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P Dawson Nominees Pty Ltd v Brookfield Multiplex Limited (No 4) [2010] FCA 1029 (21 September 2010)
Last Updated: 22 September 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
P Dawson Nominees Pty Ltd v Brookfield
Multiplex Limited (No 4) [2010] FCA 1029
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Citation:
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P Dawson Nominees Pty Ltd v Brookfield Multiplex Limited (No 4) [2010] FCA
1029
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Parties:
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P DAWSON NOMINEES PTY LTD and FREDERICK HENRY
HART v BROOKFIELD MULTIPLEX LIMITED and BROOKFIELD MULTIPLEX FUNDS MANAGEMENT
LIMITED
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File number:
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VID 1380 of 2006
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Judge:
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FINKELSTEIN J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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REPRESENTATIVE PROCEEDING – approval
of settlement – factors to be considered – disproportionate payment
to class members – payment
for applicants’ time and expenses –
solicitors restrained from acting against respondents in future litigation
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Brookfield Multiplex Ltd v International Litigation Funding Partners Pte
Ltd [2009] FCAFC 147; (2009) 180 FCR 11CSR v Rothfield (unreported, Hedigan J,
SC of Vic, 3 April 1992) Darwalla Milling Co Pty Ltd v F Hoffman-La
Roche (No 2) (2006) 236 ALR 322Dorajay Pty Ltd v Aristocrat Leisure
Ltd [2009] FCA 19Ingot Capital Investments Pty Ltd v Macquarie Equity
Markets Ltd (2008) 73 NSWLR 653 Williams v FAI Home Security Pty
Ltd (No 5) [2001] FCA 399
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Place:
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Melbourne
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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 Applicant:
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N C Hutley SC and M B J Lee
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Maurice Blackburn
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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T F Bathurst QC and S M Nixon
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Mallesons Stephen Jaques
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Counsel for the Australian Securities & Investments Commission:
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C Shaw
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Solicitor for the Australian Securities & Investments Commission:
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Australian Securities & Investments Commission
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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P DAWSON NOMINEES PTY LTD
andFREDERICK HENRY HART Applicants
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AND:
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BROOKFIELD MULTIPLEX LIMITED
andBROOKFIELD MULTIPLEX FUNDS MANAGEMENT
LIMITEDRespondents
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Pursuant
to sections 33V and 33ZF of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976
(Cth), the settlement of the proceeding be approved on the terms set out
in:
(a) the Class Action Settlement Deed executed by the parties and
dated 14 May 2010, being exhibit AJW-1 to the affidavit of Andrew
John Watson
sworn on 1 July 2010, and the Class Action Settlement Amending Deed executed by
the parties and dated 20 July 2010, being
exhibit AJW-8 to the affidavit of
Andrew John Watson sworn 21 July 2010;
(b) the Settlement Distribution Scheme being exhibit AJW-3 and including
exhibit AJW-4 to the affidavit of Andrew John Watson sworn
on 1 July 2010.
- Pursuant
to section 33ZF of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth), the
amount of $42,735.00 be approved as the amount of the First Applicant’s
Reimbursement Claim and the amount of $18,210.00
be approved as the Second
Applicant’s Reimbursement Claim for the purpose of the Settlement
Distribution Scheme.
- The
bank guarantee number G00287737 dated 21 July 2009 in the sum of AUD$5,000,000
held by the Court, provided by the Applicants as
security for the
Respondents’ costs be surrendered to the Commonwealth Bank of Australia
after payment of the Settlement Amount
(as defined in the Class Action
Settlement Deed) to Maurice Blackburn.
- The
following documents be made confidential and placed in a sealed envelope marked
"Not to be opened except by leave of the Court
or a
Judge”:
(a) Paragraph 6, from the words “Provided the
conditions of the settlement...” in line 6 to the end of the
paragraph, paragraph 7, and exhibits AJW-1, AJW-2, AJW-4 and AJW-6 to the
affidavit of Andrew
John Watson sworn 1 July 2010;
(b) Exhibit AJW-7 to the affidavit of Andrew John Watson sworn 9 July
2010;
(c) Paragraphs 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 20, 21, 22, 25, 26 and 27 of the Affidavit
of Andrew John Watson sworn 21 July 2010, and exhibits
AJW-8, AJW-9 and AJW-10.
- The
Applicant and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission mediate the
outstanding issues between them regarding any costs
orders in this Court before
a Registrar on a date to be agreed and notified to the Court (or such other date
as is convenient to
the Court).
- The
proceeding be adjourned with liberty to apply on 24 hours’ notice.
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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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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VID 1380 of 2006
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BETWEEN:
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P DAWSON NOMINEES PTY LTD and FREDERICK HENRY HART
Applicants
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AND:
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BROOKFIELD MULTIPLEX LIMITED and BROOKFIELD MULTIPLEX FUNDS
MANAGEMENT LIMITED Respondents
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JUDGE:
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FINKELSTEIN J
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DATE:
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21 SEPTEMBER 2010
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PLACE:
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MELBOURNE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- This
is a class action which the parties have agreed to compromise, subject to court
approval as required by s 33V of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976
(Cth). The action has a long history. In fact, the class action is a
consolidation of two actions. One was commenced on 18 December
2006 by the
first applicant. The other was commenced on 10 December 2008 by the second
applicant. Progressing the consolidated
claims has been both a lengthy and
costly process. There have been over ten interlocutory disputes and a number of
appeals. There
was also a related action in which it was alleged, and an appeal
court found, that an agreement to fund a class action where the
class number
exceeds twenty is a managed investment scheme which is prohibited unless
registered under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). Now, many millions of
dollars in costs later, the parties have agreed to resolve their dispute if the
court agrees.
- It
goes without saying that the court should encourage the settlement of class
actions and other complex cases. Perhaps more than
most cases, class actions
lend themselves to compromise because of the uncertainty of their result,
difficulties of proof, complexities
in the assessment of damages, as well as the
expense of a long trial.
- Some
courts take the settlement of an action more seriously than others. For
example, the US District Court for the Eastern District
of Louisiana imposes
responsibility for instituting settlement discussions on the parties’
attorneys. Local Rule 16.3E provides:
As officers of the court, counsel in civil cases have a responsibility to
minimize the expense of the administration of justice,
to refrain from burdening
unnecessarily those members of the public called for jury duty, and to avoid
inconveniencing witnesses
unnecessarily. To these ends, they should conduct
serious settlement discussions in time to avoid the expense to the public and
to
litigants, and the inconvenience to jurors and witnesses, occasioned by
settlements made on the eve of, or at the outset, of
trial.
Despite much chatter about cost saving measures, I am not aware of an
equivalent rule having been adopted (naturally with appropriate
modification) by
an Australian court. Nor am I aware of any move to incorporate such a rule.
- Despite
the obvious advantages of settling class actions, there remains the need to
ensure that the interests of class members are
adequately looked after. In the
trial preparation, and the conduct of the trial itself, their protection
depends, in no small measure,
on the capacity of the named applicant to monitor
the actions of the lawyers who have been retained to run the case. When it
comes
to a settlement it is the court that assumes responsibility for protecting
the interests of the class members. In that task the
court necessarily places
considerable reliance on the parties’ lawyers. I say
“parties’ lawyers” to make
clear that I do not think that it
is just the applicant’s lawyers that carry the burden of ensuring that the
court is given
sufficient information to assess whether a proposed settlement is
to be approved. A settlement proposal is, in reality, a proposal
put up by both
sides. So the respondent’s lawyers should also bear some responsibility
for ensuring that the court has all
the information that objectively describes
the merits of the case and brings to the court’s attention the obstacles
to recovery
and the benefits to be derived from the proposed settlement.
- It
is the practice in this court to require the applicant to notify class members
of the proposed settlement so that they may have
the opportunity to object at
the s 33V hearing. If the settlement is complex and contains elements which the
lawyers think might
not find favour with the judge (or which the judge may wish
the parties to modify), it may be appropriate to apply to the court for
a
preliminary evaluation of the proposed settlement. If, at such a hearing, the
judge has reservations about the settlement, the
parties may be able to resume
negotiations to remove any potential obstacle to approval. This is the normal
practice in United States
courts (see the Manual for Complex Litigation,
4th ed, §13.14) and, in appropriate cases, is worthwhile utilising here.
- By
way of background, this class action is brought on behalf of 109 purchasers of
securities issued by the Multiplex companies between
2 August 2004 and 30 May
2005. The securities are Multiplex Group stapled securities and Multiplex
Step-Up Income Distributing Trust
Issued Exchangeable Securities and both are
traded on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX). It is alleged that the
securities were
purchased at an over-value. The case which the applicants seek
to make relate to the Multiplex’s Wembley Stadium, West India
Quay and
Qantas Hangar projects that were undertaken by a Multiplex company. The
projects proved to be very unprofitable and when
that was disclosed to the
market the price of the securities dropped.
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first project concerned Multiplex’s contract to design and build Wembley
stadium for a fixed price. Originally the forecast
profit was approximately
₤42 million. By February 2006, Multiplex had announced to the ASX
that the project had made
an AU$465 million loss. The applicants’
main contentions are that (1) there was an overstatement of Multiplex group
profits by reason of its failure to recognise a loss on the Wembley Stadium
project in its accounts for the six month ended 31 December
2004 and
(2) at various dates in 2005 Multiplex failed to disclose that the Wembley
Stadium project was forecast to make a loss.
- As
regards the West India Quay development, it is alleged that the project was to
be carried out under a fixed price contract for
around ₤100 million
which was due to be completed in May 2004. But, as a result of problems with
construction works,
by August 2004 the project was not completed, ultimately
resulting in a write-off of ₤10 million. The applicants’
complaints are similar to those in relation to Wembley Stadium.
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Qantas Hangar contract was entered into for a fixed price of around
AU$71 million and was due to be completed by August
2004. By June 2004 it
is said that Multiplex had forecast that the project would make a loss of AU$20
million. Again, the complaints
are similar.
- There
is a further allegation levelled at Multiplex. The applicants say that in their
results for the six months to 31 December
2004, Multiplex sought to offset the
losses from the Wembley Stadium, West India Quay and Qantas Hangar projects by
recognising ₤25 million
of non-core fee income. The validity of this
accounting is in issue.
- On
these bases the applicants plead that the Multiplex companies
(1) contravened the scheme of continuous disclosure provided
for by
ss 674 and 675 of the Corporations Act and (2) contravened the
prohibitions on misleading and deceptive conduct in ss 1041H, 1041E, 670A
and 728 of the Corporations Act, s 12DA of the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth) and s 9 of the Fair Trading
Act 1999 (Vic). Each allegation is denied by Multiplex.
- The
parties have been negotiating a settlement for some time, initially under the
auspices of an experienced mediator. In broad
terms the agreement they have
reached is as follows:
(1) Multiplex will pay the settlement amount
($110 million) in full and final settlement of the claims of the applicants
and
group members. This payment is made without any admission of liability;
(2) The settlement amount is to be paid into a nominated account to be held
until the settlement is approved; and
(3) The applicants and all class members will release the Multiplex companies
from all future claims.
- The
settlement amount is to be applied as follows: first, in payment of the
applicants’ costs in a sum to be approved by the
court (approximately
$11 million for Maurice Blackburn’s legal fees); second, in payment
of the cost of administering
the fund and distributing the amounts to class
members in the manner provided for; third, in payment of the applicants’
reimbursement
claims (approximately $60,000); and fourth, the balance of the
funds to be distributed between the applicants and the class members
(approximately $100 million).
- The
applicants’ solicitors (Maurice Blackburn) have filed a memorandum in
support of the proposed settlement. The memorandum
is necessarily confidential.
Some aspects may, however, be disclosed for they will not disclose real
confidences: disclosure will
merely state the obvious. First, the solicitors
express some confidence that the action will succeed. Second, they readily
acknowledge
that proving loss will be difficult. The problem is one of
causation. It is necessary to explain why this is so.
- The
applicants may not attempt to prove that they, or the class members, relied upon
the published statements made by Multiplex about
the state of the Multiplex
business when they traded in Multiplex securities. Instead, the principal focus
of their action will
be on the market-based causation theory. Under this
theory, causation may be made out if it can be demonstrated that the
contraventions
caused the market to inflate the price of the securities. The
decision of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Ingot Capital Investments
Pty Ltd v Macquarie Equity Markets Ltd (2008) 73 NSWLR 653 suggests
that it may not be possible in Australia to rely on the market-based causation
theory. That case
posits that it is necessary to prove reliance in cases where
it is alleged that a contravention of the continuous disclosure provisions
of
the Corporations Act induce a plaintiff to enter into a particular
transaction.
- While
Maurice Blackburn consider that market-based causation involves a different
categorisation of the effect of the contraventions
and can be distinguished from
Ingot Capital, they necessarily accept that the question is uncertain.
Further, the relative novelty and legal importance of the issue suggests
that,
even were the applicants to succeed at trial, the matter would likely go on
appeal, perhaps to the High Court if special leave
is obtained. This would
effectively delay the resolution of the claims for several more years.
- Counsel
retained by the applicants have provided an opinion that, in their view, the
settlement is reasonable. Once again I will
not disclose what has been said in
that opinion as it is privileged and filed on the basis that privilege will be
maintained. Nonetheless,
without giving anything away, I am able to say that in
reaching the view that the settlement is reasonable, counsel took into account:
(1) the lack of certainty on questions of liability; (2) the
uncertainty as to the approach the court might take to expert
evidence of
economists who would be called to assess the “true value” of the
securities; (3) the possibility that
the court might require proof of
individual reliance as a condition of causation; and (4) the very real risk
of additional cost
and delay caused by any further appeals.
- Should
the proposed settlement be approved? A settlement will be approved under
s 33V if it is fair and reasonable. The factors
which have led me to
conclude that what has been proposed is fair and reasonable are as follows.
- First,
the terms of the settlement were agreed in arm’s length negotiations.
- Second,
when the settlement was agreed in principle, the case had reached the stage, as
a result of detailed pleadings, the provision
of lengthy particulars and
discovery, that Maurice Blackburn and counsel had sufficient information to
assess the merits of the class
claims.
- Third,
Maurice Blackburn and its counsel, who have recommended the settlement, are
specialists in class action litigation. They
understand, and are able to assess
and evaluate, the risks and rewards of this kind of litigation. Moreover, the
fees to which they
will be entitled under the proposal are shown by independent
evidence to be fair and reasonable. It could not be suggested that
the
lawyers’ interests have been put ahead of the class members.
- Fourth,
the class members will recover in the order of 62 cents in the dollar of Maurice
Blackburn’s estimate of the reasonable
value of their respective claims,
which is a significant recovery.
- Fifth,
no class member opposes the settlement. In this case this is a significant
factor. Generally speaking, it is dangerous to
assume that silence equals
assent as class members with only a very small stake in the action have little
incentive to object. The
court is there to protect their interests, acting akin
to a guardian. The absence of any objector adds to the court’s
responsibility;
it does not relieve it of its task. Here, however, a large
number of class members (and in terms of the dollar value of their claims
they
represent around 99%) are institutional investors. Most, if not all, have
in-house legal departments. In any event they are
experienced investors. They,
more than most, are able to assess the benefits of the settlement. If any of
them were unhappy with
the proposal I am sure they would have come forward.
- Sixth,
it is impossible to ignore the vagaries of litigation and the risk of failure in
a case such as this, as well as the expense
that will be incurred by protracted
litigation and the likely appeals that will follow when novel points of law are
at issue, whichever
way the trial goes. In this type of litigation the parties
are well served by a “bird in the hand” approach.
- There
are, I should mention, several aspects about the proposed settlement that are
unusual and require separate consideration, but
do not warrant withholding
consent. First, the distribution of the settlement sum between class members
involves the use of two
different methods of loss assessment. The measure of a
group member’s loss will be assessed by taking the average of (1) the
price paid for the security less the price received and (2) the price paid less
the true value of the security, the value being assessed
by an expert economist.
The distribution formula is designed to account for uncertainty regarding the
proper method for assessing
loss. I see no problem with this method of
distribution.
- Second,
the distribution to class members will not be proportionate. Unequal treatment
is often a hallmark of unfair terms. But
not in this case. When the original
actions commenced, each class member had entered into a funding agreement with a
litigation
funder. As a result of the Full Court’s decision in
Brookfield Multiplex Ltd v International Litigation Funding Partners Pte Ltd
[2009] FCAFC 147; (2009) 180 FCR 11, which held the scheme of which the funding agreements
were a central aspect constituted an illegal managed investment scheme, the
agreements were terminated. At the same time the retainer agreements between
the class members and Maurice Blackburn, which were
also part of the scheme,
were terminated. New funding agreements were entered into with only those group
members who were “wholesale
investors” to whom the relevant
provisions of the Corporations Act did not apply.
- What
is now proposed is a distribution which involves a “funding equalisation
factor” by which non-funded class members
will have deducted from their
entitlement an amount equal to the commission payable to the litigation funder
that would have applied
had the non-funded class members’ funding
agreements remained on foot.
- It
is said that fairness to the funded class members, without whom the proceedings
could not have continued, requires that the non-funded
group members are in no
better position for having been unfunded for a matter of weeks prior to the
in-principal settlement having
been reached. The effect of applying the
“funding equalisation factor” is to redistribute an amount
equivalent to the
commissions that would have been payable by the non-funded
group members between all group members. I believe that, in the circumstances
of this case, it would be unreasonable not to apply the proposed funding
equalisation factor. Other judges have adopted the same
position: see eg
Dorajay Pty Ltd v Aristocrat Leisure Ltd [2009] FCA 19.
- Third,
the settlement proposes a payment to the applicants as compensation for their
time and expenses incurred in prosecuting the
proceedings on behalf of group
members. The submission is that each of the applicants spent considerable time
providing instructions
and monitoring the progress of the action on behalf of
all group members and should be reimbursed accordingly. I am satisfied that
the
proposed reimbursement is reasonable. A similar provision was upheld in
Darwalla Milling Co Pty Ltd v F Hoffman-La Roche (No 2) (2006) 236 ALR
322, [76].
- The
fourth matter is the restraint imposed on Maurice Blackburn not to act in any
further claims against Multiplex arising out of
the same facts. A restraint in
similar terms was considered in Williams v FAI Home Security Pty Ltd
(No 5) [2001] FCA 399, [21]-[26], also in the context of the approval
of the settlement of a class action. Goldberg J referred to the potential
for
such a provision to be an unreasonable restraint of trade and thus
unenforceable. He also referred to CSR v Rothfield (unreported,
Hedigan J, SC of Vic, 3 April 1992) where Hedigan J had granted
an interlocutory injunction restraining
a firm of solicitors from acting in
respect of claims that might be made against the plaintiffs arising out of their
activities in
relation to the manufacture and export of asbestos products. The
solicitors had acted for a number of plaintiffs against CSR and
proceedings were
settled on terms that the solicitors would not act in claims against CSR arising
out of exposure to asbestos. Hedigan J
found that such a provision was
arguably valid.
- I
think the validity of the provision is an open question. But even if it is
invalid, that should not affect the settlement. As
a practical matter, the
validity of the restraint is a matter that can only arise between Maurice
Blackburn and other potential clients.
I am not troubled if, by its own
agreement, Maurice Blackburn is out of the market for the provision of legal
services in limited
matters. Nor, I think, would the class members be in any
way concerned.
- For
the reasons foregoing I approved the settlement.
I certify that the preceding thirty-two (32)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Finkelstein.
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Associate:
Dated: 21 September 2010
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