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Attorney -General of NSW v Bar -Mordecai [2011] NSWSC 100 (3 March 2011)
Last Updated: 14 April 2011
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Case Title:
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Attorney -General of NSW v Bar -Mordecai
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Decision Date:
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Decision:
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On the Notice of Motion of the Attorney -General
filed 3 November 2010: 1. I vacate order (5) made by Patten AJ on 25
February 2005 and substitute the following order: ( 5) That Michael Jacob Bar
-Mordecai
not serve on the Attorney General or the Crown Solicitor any
application, or notice of any application or proposed application, for
leave to
institute or continue any proceedings, unless and until he shall have been
ordered to do so pursuant to s 16(1)(a) of the Vexatious Proceedings Act
2008. 2. In addition to the orders made by Patten AJ on 25 February 2005
as varied in the previous order, I make the following additional
order: (6) Any
application by Michael Bar -Mordecai for leave to institute or continue any
proceedings in which he is, or is proposed
to be, the plaintiff, applicant or
otherwise a moving party, shall be filed in the form of a Summons returnable in
the Common Law
division, and shall not be filed in the form of a Notice of
Motion in these present proceedings. On the Attorney General's Notice of
Motion filed 9 February 2011, I answer the question of law asked as follows: (a)
No. (b) Yes.
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Catchwords:
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PROCEDURE - miscellaneous procedural matters -
other matters - vexatious litigant - how leave applications should be commenced
- procedure on leave applications - whether applicant can supplement evidence
filed in support of a leave application - whether the
Vexatious Proceedings Act
excludes principles of case management and/or the inherent jurisdiction of the
Court.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Parties:
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Attorney General in and for the State of New South
Wales (Plaintiff) State of New South Wales (Relevant Person) Nationwide
News (Relevant Person) Dr XY (Relevant Person) Michael Jacob Bar -Mordecai
(Defendant)
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Representation
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Counsel: K Oliver (Plaintiff) G Bateman
(State of New South Wales) Defendant (In Person) M Lynch (Dr XY) M
Saunders (Nationwide News & Janet Fife -Yeomans)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Crown Solicitor's Office
(Plaintiff) Crown Solicitor's Office (State of New South Wales) Avant Law
Pty Ltd (Dr XY) Blake Dawson (Nationwide News & Janet Fife
-Yeomans) In person (Defendant)
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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Judgment
- On
25 February 2005 Patten AJ made these orders:
(1) That Michael Jacob Bar -Mordecai shall not, without leave of
this Court institute proceedings in any court.
(2) That any legal proceedings instituted by Michael Jacob Bar -Mordecai, in
any court before the date of this order, shall not be
continued by him without
leave of this court.
...
(5) That Micheal Jacob Bar -Mordecai give not less than 3 days notice to
Crown Solicitor of any application to institute proceedings
for leave pursuant
to orders 1 and 2 above:
( Attorney General (NSW) v Bar -Mordecai [2005] NSWSC 142).
Those orders were made under s 84(1) Supreme Court Act 1970. Since
that time, s 84 has been repealed and the Vexatious Proceedings Act 2008
(VPA) has been enacted.
- Mr
Bar -Mordecai has filed 2 Notices of Motions asking for leave to commence 2
proceedings and a Notice of Motion asking for leave
to take a step within
proceedings that have already been commenced. The first of these was a Motion
dated 25 October 2010 that came
before RS Hulme J. The Notice of Motion sought
leave to file a Statement of Claim in the Supreme Court against Dr XY for
medical
negligence. On that day RS Hulme J ordered pursuant to s 16(1)(a) of the
VPA that Mr Bar -Mordecai serve the Attorney General, the Solicitor -General and
Dr XY with a copy of the Notice of Motion
and the Affidavit in Support and the
Order of the Court.
- The
Second and Third Notices of Motion were both filed on 2 November 2010. One of
these sought leave to file a Notice of Motion seeking
Discovery and a Trial by
Jury in a matter in the District Court of New South Wales for compensation and
damages against the State
of New South Wales for intentional torts of unlawful
arrest, assaults and wrongful incarceration.
- The
other Notice of Motion asked for a grant of leave to file a Statement of Claim
in the District Court of New South Wales seeking
compensation and damages from
the publisher of "the Telegraph" [i.e. the Daily Telegraph] and its employee, Ms
Janet Fife -Yeomans
for the intentional tort of libel.
- On
21 October 2010 Mr Bar -Mordecai had sought leave from Harrison J to file those
two Notices of Motion and a third Motion which
is irrelevant for present
purposes. Harrison J said in relation to these 2 Notices of Motion that it did
not appear that the proceedings
were unarguably vexatious or that there were no
prima facie grounds upon which to commence or continue them. Harrison J then
ordered
under s 16(1) that relevant persons be served with the Notices of Motion
and supporting affidavits.
- Mr
Bar -Mordecai duly served the persons concerned in respect of each of the 3
Notices of Motion.
- Part
3 of the VPA contains provisions dealing with the taking of proceedings by
vexatious litigants. Those sections relevantly provide:
14 Application for leave to institute proceedings
(1) This section applies to a person ( the applicant ) who is:
(a) subject to a vexatious proceedings order prohibiting the person from
instituting proceedings, or
(b) acting in concert with another person who is subject to an order referred
to in paragraph (a).
(2) The applicant may apply to an appropriate authorised court for leave to
institute proceedings that the order would otherwise prohibit
the person from
instituting.
(3) The applicant must file an affidavit with the application that:
(a) lists all occasions on which the applicant has applied for leave:
(i) under this section, or
(ii) before the commencement of this section-as required by an order under
section 70 of the Land and Environment Court Act 1979 or section 84 of
the Supreme Court Act 1970, and
(b) lists all other proceedings the applicant has instituted in Australia,
including proceedings instituted before the commencement
of this section, and
(c) discloses all facts material to the application, whether supporting or
adverse to the application, that are known to the applicant.
(4) The applicant must not serve a copy of the application or affidavit on
any person unless:
(a) an order is made under section 16(1)(a), and
(b) the copy is served in accordance with the order.
(5) An appropriate authorised court may dispose of the application by:
(a) dismissing the application under section 15, or
(b) granting the application under section 16.
(6) Despite any other Act or law, the applicant may not appeal from a
decision disposing of the application.
15 Dismissing application for leave
(1) An appropriate authorised court must dismiss an application made under
section 14 for leave to institute proceedings if it considers:
(a) the affidavit required by section 14(3) does not substantially comply
with that subsection, or
(b) the proceedings are vexatious proceedings, or
(c) there is no prima facie ground for the proceedings.
(2) The application may be dismissed even if the applicant does not appear at
the hearing of the application.
16 Granting application for leave
(1) Before an appropriate authorised court grants an application made under
section 14 for leave to institute proceedings, it must:
(a) order that the applicant serve each relevant person with a copy of the
application and affidavit and a notice that the person
is entitled to appear and
be heard on the application, and
(b) give the applicant and each relevant person an opportunity to be heard at
the hearing of the application.
(2) At the hearing of the application, the court may receive as evidence any
record of evidence given, or affidavit filed, in any
proceedings in any
Australian court or tribunal in which the applicant is, or at any time was,
involved either as a party or as a
person acting in concert with a party.
(3) The court may grant leave to institute proceedings subject to the
conditions that the court considers appropriate.
(4) However, the court may grant leave only if it is satisfied that:
(a) the proceedings are not vexatious proceedings, and
(b) there are one or more prima facie grounds for the proceedings.
(5) In this section:
relevant person , in relation to the applicant for leave to institute
proceedings, means each of the following persons:
(a) the person against or in relation to whom the applicant proposes to
institute the proceedings,
(b) the Attorney General,
...
- What
came before me for hearing was said to be a Directions Hearing to determine if a
person in the position of the Defendant could
and should be given leave to serve
and rely upon affidavits in support of the Notices of Motion the subject of the
s 16(1) orders, being additional affidavits to those which were considered by
the judge making the s 16(1) order. Put another way, the question is whether Pt
3 of the VPA permits reliance upon affidavits other than that referred to in s
14(3).
- This
issue had already been sought to be raised by the Defendant who had applied to
Adams J with a Notice of Motion dated 4 November
2010 which sought leave to file
and serve some further affidavits in respect of each of the 3 matters the
subject of s 16(1) orders. Adams J in a short judgment delivered on that day
rejected the Defendant's application and said this:
[4] An application for leave to institute proceedings is made under
s 14 and requires the filing of an affidavit with the application that lists
certain specified information. Mr Bar -Mordecai says that,
in each case, the
additional affidavits which he wishes to serve disclose material facts but
material facts which are different to
those contained in the original affidavits
and which, on the face of it, form the basis for the orders.
[5] It is not necessary for me to consider whether only one affidavit can be
filed in relation to each application. It is plainly
inappropriate in cases of
this kind that another Judge should give leave to serve an affidavit in
circumstances where that affidavit
has not been the basis upon which the
original order was made.
[6] Accordingly, the notice of motion must be dismissed.
- The
Plaintiff submitted that a question of law was raised by what the Defendant
sought to do. That question of law was identified
in the written submissions of
the Plaintiff. I expressed the view that if a question of law was to be
determined it would be better
determined as a separate question in the
proceedings rather than by general rulings or directions given in the course of
a Directions
Hearing in the way the matter had initially come before me.
- Bearing
in mind that what was raised in the Plaintiff's submissions was an important
point for the construction and operation of the
Act, it seemed to me appropriate
that there should be a final determination and a properly articulated separate
question so that
the parties would not be constrained from taking the matter
elsewhere by reason that I had merely expressed some opinion on matters
raised
at a Directions Hearing.
- The
Plaintiff sought, therefore, to file a Notice of Motion which asked that the
Notices of Motion filed by the Defendant (to which
I have already referred) be
adjourned pending a determination of the following question of law:
Whether, on the proper construction of the Vexatious Proceedings
Act 2008:
(a) The Defendant may, in the absence of any order of the Court requiring or
authorising him to do so, lawfully serve and/or rely
upon additional evidence in
support of one or more of his pending leave applications; and if not
(b) whether the Court may lawfully make an order requiring or authorising him
to do so.
- The
Defendant did not oppose that course, nor my determining the question of law at
this stage in the proceedings. It should be noted,
however, that the Defendant
sought to add to the question of law the following:
(c) that the court authorise Michael Bar -Mordecai to file further
evidence prior to the hearing of the contested leave application.
- I
declined to add that paragraph because it did not seem to me that it formed part
of any question of law. Rather, it was a request
for an exercise of the court's
discretion in the event that I held that the Act enabled the Court to allow the
filing of further
affidavit evidence.
The procedure envisaged by the Act
- It
is important at this point to set out the procedure that Pt 3 VPA envisages. A
vexatious litigant must apply to the Court for leave to institute proceedings.
Under this Court's practice at the
time of the Defendant's Notices of Motion the
Notice of Motion was to be entitled in the proceedings which determined that the
applicant
was to be the subject of a vexatious proceedings order. I shall say
something about this procedure later in the judgment.
- At
the time of these Notices of Motion brought by the Defendant the initial
consideration under s 14 was dealt with by a judge sitting in open Court,
usually the duty judge. That judge gave leave or not, as the case may be, for
the
applicant to file and serve the Notice of Motion with the Affidavit and the
notice that the relevant person is entitled to appear
and be heard on the
application (s 16(1)(a)). According to the subsequently issued directive from
the Registrar this stage of any application is now considered by a judge in
Chambers
after filing the Notice of Motion. However it is done, the same
approach set out below is to be followed.
- Section
15 requires the Court to dismiss the application in the 3 situations set out in
sub -s (1). If an application is not dismissed the Court
must order that the
Applicant serve each relevant person with a copy of the application, and the
other documents referred to above.
- There
is then a further hearing where the relevant person may appear. After hearing
from the applicant and the relevant persons the
Court may grant leave only if
satisfied of the matters in sub -s (4), and must dismiss them after that hearing
if any of the matters
in s 15(1) obtain.
Submissions on the separate question
- The
Plaintiff does not submit that the words "an affidavit" in s 14(3) confines an
applicant to a single affidavit in support of the application for leave. The
Plaintiff accepts that s 8(b) Interpretation Act 1987 would permit more
than one at this stage. The question in issue is whether an applicant can be
permitted to rely on affidavits not
put forward at the time of the initial
application for leave but which are sought to be relied upon when the
application for leave
is determined under s 16(3) with the relevant persons
present.
- The
Plaintiff submits that 2 things within the words of the sections, in particular,
point to the conclusion that no further evidence
can be relied upon by an
applicant beyond the affidavit filed with the application and considered under s
14. First, the Plaintiff points to s 14(3)(c) which requires the affidavit to
disclose "all facts material to the application that are known to the
applicant". Secondly, the Plaintiff
points to s 15(1)(a) that requires dismissal
of an application if that affidavit does not substantially comply with s
14(3)(c).
- The
Plaintiff submits further that the legislature has provided a procedure in ss 14
-16 VPA in an exhaustive fashion which does not permit the case management and
inherent powers of the Court. The Plaintiff draws attention
in this regard to s
4(5) Civil Procedure Act 2005 which provides:
Subject to any such regulation, this Act does not limit the
operation of any other Act with respect to the conduct of civil proceedings.
- The
Plaintiff also draws attention to s 61 Civil Procedure Act which is
concerned with directions as to practice and procedure. The Plaintiff also
submits that the Act is there to impose some discipline
on vexatious litigants,
and that once a vexatious proceedings order is made against the person that
person is held on a very tight
leash.
- On
the other hand, the Plaintiff accepts that the Defendant should not be prevented
from relying on a further affidavit if relevant
matters come to his or her
knowledge after the time of the initial application envisaged by s 13. Further,
the Plaintiff accepts that an applicant would be entitled to respond by
affidavit to matters raised by a relevant person
after that person had been
served with the material pursuant to s 16(1)(a).
- The
Plaintiff points to the maxim expressum facit cessare tacitum and to what
Dixon J said in The King v Wallis ; ex parte Employers Association of
Wool Selling Brokers [1949] HCA 30; (1949) 78 CLR 529 at 530:
But upon some matters the Act does speak with more particularity.
If it confers a specific power with respect to a limited subject
or specifies a
manner of dealing with it or otherwise provides what the duty or authority of
the arbitrator shall be, then upon ordinary
principles of interpretation the
provision in which that is done should be treated as the source of his authority
over the matter,
notwithstanding that otherwise the same or a wider power over
the same matter might have been implied in or covered by the general
authority
given by s. 38. This accords with the general principles of interpretation
embodied in the maxim expressum facit cessare tacitum and in the
proposition that an enactment in affirmative words appointing a course to be
followed usually may be understood as importing
a negative, namely, that the
same matter is not to be done according to some other course.
- The
Plaintiff also draws attention to statements in such decisions as Browne v
Commissioner for Railways (1935) 36 SR NSW 21 at 28 -29 and Hoban v Davey
(1972) 1 NSWLR 59 at 67 suggesting that where no machinery is prescribed in
an Act it would be open to a tribunal or court to prescribe such machinery.
However, where the machinery is prescribed there is not room for it to be
supplemented.
- The
Defendant submits that s 14 does not contain words to the effect:
- the
applicant might file only 1 affidavit in support of the application.
- He
submits that the Court should not read words into s 14 which do not appear. He
submits that traditionally courts have always had power over their own processes
particularly concerning
matters of practice and procedure. The Court would
therefore, he submits, be cautious about reading in a limitation to its powers
by a restrictive construction of ss 14 -16.
- He
submits that no party would be prejudiced by the Court's permission for the
further affidavits to be relied upon. This submission
may most easily be
disposed of at this stage. Any issue associated with prejudice could only arise
if Pt 3 VPA permits the service of further affidavits. In that case the Court
would have a discretion whether or not to permit reliance on
further material.
Questions of prejudice would arise at that time but not earlier.
Consideration
- In
my opinion, ss 13 -16 VPA do not either by express words or necessary intendment
prescribe a rigid regime from which no variation is possible, nor do they
exclude the provisions of the Civil Procedure Act nor the inherent
jurisdiction of the Court to manage and control its own procedures. My reasons
for this follow.
- First,
I acknowledge the force of the requirements in s 14(3)(c) when coupled with the
obligation on the Court under s 15(1)(a). However, s 15(1)(a) provides some
leeway in requiring only that the affidavit required by s 14(3) substantially
comply with that sub -section.
- Secondly,
the sections do not prescribe a rigid regime because s 16 leaves open the
evidence that the Court might receive after the relevant person has been served.
Section 16(2) enables the Court to receive the evidence referred to in that sub
-section. Nothing in s 16 expressly permits the receipt of any other evidence.
Given that the relevant person is entitled to appear and be heard on the
application
it would be surprising indeed if the relevant person was not
permitted to adduce relevant evidence (other than evidence referred
to sub -s
(2)) that might touch upon the question of whether leave should be granted. The
Court's usual procedures and practices
must therefore be engaged in relation to
the s 16 hearing when the relevant person is present.
- Thirdly,
and associated with the matter just mentioned, it would be surprising indeed if
the Applicant was not entitled to adduce
evidence in reply to any evidence
adduced by a relevant person. Indeed, the Plaintiff accepts that such evidence
must be able to
be adduced. That no express provision appears in s 16 in
relation to such evidence in reply suggests that the Act intends to leave such
matters of procedure to the Court's usual practices.
- Moreover,
if evidence in reply can be filed there is a reasonable likelihood that that
evidence will contain some facts material to
the application. That may be
because the facts were known to the applicant at the time he or she originally
filed but did not think
were material to the application until a particular
matter was raised by the relevant person. Further, if evidence was appropriately
given in reply it is likely to include or even consist of facts material to the
application because facts which were not material
would be unlikely to be
relevant.
- Whilst
it is certainly true that, if the Court took the view that the applicant had not
disclosed facts material to the application
in the initial affidavit without
reasonable cause, it would be bound to dismiss the application under s 15(1)(a)
there are likely to be cases when such facts were not disclosed for legitimate
reasons, such as those that I have mentioned, namely,
that until the matter was
raised by the relevant person the fact was not realised as being material.
- Fourthly,
if the VPA intended to exclude the provisions of the Civil Procedure Act
2005 and the Rules made thereunder, it could be reasonably be expected to
have said so, particularly as the Act was only passed 3 years
after the Civil
Procedure Act . The words of s 4(5) of the Civil Procedure Act
provide no answer because that sub -section, as r 1.6 UCPR makes clear, is
to enable modifications of the Civil Procedure Act in particular Courts
that operate subject to that Act and Rules where certain proceedings under
various specified Acts are brought.
In this regard, it is to be noted that r
1.6(b) does not include the VPA.
- However,
s 4(5) Civil Procedure Act might be thought to be subject to the
provisions of s 5(1) of that same Act. In the absence of some express statement
in another Act that limited this Court's jurisdiction, nothing in the
Civil
Procedure Act limits this Court's jurisdiction.
- The
maxim expressum facit cessare tacitum , as with the similar maxim
expressio unius est exclusio alterius , is to be treated with care, and
will often be a last resort when all other methods of construction fail. Dixon J
in The King v Wallis was dealing with an Act which provided authority to,
and duties on, the decision maker of a statutory body akin to a tribunal. The
passage has little application in the present circumstances where this Court and
two other named superior courts of record are authorised
to deal with procedural
requirements of an application to the Court where no rigid procedure is laid
down for that purpose.
- Fifthly,
it is difficult to see how the mischief the Act is intended to deal with could
be furthered in circumstances where a Judge
has already determined in the first
instance that the affidavit already filed shows that, at least at that stage,
the proceedings
are not vexatious, nor can it be said that there is no prima
facie grounds for bringing the proceedings: s 15(1)(b)(c). For that reason, I
reject the Plaintiff's submission that the Defendant's approach would enable an
applicant to file "a kind of 'holding
summons' and only then going about
collecting the evidence to support it". The Plaintiff accepts, in any event,
that if an applicant
is given leave to institute the proceedings after the s
16(2) hearing, that applicant will not be confined to the evidence produced at
that hearing. Because the applicant must satisfy the Court
in the first instance
(that is, before service of the relevant person) that the proceedings are
neither vexatious nor can it be said
that there is no prima facie grounds for
bringing them, there will be no "holding summons" with evidence to come later.
- Finally,
ss 14-16 do not, for another reason, prescribe a rigid procedure suggesting an
exclusion of the Civil Procedure Act and the inherent jurisdiction of the
Court. The sections do not lay down how the application is to be commenced. The
Court has, as
I have indicated, designed its own procedures that provide for the
filing of a Notice of Motion in the proceedings in which the Applicant
was
declared a vexatious litigant. Those procedures further determined that there
would be no filing of the Motions for leave until
a Judge had determined ex
parte whether leave to file and serve them should be granted. The sections of
the VPA are silent about
those procedures. They might have been different. The
Court might have determined that an application for leave was to be filed by
a
fresh summons in new proceedings. Further, the change in procedure about whether
the Notice of Motion should be filed before consideration
by the judge ex parte
rather than afterwards highlights the lack of a strict procedural regimen.
- Although
the Plaintiff pointed to the potential unfairness to a relevant person who comes
to the s 16(2) hearing expecting all the applicant's evidence to be in the s
14(3) affidavit, the usual procedures and case management enable the Court to
deal with the issue of further evidence which has to be met
by the relevant
person. The Court has it within its power to ensure there is no unfairness
including by the making of appropriate
costs orders and a requirement that they
be paid forthwith failing which there will be a stay of proceedings: see
Markisic v Commonwealth of Australia [2010] NSWSC 24 at [164] -[178],
upheld Markisic v Commonwealth of Australia [2010] NSWCA 273 at [368].
- It
can be accepted that it would be a rare case where there would be a need to
permit an applicant to adduce evidence (not in reply)
that was not contained in
the s 14(3) affidavit. However, the VPA does not deprive the Court of its
inherent jurisdiction or of its powers under the Civil Procedure Act and
Rules to deal with such a situation if and when it arises.
- Although,
on the face of it, the view to which I have come appears to be inconsistent with
what Adams J decided in his ex tempore
judgement dated 4 November 2010, I do not
think that this is so. Adams J was confronted, when acting as Duty Judge, with a
Notice
of Motion from the Defendant seeking leave to serve further affidavits.
- Adams
J said that it was not necessary for him to consider whether only one affidavit
could be filed in relation to each application.
Instead, he rejected the
application on the basis that it was inappropriate that it should not be made to
the Judge who originally
granted the leave to serve the Motion and Affidavit
under s 16(1). To the extent that that reasoning suggests that it would be
inappropriate for the judge conducting the s 16(2) hearing to consider the
question of further affidavits, I respectfully disagree with it. It must be
said, however, that Adams J did
not have the benefit of the detailed arguments
that were put to me, nor the leisure to consider those arguments and examine the
legislative
provisions. Inasmuch as Adams J did not have to determine whether
only one affidavit could be filed, the view to which I have come
is not
inconsistent with his reasoning.
- Although,
for the reasons I have given, the Court is not precluded from using its own case
management powers and procedures when dealing
with applications by vexatious
litigants, I do not consider that an applicant under Pt 3 VPA is free to serve
affidavits, other than the s 14(3) affidavit, without the leave of the Court. In
that regard, I accept the submission of the Plaintiff (noted in para [21] above)
that
a person against whom a vexatious proceedings order has been made ought to
be closely scrutinised in what they seek to do in relation
to any proceedings
they seek to bring. I have noted that it would be a rare case that such a person
would be permitted to file a
further affidavit, and there will be a heavy onus
upon any applicant who seeks to do so. An applicant may not without the leave of
the Court serve any further affidavit.
Variation of Patten AJ's orders
- Patten
AJ made these orders under s 84 of the Supreme Court Act . That section
did not prescribe the form of order that ought to be made. Order (5) does not
sit easily with the provisions in the
VPA.
- Schedule
1 to the Act contains the Savings, Transitional and other provisions. Clause 4
provides:
4 Certain existing orders taken to be vexatious proceedings
orders
(1) This clause applies to any order (an existing order ) that:
(a) was made under a repealed vexatious litigant provision, and
(b) is in force immediately before the commencement of this Act, and
(c) operates to prevent a person from instituting or continuing proceedings
without the leave of the Supreme Court or the Land and
Environment Court.
(2) An existing order is taken to be (and to have effect as if it
were) a vexatious proceedings order made under this Act by the Supreme
Court or
the Land and Environment Court (as the case may be), and may be varied, set
aside or reinstated accordingly.
- The
Schedule, accordingly, enables all orders made by Patten AJ to be varied so as
to make them consonant with the provisions of the
Act. To that end, the
Plaintiff has by Notice of Motion sought to vary order (5) made by Patten AJ so
that it reads:
(5) That Michael Jacob Bar -Mordecai not serve on the Attorney
General or the Crown Solicitor any application, or notice of any application
or
proposed application, for leave to institute or continue any proceedings, unless
and until he shall have been ordered to do so
pursuant to s 16(1)(a) of the
Vexatious Proceedings Act 2008.
- Mr
Bar -Mordecai supports the application to vary Patten AJ's order (5). It is not
appropriate that the order remain in place when
it is inconsistent with s
14(4)(a) of the VPA. In those circumstances I will vary the order as requested.
- The
Plaintiff also seeks to add a further order to those made by Patten AJ in these
terms:
(6) Any application by Michael Bar -Mordecai for leave to institute
or continue any proceedings in which he is, or is proposed to
be, the plaintiff
applicant or otherwise a moving party, should be filed in the form of a Summons
returnable in the Common Law division,
and shall not be filed in the form of a
Notice of Motion in these present proceedings.
Mr Bar -Mordecai consents to this order being made also.
The application for this order arises because of a directive made by the
Registrar on 26 November 2010 that applications for leave
to commence
proceedings under s 14, be commenced by Notice of Motion and be filed in the
proceedings in which the applicant was declared a vexatious litigant. The form
of the directive (containing more detail than I have set out) was also contained
in a letter from the Registrar to Mr Bar -Mordecai.
This directive also changed
the procedure so that such Notices of Motion were dealt with after filing by a
Judge in Chambers with
no persons being present.
- Two
other Judges in this division of the Court have expressed the view that the
procedure of commencing the leave application by Notice
of Motion in the
proceedings brought by the Applicant where he was declared to be vexatious is
not satisfactory. In Attorney General in and for the State of NSW v Bar
-Mordecai [2010] NSWSC 323 RA Hulme J was considering a Notice of Motion by
Mr Bar -Mordecai for leave to file a Statement of Claim for the purpose of
obtaining
orders setting aside a judgement of Einstein J and another judgement
of Bryson J. He was also considering a Notice of Motion by the
Attorney General
that Mr Bar -Mordecai pay costs pursuant to an order made by Johnson J in
relation to Notices of Motion that Mr
Bar -Mordecai had brought to institute
three new proceedings in the Court including proceedings to set aside the
judgements of Einstein
J and Bryson J.
In answer to the Attorney General's Notice of Motion, Mr Bar
-Mordecai drew attention to Pt 42 r 7 UCPR which provided that unless the Court
otherwise ordered, costs in an interlocutory application and reserved costs were
not
payable until the conclusion of the proceedings. In commenting on that
submission, His Honour said:
[47] The present proceedings are accepted by the Attorney General to be
interlocutory. They are brought within the proceedings entitled
Attorney
General for the State of New South Wales v Bar -Mordecai which were
instituted in early 2004 ("the original proceedings"). Those proceedings
comprised the application by the Attorney General
for Mr Bar -Mordecai to be
declared a vexatious litigant and culminated with Patten AJ making orders to
that effect on 25 February
2005. There have since been the various applications
by Mr Bar -Mordecai that I have referred to for leave to institute proceedings.
Those applications have all been made by way of notice of motion filed in the
original proceedings. As a result of this, Mr Bar -Mordecai
contended that the
original proceedings have not reached a conclusion and so, according to UCPR
42.7(2), the costs he has been ordered to pay by Johnson J, McCallum J,
Harrison AsJ and Schmidt AJ have not become payable .
[48] If this contention be correct, the result would be that the original
proceedings will never come to a conclusion while ever there
is the opportunity
for the filing of further notices of motion within them. It seems to me that it
has been erroneous for applications
for leave to commence proceedings to be made
by way of notice of motion in the original vexatious declaration proceedings.
Those proceedings concluded upon entry of the judgment of Patten AJ .
Motions are appropriate in cases where a party seeks to move the court to make
interlocutory or procedural orders in pending proceedings.
The original
proceedings are not pending. The present proceedings should have been brought
by way of summons ( UCPR 6.4(1)(h)). Be that as it may, the situation
I am dealing with is whether Mr Bar -Mordecai should be ordered to pay costs
pursuant
to the order made by Johnson J on 31 March 2009. The order that I
propose to make pursuant to s 98 Civil Procedure Act will meet the
proviso in UCPR 42.7(2) of, " Unless the court orders otherwise ".
(emphasis added)
- In
Attorney General v Bar -Mordecai (unreported - Harrison J - 21 October
2010), Harrison J was considering the two Notices of Motion to which I referred
earlier in para
[3] above. In the course of that his Honour said this:
Mr Bar -Mordecai filed in Court three notices of motion with
supporting affidavit material. As I have indicated, each matter is intituled
in
the original vexatious litigant proceedings commenced by the Attorney General.
Whether or not that is appropriate, Mr Bar -Mordecai
informs me that in many
previous applications made by him no complaints have been raised either by the
Court or the Attorney General
that such an approach is the correct one. For my
part, it seems that the application for leave to institute fresh proceedings in
each case, or at least one of the notices of motion for this, ought to have been
commenced as a fresh proceeding and not, as it were,
under the umbrella of the
proceedings pursuant to which the vexatious orders were made. Be that as it may,
I am content for present
purposes, because it is largely academic to proceed to
deal with Mr Bar -Mordecai's applications on his urging under the umbrella
proceedings against the contingency that that is something to which the Attorney
General in due course may wish to take objection.
- I
agree with the remarks made by both RA Hulme J and Harrison J. In particular, as
RA Hulme J said, the proceedings brought by the
Attorney General to have Mr Bar
-Mordecai declared a vexatious litigant concluded when Patten AJ made orders to
that effect. The
proceedings brought by the Attorney General are unconnected
with any proceedings that Mr Bar -Mordecai may wish to bring except that
the
Attorney General's proceedings have established, by order, that Mr Bar -Mordecai
is a vexatious litigant. In other words, those
proceedings have established his
status. Similarly, probate proceedings establish the right of an executor to
litigate if necessary.
Thereafter, proceedings brought by the executor are
separate proceedings from those which establish his or her position as executor.
- In
other cases where some leave or preliminary order is required from this Court
before proceedings can be commenced such applications
are invariably commenced
by summons. Examples are applications for preliminary discovery (see in this
regard r 6.4 (1)(b) UCPR),
proceedings for leave under s 6 Law Reform
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1946, proceedings seeking an extension of
time under Division 2A Limitation Act 1969 , proceedings to remove
District Court proceedings into this Court. Indeed, as RA Hulme J pointed out, r
6.4 (1)(h) identifies that
proceedings on an application under any Act (which
includes the VPA) ought to be brought by summons.
- The
appropriate course for persons in the position of Mr Bar -Mordecai is,
therefore, that if they wish to commence proceedings they
should file a summons
in which they seek the leave that s 14(2) VPA envisages. Provided that the
summons is not served before an order is made under s16(1)(a) the procedure for
dealing with the summons is a matter for the Court to determine. At the present
time, pursuant to the Registrar's
directive, such a summons will be dealt with
by a Judge in chambers without the attendance of any person.
- For
these reasons it is appropriate to make order 2 as sought in the Attorney
General's Notice of Motion of 3 November 2010.
Conclusion
- On
the Notice of Motion of the Attorney General of 3 November 2010 I make the
following orders:
- (1) I vacate
order (5) made by Patten AJ on 25 February 2005 and substitute the following
order:
(5) That Michael Jacob Bar -Mordecai not serve on the
Attorney General or the Crown Solicitor any application, or notice of any
application
or proposed application, for leave to institute or continue any
proceedings, unless and until he shall have been ordered to do so
pursuant to s
16(1)(a) of the Vexatious Proceedings Act 2008.
(2) 2. In addition to the orders made by Patten AJ on 25 February 2005 as varied
in the previous order, I make the following additional
order:
(6) Any application by Michael Bar -Mordecai for leave to
institute or continue any proceedings in which he is, or is proposed to
be, the
plaintiff, applicant or otherwise a moving party, shall be filed in the form of
a Summons returnable in the Common Law division,
and shall not be filed in the
form of a Notice of Motion in these present proceedings.
- On
the Attorney General's Notice of Motion filed 9 February 2011, I answer the
question of law asked as follows:
(a) No.
(b) Yes.
**********
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