G&S Engineering Services Pty Ltd v MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd
[2024] NSWSC 1094
•27 August 2024
Supreme Court
New South Wales
Medium Neutral Citation: G&S Engineering Services Pty Ltd v MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd (No 17) [2024] NSWSC 1094 Hearing dates: On the papers, submissions dated 13 August 2024 Date of orders: 27 August 2024 Decision date: 27 August 2024 Jurisdiction: Equity - Technology and Construction List Before: McGrath J (in chambers) Decision: (1) The cross-defendants are to pay 50% of the costs of the cross-claimants of the motion.
(2) Costs of the motion are payable forthwith.
Catchwords: COSTS — general rule — mixed outcome — privilege motion — where the cross-claimants/respondents succeeded in the substantive event — where the cross-defendants/applicants succeeded in their alternative claim — dominant and separable issues — where single order is necessary to reduce further costs — HELD — cross-defendants to pay half of the cross-claimants’ costs of the motion — costs payable forthwith
Legislation Cited: Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) s 98
Practice Note SC Eq 3
Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) rr 42.1, 42.7
Cases Cited: Calvo v Ellimark Pty Ltd (No 2) [2016] NSWCA 197
Commonwealth of Australia v Gretton [2008] NSWCA 117
Fiduciary Ltd v Morningstar Research Pty Ltd (2002) 55 NSWLR 1; [2002] NSWSC 432
Fiduciary v Morningstar Research [2004] NSWSC 664
G&S Engineering Services Pty Ltd v MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd (No 16) [2024] NSWSC 955
Grant v Downs (1976) 135 CLR 674; [1976] HCA 63
Ruma Mundi & Anor v John Peter August Hesse & Ors [2018] NSWSC 1548
Sydney Airports Corporation Ltd v Singapore Airlines Ltd [2005] NSWCA 47
Sze Tu v Lowe (No 2) [2015] NSWCA 91
Wheeler & Ors t/as PricewaterhouseCoopers v Aoyin Group Ltd (No 2) [2021] NSWSC 433
Category: Costs Parties: G&S Engineering Services Pty Ltd (First Plaintiff/Cross-Defendant/Applicant)
MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd (First Defendant/Cross-Claimant/Respondent)
DRA Pacific Pty Ltd (Second Plaintiff/Cross-Defendant/Applicant)
MACH Mount Pleasant Operations Pty Ltd (Second Defendant/Cross-Claimant/Respondent)
JCD Australia Pty Ltd (Third Defendant/Cross-Claimant/Respondent)Representation: Counsel:
Solicitors:
TM Mehigan SC and DG Johnson (Plaintiffs/Cross-Defendants/Applicants)
E Ball (Defendants/Cross-Claimants/Respondents)
HFW Australia (Plaintiffs/Cross-Defendants/ Applicants)
Corrs Chambers Westgarth (Defendants/Cross-Claimants/Respondents)
File Number(s): 2019/00071358 Publication restriction: Nil
JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
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This judgment concerns the issue of costs, which was reserved to be dealt with on the papers, following the delivery of my judgment on 5 August 2024 in G&S Engineering Services Pty Ltd v MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd (No 16) [2024] NSWSC 955 (Principal Judgment). This judgment assumes familiarity with, and adopts the shorthand expressions and defined terms used in, the Principal Judgment.
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The Principal Judgment determined the application made by the cross-defendants (G&S Engineering Services Pty Ltd, DRA Pacific Pty Ltd, DRA Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd and DRA Global Limited, often referred to as “CDJV”) seeking orders upholding their objection to the disclosure of the whole or parts of a draft supplementary witness statement over which the cross-defendants sought to claim legal professional privilege. I dismissed the cross-defendants’ claim to legal professional privilege over the whole of the draft supplementary statement, but upheld their privilege claim in respect of parts of the draft supplementary statement. Accordingly, I made orders that the cross-defendants be permitted to redact the privileged content in the draft supplementary statement before the cross-claimants (MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd, MACH Mount Pleasant Operations Pty Ltd and JCD Australia Pty Ltd) were permitted to inspect it.
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In this judgment I have determined that issue of costs in chambers, having regard to the parties’ respective written submissions on the papers.
PRINCIPAL JUDGMENT
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The relevant facts are set out in full in the Principal Judgment at [7]–[59]. For present purposes, the following summary suffices by way of background.
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The main proceedings arise out of a contract entered into in March 2017 between MACH Energy on the one hand and G&S Engineering Services Pty Ltd and DRA Pacific Pty Ltd on the other for the construction of a coal handling and preparation plant in the Hunter Valley, New South Wales. The application which came before me on 19 July 2024 was part of an extensive series of hard-fought interlocutory disputes.
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The document the subject of the cross-defendants’ privilege claim was a draft supplementary statement which had been produced to the court by its author, Andrew Naude, in compliance with a subpoena that had been issued at the cross-claimants’ request.
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Up until October 2022, Mr Naude had been employed and occupied upper executive roles within the DRA group of companies.
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In February 2022, Mr Naude made a witness statement on behalf of the cross-defendants outlining the evidence he was expected to give in these proceedings (Earlier Statement). At the time of the making of the Earlier Statement, Mr Naude was the Chief Executive Officer of the DRA group’s parent company, DRA Global. The Earlier Statement was served on the solicitors for the cross-claimants.
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Between August 2023 and November 2023, correspondence was exchanged between the solicitors for Mr Naude and the solicitors for the cross-claimants, and between the solicitors for Mr Naude and the solicitors for the cross-defendants, in the course of which the prospect of Mr Naude supplementing his evidence in the proceedings by making an additional statement was discussed. The suggestion that Mr Naude might consider providing a supplementary witness statement first emanated from the solicitors for the cross-claimants, who pointed to (and provided Mr Naude with) documents which they suggested added important context and were relevant to Mr Naude’s evidence in the proceedings.
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This and later correspondence between the various firms engaged to act for the parties from late 2023 through to the end of June 2024 demonstrates that over that period the following sequence of events occurred:
Mr Naude’s solicitors indicated to the solicitors for the cross-claimants that Mr Naude would not engage with them for the purposes of preparing a supplementary witness statement without the consent of DRA Global, given his ongoing duties of confidentiality to DRA Global.
Mr Naude through his solicitors conveyed his willingness to meet with the solicitors for the cross-defendants for the purposes of preparing a supplementary witness statement.
The solicitors for the cross-defendants in turn maintained that to properly consider Mr Naude’s request to meet, they required access to copies of, among other things, all “CDJV documents” provided to Mr Naude and all correspondence between Mr Naude and the solicitors for the cross-claimants.
Mr Naude’s solicitors denied that Mr Naude had corresponded directly with the solicitors for the cross-claimants and also indicated that the “CDJV documents” to which the cross-defendants’ solicitors referred were in the cross-defendants’ possession.
Sometime between 1 and 21 November 2023, the draft supplementary statement was created and on 19 January 2024 it was provided to the solicitors for the cross-defendants.
Mr Naude’s solicitors took the view that the cross-defendants were refusing to engage with Mr Naude to address his concerns about the inadequacy of his Earlier Statement, and felt that it was the cross-defendants’ responsibility (Mr Naude having already provided the draft supplementary statement) to assess Mr Naude’s corrections to determine whether his evidence was “the whole truth”.
The solicitors for the cross-claimants became aware of the existence of Mr Naude’s draft supplementary statement and, noting that it was plainly relevant to the issues in dispute in these proceedings, requested that the cross-defendants’ solicitors provide them with a copy of it.
At the cross-claimants’ request, Mr Naude was issued with a subpoena seeking production to the court of the draft supplementary statement, with which Mr Naude subsequently complied. The cross-claimants’ solicitors served a copy of the subpoena on the cross-defendants’ solicitors.
The cross-defendants’ solicitors advised the cross-claimants’ solicitors that they claimed privilege over the entirety of the draft supplementary statement.
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The above events culminated in the filing on 5 July 2024 of the notice of motion whereby the cross-defendants sought to resist the inspection by the cross-claimants of Mr Naude’s draft supplementary witness statement, claiming legal professional privilege over it.
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In the Principal Judgment, I made the following findings in respect of the cross-defendants’ claim of legal professional privilege over the whole of the draft supplementary statement:
The draft supplementary statement was created for two purposes: first, to supplement Mr Naude’s Earlier Statement in circumstances where he was concerned to ensure that his evidence to the court was the whole truth and considered that he needed to correct the Earlier Statement to fulfil his obligation to that end; and second, to raise with the cross-defendants’ solicitors for their consideration matters which Mr Naude considered to be inadequacies in his Earlier Statement and how those inadequacies should be rectified (Principal Judgment at [133]–[136]).
Neither of those two purposes was dominant in the sense of being “clearly paramount” (Grant v Downs (1976) 135 CLR 674; [1976] HCA 63 at 678; Sydney Airports Corporation Ltd v Singapore Airlines Ltd [2005] NSWCA 47 at [7]). The second purpose could undergird a claim for legal professional privilege, and satisfied the rationale animating the substantive rule of law protecting the confidentiality of solicitor-client communications, but was equally as important as the first purpose. (Principal Judgment at [139]–[140]).
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In the event that the above conclusion was wrong, I proceeded to articulate my reasons in respect of the parties’ arguments about the attachment (or not) of an obligation of confidentiality to the draft supplementary statement and its subject matter (Principal Judgment at [142]–[146]). I noted that the parties’ submissions on this issue were misplaced and concluded that there was sufficient evidence of an obligation of confidentiality in the draft supplementary statement to meet the essential requirement of confidentiality in the communication between a solicitor and witness and in turn to attract legal professional privilege. In particular, I rejected the cross-claimants’ argument that the service of the Earlier Statement on the cross-claimants meant that confidentiality in respect of the draft supplementary statement had been waived (at [146]).
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Turning to the cross-defendants’ claim that parts of the draft supplementary statement were privileged, I determined (having inspected the draft supplementary statement) that:
Certain highlighted parts of that document were properly the subject of legal professional privilege and ought to be redacted prior to the document being made available for inspection by the cross-claimants.
The relevant privileged paragraphs of the draft supplementary statement recorded confidential communications in the following contexts (Principal Judgment at [149]):
during meetings between Mr Naude and the former solicitors for the cross-defendants and DRA Global’s general counsel in relation to the preparation of the Earlier Statement for the dominant purpose of gathering evidence in these proceedings;
between Mr Naude and DRA Global’s general counsel in relation to the process for giving evidence and the service of the Earlier Statement for the dominant purpose of gathering evidence in these proceedings;
for the dominant purpose of the provision of legal advice to the DRA group;
between DRA group’s board of directors and general counsel for the dominant purpose of the general counsel providing legal advice in relation to these proceedings; and
in October 2022 between the then solicitors for the cross-defendants and Mr Naude as a witness for the dominant purpose of gathering evidence for use in connection with these proceedings.
SUBMISSIONS
Submissions of the cross-defendants
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The cross-defendants submit that while it would be appropriate for me to award them a proportion of their costs of the motion, costs should be costs in the cause on the cross-claim given that neither party has been wholly successful.
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The cross-defendants take as their starting position their partial success on the privilege claim, noting that the cross-claimants’ challenge elicited from the cross-defendants substantial proof including: an affidavit deposing to the basis of their claims as to privilege; a substantial portion (just under 50%) of their written submissions in support of the part privilege claims; and the production of a confidential exhibit to be inspected by the court for the purpose of determining the part privilege claims.
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While conceding that the hearing of the motion before me was devoted almost entirely to the issue of whether the whole of the draft supplementary statement was subject to legal professional privilege, the cross-defendants submit that their claim as to part privilege was neither insignificant nor minor, but rather saw the court assess claims in respect of five categories of communications diverse in origin and content and involving different sets of legal practitioners. This, the cross-defendants submit, contributed to the costs incurred by the cross-defendants in connection with the motion, and also meant that the cross-defendants needed to address in evidence and argument:
the various proofing meetings involving Mr Naude, the former solicitors on the record for the cross-defendants, and DRA Global’s in-house counsel that demonstrate the providence of the Earlier Statement and support the cross-defendants’ claims of privilege over those communications; and
board meetings of DRA Global that took place in March and July of 2022, in order to ground their claims of privilege over communications during those meetings.
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In addition to succeeding comprehensively on their claim of part privilege, the cross-defendants submit that they succeeded to some extent on their primary claim insofar as the court rejected the cross-claimants’ arguments as to confidentiality, referring to the Principal Judgment at [143]–[146]. The issue of confidentiality was not, the cross-defendants concede, determinative (the court ruled against the cross-defendants on the question of the dominant purpose for which the draft supplementary statement was prepared); nonetheless, this was an issue that the cross-claimants pressed in challenging the cross-defendants’ claim of privilege, and one on which considerable attention was concentrated in written and oral argument.
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The cross-defendants characterise the outcome as one of mixed success, noting that it is often appropriate in such situations for the court to award a proportion of the successful party’s costs where the issues are clearly severable, referring to Sze Tu v Lowe (No 2) [2015] NSWCA 91 at [40]. The cross-defendants submit that while their primary claim of privilege cannot be divided up on account of the overlapping issues of confidentiality and dominant purpose, the claims of part privilege were clearly distinct and severable. For this reason, the cross-defendants say, an order that the costs of this motion be in the cause is simpler and more appropriate, and also aligns with the approach taken by judges of this court in determining applications involving claims of privilege, including that of Stevenson J in Wheeler & Ors t/as PricewaterhouseCoopers v Aoyin Group Ltd (No 2) [2021] NSWSC 433.
Submissions of the cross-claimants
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For their part, the cross-claimants contend that the ordinary rule that costs follow the event — the relevant “event” here being the cross-defendants’ failed attempt to prevent inspection of the draft supplementary witness statement — should govern the present case, there being no reasonable or principled basis for departing from the ordinary rule.
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The cross-claimants note that they did not oppose the redaction of material determined by the court to contain privileged matters, pointing to those parts of their written submissions on the motion where they clarified that they did not seek to inspect material in the draft supplementary statement to which legal advice and/or litigation privilege legitimately attached. In turn, the cross-claimants submit that the cross-defendants were not successful in any costs-relevant way on this aspect of the application and/or by reference to my findings at [147]–[150(1)] of the Principal Judgment.
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The cross-claimants frame the court-ordered redactions not as a “win” on the part of the cross-defendants, but rather as the necessary corollary of the cross-defendants’ loss on the overriding issue of whether the cross-claimants could inspect the draft supplementary statement at all. They state that if I had found that the cross-claimants were not entitled to inspect it, then there would have been no need to redact the statement at all.
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In terms of the assessment of costs, the cross-claimants submit that the ordinary course in the Technology and Construction List is for costs to be assessable forthwith (per Practice Note SC Eq 3 at [57]), but an order displacing r 42.7(2) of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) (UCPR) is required if costs in respect of interlocutory proceedings are to be payable forthwith, referring to the decision of Rees J in Ruma Mundi & Anor v John Peter August Hesse & Ors [2018] NSWSC 1548 at [60]. They contend that such an order is justified where, as here, the relevant issues are discrete and self-contained, as described by Barrett J in Fiduciary Ltd v Morningstar Research Pty Ltd (2002) 55 NSWLR 1; [2002] NSWSC 432 (Morningstar No 1) at [11].
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
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The court’s discretion to award costs under s 98 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) is broad, although not unconstrained. It is subject, for instance, to the rules of court, including r 42.1 of the UCPR. Rule 42.1 expresses the general rule that costs should follow the “event”, as in the practical result of a particular claim or issue (see Chandrasekaran v Western Sydney Local Health District (t/as Westmead Hospital) (No 2) [2024] NSWCA 21, Gleeson, Leeming and Adamson JJA at [11]–[12]; Doppstadt Australia Pty Ltd v Lovick & Sons Developments Pty Ltd (No 2) [2014] NSWCA 219, Ward JA (as the President then was), Emmett and Gleeson JJA at [15]).
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In most cases, the practical result will dictate the costs outcome (Doppstadt at [15]). One implication of this is that the party who has been successful overall will receive the whole costs of the proceedings, including in respect of issues on which the court ruled against it. However, it may be appropriate for the court in exercising its discretion to formulate a costs order that appropriately reflects the respective successes of the parties on discrete issues. As observed by Ward JA (as the President then was), Gleeson and Leeming JJA in Calvo v Ellimark Pty Ltd (No 2) [2016] NSWCA 197 at [8]:
Where a plaintiff is ultimately unsuccessful, but a defendant is unsuccessful on some – perhaps the majority – of matters raised by way of defence, there is recurringly a question whether costs should follow the event, or whether there should be a special costs order reflective of the plaintiff’s success on individual issues. In each case, it is very much a matter of impression, based upon matters such as the severability of the issues, the reasonableness of reliance upon the issues, and the extent to which the issues incurred expending additional costs and time.
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The primary objective in every case is the payment of costs in a way that is fair, in light of what the court considers to be each party’s responsibility for the incurring of the costs in the proceedings: Commonwealth of Australia v Gretton [2008] NSWCA 117, Hodgson JA at [121].
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In Sze Tu, Gleeson JA (with whom Meagher and Barrett JJA agreed) provided a useful summary of the principles and considerations that apply in cases involving multiple issues on which the party that was successful overall encountered variable success. At [40], his Honour said:
[40] In a proper case, the party that is successful overall may be deprived of part of its costs, or ordered to pay the costs of a discrete issue. The circumstances in which this may occur are not limited to cases where it was unreasonable for the successful party to raise the issue on which it failed: Rosniak v Government Insurance Office (1997) 41 NSWLR 608 at 615D. The relevant principles were reviewed by this Court in Elite Protective Service Pty Ltd v Salmon (No 2) [2007] NSWCA 373, and summarised in Bostik Australia Pty Ltd v Liddiard (No 2) [2009] NSWCA 304 at [38] (Beazley, Ipp and Basten JJA), as follows:
• Where there are multiple issues in a case the Court generally does not attempt to differentiate between the issues on which a party was successful and those on which it failed. Unless a particular issue or group of issues is clearly dominant or separable it will ordinarily be appropriate to award the costs of the proceedings to the successful party without attempting to differentiate between those particular issues on which it was successful and those on which it failed: Waters v P C Henderson (Aust) Pty Ltd (Court of Appeal, 6 July 1996, unreported).
• In relation to trials it has been said that it may be appropriate to deprive a successful party of costs or a portion of the costs if the matters upon which that party was unsuccessful took up a significant part of the trial, either by way of evidence or argument: Sabah Yazgi v Permanent Custodians Limited (No 2) [2007] NSWCA 306 at [24]. A similar approach is adopted on appeal.
• If the appellant loses on a separate issue argued on the appeal which has increased the time taken in hearing the appeal, then a special order for costs may be appropriate which deprives the appellant of the costs of that issue: Sydney City Council v Geftlick & Ors (No 2) [2006] NSWCA 374 at [27].
• Whether an order contrary to the general rule that costs follow the event should be made depends on the circumstances of the case viewed against the wide discretionary powers of the court, which powers should be liberally construed: State of New South Wales v Stanley [2007] NSWCA 330 at [18] per Hislop J (with whom Beazley and Tobias JJA agreed).
• A separable issue can relate to “any disputed question of fact or law” before a court on which a party fails, notwithstanding that they are otherwise successful in terms of the ultimate outcome of the matter: James v Surf Road Nominees Pty Ltd (No 2) [2005] NSWCA 296 at [34].
• Where there is a mixed outcome in proceedings, the question of apportionment is very much a matter of discretion and mathematical precision is illusory. The exercise of the discretion depends upon matters of impression and evaluation: James v Surf Road Nominees Pty Ltd (No 2), citing Dodds Family Investments Pty Ltd v Lane Industries Pty Ltd [1993] FCA 259; (1993) 26 IPR 261 at 272.
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In their submissions, the cross-defendants directed me to the decision of Stevenson J in Wheeler, a case involving a dispute as to whether the defendant had waived privilege in respect of certain solicitor-client communications, production of which was sought by the plaintiff. On the day of the hearing, the defendant agreed to produce 13 of the 68 total documents sought. In the result, Stevenson J ordered that the defendant produce two further documents; the plaintiff was, in this respect, partially successful in its claim. In all the circumstances, his Honour determined that the appropriate order as to the costs of the plaintiff’s motion was that costs be in the cause (Wheeler at [11]–[12]).
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In terms of the time at which costs, pursuant to interlocutory costs orders, become payable, the general rule is that costs are payable at the conclusion of the proceedings: UCPR r 42.7(2). However, the court may order that interlocutory costs be payable forthwith, displacing the operation of r 42.7(2) (Fiduciary v Morningstar Research [2004] NSWSC 664, Austin J at [171]–[173]; Ruma Mundi, Rees J at [60]) and also by implication displacing the position prescribed by Practice Note SC Eq 3 at [57], which says nothing about the payment — as opposed to the assessment — of costs forthwith: Ruma Mundi, Rees J at [60].
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The circumstances (relevant to the present case) in which the court may so order were described by Barrett J in Morningstar No 1 at [10]–[11] as follows:
[10] … A convenient and useful starting point is the following passage in the judgment of Priestley JA in Horrobin v Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd (Court of Appeal, 6 June 1997, unreported) at 9:
“None of the cases is on all fours with the present one; indeed, a reading of them emphasises the need for cases to be considered by reference to their own particular facts. Nevertheless, those relied on by counsel for H and S show there is a tendency for costs orders to be made payable forthwith and without waiting for the conclusion of further proceedings when the proceedings in respect of which the costs orders have been made are regarded as sufficiently self contained and detached or detachable from proceedings yet to be heard, whether between the same or associated parties, as to make it seem just for an actual payment to be made in the meantime.”
[11] This identifies the first recognisable category of case, namely, where the application or aspect in respect of which the particular costs order is made before conclusion of the proceedings represents the determination of a separately identifiable matter or may be viewed as the completion of a discrete aspect. Examples of this may be found in Charlie Brown Pty Ltd v Green (McLelland CJ in Eq, 3 July 1995, unreported) and Bagley v Pinebelt Pty Ltd [2000] NSWSC 830.
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The discretion under UCPR r 42.7(2) to “otherwise order” that interlocutory costs be payable immediately is broad; however, because such an order is an exception to the general rule, it will normally only be made in a case that is itself somehow exceptional, and where the interests of justice require it: Morningstar No 1, Barrett J at [8].
CONSIDERATION
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I am of the view that this is an appropriate case in which to formulate a costs order to reflect the mixed outcome of the cross-defendants’ privilege motion. Justice and fairness to the parties in this case requires that I properly account for the extent to which each of them was successful in argument and on the real issues in dispute. To this end, I propose to order that the cross-defendants pay 50% of the costs of the cross-claimants of the application. My method and reasons for arriving at this costs result are set out below.
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The crux of the dispute before me was whether the draft supplementary statement was covered by legal professional privilege and therefore protected from disclosure. This was the main question that I had to determine, the answer to which dictated whether I then needed to turn my attention to the cross-defendants’ alternative claim of part privilege. It was also, as the cross-defendants conceded, the central matter occupying the debate at the hearing before me.
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The cross-claimants successfully opposed the cross-defendants’ primary claim that privilege attached to the whole of the draft supplementary statement; that is, they were successful in the substantive “event”.
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The cross-defendants rightly submit, however, that they partially succeeded on the application in their assertions of part privilege, to which the orders made by me gave due legal consequence. I am satisfied that this can properly be characterised as an issue on which the cross-defendants “won” and that this “win” should number among those factors to be given weight in the impressionistic, evaluative exercise I must undertake (Sze Tu at [40]). A countervailing (although not altogether neutralising) consideration is the lack of any opportunity for the cross-claimants to properly put submissions on the issue of part privilege, since the draft supplementary statement (including the parts of it sought to be redacted on the basis that they were privileged) was not before them. I appreciate that this is a common problem in cases of this nature.
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In terms of the issue of confidentiality, I do not consider this to be one that is dominant or severable in the relevant sense. I am not satisfied, particularly since my conclusion in this respect was obiter, that there is a justified basis for separating it out from the other issues comprising the cross-defendants’ primary claim (including the issue of dominant purpose).
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In my consideration, I have had regard to the factual scenario and outcome in Wheeler. I consider that the costs order made by Stevenson J there was referable in large part to the nominal quality of the plaintiff’s partial success in securing the production of two out of a total of 55 documents held by the defendant. Here, the cross-defendants’ partial success was much more significant, going to the form and extent of disclosure of the draft supplementary statement to the cross-claimants that was ultimately permitted. I am satisfied that in all the circumstances the cross-defendants’ success on their part privilege claim ought to be recognised as costs-relevant.
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To my mind, the nature of the mixed outcome in the Principal Judgment would ordinarily entitle the cross-defendants to an order for 25% of their costs be paid by the cross-claimants and entitle the cross-claimants to an order for 75% of their costs be paid by the cross-defendants. Making orders of that sort would cause further costs to be incurred and work to be done by both sets of the parties in relation to their respective assessments. To alleviate those matters, I think that I should make a single order which sets off the practical result of those two orders in a broad brush way. Accordingly, I intend to order that the cross-defendants pay 50% of the costs of the cross-claimants.
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Finally, I note that it is open to me to order that the costs of this application be payable forthwith, including on the basis that the relevant determination concerns a discrete, self-contained issue, detachable from the remainder of the proceedings and questions to be tried (Morningstar No 1, Barrett J at [10]–[11]). I do not consider that the matters raised by the cross-defendants’ privilege motion will overlap in any substantial way with the issues to be addressed in the substantive proceedings which are presently before Stevenson J (cf. Rees J’s conclusion in Ruma Mundi at [61]). To my mind, it is appropriate and in keeping with the interests of justice in these proceedings, including in the context of the various interlocutory subsets ancillary to the main proceedings, that the costs the subject of the orders I intend to make be payable forthwith.
ORDERS
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For the reasons set out above, I propose to make the following orders:
The cross-defendants are to pay 50% of the costs of the cross-claimants in relation to the notice of motion filed 5 July 2024 by the cross-defendants.
The costs referred to in order (1) are payable forthwith.
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Decision last updated: 27 August 2024
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