The Relevant Legal Principles
88 In this section, I will identify the relevant legal principles with respect to the issues raised by the submissions made by the parties.
89 The first issue is the Court's approach to costs in a case where a party succeeds, but not on all issues raised in the proceeding and the question is whether the Court should reflect that lack of success on particular issues in its order for costs. ABCL submits that this issue is raised. By contrast, the Concrete Supply defendants submit that this issue does not arise and that the position is that ABCL's claims against Concrete Supply succeeded and ABCL should have its costs of those claims against the company, whereas ABCL's claims against the directors failed and the directors should have their costs of those claims against ABCL. For reasons which I will give, I consider that it is appropriate to treat Concrete Supply and the directors as, in effect, one party and therefore the first issue (as I have described it) does arise.
90 The decision of the Full Court of this Court in Les Laboratoires Servier v Apotex Pty Ltd [2016] FCAFC 27; (2016) 247 FCR 61 contains a summary of the relevant principles with respect to the first issue. The Full Court said (at [297], [298], [301] and [303]):
297 There are two general approaches to the award of costs that have general application and have been the subject of numerous decisions:
(1) The successful party is generally entitled to its costs. That is, costs usually follow the event.
(2) It is also the case that a successful party may be awarded less than its costs, or there may be an order apportioning costs, on the basis of success on the issues.
298 This has been recently reiterated by the High Court (per French CJ, Kiefel, Nettle and Gordon JJ) in Firebird Global Master Fund II Ltd v Republic of Nauru (No 2) (2015) 90 ALJR 270 at [6], where their Honours observed that if the event of success cannot be seen as contestable, having regard to how separate issues have been determined, then:
'There are no special circumstances to warrant a departure from the general rule, and good reasons not to encourage applications regarding costs on an issue-by-issue basis, involving apportionments based on degrees of difficulty of issues, time taken to argue them and the like.'
301 On the other hand, Courts have been increasingly concerned, generally, to use all proper means to encourage parties to consider carefully what matters they will put in issue in their litigation. This has led to decisions whereby the successful party does not recover all of its costs where it has been unsuccessful on a discrete issue or in what is decided to be an unmeritorious objection. While it is acknowledged that, ordinarily, costs follow the event, the wide discretion in awarding costs has led to circumstances where a successful party who has failed on certain issues may be ordered to pay the other party's costs of them (as discussed in Hughes v Western Cricket Association (Inc) [1986] ATPR 40-748 per Toohey J), although warnings have been stated that care should be taken in such a course and consideration be given to whether the issues on which the successful party failed are clearly dominant or separable (Waters v PC Henderson (Australia) Pty Ltd (1994) 254 ALR 328 at 330-331 per Mahoney JA) and to whether the issues involved different factual enquiries in the one proceeding or multiple causes of action, even if based on a common substratum of fact.
303 … However, the Courts have been slow to order a successful party to pay the costs where it has been unsuccessful on some issues. In Mok v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (No 2) (1993) 47 FCR 81, Keely J was of the view (at 84) that, without attempting to fetter the discretion, this power ought to be exercised only where the Court, on a consideration of all of the circumstances, has concluded that the raising of an issue by the applicant on which it has failed was so unreasonable that it is fair and just to make the order.
91 Assuming the case is not one in which it is appropriate to order that costs follow the event even though the successful party has not succeeded with respect to all issues, I note that Professor GE Dal Pont in Law of Costs (4th ed, LexisNexis Butterworths, Australia, 2018) (Dal Pont) at 8.4-8.10 discusses the various ways in which the Court may reflect in its order as to costs, the fact that a party has not succeeded on all issues. They are an order for costs on an "issue by issue" basis or a reduction in the costs of the party substantially successful to reflect the fact that that party has not succeeded on all issues or a reduction in the costs of the party substantially successful to reflect the fact that the party has not succeeded on all issues and that the unsuccessful party has succeeded on certain issues (i.e., notionally recognising the unsuccessful party's entitlement to costs by the size of the reduction in the successful party's costs). An example of the last approach is the approach adopted by Keely J in Mok v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (No 2) (1993) 47 FCR 81 at 89. As to the decision about whether, in a particular case, it is appropriate to proceed on the basis that the party substantially successful should have their costs reduced to reflect the lack of success on certain issues or reduced to reflect that fact and that the unsuccessful party has succeeded on certain issues, Dal Pont (at 8.6) suggests that the former approach is appropriate unless the party substantially successful improperly or unreasonably raised the issue or issues upon which it failed. This was the approach adopted by the Court of Appeal in England in In re Elgindata Ltd (No 2) (1992) 1 WLR 1207. Nourse LJ (with whom Stocker LJ agreed), said (at 1213-1214):
In order to show that the judge erred I must state the principles which ought to have been applied. They are mainly recognised or provided for, it matters not which, by section 51 of the Supreme Court Act 1981 and the relevant provisions of R.S.C., Ord. 62, in this case rules 2(4), 3(3) and 10. They do not in their entirety depend on the express recognition or provision of the rules. In part they depend on established practice or implication from the rules. The principles are these. (i) Costs are in the discretion of the court. (ii) They should follow the event, except when it appears to the court that in the circumstances of the case some other order should be made. (iii) The general rule does not cease to apply simply because the successful party raises issues or makes allegations on which he fails, but where that has caused a significant increase in the length or cost of the proceedings he may be deprived of the whole or a part of his costs. (iv) Where the successful party raises issues or makes allegations improperly or unreasonably, the court may not only deprive him of his costs but may order him to pay the whole or a part of the unsuccessful party's costs. Of these principles the first, second and fourth are expressly recognised or provided for by rules 2(4), 3(3) and 10 respectively. The third depends on well established practice. Moreover, the fourth implies that a successful party who neither improperly nor unreasonably raises issues or makes allegations on which he fails ought not to be ordered to pay any part of the unsuccessful party's costs. It was because of his disregard of that principle that the judge erred in this case.
92 The second issue is the circumstances in which the Court may make an order for costs against non-parties. This issue arises because ABCL seeks an order for costs against, not only Concrete Supply, but also against the company's directors in relation to all of its costs of the proceeding, or at least that part of it involving the claims ABCL made against the company. Although the directors are in fact parties, they in fact successfully defended the particular claims made against them and the costs sought from them are, at first blush, costs that would be awarded against the company. Furthermore, ABCL seeks an order that the directors indemnify the company against the costs it is ordered to pay to ABCL.
93 Dal Pont identifies at least two types of case where the directors of a company have been ordered to pay the costs of the successful party in an action brought by or against a company (see Dal Pont at 22.36-22.39). The starting point is that ordinarily a company which unsuccessfully sues or defends will be ordered to pay costs and the principle of limited liability means that the company alone is responsible for the costs. If it was reasonably to be anticipated that the company would be unable to meet a costs order if an action by or against the company is unsuccessful, then the first criterion in an inquiry as to whether a costs order should be made against the directors is satisfied. In this context, the court will also consider whether, in the case of a company as plaintiff, the party ultimately successful should have brought an application for security for costs, or, in the case of a company as defendant, the party ultimately successful gave the directors notice that a personal costs order would be sought against them if the company is unsuccessful.
94 The next stage of the inquiry is to determine whether there is something exceptional about the case so as to justify an order for costs against a non-party. "Exceptional" in this context means no more than outside the ordinary run of cases where parties pursue or defend claims for their own benefit and at their own expense (Dymocks Franchise Systems (NSW) Pty Ltd v Todd [2004] 1 WLR 2807; Total Spares & Supplies Limited v Antares SRL [2006] EWHC 1537 (Ch)).
95 The two types of case identified by Dal Pont as cases in which the courts have been prepared to award costs against non-party directors of a company litigant are as follows. First, a court may award costs against a non-party director who has given false evidence or raised an issue knowing it to be a false issue or otherwise acted in bad faith (Naomi Marble and Granite Pty Ltd v FAI General Insurance Co Ltd (No 2) (1999) 1 Qd R 518; Re Talk Finance and Insurance Services Pty Ltd (1994) 1 Qd R 558). Secondly, a court may award costs against a non-party director even in circumstances not involving bad faith (or a lack of good faith) where the director is properly regarded as the real party in the litigation. The company in such circumstances has been referred to in various ways in the cases ("mere shell or conduit", "cypher" or "a shield of limited liability"). The cases are referred to in Dal Pont and I do not propose to go through them (see Dal Pont at 22.37). It is sufficient to say that, recognising that there is no precise formula, the factors a court will consider are whether the company is likely to be able to meet an order for costs, whether the non-party director has funded and controlled the litigation, the benefits the non-party director is likely to receive if the litigation is successful, and whether the litigation was a reasonable course to adopt.
96 The third issue is the circumstances in which the Court may exercise the power to award indemnity costs. In a well-known passage in Colgate-Palmolive Co v Cussons Pty Ltd [1993] FCA 801; (1993) 46 FCR 225, Sheppard J said (at 233-234):
4. In consequence of the settled practice which exists, the Court ought not usually make an order for the payment of costs on some basis other than the party and party basis. The circumstances of the case must be such as to warrant the Court in departing from the usual course. … Most judges dealing with the problem have resolved the particular case before them by dealing with the circumstances of that case and finding in it the presence or absence of factors which would be capable, if they existed, of warranting a departure from the usual rule. But as French J said (at p 8) in Tetijo, "The categories in which the discretion may be exercised are not closed". Davies J expressed (at p 6) similar views in Ragata (supra).
5. Notwithstanding the fact that that is so, it is useful to note some of the circumstances which have been thought to warrant the exercise of the discretion. I instance the making of allegations of fraud knowing them to be false and the making of irrelevant allegations of fraud (both referred to by Woodward J in Fountain and also by Gummow J in Thors v Weekes (1989) 92 ALR 131 at 152; evidence of particular misconduct that causes loss of time to the Court and to other parties (French J in Tetijo); the fact that the proceedings were commenced or continued for some ulterior motive (Davies J in Ragata) or in wilful disregard of known facts or clearly established law (Woodward J in Fountain and French J in J-Corp (supra)); the making of allegations which ought never to have been made or the undue prolongation of a case by groundless contentions (Davies J in Ragata); an imprudent refusal of an offer to compromise (eg Messiter v Hutchinson (1987) 10 NSWLR 525; Maitland Hospital v Fisher (No 2) (1992) 27 NSWLR 721 at 724 (Court of Appeal); Crisp v Keng (unreported, Court of Appeal, NSW, Kirby P, Priestley JA, Cripps JA, No 40744/1992, 27 September 1993) and an award of costs on an indemnity basis against a contemnor (eg Megarry V-C in EMI Records (supra)). Other categories of cases are to be found in the reports. Yet others to arise in the future will have different features about them which may justify an order for costs on the indemnity basis. The question must always be whether the particular facts and circumstances of the case in question warrant the making of an order for payment of costs other than on a party and party basis.
(see also Morad v El-Ashey (No 2) [2017] FCA 1612 at [6]-[11] per Kenny J).
97 The categories of cases in which indemnity costs may be awarded are not closed. Nevertheless, the particular categories relied on by ABCL in this case are putting a party to proof where it is unreasonable to do so and a party persisting with a defence in circumstances in which the party knows that the defence cannot be maintained.
98 The fourth issue is the apportionment of the costs between parties liable for costs. This issue arises because of the respective submissions by the Concrete Supply defendants and the deed administrators as to how the costs which they are ordered to pay should be apportioned between them, either by way of direct apportionment or by way of an order for contribution
99 There is a general rule that where a costs order is made against several parties, the liability is joint and several. If there is any difference in relative responsibility, then that is a matter for contribution between the parties who are liable. However, the rule is no more than a general rule and there are circumstances in which the Court will apportion costs having regard to an unsuccessful party's contribution to the costs incurred by the successful party. Generally speaking, at the apportionment stage, the ruling consideration is the conduct of the parties in the litigation, not the conduct giving rise to the litigation (Probiotec Ltd v University of Melbourne [2008] FCAFC 5; (2008) 166 FCR 30 at [62], [71] and [77] per Rares J; at [91] per Besanko J; see also Dal Pont at 11.2-11.7).
100 The fifth issue concerns the scope of a deed administrator's right of indemnity against the assets of the company in respect of which he or she is deed administrator. In this case, that issue arises in relation to costs the deed administrators are ordered to pay ABCL and their own costs.
101 The deed administrators rely on three sources for their right of indemnity: the general law, s 443D of the Corporations Act and the DOCA. For reasons I will give, s 443D does not apply to deed administrators and the right of indemnity under the DOCA extends no further than the right of indemnity under the general law.
102 In Adsett v Berlouis (1992) 37 FCR 201 (Adsett v Berlouis), the Full Court of this Court considered the right under the general law of a trustee to be indemnified out of the trust estate for an expense incurred by the trustee. The Court said that a trustee in bankruptcy had the same right in the same circumstances. A former trustee of the bankrupt estates of four persons appealed against two orders made by a trial judge that involved the trustee paying costs of an application and paying his own costs of other applications, and that no part of such costs be included in any sum payable under the compositions accepted by the creditors of the bankrupts and which ultimately led to the annulment of the bankruptcies. A natural justice complaint by the former trustee was rejected by the Full Court. The second ground of challenge by the former trustee is the relevant one for present purposes. It was that a trustee should be deprived of the right to recover his or her costs relating to litigation from the bankrupt estate only where the trustee had recklessly instituted or precipitated the litigation.
103 The Full Court held that the circumstances in which a trustee might be deprived of the indemnity were not as limited as the former trustee's argument suggested.
104 The Full Court addressed the duty of a trustee and the proper manner of its performance by adopting as a correct statement of the law the observations of Smithers J in Mannigel v Aitken (1983) 77 FLR 406 at 408-409. There is no need for me to set out those observations.
105 The Court then made the following important points.
106 First, the Court said that with respect to the right of a trustee to be reimbursed in respect of costs, charges or expenses incurred in the administration of the estate, the then Bankruptcy Act did not provide for a right of indemnity. Such a right arose under the general law and was for costs, charges and expenses properly incurred by the trustee (see the third point below).
107 Second, the Court said that with respect to the "right" to be remunerated for his or her own efforts, that is distinct from a right to the reimbursement of outgoings and is not conferred by the general law. A trustee, generally speaking, has no right to remuneration and, absent a statutory provision giving the phrase "costs, charges or expenses" a different meaning, remuneration is not covered by that phrase. The then Bankruptcy Act assumed, rather than provided for, the right of a trustee to remuneration.
108 Third, and in further development of the first point, the Court said that the case where a trustee involved in litigation unsuccessfully brings the proceeding or defends a proceeding and is ordered to pay costs is distinct from the trustee's entitlement to recoupment out of the bankrupt's estate. In the ordinary case, the unsuccessful trustee will be ordered to pay the successful party's costs and the obligation on the trustee to pay costs is a personal obligation, and the question which then arises, namely, whether or not the trustee has a right to be reimbursed out of the trust estate arises in the administration of the bankruptcy, not in the original litigation. The Full Court then referred to the case of Re Beddoe; Downes v Cottam [1893] 1 Ch 547 (Re Beddoe) which addressed, in the general area of the administration of trusts, the circumstances in which a trustee is entitled as of right to a full indemnity out of his trust estate against all his costs, charges and expenses. It is convenient to refer to Re Beddoe at this point.
109 In Re Beddoe, Lindley LJ and Bowen LJ considered the circumstances in which a trustee has a right of indemnity in relation to costs incurred. Lindley LJ said (at 558):
I entirely agree that a trustee is entitled as of right to full indemnity out of his trust estate against all his costs, charges, and expenses properly incurred: such an indemnity is the price paid by cestuis que trust for the gratuitous and onerous services of trustees; and in all cases of doubt, costs incurred by a trustee ought to be borne by the trust estate and not by him personally. The words "properly incurred" in the ordinary form of order are equivalent to "not improperly incurred".
Bowen LJ said (at 562):
The principle of law to be applied appears unmistakably clear. A trustee can only be indemnified out of the pockets of his cestuis que trust against costs, charges, and expenses properly incurred for the benefit of the trust - a proposition in which the word "properly" means reasonably as well as honestly incurred. While I agree that trustees ought not to be visited with personal loss on account of mere errors in judgment which fall short of negligence or unreasonableness, it is on the other hand essential to recollect that mere bona fides is not the test, and that it is no answer in the mouth of a trustee who has embarked in idle litigation to say that he honestly believed what his solicitor told him, if his solicitor has been wrong-headed and perverse. Costs, charges, and expenses which in fact have been unreasonably incurred, do not assume in the eye of the law the character of reasonableness simply because the solicitor is the person who was in fault. No more disastrous or delusive doctrine could be invented in a Court of Equity than the dangerous idea that a trustee himself might recover over from his own cestuis que trust costs which his own solicitor has unreasonably and perversely incurred merely because he had acted as his solicitor told him.
110 These principles formulated in the general area of the administration of trusts apply to the administration of bankrupt estates.
111 Returning to Adsett v Berlouis, the fourth point made by the Full Court was the test of the circumstances in which a trustee in bankruptcy has a right to be indemnified out of the bankrupt estate in relation to costs he has been ordered to pay another party, or his own costs, is whether the expense was honestly and reasonably incurred, or put in slightly different words, prudently and reasonably incurred in the discharge of the trustee's duties. An expense may be properly incurred, but not the particular expense incurred by the trustee, in other words, the particular expense may be extravagant and excessive. The question of whether an expense has been properly incurred is to be determined on the particular facts of the case and in the exercise of judgment.
112 I have already referred to Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v BE100 Property Investments. The issue in that case relevant for present purposes was whether the costs of the Deputy Commissioner, the major creditor of BE100 Property Investments Pty Ltd, should be paid by the deed administrator of the company. The deed administrator had acted on legal advice, although the advice was not at arms-length. The issue was whether the deed had terminated because the circumstances for its termination as specified in the deed existed. The Court found that the deed administrator erred in his conduct in relation to this issue. Greenwood J said (at [81]):
In the ordinary course, an order for costs would be made against Mr Hamilton, the DCOT having been successful in the proceeding, and he would be entitled to be indemnified out of the assets of the administration (or the Deed Property) as a first charge before distribution of Deed Property to creditors: Kirwan v Cresvale Far East Ltd (in liq) ("Kirwan") (2002) 44 ACSR 21 at [434], Young CJ (in Eq). An administrator is entitled to an indemnity for costs reasonably and honestly incurred: Kirwan at [259], Giles JA. Provided the step of acting on the legal advice given to him was reasonably and honestly taken although shown to be in error, Mr Hamilton would be entitled to an indemnity out of the assets of the administration for those costs incurred by him as a result of a costs order in the proceeding. In this case, there is no fund out of which Mr Hamilton can be indemnified. In those circumstances, Mr Hamilton would then bear the burden of a costs order personally. In those cases where there is no prospect of the administrator receiving indemnification of the burden of a costs order arising out of a successful challenge to a step taken by him (or her) in the course of an administration, the question that arises is whether the exercise of the discretion to order costs against the administrator is informed by other considerations.
Also relevant is the following passage in his Honour's reasons (at [84]):
… The phrase "acting appropriately" seems to me to mean acting reasonably and honestly. If the administrator acted reasonably and honestly, he or she ought not to be the subject of an order for costs personally, that is to say, an unlimited costs order. In this case, Mr Hamilton fell into error by removing from the meeting a decision about whether the DOCA should be brought to an end and whether BE100 ought to be placed into liquidation and wound up. He was in error in taking that course. I accept that he acted honestly in procuring legal advice notwithstanding that the advice was given to him by his own son. I accept that having regard to the sequence of considerations that informed his decision-making, he acted on the footing that having analysed the source of assets that might be available in the administration to unsecured creditors, there was no likelihood in any practical sense of a recovery of funds in excess of the secured Wolli debt. In that sense, Mr Hamilton acted reasonably according to that frame of reference although he acted in error in removing the matter from the plenary decision-making forum of the unsecured creditors.
113 In Kirwan v Cresvale Far East, there were a number of issues concerning a company which had gone into administration, then executed a deed of company arrangement and then, under that deed, had issued shares to one of its directors. The primary judge (Austin J) made findings of improper conduct against the administrator and deed administrator and ordered him to pay the costs of an action brought against him and the company with no right of indemnity for the costs he was ordered to pay and his own costs. On appeal, the findings of improper conduct were set aside, as was the costs order against him. Giles JA said (at [259]):
For the reasons I have given, I have come to a different view of the findings of impropriety essential to his Honour's making of orders 3 and 4. On the view I have come to, it was reasonable for Mr Gould actively to defend the proceedings brought against Securities and against himself as administrator. He was entitled to indemnity for costs reasonably and honestly incurred: Re Beddoe; Downes v Cottam [1892] 1 Ch 547; National Trustees Executors and Agency Co of Australasia Ltd v Barnes (1941) 64 CLR 268; [1941] ALR 58; Adsett v Berlouis (1992) 37 FCR 201; 109 ALR 100. It does not matter that at the same time Mr Gould was "defending his own character": Walter v Woodbridge (1878) 7 Ch D 504. Whether particular costs were reasonably incurred may arise, but there was not impropriety in the administration amounting to misconduct whereby, because defending his own misconduct, Mr Gould did not incur the costs reasonably and honestly.
114 Young CJ in Eq noted that the primary judge, in refusing to allow the administrator and deed administrator an indemnity out of the company assets, had held that it was unreasonable for him to defend the proceeding "given that the gist of the proceedings was to complain, successfully in the result, about the administrator and deed administrator's improper conduct". Young CJ in Eq also referred to a general guideline to the effect that a liquidator or administrator acting appropriately is entitled to an order, if unsuccessful, that the costs be paid by the company and not by the liquidator or administrator personally.
115 A deed administrator might incur costs as part of the duty of a reasonable administrator "to put before the court material which the court would need to decide the issues before it". Young CJ in Eq said (at [429]):
With respect, it does not necessarily follow from Mr Gould's decision actively to defend the proceedings that all the costs incurred by Securities or Mr Gould were unreasonably incurred. It would be almost certain that some of those costs would be necessary to perform the duty of any reasonable administrator in seeking to put before the Court material which the Court would need to decide the issues before it.
116 In Cadwallader v Bajco Pty Ltd [2002] NSWCA 328, Heydon JA said (at [35]):
Parties who see themselves as having a role of assisting the court in some respects cannot easily also occupy the role of parties advancing positive self-interested claims in other respects - particularly where the arguments advanced by way of assistance to the court are also strongly in the self-interest of those advancing them. Sacro egoismo is not a quality which a statutory office holder can easily claim. The submissions advanced on behalf of the administrators pursuant to their "duty" as liquidators were not noticeably more restrained, in volume and fire, than those otherwise advanced. The result was that the submissions fairly advanced by the administrators in support of the personal conduct of Mr Cardwell and of themselves suffered by association with other submissions. It detracted a little from the dignity of the administrators' entrance on the appellate scene that the submissions just referred to were accompanied by necessarily mercenary arguments about expenses and costs, but that dignity was affected much more by the advancing of arguments in support of the continuation of the liquidation. In reality, as counsel said in the passage quoted above and elsewhere, it should be a matter of indifference to liquidators in the position of the second defendants in this case whether they remain liquidators, whether they revert to being administrators, or whether they give up all office in the company.
117 In Walters v Woodbridge [1878] 7 Ch D 504 (Walters v Woodbridge), the Court of Appeal decided that a trustee who had acted properly and for the benefit of the estate was not precluded from recouping his costs from the estate (the other party to the litigation being unable to pay) by the fact that at the same time he defended his own character. Jessel MR said (at 509-510):
It seems to me, therefore, to come within the principle that where an action is brought against a trustee in respect of the trust estate, whether it be an action of ejectment, trespass, or of any other description, and is defended by the trustee, not for his own benefit, but for the benefit of the trust estate, he is entitled to indemnity. Here the defence by the trustee was for the benefit of the trust estate; it is true that at the same time he defended his own character, but that was merely an incident. If he had died, and his co-trustees had defended the action, they must at the same time have defended him. The defence of his character, therefore, does not make the defence less a defence on behalf of the trust estate, and there is no reason why he should be left to bear his own costs.