The parties' contentions on admissibility
10 On behalf of the applicant, reliance is placed upon s 131(1)(a) of the Act which provides:
'131 Exclusion of evidence of settlement negotiations
(1) Evidence is not to be adduced of:
(a) a communication that is made between persons in dispute, or between one or more persons in dispute and a third party, in connection with an attempt to negotiate a settlement of the dispute; …'
11 It is submitted for the applicant that Mr Humphris 'initiated [the telephone call] with the purpose of compromising the proceedings, and in that conversation an offer to compromise those proceedings was made'. The words 'in connection with' in s 131(1)(a) are, it is contended by the applicant, 'very broad words' and apply to the communication now relied upon by the respondents, being a 'communication .. made between persons in dispute … in connection with an attempt to negotiate a settlement of the dispute …'.
12 On behalf of the respondents, reliance is place upon the decision of Young J in GPI Leisure Corporation Ltd (in Liquidation) v Yuill (1997) 42 NSWLR 225. It was there held that the 'connection' described in s 131(1)(a) is a direct connection; and that the question whether there has been an 'attempt' to negotiate a settlement is one of nexus.
13 In Yuill, a letter (headed 'without prejudice') included statements that the party was willing to put in place a working mechanism for operation of any relevant claims, and contained other matters which that party would be willing to consider for approval. It was held that the communication in the form of the letter was not sufficiently close to 'an attempt to negotiate a settlement' of the dispute so as to be protected by s 131(1)(a).
14 Young J said (at 226):
'The paragraph in the exhibit states, in essence, that the party is willing to put in place a workable mechanism for operation of any claims to be made under the indemnity. It also contains other matters which that party would be willing to consider for approval.
The question is whether that is in connection with an attempt to negotiate a settlement. "Connection" is a word that can have different connotations and can mean "in any way connected" or "directly connected". When faced with such a choice, a court reaches for the interpretation which produces a sensible operation of the statute conformable to the intention of the legislature and the purpose of the enactment: …'
15 His Honour continued (at 226):
'In Field v Commissioner for Railways for NSW (1957) 99 CLR 285 at 292, the High Court said of the scope of the privilege: "It depends upon what formed part of the negotiations for the settlement of the action and what was reasonably incidental thereto." There needed to be a "proper connexion with any purpose connected with the settlement of the action" (at 293). In Trade Practices Commission v Arnotts Ltd (1989) 88 ALR 69 at 71-73, Beaumont J reviewed and contrasted cases where the parties discussed a possible compromise on the one hand (privileged) and where they had discussions merely asserting their respective positions (not privileged).'
16 Young J held that the 'connection' referred to in s 131(1)(a) is a direct connection.
17 His Honour concluded (at 226 - 227):
'What then is an "attempt" to negotiate a settlement? Again, I think really it is a question of nexus. There may be many communications between parties, which one can read between the lines as saying that certain things may happen, and if those certain things happen, the dispute might be settled. I do not consider that generally such a communication would fall within the privilege in s131(1)(a).
The present letter seems to me merely to be a communication which indicates that if the litigation can be dealt with in some practical way, the writer is open to suggestions. Alternatively it indicates that if a claim arises in the future, a mechanism can be put in place to deal with it. The letter does not suggest a method of compromising the underlying dispute. I do not consider that it is sufficiently close to "an attempt to negotiate a settlement" of the dispute to come within privilege.'
18 The respondents further rely upon the decision of Austin J in the Supreme Court of New South Wales in Collins Thomson v Clayton (2002) NSWSC 366, unreported, relying upon the decision in Yuill and the following observations of Young J in Nodnara Pty Ltd v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (1997) 140 FLR 336 at 340 - 341:
'Unless there is evidence that at least one party was attempting to settle the dispute at such conference, it does not seem to me that the ground for a s 131 privilege is established. The only relevant decision that I have found, Trade Practices Commission v Arnotts Ltd …, is consistent with this approach. In that case, Beaumont J considered that what was said by a defendant at a settlement conference called by the plaintiff, a person who was both a regulatory authority and a litigant, was privileged because it should be inferred that the defendant attended the conference with a view to settlement: …'
19 In Collins Thomson, Austin J received into evidence a letter headed 'without prejudice' for the following reasons:
'The letter, on a proper reading, does not have the character of an attempt to negotiate a settlement. It is instead a statement, admittedly in response to a series of letters of offer, in which the author provides his analysis of the various proceedings between the parties. The letter is expressed in robust terms, advances categorical claims as to the likely outcome of the proceedings, and then rejects the offers in question. It goes on to say some things about Mr Ellison's position [Mr Ellison was proposed to be called as an expert] which, it seems to me, are relevant to the application to exclude Mr Ellison's evidence, and could not by any stretch of the imagination be regarded as connected, in the direct sense required by Young J's judgment, with an attempt to negotiate settlement. Essentially those observations are to the effect that the liquidator had substantially nothing to lose by prosecuting the various proceedings, and stood to gain in various respects.'
20 In response to these submissions, it is submitted for the applicant that the 'connection' here was sufficiently direct, since the call was initiated by Mr Humphris who then 'made a bona fide offer to compromise proceedings'; and the communication in response from Mr Knox was 'a direct response to that overture'.
21 On behalf of the respondents, it is submitted that Mr Knox's statements to Mr Humphris on 3 June 2003 and 4 May 2003 be analysed as follows:
· The applicant was not paying fees to its solicitors, who were proceeding on a 'success basis'.
· The applicant would be happy for Mr Humphris to be appointed as the applicant's liquidator as the applicant had no money.
· On that basis, the applicant was not willing to discuss settlement in any meaningful sense at all.
22 Counsel for the respondents contend that these communications from Mr Knox are not a discussion or negotiation about settlement at all.
23 The respondents also rely upon observations by Burchett J in Burg Design Pty Ltd v Wolki (1999) 162 ALR 639 (at 646) that communications at a meeting between the parties were not privileged because they were 'not related to any attempt to settle the matter'.