You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Federal Magistrates Court of Australia >>
2010 >>
[2010] FMCA 519
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Breakthrough Australia Pty Ltd v Halpin [2010] FMCA 519 (19 July 2010)
Last Updated: 21 July 2010
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
BREAKTHROUGH AUSTRALIA
PTY LTD v HALPIN
|
|
|
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Application in a case for summary judgment
– failure by applicant to file reply and defence to
counter-claim on time
– applicant cannot be said to have lost interest in the proceedings
– no significant prejudice
to the respondent by late filing –
application in a case dismissed.
|
Applicant/Cross-Respondent:
|
BREAKTHROUGH AUSTRALIA PTY LTD
|
|
Respondent/Cross-Claimant:
|
|
|
Date of Last Submission:
|
19 July 2010
|
REPRESENTATION
Counsel for the
Applicant:
|
Mr A. Rumsley
|
Solicitors for the Applicant:
|
Alan Rumsley
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
Mr J. Riley
|
Solicitors for the Respondent:
|
Elevation Legal
|
ORDERS
(1) The time for compliance with Order 2 of the
Court’s Orders of 31 May 2010 be extended to 8 July 2010, the
date of actual
filing.
(2) The time for compliance with Order 3 of the Court’s Orders of
31 May 2010 be extended to 30 July 2010.
(3) The respondent’s application in a case be dismissed.
(4) The costs of today be
reserved.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATESCOURT OF AUSTRALIA
ATPERTH
|
PEG 59 of 2010
BREAKTHROUGH AUSTRALIA PTY LTD
|
Applicant/Cross-Respondent
And
Respondent/Cross-Claimant
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Ex tempore – revised from the transcript)
- There
is an application in a case before the Court for various orders. In the
circumstances, it is necessary to note that on 31 May
2010, the Court ordered
that the respondent file and serve a defence and any counter-claim by 11 June
2010, and that was done. There
was then an Order, Order 2 of the Court’s
Orders of 31 May 2010, that the applicant file and serve any reply and defence
to
counter-claim by 25 June 2010. That was not done, and there was no
agreement between the parties for an extension of time in relation
to the filing
of any reply and defence to counter-claim. The circumstances in which that had
occurred, including the illness of the
solicitor for the applicant, are
recounted in an affidavit filed by Mr Rumsley today, shortly before this
hearing.[1]
- The
application today, which seeks Orders that the application be dismissed and for
payments as a consequence of the failure to file
any reply and defence to
counter-claim, is pressed by the respondent. It is true to say, as Buss JA has
recently observed in the
West Australian Supreme Court, that the failure to
comply with timelines is not something that simply ought to be allowed to happen
and that parties ought properly make
applications,[2] and I
would add, seek consent orders from the other side if they have not complied
with the time
table.[3]
- The
circumstances in which the defence to cross-claim was not filed have been
explained in a manner which, in the Court’s view,
is satisfactory in these
proceedings. The Court takes into account, in making a determination in relation
to the matter, that although
it is said by the respondent’s Counsel that
his client seeks to have this application pressed because they considered that
the applicant had lost interest in the proceedings, that the defence to
cross-claim was, in any event, served on 8 July 2010 and
there has been a
mediation listed in this matter for Friday, 23 July 2010. And in those
circumstances, the Court is simply unable
to come to the view, as is put by the
respondent, that the applicant can be said to have lost interest in these
proceedings. Furthermore,
and in any event, there is no evidence that the late
filing or the failure, prior to 8 July 2010, to file a defence to cross-claim
results in any prejudice other than the usual prejudice attached to late
filing.
- In
the above circumstances, the Court considers that the application in a case
ought to be dismissed and that there ought to be Orders
for time for compliance
with Order 2 of the Court’s Orders of 31 May 2010 to be extended to 8
July 2010, the date of actual
filing, and there will be an Order to that effect.
There ought to also be an Order that time for compliance with Order 3 of the
Court’s
Orders of 31 May 2010 be extended. In the circumstances, it is not
the case that Mr Rumsley seeks to have a reply to defence to cross-claim
filed
prior to the mediation this Friday and he informs the Court that he believes
there is sufficient material for the matter to
go to mediation. No doubt, if a
draft of the reply is available before the mediation, it will be sent to the
other side but, in any
event, the mediation can, in the Court’s view,
progress on the materials which have presently been filed, and therefore, there
will be an Order that time for compliance with Order 3 of the Court’s
Orders of 31 May 2010 be extended to 30 July 2010. There
will be an Order, given
what the Court has said, that the respondent’s application in a case be
dismissed. There will be an
order then that the costs of today be
reserved.
I certify that the preceding
4Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!Error! Style not defined.Error! Style not defined.!Syntax Error,
!fourfour (4) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Lucev
FM
Date: 20 July 2010
[1] Affidavit of Alan
Phillip Rumsley, sworn 19 July
2010.
[2] Willis v
Western Australia (No 2) [2009] WASCA 205 at para.12 per Buss
JA.
[3] Federal
Magistrates Court Rules 2001 (Cth), r.13.04.
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FMCA/2010/519.html