Hillam v Iacullo

Case

[2016] NSWCA 1

03 February 2016

No judgment structure available for this case.

Court of Appeal


Supreme Court


New South Wales

Medium Neutral Citation: Hillam v Iacullo [2016] NSWCA 1
Hearing dates:On the papers
Decision date: 03 February 2016
Before: Basten JA at [1];
Ward JA at [2];
Leeming JA at [3]
Decision:

1. The notice of motion filed 24 July 2015 be dismissed with costs.

Catchwords: COSTS – Court of Appeal allowed appeal, set aside orders made by the primary judge and ordered that the proceedings brought by the plaintiffs be dismissed with costs – plaintiffs applied for favourable costs order at first instance – plaintiffs had succeeded in summary judgment application prior to trial – plaintiffs had recovered part of amount sought from defendant prior to and during the trial – plaintiffs claimed they were forced to bring proceedings in order to recover any amount lent by them – only issues at trial were issues upon which the plaintiffs failed – no occasion to make costs order by reference to issues – plaintiffs had benefit of costs order for summary judgment application – application to vary costs order dismissed
Legislation Cited: Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), r 36.16
Cases Cited: Bostik Australia Pty Ltd v Liddiard (No 2) [2009] NSWCA 304
Hillam v Iacullo [2015] NSWCA 196
Iacullo v Hillam [2014] NSWSC 1021
Category:Costs
Parties: John Hillam (Appellant; Respondent on the motion)
Dominic Iacullo (First Respondent; First Applicant on the motion)
Lillian Iacullo (Second Respondent; Second Applicant on the motion)
Representation:

Counsel:
DE Perrignon (Appellant; Respondent on the motion)
DA Smallbone (Respondents; Applicants on the motion)

  Solicitors:
Sarvaas Ciappara (Appellant; Respondent on the motion)
I.E. Duffield (Respondents; Applicants on the motion)
File Number(s):2014/249492
Publication restriction:Nil
 Decision under appeal 
Court or tribunal:
Supreme Court of New South Wales
Jurisdiction:
Equity Division
Citation:
[2014] NSWSC 1021
Date of Decision:
30 July 2014
Before:
Ball J
File Number(s):
2014/66418

Judgment

  1. BASTEN JA: For the reasons given by Leeming JA, the respondents’ motion must be dismissed with costs.

  2. WARD JA: I agree that, for the reasons Leeming JA has given, the respondents’ motion should be dismissed with costs.

  3. LEEMING JA: This Court allowed Mr Hillam’s appeal on 16 July 2015: Hillam v Iacullo [2015] NSWCA 196. The unsuccessful respondents, Mr and Mrs Iacullo, were ordered to pay the costs of the appeal. About that there is no dispute. However, Mr and Mrs Iacullo have applied to vary the orders made by this Court in lieu of those made at first instance: Iacullo v Hillam [2014] NSWSC 1021.

  4. This Court set aside the orders made by the primary judge, and in lieu thereof, dismissed the proceedings and ordered Mr and Mrs Iacullo to pay the costs of the proceedings. The substantive orders sought by Mr and Mrs Iacullo’s motion are that:

“The Order made in the Court below on 30 July, 2014 be set aside, save for the order that the defendant pay the plaintiffs’ costs of the proceedings.

In lieu thereof it be ordered that the balance of the proceedings on the Amended Summons be dismissed.”

  1. Essentially, the first proposed order seeks to preserve the favourable costs order in relation to the costs of the proceedings made at first instance. The second proposed order is intended to be by way of clarification (it amounts to inserting the words “the balance of” in the order dismissing the proceedings).

  2. There are two preliminary points. The first is to note the considerable delay in the readying of the motion for determination. That is said to have been attributable to Mr Hillam’s desire to obtain transcript of the occasion when judgment was handed down in the appeal. That may or may not fully explain the delay, but nothing turns on whether that is so. The parties ultimately filed written submissions, in accordance with a relatively relaxed timetable, on 12 November, 3 December and 17 December 2015. The timing of those submissions prevented the motion being determined before the end of the 2015 term. Thus it is that almost six months has now elapsed since the appeal was allowed.

  3. The second preliminary point arises from the fact that Mr and Mrs Iacullo relied, in the alternative, on the “slip” rule. That reliance gave rise to a debate in the submissions as to whether the rule was available and whether there had been a “slip”. None of that is to the point, as Mr and Mrs Iacullo pointed out in reply, because their motion was filed within the time authorised by UCPR 36.16, and invoked the broader power conferred by that rule.

  4. I turn to the substance of the application. It will be recalled that Mr and Mrs Iaculllo entered into, successively, a “First Loan Agreement”, “Second Loan Agreement” and “Third Loan Agreement” with Mr Hillam between July and September 2011. They promised to lend $455,000, but in fact only advanced $380,000, to him. Each Loan Agreement made provision not merely for the repayment of principal plus interest, but also a promise to pay double the amount lent in shares or money (referred to as “the uplift”).

  5. Mr Hillam made very few repayments prior to the commencement of proceedings by Mr and Mrs Iacullo in 2014.

  6. Prior to the matter coming to trial, Mr and Mrs Iacullo applied for judgment in relation to the amounts of principal and interest. Passing over some procedural complexities, after three short hearings before McDougall J, they obtained judgment and a costs order on 27 May 2014.

  7. The hearing before the primary judge occurred on 21 July 2014. By that day, Mr Hillam had repaid the whole of the principal and interest. No issue was taken with the position recorded in my reasons at [42] and [43]:

“By 21 July 2014, Mr Hillam had repaid all of the amounts lent to him by the Iacullos, together with interest calculated in a way which was acceptable to Mr and Mrs Iacullo. The last payment was made during the course of the hearing at first instance. Mr Hillam’s submissions at first instance recorded that the total amounts repaid by him were $460,283.52 paid prior to the trial, and $73,264.66 paid at the hearing. That amounts to a repayment of principal of $380,000 and interest of $153,548.18. Interest at 15% on $380,000 is $57,000 per annum, just over a third of the total interest paid. It will be seen that the interest component is broadly consistent with interest accruing on amounts lent in mid-2011 for almost three years.

Thus it was that the only amount in contest below was $910,000 plus interest, being the amount said to be owed by Mr Hillam under cl 4.3 of the Third Loan Agreement.”

  1. The orders made by the primary judge were:

“1. Judgment for the plaintiffs in the sum of $981,647.95.

2. The defendant pay the plaintiffs’ costs of the proceedings.”

  1. The primary judge explained (at [41]) that the judgment amount reflected $710,000 plus interest. His Honour also explained (at [42]) that although Mr and Mrs Iacullo had failed to recover the amount of $910,000 (being double the amount lent pursuant to the Third Loan Agreement), they should still receive all of their costs, in light of the facts that they had been largely successful and that the issues relating to the enforceability of the $910,000 under the Third Loan Agreement were not easily separated from the issues relating to the enforceability of the $710,000 under the Second Loan Agreement.

  2. Two things may be observed. First, the primary judge made no orders in relation to the amounts of principal and interest, because these had already been repaid (as his Honour himself noted at [2]). Secondly, his Honour regarded the only issue as being the enforceability of the additional payments under the Second and Third Loan Agreements.

  3. I turn to Mr and Mrs Iacullo’s submissions. The first point they make is that the orders made by this Court in lieu of those made by the primary judge should only dismiss “the balance of” the proceedings, reflecting the success obtained by them in relation to the recovery of principal and interest. They say that such a clarification is necessary because “[t]he order dismissing the proceedings in their entirety goes beyond the scope of the Appeal proceedings and is inconsistent with the orders of McDougall J.”

  4. I would not accept these submissions. There is no sound basis for any suggestion that the orders made by McDougall J were affected by this Court’s order that the proceedings be dismissed (just as there is no sound basis for any suggestion that the judgment entered by the primary judge in some way supplanted the judgment entered by McDougall J). The subject matters of the orders are different. McDougall J was dealing with principal and interest. The primary judge and this Court on appeal were dealing with – and exclusively with – the “uplift” claimed by Mr and Mrs Iacullo. As much is plain beyond argument on the face of both sets of reasons. The fact that separate judgments were entered at first instance in litigation between the same parties was the consequence of the choice taken by Mr and Mrs Iacullo to split the issues arising in the litigation, so as to have a separate hearing and determination of the questions of principal and interest, on the one hand, and the “uplift” amounts, on the other.

  5. The second point made by Mr and Mrs Iacullo concerns costs. They say that by paragraph 5 of their notice of contention, they maintained that the primary judge’s order as to costs was supportable on the basis of their claims to principal and interest on which they were successful. This was expanded in their written submissions in the appeal as follows:

“The respondents had thus to sue to recover these other several amounts, which had been outstanding for over two years before action was brought, and which even then required applications to be made and the matter to be pursued to trial in order to get the money which was ultimately paid.

In those circumstances the respondents were entitled to their costs in any event and there is no occasion to disturb the order for costs made by the primary Judge.”

  1. They say that that submission was not addressed by this Court’s reasons on the appeal. Further, they say that the effect of this Court’s order is unjust, insofar as it would “visit upon the Respondents/Plaintiffs the general costs of the suit in the Court below because the suit was necessitated in any event by the Defendant/Appellant’s failure to pay claims on which he either suffered judgment, or upon which he capitulated during the proceedings by payment”.

  2. Mr and Mrs Iacullo are correct to observe that these submissions were not directly addressed in this Court’s reasons on the appeal. However, I would not vary the orders made.

  3. It is commonplace for plaintiffs to abandon the more extreme elements of their claims prior to trial, and it is commonplace for defendants to concede the least defensible aspects of their defences prior to trial. Ultimately, the issues litigated at trial tend to be a subset of those originally identified in the pleadings.

  4. Notwithstanding that fact, it is commonplace for a plaintiff who is only successful in respect of the issues actually determined by the court to obtain a favourable costs order. Indeed, a plaintiff who only achieves partial success in respect of the issues actually determined by the court still will regularly obtain a favourable costs order. That occurred in the present case, notwithstanding that Mr and Mrs Iacullo continued to press their entitlement to $910,000. Of course, the court has a broad discretion to make a different order as to costs, and may do so if, for example, an issue unsuccessfully advanced by a partially successful plaintiff was substantial and severable.

  5. So too with defendants. A defendant who makes a concession or makes a payment of part of the amount claimed is not thereby disentitled from a favourable costs order in the event that the balance of the plaintiff’s claim, which actually goes to trial, fails. Of course, much will depend on the circumstances in which that occurs, including whether the concession or payment is made promptly or belatedly and whether the issue gives rise to appreciable severable costs.

  6. Another relevant principle is the undesirability of making costs orders referable to particular issues. To do so may lead to further dispute. Thus it has been said, repeatedly, that:

“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”: see Bostik Australia Pty Ltd v Liddiard (No 2) [2009] NSWCA 304 at [38] and the cases there cited.

  1. Had this been a situation where there was a single hearing on all issues raised in the pleadings, there would be a strong case for a special costs order, reflecting the success of Mr and Mrs Iacullo’s claim to recover $380,000 plus (substantial) interest but their failure in recovering the “uplift” of $910,000 plus (substantial) interest.

  2. But there was no single hearing. Mr and Mrs Iacullo chose to split the litigation and to obtain the benefit of an earlier judgment in their favour in respect of the only issues on which they are entitled to success. And they obtained a favourable costs order in respect of that application.

  3. The only issues actually fought on a final basis at trial were issues as to which this Court has held Mr and Mrs Iacullo should have failed. It may be acknowledged that it would be possible to frame an order as to costs by reference to issues. It would be possible, for example, to order Mr Hillam to pay Mr and Mrs Iacullo’s costs of the litigation which were attributable to their claim for principal or interest, and to order Mr and Mrs Iacullo to pay Mr Hillam’s costs of the litigation attributable to his defence of the claimed “uplift”. But it is immediately apparent that orders along those lines would give rise to complexity and dispute (which would descend to apportioning costs of the individual pleadings and affidavits and submissions).

  4. In any event, that is not the order sought by Mr and Mrs Iacullo on their motion. The substance of Mr and Mrs Iacullo’s application is to seek an order that Mr Hillam be ordered to pay their costs at first instance. I would not make such an order. This Court has held that they should have lost on all issues determined on a final basis by the primary judge. The quantum of their claim held to be unsuccessful significantly exceeded the claims as to which they were successful in advance of trial. And they have the benefit of costs orders in their favour in respect of their application for judgment.

  5. In short, I accept the submission advanced by Mr Hillam, orally, during the appeal, that “the real fight below concern[ed] the entitlement of the uplift and costs [below] should follow the event of this appeal”.

  6. Finally, Mr Hillam has invited this Court to clarify the interrelationship between the costs orders favourable to Mr and Mrs Iacullo made by McDougall J, and the costs order made by this Court in lieu of that made by the primary judge, in order “to ensure that on assessment, the respondents do not claim or receive pursuant to the orders granting costs of the notices of motion, some component for the costs of the issues on which they were ultimately unsuccessful”. I would not accede to that request. On its face, it conflates two things: the costs of an application within a proceeding, and the costs of an issue in an proceeding. It would also give rise to dispute, and it is contrary to the general principles as to the exercise of the broad discretion as to costs referred to above.

  7. It will be a matter for agreement or assessment to determine Mr and Mrs Iacullo’s costs of their successful interlocutory applications, and I do not think it is appropriate to attempt to provide, necessarily in the abstract, any clarification of how those orders apply to the costs incurred by them.

  8. For those reasons, I propose that the notice of motion filed 24 July 2015 be dismissed. Mr Hillam’s costs of that notice of motion should be paid by Mr and Mrs Iacullo.

**********

Decision last updated: 03 February 2016

Areas of Law

  • Civil Procedure

  • Contract Law

Legal Concepts

  • Costs

  • Appeal

  • Summary Judgment

  • Remedies

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Cases Citing This Decision

0

Cases Cited

3

Statutory Material Cited

1

Hillam v Iacullo [2015] NSWCA 196
Iacullo v Hillam [2014] NSWSC 1021