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Canberra Residential Developments Pty Limited v Brendas [2010] FCA 169 (4 March 2010)
Last Updated: 5 March 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Canberra Residential Developments Pty
Limited v Brendas [2010] FCA 169
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Citation:
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Canberra Residential Developments Pty Limited v Brendas [2010] FCA
169
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Parties:
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CANBERRA RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENTS PTY LIMITED v
SPIROS BRENDAS, BEVERLEY ROSE BRENDAS, KENOSS PTY LIMITED and CANBERRA LAND
DEVELOPMENTS
PTY LTD
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File number:
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ACD 21 of 2006
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Judge:
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STONE J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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COSTS - apportionment of costs –
each party partially successful
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Place:
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Sydney (HEARD IN PART VIA VIDEO LINK TO CANBERRA)
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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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Mr I Neil SC with Mr G Blank
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Goodman Law
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Counsel for the First, Second and Third Respondents:
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Mr D J Mossop
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Solicitor for the First, Second and Third Respondents:
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Gillespie-Jones & Co
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Solicitor for the Fourth Respondent:
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J S O'Connor Harris & Co
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY DISTRICT
REGISTRY
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CANBERRA RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENTS PTY
LIMITEDApplicant
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AND:
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SPIROS BRENDASFirst
Respondent
BEVERLEY ROSE BRENDAS Second Respondent
KENOSS PTY LIMITED Third Respondent
CANBERRA LAND DEVELOPMENTS PTY LTD Fourth Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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SYDNEY (HEARD IN PART VIA VIDEO LINK TO CANBERRA)
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Each
of the applicant, the first respondent, the second respondent and the third
respondent bear their own costs of the amended notice
of motion filed in Court
on 16 February 2010.
- The
applicant pay the fourth respondent’s costs of the amended notice of
motion filed in Court on 16 February 2010.
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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AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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ACD 21 of 2006
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BETWEEN:
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CANBERRA RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENTS PTY
LIMITED Applicant
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AND:
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SPIROS BRENDAS First Respondent
BEVERLEY ROSE BRENDAS Second Respondent
KENOSS PTY LIMITED Third Respondent
CANBERRA LAND DEVELOPMENTS PTY LTD Fourth Respondent
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JUDGE:
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STONE J
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DATE:
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4 MARCH 2010
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY (HEARD IN PART VIA VIDEO LINK TO CANBERRA)
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- On
30 January 2009 Graham J ordered Canberra Residential Developments Pty Limited
(CRD) to pay the respondents’ costs incurred
in connection with an
unsuccessful application made by CRD; Canberra Residential Developments Pty
Limited v Brendas (No5) [2009] FCA 34; 69 ACSR 435. On 16 February 2010
following a hearing on the applicant’s notice of motion, I set aside an
interim certificate of taxation
issued on 8 February 2010 in respect of a bill
of costs submitted by the first, second and third respondents; Canberra
Residential Developments Pty Limited v Brendas [2010] FCA 90. I also
ordered that no further certificate pursuant to the taxing officer’s
decision be issued for 14 days from the date of
the order.
- The
applicant was otherwise unsuccessful in its application, pending the outcome of
an appeal from Graham J’s decision, to
stay his Honour’s costs
order, to restrain the respondents from drawing on the bank guarantees provided
by the applicant as
security for the respondents’ costs and to have
$40,000 also provided as security paid into this Court. Following the hearing
of the notice of motion I allowed the parties five days within which to provide
written submissions on the question of costs of the
motion.
- The
Court has an unfettered discretion in relation to the award of costs of a
proceeding; Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s 43(2). In
general, costs follow the event but this is a practice not a rule; the practice
may give way to individual circumstances. In
particular, the Court may
apportion the costs between the parties where each has been successful to some
extent. Ultimately, the
principle is that the discretion must be exercised
judicially and, as Allsop J said in DSE (Holdings) Pty Limited v InterTAN Inc
[2004] FCA 1251 at [14], it is “a broad and ample power not to be read
down otherwise than by judicial principle conformable with the amplitude of
the
power”.
- In
considering the basis on which costs should be awarded in respect of the
applicant’s notice of motion, it is necessary to
distinguish between the
position of the fourth respondent, Canberra Land Developments Pty Ltd and that
of the first, second and third
respondents. Therefore, in these reasons, I
shall generally refer to the first, second and third respondents collectively as
the
respondents and to the fourth respondent as such.
The fourth respondent
- The
fourth respondent has not issued a bill of costs and, as indicated in [1] above,
the interim certificate of taxation challenged
by the applicant related only to
the costs of the first, second and third respondents. Nevertheless, the notice
of motion served
on the fourth respondent, at the offices of its solicitors, on
11 February 2010 sought orders, including costs, against all the respondents
without differentiation.
- At
the hearing, the notice of motion was amended to exclude any reference to the
fourth respondent however there had been no prior
communication of this
intention to the fourth respondent. That being so the fourth respondent was
represented at the hearing of
the notice of motion by Mr John Harris of J S
O’Connor Harris & Co, solicitors although, as it transpired, the
notice of
motion was abandoned against the fourth respondent. In the
circumstances the fourth respondent incurred wholly unnecessary costs
as a
result of the applicant’s actions. In the circumstances it is
appropriate, and it was accepted by the applicant in its
written submissions,
that the fourth respondent should have its costs of the notice of motion.
The first, second and third respondents
- The
applicant seeks costs against the respondents. It submits that the hearing only
became necessary because the interim costs certificate
had been incorrectly
issued against the applicant. The issue triggered an entitlement in the
respondents to call on the bank guarantees
issued in their favour prior to the
hearing before Graham J. Therefore, the applicant submits, that in having the
interim certificate
set aside, it was successful on the main issue.
- The
respondents submit that the argument as to the operation of O62 r42 of the
Federal Court Rules that was considered at the hearing and outlined at [2010]
FCA 90 at [6]- [10], was not articulated by the applicant prior to the hearing.
Moreover despite request by the respondents’ solicitors in correspondence
between the parties, the applicant did not identify any basis in the Rules for
its position.
- Both
parties made submissions about the extent of argument on issues other than the
issue of the interim certificate however I do
not regard the submissions on
either side as warranting detailed examination here. Ultimately, both the
applicant and the respondents
were partially successful. In succeeding in
having the interim certificate set aside the applicant vindicated its right to
object
to the interim assessment. On the other hand the respondents were
successful in defending their rights not to be precluded from
enjoying the
benefits of the costs order made by Graham J. It is difficult to give relative
weight to the points on which they were
successful and I do not regard it as
necessary for me to do so. I have concluded that in the circumstances I have
outlined it is
appropriate that the applicant and the respondents each bear
their own costs of the notice of
motion
I certify that the preceding nine (9) numbered
paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable
Justice
Stone.
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Associate:
Dated: 4 March 2010
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