Hyde v Ion Limited (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement)

Case

[2012] FCA 610

13 June 2012


FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

Hyde v ION Limited (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) [2012] FCA 610

Citation: Hyde v ION Limited (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) [2012] FCA 610 
Parties: RONALD HENRY HYDE v ION LIMITED (SUBJECT TO DEED OF COMPANY ARRANGEMENT) (ACN 009 106 272) and others named in the attached Schedules
File number: VID 228 of 2012
Judge: BROMBERG J
Date of judgment: 13 June 2012
Catchwords: COSTS – no hearing on the merits – where proceeding dismissed by consent – whether plaintiffs entitled to costs
Legislation: Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s 43
Cases cited: Ruddock v Vardalis (No 2) (2001) 115 FCR 229
Re Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs; Ex parte Lai Qin (1997) 186 CLR 622
Akiba and Another v Queensland (2010) 184 FCR 406
Ann Street Mezzanine Pty Ltd v KPMG [2011] FCA 453
Mineralogy Pty Ltd v National Native Title Tribunal & Ors [1998] FCA 1700
Rickus v Motor Trades Association of Australia Superannuation Fund Pty Ltd (2010) 265 ALR 112
Date of hearing: Heard on the papers
Place: Melbourne
Division: GENERAL DIVISION
Category: Catchwords
Number of paragraphs: 16
Counsel for the Plaintiffs: Mr R White
Solicitor for the Plaintiffs: Thomas Booler & Co
Counsel for the Defendants: Mr T Clarke
Solicitor for the Defendants: Allens Arthur Robinson

IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY

GENERAL DIVISION

VID 228 of 2012

IN THE MATTER OF ION LIMITED (SUBJECT TO DEED OF COMPANY ARRANGEMENT) (ACN 009 106 272) AND OTHERS NAMED IN THE ATTACHED SCHEDULE A

BETWEEN:

RONALD HENRY HYDE and others named in the attached Schedule B
Plaintiff

AND:

ION LIMITED (SUBJECT TO DEED OF COMPANY ARRANGEMENT) (ACN 009 106 272) and others named in the attached Schedule C
Defendant

JUDGE:

BROMBERG J

DATE OF ORDER:

13 JUNE 2012

WHERE MADE:

MELBOURNE

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

1.There be no order as to costs of the plaintiffs’ application.

Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY

GENERAL DIVISION

VID 228 of 2012

IN THE MATTER OF ION LIMITED (SUBJECT TO DEED OF COMPANY ARRANGEMENT) (ACN 009 106 272) AND OTHERS NAMED IN THE ATTACHED SCHEDULE A

BETWEEN:

RONALD HENRY HYDE and others named in the attached Schedule B
Plaintiff

AND:

ION LIMITED (SUBJECT TO DEED OF COMPANY ARRANGEMENT) (ACN 009 106 272) and others names in the attached Schedule C
Defendant

JUDGE:

BROMBERG J

DATE:

13 JUNE 2012

PLACE:

MELBOURNE

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

  1. On 27 March 2012, I made orders by consent reserving the question of costs and otherwise dismissing the plaintiffs’ application.  Those orders also required the exchange of short written submissions from the parties as to costs.  All but five of the plaintiffs seek an order that their costs be paid by the defendants.  The defendants resist such a course.  For the reasons that follow, I have determined that there be no order as to costs.

    BACKGROUND

  2. The background facts to this application are complex but need not be referred to here other than by a brief outline.  The first defendant (“ION”) is a public company which, together with other associated companies in the ION group of companies (“the ION Entities”), is subject to a Deed of Company Administration.  The second to sixth defendants were variously appointed as Deed Administrators of one or more of the ION Entities (“the Administrators”).  The plaintiffs are some of a large number of shareholders of ION (“Shareholder Claimants”) who have submitted proofs of debt in relation to claims made by them against ION for damages in relation to shares acquired in ION. 

  3. The plaintiffs’ application alleges that the Administrators determined that Shareholder Claimants could elect not to submit any evidence of causation in respect of their claims and accept admission of their proofs of debt at 80% of the value of the losses sustained.  The plaintiffs allege that, despite that determination, which has been applied generally to Shareholder Claimants, the Administrators on 30 January 2012 and 15 February 2012 determined that they would not apply the determination to the plaintiffs’ proofs of debt.  The plaintiffs allege that those acts of the Administrators were discriminatory and had unfairly prejudiced the interests of the plaintiffs.  Orders were sought including an order that the Court reverse the decision of the Administrators not to admit and pay a dividend on the proofs of debt filed by the plaintiffs to the extent of 80% of their admissible value.

  4. On the question of costs, the plaintiffs contend that all but five of them have been wholly successful in their application, because the orders made by the Court resulted in the 49 successful plaintiffs being paid in full as claimed.  They contend that the successful plaintiffs should be awarded their costs because the conduct of the defendants prior to the institution of the proceeding left those plaintiffs no choice but to bring the action in which they have been wholly successful.

  5. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the undertakings given by the plaintiffs were crucial to the resolution of the dispute affected by the consent orders made.  The undertakings are said by the defendants to be the quid pro quo for the Administrators’ agreement to the consent orders made and to the subsequent processing of the 80% payments to the successful plaintiffs. 

  6. Supported by affidavits filed as to the question of costs, the defendants contest any suggestion that they have acted unreasonably.  They agree that their determination to pay Shareholder Claimants at the 80% rate was suspended in respect of the plaintiffs.  They contend that occurred by reason of the plaintiffs’ conduct which was the subject of correspondence of 30 January 2012.  They say that the impediment which led to the suspension of payments to the plaintiffs was removed by the undertakings given to the Court.  Accordingly, they contend that the consent resolution arrived at by the parties included concessions from the plaintiffs and could not be properly described as a situation in which the plaintiffs have been “wholly successful”. 

    RELEVANT PRINCIPLES

  7. Section 43 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) confers a wide and unfettered discretion upon the Court to award costs. That discretion is to be exercised judicially and not against a successful party, except for some reason in connection with the case: Ruddock v Vadarlis (No 2) [2001] 115 FCR 229 at [9] (Black CJ and French J). The discretion enables the Court to respond to a wide range of circumstances: Ruddock at [16].

  8. There are well established principles developed by the authorities to guide the Court in the exercise of its discretion to award costs in the event where there has been no hearing on the merits and a proceeding is discontinued or, as in this case, dismissed.

  9. As, McHugh J observed in Re Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs; Ex parte Lai Qin (1997) 186 CLR 622 at 624-625:

    In most jurisdictions today, the power to order costs is a discretionary power. Ordinarily, the power is exercised after a hearing on the merits and as a general rule the successful party is entitled to his or her costs. Success in the action or on particular issues is the fact that usually controls the exercise of the discretion. A successful party is prima facie entitled to a costs order. When there has been no hearing on the merits, however, a court is necessarily deprived of the factor that usually determines whether or how it will make a costs order.

    In an appropriate case, a court will make an order for costs even when there has been no hearing on the merits and the moving party no longer wishes to proceed with the action. The court cannot try a hypothetical action between the parties. To do so would burden the parties with the costs of a litigated action which by settlement or extra-curial action they had avoided. In some cases, however, the court may be able to conclude that one of the parties has acted so unreasonably that the other party should obtain the costs of the action.

    Moreover, in some cases a judge may feel confident that, although both parties have acted reasonably, one party was almost certain to have succeeded if the matter had been fully tried…But such cases are likely to be rare.

    If it appears that both parties have acted reasonably in commencing and defending the proceedings and the conduct of the parties continued to be reasonable until the litigation was settled or its further prosecution became futile, the proper exercise of the cost discretion will usually mean that the court will make no order as to the cost of the proceedings.  This approach has been adopted in a large number of cases [footnotes omitted].

  10. The test enunciated by McHugh J has frequently been applied in relation to the discontinuance or dismissal of a proceeding without a hearing.  The relevant authorities are helpfully collected by Greenwood J in Akiba and Another v Queensland (2010) 184 FCR 406 at [83] – [96] and also by Kenny J in Ann StreetMezzanine Pty Ltd v KPMG [2011] FCA 453 at [24]-[29]. The many authorities there considered may be supplemented by the Full Court’s judgments in Mineralogy Pty Ltd v National Native Title Tribunal & Ors [1998] FCA 1700 at 7 and Rickus v Motor Trades Association of Australia Superannuation Fund Pty Ltd (2010) 265 ALR 112 at [118].

  11. The guiding principles are firm in their resolve that where parties wish to end the litigation, the Court will facilitate that course.  The Court will not conduct a hypothetical trial to assess the merits of the substantive application before it, for the purpose of determining who should bear the costs.  Commonly, a discontinuance will result in no order as to costs so that each party will bear its own costs.  Whilst it has been suggested that “special circumstances” may be required to be demonstrated to avoid such a result, the better view is that the imposition of that qualification would be an overly strict approach.

  12. Where the further prosecution of a proceeding has become futile, there are two well recognised reasons for the making of adverse costs orders, each of which is referred to by


    McHugh J in Lai Qin

  13. The first is where the judge is confident that one party was “almost certain” to have succeeded.  A discontinuance amounting to an effective surrender by an applicant provides an obvious example of where an adverse costs order against an applicant will be made. But as McHugh J emphasised, reaching the requisite level of confidence as to the apparent certainty that one party will have won, is “likely to be rare”. 

  14. The second category relates to cases where one of the parties has acted “so unreasonably” that the other party should obtain the costs of the action.  The unreasonableness of the conduct of a party may be examined by reference to the commencement of, and the conduct of, the proceeding.

  15. The plaintiffs’ submission on costs does not point to any unreasonable conduct on behalf of the defendants.  There is no basis upon which I could confidently come to the conclusion that it was almost certain that the plaintiffs would have won, if their application had been determined.  The willingness of the defendants to pay the successful plaintiffs is deposed by them to be referrable to the undertakings given by the plaintiffs.  The concession made by the defendants does not, in those circumstances, provide a basis for the conclusion that the plaintiffs would have won.  Nor have the plaintiffs shown that they were “wholly successful” given the undertakings which they gave.  The material before me does not demonstrate a surrender, but does demonstrate that a supervening event (the giving by the plaintiffs of the undertakings to the Court) so removed or modified the subject of the dispute as to lead to the settlement arrived at.  In the circumstances, there is no reason why one party, rather than the other, should bear the costs of the proceeding and no basis for the Court to do other than to order that there be no order as to costs.

  16. That is the order that I will make.  

I certify that the preceding sixteen (16) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Bromberg.

Associate:

Dated:       13 June 2012


SCHEDULE A

Entity Name ABN / ACN Deed Administrators Appointed
ION Limited (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 29 009 106 272 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
Core Cast Limited (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 87 097 447 660 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ION Automotive Group Limited (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 87 104 279 156 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ION Light Metal Castings Pty Ltd (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 51 104 930 181 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
Yollatsac Limited (formerly Castalloy Limited) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 56 007 528 583 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
SAMUEL CHARLES DAVIES
Yollatsac Manufacturing Pty Ltd (formerly Castalloy Manufacturing Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 79 007 838 986 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
SAMUEL CHARLES DAVIES
Yollatsac Wheels Pty Ltd (formerly Castalloy Wheels Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 14 007 894 984 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
SAMUEL CHARLES DAVIES
XCTA Pty Ltd (formerly Cootes Transport Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 76 010 383 016 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XCTS Pty Ltd (formerly Cootes Tanker Service Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 14 004 495 765 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XIAS Pty Ltd (formerly ION Automotive Systems Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 35 104 930 109 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
MICHAEL JOHN HILL
XIRC Pty Ltd (formerly I.R. Cootes Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 20 004 801 076 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XITMS Pty Ltd (formerly ION Transmissions Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 90 099 982 180 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
MICHAEL JOHN HILL
XLC Pty Ltd (formerly Liquip Corp Pty Limited) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 81 082 859 970 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XLO Pty Ltd (formerly Liquip Overseas Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 094 440 589 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XLS Pty Ltd (formerly Liquip Sales Pty Limited) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 48 001 595 222 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XLSE Pty Ltd (formerly Liquip Service Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 71 082 859 989 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XLSV Pty Ltd (formerly Liquip Sales (Vict.) Pty Limited) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 28 005 691 761 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN
XST Pty Ltd (formerly Stevenson Transport Pty Ltd) (Subject to Deed of Company Arrangement) 48 006 271 352 KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD
PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON
ROBYN BEVERLY MCKERN

SCHEDULE B 

Second Plaintiff:  GWENETH HOPE HYDE

Third Plaintiff:  WEI LIN HU

Fourth Plaintiff:  GOWER ANTHONY MCGIFFORD

Fifth Plaintiff:  WEI BIN CHOU

Sixth Plaintiff:  LING WEI

Seventh Plaintiff:  LENNARD WILLIAM COX

Eighth Plaintiff:  SENRENDIPITY INVESTMENTS PTY LIMITED ACN 001 138 478

Ninth Plaintiff:  IAN ANNABEL

Tenth Plaintiff:  PEGGY ANNABEL

Eleventh Plaintiff:  MEGAN JANE BOWN

Twelfth Plaintiff:  CAROLINE ROSENA PHIPPARD

Thirteenth Plaintiff:  JOHN THOMAS BOYTON

Fourteenth Plaintiff:  GWENDA JEAN BOYTON

Fifteenth Plaintiff:  SIDNEY ROBERT FRESHWATER

Sixteenth Plaintiff:  GWENDOLINE ETHEL FRESHWATER

Seventeenth Plaintiff:  ANGELA WOON CHEUNG HO

Eighteenth Plaintiff:  RONALD PAUL BOWN

Nineteenth Plaintiff:  MEGAN JANE BOWN

Twentieth Plaintiff:  SUSAN MARGARET ROBB

Twenty First Plaintiff:  LICINIO MACEROLA

Twenty Second Plaintiff:                   DANIELA MACEROLA

Twenty Third Plaintiff:  NORMA EDITH SIMES

Twenty Fourth Plaintiff:  BRUCE WHITTING

Twenty Fifth Plaintiff:  R J PEPPERELL PTY LTD ACN 006 569 955

Twenty Sixth Plaintiff:  VENIERO GIUSEPPE STENTA

Twenty Seventh Plaintiff:                  NEIL WALLACE RANKINE

Twenty Eighth Plaintiff:  NOLA MARY MAXFIELD

Twenty Ninth Plaintiff:  JOHN SIMON MCDONNELL

ThirtiethPlaintiff:  GLEN PAUL ALSEMGEEST

Thirty First Plaintiff:  KANTI SHAH

Thirty Second Plaintiff:  BHANU SHAH

Thirty Third Plaintiff:  ALEXANDER JOHN NICHOLS

Thirty Fourth Plaintiff:  RICHARD GREGGOR

Thirty Fifth Plaintiff:  COLIN DAVID HAYWOOD

Thirty Sixth Plaintiff:  ANN JOYCELIN HAYWOOD

Thirty Seventh Plaintiff:  KELVIN ALAN HEATH

Thirty Eighth Plaintiff:  PETER ANATOL KRAWEC

Thirty Ninth Plaintiff:  RICHARD DAVID YOUNG

FortiethPlaintiff:  HEATHER FAYE HOBBS

Forty First Plaintiff:  TERESA MARIA ROETZER

Forty Second Plaintiff:  JOHN DAVID PARTRIDGE

Forty Third Plaintiff:  BETH MARGARET COOK

Forty Fourth Plaintiff:  PETER KLAUS GROMOTKA

Forty Fifth Plaintiff:  ANITA LORRAINE GROMOTKA

Forty Sixth Plaintiff:  ALENE AUCHETTL

Forty Seventh Plaintiff:  DARRYL CRAIG AUCKETT

Forty Eighth Plaintiff:  ANTHONY JOHN PRICE

Forty Ninth Plaintiff:  ANDREA LEIGH BULL

FiftiethPlaintiff:  DOUGLAS ALEXANDER SPRINGALL

Fifty First Plaintiff:  GRANADILLA NOMINEES PTY LTD ACN 008 732 269

Fifty Second Plaintiff:  GREGORY PAUL COOPER

Fifty Third Plaintiff:  CHARMAINE AILSA COOPER

Fifty Fourth Plaintiff:  JOHN CHARLES HOLLAND


SCHEDULE C

Second Defendant:  KEITH ALEXANDER CRAWFORD

Third Defendant:  PETER MCKENZIE ANDERSON

Fourth Defendant:  SAMUEL CHARLES DAVIES

Fifth Defendant:  ROBYN BEVERLEY MCKERN

Sixth Defendant:  MICHAEL JOHN HILL

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