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Pearce v Clear Island Investments Pty Ltd [2010] FMCA 37 (22 January 2010)
Federal Magistrates Court of Australia
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Pearce v Clear Island Investments Pty Ltd [2010] FMCA 37 (22 January 2010)
Last Updated: 27 January 2010
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
PEARCE v CLEAR ISLAND
INVESTMENTS PTY LTD
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BANKRUPTCY – Reasonable costs of
representation.
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MARK WILLIAM PEARCE AS TRUSTEE OF THE BANKRUPT ESTATES OF NEIL IAN LEGGETT
& JULIE LEGGETT
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Respondent:
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CLEAR ISLAND INVESTMENTS PTY LTD AS TRUSTEE OF THE
CII SUPERANNUATION FUND
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Date of Last Submission:
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7 August 2009
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REPRESENTATION
Solicitors for the
Applicant:
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Shand Taylor Lawyers
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Solicitors for the Respondent:
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Hemming & Hart Lawyers
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ORDERS
(1) That for the purpose of determining the reasonable
legal costs and expenses of defending these proceedings, in accordance with
Order 1 made on 5 June 2009, the solicitors for the respondent shall obtain an
assessment of their costs pursuant to s.337 Legal Profession Act 2007
(Q.) from a costs assessor.
(2) That in addition to the notice required to be given pursuant to Order 2 made
on 5 June 2009 the solicitors for the respondent
shall provide the solicitors
for the applicant with a copy of any assessment of costs, omitting any details
that may attract
privilege.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATESCOURT OF AUSTRALIA
ATBRISBANE
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BRG 310 of 2009
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MARK WILLIAM PEARCE AS TRUSTEE OF THE BANKRUPT ESTATES OF NEIL IAN
LEGGETT & JULIE LEGGETT
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Applicant
And
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CLEAR ISLAND INVESTMENTS PTY LTD AS TRUSTEE OF THE CII SUPERANNUATION
FUND
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Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
parties are engaged in litigation as to whether the applicant trustee in
bankruptcy of two debtors is entitled to certain monies
held by the respondent
superannuation fund, of which the debtors were the only members.
- Consequent
upon an application brought by the trustee in bankruptcy, on 14 May 2009 orders
were made for the preservation of the assets
of the superannuation fund pending
the final hearing of this matter. A question arose as to whether the respondent
was entitled
to use its assets to meet its costs of defending the
proceedings
- In
Reasons for Judgment delivered on 5 June 2009 I concluded that the respondent
should be entitled to meet its reasonable legal expenses
from its assets
otherwise frozen. At paragraph [29] of my Reasons I stated:
- “I am
therefore persuaded that, in the exercise of my discretion, the respondent
should be permitted access to the superannuation
fund to meet its legal expenses
of these proceedings. However, the respondent should not have carte blanche to
incur needless or
excessive expenses. The conduct of the litigation will need
to be carefully monitored. The respondent’s lawyers will have
to justify
their costs and expenses to a taxing registrar. Much more detail will be
required to determine what is a reasonable level
of costs in proceedings such as
these. I do not propose, at this stage, to set a cap or a limit to the legal
costs that can be incurred.
What I propose to permit is the incurring of
reasonable legal costs and expenses, and a prior reporting of such expenses to
the
solicitors for the applicant. If the applicant has genuine concerns about
the level of costs incurred it can apply to the Court
for appropriate
relief.”
- Orders
were made on 5 June 2009:
- (1) That,
subject to and conditional upon compliance with Order 2 hereof, Order 1 made on
14 May 2009 be varied to permit the respondent
to meet its reasonable legal
costs and expenses of defending these proceedings from the assets of the CII
Superannuation Fund.
- (2) The
solicitors for the respondent shall give to the solicitors for the applicant not
less than seven (7) days notice in writing
of any request for a payment by the
respondent towards legal costs and expenses, specifying the amount of payment
required and the
date on which such payment is due.
- (3) Each
parties’ costs of and incidental to the interlocutory application of 14
May 2009 are reserved.
- An
issue has arisen as to how the reasonableness of the respondent’s costs be
monitored, and the practical implementation of
the orders of 5 June. What was
contemplated by my earlier orders was that the applicant could apply to the
court for relief if a
payment thought by it to be excessive was notified in
accordance with Order 2 made on 5 June. As is apparent from my reasons, the
procedure to be adopted was for the respondent’s solicitors to have their
costs assessed by an appropriate person. The Court
nominated a taxing
registrar, but under the Legal Profession Act 2007 (Q.), the reasonable
legal costs can be assessed by a ‘costs assessor’ (a defined term in
s.300 of the Act). Once assessed, the respondent’s solicitors were
entitled to payment and had to notify the applicant’s solicitors.
- By
letter dated 10 June 2009 the solicitors for the applicant proposed a procedure
by which the reasonableness of the respondent’s
costs could be monitored.
The respondent’s solicitors disagreed with that procedure. They simply
submitted a tax invoice
issued to their client.
- By
an affidavit filed on 31 July 2009 the solicitor for the applicant deposed to
genuine concerns regarding the level of costs incurred
by the respondent. He
elaborated on these concerns at paragraph 5 of his affidavit.
- Accordingly,
on 31 July the following orders were made:
- (12) That any
submissions as to the respondents entitlements to its reasonable legal costs and
expenses provided for in order 1 made
5 June 2009 be filed and served by 7
August 2009.
- (13) That the
respondent file and serve any submissions in response by 14 August 2009.
- (14) That the
applicant file and serve any submissions in reply by 21 August
2009.
- Submissions
were received from the solicitors for the applicant. No submissions were
received from the solicitors for the respondent.
- The
Court must be careful when considering what information is provided by the
respondent to the solicitors for the applicant not
to infringe any legal
professional privilege, or privilege against self-incrimination to which the
respondent, or its officers, may
be entitled to maintain. In my view, whilst
the respondent ought not be allowed to incur excessive legal fees, so as to
dissipate
what is arguably the applicant’s asset, nor should the applicant
be entitled to use its entitlement to monitor the incurring
of such legal
expenses as either a forensic tool, nor as a weapon of oppression. I am not
suggesting that any of those matters have
occurred to date.
- In
my view, the way in which both parties’ interests can be protected is as
follows.
- By
s.337 of the Legal Profession Act, the respondent’s solicitors can
request an assessment of their legal costs from an appointed costs assessor. By
s.341 of the Act that costs assessor will determine:
- (a) whether or
not it was reasonable to carry out the work to which the legal costs relate; and
- (b) whether or
not the work was carried out in a reasonable way; and
- (c) the
fairness and reasonableness of the amount of legal costs in relation to the
work.
- Once
the legal costs have been assessed in accordance with the Act, the solicitors
for the respondent should then submit that assessment
(together with any
itemised assessment (omitting details that may attract privilege) to the
solicitors for the applicant in accordance
with Order 2 made on 5 June.
- If
the solicitors for the applicant then have any issue with either the amount of
the assessment or any matter incidental thereto,
they can seek the Court’s
assistance.
- A
copy of any client costs agreement will have to be provided to the costs
assessor. The costs of the assessment will form part of
the reasonable defence
costs, unless s.342(2)(a) of the Legal Profession Act applies. It should
be made clear to the costs assessor that the respondent’s solicitors are
only entitled to recover, from
the preserved fund, the reasonable costs of
defending these proceedings, and not for any collateral
purpose.
I certify that the preceding
15Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!Error! Style not defined.Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!fifteenfifteen (15) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment
of Wilson FM
Associate: Lynnette Chin
Date: 22 January 2010
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