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[2011] NSWSC 1519
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Chapel Road Pty Limited v Australian Securities Investments Commission [2011] NSWSC 1519 (9 December 2011)
Last Updated: 19 December 2011
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Case Title:
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Chapel Road Pty Limited v Australian Securities
Investments Commission
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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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Before:
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Decision:
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The plaintiff is ordered to pay the defendant's
costs of the motion, as agreed or assessed.
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Catchwords:
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PROCEDURE - costs - notice of motion
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Chapel Road Pty Limited v Australian Securities
Investments Commission [2011] NSWSC 419
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Texts Cited:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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Chapel Road Pty Limited (Plaintiff) Australian
Securities Investments Commission (Defendant)
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Representation
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Counsel: Mr SJ Walsh (Plaintiff) Mr J Clarke
(Defendant)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Creagh & Creagh
(Plaintiff) Blake Dawson (Defendant)
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT
- By
notice of motion filed in September 2011, the defendant sought orders varying an
order earlier made in relation to discovery. The
orders sought were consented to
by the plaintiff at the hearing of the motion. There was, however, a dispute
about costs.
- The
order was the result of a contest, but not as to the terms of the order itself
(see Chapel Road Pty Limited v Australian Securities Investments Commission
[2011] NSWSC 419 ). Beforehand, the parties had co-operated in relation to
informal discovery, but they could not agree about discovery in relation
to
third party documents. It was the order which the plaintiff had drafted, which
was made.
- The
discovery which had to be given was thus:
"1. The Defendant provides Discovery in accordance with the categories
nominated by the Plaintiff:
"Documents" include emails, correspondence, minutes, notes, files, contracts,
reports, drafts, instructions and memoranda.
All documents referable to the Defendant's investigations to the
consideration of training, supervision and compliance issues during
the period
of 30 June 1998 to 30 June 2002 in respect of the following entities:
(a) Financial Wisdom Ltd.
(b) Count Financial Group Pty Ltd.
(c) Greater Western Financial Services Co Pty Ltd.
(d) AMP Financial Planning Pty Ltd.
(e) Grosvenor Securities Pty Ltd."
- After
the order was made, the parties agreed on a timetable. The discovery was to be
given by 26 August 2011. The defendant's solicitor
Ms Susan Goodman explained in
an affidavit dated 15 September 2011, the steps taken, in order to review the
relevant files, so that
the discovery could be given. That process ceased on 29
June, when the plaintiff failed to pay the third tranche of a security for
costs
order. That payment was made on 8 July and the discovery process was resumed.
- The
security which has been ordered is for $175,000.
- Verified
discovery of many documents was given on 26 August, after review of over 8,000
documents, of which only 237 were found to
have come within the agreed
categories. The cost incurred was in excess of $40,000.
- During
the course of the work necessary to provide the discovery required by the order,
a question emerged as to its meaning and a
view was formed that the discovery
was oppressive. These were not matters earlier agitated between the parties.
Despite correspondence
between the parties as to these difficulties in August,
consent to amendment of the orders was refused by the plaintiff.
- On
1 September 2011, the motion was filed. Ms Goodman's affidavit evidence was that
there are at least a further 8,000 documents which
have been identified as
necessary to be reviewed and further extensive searches necessary to be
undertaken, in relation to some 82
investigating/surveillance activities pursued
by the defendant, in relation to the nominated companies. It was estimated that
this
would require consideration of a further 93,000 documents at a cost of over
$400,000. It was estimated that what was proposed by
way of the amended order
would result in a need to review a further 5,700 documents at a cost of a
further $28,000.
- It
was not until 16 November that consent was forthcoming from the plaintiff in
relation to the order proposed in the motion. It was
then advised that the
agreement was forthcoming in order 'to avoid these protracted and expensive
interlocutory hearings'. It was
proposed that in accordance with the motion,
costs be reserved. The defendant sought an order for its costs of the motion,
with the
result that the question of costs was all that remained to be
determined at the hearing.
- Under
the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005, the usual order is that costs
should follow the event. The plaintiff urged that the usual order would not be
made, given that there
was at the initial hearing no question raised as to
either the meaning of the order, or that it would create any oppression; that
it
was not until Ms Goodman's affidavit of 15 September 2011 was served, that the
nature of the difficulty was appreciated; and that
it was relevant that the
plaintiff's consent to the practical resolution of the motion, had rested on the
basis of the order proposed
in the motion, that costs would be reserved.
- What
arises for consideration has to be approached in the face of the requirements of
the Civil Procedure Act 2005, which by s 56 requires the Court to
facilitate the just, quick and cheap resolution of the real issues in dispute in
the proceedings. Section 59 emphasises the need to eliminate delay; s 60
requires that the Court's practice and procedure be implemented with the object
of resolving the issues between the parties, so that
cost is proportionate to
the importance and complexity of the subject-matter in dispute. The Court must
always act in accordance
with the dictates of justice, having in mind matters
specifies in s 58(2)(b):
"(b) may have regard to the following matters to the extent to which it
considers them relevant:
(i) the degree of difficulty or complexity to which the issues in the
proceedings give rise,
(ii) the degree of expedition with which the respective parties have
approached the proceedings, including the degree to which they
have been timely
in their interlocutory activities,
(iii) the degree to which any lack of expedition in approaching the
proceedings has arisen from circumstances beyond the control of
the respective
parties,
(iv) the degree to which the respective parties have fulfilled their duties
under section 56 (3),
(v) the use that any party has made, or could have made, of any opportunity
that has been available to the party in the course of
the proceedings, whether
under rules of court, the practice of the court or any direction of a procedural
nature given in the proceedings,
(vi) the degree of injustice that would be suffered by the respective parties
as a consequence of any order or direction,
(vii) such other matters as the court considers relevant in the circumstances
of the case."
- Like
all other proceedings before the Court, these proceedings have to be managed in
accordance with s 57, which requires that regard be paid to the following
objects:
"(a) the just determination of the proceedings,
(b) the efficient disposal of the business of the court,
(c) the efficient use of available judicial and administrative resources,
(d) the timely disposal of the proceedings, and all other proceedings in the
court, at a cost affordable by the respective parties"
- So
far as the parties are concerned, they too, have relevant obligations under s
56:
"(3) A party to civil proceedings is under a duty to assist the court to
further the overriding purpose and, to that effect, to participate
in the
processes of the court and to comply with directions and orders of the court.
(3A) A party to a civil dispute or civil proceedings is under a duty to take
reasonable steps to resolve or narrow the issues in dispute
in accordance with
the provisions of Part 2A (if any) that are applicable to the dispute or
proceedings in a way that is consistent with the overriding purpose.
(4) Each of the following persons must not, by their conduct, cause a party
to a civil dispute or civil proceedings to be put in breach
of a duty identified
in subsection (3) or (3A):
(a) any solicitor or barrister representing the party in the dispute or
proceedings,
(b) any person with a relevant interest in the proceedings commenced by the
party."
- The
issue which was raised by the defendant with the plaintiff by letter of 12
August was the disproportionate costs being generated
by the enquiries of the
discovery which had been ordered, given the terms of the order and its apparent
meaning. That was not a matter
to which the parties had earlier turned their
minds, but it was in their interests that the problem be promptly resolved, once
identified.
Their obligations under the Act required them to actively pursue its
sensible resolution.
- The
necessity of pursing orders from the Court by way of motion, was the result of
the plaintiff's opposition to any amendment of
the order. That was a position
which altered, after considerable time was taken to reflect on the matters
raised in the August correspondence,
as amplified in Ms Goodman's affidavit.
- That
situation is not one in which the Court's discretion to depart from the usual
costs order may justly be exercised in favour of
the plaintiff. The question of
the costs of the motion must be resolved at some stage. The sensible time,
consistently with the requirements
of the Act, is now.
Order
- For
those reasons, the plaintiff is ordered to pay the defendant's costs of the
motion, as agreed or assessed.
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