2313/02 Bruce Clyde Bailey and anor v Arnold Neil Bailey and ors
JUDGMENT (EX TEMPORE)
1 REIN J: The plaintiffs by notice of motion dated 23 September 2009 seek to vacate a hearing date and obtain an order for mediation. The case has been fixed for hearing (on liability only) commencing on 9 November 2009 with an estimate of 3 weeks. The case was fixed for hearing by Brereton J on 19 May 2009.
2 The defendants resist the application to vacate the hearing date but they do not oppose the mediation subject to two matters. One relates to the question of the length of time for the mediation and, hence, the cost of the mediation, and I shall return to that.
3 The second issue is really linked to their opposition to the vacation of the hearing date; that is, that although amenable to a mediation, the second and third defendants do not agree that any such mediation should be held at the expense of the existing trial date. The first defendant is less amenable to an order for mediation but will not oppose it if the second and third defendants are agreeable and provided it does not involve vacation of the hearing date.
4 This litigation, which has had a very long and sad history, relates originally to partnership arrangements that existed between members of a family following the death of the plaintiffs' and defendants' father. Essentially it seems to have come down to a matter which I described in a judgment given earlier this year on 23 June 2009: see [2009] NSWSC 598 at [1] to [7], and it relates to - paraphrasing it very broadly - how the terms of an agreement reached at a mediation were to be implemented, including how the proceeds of sale of the family property known as Hazeldene were dealt with and the establishment of a contingency fund which the plaintiffs assert was a breach of the mediation agreement.
5 The matter has had many directions hearings before and subsequent to my becoming the judge with responsibility for its case management, and there have been a number of interlocutory applications. In the judgment of June 2009, to which I earlier referred, I refused the second and third defendants' application for leave to file a cross claim out of time, in part, because of the fact that the matters the subject of the cross claim, even if otherwise allowed, would not be heard at the time of the fixture for hearing which had been made. The plaintiffs resisted the application of the defendants for leave, in part, based upon the fact that a hearing date had already been given. Subsequently the second and third defendants have filed and served a statement of claim seeking some of the relief sought in the proposed cross claim ("the 2009 proceedings").
6 There have been occasions in the past where the plaintiffs have criticised the lack of compliance by the defendants with various interlocutory orders. There was a long period in which none of the defendants were represented. The first defendant has not been represented for a considerable period but today he is represented by counsel, Mr Castley. The second defendant and the third defendant have been represented for a significant period of time now by Mr Pesman of counsel, and until recently on all the applications that I heard or directions hearings at which I presided Mr Bevan of counsel appeared on behalf of the plaintiffs either by himself or more often with a junior, Mr Young of counsel. At the most recent interlocutory hearing on 2 September 2009 Mr Bevan was led by Mr Grieve QC.
7 In September 2009 I had to consider an application by the plaintiffs for leave to file a fourth further amended statement of claim. The defendants objected to part of that proposed amended claim, or part of a paragraph, and I gave judgment in relation to that matter on 8 September 2009: see [2009] NSWSC 931. As recently as that time it appeared that the matter was on track for hearing and that all evidence relied on by either side had been served on the other. There was also discussion in respect of some orders that had been made for pre-trial directions for the preparation of a bundle of documents. That bundle preparation has, I am informed by Mr Pesman, proceeded in an appropriate way to the extent that agreement had been reached between the solicitors formerly on the record for the plaintiffs and the defendants as to what would be included in the tender bundle. Mr Pesman has prepared a document which identifies the documents in the bundle together with documents which, in accordance with a letter sent by the plaintiffs' former solicitors, were agreed could be removed from the bundle. The document also lists all the affidavits which the plaintiffs' former solicitors advise will be relied on by the plaintiffs in their case. Mr Pesman says and I accept that there are approximately 2 ½ volumes of the tender bundle. That Mr Bevan was involved in the process can be seen from the invoice of Turner Freeman which is annexure D to Mr Luxford's affidavit of 23 September 2009.