Avant Insurance Limited v Darshn
[2021] FCA 1129
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2021-09-16
Before
Yates J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (6 paragraphs)
- The relief claimed in prayer 2 of the interlocutory application dated 3 September 2021 be refused.
- The appellant pay the first respondent's costs of and incidental to the hearing of its application for the relief referred to in Order 1. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
Introduction 1 In the proceeding below, the following declaration and orders were made on 23 August 2021: THE COURT DECLARES THAT: Upon the proper construction of the applicant's 2018-2019 policy with the first respondent described in paragraph [38] of the reasons for judgment dated 25 June 2021 (Avant Policy), and in the circumstances that have happened, without limiting any right the applicant may have to seek indemnity in relation to the claims of group members in Supreme Court of New South Wales proceedings 279308 of 2017 (the TCI proceeding), the first respondent is obliged to indemnify the applicant in respect of: (a) his 'Legal Defence Costs' (as defined in the Avant Policy) in relation to his defence of the claims of Ms Sanchez in the TCI proceeding; and (b) any civil liability arising in relation to the claims of Ms Sanchez brought in the TCI proceeding. THE COURT ORDERS THAT: 1. The first respondent pay the applicant interest on the Legal Defence Costs that he has already paid, from the date of payment by the applicant to his lawyers to the date of payment by the first respondent to the applicant, calculated in accordance with s 57 of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth). 2. The first respondent pay the applicant's costs of and incidental to the proceeding on a party-party basis. 3. Within 14 days, the first respondent pay to the applicant: (a) $182,000 in partial satisfaction of his entitlement to costs of the proceeding; and (b) $189,000 in partial satisfaction of his entitlement to indemnity for Legal Defence Costs. 4. The costs payable pursuant to paragraph 2 above be the subject of a lump-sum costs assessment in accordance with Part 4 of the Court's Costs Practice Note (GPN-COSTS) (Practice Note) as follows: (a) within 7 days, the applicant file and serve an affidavit in support of the lump-sum claim (Costs Summary) in accordance with paragraphs 4.10-4.12 of the Practice Note; (b) within 14 days, the first respondent file and serve any affidavit responding to the matters raised in the Costs Summary in accordance with paragraphs 4.13-4.14 of the Practice Note; and (c) in the absence of any agreement having been reached within 21 days of the date of these orders, the matter of an appropriate lump sum figure for the applicant's costs be referred to a Registrar for determination. 5. There be liberty to apply in relation to any issue of quantification of the costs already incurred by the applicant in defending the TCI Proceeding. 6. The first respondent pay the second respondent's costs of and incidental to the proceeding (including the costs of the second respondent's interlocutory application dated 23 July 2021) as agreed or assessed. 2 By an interlocutory application dated 3 September 2021, the appellant, Avant Insurance Limited (Avant), seeks a stay of Orders 1 to 6. It also seeks an order that its appeal be expedited. These reasons deal with the application for a stay. 3 The declaration made on 23 August 2021 was based on a finding that the lawyers acting for the first respondent, Dr Darshn - in proceedings called the Scotford proceeding and the Summers-Hall proceeding - had given written notice to Avant of facts that might give rise to a claim against him, for the purposes of s 40(3) of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) (the Insurance Contracts Act). That claim resulted in the TCI proceeding referred to in the declaration. 4 As Avant puts it, the central issue in the appeal is whether the primary judge erred in that finding. Avant accepted Dr Darshn's claims for indemnity in the Scotford proceeding and in the Summers-Hall proceeding, and had appointed the lawyers to act for Dr Darshn in those proceedings. But Avant contends that the communications between the lawyers and Avant in those proceedings were for the sole purpose of discharging particular retainers, and that communications between the lawyers and Avant relating to the TCI proceeding were not capable of acting as notification by Dr Darshn to Avant for the purposes of s 40(3) of the Insurance Contracts Act. 5 In the proceeding below, the primary judge also found that Avant had breached its duty of utmost good faith in rejecting Dr Darshn's claim for indemnity. Avant appeals from that finding. It also appeals from the primary judge's findings that costs should be awarded to Dr Darshn on a lump sum basis and that Dr Darshn is entitled to payment of the two sums referred to in Order 3.