Exit Distraction Free Reading Mode
- Unreported Judgment
- Appeal Determined - Special Leave Refused (HCA)
- Lawes v Nominal Defendant[2007] QSC 103
- Add to List
Lawes v Nominal Defendant[2007] QSC 103
Lawes v Nominal Defendant[2007] QSC 103
SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND
CITATION: | Lawes v Nominal Defendant [2007] QSC 103 |
PARTIES: | RICKY LEE LAWES |
FILE NO/S: | BS 1930 of 2006 |
DIVISION: | Trial Division |
PROCEEDING: | Costs Order |
ORIGINATING COURT: | Supreme Court, Brisbane |
DELIVERED ON: | 3 May 2007 |
DELIVERED AT: | Brisbane |
HEARING DATE: | 5-7 March 2007 Further submissions received 3 May 2007 |
JUDGE: | Byrne J |
ORDER: | That the application for indemnity costs is refused and the costs be awarded on the Supreme Court Scale |
CATCHWORDS: | PROCEDURE – COSTS – SCALE OF COSTS – DISCRETION TO VARY SCALE – whether costs should be awarded on the District Court Scale pursuant to the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules – whether the circumstances justify the exercise of discretion to award costs on the Supreme Court Scale PROCEDURE – COSTS – DEPARTING FROM THE GENERAL RULE – OTHER CASES – the plaintiff made a mandatory final offer pursuant to the Motor Accident Insurance Act before the litigation commenced – the judgment sum awarded was more favourable than his offer – whether there were sufficient circumstances to justify departing from the ordinary basis of a costs assessment – whether the defendant was imprudent or unreasonable by not accepting the mandatory final offer – whether costs should be awarded on an indemnity basis Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 1999, r 360(1), r 698(1), r 698(3) Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994, s 51C(2),s 51C(1), s 55F(3)(b)(i), s 55F(3)(b)(ii) Balderstone Hornibrook Engineering Pty Ltd v Gordian Runoff Ltd [2006] NSWSC 583, cited Brymount Pty Ltd v Cummins (No 2) [2005] NSWCA 69, cited Crump v Equine Nutrition Systems Pty Ltd (No 2) [2007] NSWSC 25, cited Devprov v Seamark Pty Ltd [2007] QSC 31, cited Food Improvers Pty Ltd v BGR Corporation Pty Ltd (No 4) (2007) 25 ACLC 177, cited Fordyce v Fordham (No 2) [2006] NSWCA 362, cited Gove v Black [2006] WASC 298, cited Gretton v The Commonwealth of Australia [2007] NSWSC 149, cited Grice v The State of Queensland [2005] QCA 298, cited Monement v Faux [2006] 2 Qd R 392, cited Westpac Banking Corporation v Commissioner of State Revenue [2004] 55 ATR 72, cited |
COUNSEL: | R J Douglas SC, with him P B de Plater, for the plaintiff R B Dickson for the defendant |
SOLICITORS: | McNamara Garrahy Lawyers for the plaintiff Broadley Rees Lawyers for the defendant |
SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND
CIVIL JURISDICTION
BYRNE J
No B/S 1930 of 2006
RICKY LEE LAWES Plaintiff
and
NOMINAL DEFENDANTDefendant
BRISBANE
..DATE 03/05/2007
JUDGMENT
HIS HONOUR: The issue of costs arises.
The Nominal Defendant does not resist an order for costs assessed on the standard basis, but does rely on rule 698(3) to propose that the costs be on the District Court scale, the judgment sum having been $212,000.
The plaintiff, however, seeks indemnity costs on the Supreme Court scale, relying on the circumstance that the judgment sum exceeds his mandatory final offer of $125,000 made pursuant to s.51C(2) of the Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994 ("the Act") before the litigation commenced.
No attempt was made to invoke the UCPR Chapter 9 Part 5 Offer to Settle procedure. Had there been such an offer for $125,000, by rule 360(1), because the plaintiff obtained a judgment no less favourable than $125,000, and as no doubt he was willing and able to carry out the offer,
"the Court must order the defendant to pay the plaintiff's costs calculated on the indemnity basis unless the defendant shows another order for costs is appropriate in the circumstances."
Had the damages been more than $30,000 and not more than $50,000, the plaintiff would have been entitled to an award of pre-litigation costs (to a maximum of $2,500) assessed on the standard basis: See s.55F(3)(b)(i) of the Act. In addition, the plaintiff would have had a statutory entitlement to "costs on or after the date on which the proceeding" began "on an indemnity basis": See s.55F(3)(b)(ii).
That regime, however, does not apply where, as here, the judgment sum exceeds $50,000. In this event, the Act does not stipulate in terms for an award of indemnity costs where the plaintiff is awarded more by judgment than his mandatory final offer showed he was willing to accept. Instead, in those circumstances (see Monement v Faux [2006] 2 QdR 392, 397 [27],) by s.51C(10) of the Act,
"The Court must (where relevant) have regard to the mandatory final offers in making a decision about costs."
This is not the right to indemnity costs created by s.55F. Nor is it equivalent to the presumptive entitlement arising from successful compliance with the Offer to Settle scheme. Rather, potentially, a mandatory final offer is, by operation of s.51C(10), a significant, though not decisive, consideration in the exercise of a discretion to award costs on an indemnity basis.
In this respect, s.51C(10) operates much as a Calderbank offer that is bettered at trial: namely, that the mere fact that the party making the offer obtains a judgment more favourable than the terms offered does not of itself inevitably demonstrate such special circumstances as would justify a departure from the ordinary basis of a costs assessment: See Crump v Equine Nutrition Systems (No 2) [2007] NSWSC 25 at [39]-[41]; Gove v. Black [2006] WASC 298 at [43]-[47]; Balderstone Hornibrook Engineering Pty Limited v Gordian Runoff Limited [2006] NSWSC 583 at [30]-[37]; Fordyce v Fordham (No 2) [2006] NSWCA 362 at [16], [21]; Devprov v Seamark Pty Ltd [2007] QSC 31 at [4]; Westpac Banking Corporation v Commissioner of State Revenue [2004] 55 ATR 72 [2004] QSC 19 at [30]-[32]; Gretton v The Commonwealth of Australia [2007] NSWSC 149 at [11]-[17]; Food Improvers Pty Limited v BGR Corporation Pty Ltd (No 4) (2007) 25 ACLC 177, [2007] FCA 220 at [35]; and Grice v The State of Queensland [2005] QCA 298 at [7].
Among the pertinent considerations is whether it appears that the party sought to be made liable for costs on an indemnity basis has imprudently or unreasonably failed to accept a Calderbank offer of compromise.
That will often involve an attempt to form a view about the relevant strengths and weaknesses of the cases that ought to have been apparent to the parties when the offer was made:
cf Baulderstone Hornibrook Engineering at [34]-[35]; and Brymount Pty Ltd v Cummins (No 2) [2005] NSWCA 69 at
[11]-[14].
There has been no attempt by the plaintiff to demonstrate that the Nominal Defendant's decision to decline the plaintiff's final mandatory offer was unreasonable.
In any event, in view of the issues that arose and the several obstacles of fact and law the plaintiff needed to surmount to establish liability, it cannot be concluded that the Nominal Defendant was unreasonable or imprudent in not accepting the plaintiff's mandatory final offer.
The application for indemnity costs is refused.
The next question is whether the costs ought to be awarded on the District Court Scale.
Rule 698(3) provides that if the only relief obtained by a plaintiff in a proceeding in the Supreme Court is relief that when the proceeding began could have been given by the District Court, the costs the plaintiff may recover must be assessed as if the proceeding had been started in the District Court.
But subrule (1) provides that that is the costs order "unless the Court otherwise orders".
The circumstances here justify the exercise of the discretion to award costs on the Supreme Court Scale.
The agreed damages - $265,000 - exceeded the jurisdictional limit of the District Court, and a finding of contributory negligence was by no means inevitable.
It was appropriate in all the circumstances that the litigation be prosecuted to trial in the Supreme Court.
There will therefore be an order otherwise pursuant to rule 698(1) stipulating for costs on the Supreme Court Scale.