The first to third respondents' costs
5 Insofar as the first to third respondents' costs are concerned (i.e., the Maximo parties' costs on the principal claim), the applicant accepts that it must pay those costs on a party and party basis. However, in reliance on a Form 45 notice of offer to settle the principal proceeding served on 11 March 2020, the Maximo parties seek an order for indemnity costs in respect of costs incurred after 11:00 am on 13 March 2020. The applicant, APD, opposes that on the basis that the offer was not a genuine compromise and that its refusal of the offer was therefore not unreasonable.
6 The Maximo parties' offer to APD was to pay the sum of $5,000 inclusive of interest and costs in full and final settlement of all claims by APD against them. The offer was made under Pt 25 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) which, relevantly, provides as follows:
25.01 Offer to compromise
(1) A party (the offeror) may make an offer to compromise by serving a notice, in accordance with Form 45, on another party (the offeree). …
25.14 Costs where offer not accepted
…
(2) If an offer is made by a respondent and an applicant unreasonably fails to accept the offer and the applicant's proceeding is dismissed, the respondent is entitled to an order that the applicant pay the respondent's costs:
(a) before 11.00 am on the second business day after the offer was served - on a party and party basis; and
(b) after the time mentioned in paragraph (a) - on an indemnity basis.
7 APD did not respond to the offer. It accordingly failed to accept the offer. The question then is whether that failure was unreasonable so as to attract the operation of r 25.14(2).
8 APD submits, with reference to authority, that the following principles are applicable:
(1) The offer must involve a real and genuine element of compromise.
(2) If the amount offered is "properly characterised as trivial or contemptuous" or "derisory", it will not engage the cost consequences provided for by the relevant rule.
(3) A successful respondent is not entitled to an order for indemnity costs merely because the applicant's case has been found to lack merit.
(4) The offeror bears the onus of establishing that it was unreasonable for the offeree to refuse the offer.
(5) The failure of the offeree to accept an offer which was not bettered on judgment will not lead to a presumption that the offer was unreasonably rejected.
9 I am prepared to assume in APD's favour that those are the applicable principles.
10 APD submits that its non-acceptance of the offer was not unreasonable because the offer did not involve a real and genuine element of compromise. APD relies on four factors in support of that submission:
(1) The primary claim was for damages in excess of $12 million.
(2) The secondary claim was for $1,283,160.
(3) The hearing of the proceeding occupied five days.
(4) The claims could not fairly be characterised as vexatious, particularly having regard to the very large commission paid to Maximo.
11 The difficulty for APD is that its decision-maker was, in effect, Mr Doan. Although Mrs Doan was the sole director, all the relevant conduct on behalf of APD was undertaken by Mr Doan. Moreover, on my findings in the first judgment Mr Doan knew that Mr Rahmani had not made the representations to him on which APD sued. That knowledge must be ascribed to APD. Thus, when APD failed to accept the Maximo parties' offer it knew that its principal case was false. Its failure to accept the offer was, in those circumstances, inevitably unreasonable.
12 I am accordingly satisfied that the Maximo parties are entitled to their costs on an indemnity basis after 11:00 am on 13 March 2020.