Ballard v Brookfield Australia Investments Ltd
[2013] NSWCA 82
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2013-04-08
Before
Ward JA
Catchwords
- 193 CLR 502 Nominal Defendant v Manning [2000] NSWCA 80
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
orestry Mining and Energy Union (Third Respondent/Applicant on motion for summary dismissal of appeal) Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union (New South Wales Branch) (Fourth Respondent/Applicant on motion for summary dismissal of appeal) Andrew Ferguson (Fifth Respondent/Applicant on motion for summary dismissal of appeal) Representation: Counsel: D Murr SC (Appellant/Applicant on security for costs motion) I Pike SC (First & Second Respondents/Applicants on motion for summary dismissal of appeal) BC Oslington QC with M Condon SC (Third, Fourth & Fifth Respondents/Applicants on motion for summary dismissal of appeal) Solicitors: Russell Byrnes (Appellant) Clayton Utz (First & Second Respondents) Taylor & Scott Lawyers (Third, Fourth & Fifth Respondents) File Number(s): CA 12/169375 Decision under appeal Citation: [2011] NSWSC 426 Date of Decision: 2012-05-03 00:00:00 Before: McDougall J File Number(s): 07/266587
Judgment 1HER HONOUR: Before me in the referrals list on 8 April 2013 were applications by the various parties to this appeal consequent upon the making of orders by me on 18 December 2012 for the provision by Mr Ballard (on a staged basis) of security for the respondents' costs of the appeal. The appeal is from the dismissal by McDougall J in May 2012 ([2012] NSWSC 426) of conspiracy claims brought by Mr Ballard against the respondents (the Brookfield/Multiplex parties and the CFMEU parties). 2The first tranche of payments by way of security for the respective respondents' costs were due by 15 January 2013. Subsequent payments were due on 28 and 31 March 2013, with the last two payments to be paid at times referable to the commencement of the hearing of Mr Ballard's appeal (which was then provisionally listed for a two week hearing in June this year but which is now listed to commence on 22 July this year). No sum has been paid by way of security for costs in accordance with those orders and the evidence on Mr Ballard's present application is that he is not (and will not be) able to meet the security for costs orders. The appeal (though a date for hearing has been fixed) is currently stayed, having regard to Mr Ballard's non-compliance to date with the security for costs regime ordered late last year. 3In early March this year, the respective sets of respondents each filed applications for the summary dismissal of the appeal proceedings on the basis of non-compliance with the security for costs orders (the Brookfield/Multiplex parties by Notice of Motion filed 4 March 2013, the CFMEU parties by Notice of Motion filed 5 March 2013). Mr Ballard then filed his Notice of Motion on 18 March 2013 seeking an order setting aside the security for costs orders. 4At the outset I note that Senior Counsel appearing for Mr Ballard on this occasion, Mr Murr SC, made it clear that the application made by Mr Ballard is not for a review of my earlier orders pursuant to s 46(4) of the Supreme Court Act 1970. (Had that been the case, the application would have been referred to other judges of this Court to determine.) Rather, this is an application based on what is said to have been a material change of circumstances since the orders were made in December last year, as a result of which it is contended that the security for costs orders should now be set aside. 5Rule 36.16(3) of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) permits the court to set aside or vary any judgment or order, except so far as it either determines a claim for relief (or a question arising on a claim for relief) or dismisses the proceedings, in whole or part. The power is analogous, but not confined, to that applicable in instances of accidental mistake or omission. It permits the discharge of an existing order and its substitution by a different order in an appropriate case (Douglass v Gillman (1990) 19 NSWLR 570).