Re Horesh, D. Ex parte Edgewater Service
[1994] FCA 350
•2 Jun 1994
JUDGMENT No. "... 3%?d 2%-
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA ) GENERAL DIVISION ) No. VP 808 of 1991 BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF THE STATE ) OF VICTORIA )
RE:
- DAN HORESH Judgment Debtor
EX PARTE: EDGEWATER SERVICE LTD Petitioning creditor
C O W : Jenkinson J. PLACE : Melbourne DATE: 2 June, 1994
MINUTES OF ORDER
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
1. Each appeal be dismissed.
2. The petitioning creditor's costs including reserved costs of each appeal be taxed and paid by the judgment debtor.
NOTE:
Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in
Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules. mRECEIVED .
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA ) GENERAL DIVISION
) No. VP 808 of 1991 BANKRUPTCY DISTRICT OF THE STATE 1 OF VICTORIA )
RE:
- DAN HORESH Judgment Debtor
EX PARTE: EDGEWATER SERVICE LTD Petitioning Creditor
M A = : Jenkinson J.
PLACE : Melbourne U: 2 June, 1994
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Appeals from each decision of a taxing officer in allowing three bills of costs ordered to be paid by the judgment debtor to the petitioning creditor.
The judgment creditor's solicitors are Messieurs
Irlicht & Broberg, although several documents filed on behalf
of the petitioning creditor bore the name and address of another firm of solicitors, Messieurs Chrapot Bock & Co., and had no reference to Irlicht & Broberg. Chrapot Bock & Co. had acted for the petitioning creditor in the proceeding in which the judgment was obtained which founded the bankruptcy notice upon which in turn the bankruptcy petition was based. Chrapot Bock & Co. instructed Irlicht & Broberg on behalf of the judgment creditor to act as the latter's solicitors in the bankruptcy proceedings. Some of the work for which charges
were entered in the bills of costs was, however, done by Chrapot Bock & Co. After the three bills had been taxed and certificates had been served the judgment debtor discovered that the name of none of the members of the firm Chrapot Bock
& Co. appeared in the Register of Practitioners kept at the Registry of the High Court in compliance with s.55C of the Judiciarv Act 1903 and accordingly none of them was entitled to practise as a barrister or solicitor in a federal court.
On the hearing of the appeal the judgment debtor sought a direction, which Rule 173(3) of the Bankru~tcv Rules authorises the Court to give, that evidence of the lack of entitlement to practise be received. Mr. Irlicht, who appeared for the petitioning creditor, opposed the giving of that direction by reference to the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas in Fullalove v. Parker (1862) 31 L.J.C.P. (N.S.) 239 at 240 that, because "there is no reason why the discovery might not just as well have been made by [the appellant] before as after taxation", the lack of entitlement could not
general power to receive further evidence on appeal. Partles be considered by that Court. However, Rule 173(3) confers a to litigation in a federal court should in my opinion suffer no prejudice by reason of having assumed that lawyers practising in the Court have the required entitlement. I give the direction sought.
The judgment debtor and Mr. Irlicht canvassed a number of submissions and authorities and statutory provisions in their debate as to whether the lack of entitlement to practise in this Court precluded allowance of costs on
taxation. But the appeal can in my opinion be determined by reference to one consideration. The costs taxed had all been paid by the petitioning creditor to one or other of the two firms of solicitors before those costs were taxed. If, as the judgment debtor contends, no costs were recoverable by action at the suit of either of those two firms in respect of the legal representation of the petitionmg creditor in the proceeding, yet those costs are allowable to the petitioning creditor on taxation after the petitioning creditor has paid them : Fullalove v . Parker, supra; Guss v. Veenhulzen (No.
2)(1976) 136 C.L.R. 47 at 53-56; TNT Bulkshi~s Ltd. v . Ho~kins
(1989) 65 N.T.R. 1 at 5-6. The judgment debtor relied on English authorities which denied the correctness of the proposition I have stated, because of a statutory prohibition (37 & 38 Vict.c.68, s.12) of recovery of costs, in relation to work done by an unqualified solicitor, "by any person or persons whomsoever" : see, for example, Fowler v . The
Monmouthshire Railway and Canal Com~any
(1879) 4 Q.B.D. 334.
But no similarly worded statutory provision applicable here was cited. My attention was drawn to ss. 90(4) and 111 of the Leual Profession Practice Act 1958 (Vic. ) . I express no opinion as to whether either provision has any application in relation to proceedings in a federal court. If either did have application, each is so expressed as not to attract the reasoning of the English authorities on which the judgment debtor sought to rely.
There were other grounds of appeal in respect of particular items. None was sustained. Reasons for rejecting those grounds were stated durlng the hearing of the appeals.
Each appeal must be dismissed with costs.
I certify that this and the 3
preceding pages are a true copy of
the Reasons for Judgment of theHonourable Mr. Justice Jenkinson.
Dated: 2 June, 1994
Applicant debtor in person.
Mr. T. Irlicht of the firm Irllcht & Broberg Solicitors for the respondent creditor.
Date of hearing: 2 December, 1993
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