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Mijac Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 084 820 280) v Graham [2010] FCA 87 (20 January 2010)
Last Updated: 17 February 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Mijac Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 084 820
280) v Graham [2010] FCA 87
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Citation:
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Mijac Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 084 820 280) v Graham [2010] FCA 87
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Appeal from:
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Mijac Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 084 820 280) v Graham (No 2) [2009]
FCA 773
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Parties:
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MIJAC INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (ACN 084 820 280) v
WILLIAM GRAHAM, COSMICK PTY LTD (ACN 065 356 149) and MELBOURNE GRAVITY PTY LTD
(ACN
490 584 339)
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File number(s):
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VID 635 of 2009
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Judge:
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GRAY J
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Date of judgment:
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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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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No Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the appellant:
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Mr M Heaton QC and Mr D Clough
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Solicitor for the appellant:
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Frank Sanna
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Counsel for the respondents:
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Mr PG Cawthorn SC
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Solicitor for the respondents:
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B2B Lawyers
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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MIJAC INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (ACN 084 820
280)Appellant
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AND:
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WILLIAM GRAHAMFirst
Respondent
COSMICK PTY LTD (ACN 065 356 149) Second Respondent
MELBOURNE GRAVITY PTY LTD (ACN 490 584 339) Third
Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal instituted by notice of appeal filed on 12 August 2009 be dismissed.
- The
cross-appeal instituted by notice of cross-appeal filed on 7 September 2009 be
dismissed.
- The
appellant pay the respondents’ costs of the appeal, including the costs of
the notice of motion filed on 22 December 2009.
- Those
costs, once taxed or agreed, be paid out of the security for costs ordered by
Middleton J on 27 October 2009.
5. Any surplus in the security for
costs be paid out to the appellant.
- Otherwise,
the motions the subject of the notice of motion filed on 22 December 2009 be
dismissed.
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 635 of 2009
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BETWEEN:
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MIJAC INVESTMENTS PTY LTD (ACN 084 820
280) Appellant
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AND:
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WILLIAM GRAHAM First Respondent
COSMICK PTY LTD (ACN 065 356 149) Second Respondent
MELBOURNE GRAVITY PTY LTD (ACN 490 584 339) Third
Respondent
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JUDGE:
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GRAY J
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DATE:
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20 JANUARY 2010
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PLACE:
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MELBOURNE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- The
motions before the Court today are filed in an appeal from a judgment of a
single judge of the Court. The judgment the subject
of the appeal was given by
Gordon J on 22 July 2009. Her Honour dismissed an application to the Court by
the appellant, but made
no order as to costs. In substance, her Honour found
that there had been a failure to comply with the duties of a mortgagee in
possession
on the part of one or more of the respondents in selling the
security. As a result of events that had occurred in the interim, however,
her
Honour found that it was not possible to grant any remedies to the appellant.
See Mijac Investments Pty Ltd (ACN 084 820 280) v Graham (No 2) [2009]
FCA 773. For the purposes of dealing with these motions, I am prepared to
assume that the appellant has an arguable case in the appeal.
- The
motions are the subject of a notice of motion filed on 22 December 2009. Most
importantly, the respondents seek an order pursuant
to s 25(2B)(bb) of
the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) (“the Federal Court
Act”), that the appeal be dismissed for failure by the appellant to comply
with directions
of the Court. There are alternative orders sought, including:
summary judgment in favour of the respondents; the dismissal of the
appeal as
incompetent because it was not served within 21 days from the date of judgment
sought to be appealed, and no application
for leave has been brought; or the
striking out of a further amended notice of appeal dated 17 December 2009. The
respondents, of
course, also seek an order that the appellant pay the
respondents’ costs of the appeal.
- The
history of the appeal can be stated briefly. The time within which the
appellant was required to file and serve the notice of
appeal by O 52 r
15(1)(a)(i) of the Federal Court Rules was 21 days from the date when the
judgment appealed from was pronounced. On the last day of that period, a Mr
Jorgensen, who was
the sole director of the appellant, presented to the registry
of the Court a notice of appeal, along with an application for the
appellant to
be relieved from the obligation to pay the normal filing fee.
- The
notice of appeal so submitted contained some 35 paragraphs, many of them quite
lengthy. Its tone overall was narrative and argumentative.
Mr Jorgensen was
advised by an officer in the Court’s registry that the deadline for
payment of the filing fee had been extended
for 14 days so that the application
for waiver of that fee could be determined. He was also advised that if the fee
was paid within
that time, the filing of the notice of appeal would be
regularised. Strangely, the appellant did not take any step to serve that
notice of appeal on the respondents within the required time. An unsigned and
unsealed copy was sent by email to the solicitors
for the respondents a week
later, on 19 August 2009.
- The
solicitors for the respondents indicated to the Court that they proposed to file
a notice of motion, seeking to have the appeal
dismissed as incompetent for
three reasons. The first reason was that the appellant is a corporation and the
appeal had been filed
otherwise than by a solicitor, without the leave of the
Court, contrary to O 4 r 14 of the Federal Court Rules. The second was
that the notice of appeal was served outside the period provided for in O 52 r
15(1)(a)(i) of the Federal Court Rules. The third ground was that the
notice of appeal failed to comply with the requirement of O 52 r 13(2)(b) of the
Federal Court Rules by stating briefly but specifically the grounds
relied upon in support of the appeal. All of these defects were capable of
being
remedied if circumstances existed that were favourable to their remedy.
The respondents were dissuaded from moving the Court to
dismiss the appeal on
any of the bases proposed. The respondents entered a conditional appearance to
the appeal and filed both a
notice of contention and a notice of cross-appeal.
The notice of cross-appeal relates to her Honour’s failure to award costs
against the appellant at first instance. The respondents have stated that it is
their intention only to proceed with the cross-appeal
if the appellant pursues
its appeal.
- On
8 September 2009, a solicitor advised the solicitors for the respondents that
she now acted for the appellant, and attached a
notice of change of
practitioner. On 10 September 2009, Ryan J dealt with a motion relating to
matters arising out of the proceeding
at first instance. The respondents sought
to reopen the proceeding in relation to the order for costs. His Honour ordered
that
their motion to that effect be referred to Gordon J for hearing on a date
and at a time to be fixed. At the same time, Ryan J ordered
that any motion for
an extension of time within which to bring this appeal, or for an amendment of
the notice of appeal, be made
returnable in the first instance before Gordon J,
with a view to having it heard and determined at the same time as the motion
relating
to the costs of the proceeding at first instance.
- Despite
this order of Ryan J no motion for any extension of time within which to serve
the notice of appeal has ever been filed.
No application for such an extension
of time has ever been made. No material has ever been put before the Court that
would justify
the granting of such an extension or would explain why the delay
occurred.
- On
23 September 2009, an appointment to settle the index to the appeal papers was
aborted because the appellant had failed to file
and serve a draft index of
appeal papers, in contravention of O 52 r 27 of the Federal Court Rules.
A further appointment was made for 4 November 2009.
- On
20 October 2009 the appeal was mentioned at a callover before Middleton J. On
that occasion, his Honour ordered that, on or before
26 October 2009, the
appellant file and serve through solicitors an amended notice of appeal, stating
briefly but specifically the
grounds relied upon, a draft index of appeal
papers, and any notice of motion for an extension of time within which to bring
the
appeal. The only purported compliance with this order was that, on 26
October 2009, Mr Jorgensen sent by email to the respondents’
solicitors an
amended notice of appeal. There was no attempt to comply with the orders to
file a draft index of appeal papers or
a notice of motion to extend the time
within which to bring the appeal. The amended notice of appeal so forwarded
bears the name
of the solicitor then acting for the appellant, but was not
forwarded by that solicitor to the respondents’ solicitors.
- The
appeal was further mentioned before Middleton J on 27 October 2009. On that
occasion, his Honour made a series of orders for
the management of the appeal.
Those orders included an order that the appellant file and serve a further
amended notice of appeal
in a form which is in accordance with the rules of the
Court by 4.00 pm on 30 November 2009. His Honour also ordered that the
appellant
provide a draft index to the appeal books by the same time, and
extended the settling of the index to the appeal book until 4 December
2009.
- On
30 November 2009, the respondents’ solicitors received a telephone call
from another solicitor, advising that he now acted
for the appellant. This
solicitor also advised that the appellant was not in a position to provide a
further amended notice of appeal
and requested an extension for two weeks. The
parties then consented to orders made by Registrar Luxton on 1 December 2009,
adjourning
the conference to settle the index to the appeal books until 18
December 2009, extending the time for the filing and serving of a
further
amended notice of appeal to 15 December 2009, and extending the time for the
appellant to provide a draft index to the appeal
book to 15 December 2009.
- Despite
having consented to these orders, the appellant failed to comply with them in
time. On 17 December 2009, the solicitor then
acting for the appellant
delivered to the respondents’ solicitors a further amended notice of
appeal and a draft index of appeal
papers. The respondents’ solicitors
took the view that both of these documents were defective. They took issue with
the failure
of the draft index of appeal papers to identify properly the
documents the appellant sought to have included in the appeal book.
In
particular, they objected to the identification of documents by categories and
to the abbreviation “TBA” in some
places. They also took objection
to the inclusion of documents irrelevant to the appeal, such as affidavits
concerning interlocutory
applications in the primary proceeding.
- The
appointment to settle the appeal papers commenced on 18 December 2009, but could
not proceed and was adjourned to 27 January
2010. The appellant was not ready
to proceed. On 21 December, the respondents’ solicitors sent by email to
the solicitor
for the appellant a list of the objections the respondents took to
the draft index of appeal papers and a list of objections to the
further amended
notice of appeal. As I have said, on the following day, 22 December 2009, the
respondents applied to the Court by
notice of motion to terminate the appeal.
The notice of motion was served on 23 December 2009. This is common
ground.
- It
might have been thought that the service of such a notice of motion would have
prompted swift and thorough action on the part
of the appellant to regularise
its position, if the appellant had been truly interested in proceeding with the
appeal. To the contrary,
nothing occurred until an affidavit of Mr Jorgensen
was filed in the Court yesterday, 19 January 2010. In Court today, the counsel
for the appellant has produced a proposed second further amended notice of
appeal.
- Mr
Jorgensen’s affidavit explains some of the circumstances in which he filed
the notice of appeal. Apart from saying that
he emailed the original notice of
appeal to the respondents’ solicitors within the seven-day time frame
after filing the notice
of appeal (the seven-day time frame apparently being for
dealing with the application for waiver of the fee), Mr Jorgensen offers
no
explanation and no reason for failing to serve the notice of appeal on 12 August
itself, the last day for filing and service of
it. Apart from saying that, on
that day, he was flying to Beijing and arrived about 3.00 pm Melbourne time, he
does not offer any
explanation as to why a notice of appeal was not filed and
served within time. He advances arguments about the adequacy of the grounds
expressed in the notice of appeal and an argument that the time for technical
objections to the appeal has passed.
- Strangely,
Mr Jorgensen offers no explanation at all for the appellant’s failure to
comply with the previous orders of the
Court. There is no material whatsoever
that would justify the failure to comply with the order of Ryan J of 10
September 2009 by
filing a motion for extension of time within which to serve
the notice of appeal. There is no material that would justify the failure
to
comply with the orders of Middleton J made on 20 October and 27 October 2009.
There is no material that would justify the late
purported compliance with the
consent order made by Registrar Luxton. Having chosen to go on affidavit in
relation to the circumstances
of the appeal, Mr Jorgensen has chosen not to
contest the allegations made against the appellant, or to seek to excuse the
appellant’s
conduct in failing to comply with orders. Even more
significantly, Mr Jorgensen has failed to offer any hope for the future. He
has
indicated that the appellant wishes to proceed with its appeal. He has not
offered any assurance that, if it should be allowed
to do so, the appellant will
comply immediately with orders that have been made and will set about
regularising its position.
- The
absence of any material that would justify what has occurred so far, and the
absence of any expression of a determination to
remedy the situation, is most
troubling in the context of this case. Also troubling is the proposed second
further amended notice
of appeal, which is said to be in substitution for the
further amended notice of appeal filed on 17 December 2009. A quick reading
of
this document reveals that it contains and expresses effectively 44 grounds of
appeal from the judgment of the learned primary
judge. The notice of appeal
seems to take issue with a great number of findings of fact and conclusions that
her Honour reached.
It appears that the appellant has combed through her
Honour’s reasons for judgment and composed a ground of appeal challenging
every finding and conclusion of her Honour. This does not justify any
confidence that the appellant is aware of some good ground
or grounds of appeal,
likely to be able to be supported with weighty argument, if the appeal should
proceed. It is also apparent
that no step has been taken yet to remedy the
defects in the draft index for the appeal papers, in advance of the adjourned
conference
to settle that index, which is due to take place in a week’s
time.
- Consequent
upon my pointing out to counsel for the appellant the obvious deficiencies in
the material on which the appellant now
relies, at a late stage of the hearing
of the motions, counsel for the appellant sought an adjournment of the motion.
They indicated
an intention to make an application to regularise the service of
the notice of appeal and to provide material that would explain,
if not justify,
the failures to remedy the appellant’s situation up until now and to
provide such material as they could in
relation to what was to happen in the
future.
- There
are a number of difficulties about this application for an adjournment. First,
counsel for the appellant were not able to
inform me as to what the nature of
any material might be. They were not able to draw on any instructions as to any
explanation for
the failure to comply with orders that has occurred so far. It
is axiomatic that there are dangers in encouraging people to submit
further
affidavit material when the Court has pointed out the deficiencies in what has
been presented so far. In particular, it
would be very easy now for Mr
Jorgensen to swear an affidavit expressing his determination to do everything in
the appellant’s
power to bring about the efficient hearing of the appeal.
In the circumstances such material could hardly be credible. In the absence
of
any indication about what might be the explanation for failure to comply with
orders so far, the application for an adjournment
of these motions appears to
have little merit.
- There
are further difficulties, however. As I have said, the appointment to settle
the index to the appeal book is due to occur
on Wednesday of next week, 27
January 2010. In the meantime, there is a public holiday. The length of any
adjournment obviously
begins to become critical. There would have to be
sufficient time for the appellant to file further material and for the
respondent
to respond to it, if that were seen to be appropriate. A further
adjournment of the conference to settle the index of the appeal
papers would be
extremely undesirable. In the context of an appeal that is listed for hearing
on 22 February 2010, an adjournment
of motions that may determine its outcome
seems to be lacking in practicality. There has been no indication that the
appellant would
seek to prepare yet another notice of appeal that might contain
a better focus in relation to errors on which the appellant might
seek to rely.
- In
all of these circumstances, it seems to me to be utterly inappropriate to
adjourn the notice of motion. There is absolutely no
doubt that the respondents
have established that the appellant has failed to comply with directions of the
Court. The failures have
been frequent. They have been persistent. They have
been neither contested nor explained, and there has been no expression of any
determination to remedy the situation. In those circumstances, the ground under
s 25(2B)(bb)(i) of the Federal Court Act is clearly
made out. There is a
discretion to dismiss the appeal for failure to comply with those orders.
- It
is noteworthy that, in the relatively recent High Court judgment in Aon Risk
Services Australia Ltd v Australian National University [2009] HCA 27 (2009)
239 CLR 175 at [89]- [103] per Gummow, Hayne, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ, the
High Court expressed a significant change of policy in relation to case
management.
Previously, the High Court had given primacy to procedural fairness
over case management considerations. It seems now that such
primacy will not
always be given. In this case, I have assumed that the appellant would have an
arguable appeal. It has shown a
lack of commitment to having that appeal
brought on for hearing in an orderly and efficient way. So bad is that lack of
commitment
that it could lead to the conclusion that the appellant is not really
committed to having the appeal heard at all. The appellant
has complied with an
order to provide security for costs of the appeal, which makes it rather odd
that it has not done any of the
other things that it is required to do to have
the appeal heard.
- In
the absence of explanation for this failure, and in the absence of expression of
determination to remedy the matter in the future
when those expressions were
obviously required, it seems to me appropriate that I should grant the order
sought in para 1 of the
notice of motion filed on 22 December 2009 and dismiss
the appeal. It is not appropriate, in those circumstances, to dismiss the
appeal on any other ground or to strike out any notice of appeal.
- Counsel
for the respondents has conceded that it would follow from an order dismissing
the appeal that the cross-appeal would also
be dismissed. Such an order will be
made. In the circumstances, it seems that there could not be any argument but
that the appellant
should pay the respondents’ costs of the appeal. It
would follow from such an order that those costs be paid from the funds
held in
Court as security for costs.
- The
orders I make are as follows:
1. The appeal instituted by notice of
appeal filed on 12 August 2009 be dismissed.
- The
cross-appeal instituted by notice of cross-appeal filed on 7 September 2009 be
dismissed.
- The
appellant pay the respondents’ costs of the appeal, including the costs of
the notice of motion filed on 22 December 2009.
- Those
costs, once taxed or agreed, be paid out of the security for costs ordered by
Middleton J on 27 October 2009.
5. Any surplus in the security for
costs be paid out to the appellant.
- Otherwise,
the motions the subject of the notice of motion filed on 22 December 2009 be
dismissed.
I certify that the preceding twenty-five (25)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Gray.
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Associate:
Dated: 17 February 2010
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