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Gigi Entertainment Pty Limited v Basil John Macree (No. 2) [2011] NSWSC 869 (12 August 2011)
Last Updated: 3 November 2011
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Case Title:
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Gigi Entertainment Pty Limited v Basil John Macree
(No. 2)
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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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Equity Division - Duty
List
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Before:
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Decision:
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1. Order pursuant to Legal Profession Act , s
728 that the defendant deliver to O'Neill Partners his file or files in respect
of proceedings 2008/289478. 2. Order 1 is subject to a condition that the
plaintiff first provide security to the defendant in the sum of $100,000 for the
purpose
of payment of any outstanding costs found to be due to the defendant,
either by: (a) the retaining that sum as security in the trust account of
O'Neill Partners for that purpose, or (b) the giving of a charge over real
estate for that purpose or, (c) the giving of a charge over some other
property to which the defendant agrees for that purpose. 3. The defendant is
ordered to implement Order 1 by providing the file to the solicitor's for the
plaintiff by 12 noon on Monday,
15 August 2011 provided that by 10am on Monday
15 August 2011 the plaintiff has provided security in accordance with Order 2.
4. Grant parties liberty to apply on 24 hours notice in relation to the
implementation of these orders. 5. Note that there will be no order as to
costs to the intent that each party will bear his or its own costs of the
proceedings. 6. The Summons is otherwise dismissed.
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Catchwords:
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SOLICITOR - COSTS - lien - delivery of former
client's papers to new solicitor - solicitor's rules - whether solicitors
undertaking
satisfactorily secures payment of former solicitor's costs and
disbursements - Legal Profession Act 2004, s 728 - appropriate conditions.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Parties:
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Plaintiff - Gigi Entertainment Pty
Limited Defendant - Basil John Macree
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Representation
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Plaintiff- J.P.Redmond (on 12 August
2011) Defendant - M.Bateman
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- Solicitors:
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Plaintiff - C Brown (on 11 August 2011), O'Neill
Partners
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT
- The
Court hoped when delivering judgment in Gigi Entertainment Pty Limited v
Basil John Macree (2011) NSWSC 856 that the parties would be able to agree
upon a regime for dealing with the solicitor's file once it was clear that the
solicitor
had terminated the retainer. That hope, expressed in the principal
judgment, has not been fulfilled. The hearing of the remaining
issues took place
yesterday. This second judgment in the proceedings should be read with my
principal judgment which identifies the
parties and sets out the relevant
background.
- One
issue fell away at yesterday's hearing. The client argued that the 22 January
2008 retainer agreement was not a valid costs agreement
between solicitor and
client under Legal Profession Act 2004, thereby disentitling the
solicitor from recovering costs against the client, subject to the availability
of restitutionary remedies.
But this argument was abandoned at hearing. The only
issue that remains is to fix the terms upon which the Court should order under
Legal Profession Act , s 728 that the file be transferred from the
solicitor to the new solicitor, O'Neill Partners.
- The
client contended that the Court should order the transfer of the file subject
only to the execution of the standard tripartite
agreement provided for under
the Law Society Rules in these circumstances.
- The
solicitor is not satisfied with that. He says that will give him insufficient
security and that the Court should order some other
substitute security to
replace the value of the lien effectively being destroyed by making orders under
Legal Profession Act , s 728.
- My
principal judgment only dealt with the background relevant to the issue of who
terminated the retainer. But other facts are now
relevant to the discretionary
issue before the Court; facts relating to the state of the principal proceedings
and the client's prospects
of success; facts relating to the client's capacity
to meet the solicitor's bill of costs; and facts relating to the conduct of the
parties.
Costs Disclosure
- The
client contended that the solicitor had failed to give it adequate costs
disclosure and that that was a factor which the Court
should now take into
account when considering what order to make under Legal Profession Act ,
s 728. The solicitor gave some costs disclosure to the client by letter when the
solicitor provided a costs agreement with the client on
22 January 2008. The
disclosure was in the following terms:-
"We refer to the enclosed cost agreements.
This letter should be read in conjunction with the attached Costs
Agreement, which sets out our terms of business. This letter and our Costs
Agreement constitutes our disclosure pursuant to
the Legal Profession Act
1987 (" the Act ") and the terms of our offer to provide legal
services.
1. INSTRUCTIONS AND COMMENTS
1.1 You have instructed us to represent you, Gina Gerzilis and GIGI
Entertainment Pty Ltd in respect of legal proceedings against
Michael Schmidt
including Supreme Court proceeding for recovery of damages for breach of lease.
SCOPE OF WORK
2.1 We anticipate that acting for you in connection with this matter will
involve the following tasks:
(a) Receiving instructions gathering evidence by way of statements
consultants; attendances telephone calls; preparing drawing engrossing
court
documents; briefing counsel attending court etc.
BUDGET
3.1 We have prepared a Tale setting out our estimate of professional fees for
this matter, based on the scope of work set out in paragraph
2 above. This Table
is set out below.
3.2 We estimate that out total fees for the matter(s) on which you have
instructed us are likely to be between $75,000.00 and $125,000.00
excluding GST
and disbursements.
3.3 Standard disbursements will be charged for in accordance with the
Schedule to the attached Costs Agreement. Any anticipated major
disbursements, not covered in the Schedule to the Costs Agreement, are set out
in the table
of disbursements set out below."
- But
the proceedings were litigious and costs rapidly escalated. The solicitor gave
the client three invoices for legal costs in the
three and a half year period
from January 2008 to July 2011. The total of these was in the order of $350,000
which considerably exceeded
the ceiling estimated in the January 2008 costs
disclosure of $125,000.
- The
solicitor did not invoice the client for fourteen months until 21 April 2009
when he sent an invoice for fees and disbursements
of $73,838.00, which less an
amount paid of $27,788.03 left an amount outstanding of $46,049.97. Despite the
solicitor's attempts
to reduce his fees and avoid some duplication of effort,
the delay in sending the first bill had the predictable effect of surprising
the
client, who nevertheless agreed to pay it off by instalments and did so.
- The
second bill had a similar effect on the client. Issued in February 2010 covering
the period February 2009 to December 2009 it
totalled $72,380. The client also
agreed to pay this amount off by instalments and did so.
- The
parties agreed thenceforth the solicitor would send quarterly bills to client.
But he did not do so. Nor did the solicitor give
any other formal disclosure of
the expected fees for the balance of the proceedings. This meant that when after
termination the solicitor
issued a final bill in July this year it was large.
The third, and now disputed invoice, covering a period January 2010 to 8 July
2011, issued on 12 July 2011, was for the total sum of $220,209, reduced by
$14,000 on account of prior payments, leaving a balance
claimed of $206,209.
- This
meant that by the time of termination the total fees had reached approximately
$350,000, some $225,000 in excess of the original
upper range estimate in the
costs disclosure of $125,000. Through his counsel in submissions the solicitor
did not really contest
that he had failed to give adequate disclosure to the
client. Nor could he have done so on the material before me.
- The
solicitor has a continuous obligation to disclose to a client "any substantial
change to anything included in a disclosure already
made [under Legal
Profession Act , s 309] as soon as is reasonably practicable after the law
practice becomes aware of that change": Legal Profession Act , s 316. The
effect of a failure to disclose is that the client or "an associated third party
payer" then "need not pay the legal
costs unless they have been assessed under
Division 11": Legal Profession Act, s 317. The application of these
provisions means that the client is not obliged to pay the legal costs in the
solicitor's third invoice
until they have been assessed.
- The
client also argued that the solicitor had also failed to disclose at any time
the estimates required in litigious matters under
Legal Profession Act ,
s 309(1)(f). The solicitor does not obviously appear to have disclosed the
estimates of "the range of costs that may be recovered
if the client is
successful in the litigation" and "the range of costs the client may be ordered
to pay if the client is unsuccessful"
as the legislation requires. But I do not
have to decide this question, as it is clear on other grounds that the third
invoice is
not payable until after an assessment of costs.
- But
Legal Profession Act , s 317 merely postpones the obligations under the
third invoice. It does not destroy any solicitor's lien that would otherwise
arise.
I agree, with respect, with James J's analysis of Legal Profession Act
1987, s 182 (in relevantly equivalent terms to Legal Profession Act
2004, s 317) that a failure to comply with the disclosure provisions should
be limited to the consequences expressly stated in Legal Profession Act,
s 317(1) and that "any such failure will not affect any lien to which the
solicitor might be entitled": Blanda v Kemp Strang Lawyers Pty Limited
[2006] NSWSC 48 at [54] - [56]. The solicitor remains entitled to his lien
over the file.
Gigi Entertainment Pty Limited v Michael Karl Schmidt
- The
principal proceedings are in an intense phase of preparation for the hearing on
22 August 2011, now a little over a week away.
Orders and directions were made
on Monday, 8 August 2011 for detailed further pre trial directions.
- In
the principal proceedings the client, as plaintiff, seeks to recover damages
from Mr Michael Schmidt, the tenant in respect of
alleged breaches by the
defendant of alleged obligations under the lease of the hotel known as the
"Tattersall Hotel" Lithgow, New
South Wales. The principal proceedings seem to
be in the nature of a building case. In April 2010, a referee gave a
determination
about some aspects of the plaintiff's claim. Hall J adopted parts
of the referee's report and rejected other parts in a determination
in the
proceedings in August last year: Gigi Entertainment Pty Limited v Schmidt
[2010] NSWSC 906. The legal representatives on both sides argued the case
before me on the basis that the effect of his Honour's decision was that
the
client's claim against Mr Schmidt, which had originally been in excess of
$523,000, was reduced by his Honour's decision by an
amount of $250,000. The
client said in submissions that it was proposing to amend the amount claimed to
pursue a larger sum. But
this close to trial that may be quite a difficult
application.
- The
client is a recent purchaser of the Tattersall Hotel. In a three way arrangement
with the vendor it reduced the purchase price
by $250,000 and took on the
liability to repay to Mr Schmidt at the end of the lease a tenant's bond in that
same amount. Mr Schmidt
has cross-claimed in the principal proceedings for that
sum. The solicitor submits that if the client cannot amend the principal
proceedings and the cross-claim succeeds that the client's return from the
proceedings is likely only to be marginal.
- There
was no evidence before the Court of solicitor's or counsel's advice about the
client's prospects of success in the principal
proceedings, evidence that is
sometimes put before the Court on similar applications: see for example Pembroke
J's decision in Tyneside Property Management Pty Limited & Ors v
Hammersmith Management Pty Limited & Ors [2011] NSWSC 22. Mr Schmidt was
a interested member of the public watching these proceedings closely. Although
Ms Bateman, on behalf of the solicitor,
tended in her submissions, as might be
expected, to emphasise the risks in the principal litigation, and Mr Brown on
behalf of the
client to emphasise the strengths of the plaintiff's position,
nothing was disclosed in these proceedings about the client's real
prospects of
success in the principal proceedings. I approach the matter on the basis that
the client has a claim for a little over
$250,000 but which may be neutralised
by a cross-claim of about the same order but which may also be amended to claim
a higher figure.
- This
analysis starkly illustrates what happens in many building cases, that the cost
of the parties can rapidly run ahead and even
exceed the amount in issue.
The Client's Capacity to Pay Legal Costs
- The
parties debated the client's capacity to eventually pay the solicitor's bill
after assessment. This bears closely upon whether
any security additional to the
usual tripartite agreement should be ordered and whether such an order might
stultify the client's
capacity to conduct the principal proceedings. Two major
factors here are the client's existing access to assets and the financial
demands of the principal proceedings.
- The
client has put the new solicitor in funds. The solicitor issued notices to
produce to the client, the response to which indicated
that as at 31 July 2011
O'Neill Partners held $72,306 to the client's credit in its trust account. That
figure is now slightly out
of date and I anticipate recent deductions have
either been made from it or are liable to be made from it for O'Neill Partners'
work
in progress in the principal proceedings.
- The
principals of the client are Mr George Gerzilis and Ms Gina Gerzilis. The
uncontested evidence is that Mr Gerzilis owns real estate
to the value of
$300,000 mortgaged up to $120,000, with no other liabilities that exceed the
value of his moveable assets. Ms Gerzilis
is in a similar position but she has
an equity of a little over $130,000 in her home.
- The
client's corporate balance sheet shows negative equity of $328,054.62. Although
this balance sheet has only been produced from
management accounts, it gives
little confidence in the client's capacity to pay the solicitor's costs from its
own resources when
called upon to do so.
- But
Mr Brown declared in submissions that in the principal proceedings Gigi
Entertainment is acting as a trustee and has an indemnity
against all trust
assets in respect of the proceedings. The balance sheet of the Gerzilis Family
Trust of which the client is a trustee
was also in evidence. But it shows a net
equity of zero. The trust has total assets, including a freehold hotel
(presumably the Tattersall
Hotel) of $2,175,564.42 and total liabilities of the
same amount. This evidence gives little confidence that the Trust will be able
to source funds to pay the solicitor.
- A
trust's creditor may have a right to payment from trust property by way of
subrogation to the trustee's right of indemnity against
trust assets: Re
Raybould; Raybould v Turner [1900] 1 Ch 199, Benett v Wyndham (1862)
4 DF&J 259; [1862] EngR 900; 45 ER 1183 and Gatsios Holdings Pty Limited v Nick Kritharas
Holdings Pty Limited (2002) ATPR 41-864; [2002] NSWCA 29. But in this case
that right would appear to be of limited value to either the solicitor or indeed
to Mr Schmidt were he to be successful.
- I
mention at this point that although the 22 January 2008 costs agreement on one
analysis may appear to have been made with Mr Gerzilis,
it was accepted on all
sides for the purposes of argument that Gigi Entertainment Pty Limited, the
plaintiff in these proceedings,
was the client and that Mr and Ms Gerzilis
nevertheless had co-ordinate legal responsibility for payment of the solicitor's
costs.
The Parties' Conduct
- Both
parties pressed upon the Court the relevance of the conduct of the parties at
the time of termination to the exercise of the
Legal Profession Act , s
728 discretion. Not all of this conduct was dealt with in the principal
judgment. For the reasons that appear below, although this conduct
in my view
can be taken into account in exercise of the discretion, it is not of decisive
importance in this case.
- First
there was contention about which of the Solicitors Rules applied. The Solicitors
Rules reflect the authorities dealing with
possessory liens; are applied subject
to Legal Profession Act , s 728; and provide a framework for the steps
that solicitors must observe where a former client seeks access to documents:
B Bechara t/as Bechara & Co v Atie & Anor [2005] NSWCA 268 at
[61]. The Solicitors Rules were originally made under Legal Profession Act
1987, s 57B. They remain in force and bind legal practitioners under
Legal Profession Act 2004, Schedule 9, Clause 24. Rules 8 and 29 were the
focus of submissions.
"8. Ownership of clients' documents - Termination of retainer
8.1 The following Rules apply subject to any contrary order which may be made
in respect of clients' documents by the Supreme Court
of New South Wales under
section 728 of the Legal Profession Act 2004.
8.2.1 A practitioner must retain, securely and confidentially, documents to
which a client is entitled, for the duration of the practitioner's
retainer and
at least seven (7) years thereafter, or until such time as the practitioner
gives them to the client or another person
authorised by the client to receive
them, or the client instructs the practitioner to deal with them in some other
manner.
8.2.2 A practitioner is not entitled to recover from the client any costs for
storage of documents as required by this Rule and is
not entitled to charge any
costs for retrieval from storage as requested by or on behalf of the client
unless such costs have been
disclosed to the client pursuant to the disclosure
requirements set out in Part 3.2 of the Legal Profession Act 2004 or with the
informed consent of the client.
8.2.3 "Costs" in this Rule includes fees, charges, disbursements, expenses
and remuneration.
8.3 Upon completion or termination of a practitioner's retainer, a
practitioner must, when requested so to do by the practitioner's
client, give to
the client, or another person authorised by the client, any documents related to
the retainer to which the client
is entitled,
unless -
8.3.1 the practitioner has completed the retainer; or
8.3.2 the client has terminated the practitioner's retainer; or
8.3.3 the practitioner has terminated the retainer for just cause and on
reasonable notice; and the practitioner claims a lien over
the documents for
costs due to the practitioner by the client.
8.4 Despite Rule 8.3, a practitioner who claims to exercise a lien for unpaid
costs over a client's documents, which are essential to the client's defence
or
prosecution of current
proceedings, must:
8.4.1 deal with the documents as provided in Rule 29, if another lawyer is
acting for
the client; or
8.4.2 upon the practitioner's costs being satisfactorily secured, deliver the
documents to the client.
8.5 For the purposes of the above Rules -
The documents to which a client of a practitioner should be entitled will
include:
8.5.1 documents prepared by a practitioner for the client, or predominantly
for the purposes of the client, and for which the client
has been, or will be,
charged costs by the practitioner; and
8.5.2 documents received by a practitioner from a third party in the course
of the practitioner's retainer for or on behalf of the
client or for the
purposes of a client's business and intended for the use or information of the
client.
...
29. Taking over a matter from another practitioner
29.1 Where a practitioner's retainer is terminated before the completion of
the client's business to which it relates, and the client
instructs another
practitioner to take over the conduct of the client's business, the following
rules shall apply, subject to any
orders which may be made by the Supreme Court
in respect of the delivery of documents pursuant to Section 728 of the Legal
Profession Act 2004.
29.2 The first practitioner must promptly, on receipt of a direction in
writing from the client, deliver to the second practitioner
all relevant
documents to which the client is entitled and any information which is necessary
for the proper conduct of the client's
business, unless the first practitioner
claims a lien over the documents for unpaid costs.
29.3 If the client has terminated the first practitioner's retainer, the
first practitioner may retain possession of the documents
until the
practitioner's costs are paid, or their payment to the practitioner is
satisfactorily secured.
29.4 If the first practitioner has terminated the retainer and the client's
documents are essential to the defence or prosecution
of proceedings which are
continuing before a Court, the practitioner must surrender possession of the
documents to the client, upon
the terms prescribed in Rule 8.4.2 or to the
second practitioner, if so directed by the client, and, provided that the second
practitioner
-
29.4.1 holds the documents subject to the first practitioner's lien, if that
is practicable, and ensures the first practitioner's
costs are satisfactorily
secured; or
29.4.2 enters into an agreement with the client and the first practitioner to
procure payment of the first practitioner's costs upon
completion of the
relevant proceedings.
29.5 A practitioner who receives a client's documents from another
practitioner pursuant to an agreement between the client and both
practitioners,
providing that the practitioner receiving the documents will pay the first
practitioner's costs from money recovered
on the client's behalf in respect of
the business or proceedings to which the documents relate, must do all things
which are reasonably
practicable on the practitioner's part to ensure compliance
with the agreement."
- Although
my principal judgment resolved the question of who terminated the retainer, the
solicitor still argued that he did not have
to deal with the file under Rule 29
as Rule 8.4 provides, because Rule 8.3 applies. The contention was that Rule
8.3.3 was satisfied as the solicitor had terminated the retainer "for just cause
and on reasonable
notice". Therefore the solicitor was not obliged to hand the
documents over at the direction of the client in accordance with Rule 29.
- This
argument fails because the retainer was not terminated "on reasonable notice".
The findings in my principal judgment establish
that the solicitor gave
immediate notice of termination of the retainer to the client at 12.40pm on 4
July; did not give the 14 day
notice provided for by the costs agreement; and,
reversed that position within 3.5 hours but not before the client had acted on
it:
Gigi Entertainment Pty Limited v Basil John Macree (2011) NSWSC 856
at [4], [7] - [14], [28] - [29]. This was not termination "on reasonable
notice". The termination was close to hearing, it did not comply
with the
contract and the solicitor's second thoughts in reversing it after speaking to
the Law Society are an admission by conduct
that it should not have happened.
Rule 8.3.3 is not satisfied. Rules 8.4 and 29 apply.
- The
solicitor also put that he terminated the retainer for "just cause". I did not
have to decide that question but it must be said
the client's conduct in dealing
with the barrister as he did, makes the solicitor's reaction understandable,
especially where the
solicitor professed at least to have attempted to reduce
the client's fees in what was an essentially difficult and costly building
case.
- Some
of the parties' conduct during the retainer is also relevant. The client has
paid the solicitor $146,218 in costs for the principal
proceedings. Although the
cost agreement between solicitor and client provides for the recovery of legal
costs thirty days after
the issuing of a bill of costs that complies with the
Legal Profession Act , it is evident from the billing pattern itself, if
nothing else, that the solicitor was willing to "carry" the client through a
considerable
period. The client complains that the solicitor reversed this
position in June of this year, which no doubt led to the recent tensions
between
solicitor and client. But in my view the solicitor was merely at that time
reinforcing the actual terms of the cost agreement
in making it clear that he
could not carry the client all the way through contested litigation. In many
ways the solicitor's decision
to defer issuing the third invoice for eighteen
months has given the client not inconsiderable assistance in the conduct of the
proceedings.
Moreover the cost agreement did not provide for payment only at the
end of the proceedings or only upon success. I do not think it
was reasonable
for the client to expect the solicitor to have carried him indefinitely.
- The
question therefore now becomes the application of Rule 29.4. There was no issue
between the parties that the client's documents are essential to its prosecution
of its claim in the principal
proceedings and to its defence of its cross-claim
in those proceedings. The point at issue was whether a tripartite agreement
should
be entered into under Rule 29.4.2 between the solicitor, the client and
the new solicitor or whether the new solicitor should hold
the documents subject
to the solicitor's lien and ensure that the solicitor's costs "are
satisfactorily secured". Rule 8.4.2 achieves
a similar result. Although the
Court of Appeal has pointed to an "unhappy discontinuity" between Rule 8.4, Rule
29.3 and Rule 29.4: Bechara t/as Bechara & Co v Atie & Anor
[2005] NSWCA 268 at [62].
- The
new solicitor offered by letter dated 10 August 2011 to enter into the standard
tripartite deed provided for under the Solicitors
Rules. Under the tripartite
deed the client irrevocably authorises the new solicitor to allow any
settlement, award or verdict to
be paid to the solicitor upon the conclusion of
proceedings; the solicitor agrees to transfer the file to the new solicitor; and
the new solicitor promises to preserve the lien and pay the solicitor out of any
available funds. But Ms Bateman contends that this
represents insufficient
security in this case.
Applicable Legal Principles
- When
the Court considers making orders under Legal Profession Act , s 728 and
the solicitor has terminated the retainer the Court: does not act automatically
but in an equitable manner exercising its discretion
having regard to "the
nature of the case, the stage which litigation had reached, the conduct of the
solicitor and the client respectively,
and the balance of hardship which might
result from the order the Court is being asked to make": see Stark v Dennett
[2008] 2 Qd R 72; [2008] QCA 50 at [41] per Keane JA (Muir JA and Mullins J
agreeing), citing Templeman LJ in Gamlen Chemical Co (UK) Ltd v Rochem Ltd
[1980] 1 All ER 1049 at 625.
- The
expression "satisfactorily secured" in Rules 8.4.2 and 29.4.1 has received
judicial attention. In Bechara t/as Bechara & Co v Atie & Anor
[2005] NSWCA 268 the Court of Appeal discussed the meaning of the expression
at [64] and [65] as follows:-
"[64] The expression "satisfactorily secured" should be understood,
both by reference to the authorities dealing with possessory liens,
and in its
textual context, to refer to the provision, in lieu of payment, of something of
monetary value which would ensure the
satisfaction of the possessory lien. Like
should be replaced with like. This is reinforced by r 29.5 which requires a
practitioner
'who receives a client's documents from another practitioner
pursuant to an agreement between the client and both practitioners,
providing
that the practitioner receiving the documents will pay the first practitioner's
costs from money recovered on the client's
behalf in respect of the business or
proceedings to which the documents relate, [to] do all things which are
reasonably practicable
on the practitioner's part to ensure compliance with the
agreement'.
[65] Accordingly, in the case of litigation, as here, undertaken on
payment only in the event of a successful outcome, that security would
commonly,
in my view, take the form of an agreement, to which both the former client and
the substituted solicitor are parties, that
the verdict or settlement monies
would be retained by the substituted solicitors to the extent necessary to meet
the former solicitor's
costs. While the test of what constitutes satisfactory
security is clearly objective, it might be accepted that a solicitor whose
services had been terminated would be entitled to feel uncomfortable with
anything less: cf Hughes v Hughes (at 228)."
Decision
- In
my view Ms Bateman's arguments on behalf of the solicitor are persuasive,
especially when the case is analysed by reference to
the considerations Keane JA
identifies in Stark v Dennett [2008] 2 Qd R 72; [2008] QCA 50 at [41].
There should be an order for satisfactory security in the solicitor's favour.
The decisive issue in the circumstances of this case
is the balance of hardship
which might result from making an order of the Court . The other ordinary
factors appear to me to be neutral.
- Nature
of the Case and Stage reached. As to the nature of the case and the stage
that the litigation has reached: the principal proceedings is a labour intensive
building
case which is close to hearing and in which very considerable energy
has been invested by both the solicitor and the client before
the retainer was
terminated. Such proceedings are always expensive. Although the solicitor
defaulted in his obligation to give proper
costs disclosure, but especially
given the nature of the proceedings, I also have no basis to infer that his fees
are excessive or
are likely to be heavily discounted upon assessment. The client
has paid the solicitor's first two invoices and invested considerable
sums in
the litigation which it wishes to bring to a successful conclusion. But the
solicitor has carried the client for a long period
by any standard. The client's
urgent requirement to have the matter ready for hearing on 22 August is counter
balanced by the solicitor's
18 months of support to the litigation. Nor do I
regard the solicitor's decision in not "carrying" the client beyond June 2011 as
conduct to be counted against him.
- The
Parties' Conduct. The respective conduct of the solicitor and the client in
relation to the termination of the retainer is also a neutral factor. I
am
conscious that where a solicitor has terminated the retainer, in seeking to
strike an equitable balance between the interest of
the former solicitor and the
former client, the Court will not be "overly fastidious to ensure the adequacy
of the former solicitor's
security for his or her fees": Stark v Dennett
[2008] 2 Qd R 72; [2008] QCA 050 at [49]. Although the solicitor's
termination occurred without reasonable notice this circumstance is mitigated to
a considerable extent by the client's apparently deliberate conduct attempting
to mislead the barrister.
- The
Balance of Hardship. But in my view the balance of hardship is decisive.
This consideration favours the making of a security order rather than leaving
the parties to enter a tripartite agreement for several reasons.
- First,
the client has not advanced a case that the making of any security order in
addition to the tripartite agreement offered will
stultify the client's
prosecution of the new proceedings. Such an order seems to be a further
financial burden to the client but
not an overwhelming one.
- Second,
the client's principals have equity in residential properties, which is
available to be charged. I am mindful that that equity
may also need to be used
to fund the conduct of rest of the principal proceedings, so any present
charging order that consumed all
the remaining equity in those properties may
have the effect of impeding the client's conduct of the principal proceedings.
- Third,
the tripartite agreement is of little value to the solicitor where the fruit of
the principal proceedings is uncertain as it
is here, where the quantum of the
claim is in contention, where the cross-claim may reduce the outcome for the
client even further,
and where there is evidence of uncertainty of any recovery
from Mr Schmidt.
- Fourth,
in the absence of his lien the solicitor can be anticipated to have real
difficulties in competing for his fees potentially
with the new solicitor and
possibly with Mr Schmidt or other creditors of Gigi Entertainment Pty Ltd and Mr
Gerzilis.
- Finally,
the question is what is an appropriate amount to constitute satisfactory
security. This is holistic valuation of what I regard
as appropriate. Being a
discretionary matter, it is something upon which reasonable minds might differ.
In my view the appropriate
security which should be provided is in the sum of
$100,000. This figure gives the solicitor security as to almost half his costs
but allows Mr and Ms Gerzilis to use the combined equity in their real estate to
continue to fund the proceedings, if that is what
they require.
The parties argued about costs upon the giving of judgment and then the
judgment proceeded.
- The
defendant argues that the plaintiff should pay its costs. But it seems to me
that both parties have had a measure of success,
the client in my first
judgment, and the solicitor in this judgment. I do not see why one or other
party should bear the costs of
this contest. I will therefore note that there
will be no order as to costs to the intent that each party bear his or its own
costs
of these proceedings.
- Accordingly,
the orders of the Court will be:-
1. Order pursuant to Legal Profession Act , s 728 that the defendant
deliver to O'Neill Partners his file or files in respect of proceedings
2008/289478.
2. Order 1 is subject to a condition that the plaintiff first provide
security to the defendant in the sum of $100,000 for the purpose
of payment of
any outstanding costs found to be due to the defendant, either by:
(a) the retaining that sum as security in the trust account of O'Neill
Partners for that purpose, or
(b) the giving of a charge over real estate for that purpose or,
(c) the giving of a charge over some other property to which the defendant
agrees for that purpose.
3. The defendant is ordered to implement Order 1 by providing the file to the
solicitor's for the plaintiff by 12 noon on Monday,
15 August 2011 provided that
by 10am on Monday 15 August 2011 the plaintiff has provided security in
accordance with Order 2.
4. Grant parties liberty to apply on 24 hours notice in relation to the
implementation of these orders.
5. Note that there will be no order as to costs to the intent that each party
will bear his or its own costs of the proceedings.
6. The Summons is otherwise dismissed.
**********
Amendments
15 Aug 2011 Typographical errors Paragraphs: Category on Coversheet- changed
to principal judgment.Paragraph 32
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