According to another translation in evidence, s 49 provided -
"An authority to act in a matter may at any time be withdrawn. For the Court and the opposing party such withdrawal comes into effect only at the point in time when it is communicated to them.
The authority is not revoked by reason of the party's death, liquidation, or loss or acquisition of legal capacity."
34 Mr Boele said that the evidence of s 49 was inadmissible unless tendered and expounded through a person qualified to give expert evidence of Norwegian law, referring to statements such as those in The Sussex Peerage Case (1844) 11 Cl & Fin 85 at 115; (1844) 8 ER 1034 at 1046 and Lazard Brothers & Co v Midland Bank Ltd (1933) AC 289 at 298. Norsemeter responded that s 174 of the Evidence Act 1995 permitted the adduction of evidence of the Norwegian statute. I doubt that the requirements of a basis of admissibility in s 174 were met, since one affidavit simply annexed a translation of s 49 and the other affidavit simply annexed s 49 as an extract plus a translation. It is not necessary to decide; I am content to assume in favour of Norsemeter proper admission of the evidence of s 49.
35 Norsemeter more particularly relied on a letter from one of the judges of the Borgarting Court of Appeals, addressed apparently to a lawyer for Norsemeter. The letter had been tendered by Mr Boele. It read -
"I refer to your letter of 5 March 2002.
Section 47 of the Norwegian Civil Procedure Act 13 August 1915 states that:
Pursuant to a general authority ad litem for the case, the representative ad litem may:
1. bring and accept actions and cross-actions, accept intervention suits, approve and waive submissions and take all other steps in legal proceedings relating to the conduct of the case before the relevant instance;
2. give notice of appeals against interlocutory orders and decisions;
3. accept any litigation costs awarded to his client.
An advocate's deemed to have the authority he asserts to take all procedural steps for the furthering of the case, in order to have enforced a decision by the court and to receive what his client is entitled to.
Pursuant to the general authority ad litem vested in a representative ad litem according to section 47 of the Civil Procedure Act, the representative is considered as authorised to act on behalf of his client, and to make such legal dispositions as are stated in the regulation. The representative ad litem is deemed to have such authority unless it is clearly stated that his authority is limited. This implies that the court cannot require that the representative ad litem present a power of attorney that shows that he can act on behalf of his client in the case. It also lies within the authority ad litem to receive services and notices, as for example summons to court hearings. Summons to court hearings are sent by the court to the representative ad litem, and it is the responsibility of the representative to inform his client of the time for the court hearing. The court does not check whether the representative has summoned his client.
In the current case, Advocate Gerhard Holm acted as the representative ad litem for Pieter Boele, Eva Ulrike Graflind and Fredrik Graflind. Advocate Gerhard Holm is considered to have had a general authority ad litem, of section 47 of the Civil Procedure Act. Accordingly, the court has related to Mr Holm as the representative ad litem for, amongst others, Pieter Boele, in the case. Whether Mr Holm was in actual fact entitled to act on behalf of Mr Boele is unknown to the Court of Appeals."
36 Norsemeter argued that the lis, the matter or the case in ss 49 and 47 was the whole of the dispute between the parties, any appeal as well as the first instance proceedings. It said that the letter showed that Mr Boele's termination of his engagement of Vinge and TKGL was by Norwegian law of no effect, because it was irrelevant that Mr Holm may in fact not have had authority to act on behalf of Mr Boele and so far as the Borgarting Court of Appeals was concerned Mr Boele was bound by the result in the appeal and the cross-appeal although he had not authorised Mr Holm as his representative. By the engagement ultimately of Mr Holm, it said, Mr Boele had set up a mode of notification which, unless Norsemeter and the court was told of the termination of the engagement, could be followed in respect of the appeal, and Mr Boele could not rely on lack of actual knowledge of the appeal.
37 Courts in New South Wales generally do not require legal representatives to prove their retainer. An opposite party can challenge the retainer, but in the absence of challenge a solicitor who goes on the record and a barrister or solicitor who appears is generally taken to act with the party's authority. It is a different thing, however, if it becomes known that the legal representative was acting without authority, and that the party does not know anything of the proceedings.
38 It is by no means clear that the letter says more than that, in similar manner, the Borgarting Court of Appeals would take Mr Holm to have been acting with Mr Boele's authority. I do not think that there can be found in the letter, with the confidence required for summary judgment, the irrelevance of lack of authority in fact which is necessary for Norsemeter's argument. More important, neither ss 49 and 47 nor the letter clearly goes beyond Mr Holm's authority in relation to proceedings at one level of the curial hierarchy. When the translations of ss 49 and 47 refer to a lis, a matter or a case they do not necessarily go beyond the one curial level, and s 47's references to interlocutory appeals and enforcement suggest that it does not extend to a substantive appeal.
39 I do not think that ss 49 and 47 and the letter establish, to the level necessary for summary judgment, either that according to Norwegian law and procedure Mr Holm remained as an effective recipient of notice of the appeal or that he was given due notice of the appeal. Mr Holm had knowledge of the appeal, but there was no evidence of how notice of the appeal was given or to whom and in particular of whether according to Norwegian law and procedure the manner in which that was done was due notice sufficient to operate against Mr Boele. As I have indicated, it is by no means clear that the letter says more than that, unless the matter was raised, the Borgarting Court of Appeals would not be concerned to investigate Mr Holm's authority.
40 Norsemeter referred to the presumption that foreign law is the same as the law of the forum. It is not necessary to consider the reach of the presumption, extensively discussed in Damberg v Damberg (2001) 52 NSWLR 492. It is particularly difficult to presume that a foreign court's procedural law is the same as the law of the forum, indeed the forum's courts may not have uniform procedural laws. Norsemeter pointed out that an appeal to or within the Supreme Court of New South Wales generally permits service at the address for service in the proceedings from which the appeal is brought (Supreme Court Rules Pt 9 r 8; Pt 51 r 3(1), although it was otherwise prior to 1996). Taking that as the most favourable position for Norsemeter, however, there was no evidence that there was such a thing as an address for service in the proceedings in the Oslo City Court, or that there was service at any such address, and no basis for the presumption to operate was made out.