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Maxwell-Smith v Donnelly (No 2) [2011] FCA 259 (25 March 2011)
Last Updated: 25 March 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Maxwell-Smith v Donnelly (No 2)
[2011] FCA 259
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Citation:
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Parties:
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EUGENE MAXWELL-SMITH and INGE MAXWELL-SMITH v
MAX CHRISTOPHER DONNELLY and S & E HALL PTY LTD
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File number:
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NSD 198 of 2004
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Judge:
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NICHOLAS J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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BANKRUPTCY – trustee’s costs,
charges and expenses of administration of former bankrupts’ estates
– taxation of trustee’s
costs, charges and expenses – whether
judgment should be entered in favour of trustee against former bankrupts for sum
of such
costs, charges and expenses – trustee not entitled to judgment but
declaration made specifying sum of trustee’s entitlements
BANKRUPTCY – application by former bankrupts under s 179(1) of
the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) claiming orders for inquiry and for payment
of compensation by trustee – application unjustifiably vexatious and
oppressive
to trustee – application an abuse of process –
application dismissed save as to one particular issue
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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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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The second applicant appeared in person and on behalf of the first
applicant
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Counsel for the First Respondent:
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BJ Skinner
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Solicitor for the First Respondent:
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Church & Grace
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Solicitor for the Second Respondent:
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The Second Respondent did not appear
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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EUGENE MAXWELL-SMITHFirst
Applicant
INGE MAXWELL-SMITH Second Applicant
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AND:
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MAX CHRISTOPHER DONNELLYFirst
Respondent
S & E HALL PTY LTD Second Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT DECLARES THAT:
- The
sum of the entitlements of Maxwell Christopher Donnelly (the Trustee) to
remuneration, costs and expenses of his administration of the former bankrupt
estates of Eugene Maxwell-Smith and Inge Maxwell-Smith
(the Applicants)
for the period 16 September 2003 to 21 May 2008 is
$273,717.41.
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
Applicants give vacant possession of the property known as 8B Surf Circle, Tura
Beach, New South Wales (the Tura Beach Property) to the Trustee, or his
duly authorised servants or agents, within 60 days of the date of this
order.
- The
trustee file and serve an affidavit within 21 days of today specifying his
estimate of such other amount as the Applicants might
reasonably be required to
pay on account of any additional remuneration, costs and expenses incurred in
the administration of the
Applicants’ former bankrupt estates to which the
Trustee may be found to be entitled including any additional remuneration,
costs
and expenses referable to the proposed sale of the Tura Beach Property.
- The
Trustee file and serve an affidavit within 28 days of
today:
(a) exhibiting a copy of any valuation obtained by him of the
Tura Beach Property;
(b) outlining the steps which he proposes to take in relation to the
marketing and promotion of the Tura Beach Property.
- There
be no order as to costs of the taxation before the Registrar.
- The
Trustee’s costs in the administration of the former bankrupts’
estates include eighty-five percent (85%) of the Trustee’s
costs, charges
and expenses of and incidental to the notices of motion filed 5 May 2009
(including as amended on 16 October
2009) and 20 August 2009.
- Each
party have liberty to apply on 5 days notice for the purposes referred to in
paras 13, 15 and 16 of the reasons for judgment
delivered today.
- The
application filed in Court on 2 February 2011 (the 2 February 2011
application) be dismissed in so far as it claims relief under s 179 of
the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) in relation to the matters raised in
paragraphs 1 – 5 (inclusive) and paragraphs 7 and 8 on pages 2 and 3.
- The
2 February 2011 application, in so far as it claims relief under s 179 of
the Act in relation to the matter raised in paragraph 6 on page 2, be stood over
for directions to a date to be fixed.
- The
Applicants file and serve within 14 days a statement of particulars that
specifies:
(a) the details of the requests referred to in para 6 of
the 2 February 2011 application (including whether those requests were written
or oral or partly written and partly oral);
(b) the details of the refusals referred to in para 6 of the 2 February 2011
application (including whether those refusals were written
or oral or partly
written and partly oral); and
(c) the reasons why such refusals are alleged to have been unreasonable.
THE COURT DIRECTS THAT:
- A
Registrar of the Court tax any further costs, charges and expenses of the
Trustee incurred in administering the former bankrupt
estates of the Applicants,
including the costs specified in Order 6 above, as if it were a taxation in
accordance with Part 8, Division 4 of the Bankruptcy Regulations 1966
(Cth).
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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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 198 of 2004
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BETWEEN:
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EUGENE MAXWELL-SMITH First Applicant
INGE MAXWELL-SMITH Second Applicant
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AND:
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MAX CHRISTOPHER DONNELLY First Respondent
S & E HALL PTY LTD Second Respondent
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JUDGE:
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NICHOLAS J
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DATE:
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25 MARCH 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
procedural history in this matter is set out in my reasons for decision of 14
May 2010 (Maxwell-Smith v Donnelly [2010] FCA 474). That decision was
the subject of an appeal by Mr Donnelly (the trustee). On 16 December
2010 the Full Court which heard the appeal dismissed it as incompetent
(Donnelly v Maxwell-Smith [2010] FCAFC 154). An application for leave to
appeal against the same orders was filed during the course of the hearing of the
appeal. The Full Court
further ordered that “[l]eave to appeal be refused
because any appeal would have no prospects of success”. The Full
Court
also made a declaration that the trustee is not entitled to any indemnity from
the former bankrupt estates of Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith
in respect of the
appeal and application for leave to appeal.
- There
are two matters that I need to deal with. The first concerns the making of
orders in relation to the trustee’s costs
and expenses. The second
concerns another application that has been filed by Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith
seeking orders pursuant to
s 179(1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966
(Cth) (the Act). I will deal with these matters in that order.
The trustee’s costs and expenses
- For
the reasons stated in my earlier judgment, I made an order remitting the
proceeding to the Registrar to allow her to review the
bills of costs the
subject of the taxation and prepare a short report indicating what further
amounts should be disallowed in accordance
with my reasons. The
Registrar’s report is dated 5 November 2010. In it the Registrar revises
the total for all bills that
were the subject of the previously issued
certificates of taxation down from $392,482.72 to $273,717.41.
- The
parties were given the opportunity to raise any issue they had with the
Registrar’s report. Neither the trustee nor Mrs
Maxwell-Smith raised any
such issue.
- Now
that the Registrar’s report is at hand and the trustee’s appeal has
been determined, it is necessary for me to make
the appropriate orders. In my
earlier judgment I said (at [99]) that it was my intention to make an order for
the payment of the
trustee’s entitlement after it was finally ascertained.
I also said:
And unless there is some co-operation between the trustee and Mr and Mrs
Maxwell-Smith which renders it unnecessary for me to do
so, it is also my
intention to make an order for possession of the Tura Beach property so that it
may be sold by Mr Donnelly, thereby
allowing him to be paid what he is owed from
the proceeds of the sale.
- The
title to the Tura Beach property is registered in the name of the trustee though
it is still occupied by Mrs Maxwell-Smith.
The relief now sought by the trustee
is as follows:
- A judgment in
favour of the trustee in the sum of $273,717.41 against Mr & Mrs
Maxwell-Smith.
- An order that Mr
and Mrs Maxwell-Smith give vacant possession of the property known as 8B Surf
Circle, Tura Beach, New South Wales
to the trustee within 42 days.
- Leave to issue a
writ for possession in the event that Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith fail to give such
possession.
- A direction that
a Registrar of the Court tax any further costs, charges and expenses of the
applicant trustee including his legal
expenses of the notices of motion filed 5
May 2009 (which was amended and filed 16 October 2009) and 20 August 2010
(together, the
Notices of Motion) in accordance with Part 8, Division 4
of the Bankruptcy Regulations.
- Counsel
for the trustee argued that there should be a judgment in the amount of
$273,717.41 in the trustee’s favour against
Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith. He
said that this was the result provided for by the rules in accordance with which
the taxation occurred.
While counsel did not refer me to any specific rules, I
understood him to be referring to O 62 of the Federal Court Rules and, in
particular, O 62, r 45(3) which
provides:
If, after 14 days from the date of service of the certificate of taxation, the
costs remain unpaid then the Registrar shall, at the
request of the party in
whose favour the costs are awarded draw up sign and seal an order in favour of
that party for the sum shown
in the certificate of taxation and enter the
same.
- The
first difficulty with the trustee’s argument is that the taxation that
occurred did not occur in accordance with O 62.
The taxation went beyond a
taxation of “costs” and extended to the trustee’s remuneration
and expenses for work
undertaken by him in connection with the trustee’s
administration of the former bankrupt estates. Nor was the taxation one
that
occurred under Pt 8, Div 4 of the Bankruptcy Regulations 1966
(Cth) (Bankruptcy Regulations). The reason for that is that the
Registrar who conducted the taxation in the present case was not appointed by
the Inspector General
of Bankruptcy. As I previously explained, the taxation
occurred pursuant to an order authorised by s 30(1) and (2) of the Act:
see
paras [21]-[32] of my previous reasons. In substance, the order made by
Moore J provided that the trustee’s costs,
charges and expenses of the
administration of the estates, including the remuneration and expenses of the
trustee, would be taxed
by a registrar of the Court as if it were a taxation in
accordance with Pt 8, Div 4 of the Bankruptcy Regulations. That
is
precisely what occurred.
- The
second difficulty with the trustee’s argument is that it would, if
accepted, have the result that Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith
would be personally
liable for the trustee’s remuneration, costs and expenses incurred by him
in the course of the administration
of the bankrupt estates. Yet as counsel for
the trustee has emphasised, his client’s entitlement to be paid his
reasonable
costs, expenses and remuneration arises out of his right to be
indemnified out of the trust assets. That entitlement has been confirmed
by
orders made from time to time, including, for example, the order made by Allsop
J which provided that “the costs, remuneration
and expenses of the
respondent trustee ... as taxed ... form part of the respondent trustee’s
costs, charges and expenses of
the administration ...”. That order, and
others like it made in favour of the trustee, is not one that renders Mr and Mrs
Maxwell-Smith personally liable.
- There
are circumstances in which a beneficiary may be personally bound to indemnify a
trustee for liabilities properly incurred:
see Hardoon v Belilios [1901]
AC 118 and other authorities referred to in J.D. Heydon, M.J. Leeming, Jacobs
Law of Trusts, 7th ed at [2015]. But the trustee
has never argued that Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith could be made personally liable
by reference to the
principles discussed in those cases. Indeed, in his
submissions to me, counsel for the trustee made it clear that his client wished
to do no more than enforce his right to be indemnified out of the trust assets.
- It
is therefore not appropriate to enter judgment against Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith.
What I propose to do, however, is make a declaration
that the sum of the
trustee’s entitlements to remuneration, costs and expenses of his
administration of the former bankrupt
estates of Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith for
the period 16 September 2003 to 21 May 2008 is $273,717.41.
- There
is an additional complication in that the trustee’s entitlements are most
likely not confined to the sum of $273,717.41
because, since the close of the
period to which the certificates of taxation issued by the Registrar relate (ie.
16 September 2003
to 21 May 2008) further costs and expenses have been incurred
by the trustee which are covered by the indemnity. Hence, the declaration
I
propose to make is not intended to impose any limit upon the total amount that
might ultimately be payable to the trustee in respect
of his remuneration, costs
and expenses. What further amount is payable will depend upon the outcome of a
further taxation which
will occur in accordance with another direction that I
propose to make similar to the direction proposed by the trustee.
- I
will also order that Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith deliver up possession of the Tura
Beach property to the trustee to enable the property
to be sold by him. My
order will allow them 60 days in which to provide the trustee with vacant
possession of the Tura Beach property.
I propose to give the trustee liberty to
apply for leave to issue a writ of possession should that prove necessary.
- The
trustee, through his counsel, stated that he is willing to co-operate with Mr
and Mrs Maxwell-Smith with a view to allowing them,
if possible, to obtain
finance on the security of the property and thereby avoid the proposed sale. I
received into evidence a letter
written by the trustee on 4 July 2007. In
numbered paragraph 10 of that letter the trustee
states:
In regard to the finalisation of my administration, I have sought to reach
agreement with you about my entitlements on a number of
previous occasions. I
have offered to assist by speaking to financiers who you may wish to approach.
I have volunteered to participate
in orderly arrangements for the transfer of
title to your properties in conjunction with payment of my entitlements (for
example
a transfer to you in conjunction with you granting a mortgage to a
mortgagee who advances funds from which my entitlements are paid,
which is
standard conveyancing practice). This is a matter of record.
The significance of this for present purposes is
that counsel for the trustee informed me that the trustee’s position
remains
as stated in that paragraph.
- I
propose to grant Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith liberty to apply for the purpose of
applying for a stay of the order for possession in
the event that they are able
to arrange a payment to the trustee in the amount of $273,717.41 together with
such other amount as
they might reasonably be required to pay on account of the
trustee’s additional remuneration, costs and expenses which are
yet to be
taxed. But there are two things I should say to Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith about
this. First, I would need to be satisfied
by evidence that they were willing
and able to make such a payment before granting a stay of the order for
possession. Secondly,
they need to understand that if they want to avail
themselves of the opportunity to reach an agreement with the trustee, they will
need to move quickly.
- I
think the trustee should provide an estimate of the additional costs and
expenses which he has incurred in the period since that
covered by the taxation
before the Registrar. This would seem to be a necessary step in allowing Mr and
Mrs Maxwell-Smith the
opportunity to arrange finance to pay out the
trustee. Should there be any dispute about the reasonableness of any further
amount
which the trustee seeks to have set aside out of the proceeds of sale on
account of his additional costs and expenses, then it will
be open to any party
to apply for further orders in relation to that matter. I will allow the
trustee 21 days in which to comply
with this order.
- I
was informed by counsel for the trustee that the trustee does not have an
up-to-date valuation of the Tura Beach property but that
he intends to obtain
one for the purpose of setting a reserve and selling the property by auction.
Counsel for the trustee said
that the trustee did not object to filing and
serving an affidavit that exhibits the valuation. I think that should be done.
I
also think the affidavit should outline the steps the trustee proposes to take
in terms of advertising and promoting the sale of
the property. I will allow
the trustee 28 days in which to comply with this order.
Costs
- Counsel
for the trustee made it clear during the course of the hearing that the trustee
does not make any claim for the costs and
expenses that were incurred by him in
connection with the taxation before the Registrar. Accordingly, I propose to
make an order
that there be no order as to the costs of the taxation before the
Registrar. However, the trustee maintains that he is entitled
to his costs of
the Notices of Motion. To this end he does not ask me to make any order for
costs on the basis, I infer, that in
the absence of any such order his right to
recover his costs and expenses will be preserved.
- I
think the trustee is entitled to recover his costs of the Notices of Motion.
The question is whether there should be some adjustment
in favour of Mr and Mrs
Maxwell-Smith to reflect the trustee’s lack of success on several issues
and, if so, by what mechanism
any such adjustment should be given effect.
Counsel for the trustee submitted there should be no adjustment because it had
not been
shown that the trustee was guilty of misconduct or that the costs and
expenses incurred by him in maintaining his claim to items
which were ultimately
disallowed were themselves unreasonable.
- I
did not make any finding that the trustee was guilty of misconduct. Nor do I do
so now. However, I did find that certain amounts
that he had claimed were
unreasonable. As to the costs and expenses associated with the examination
summons, I made an explicit
finding to that effect. As to the matter of the
solicitors’ uplift, I found that the trustee’s solicitors were not
entitled
to charge any uplift under two of their three costs agreements with the
trustee and, as a result, the trustee was not entitled to
be reimbursed for any
such uplift out of the former bankrupts’ estates.
- The
trustee relied on the Full Court decision in Pantzer v Wenkart [2006] FCAFC 140; (2006) 153
FCR 466 in support of his submissions. However, there is nothing in the
decision of the Full Court in that case which suggests that a trustee
is
entitled to charge against a former bankrupt’s estate costs and expenses
incurred by the trustee in maintaining a claim
for antecedent costs and expenses
which were themselves disallowed as unreasonable. I do not accept that the
trustee’s right
of indemnity extends to such costs and expenses.
- The
matter of the Full Court’s “no costs” order may be in a
slightly different category. While the trustee’s
interpretation of the
Full Court’s order has been shown to be erroneous, I do not regard the
interpretation of that order for
which the trustee argued as one that was not
reasonably open. Nevertheless, it seems to me that when a trustee in bankruptcy
is
involved in litigation against the former bankrupt and there is a dispute as
to the meaning or effect of an order previously made
in relation to the
bankruptcy, then it is not necessary for the former bankrupt to show that the
trustee’s view of the order
was unreasonable before the former bankrupt
can obtain an order depriving the trustee of his costs in so far as they relate
to that
dispute. Again, I do not think this is contrary to anything the Full
Court said in Pantzer v Wenkart [2006] FCAFC 140; (2006) 153 FCR 466.
- In
the present case I am satisfied that it would be unjust to allow the trustee to
charge all his costs and expenses of the Notices
of Motion against the former
bankrupt estates. I propose to make a costs order which makes clear that the
trustee is not entitled
to all such costs and expenses.
- I
do not think it is satisfactory to attempt to divide out on an item by item
basis following yet another taxation the costs and
expenses which ought to be
disallowed on the basis that they related to matters upon which the trustee was
unsuccessful. I think
the better approach is for me to make an adjustment which
reflects my broad assessment of the time spent considering those aspects
of the
Notices of Motion upon which the trustee was unsuccessful.
- I
am satisfied that it is appropriate to make an adjustment in Mr and Mrs
Maxwell-Smith’s favour of 15%. This figure reflects
the trustee’s
lack of success on the three issues which I have identified and my assessment of
the amount of time which was
devoted to them during the hearing. Accordingly,
the costs order I propose to make is that 85% of the trustee’s costs of
the
Notices of Motion form part of the trustee’s costs, charges and
expenses of the administration of the former bankrupts’
estates.
- I
will direct that the further costs, charges and expenses incurred by the trustee
in his administration of the bankrupt estates
of Mr & Mrs Maxwell-Smith,
including the costs specified in para [25] above, be taxed by a Registrar of
this Court as if it were
a taxation in accordance with Pt 8, Div 4 of
the Bankruptcy Regulations.
Application under s 179(1) of the Act
- On
16 December 2010, Mrs Maxwell-Smith attempted to file an application and
supporting affidavit in the registry. These documents
were referred to me
pursuant to O 46, r 7A(2) and I made a direction that the application
and affidavit not be accepted
for filing without the leave of a judge. I also
directed that any application for such leave be listed before me at 9.30am on 2
February 2011. On that date I granted leave to Mrs Maxwell-Smith to file the
application and her supporting affidavit in Court.
- The
application is expressed to be made by Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith for orders under
s 179(1) of the Act. The substantive relief
that Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith seek
in the application includes $750,000 in compensation and, by way of
interlocutory relief, that
any “final order ...to pay the trustee’s
costs be put on hold”. The relief that is now sought and the basis upon
which that relief is sought raise some important issues.
- First,
in my earlier judgment I considered arguments raised by Mrs Maxwell-Smith at the
hearing of the Notices of Motion involving
similar allegations to those raised
in this application which she argued at that time should result in the trustee
being denied the
whole of his claim. Some of those arguments are summarised by
me in paras [44] to [48] of my previous reasons. Those arguments
were
implicitly rejected by me when I held, subject to the findings I made in
relation to certain costs that were disallowed, that
I was not satisfied that
the Registrar’s decision was wrong: see para [55] of my previous reasons.
It was submitted by Mr
and Mrs Maxwell-Smith to the Registrar that the trustee
was not entitled to any of his remuneration, costs and expenses and that
he and
his staff had acted in bad faith, irresponsibly, and not in the interests of the
creditors and the bankrupts. None of those
submissions was accepted by the
Registrar.
- The
relief that is now sought by Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith presupposes that the
trustee is not entitled to receive any of his costs,
charges and expenses which
I have determined are properly allowable to him. The position Mr and Mrs
Maxwell-Smith now seek to take
up by this application is fundamentally at odds
with the conclusion I reached in my earlier judgment where I accepted that the
bulk
of those costs were reasonable. It is impossible to see how my decision to
allow the trustee his costs (now quantified at $273,717.41)
could be permitted
to stand if I was to also hold that Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith were entitled to
recover compensation from the trustee
on the basis that none of those costs were
properly payable to him.
- Secondly,
leaving aside my previous decision, the application seeks to re-agitate a number
of issues that have already been considered
by Wilcox J and Allsop J. Wilcox J
has already heard an application made by Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith for
orders under s 179(1)
of the Act. That application related to six separate
matters that were considered by his Honour and which I summarised at
para [14]
of my previous reasons. His Honour refused to make any such
orders. That decision was confirmed on appeal subject to one important
exception relating to the matter of permission to travel: see para [17] of
my previous reasons. This matter was later the subject
of an inquiry pursuant
to s 179(1) of the Act conducted by Allsop J. His Honour found that there
was no basis for criticism
of the trustee in relation to this matter: see
para [19] of my previous reasons. Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith unsuccessfully
sought
to challenge Allsop J’s decision before the Full Court and then by
way of application for special leave to appeal to the High
Court.
- It
is well established that proceedings may constitute an abuse of process if the
point sought to be raised in them is the same as
was determined in earlier
proceedings albeit in circumstances that do not give rise to any issue estoppel:
Walton v Gardiner [1993] HCA 77; (1993) 177 CLR 378. In that case, Mason CJ, Deanne
and Dawson JJ said (at 393):
...proceedings before a court should be stayed as an abuse of process if,
notwithstanding that the circumstances do not give rise
to an estoppel, their
continuance would be unjustifiably vexatious and oppressive for the reason that
it is sought to litigate anew
a case which has already been disposed of by
earlier proceedings.
(citations omitted)
Their Honours also said (again at 393):
The jurisdiction of a superior court in such a case was correctly described by
Lord Diplock in Hunter v Chief Constable of the West Midlands
Police [1981] UKHL 13; [1982] A.C. 529, at p. 536 as “the inherent power which any
court of justice must possess to prevent misuse of its procedure in a way which,
although not inconsistent with the literal application of its procedural rules,
would nevertheless be manifestly unfair to a party
to litigation before it, or
would otherwise bring the administration of justice into disrepute among
right-thinking people”.
- It
is clear that most of the matters identified in the application, including the
matter of “permission to travel”, have
been considered by Wilcox J
and Allsop J. While some of the grievances that Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith now
raise do not precisely
mirror those dealt with in their Honours’
judgments, they are so intrinsically bound up in what has already been
considered
that it would be manifestly unfair for the trustee to have to respond
to these matters in yet another round of litigation with Mr
and Mrs
Maxwell-Smith. Another inquiry is likely to increase the trustee’s costs
and expenses substantially.
- Even
if those additional matters were not so intrinsically bound up in the matters
that were previously dealt with, it was open to
Mrs Maxwell-Smith to seek to
raise them years ago. In fact, Mrs Maxwell-Smith spent a considerable amount of
time putting the same
or very similar arguments to me in support of her position
that the trustee was not entitled to anything in respect of his remuneration,
costs and expenses during the hearing of the Notices of Motion in November 2009.
Save to the extent reflected in my previous judgment,
I was not persuaded by any
of them.
- The
Court is empowered by O 20, r 5 to dismiss a proceeding, or a claim
for relief in such a proceeding, where it is satisfied
that the proceeding or
claim is frivolous or vexatious or an abuse of the process of the Court. The
power conferred by O 20,
r 5 is one that is exercised sparingly and
only in clear cases. In the present case, I am satisfied that the power should
be
exercised in relation to all of the matters which Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith
seek to agitate in this latest proceeding save for that
referred to in
para 6 of their application.
- In
my opinion, to allow Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith to maintain the claims made in
their latest application would be manifestly unfair
to the trustee. I am
satisfied that the proceeding brought by them is unjustifiably vexatious and
oppressive to the trustee and
constitutes an abuse of process. That conclusion
is subject to a qualification relating to para 6 of their application.
- In
para 6 of the application, Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith complain of the
trustee’s refusal to return to them the title deeds
to the Jindabyne
property (folio 29/SP30123). Their complaint seems to be that this alleged
refusal was unreasonable. It does not
appear to me that any such complaint was
considered by Wilcox J or Allsop J. Nor has it been previously considered by
me.
- I
am not disposed to dismiss Mr and Mrs Maxwell-Smith’s application for an
inquiry under s 179(1) of the Act in relation
to the matter raised in
para 6. In saying this, I am not intending to reflect on the merits of
this particular complaint one
way or the other save for saying that, on the
material presently before me, I am not satisfied at this point in time that the
proceeding
would be vexatious or oppressive to the trustee or that it would
amount to an abuse of process if it was confined to that particular
matter.
- What
I propose to do is order that the application, in so far as it claims relief in
respect of the matters raised in paras 1-5
(inclusive) and paras 7 and
8 of the document, be dismissed pursuant to O 20, r 5. So far as the claim for
relief based on
para 6 of the application is concerned, I will fix the
matter for hearing on a date convenient to the parties. The question
for
decision in relation to para 6 will then be whether an order for any
inquiry should be made in relation to that matter pursuant
to s 179(1) of
the Act. I propose to make an order requiring Mrs Maxwell-Smith to provide
particulars of the requests and refusals
referred to in para 6 and
specifying the reasons why the alleged refusals are said by her to have been
unreasonable.
- I
will make orders accordingly.
I certify that the preceding forty (40)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable Justice
Nicholas.
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Dated: 25 March 2011
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