Consideration
31 I turn to consider whether an order for security for payment of the respondents' costs should be made.
32 As a preliminary matter the respondents contended that Ms Burrows would be unable to satisfy a costs order if they are successful in defending the litigation. The evidence relied on by the respondents to support that contention comprises the following:
(1) according to a national property ownership search undertaken in Ms Burrows' name on 25 July 2022, Ms Burrows does not own any real property in Australia;
(2) Ms Burrows has failed to comply with the Bankruptcy Notice;
(3) Ms Burrows has not satisfied or made any payment in reduction of the Local Court Judgment or the Costs Judgment;
(4) in an email dated 6 February 2020 to Michelle Dawe (6 February 2020 Email), who I infer is the Associate to Acting Judge Craig QC of the District Court, Ms Burrows asked that the District Court Proceeding, which was listed at 9.00 am that morning, be stood down until her counsel arrived, in the event he was late. Her email included (as written):
I am seeking 8 weeks to put on submissions and any evidence in reply to the defendant's motion on costs approximately $130,000, because I do not have the capacity to respond earlier and given the quantum of costs they are seeking, it is a very serious matter. Further, it requires consideration to the High Court authority on legal practitioners claiming their own costs, I require the time to properly respond given such a large cost order will have dire consequences on my practicing certificate and livlihood. I am a single mother with 3 dependents under the age of 14, no assets and I am a sole practitioner predominately legal aid matters. I require the time to properly respond to the motion. I was served an affidavit last night by the defendant.
(5) a transcript of the District Court Proceeding on 6 February 2020 recording that court's consideration of Ms Burrow's application for an adjournment where Acting Judge Craig stated, by reference to the 6 February 2020 Email, that:
The only other basis upon which the plaintiff seems to indicate that she required an eight week period, was that she had matters to which she had to attend, including that same criminal matter. She also identified the seriousness of the defendants' motion in this matter for her because of difficulty she would have in meeting the costs sum sought by the defendants, particularly in light of her personal circumstances as a single mother with three dependent children under the age of 14.
33 Ms Burrows did not lead any evidence demonstrating her ability to meet a costs order in the amount sought by the respondents or, indeed, any amount should she be unsuccessful in this proceeding. Although Ms Burrows is a practising solicitor she did not, for example, put before the Court any evidence of her income and/or of any assets which she owns.
34 Ms Burrows submitted that, even taking the evidence on which the respondents rely at its highest, they have not established that any of them would be entitled to a costs order in anything like the amount sought, if successful. She made the following further submissions.
35 First, Ms Burrows submitted that a costs order can only be made to indemnify the successful party for professional costs actually incurred in the conduct of litigation as opposed to costs theoretically quantifiable but not in fact payable by the successful party, relying on Cachia v Hanes (1994) 179 CLR 403 at 410.
36 Cachia concerned the question of whether the appellant's claim for compensation for the loss of his time spent preparing and conducting his case and associated out of pocket expenses could be included in a bill of costs for taxation under the Supreme Court Rules 1970 (NSW) as they applied at the time. The High Court held at 409 that:
The "costs" provided for in the Rules do not include time spent by a litigant who is not a lawyer in preparing and conducting his case. They are confined to money paid or liabilities incurred for professional legal services.
At 410-411 the Court said:
To use the Rules to compensate a litigant in person for time lost would cut across their clear intent. Costs, within the meaning of the Rules, are reimbursement for work done or expenses incurred by a practitioner or practitioner's employee. Compensation for the loss of time of a litigant in person cannot be said to constitute costs within the meaning of the Rules.
This is hardly surprising. It has not been doubted since 1278, when the Statute of Gloucester introduced the notion of costs to the common law, that costs are awarded by way of indemnity (or, more accurately, partial indemnity) for professional legal costs actually incurred in the conduct of litigation. They were never intended to be comprehensive compensation for any loss suffered by a litigant.
37 Ms Burrows' reliance on Cachia is inapt for two reasons. First, the purpose of an order for security for costs is to protect a respondent beneficiary of a costs order from that order being frustrated by the inability of the applicant to satisfy it: see Dal Pont, The Law of Costs at 28.1. That is, at the stage of such an application the Court considers whether, in the circumstances of the particular case, it should exercise its discretion to order security to ensure that its orders are ultimately not frustrated. Secondly, the respondents seek security for their legal costs, i.e. costs that are likely to be incurred in defending this proceeding. They do not seek to have costs which they say they actually incurred quantified by way of a taxation or otherwise. Nor do they seek to include in the estimate of their likely costs of defending the proceeding any costs other than their legal costs estimated by reference to the nature of the proceeding, the hours to be spent by various practitioners in acting in the respondents' defence, an estimate of counsel's fees and other disbursements.
38 Secondly, Ms Burrows submitted that "the existence and scope of the successful litigant's duty to pay his or her own solicitors is central to the ability to recover costs" quoting from Shaw v Yarranova Pty Ltd [2011] VSCA 55 at [8]. That case concerned an application for leave to appeal from a review of an order confirming the taxation of certain costs orders. The primary argument was that as the respondents' parent company had paid the respondents' legal costs, the respondents' claim for the applicant to pay their taxed costs offended the indemnity rule as the respondents had no liability to their solicitors: at [7]. At [8] Redlich and Mandie JJA set out the parameters of the rule known as the indemnity costs rule observing that:
An order for costs against the unsuccessful litigant aims to provide the successful party with some level of indemnity for the legal costs the successful party would not have incurred had it not been necessary to uphold his or her rights in court. Such an order does not entitle the successful litigant to recover more than he or she has paid or is liable to pay to his or her own lawyer. The rule limits the successful party's right to indemnification to the "necessary or proper" costs incurred to obtain justice in the case. The costs are usually confined to those that the successful party "was primarily and potentially legally obliged to pay to his solicitor". Hence the existence and scope of the successful litigant's duty to pay his or her own solicitors is central to the ability to recover costs.
(Footnotes omitted.)
39 There is no controversy about this principle. It concerns the nature and ultimately quantum of recoverable costs by a party who has been successful in a proceeding. However, as I have already observed this application is not about entitlement to costs once an order for costs has been made. It concerns the question of whether the respondent should be required to defend the litigation in circumstances where it contends that there is a risk that the applicant will not be able to meet a costs order, if made.
40 Thirdly, Ms Burrows submitted that none of the respondents have proved that any professional fees, as opposed to disbursements, will be payable in this proceeding. Ms Burrows contended that is because MK, as a self-represented legal practice, is not entitled to recover costs for work done by its employed solicitors and neither 298 PL, MK's wholly owned subsidiary, nor Mr Frawley, an employed solicitor of MK and director of 298 PL, has proven the existence or scope of any duty to pay MK as their solicitor. Ms Burrows submitted that the best the respondents' case gets is that she might be liable to pay disbursements, which were estimated to be in the sum of approximately $49,000 as at March 2023, if she is unsuccessful and the respondents have not discharged their onus that she would be unable to meet a costs order up to that sum because their case is premised on the higher sum of $130,000.
41 Ms Burrows relies on the decision in Birketu v Castagnet [2022] NSWSC 1435. The facts of that case are complicated. The second defendants, the partners in law firm Atanaskovic Hartnell (Firm), sued the first plaintiff, Birketu Pty Ltd, to recover their professional fees and disbursements, having acted for it in six matters. Ultimately an order was made that Birketu pay the Firm's costs up to and including 16 September 2019, assessed on the ordinary basis, and that the Firm pay Birketu's costs of the proceeding from 10 August 2019, assessed on the indemnity basis. Throughout the costs recovery proceeding the Firm acted for itself.
42 The Firm subsequently served its proposed application for costs assessment on Birketu. The application included costs for work done by the Firm's employed solicitors. Birketu objected to the claim for professional costs for work done by the Firm's employed solicitors and made submissions to the costs assessor to whom the assessment was assigned on that issue. By email dated 22 April 2022 (22 April Email) the costs assessor noted, among other things, that:
Whether [the Firm] is entitled to such costs and the amount of costs to which it is entitled will be determined in this assessment. Any sustainable submissions Birketu may make would be on the costs of the costs assessment.
43 Birketu requested the assessor to provide formal reasons for the decisions set out in the 22 April Email. The assessor declined, noting he had not made any interim determination and that the only determination he would make in the matter would be his final determination. Birketu then filed a summons seeking, among other things, a declaration that the Firm was not entitled to recover the professional costs of its employed solicitors in the assessment.
44 In considering whether such a declaration should be made Brereton J observed that the issue that arose for determination was whether abrogation of the Chorley exception involved denying that solicitor litigants could recover costs for work done by their employees, though not work done by themselves personally, or whether preservation of the employed solicitor exception means that they are entitled to recover such costs. After stating the question, his Honour noted (at [24]) that the reasons in Bell Lawyers Pty Ltd v Pentelow (2019) 269 CLR 333 did not expressly address that question but that it had been addressed by the Victorian Court of Appeal in United Petroleum Australia Pty Ltd v Herbert Smith Freehills [2020] VSCA 15 in which the Court held that, in light of Bell Lawyers, recovery ought not be permitted.
45 After examining the "evolution and rationale" for the employed solicitor exception, Brereton J turned to consider the decision in Bell Lawyers. At [36] his Honour expressed the opinion that he did not think the High Court had in mind a litigant solicitors' own employed solicitors when it made clear that it was not intending to displace the employed solicitor exception. At [40] his Honour said:
In my view, the High Court had in mind "in-house" lawyers employed by government departments and corporations, who act as solicitor for the employing department or corporation in litigation, and not employed solicitors in a law firm which as a party to litigation has some or all of the work done by those employees.
46 At [42] after referring to the considerations which led to the High Court rejecting the Chorley exception, Brereton J added:
As it seems to me, those same reasons unambiguously favour the position that a solicitor litigant should not be able to recover costs in respect of work done by his or her own employees, any more than for work done by him or herself. To permit a solicitor to recover such costs would be to provide an incentive for solicitors to act for themselves, while allocating as much of the work as they could, to their employees; and it would preserve the appearance that a solicitor was in a privileged position as a self-represented litigant in being able to recover costs for work done by his or her own firm.
47 It follows from the analysis undertaken by Brereton J in Birketu v Castagnet that a law firm which successfully acts for itself and secures a costs order in its favour cannot recover the costs incurred by reason of its employed solicitors acting in the matter. That may mean that, to the extent that MK acts for itself in this proceeding and obtains a costs order in its favour it may not be able to recover the costs of its employed solicitor. By that observation I should not be taken to have determined the question which is one for another day. Further, on this application I see no need for 298 PL and/or Mr Frawley to establish the terms of any retainer between them and MK. Again that is matter for another day and not one which arises on this application.
48 In my opinion, Ms Burrows' submissions as to entitlement to costs are misplaced. At this stage, the respondents seek to quantify their recoverable costs for the purpose of their application for security. Whether that amount will ultimately be recoverable is a question for another day. The respondents estimate that their likely recoverable costs of defending the proceeding amount to approximately $130,000. But even if I am wrong about the relevance of Ms Burrows' submissions as to recoverability, she concedes that the respondents' disbursements estimated at $49,000 would be recoverable if they were successful in the proceeding.
49 Despite her submission to the contrary, I am satisfied that the respondents have established that there is reason to believe that Ms Burrows could not meet a costs order if made in this proceeding, either in the amount of the approximately $130,000 sought or in the lesser amount of $49,000. The evidence is that Ms Burrows owns no real property and has failed to comply with the Bankruptcy Notice. Absent that, Ms Burrows has not filed any evidence which would satisfy me that she would be able to meet a costs order in either amount.
50 That being so, I am satisfied that the respondents have established Ms Burrows' impecuniosity.
51 However, establishing Ms Burrow's impecuniosity is not sufficient. As the respondents acknowledge, there is a reluctance to order a natural person to pay security for costs. That said, there have been instances where such an order has been made, usually where the applicant for security can demonstrate a factor in addition to impecuniosity. The respondents say the following additional factors are present.
52 First, that Ms Burrows has failed to show that an order for security would stultify the proceeding. That is so. Ms Burrows has neither put on any evidence to that effect, e.g. of her asset position and ability to meet an order for security if made, nor made any submissions to that effect other than her reliance on the 6 February 2020 Email (see [74] below).
53 Secondly, that the amount of security is relatively low. In my opinion, whether that is so is to be considered in the context of a particular proceeding. Certainly the amount sought is not at the higher end but of itself I would not consider this to be a compelling additional factor.
54 Thirdly, that the application for security is not oppressive. The respondents explain that it is not being made to deny Ms Burrows the opportunity to pursue her rights; rather it is made to ensure that their costs are covered in the event of a costs order in their favour. So much can be accepted.
55 Fourthly, that Ms Burrows has not satisfied costs orders made in other proceedings. Ms Burrows has not paid the Local Court Judgment or the Costs Judgment. The latter is the subject of the Bankruptcy Notice and the litigation associated with it and by the Supreme Court Fraud Proceeding Ms Burrows seeks to have the District Court Judgment, which led to the Costs Judgment, set aside. Other costs orders have also been made against Ms Burrows in favour of one or more of the respondents, but to date those costs orders have not been quantified. The respondents submitted that was of no consequence because the Costs Judgment, which has been quantified, remains unpaid.
56 The final and principal reason relied on by the respondents is that Ms Burrows has adopted a vexatious mode of conducting litigation.
57 The respondents submitted that the non-payment of the Costs Judgment is itself a manifestation of vexation and that there is also the "opaque and haphazard" content of Ms Burrows' pleading, the form and substance of which is inherently vexatious.
58 In relation to the non-payment of costs orders, as set out above although they have the benefit of other costs orders, the respondents accept that the only quantified costs order is the Costs Judgment. Ms Burrows submitted that she has applied in the Supreme Court Fraud Proceeding to set aside that order on the ground of fraud and that the respondents do not seem to question the bona fides of that claim or to deny that it is reasonably arguable. Ms Burrows submitted that this Court would not exercise its discretion to award security on the basis of an unpaid costs order in an unrelated proceeding where that order is the subject of a reasonably arguable and properly pleaded application to set aside the order on the basis of fraud.
59 Ms Burrows also submitted that by commencing the Supreme Court Fraud Proceeding, even after an unsuccessful appeal to set aside the Costs Judgment, she had followed a procedure expressly endorsed by the High Court in Clone Pty Ltd v Players Pty Ltd (in liq) (2018) 264 CLR 165 such that the proceeding is not somehow vexatious and does not engage any exception to the basic rule. Ms Burrows said that she brought the Supreme Court Fraud Proceeding shortly after new evidence emerged in this proceeding, namely the date on which 298 PL ceased to be an incorporated legal practice, which was material to questions of whether 298 PL was self-represented in the District Court and hence whether it was entitled to recover the professional fees of lawyers who had worked on the matter.
60 In Sywak v Visnic (No 2) [2010] NSWSC 374 Slattery J considered whether an order should be made for security for costs against the plaintiff who was a natural person on the basis that the plaintiff's action is vexatious because he had failed to pay two sets of costs orders owing to the defendant in related proceedings. At [10] Slattery J said:
The non-payment of these prior costs orders is an important logical step in the defendant's argument. The core element of vexation, where a plaintiff sues before satisfying prior costs orders that the defendant has against the plaintiff, may be readily identified. It is to ensure that a plaintiff does not make further use of Court processes, where the plaintiff is already misusing Court processes by failing to honour existing Court orders. Allowing the second case to proceed risks increasing the financial burden upon the defendant, who has already suffered the detriment of unpaid costs orders.
61 To like effect in Mbuzi v Hall [2010] QSC 359 at [68]-[69] Applegarth J said:
[68] As a general rule, the law requires defendants to accept the risk that natural persons who litigate viable claims in good faith for their own benefit might not be able to satisfy an order for costs. However, a claimant who "has adopted a vexatious mode of conducting the litigation" may fall outside the general rule. There may be other processes by which such vexation may be remedied, including a stay of proceedings. Still, where a party has adopted a vexatious mode of conducting the proceedings, the interests of justice in the case may justify an order for security for costs.
[69] The non-payment of existing costs orders may constitute vexation, particularly where the prior costs orders relate to a previous case involving similar disputes. The core element of vexation may be readily identified since "allowing the second case to proceed risks increasing the financial burden upon the defendant, who has already suffered the detriment of unpaid costs orders". The circumstances in which the previous costs orders were made, and the steps taken to have them quantified, assessed and enforced may be relevant. Naturally, any costs orders in favour of the claimant may need to be taken into account.
(Footnotes omitted.)
62 The Supreme Court Fraud Proceeding is in its early stages. The evidence before me disclosed that the defences are yet to be filed and that Ms Burrows has suggested she may wish to bring an application to transfer it to the District Court. In those circumstances I would not infer that the defendants accept that Ms Burrows' claim is reasonably arguable and properly pleaded.
63 In Clone at [2] the High Court said that a court may set aside a perfected judgment for actual fraud. At [32] the High Court noted that generally the appropriate way to proceed on an application to set aside a perfected judgment for actual fraud is to bring a fresh action. There is no dispute that that is what Ms Burrows has done and that she has thereby followed the procedure endorsed by the High Court.
64 But the question before me is whether this proceeding and the circumstances in which it is pursued is vexatious. That is because, to adopt Applegarth J's characterisation, Ms Burrows in pursuing this proceeding "risks increasing the financial burden upon the [respondents], who [have] already suffered the detriment of unpaid costs orders", which in this case is the Costs Judgment.
65 The new fact which emerged and led to the commencement of the Supreme Court Fraud Proceeding was that 298 PL ceased to be an incorporated legal practice on 30 June 2015 while the evidence in the District Court was that this had occurred some three years earlier in 2012. However, the respondents point out that the District Court Proceeding in which Ms Burrows sued 298 PL commenced on 3 November 2015 so that whether 298 PL had ceased to be an incorporated legal practice on 30 June 2015 or in 2012 was immaterial as, either way, it was before the District Court Proceeding had commenced. That is so.
66 Further, as the respondents point out, the further amended defence filed in the District Court Proceeding, which was in evidence before me, was filed for 298 PL, not by it, and its lawyer is Mr Frawley of M&K Lawyers Group Pty Ltd. In other words 298 PL does not appear to have been acting for itself in the District Court Proceeding.
67 Finally, as the respondents submitted, even if Ms Burrows was successful in setting aside the Costs Judgment for fraud, 298 PL would still be entitled to recover its disbursements which, based on the evidence before him, Craig ADCJ quantified in his reasons at $38,651.63.
68 Ms Burrows also referred to the decision in Potier v Attorney-General (NSW) (2015) 89 NSWLR 284 where Leeming JA said (at [125]) that to be vexatious a proceeding needs to be "an abuse of process or lacking in reasonable grounds". However, that proceeding was concerned with the relationship between the Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981 (NSW) and the Vexatious Proceedings Act (2008) (NSW). It is difficult to see how it can assist the Court on this application particularly given that non-payment of existing costs orders may lead to a finding that a subsequent proceeding is vexatious for the purposes of exercising the discretion to order security for costs.
69 The respondents made other submissions in support of their contention that the proceeding is vexatious. They noted that proceedings have been on foot against them, or at least 298 PL, for close to a decade, all of which have their genesis in the Local Court Judgment for approximately $12,000 and in relation to each of which they have incurred costs. The respondents submitted that Ms Burrows' conduct of this proceeding has been particularly vexatious to date noting that there have been two iterations of the statement of claim, failure to engage with and respond to email communications and that the proceeding is likely to be complicated and expensive to run. That there have been two iterations of a statement of claim does not, in my opinion, of itself lead to a finding that a proceeding is vexatious. However, understandably the respondents are concerned that Ms Burrows' approach protracts the proceeding, adding to their costs in circumstances where they are already faced with an outstanding costs order.
70 On balance, having regard to the factors set out above, I am satisfied that an order should be made for Ms Burrows to pay security for the respondents' costs of the proceeding. Although Ms Burrows is an individual, the respondents have demonstrated that she would be unable to meet a costs order if made against her and have established that her approach to this litigation is vexatious. The conduct which leads to that conclusion is her pursuit of this proceeding where she has failed to satisfy an outstanding quantified costs order in a related proceeding involving at least one party in common. All of the subsequent litigation in which the respondents have been involved have sprung from the District Court Proceeding in which the Costs Judgment was given. As the respondents submitted, even if Ms Burrows is not impecunious, based upon her approach to the broader litigation, it appears highly likely that if she is ordered to pay their cost of this proceeding she will not quietly do so.
71 I turn to the question of quantum.
72 The respondents seek $133,398.45 (exclusive of GST) by way of security. Ms Burrows submitted that in doing so the respondents seek a complete indemnity for their costs of the proceeding. That is because the respondents seek by way of security the amount they say they could be entitled to if they successfully defend the proceeding and obtain an order for their costs. In addition, and despite not adducing any evidence to this effect (or making any submission or leading evidence in relation to stultification), Ms Burrows submitted that to order the amount sought by the respondents as security would be unjust because it would "cut [the proceeding] off at the knees".
73 Ms Burrows contended that the Court would infer, based on the way in which the respondents had conducted their application for security, that the estimates provided by them are over estimates and that a significant discount should be applied, of approximately 50%. This was because of the way in which the respondents have conducted the litigation, having filed a significant amount of evidence just prior to the hearing and the fact that there were three solicitors and one graduate-at-law present at the hearing.
74 Other than the 6 February 2020 Email adduced by the respondents (see [32(4)] above), Ms Burrows did not rely upon nor produce any evidence to support the contention that the proceeding would "be cut off at the knees" if an order was made that she pay the amount sought by the respondents as security, or any amount. To the extent she does so, the 6 February 2020 Email is now more than three years old and can only be taken to describe her circumstances as at that time and there is no evidence from Ms Burrows to the effect that her circumstances remain as described in the 6 February 2020 Email.
75 Further, I do not accept that the respondents seek a complete indemnity for their costs. In estimating the respondents' costs Mr Siddle has considered the likely steps in the litigation and time for each step. He has then applied a discount based on the likely recovery on a taxation and adopted the mid-point of 70% recovery. That is, he has done the best he can to provide a fair estimate of likely recoverable fees. Ms Burrows has not led any evidence which challenges Mr Siddle's estimates including as to likely recovery. Accepting that there were four representatives of the respondents present in Court on this application does not lead me to reject or reduce Mr Siddle's estimate. That is because the estimate does not reflect that level of resourcing of this application or any other step in the proceeding. It was prepared on a more modest basis, in terms of resourcing.
76 Ms Burrows has not established that the quantum sought should be reduced in any significant way. I am satisfied that is just that Ms Burrows provide security for the respondents' costs in the sum of $130,000.