Sissian Investments Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation
[1988] FCA 803
•2 Dec 1988
JUDGMENT No. 603..I/...%.......
NOT FOR CIRCULATION
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY j NG 407-414 of 1988
) NG 758 of 1988
GENERAL DIVISION )
BETWEEN : SISSIAN INVESTMENTS PTY. LIMITED --- Applicant -
AND : THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION Respondent
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JUDGE MAKING ORDER: LOCKHART J. DATE ORDER MADE: 2 DECEMBER 1988 WHERE ORDER MADE: SYDNEY MINUTE OF ORDER
36 of the Federal Court Rules.
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
The proceeding be dismissed for want of prosecution.
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The applicant pay the costs c~f the respondent of this
proceeding.
- NOTE: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order
NOT FOR CIRCULATION
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA ) 1 NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
j NG. 407-414 of 1988 ) NG. 758 of 1988 GENERAL DIVISION )
BETWEEN: SISSIAN INVESTMENTS PTY. LIMITED Applicant
AND : THE COMMISSIONER OF TAXATION - Respondent
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2 December 1988
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
LOCKHART J.
This matter has been in the list for directions on some
nine occasions including today. The respondent now moves, after notice conveyed to the solicitors for the applicant by letter of 29 November 1988, for an order that the proceedings stand dismissed for want of prosecution pursuant to Order 52A Rule 14 of the Federal Court Rules, or alternately pursuant to the Court's implied power to exercise control over its own proceedings. No Notice of Motion has been flled. No point is taken as to that, and in the circumstances I would not-
accede to such a point had it been taken.
The matter has a sorry hlstory. I need not traverse each occasion on whlch the Court has given directions which
have not been complied wlth, and I shall mention but some of
them. On 18 April 1988 the Court dlrected that the parties
flle and serve agreed statements of issues or, failing
agreement, separate statements of issues by a named date;
that was not done. On 10 June the Court ext'ended the tlme In
which the parties should file and serve statements of issues
to 1 July 1988. The extended timetable was also not complied
wlth. On 8 July the Court directed the applicant to flle and
serve by a named date a statement outlining succinctly the
issues as the applicant percelved them. The Court sald that
if any further extension of time to comply with the dlrection
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was sought, the appllcatlon for an extenslon was to be supported by affidavits to be flled and served by a named date. On 8 August a further extension of time to flle the statement outlining the Issues as the applicant perceived them was granted to the applicant. A self-executing order
was made, with effect hat If the statement of Issues was not filed by a certain date the proceeding would stand dismissed
for want of prosecution. On the last date permisslble under the directions made on 8 August a document was filed which purported to be a statement of issues as the applicant perceived them. The self executing order therefore did not come into operatlon.
On 17 August the Court directed the applicant to flle and serve statements of all witnesses which the applicant proposed to call on or before 14 September. That dlrectlon was not complied with. On 27 September the applicant was
granted an extension of time to file and serve those
statements of witnesses to 12 October. Again no statements were filed. On 14 October, being the ad~ourned date, the matter was adjourned to 1 November. On 20 October, a single statement was filed on behalf of the applicant, that
statement belng that of the solicitor bctlng for the applicant in these proceedings. On 1 November, after the
applicant indlcated that he proposed to call no other witnesses other than an expert wltness, the Court dlrected the applicant to file and serve on or before 21 November a statement of the expert who It was proposed to be called. That has not been done
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It has been made plain to me this morning by the
solicitor for the applicant that the further evidence upon which the applicant wishes to rely consists of the statement of one wltness being an expert wltness. It appears from the affidavit sworn by the solicltor acting for the applicant on
30 November and filed in the proceedings today that any such statement, if available at all, will not be available until on or about 22 February next year.
The grounds upon which the applicant relies to reslst
the dismissal of the proceeding for want of prosecutlon are set out in the affidavlt of the appllcant’s solicltor sworn on 3 0 November. Some of those grounds relate to matters personally affecting the solicitor but others generally to the conduct of this case.
In my opinion thls is a case that plainly calls for the
Intervention of the court by summary order. The recitation of the course of proceedings, and of the repeated failure to comply with directions, speaks for itself. It is unnecessary to refer further to the waste of curial resources resulting from the multiplication of directions hearings in this matter resulting from non-compliance.
Accordingly the Court orders that bhe proceeding be
dlsmlssed for want of prosecution and tha t the applicant pay the respondent's costs of the proceedings
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I certlfy that this and the preceding three ( 3 ) pages are a true copy of the
reasons for ~udgment herein of the Honourable Mr. Justice Lockhart. - Date: 2 December 1988
Solicitors for the Applicants: John Sarroff L Company Solicitors for the Respondent: Australian Government
SolicitorDate of Hearing: 2 December 1988 Date of Judgment: 2 December 1988
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