Vidyagauri Hiralal v Nitin Hiralal and Ors (No.2)
[2013] NSWSC 1160
•22 August 2013
Supreme Court
New South Wales
Medium Neutral Citation: Vidyagauri Hiralal v Nitin Hiralal & Ors (No.2) [2013] NSWSC 1160 Hearing dates: 29 July 2013 Decision date: 22 August 2013 Jurisdiction: Equity Division Before: Slattery J Decision: Defendants to pay the plaintiff's costs of the defendants motion of 25 May 2012 on the ordinary basis. Defendants may not have recourse to the trust funds for payment of their cost of the motion. Plaintiff may seek supplementary costs enforcement orders out of the trust fund at the conclusion of the proceedings.
Catchwords: PROCEDURE - COSTS - Departing from the general rule - nature of proceedings -defendants' motion of 25 May 2012 challenges the validity of the plaintiff's service on the defendants outside the jurisdiction in accordance with UCPR Pt 11 and seeks a stay of proceedings on forum non conveniens grounds and alternatively a striking out of the plaintiff's proceedings as frivolous and vexatious - plaintiff successful in resisting the defendants' motion - whether in addition to costs against the defendants on the ordinary basis the plaintiff should have an order for indemnity costs and reimbursement of her costs out of the trust fund the subject of the proceedings - whether the defendants may have recourse to trust funds for payment of their costs of the motion - HELD: plaintiff should only have costs against the defendants on the ordinary basis. Legislation Cited: Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 Cases Cited: Hiralal v Hiralal [2013] NSWSC 984
In Re Beddoe 1893 Ch 547
In the Estate of William Just, deceased (No.1) 7 SASR 508
Luke v South Kensington Hotel Co 1879 11 Macedonian Orthodox Community Church St Petka Incorporated v His Eminence Petar The Diocesan Bishop of The Macedonian Orthodox Diocese of Australia and New Zealand (2008) 237 CLR 66 [2008] HCA 42Category: Costs Parties: Plaintiff:- Vidyagauri Hiralal
First Defendant:- Nitin Hiralal
Second Defendant:-Vinod Gokal
Third Defendant:- Vibha HiralalRepresentation: Counsel:
Plaintiff:- N. Allan
Defendants:- S.J.Stanton; T. Flaherty
Solicitors:
Plaintiff:- Harish Prasad & Associates
First and Second Defendants:- Gateway Legal
Third Defendant:-
File Number(s): 2012/82834 Publication restriction: No
Judgment
This is the Court's second judgment in these proceedings. It deals with the costs of the proceedings so far. In my first judgment the Court: (1) dismissed the defendant's motion which challenged the jurisdiction of this Court to grant the relief sought in the plaintiff's summons; and (2) declined to grant a stay of the proceedings on forum non conveniens grounds: Hiralal v Hiralal [2013] NSWSC 984. At the time of giving the principal judgment the Court directed the parties to file any submissions in relation to costs of the motion. The parties took up that opportunity. This costs judgment follows those written submissions, without further oral argument. This judgment should be read with the Court's principal judgment. Events, matters and things are referred to in the same way in both judgments.
As the Court observed in its principal judgment, costs would normally follow the event unless one or other party seeks a special costs order: Hiralal v Hiralal [2013] NSWSC 984 at [207].
The plaintiff seeks special costs orders. The plaintiff submits that the following costs orders should be made:
(a) the defendants pay the plaintiff's costs of the motion;
(b) the plaintiff is entitled in any event to her costs out of the fund on the indemnity basis beyond her entitlement, or on the ordinary basis against the defendants;
(c) if the plaintiff cannot readily recover her costs from the defendants, the plaintiff may have all her costs on an indemnity basis out of the fund in conformity with Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 ("UCPR") r 42.5;
(d) the first and second defendants are not entitled to their costs out of the fund.
The plaintiff argues that she is seeking relief as a trustee in these proceedings, which relief will be of advantage to the beneficiaries generally. And she further contends, although she is herself a beneficiary, that does not detract from her principal role in the proceedings as a trustee seeking relief for the advantage of all beneficiaries. She says that the Amended Summons, which as a result of dismissal of the defendants' motion the Court will now entertain, will preserve the fund the subject of the trust for all beneficiaries.
The plaintiff says that, as she is acting in substance in the capacity of a trustee, she should be compensated under the rules that apply to the costs of trustees: UCPR r 42.5 (indemnity costs) and UCPR r 42.25 (costs of trustee or mortgagee). UCPR r 42.5 provides as follows:
42.5 Indemnity costs
(cf SCR Part 52A, rule 37)
If the court determines that costs are to be paid on an indemnity basis:
(a) in the case of costs payable out of property held or controlled by a person who is a party to the proceedings:
(i) in the capacity of trustee, executor, administrator or legal representative of a deceased estate, or
(ii) in any other fiduciary capacity,
all costs (other than those that have been incurred in breach of the person's duty in that capacity) are to be allowed, and
(b) in any other case, all costs (other than those that appear to have been unreasonably incurred or appear to be of an unreasonable amount) are to be allowed.
And UCPR r 42.25, a special rule relating to costs of trustees, provides as follows:
42.25 Costs of trustee or mortgagee
(cf SCR Part 52A, rule 42)
(1) Subject to subrule (2), a person who is or has been a party to any proceedings in the capacity of trustee or mortgagee is entitled to be paid his or her costs in the proceedings, in so far as they are not paid by any other person, out of the fund held by the trustee or out of the mortgaged property, as the case may be.
(2) The court may order that the person's costs not be so paid if:
(a) the trustee or mortgagee has acted unreasonably, or
(b) in the case of a trustee, the trustee has in substance acted for his or her own benefit rather than for the benefit of the fund.
The plaintiff also submits that as far as possible the trust funds should be protected from depletion by the defendants' erroneous pursuit of the motion that has now been dismissed. So, the plaintiff seeks to have payment of her costs on the indemnity basis out of the trust fund, and to deny the first and second defendants any costs out of the fund.
The plaintiff is entitled to an ordinary costs order against the defendants. Although the motion was interlocutory, the plaintiffs successfully resisted a motion to dismiss her proceedings entirely as frivolous and vexatious and she successfully resisted a stay on forum non conveniens grounds. The action will now proceed here.
The plaintiff should not yet have an order for payment of indemnity costs out of the trust fund. But nor for that matter should the defendants have access to trust funds for their costs. This is so for two principal reasons.
First, the Court's findings so far are entirely interlocutory and not final. The Court's principal judgment was based upon what the evidence appeared to establish, without the making of findings on a final basis: Hiralal v Hiralal [2013] NSWSC 984. For example, it has not yet been established that the defendants or either of them are executors de son tort in New South Wales, nor has it been established that the plaintiff should be appointed as executor ad colligenda bona. Nor has it been established that the defendants have mismanaged the trust fund in New South Wales, or indeed how large that fund is within the jurisdiction. There is too much uncertainty at the present time for the Court to make orders out of trust funds. Such orders may yet be made if the plaintiff proceeds to trial and establishes an entitlement to final relief. The Court would then have a firmer basis for deciding whether any costs orders should be made out of trust funds.
Secondly, it is not strictly accurate for the plaintiff to say she has brought these proceedings as trustee. That certainly is not the capacity, for example, in which she claims that the defendants have acted as executors de son tort. Moreover, given the structure of the deceased's will, the principal immediate benefit which is likely to flow from bringing the proceedings will be to the plaintiff herself, in her capacity as beneficiary. And in that capacity an indemnity costs order is not appropriate.
Thirdly, if the plaintiff's position is ultimately vindicated she is likely to get an order for costs out of the fund. But before such a vindication occurs, ordinarily the Court will only recognise her acts as trustee (as distinct from beneficiary) when she acts in concert with the other two trustees: Luke v South Kensington Hotel Co 1879 11 Ch Div 121 at 125. In fact, the Court's reasoning so far has looked at the plaintiff's case from her perspective as a beneficiary with complaints against the trustee. To the extent that she and the other trustees continue to disagree about the future administration of the trust and unanimity is lost a risk exists that the administration of the trust may devolve upon the Court: In the Estate of William Just, deceased (No.1) 7 SASR 508.
But nor should the defendants have their costs out of the trust fund. Although the case is still at an early stage, the evidence shows the defendants have a case to answer as to their administration of the trust: Hiralal v Hiralal [2013] NSWSC 984 at [142] [143] [148] [163]. And authority makes clear that trustees who unsuccessfully take a position in litigation must show that it was proper to have done so before their costs come out of the fund: In Re Beddoe 1893 Ch 547 at 558. Generally, they should seek judicial advice before taking a position in litigation against a beneficiary: Macedonian Orthodox Community Church St Petka Incorporated v His Eminence Petar The Diocesan Bishop of The Macedonian Orthodox Diocese of Australia and New Zealand (2008) 237 CLR 66 at 74, [2008] HCA 42. In any event for the defendants' costs of the motion to be paid out of the trust fund their payment would have to be authorized by all three trustees.
For these reasons I decline to make all the orders the plaintiff seeks. But I leave open for subsequent consideration for the trial judge whether or not the plaintiff can have recourse to the trust fund to satisfy these costs orders. That may be a more obviously appropriate order at the end of the proceedings, than it is at this stage.
So the orders of the Court are that :
(1) The defendants pay the plaintiff's costs of the defendants' motion of 25 May 2012;
(2) The defendants may not indemnify themselves in respect of their liability to pay the costs the subject of order (1), or in respect of their own costs of the defendants' 25 May 2012 motion, out of any funds held as executors or as trustees of the estate of the late Bhagwandas Hiralal.
Decision last updated: 05 February 2014
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