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Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd [No 2] [2009] HCA 36 (23 September 2009)
Last Updated: 23 September 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON AND KIEFEL JJ
DOUGLAS RONALD CAMPBELL AND ANOR
APPELLANTS
AND
BACKOFFICE INVESTMENTS PTY LTD
AND ANOR
RESPONDENTS
Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd [No 2]
[2009] HCA 36
23 September 2009
S435/2008
ORDER
1. Respondents to pay appellants' costs of the proceedings in this
Court.
- The
costs of proceedings in the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South
Wales and of the proceedings at trial be in the
discretion of the Court of
Appeal.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of New South Wales
Representation
A J L Bannon SC with J T G Gibson for the appellants (instructed by
Rodd Peters Commercial, Media and European Lawyers)
J T Gleeson SC with T L Wong for the respondents (instructed by Watson Mangioni
Solicitors)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd [No 2]
Procedure – Costs.
Federal Proceedings (Costs) Act 1981 (Cth), s 6.
- FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON AND KIEFEL JJ. On 29 July 2009, the Court published
its reasons for decision in this
matter. The Court made orders allowing the
appeal, refusing special leave to cross-appeal, setting aside certain of the
orders of
the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales made on
19 May 2008 and remitting the matter to that Court for further
hearing and
determination.
- In
the course of the hearing in this Court, the parties sought the opportunity to
make further submissions as to costs after the
publication of the Court's
reasons. Accordingly, when making orders disposing of the appeal and the
application for special leave
to cross-appeal, the Court gave directions to the
parties about filing and serving written submissions about costs. Each side has
now made its submissions.
- There
is no dispute that the appellants should have their costs of the proceedings in
this Court. They differ about whether, as
the respondents submitted,
enforcement of the order for payment of the costs of the proceedings in this
Court should be deferred
until the proceedings in the Court of Appeal are
completed. They further differ about what orders should be made in respect of:
first, the costs of proceedings to date in the Court of Appeal, and secondly,
the costs of trial.
- There
is no reason to make an order deferring enforcement of the order for costs in
this Court.
- As
for the other points of difference between the parties, the appellants submit
that they should have their costs for proceedings
in the Court of Appeal so far.
The appellants further submit they should now have an order giving them half of
their costs of the
trial, and that the balance of the costs of trial should be
in the discretion of the Court of Appeal on remitter. By contrast, the
respondents submit that the costs of the proceedings at trial and the
proceedings in the Court of Appeal should be in the discretion
of the Court of
Appeal on remitter of the proceedings to that Court.
- Until
the issues remitted for consideration by the Court of Appeal are determined, it
is not possible to say which side of this litigation
will obtain judgment in its
favour. That being so, it would not be appropriate now to make an order
disposing of the costs of the
proceedings at trial or on appeal to the Court of
Appeal. And to make an order of the kind which the appellants sought (disposing
now of part of the costs of trial and the whole of the costs before the Court of
Appeal to date) would foreclose consideration by
the Court of Appeal of any
argument later advanced that some order for costs should be made that
differentiated between issues or
particular steps in the prolonged litigious
process in this matter. Whether such an argument can be made, or if made,
should be
taken into account in determining who should bear any or all of the
costs incurred should be questions for the Court of Appeal to
determine.
- The
orders made by this Court on 29 July 2009 included an order setting aside
the Court of Appeal's order dealing with the costs
of proceedings in that Court.
The Court of Appeal did not make any order dealing with costs at trial. In the
circumstances, there
should now be orders, in addition to those pronounced on
29 July 2009, as follows:
- Respondents
pay appellants' costs of the proceedings in this Court.
- The
costs of proceedings in the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South
Wales and of the proceedings at trial be in the
discretion of the Court of
Appeal.
- The
respondents submitted that this Court should grant them a costs certificate
pursuant to s 6(2) of the Federal Proceedings (Costs) Act 1981
(Cth). That sub-section provides:
"Subject to this Act, where a Federal appeal in relation to the amount of
damages awarded by a court succeeds, the court that heard
the appeal may, on the
application of a respondent to the appeal, grant to the respondent a costs
certificate in respect of the appeal."
A certificate granted under that provision "is a certificate stating that, in
the opinion of the court, it would be appropriate for
the Attorney-General to
authorise a payment under [the Act] to the respondent in respect of ... the
costs incurred by the respondent
in relation to the
appeal"[1].
- It
is not necessary to consider whether it is right to describe the outcome of
proceedings in this Court as success in "a Federal
appeal in relation to the
amount of damages awarded by a court" (emphasis added). Even if the
condition for engaging s 6(2) of the Federal Proceedings (Costs) Act
is satisfied, this is not a case in which it would be appropriate to order
that the burden of the costs should lie otherwise than
where they fall.
[1] Federal Proceedings (Costs) Act
1981 (Cth), s 6(3).
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