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[2011] NSWSC 146
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T& M Industries Pty Limited v Orsini [2011] NSWSC 146 (10 March 2011)
Last Updated: 14 April 2011
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Case Title:
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T & M Industries Pty Limited v Orsini
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Decision:
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Originating process dismissed with costs, such costs
to be assessed on the indemnity basis.
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Catchwords:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Parties:
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T & M Industries Pty Limited - Plaintiff Julie
Ann Orsini - Defendant
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Representation
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Counsel: Mr M K Condon/Mr E G B Cox/Ms T Davy -
Plaintiff Mr D W Elliott - Defendant
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Terrence Roland Tindale in person -
Plaintiff
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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Judgment
- The
plaintiff purports to make application under s 459G of the Corporations Act
2001 (Cth) for an order setting aside a statutory demand served on it by the
defendant. The originating process was filed on 15 December
2010 by the
plaintiff itself, that is, without the intervention of a solicitor.
- I
say that the plaintiff "purports to make application" because there is a
preliminary issue, raised by the defendant's interlocutory
process filed on 2
February 2011, as to whether the plaintiff took all the steps made necessary by
s 459G(3) to constitute a valid s 459G application.
- The
interlocutory process was listed for hearing today. When the matter came before
the court, however, the plaintiff indicated that
it no longer pressed its
purported s 459G application with the result, it was submitted, that there was
no utility in the hearing of the defendant's interlocutory process.
In short,
both applications had been overtaken by events.
- The
relevant events occurred on 4 March 2011 when there was before the court a
winding up application made by the defendant in respect
of both the plaintiff
and another company, Catalyst Engineering Pty Ltd. The defendant's position
apparently was that the plaintiff
and Catalyst were jointly indebted to her in
respect of the debt the subject of the statutory demand to which this present
case relates.
She served statutory demands on both of them. No move towards
having the statutory demand served on it was made by Catalyst. The
defendant
initiated winding up proceedings against both companies.
- On
4 March 2011, the winding up proceedings were settled and the court made the
following orders:
"1. Summons dismissed;
2. Order the second defendant (Catalyst Engineering Pty Limited) to pay the
Plaintiff's costs of these proceedings whether incurred
with respect of the
first defendant [the present plaintiff] or the second defendant as agreed or
assessed;
3. Otherwise there be no order as to costs with the intent that the first
defendant bear its own costs of these proceedings and have
no liability to the
Plaintiff;
4. The Court notes that the amount claimed in the creditors statutory demand
has been paid without admissions."
- It
is because the debt the subject of the statutory demand served on it by the
defendant (that is, the statutory demand the subject
of these proceedings) has
been paid that the plaintiff no longer seeks to have that statutory demand set
aside and therefore regards
as academic the question raised by the defendant's
interlocutory process, that is, whether there was in truth a valid s 459G
application.
- The
defendant, for her part, accepted that the central issue disappeared as a result
of the payment of the debt and the making of
the orders of 4 March 2011. The
defendant contended, however, that the court should nevertheless proceed to
determine the narrow
question at the centre of her interlocutory process, since
to do so would indicate the appropriate outcome as to costs, being the
only live
issue remaining.
- As
to costs, the plaintiff's position is that there should be no order as to costs.
The defendant says, however, that she should be
awarded her costs of the
proceedings and that those costs should be assessed on the indemnity basis.
- Mr
Condon of counsel, who appeared for the plaintiff, referred to authority to the
effect that the court should not, merely for the
purpose of deciding a question
of costs, embark on the trial of issues that have become academic: see for
example, Re Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs; Ex parte Lai Qin
[1997] HCA 6; (1997) 186 CLR 622; Australian Securities Commission v
Aust-Home Investments Ltd [1993] FCA 585; (1993) 44 FCR 194. Mr Condon took me to the
following passage in the judgment of Hill J in the latter case (at 200-201):
"I should say that both parties recoiled from submitting that I
should, in the guise of determining how costs should be borne as between
the
parties, actually decide the merits of the original application. It should be
noted that no witness was cross-examined and that
a trial on the merits would
undoubtedly have required me to form some view as to the credit of Mr and Mrs
Bunt. It can not, I think,
be accepted that because Cooper J directed that
affidavit evidence be adduced on the question of costs, his Honour contemplated
that
that evidence would involve contesting the merits of the initial
application.
In the SEQEB case, proceedings had been instituted under the
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) challenging the
refusal of the applicant's request that it be authorised to maintain an existing
telephone system. Ultimately
those proceedings were settled but for the question
of costs. Both parties in the case contended that the Court should not attempt
to predict the likely outcome of the litigation, a contention which appears to
have been accepted by his Honour. Pincus J was of
the view that the Court could
dispose of the question of costs at the request of the parties without requiring
a trial to determine
who would have won, although his Honour did observe that:
'... in some cases where the result of litigation has become academic, the
Court may not be able rationally to decide the issue of
costs without attempting
some such prediction.'
The matters ultimately taken into account by his Honour were the
reasonableness of the applicant in commencing the proceedings and
the
reasonableness of the respondent in defending them. However, his Honour also
considered the strength of the applicant's case,
expressing the view that the
applicant had: "a fairly strong case - one more promising than that of the
respondent." The reasonableness
of commencing the proceedings (and defending
them) were matters also regarded as relevant in Liddle v Kooralbyn Pty Ltd
(unreported, Supreme Court, Queensland, 9 October 1987) per Ryan J.
In R v Gold Coast City Council; Ex parte Raysun Pty Ltd [1971] QWN 13
an order nisi had been granted to show cause why a writ of mandamus should not
issue to compel a council to determine an application
before it. After the order
nisi had been obtained the council considered the application and granted it.
The Full Court held that
it was not necessary to determine the merits of the
matter as a condition precedent to an order for costs. It was, however, relevant
that the prosecutor had reasonable grounds for complaint and in the
circumstances the prosecutor was granted costs to the time the
council granted
the application.
Reference may also be made to the decision of Master White in Austcorp
Finance and Leasing Pty Ltd v Thomas (unreported, Supreme Court, Queensland,
23 August 1991) and the decision of the Court of Appeal in J T Stratford
& Son Ltd v Lindley (No 2) [1969] 1 WLR 1547; [1969] 3 All ER 1122.
Stratford was a case where an interlocutory injunction had been
granted. The interlocutory proceedings were, however, fought through until the
House of Lords. Thereafter the proceedings went to sleep and never came to
trial. Ultimately the defendants applied to dismiss the
proceedings for want of
prosecution. The plaintiff countermanded with an application to discontinue the
proceedings. Ultimately it
was held that the plaintiff should be given leave to
discontinue. As Lord Denning MR put it (at 1553; 1123):
'Nobody has lost. Nobody has won ... Neither side wanted to go on. But
neither side wanted to pay the costs of the other side.'
Speaking rhetorically his Lordship continued (at 1553; 1123):
'So what is to be done? Is this case to go on simply about costs? I think
not.'
His Lordship declined to consider the merits of the dispute. Rather, he
affirmed the exercise of discretion below that each side should
pay its own
costs. Winn LJ and Cross LJ also were of opinion that the assessment of a
theoretical prospect of success was impractical
and that the merits should not
be gone into. Both were of the view that there should be no order as to costs.
These cases seem to me to support the following propositions being made.
(1) Where neither party desires to proceed with litigation the Court should
be ready to facilitate the conclusion of the proceedings
by making a cost order:
Stratford and the SEQEB case.
(2) It will rarely, if ever, be appropriate, where there has been no trial on
the merits, for a Court determining how the costs of
the proceeding should be
borne to endeavour to determine for itself the case on the merits or, as it
might be put, to determine the
outcome of a hypothetical trial: Stratford
. This will particularly be the case where a trial on the merits would
involve complex factual matters where credit could be an issue.
(3) In determining the question of costs it would be appropriate, however,
for the Court to determine whether the applicant acted
reasonably in commencing
the proceedings and whether the respondent acted reasonably in defending them
(SEQEB).
(4) In a particular case it might be appropriate for the Court in its
discretion to consider the conduct of a respondent prior to
the commencement of
the proceedings where such conduct may have precipitated the litigation: cf
Sunday Times Newspaper Co Ltd v McIntosh (1933) 33 SR (NSW) 371.
(5) Where the proceedings terminate after interlocutory relief has been
granted, the Court may take into account the fact that interlocutory
relief has
been granted: cf Re Asiatic Electric Co Pty Ltd [1973] 1 NSWLR 603 at
606, a case which, however, depended upon the specific wording of the statute
under consideration."
- Mr
Elliott of counsel, who appeared for the defendant, did not, in substance, take
issue with the principles but pointed to the recognised
exception or variant
that allows resort to the merits where a simple and clear cut point alone is
involved. He referred to the observation
in Wharfside Pty Ltd v McCormick
[2010] NSWSC 398 (at [13]) that a good example of such a case "is where the
s 459G application was served after the end of the mandatory 21 day period".
- I
am satisfied that this case is one in which it is appropriate to proceed in
accordance with that exception or variant. The central
matter in issue is
whether the defendant failed to take one necessary step. While the plaintiff
served, within the relevant period
of 21 days, a document which may well be "a
copy of the supporting affidavit" as referred to in s 459G(3)(b), the defendant
maintains
that the plaintiff did not serve, within that period or at all, what
the same provision refers to as "a copy of the application",
that is a copy of
the originating process which the court file shows to have been filed on 15
December 2010.
- If
the plaintiff did not serve "a copy of the application" within the relevant
period of 21 days, the court has no jurisdiction to
set aside the statutory
demand: David Grant & Co Pty Ltd v Westpac Banking Corporation [1995]
HCA 43; (1995) 184 CLR 265 .
- The
defendant accepts that a copy of the relevant affidavit (being Mr Tisdale's
affidavit of 15 December 2010) was served on her by
Mr Hirst at her Lilyfield
premises on 16 December 2010. She gave evidence that she looked at the document,
realised that it was an
affidavit (she being a solicitor) and asked Mr Hirst
whether he had anything else to give her. She says that Mr Hirst's response
was
to shrug his shoulders. She then showed him the affidavit and asked whether that
was all he had to give her, to which he replied,
"Yes, that's it." Mr Hirst then
left the premises.
- Mr
Hirst is an employee of the plaintiff. He is not a professional process server;
nor is he a lawyer. He had been sent by his superior,
Mr Tisdale, to effect
service on the defendant.
- In
an affidavit of 25 January 2011, Mr Hirst deposed to having gone to the
Lilyfield address on 16 December 2010 and spoken to the
defendant. He continued:
"I handed Ms Orsini a copy of the originating process filed on 15
December 2010 and the supporting affidavit of Terrence Roland Tisdale."
- Mr
Hirst swore another affidavit on 14 February 2011. In that affidavit he said:
"I did not read the documents that Terry gave me that morning
except that I noticed that the first document said that it was an affidavit
of
Terrence Roland Tisdale . . . I do not know what else was in the bundle. At the
time of swearing my previous affidavit I was informed
by an employee of the
plaintiff and believe that the bundle also contained the originating process."
- Mr
Tisdale (the "Terry" referred to by Mr Hirst) deposes that he gave "a bundle of
documents" to Mr Hirst on 16 December 2010 and
instructed him to hand them to
the defendant at the Lilyfield address. He says that the bundle consisted of a
copy of the originating
process and a copy of his affidavit of 15 December 2010.
- On
11 January 2011, the defendant sent a facsimile to the plaintiff confirming that
a copy of Mr Tisdale's affidavit of 15 December
2010 had been served on her and
stating that no copy of an originating process was served. The defendant later
received by post on
17 January 2011 a letter from the plaintiff enclosing
"another copy of affidavit for proceedings 2010/416372". The letter was
accompanied
by a further copy of the affidavit of Mr Tisdale but no copy of the
originating process.
- The
defendant sent a further letter to the plaintiff dated 21 January 2011 repeating
that she had not been served with any originating
process. The plaintiff replied
by letter dated 24 January 2011 and enclosed a copy of the originating process.
By her letter in response
the defendant said that that copy was "the first and
only copy of the originating process ever provided".
- Had
the proceedings gone to trial, the plaintiff would have had the task of proving
all elements of its cause of action, including
that a copy of the originating
process filed on 15 December 2010 was served on the defendant within the period
of 21 days referred
to in s 459G(3).
- The
plaintiff's evidence, in that respect, consists only of the evidence of Mr Hirst
as to what happened at the Lilyfield address
on 16 December 2010 plus Mr
Tisdale's evidence of what he gave Mr Hirst to serve on the defendant. The
plaintiff does not suggest
that anything done on any other day is relevant. Its
case stands or falls on the proposition that the actions of Mr Hirst on 16
December
2010 caused a copy of the originating process, as well as a copy of the
supporting affidavit, to be served on the defendant.
- There
is no dispute that the address at Lilyfield was the defendant's address. Nor is
there any dispute that Mr Hirst served on the
defendant personally at that
address a copy of Mr Tisdale's affidavit of 15 December 2010. The contentious
question is whether a
copy of the originating process was served at the same
time; and on that, as I have said, the onus of proof would have rested with
the
plaintiff.
- The
plaintiff would have had the task of discharging the onus of proof according to
the balance of probabilities. On the material
before me, the plaintiff would
have failed in that task.
- The
defendant, a solicitor familiar with documents of the relevant kind, has said
throughout that Mr Hirst handed her a copy affidavit
alone, without any copy of
an originating process and that she queried him as to whether there was anything
else.
- Mr
Hirst's first affidavit refers to service on 16 December 2010 of both documents.
A copy of each is annexed to the affidavit. In
his second affidavit, however, Mr
Hirst says that he did not read "the documents" that Mr Tisdale gave him except
to see that "the
first document" was an affidavit of Mr Tisdale. It is
particularly pertinent that he then says that he did "not know what else was
in
the bundle", beyond having been told by "an employee of the plaintiff" that it
contained the originating process.
- The
defendant later raised in correspondence with the plaintiff the fact that she
was not given a copy of the originating process
with the copy of Mr Tisdale's
affidavit handed to her by Mr Hirst. The plaintiff's response to this clear
message about the originating
process was to send the defendant another copy of
the affidavit and to say nothing about the originating process. It was in
response
to a later letter from the defendant (the letter of 21 January 2011)
that the plaintiff forwarded a copy of the originating process.
That copy was,
on the defendant's evidence, the first to be received by her.
- It
is true that Mr Tisdale says in an affidavit that a copy of the originating
process was in the bundle he gave to Mr Hirst to serve.
But given Mr Tisdale's
apparent difficulty in coming to grips with the defendant's letters pointing out
the absence of that document,
one may question whether he was in truth aware of
that. I note again, in that connection, that the originating process and
affidavit
were apparently prepared and served without the intervention of a
solicitor.
- In
these circumstances, there could not have been any degree of confidence
whatsoever that the position was otherwise than as the
defendant said it was.
The finding would have been that the plaintiff did not serve "a copy of the
application" in conformity with
s 459G(3)(b), with the result that an essential
element of the court's jurisdiction under s 459G was lacking and the originating
process was doomed to failure.
- I
move now to another matter relevant to costs. The defendant made it clear to the
plaintiff from the earlies stages that she maintained
that there was no valid s
459G application on foot. She invited withdrawal of the purported application.
Such an invitation was conveyed
by her letter of 29 January 2011, two days
before the first return date. The invitation was not accepted and, on 31 January
2011,
the registrar placed the matter in the judge's 14 February 2011 list with
a view to the allocation of a hearing date for the interlocutory
process. On
that day, the interlocutory process was listed for hearing today.
- But
it was on that same day - 14 February 2011 - that Mr Hirst swore an affidavit
saying that he did not know what was in "the bundle"
(apart from an affidavit of
Mr Tisdale), thus making it clear that he was quite unable to say that he had in
fact served a copy of
the originating process.
- The
plaintiff should have recognised at that point that it was unable to succeed in
its purported application under s 459G. Indeed,
it should have realised that
immediately the defendant raised the issue of the absence of a copy of the
originating process. Had
Mr Hirst been questioned closely at that earlier point,
he would have said that he did not know what was in "the bundle" beyond an
affidavit of Mr Tisdale. It is not as if some supervening event came to change
his appreciation of the content of the bundle. It
was, in the sense referred to
in Oshlack v Richmond River Council [1998] HCA 11; (1998) 193 CLR 72,
"relevant delinquency" for the plaintiff, after being met at an early stage by
the clear and repeated allegation of absence of a
copy of the originating
process, to fail to elicit from Mr Hirst the information he eventually gave and
instead to persist with the
proceedings.
- I
order that the originating process be dismissed with costs, such costs to be
assessed on the indemnity basis.
**********
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