read with s 1335(2) of the Corporations Act, the
jurisdiction of the Court hearing a Corporations Act proceeding, was
confined to awarding costs against a party to that proceeding.
- Mr
Johnston went on to contend that the provisions of r 11.10(2)(b) of the
Corporations Rules, which permitted the Court to “make
any other orders
that the Court thinks just or necessary”, did not provide an independent
head of jurisdiction to permit an
order to be made against a non-party. This
was because the Corporations Rules had to be read subject to the jurisdiction
conferred
on the Court in the enabling Acts, and s 43 of the Federal Court Act
could not operate as an enabling Act to permit the making of
non-party costs
orders, in respect of the Corporations Act proceedings.
- Mr
Johnston contended further that no reliance could be placed on the cases of
In the matter of Charles Henry Pty Ltd (In Liquidation): Burness (in his
capacity as Liquidator) v Latimer [2005] FCA 343 (Charles Henry)
and Crosby and Bryant, in the matter of Australian Motor Finance Limited
(Receivers and Managers Appointed) and Australian Motor Finance
Corporate Pty
Ltd (Receivers and Managers Appointed [2009] FCA 707 (Crosby and
Bryant). In those cases, the Court had made orders pursuant to r
11.10(2)(b) that a defaulting examinee pay the liquidator’s wasted
costs
caused by a defaulting examinee not attending an examination, and the
liquidator’s costs of the application for the issue
of a warrant for the
arrest of the defaulting examinee, respectively. Mr Johnston contended that in
those cases no consideration
had been given to the argument that that rule
could not found an independent head of jurisdiction to make an award of costs
against
a non-party examinee.
- Mr
Johnston submitted that, in any event, the power to award costs under s 43 of
the Federal Court Act against a non-party was confined
to categories which did
not include a defaulting examinee.
- In
my view, Mr Johnston’s argument that the jurisdiction conferred on the
Court by s 43 of the Federal Court Act to award
costs is limited by the
provisions of s 1335(2) of the Corporations Act, cannot be accepted.
- The
Court, in the case of Consolidated Byrnes Holdings Ltd v Hardel Investments
Pty Ltd [2009] FCA 399; (2009) 176 FCR 348 (Consolidated Byrnes), considered a
similar argument to that which is raised by Mr Johnston as to the construction
of s 43 of the Federal Court Act and
s 1335(2) of the Corporations
Act. Lander J found that s 1335(2) was not intended to limit the
jurisdiction of this Court described in s 43(1) of the Federal Court Act to make
costs orders in respect
of proceedings before the Court brought under the
Corporations Act.
- Lander
J reached this conclusion after closely examining the existing authorities.
Lander J found the reasoning of Chernov J in
UTSA Pty Ltd (In liquidation) v
Ultra Tune Australia Pty Ltd [1998] VSC 13; [1999] 1 VR 204 (UTSA) compelling.
Lander J also observed that Brereton J in the case of Re Struthers,
Liquidator of Project Management, Architecture and Construction Interior (PACI)
Pty Ltd (No 3) (2005) 64 NSWLR 392, had also found the reasoning of Chernov
J in UTSA compelling and had followed the decision in UTSA in
preference to the first instance decisions in this Court in Re Wridgemont
Display Homes Pty Ltd [1992] FCA 604; (1992) 39 FCR 193 (Wridgemont) and
Australian Forest Managers Limited (in liq) v Bramley (1996) 65 FCR 13.
Lander J also noted the criticism of the Wridgemont decision by Professor
Dal Pont in Law of Costs (2nd ed, Lexis Nexis
Butterworths, 2009).
- Like
Lander J and Brereton J, I, too, find the reasoning of Chernov J in UTSA
compelling and, therefore, follow Lander J’s decision in Consolidated
Byrnes. Accordingly, I find that s 1335(2) does not have the effect of
preventing this Court from making an order for costs against non-parties under s
43 of the Federal Court
Act in proceedings brought under the Corporations
Act; nor does it preclude the making of rules which permit the making of
such costs orders in respect of the Corporations Act proceedings.
- There
is, therefore, no reason why the Court should not give full effect to the terms
of r 11.10 of the Corporations Rules. That
rule deals specifically with the
Court’s powers in circumstances where a person is summoned under s 596A of
the Corporations Act to attend for an examination, and does not do so
without reasonable excuse. As mentioned, r 11.10(2)(b) provides
specifically
that the Court may “make any other orders that the Court
thinks just or necessary”.
- In
my view, r 11.10(2) provides a sufficient basis upon which the Court may order
that Mr Johnston pay the liquidator’s wasted
costs of his failure to
attend the Court on 26 November 2009 in answer to the examination summons;
and also the liquidator’s
costs in respect of the notice of motion which
the liquidator was required to file in order to compel Mr Johnston’s
attendance
at the examination summons. (See, Charles Henry and Crosby
and Bryant.)
INDEMNITY COSTS
- The
next issue is whether the costs should be awarded against Mr Johnston on an
indemnity basis.
- In
the case of Colgate-Palmolive Company v Cussons Pty Limited [1993] FCA 536; (1993) 46 FCR
225 at 233 (Colgate-Palmolive), Sheppard J said that to warrant a
departure from the ordinary rule that costs be paid on a party and party
basis there should
be some “special or unusual feature in the case”;
and that the cases in which indemnity costs may be ordered were not
closed.
Sheppard J then went on to observe at 233-234, at
[5]:
Notwithstanding the fact that that is so, it is useful to note some of the
circumstances which have been thought to warrant the exercise
of the discretion.
I instance the making of allegations of fraud knowing them to be false and the
making of irrelevant allegations
of fraud (both referred to by Woodward J in
Fountain and also by Gummow J in Thors v Weekes (1989) 92 ALR 131
at 152; evidence of particular misconduct that causes loss of time to the Court
and to other parties (French J in Tetijo); the fact that the proceedings
were commenced or continued for some ulterior motive (Davies J in
Ragata) or in wilful disregard of known facts or clearly established law
(Woodward J in Fountain and French J in J-Corp...); the making of
allegations which ought never to have been made or the undue prolongation of a
case by groundless contentions
(Davies J in Ragata); an imprudent refusal
of an offer to compromise (eg Messiter v Hutchinson (1987) 10 NSWLR 525;
Maitland Hospital v Fisher (No 2) (1992) 27 NSWLR 721 at 724 (Court
of Appeal); Crisp v Keng (unreported, Court of Appeal, NSW, Kirby P,
Priestley JA, Cripps JA, No 40744/1992, 27 September 1993) and an award of
costs on an indemnity basis against a contemnor (eg Megarry V-C in EMI
Records...). Other categories of cases are to be found in the reports. Yet
others to arise in the future will have different features about
them which may
justify an order for costs on the indemnity basis. The question must always be
whether the particular facts and circumstances
of the case in question warrant
the making of an order for payment of costs other than on a party and party
basis.
- In
light of my findings in Firepower Operations (No 2) that Mr
Johnston’s failure to answer the examination summons occurred in
circumstances where he deliberately set out to obtain
a medical certificate for
the purposes of avoiding his attendance at the examination, whether warranted by
the state of his health
or not, Mr Johnston had acted in deliberate disregard of
the Court summons. Further, in contending that the medical certificate
obtained
in those circumstances constituted a reasonable excuse, Mr Johnston put forward
a case which was, once the true facts were
revealed, bound to fail.
- In
my view, those circumstances constitute special circumstances of the kind
referred to by Sheppard J in Colgate-Palmolive, which warrant an order
that costs be payable on an indemnity basis.
COSTS PAYABLE FORTHWITH
- The
next question is whether the costs should be ordered to be payable
forthwith.
- The
Court has a discretion as to whether to order that the costs be payable
forthwith. The general position is that costs in respect
of interlocutory
proceedings would not be payable forthwith.
- However,
in my view, the costs in question relate to a specific episode, namely, the
failure of Mr Johnston to attend an examination
pursuant to an order of the
Court and the steps taken by the liquidator in order to ensure compliance with
that order.
- That
episode is a separate episode which is now finalised. The matter was concluded
in favour of the liquidator who succeeded in
procuring Mr Johnston’s
attendance at the examination. There is no need for the payment of the costs to
await the completion
of Mr Johnston’s examination. No further
circumstances will affect the costs question in respect of the finalised
episode.
- In
those circumstances, the costs should be payable forthwith.
I certify that the preceding twenty-nine (29)
numbered paragraphs are a
true copy
of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Siopis.
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Associate:
Dated: 26 February 2010
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