FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

 

Haviv Holdings Pty Limited v Howards Storage World Pty Limited (No 2) [2009] FCA 652



COSTS – multiple claims – where applicant succeeded on only one claim – joint and individual liability to pay costs – question of apportionment – “rule of thumb” – whether any claims dominant or separable – judicial discretion


Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth)

Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth)


Currabubula Holdings Pty Ltd & Paola Holdings Pty Ltd v State Bank of New South Wales [2000] NSWSC 232

Dansk Rekylriffel Syndikat Aktieselskab v Snell [1908] 2 Ch 127

Dodds Family Investments Pty Ltd (formerly Solar Tint Pty Ltd) v Lane Industries Pty Ltd (1993) 26 IPR 261

Elite Protective Personnel Pty Ltd & Anor v Salmon (No 2) [2007] NSWCA 373

Haviv Holdings Pty Limited v Howards Storage World Pty Ltd [2009] FCA 242

Hughes v Western Australian Cricket Assn (Inc) (1986) 8 ATPR 40-748

Keen v Towler (1924) 41 TLR 86

Korner v H Korner & Co Ltd [1951] 1 Ch 10

Latoudis v Casey (1990) 170 CLR 534

Oshlack v Richmond River Council (1998) 193 CLR 72; [1998] HCA 11

Ruddock v Vadarlis (No 2) (2001) 115 FCR 229; [2001] FCA 1865


Quick, R and Garnsworthy, D. Quick on Costs. Thomson: Lawbook Company (looseleaf service, update 30)  


HAVIV HOLDINGS PTY LIMITED (ACN 101 265 730) and PAUL AGHION v HOWARDS STORAGE WORLD PTY LIMITED (ACN 094 719 490), PLAZA HOME-IMPORTS PTY LIMITED (ACN 069 891 201) and DIRK SPENCE

NSD 523 of 2007

 

JAGOT J

17 JUNE 2009

SYDNEY



IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

 

NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY

NSD 523 of 2007

 

BETWEEN:

HAVIV HOLDINGS PTY LIMITED (ACN 101 265 730)

First Applicant

 

PAUL AGHION

Second Applicant

 


AND:

HOWARDS STORAGE WORLD PTY LIMITED (ACN 094 719 490)

First Respondent

 

PLAZA HOME-IMPORTS PTY LIMITED (ACN 069 891 201)

Second Respondent

 

DIRK SPENCE

Third Respondent

 

 

JUDGE:

JAGOT  J

DATE OF ORDER:

17 JUNE 2009

WHERE MADE:

SYDNEY

 

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

 

1.         Subject to the orders below, the first respondent is to pay the applicants’ costs of the proceeding as agreed or taxed.

2.         The respondents are to pay any costs incurred by the applicants by reason of the adjournment of the hearing on 30 October 2008 as agreed or taxed.

3.         The applicants are to pay the respondents’ costs of the proceeding as agreed or taxed insofar only as those costs were incurred in relation to the claims that:

(a)     the second respondent received rebates and other financial benefits from the supply of goods as set out in paragraph 27 of the statement of claim; and

(b)     the first applicant overpaid GST as set out in paragraphs 39 to 46 of the statement of claim.

4.         The applicants are to pay the costs of the second and third respondents as agreed or taxed but only insofar as such costs were incurred solely by reason of the joinder of those parties to the proceeding (and, for the avoidance of doubt, such costs are not to include any costs jointly incurred by the respondents). 


Note:    Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.



IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

 

NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY

NSD 523 of 2007

 

BETWEEN:

HAVIV HOLDINGS PTY LIMITED (ACN 101 265 730)

First Applicant

 

PAUL AGHION

Second Applicant

 


AND:

HOWARDS STORAGE WORLD PTY LIMITED (ACN 094 719 490)

First Respondent

 

PLAZA HOME-IMPORTS PTY LIMITED (ACN 069 891 201)

Second Respondent

 

DIRK SPENCE

Third Respondent

 

 

JUDGE:

JAGOT  J

DATE:

17 JUNE 2009

PLACE:

SYDNEY


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

1                          On 18 March 2009 I delivered my principal reasons for decision in this proceeding (Haviv Holdings Pty Limited v Howards Storage World Pty Ltd [2009] FCA 242). 

2                          On 7 May 2009 I made orders consequential to my principal reasons as follows:

THE COURT DECLARES THAT:

1.       The First Respondent breached the franchise agreement between the First Respondent and the First Applicant dated 18 July 2002 by, on 17 August 2004, granting a franchise for, and permitting the operation of, the Howards Storage World store at Rhodes.

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

2.       The First Respondent pay the First Applicant:

(a)     The sum of $591,983 in damages; and

(b)     Interest accruing at a daily rate of $103 from 19 March 2009 to the date of these orders.

3.       Except for the issue of costs, the application be otherwise dismissed.

4.       The Respondents are to pay the Applicants’ costs of and in connection with the application for leave to re-open made by the Respondents on 7 May 2009 (including the preparation of the affidavit of Darel Ferguson Hughes sworn 8 April 2009 and Exhibit DFH14 thereto and the affidavits of Aron Isaac Mucsnik sworn 7 April 2009 and 7 May 2009) as agreed or taxed.

5.       The Respondents are to pay their own costs of and in connection with the application for leave to re-open made by the Respondents on 7 May 2009 (including the preparation of all evidence the subject of the application for leave to re-open).

3                          The remaining issue is costs. 

4                          The first and second applicants (referred to as Haviv and Mr Aghion respectively) claim that the usual order for costs should be made in their favour and against all respondents (referred to as HSW, Plaza and Mr Spence respectively) subject only to the exclusion of costs for the abandoned claims relating to rebates and overpayment of GST (raised in paragraphs 27 and 39 to 46 respectively of the statement of claim). 

5                          The respondents claim that: - (i) the applicants should pay each of Plaza and Mr Spence one third of the respondents’ total costs, (ii) Mr Aghion should pay HSW one third of the respondents’ total costs, and (iii) as between Haviv and HSW, each party should pay its own costs or HSW should pay one sixth of Haviv’s costs.

6                          To understand these competing positions it is necessary to consider the relevant principles with respect to an award of costs, the competing submissions of the parties and the circumstances of the present case.

PRINCIPLES

7                          The award of costs is discretionary (s 43(2) of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth)).  The discretion is broad but not unconfined.  It is a judicial discretion to be exercised on a principled basis.  

8                          Costs are awarded to compensate the successful party.  For this reason costs ordinarily follow the event (Oshlack v Richmond River Council (1998) 193 CLR 72; [1998] HCA 11; Latoudis v Casey (1990) 170 CLR 534 and Ruddock v Vadarlis (No 2) (2001) 115 FCR 229; [2001] FCA 1865 at [33] – [36]). 

9                          In Dodds Family Investments Pty Ltd (formerly Solar Tint Pty Ltd) v Lane Industries Pty Ltd (1993) 26 IPR 261 at 271 the Full Court of the Federal Court approved the observations of Toohey J in Hughes v Western Australian Cricket Assn (Inc) (1986) 8 ATPR 40-748 at p 48-136 as follows:

1.       Ordinarily, costs follow the event and a successful litigant receives his costs in the absence of special circumstances justifying some other order …

2.       Where a litigant has succeeded only upon a portion of his claim, the circumstances may make it reasonable that he bear the expense of litigating that portion upon which it has failed …

3.       A successful party who has failed on certain issues may not only be deprived of the costs of those issues but may be ordered as well to pay the other party's costs of them. In this sense, “issue” does not mean a precise issue in the technical pleading sense but any disputed question of fact or of law …

10                        To these considerations, the Court in Dodds added the following observations (at 271 - 272):

The propositions enunciated in that case are subject to the further consideration that justice may not be served if parties are dissuaded by the risk of costs from canvassing all issues which might be material to the decision in the case…

Where there is a mixed outcome in proceedings, the question of apportionment is very much a matter of discretion for the trial judge. Mathematical precision is illusory and the exercise of the discretion will often depend upon matters of impression and evaluation.

11                        In Elite Protective Personnel Pty Ltd  v Salmon (No 2) [2007] NSWCA 373 at the New South Wales Court of Appeal discussed the apportionment of costs in these terms:

[6] Where there are multiple issues in a case the Court generally does not attempt to differentiate between the issues on which the appellant 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: Waters v P C Henderson (Aust) Pty Ltd (Court of Appeal, 6 July 1994, unreported).

[7] As the appellants submit, the commencing position is that costs follow the event so that a successful party is entitled to costs.  In relation to trials it has been said that it may be appropriate to deprive a successful party of costs or a portion of the costs if the matters upon which that party was unsuccessful took up a significant part of the trial, either by way of evidence or argument: Sabah Yazgi v Permanent Custodians Limited (No 2) [2007] NSWCA 306 (at [24]).  A similar approach is adopted in the Court of Appeal. If the appellant loses on a separate issue argued on the appeal which has increased the time taken in hearing the appeal, then a special order for costs may be appropriate which deprives the appellant of the costs of that issue: Sydney City Council v Geftlick & Ors (No 2) [2006] NSWCA 374 (at [27]).

COMPETING SUBMISSIONS

12                        The applicants’ arguments were simple.  They had claimed a breach of the franchise agreement and substantial damages in consequence.  The respondents’ ultimately admitted breach at the hearing but denied any, or any material, liability in damages.  The Court ordered the payment of damages warranting the description of substantial.  The applicants thus succeeded in the proceeding.  Costs should follow the event.  There are no special circumstances justifying departure from the usual rule.  The claims pursuant to the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (on which the applicants were unsuccessful) arose from the same substratum of facts as the claim for the breach of the franchise agreement and did not take up significant time.  The applicants, however, accepted that the two claims abandoned at the hearing (with respect to rebates and GST) should be excluded from any costs order in their favour.

13                        The respondents submitted that the proceeding involved six actions (Haviv against HSW, Haviv against Plaza, Haviv against Mr Spence, Mr Aghion against HSW, Mr Aghion against Plaza, and Mr Aghion against Mr Spence).  Of those six actions, Haviv succeeded against HSW but the applicants otherwise failed.  Hence, Haviv failed against two respondents (Plaza and Mr Spence) and Mr Aghion failed against all three respondents.

14                        The respondents supported their position by relying on the “rule of thumb” about proportionate liability with respect to joint costs where defendants engage a single solicitor as described in Quick, R and Garnsworthy, D. Quick on Costs. Thomson: Lawbook Company (looseleaf service, update 30) at [4.3260] and Currabubula Holdings Pty Ltd & Paola Holdings Pty Ltd v State Bank of New South Wales [2000] NSWSC 232 at [89]-[95] and the cases cited therein.  The “rule of thumb” is that where a solicitor acts for more than one defendant, each defendant (if successful) is entitled to its proportion of the costs jointly incurred and any costs incurred solely on its behalf.

15                        The respondents filed lengthy written submissions explaining how the “rule of thumb” should be applied to the facts of the present case.  I summarise those submissions as follows: - (i) the approach in Quick on Costs and in Currabubula to the costs of successful and unsuccessful defendants should be adopted, (ii) accordingly, Plaza and Mr Spence, being successful respondents, are prima facie entitled, as against both applicants, to one third of the joint costs of the respondents, whereas HSW is prima facie entitled to an order that Mr Aghion (who failed in his claim against HSW) pay one third of the respondents’ total costs, (iii) however, the approach in Currabubula to the costs of successful and unsuccessful plaintiffs should not be adopted (namely, Einstein J’s refusal in that case to extend the “rule of thumb” to plaintiffs who have enjoyed mixed success and failure), (iv) accordingly, the successful applicant, Haviv, would ordinarily be prima facie entitled to its proportion of the applicants’ total costs (that is, 50%) which, given the foregoing, equates to 50% of one third of its total costs or one sixth of the applicants’ total costs, but (v) this entitlement should be displaced on the facts of the present case because Haviv abandoned and failed on discrete issues, so that as between Haviv and HSW each party should pay its own costs.

16                        During the hearing on costs I observed that the practical effect of the respondents’ submissions is that the respondents would obtain orders entitling them to claim all of their costs from one or other of the applicants.  In other words, irrespective of the circuitous route by which the outcome was achieved, the respondents were in fact claiming the usual order as to costs in their favour despite the fact that Haviv succeeded in obtaining a substantial award for damages on its claims for breach of the franchise agreement. 

17                        The respondents did not embrace this description.  Nevertheless, I remain unable to adopt any different characterisation of the respondents’ submissions and proposed orders.  The effect of the orders sought by the respondents would be for one or the other applicant to pay each of the three respondents one third of the respondents’ total costs whilst leaving the applicants to meet their own costs.  By this route, the respondents would be wholly compensated for having defended a proceeding over ten hearing days which culminated in an order that HSW pay Haviv nearly $600,000 by way of damages for HSW’s wrongdoing in breaching the franchise agreement.  The injustice of this result confirms two matters.  First, the award of costs involves a discretionary, not a mathematical exercise (Dodds at 271-272 quoted at [10] above).  Second, close attention to the circumstances of the individual case, part of which includes an evaluation of the real degrees of success and failure, is required.  I turn to those circumstances next.

DISCUSSION

18                        I do not have any evidence about the arrangements between the parties and their respective solicitors with respect to their joint or individual liability to pay costs (be it their own costs or that of any opposing party).  However, I do know the following matters: - (i) Mr Aghion is a director of Haviv and hence the applicants are related in that sense, and were represented by a single solicitor, (ii) HSW and Plaza are related companies forming part of a group of companies which is managed as a group, (iii) Mr Spence is a director of HSW and Plaza, and (iv) hence, HSW, Plaza and Mr Spence are related in that sense, and were also represented by a single solicitor.  Nothing I have said is intended to undermine the fact (emphasised by the respondents) that corporations have separate legal identities.  Nevertheless, when dealing with a discretionary issue such as costs, it is relevant to consider the relationships between the parties and whether they share a common interest or not. 

19                        I also know that: - (i) Mr Aghion negotiated the franchise agreement for Haviv, (ii) Mr Spence negotiated the franchise agreement, first, for Plaza and, second, for HSW, after a corporate restructuring of the group, and (iii) Mr Spence decided to grant the franchise agreement for the Rhodes store in breach of the contractual promise that Haviv would enjoy an exclusive franchise territory within a certain area. 

20                        The principal causes of action in the proceeding may be described as follows: - (i) Haviv claimed damages against HSW for breach of the provisions of the franchise agreement relating to Haviv’s exclusive territory, and (ii) Haviv and Mr Aghion claimed damages from HSW and Plaza for breach of the Trade Practices Act in respect of allegedly misleading and deceptive conduct about Haviv’s exclusive franchise territory. 

21                        Importantly, from the outset of the hearing (and, indeed, from the evidence as filed) it was clear that the quantum of damage claimed by Haviv against HSW for the breach of the franchise agreement was the same as the quantum claimed by Haviv and Mr Aghion against HSW and Plaza for the allegedly misleading and deceptive representations about Haviv’s exclusive franchise territory.  Further, and as disclosed in [2] of my principal reasons, Plaza was initially proposed to be the franchisor under the franchise agreement and thus all negotiations before the restructure of the group of companies of which Plaza and HSW form part involved Mr Spence on behalf of Plaza.  The restructure occurred before the franchise agreement was signed with the result that HSW, not Plaza, was the contracting party to the franchise agreement. 

22                        The subsidiary causes of action in the proceeding were that: - (i) Haviv and Mr Aghion claimed damages from HSW and Plaza for breach of the Trade Practices Actin respect of alleged misleading and deceptive conduct about Plaza’s entitlement to financial benefits from the supply of goods to Haviv under the franchise agreement; these damages, unlike the damages sought under the principal causes of action, were additional damages, and (ii) Haviv and Mr Aghion claimed that Mr Spence was liable as an accessory in respect of all of the claims under the Trade Practices Act.

23                        I have characterised the causes of action as “principal’ and “subsidiary” based on my evaluation of the importance of the claims in the context of the overall proceeding, the amount and nature of the evidence relevant to the claims, the time taken in the proceeding to deal with the claims, and the nature of the relief sought.  This characterisation, I note, generally accords with the way in which I dealt with the claims in my principal reasons. 

24                        As HSW ultimately admitted the breach of the franchise agreement, the majority of the principal reasons concerned the many issues arising on the evidence and submissions relating to the assessment of damages (at [6]-[87]).  While I did not accept all of Haviv’s case on damages, I also did not accept HSW’s case that Haviv had suffered no or minimal loss.  Haviv succeeded in obtaining a substantial order for damages.  I dealt with the trade practices claims in [88] - [108] and Mr Spence’s accessorial liability in [109] of the principal reasons.  Haviv and Mr Aghion failed on all the trade practices claims. 

25                        The respondents relied on that part of the reasoning in Currabubula dealing with multiple defendants represented by a single solicitor, culminating in Einstein J’s summary at [95] as follows:

These decisions reveal that the concern of the rule of thumb is to achieve substantial justice in the awarding of costs as between a partially successful plaintiff and variously successful and unsuccessful defendants.  The rule operates upon the premise that defendants are proportionately responsible for and liable for the joint costs involved in mounting the defence.  Thus, a successful defendant cannot claim from the plaintiff more than a proportionate share of the joint costs of the action in addition to any costs separately referable to that defendant.  Conversely, the partially successful plaintiff is prevented from looking to each of the unsuccessful defendants for more than an equal proportionate share of the costs not solely referable to the plaintiff’s case against one or other of the defendants individually, in addition to the costs which are so referable.  In this way, the rule of thumb prevents both the unjust enrichment of the partially successful plaintiff or successful defendant and the casting of an unfair burden on the unsuccessful defendants.  Where the premise is falsified or the rule does not achieve its intended effect, it finds no application.

26                        The respondents’ submissions focused on all but the last sentence of this paragraph in Currabubula.  The last sentence is of particular importance in the present case.  Einstein J (at [96] – [99]) gave examples of the observation in the last sentence.  Accordingly, the rule was not applied in a case where the plaintiff succeeded against one defendant summarily and another after trial (Dansk Rekylriffel Syndikat Aktieselskab v Snell [1908] 2 Ch 127).  The rule was also not applied in Korner v H Korner & Co Ltd [1951] 1 Ch 10 where a plaintiff succeeded against only one of eight defendants in circumstances where the success the plaintiff enjoyed related to the substantial issue in the proceeding and the loss the plaintiff suffered related to distinct but less substantial issues.  Accordingly, the seven successful defendants failed in their claim against the plaintiff for seven-eighths of the defendants’ costs as a whole because that result involved applying the rule to achieve an unjust result. 

27                        As to the position of the applicants in the present case, however, the respondents submitted that the reasoning in Currabubula with respect to multiple plaintiffs represented by a single solicitor (as opposed to multiple defendants) should not be followed.  In that regard Einstein J refused to follow the approach in Keen v Towler (1924) 41 TLR 86 in which the rule of thumb was applied to multiple plaintiffs.  In particular, Einstein J (at [103]) observed that as the rule of thumb applies to joint costs only, application of the rule to multiple plaintiffs would mean that “those costs the successful plaintiff will be forced to seek from his unsuccessful co-plaintiffs will be costs which would have been incurred even if the action had been brought by the successful plaintiff alone. The defendant, having been found to be in the wrong, will be partially immunised against the proper costs of the successful plaintiff by the unmeritorious circumstance that the action was simultaneously brought by other, unsuccessful, plaintiffs”.  Einstein J thus concluded (at [104]) as follows with respect to multiple plaintiffs:

There is authority for the proposition that the rule of thumb is not to be extended: Korner v H Korner & Co Ltd (supra).  The premise upon which the rule of thumb operates is, as has been shown, one which applies only in the case of defendants. To apply it to plaintiffs, as was done in Keen v Towler (supra), is, to my mind, to extend the rule beyond its principled and authoritative basis and to achieve a result which is not self-evidently just.  There is no logical reason why a defendant who is sued by several plaintiffs who are variously successful and unsuccessful should be in a more advantageous position qua joint costs (ie., those costs not referable to any one plaintiff but necessary for the cases of all the plaintiffs), than would be an unsuccessful defendant sued by one successful plaintiff alone.  Intuitively, justice would seem to require that a defendant, found to be in the wrong, should bear all the costs which the successful plaintiff would have to incur in bringing the action and should be spared only those costs occasioned by the joining of the unsuccessful plaintiffs.  To my mind, this is the correct legal position, as is stated by Mr Mark Orkin QC in Law of Costs (2 ed, Canada Law Book Inc, 1987, para 208.1) as follows:

`Where several plaintiffs sue by the same solicitor, and one succeeds while the others fail, the successful plaintiff will be entitled to recover the whole of his costs from the defendant and not merely a proportion.  The unsuccessful plaintiffs will be obliged to pay the defendant's costs as occasioned by their having been joined unless the Court otherwise orders.'

28                        The respondents’ submissions to the contrary of Einstein J’s conclusions are unpersuasive both as a matter of principle (for the reasons given by Einstein J) and on the facts of the present case (which I have identified above). 

29                        I consider that the rule of thumb invoked by the respondents has no application to the present case which involved multiple applicants, defendants and claims.  As Singleton LJ said in Korner v H Korner & Co Ltd (at 17-18):

This rule, a rule of thumb, is no doubt convenient in an ordinary case; but I do not think that it can be said that it must be applied in every case.  Regard must be had to the nature of the case and to the nature of the defences raised to the same claim.

I do not know of any authority which compels the court to follow the rule which I have mentioned in every class of case, and even if to follow it would result in injustice.  To do so would be to fly in the teeth of the generally accepted principle as stated in Ellingsen's case [[1919] 2 K. B. 567, 569] “that the successful party is to be recompensed the liability he has reasonably incurred in defending himself”. Wynn-Parry J thought the authorities in which the rule has been applied to be all authorities in which the plaintiff was pursuing the same action against all the defendants.  That may be a somewhat narrow view.  At the same time, I agree with him that the rule ought not to be extended.  I regard it as some-thing convenient to be applied in an ordinary or straightforward case.  I do not think it apt in any degree for application to this case, having regard to the different defences which were raised and to the fact that the plaintiff succeeded on the main issue, an issue in which only one of the defendants was involved.

30                        I also do not accept the respondents’ two additional submissions that the applicants should not obtain the benefit of a costs order for costs incurred: - (i) by reason of the adjournment of the hearing on 30 October 2008 to enable the respondents to prepare further evidence to meet the applicants’ alternative damages claim (referred to as “scenario 2” in the principal reasons), and (ii) in connection with the preparation of Mr Hughes’ expert evidence.

31                        The difficulty with the first aspect of this submission is that the adjournment was caused by the respondents’ default in not preparing evidence (or adequate evidence) to meet a part of the applicants’ case clearly disclosed in the applicants’ evidence.  The fact that I rejected the scenario 2 claim is beside the point.  The adjournment was occasioned by the respondents’ default.  Hence, costs occasioned by the adjournment should not be excluded from any costs order in the applicants’ favour.  Rather, the respondents should pay the applicants’ costs (if any) occasioned by the adjournment of the hearing on 30 October 2008. .

32                        The difficulty with the second aspect of this submission is that it fails to give weight to the applicants’ success in obtaining a substantial award of damages.  The fact that I generally preferred Mr Halligan’s evidence to that of Mr Hughes should not have the effect of depriving the applicants of an entitlement to costs.

33                        For these reasons, I do not accept the respondents’ primary submissions on costs.

34                        Nor, however, do I accept the applicants’ approach that the usual order as to costs should be made, excluding only the costs relating to the two claims which the applicants abandoned at the start of the hearing.  This approach fails to recognise that: - (i) the applicants simply abandoned two claims at the start of the hearing (after the respondents incurred costs in meeting those claims), (ii) the applicants succeeded on obtaining an award of damages by reason only of the breach of the franchise agreement claim, and (iii) the applicants failed against Mr Spence and Plaza.   

35                        With respect to the claims abandoned at the start of the hearing (relating to rebates and overpayment of GST), I am mindful of the observations of the Full Court in Dodds at 272 concerning the proper demands of the community for greater economy and efficiency in the conduct of litigation.  The costs relating to the abandoned claims should not lie where they fall, as the applicants proposed.  The claims were readily separable from the balance of the applicants’ case.  They were never prosecuted at the hearing.  The respondents should have the benefit of an order for costs in their favour in relation to those claims. 

36                        I have also considered whether the two trade practices claims prosecuted by the applicants (the exclusive territory representations and the financial benefit representation) which I rejected were clearly dominant or separable so as to warrant displacement of the usual order as to costs in the applicants’ favour. 

37                        With respect to the exclusive territory representations, I am unable to reach that conclusion.  First, the evidence about the assessment of damages for this alleged breach of the Trade Practices Act was the same as the evidence about the assessment of damages for the breach of the franchise agreement (on which the applicants succeeded).  Second, the applicants made only one set of submissions on the question of the quantum of damage.  Third, the question of the quantum of damage, as my principal reasons disclose, was by far the most significant issue in the proceeding in terms of both evidence and hearing time.  Fourth, the evidence founding alleged liability on the trade practices claim based on the exclusive territory representations substantially overlapped with the evidence relating to claims of the breach of the franchise agreement (which HSW ultimately conceded).  Evidence of the circumstances in which the franchise agreement was negotiated and executed and the circumstances of the opening of the HSW store at Rhodes was relevant to both claims.  While some evidence related solely to the exclusive territory representations, that evidence could not fairly be described as dominant or separable in the context of the proceeding as a whole.  Accordingly, I do not accept that there should be any apportionment of costs on the basis that the applicants failed on the exclusive territory representations.

38                        With respect to the financial benefits representation, the position is not as straightforward.  The evidence on which the applicants relied was primarily documentary (as to liability) and was included in the expert report of Mr Hughes (as to quantum).  The respondents relied mainly on the evidence of Alan Blake (the chief financial officer of HSW) and documents.  The claim did not involve extensive hearing time but Mr Doumanis, the respondents’ solicitor, estimated that it, together with the rebates claim, consumed at least 40% of the respondents’ costs (apparently because of disputes about, and the extent of, discovery in relation to the claim).  The issue was not clearly dominant in terms of the amount of evidence or the time taken at the hearing.  However, it was clearly separable.  It involved construction of the disclosure document not the franchise agreement.  It involved a separate assessment of damages.  While Mr Aghion and Mr Spence both gave evidence about this claim, the evidence they gave about it was discrete from all other evidence they gave in the proceeding.  Mr Blake’s evidence was necessary because of this issue.  The applicants were unsuccessful with respect to this discrete issue.  In these circumstances, departure from the usual order as to costs is appropriate.  In common with the abandoned claims, the respondents should be compensated for their successful defence of this claim.

39                        Plaza and Mr Spence were wholly successful in their respective defences.  If those parties incurred costs solely referable to their joinder then justice also requires that they be compensated on that account.  Costs jointly incurred as between the respondents, however, are in a different category for the reasons given by Einstein J in [103] – [104] of the decision in Currabubula.

40                        Subject to these conclusions, the applicants should have the benefit of an order for costs against the first respondent.

41                        I have considered whether it is appropriate for me to attempt to synthesise all of these conclusions and impose a percentage apportionment.  I have decided that it is not possible to do so and that the fairest course is for orders to be framed by reference to the claims, with the actual apportionment be left to taxation.

 

I certify that the preceding forty one (41) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Jagot.



Associate:


Dated:         17 June 2009


Counsel for the First and Second Applicants:

Ms J Baird SC and Mr A Connolly

 

 

Solicitor for the First and Second Applicants:

Aron I Mucsnik

 

 

Counsel for the First, Second and Third Respondents:

Mr M Christie and Mr M White

 

 

Solicitor for the First, Second and Third Respondents:

Diamond Conway Lawyers



Date of Hearing:

7 May 2009

 

 

Date of Judgment:

17 June 2009