Brown v Edwards
[2002] FCA 538
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2002-04-30
Before
Doussa J, Carr J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (9 paragraphs)
introduction 1 The Court is considering, of its own motion, whether each of these applications should be stayed or dismissed generally under Order 20 rule 2 of the Federal Court Rules on the ground or grounds that no reasonable cause of action is disclosed or that the application is frivolous or vexatious, or is an abuse of the process of the Court.
The South Australian Proceedings 2 On 12 March 2001 the applicant lodged at the South Australia District Registry of this Court a document in the style of a Form 56 Application under the Federal Court Rules in which the first respondent in Application No W576 of 2001 was named as first respondent and a company called Universal Music Australia Pty Ltd was named as the second respondent. It appeared that the applicant was seeking equitable remuneration under the Copyright Act 1958 (Cth) from those respondents. The application was given the number S29 of 2001 3 At the first directions hearing in that matter (which was before any of the documents had been served) von Doussa J gave the applicant leave to amend his application. The applicant did so by filing an amended application and supporting affidavits which von Doussa J held to have failed to give details of how the remedy which the applicant sought could possibly have a basis in law. At a subsequent directions hearing, by which time the second respondent had been served and appeared, von Doussa J made further endeavours to explain to the applicant how he might remedy the defects in his documentation. The second respondent then filed a notice of motion and supporting affidavits seeking to have the proceedings dismissed under either Order 20 rule 2 or Order 11 rule 6 of the Federal Court Rules. By that time it had become clear that the first respondent resided in the United States of America and had not been served. Von Doussa J gave the applicant leave to amend his statement of claim. That statement of claim was subsequently struck out, but the applicant was given leave to make one more attempt to formulate his claim. The document which the applicant filed pursuant to that leave was described by von Doussa J as "nonsensical" and failing to reveal any factual basis that could support a claim of any kind, let alone disclose a cause of action. His Honour then dismissed the claim against the first respondent on the basis that it would be vexatious and an abuse of the process of the Court to allow the proceedings to continue. He also dismissed the proceedings against both respondents. 4 The applicant had also on 12 March 2001 lodged documents purporting to be applications with the South Australia District Registry in two other matters. They were given the application numbers of S30 and S31 of 2001 respectively. In each of those applications the applicant sought equitable remuneration under s 135ZU of the Copyright Act in respect of certain songs of which the applicant claimed to be the author. In application No S30 of 2001 the respondents named were Garth Brooks and Russell Jones. It appears from the document filed in that application that the applicant was seeking to advance a claim based on his ownership of the copyright in a song entitled "Friends in Low Places". 5 In each of those applications von Doussa J made identical orders, on 19 March 2001 in the following terms: "Stay further action on this application with liberty to the applicant to apply to lift the stay. If such an application is not made within 6 months, the application is to be struck out." 6 I have examined the relevant Court files (sent to this District Registry by the South Australia District Registry). It is apparent that no application was made in either application to lift the stay. 7 On 24 August 2001 the applicant lodged a notice of appeal against the orders made by von Doussa J in application S29 of 2001. 8 On 22 November 2001 a Full Court of this Court unanimously dismissed that appeal and published its reasons for doing so on 5 December 2001.