RELEVANT PRINCIPLES
8 The Court has a general power to control its own proceedings pursuant to s 23 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth). The general power enables the Court to order temporary stay of proceedings in various circumstances including where a proceeding is pending in another court and it is desirable that such earlier proceeding proceed to its conclusion before the Federal Court proceeding is determined.
9 The parties advance arguments by reference to a list of considerations collected in Sterling Pharmaceuticals Pty Ltd v The Boots Company (Australia) Pty Ltd (1992) 34 FCR 287. A number of cases in this Court and others have followed the approach taken by Lockhart J in Sterling Pharmaceuticals. Sterling Pharmaceuticals concerned litigation in New Zealand similar to that subsequently commenced in Australia between related parties. The New Zealand litigation had included the dismissal of an application for an interim injunction. Lockhart J noted that 'extensive affidavit evidence was filed' in the New Zealand proceeding. This included a significant number of expert affidavits from witnesses from various countries. Seven interlocutory applications had been heard subsequent to the application for interim injunction relief. Discovery by exchange of lists of documents had occurred and the New Zealand proceeding was expected to occupy some 21 days of hearing and expected to take place before the end of that year. (The application for a stay was heard at the end of February). A stay of the Australian proceeding was sought.
10 Lockhart J noted (at 291):
In my opinion relevant considerations to be taken into account in the present case include the following:
• Which proceeding was commenced first.
• Whether the termination of one proceeding is likely to have a material effect on the other.
• The public interest.
• The undesirability of two courts competing to see which of them determines common facts first.
• Consideration of circumstances relating to witnesses.
• Whether work done on pleadings, particulars, discovery, interrogatories and preparation might be wasted.
• The undesirability of substantial waste of time and effort if it becomes a common practice to bring actions in two courts involving substantially the same issues.
• How far advanced the proceedings are in each court.
• The law should strive against permitting multiplicity of proceedings in relation to similar issues.
• Generally balancing the advantages and disadvantages to each party.
11 Although resolution of the issues in New Zealand or Australia would not have given rise to an issue estoppel in the other country, his Honour observed that it:
… would be quite unreal to regard companies from the same international group as if they were totally independent of each other such that the success or reversal of one of them in proceedings in one country would not materially, as a practical matter, affect the conduct of their associates in another country where the proceedings involve similar issues.
12 The issues in the New Zealand case were not identical with the Australian case but his Honour was satisfied that the basic issue was the same in each proceeding. His Honour noted that resolution of issues in the New Zealand case, unless there was some serious deficiency in the evidence of the unsuccessful party in the New Zealand proceeding, should determine the issues in the Australian proceeding. His Honour went on to say:
Indeed, whether the parties to the Australian proceeding do or do not agree to accept the result of the New Zealand proceeding, this Court will be able to control the future conduct of the Australian proceeding by giving directions with the benefit of the findings in New Zealand which may substantially reduce the scope of the issues in the Australian proceeding, in particular, the medical issues.
13 His Honour referred to the duplication in preparation for the conduct of the two sets of proceedings, inconvenience for expert witnesses and for officers of the respective companies. Both proceedings were public interest proceedings, dealing in part with drug safety claims, rather than proceedings to protect exclusively proprietary rights of corporations. The Australian proceeding commenced 'many months' after the complaint had been made by Sterling Australia against Boots Australia. Sterling Australia received advice in September 1989 as to the conduct of Boots Australia and did not issue any proceeding until November 1991. In the meantime, the New Zealand proceeding had commenced in November 1990 (a year before the Australian proceeding).
14 The significant state of advancement of the New Zealand proceedings and the significant delay of the Australian proceedings in Sterling Pharmaceuticals stand in stark contrast to the circumstances of the present case. The Victorian proceedings are not substantially advanced. They were commenced only a short time prior to the Federal Court proceedings. A complete statement of claim accompanies the Federal Court proceeding and, while the defence to the statement of claim has not been filed, neither has a reply been filed in the Victorian proceedings. No extensive evidence has been filed in the Victorian proceedings unlike the New Zealand proceeding in Sterling Pharmaceuticals. No significant interlocutory disputes have arisen or been determined in the Victorian proceeding.
15 In Sterling Pharmaceuticals, Lockhart J weighed the advantages and disadvantages to each party in the Australian proceeding and concluded that while there should not be a stay, even on a temporary basis, the matters should be stood out of the list to a date later in the year with liberty being reserved to either party to restore the matter to the list on reasonable notice in the event that circumstances changed.
16 The parties, mainly the respondents, have presented arguments by reference to the list in Sterling Pharmaceuticals. Judgments on occasions set out a check list of relevant principles gathered from preceding cases and which may guide the exercise of judicial discretion. That approach is often helpful both for the writer and the reader but more often than not, such a list is accompanied by a caveat perhaps to the effect that the list does not purport to be exhaustive. In this case the description given was that the considerations, in his Honour's view, 'include the following'. The fact that such a list is a non-exhaustive guide accords with the task of exercising judicial discretion and sets it apart from 'ticking off' strictly prescriptive statutory preconditions. There are occasions of which this is one, where few of the elements in such a list have particularly weighty significance in the circumstances. In this case, the infancy of the litigation in both instances is a significant factor.
17 In Union Steamship Co of New Zealand Ltd v The Caradale (1937) 56 CLR 277, Dixon J observed (at 281) in relation to situations involving multiple proceedings with respect to the same subject matter in different courts in Australia that '[t]he inconvenience and embarrassment of allowing two independent actions involving the same question of liability to proceed contemporaneously in different courts needs no elaboration'.
18 However, in that case, Dixon J also declined to grant a stay. Following a ship collision, the owner of one ship commenced an action for damages against the owner of the other in the Supreme Court of Victoria. Shortly after, the owner of the latter ship commenced an action for damages against the former ship in the High Court in its Admiralty jurisdiction. The defendant in the High Court sought to stay the action to enable the responsibility for the damage caused by the collision to be determined in the Supreme Court. Dixon J held that the plaintiff in the High Court was entitled to proceed in rem and was not obliged to assert its claim by counterclaim in the action in the Supreme Court. Dixon J noted that the Admiralty jurisdiction was established for the hearing and determination of kinds of causes of which this case presented an ordinary example.
19 The institution of the action was quite proper. The two actions were begun almost at the same time and the circumstance that the defendant was a little quicker in the actual issue of the writ was not a very substantial consideration. His Honour continued:
The plaintiff brings in an appropriate jurisdiction an action for a very large claim. There are no questions as to the existence or sufficiency of the jurisdiction or as to the mode of trial. The action was instituted for a proper purpose which might not otherwise be achieved. I do not think that the defendant can show any sufficient reason for this court's refusing to try the plaintiff's claim and turning it into the Supreme Court, where the admiralty jurisdiction is in doubt and the mode of trial may prove unsuitable and perhaps other difficulties may be raised. It is not a sufficient reason that the defendant's writ was issued three days earlier and the defendants are now ready to allow the security that they were forced to give by the process of this court to give stand until the conclusion of the proceedings in the Supreme Court.
20 Palmer J observed in J Aron Corporation v Newmont Yandal Operations Pty Ltd [2005] NSWSC 1159, when granting a stay of a second set of proceedings where overlapping issues were raised, that questions of whether or not a temporary stay should be granted were essentially questions of case management. There are a number of cases where stay applications have been refused largely on case management grounds: see, for example, Arkin v Tridon Australia Pty Ltd [2002] FCA 1629 per Heeley J; Owners-Strata Plan No 51487 v Broadsand Pty Ltd (2001) 132 IR 361 per Bryson J. In Broadsand Bryson J said (at [9]) that the reasoning in the various decisions, such as those cited in the present motion, is enmeshed in the facts and circumstances of each case under consideration, and '… in my respectful view the decisions do not establish broad principles, nor do they establish any clear practice or course of proceedings; and it would not be appropriate for them to do so as each matter must be addressed in its own circumstances'.
21 The Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia dismissed an appeal against a refusal to stay in Balescope Pty Ltd v Pegasus Leasing Ltd (1994) 125 ALR 483. In that case, Pegasus instituted proceedings in the Supreme Court of South Australia claiming a sum said to be due on an agreement pursuant to which it alleged that Balescope agreed to lease 14 thoroughbred horses. Six weeks after that, Balescope issued Federal Court proceedings out of the Australian Capital Territory Registry seeking various heads of relief including a declaration that the agreement was void pursuant to s 87 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). Balescope sought an order to stay the South Australian Supreme Court proceedings pending final judgment in the Federal Court action or alternatively, a transfer of the South Australian proceedings to the Federal Court pursuant to the cross-vesting legislation. The motion was dismissed. Perry J followed Gibbs J in Cope Allman (Aust) Ltd v Celermajer (1968) 11 FLR 488 where Gibbs J observed (at 494) 'Before I may decline to exercise jurisdiction and deny to the plaintiff its prima facie right to proceed in this Court I must be satisfied that there would be something amounting to vexation, oppression or injustice to the defendants. I am not so satisfied'. Bolen and Prior JJ agreed with Perry J.
22 The respondents also rely on Henry v Henry (1996) 185 CLR 571 (at 590) and Jeffery & Katauskas Pty Ltd v SST Consulting Pty Ltd (2009) 239 CLR 75. In Henry v Henry, dealing with matrimonial proceedings, the High Court said (at 590) (footnotes omitted):
Parallel proceedings in another country with respect to the same issue may be compared with multiple proceedings with respect to the same subject matter in different courts in Australia. In Union Steamship Co of New Zealand Ltd v The Caradale, Dixon J observed of that latter situation that "[t]he inconvenience and embarrassment of allowing two independent actions involving the same question of liability to proceed contemporaneously in different courts needs no elaboration". From the parties' point of view, there is no less - perhaps, considerably more - inconvenience and embarrassment if the same issue is to be fought in the courts of different countries according to different regimes, very likely permitting of entirely different outcomes.
It is prima facie vexatious and oppressive, in the strict sense of those terms, to commence a second or subsequent action in the courts of this country if an action is already pending with respect to the matter in issue. And although there are cases in which it has been held that it is not prima facie vexatious, in the strict sense of that word, to bring proceedings in different countries, the problems which arise if the identical issue or the same controversy is to be litigated in different countries which have jurisdiction with respect to the matter are such, in our view, that, prima facie, the continuation of one or the other should be seen as vexatious or oppressive within the Voth sense of those words. (emphasis added)