Araz Investments Pty Ltd v Mitry Lawyers Pty Ltd
[2019] NSWDC 823
•14 November 2019
District Court
New South Wales
Medium Neutral Citation: Araz Investments Pty Ltd v Mitry Lawyers Pty Ltd [2019] NSWDC 823 Hearing dates: 14 November 2019 Date of orders: 14 November 2019 Decision date: 14 November 2019 Jurisdiction: Civil Before: P Taylor SC DCJ Decision: (1) Defendant’s notice of motion seeking security for costs (filed 16 September 2019) is dismissed.
(2) Defendant pay the plaintiff’s costs of the motion.Catchwords: COSTS — security for costs — relevant factors – plaintiff’s ability to pay costs of defendant – whether defendant has discharged burden - no NSW real estate – $10,100 paid up share capital – no notice to produce issued Legislation Cited: Civil Procedure Act 2005, s 56
Uniform Civil Procedure Rules, r 42.21Cases Cited: Conform Australia Pty Ltd v Yform Pty Ltd (NSWDC, 20 March 2019, Norton SC DCJ, unreported)
Green Camel Pty Ltd v Urban Ecological Systems Ltd [2017] NSWSC 362
Idoport Pty Ltd v National Australia Bank Ltd [2001] NSWSC 744
In the matter of Felan's Fisheries Pty Limited [2016] NSWSC 1351
Owners-Strata Plan No 50530 v Walter Construction Group Ltd [2001] NSWSC 820
Shi v Benhamou Designs Pty Ltd [2017] NSWSC 735
Wollongong City Council v Legal Business Centre Pty Ltd [2012] NSWCA 245Category: Procedural and other rulings Parties: Araz Investments Pty Ltd (plaintiff)
Mitry Lawyers Pty Ltd (defendant)Representation: Counsel:
Solicitors:
Mr M Klooster (plaintiff)
Mr R Jedrzejczyk (defendant)
CP White & Hetherington (plaintiff)
Yeldham Price O'Brien Lusk (defendant)
File Number(s): 2019/206546 Publication restriction: None
Judgment
1. INTRODUCTION
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The defendant, Mitry Lawyers Pty Ltd, is sued by Araz Investments Pty Ltd in connection with Local Court litigation in which Araz was represented by Mitry. Mitry applies for an order for security for costs in the sum of $100,000.
2. ISSUES
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The litigation raises questions about advocate's immunity in relation to matters not run at trial, and perhaps also in relation to settlement offers and appeals. These matters might be relevant to assessing the plaintiff's prospects in the litigation, but this and other matters relevant to the discretion in a security for costs application, including the amount of security and its form, are not to be ventilated here. The only issue is whether the threshold test is satisfied. If it is, Araz has nothing further to say against an order for security in the sum of $100,000.
3. THRESHOLD TEST
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The application is based on UCPR 42.21(1)(d) which provides that the Court may order the plaintiff to give security if "there is reason to believe that a plaintiff, being a corporation, will be unable to pay the costs of the defendant if ordered to do so".
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This test has been described as setting a "low threshold" and that it is an "undemanding test". [1] It provides the gateway to an order. [2] It requires a "practical commonsense approach to the examination of the financial affairs of the corporation". [3]
1. In the matter of Felan's Fisheries Pty Limited [2016] NSWSC 1351 at [10], Green Camel Pty Ltd v Urban Ecological Systems Ltd [2017] NSWSC 362 at [21].
2. Idoport Pty Ltd v National Australia Bank Ltd [2001] NSWSC 744 at [53].
3. Wollongong City Council v Legal Business Centre Pty Ltd [2012] NSWCA 245 at [28].
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In this case, it is difficult for the Court to engage deeply in this "practical commonsense approach" because there is in evidence little information of the corporation's financial affairs.
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Mitry relies upon two matters which are not disputed - that the paid‑up share capital is $10,100, and that the Araz company owns no real estate in New South Wales. Neither of these matters is especially informative of the corporation's financial affairs.
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The popularity of personal ownership of real estate in Australia may well be within judicial knowledge, but its absence hardly bespeaks financial impecuniosity. Some people prefer to invest in shares or other forms of investment. The popularity, if it be so, of ownership of real estate by a small business company like Araz is not so well-known. Its absence is not probative of an inability to meet a costs order, save that obviously enough, Araz cannot rely on an asset it does not own to counter other evidence of impecuniosity.
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As to the relatively modest share capital, I am also unpersuaded that that provides any real guide as to the financial position of Araz. Araz may utilise debt more so than capital to finance its operations. It might have many years of profits and substantial liquid assets, or it might not. Nothing about these matters is to be inferred from a modest share capital.
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Mitry sought to obtain further details of Araz's financial affairs by letter requesting the same. Araz did not supply any details, asserting that there was no basis for security to be ordered. Mitry placed emphasis on that asserted lack of response.
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Similar emphasis was placed on a lack of response in Shi v Benhamou Designs Pty Ltd. [4] In that case, Ward CJ in Equity referred to a decision of Bergin J in Owners-Strata Plan No 50530 v Walter Construction Group Ltd [5] and stated the proposition that:
“an applicant for security will not discharge the onus it bears merely by pointing to an unfulfilled demand to the other party to provide evidence as to its ability to satisfy an adverse costs order”.[6]
4. [2017] NSWSC 735 at [11].
5. [2001] NSWSC 820.
6. At [12].
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In this case, the response of Araz did provide some evidence of capacity, though it gave no detail and was perhaps less then convincing. Yet that is not enough to discharge the onus of Mitry.
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The decisions of both Shi and Owners-Strata Plan No 50530 made reference to a capacity in the applicant to serve a notice to produce upon the plaintiff for its accounting records and financial statements, and the relevance of the circumstance that no notice was issued. Reference was also made to the circumstance that the failure to issue such a notice is not remedied by the rule in Jones v Dunkel, that the burden remains on the applicant, and that suspicion is not sufficient to establish “reason to believe”. As Bergin J stated, “Where forensic steps are available to and not taken by an applicant, whose burden it is to prove its case, I am of the view that a Court should be less inclined to draw such an adverse inference”. [7]
7. Owners-Strata Plan No 50530 v Walter Construction Group Ltd [2001] NSWSC 820 at [35].
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Thus, a failure by the plaintiff to respond to an expressed concern about its ability to meet an adverse costs order would of itself not enable the inference that the plaintiff is unlikely to be able to meet an adverse costs order, notwithstanding possible thin capitalisation and the undemanding nature of the test. [8] Less still does it do so where there is a denial of that inability in the response.
8. See Shi at [16]-[17].
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I was also referred to the judgment of Norton SC DCJ in Conform Australia Pty Ltd v Yform Pty Ltd [9] to a similar effect. In that case, the plaintiff had less paid up capital, no ownership of New South Wales real estate, a failure to respond to a request for a concession about an inability to meet an adverse costs order, and an unrelated adverse default judgment against it. Reference was made to the decision in Owners-Strata Plan No 50530. The threshold test was held not to be satisfied, her Honour at [29] identifying the absence of evidence of the plaintiff's financial position as the foundation for her being unsatisfied on that matter.
9. (NSWDC, 20 March 2019, Norton SC DCJ, unreported).
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I note that there was also a substantial adverse judgment against the plaintiff in Shi,[10] but that Ward CJ in Eq remained unsatisfied at [23] as to the threshold test.
10. See at [11].
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In this case, the plaintiff's position is stronger. There is a greater paid up capital than in either Shi or Conform. There is a response, albeit general, denying an inability to meet an adverse costs order. And there is no adverse judgment. Whilst none of these earlier decisions are binding on me, I do find the reasoning in them to be persuasive. In all these circumstances, I would be minded to conclude that there is no proper basis to believe, or no "good reason to believe", as Einstein J said in Idoport,[11] that the plaintiff will be unable to meet an adverse costs order.
11. At [53].
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Mitry, in reply submissions, adopted a consideration raised by the Court about whether s 56 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 had any impact. Mitry argued that s 56 added weight to the failure of the plaintiff to supply financial details when requested, and that a party should not have to use a notice to produce to reveal that information. I was unconvinced. Perhaps the provision of further details in answer to the letter may have dissuaded the defendant from a security application, but perhaps not. It may rather have led to the ventilation of the discretionary factors. Any excursion into the discretionary aspects of the security application would not necessarily be cheaper or quicker than one that relied upon by Araz, it being an unassailable answer to proof of the threshold question.
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On the evidence before me, I am not satisfied that there is reason to believe that Araz would be unable to pay the costs of Mitry if ordered to do so. The threshold issue for an order for security under UCPR 42.21(1)(d) is not established and the application should be dismissed.
4. ORDERS
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The orders of the Court are:
Defendant’s notice of motion seeking security for costs (filed 16 September 2019) is dismissed.
Defendant pay the plaintiff’s costs of the motion.
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Endnotes
Decision last updated: 25 February 2020
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