THE FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
6 On 6 October 2017 the application for approval of the proposed settlement of the class action came before the Court. It became clear in the course of the hearing that the applicants were not ready to proceed with all parts of the application. Accordingly I heard the parts of the application which concerned whether the quantum and terms of the settlement were fair and reasonable, and adjourned the balance of the application to 16 November 2017.
7 The balance of the application included the following 'personal' claims made by Caason and/or Wise Plan:
(a) Caason and Wise Plan sought orders for $80,073.88 and $76,708.27 respectively, payable from the settlement fund, to reimburse them for time they claimed to have spent prosecuting the case on behalf of the class (the Representative Costs Claim, although called "the Reimbursement Claims" in Caason (No 2)); and
(b) Caason and Wise Plan sought orders for payment of amounts from the Funder, pursuant to side agreements they entered into with the Funder to vary their funding agreements (the Variation Letters). Under the Variation Letters they were entitled to reimbursement of their "reasonable costs for [their] own legal, accounting and administrative work" including the time of senior company officers to be calculated at specified hourly rates (the Variation Letter Costs Claims). Caason and Wise Plan did not particularise the amounts claimed at that point but they subsequently claimed $1,014,644.37 and $116,260.14, respectively; and
(c) Caason sought an equitable set-off of its Variation Letter Costs Claim against input tax credits (GST refunds) it had received for GST on legal invoices paid by the Funder on its behalf. Caason had claimed GST refunds from the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) for the periods up to 30 June 2017 and had been paid a total of approximately $397,251.51. It had also claimed a further amount of approximately $220,385 from the ATO which had not yet been accepted. Under the funding agreement and the Variation Letter, Caason was obliged to remit to the Funder any GST refunds it had received within seven days of receipt or crediting, but it failed to do so. Caason argued that the Funder had agreed that it could offset the GST refunds against its Variation Letter Costs Claim, which agreement the Funder denied. Further, at the time of the 16 November 2017 hearing the ATO was conducting an audit of Caason's entitlement to claim GST refunds in relation to the legal costs paid by the Funder in the proceeding (the ATO review) and it had not yet made a decision as to Caason's entitlement (the GST Refunds Issue). Subject to the outcome of the ATO review, Caason proposed to lodge further claims for GST refunds of $80,072.66 once the review was complete.
8 There was a substantial overlap between the applicants' Representative Costs Claims and Variation Letter Costs Claims because both sought reimbursement of costs and expenses the applicants claimed to have incurred in acting as the applicants in the proceeding. The Representative Costs Claims were more modest in quantum (at least initially) and claimed against the settlement fund whereas the Variation Letter Costs Claims were claimed from the Funder.
9 Insofar as the applicants made claims against the settlement fund, in my preliminary view there was a conflict between their personal interest in maximising the amount of Representative Costs which were to be deducted from the settlement fund and paid to them, and their fiduciary obligations to act in the class members' interests. Class members' interests lay in minimising the deduction for Representative Costs or at least in ensuring that only fair and reasonable deductions were allowed. There was not however a conflict of interest in relation to the applicants' Variation Letter Costs Claims because they were made against the Funder rather than the settlement fund, and those claims therefore did not impinge upon class members' interests.
10 At the hearing on 6 October 2017 counsel for the applicants submitted that for the purposes of their 'personal' claims the applicants should have their own legal representation for the adjourned hearing. I accepted that submission and set a timetable for the applicants to put on any further evidence and submissions in relation to those claims. On 18 October 2017 I made orders:
(a) giving leave to the applicants to be separately represented for the purposes of their personal claims;
(b) requiring that by 3 November 2017:
(i) the applicants file and serve any evidence and submissions in support of any Variation Letter Costs Claim, additional to their Representative Costs claims;
(ii) Caason file and serve any evidence and submissions in support of any claim to retain any part of the GST refunds it had received from the ATO; and
(iii) the applicants file and serve any evidence and submissions in respect of the contractual or other relationship between them and the Funder under the Variation Letters and its bearing if any on the case;
(c) requiring that by 8 November 2017 the Funder file and serve any evidence and submissions in response; and
(d) listing the applicants' personal claims for hearing on 16 November 2017.
11 The applicants did not comply with the orders to file further evidence and submissions in support of their Variation Letter Costs Claims, and they were not ready to proceed with those claims on 16 November 2017. In those circumstances, on 16 November 2017 I heard the balance of the settlement approval application, and adjourned the applicants' Variation Letter Costs Claims to 19 February 2018.
12 On 6 December 2017 I made orders (the 6 December 2017 Orders) to, amongst other things:
(a) approve the settlement of $19.25 million, inclusive of costs, and the Settlement Distribution Scheme (the Scheme);
(b) appoint Ms Amanda Banton of Squire Patton Boggs as the Scheme Administrator;
(c) approve the applicants' legal costs of the proceeding and the estimate of the Scheme administration costs, and their deduction from the Scheme fund;
(d) approve a common fund order and the deduction of a reasonable funding commission from the settlement fund; and
(e) approve an allowance of $150,000 to cover the costs of the Scheme Administrator if it decided to challenge any decision in the ATO review to the effect that Caason was not entitled to claim and/or retain the relevant GST refunds.
13 The 6 December 2017 orders dealt with the applicants' personal claims in the following ways.
14 First, in relation to the applicants' Representative Costs Claims, orders 10(c) and (d) approved Caason's and Wise Plan's Representative Costs Claims in the reduced amounts of $26,730 and $22,513 respectively, as well as allowing an amount to be agreed or later determined by the Court for the reasonable "costs of and incidental to" their application for approval of the Representative Costs: see Caason No 2 at [175] to [212].
15 Second, in relation to the applicants' Variation Letter Costs Claims, the applicants were not ready to proceed with those claims. In any event they contended that the Court did not have jurisdiction to decide the claims as they were merely contractual claims between them and the Funder. In the alternative, they submitted that the Court should allow Caason an equitable set off of its obligation to remit GST refunds to the Funder against its Variation Letter Costs Claims. I also submitted that the Court should not decide the Variation Letter Costs Claims because that dispute would be more appropriately resolved by way of a pleaded claim commenced by one of them in another court.
16 I held that the Court possessed jurisdiction to decide the Variation Letter Costs Claims because they arose from the same substratum of facts and legal issues as the underlying justiciable controversy in the settlement approval application and that there were good reasons for the Court to hear and decide them: see Caason (No 2) at [237]-[258]. Because the applicants were again not ready to proceed with their Variation Letter Costs Claims, I adjourned those claims for hearing on 19 February 2018.
17 Third, I rejected Caason's application for an equitable set-off of its obligation to remit to the Funder the relevant GST refunds it had received against its Variation Letter Costs Claim. I ordered Caason to pay the $397,251.51 in GST refunds it had received to the Scheme Administrator, to be held on trust pending the result of the ATO review. Depending upon the result of the ATO review the orders provided for any relevant GST refunds Caason received to be: (a) returned to Caason; (b) paid directly to the ATO; or (c) paid into the settlement fund to form part of the monies for distribution to the class members: see Caason (No 2) at [259]-[272].
18 On 20 December 2017 Caason sought leave to appeal from the 6 December 2017 Orders. The proposed appeal was limited to certain findings in relation to its personal claims and raised two central questions:
(a) whether the Court erred in deciding that it had jurisdiction to determine questions about the respective rights and obligations of Caason and the Funder in respect of Caason's Variation Letter Costs Claim and the GST Refund Issue; and
(b) if the Court did have jurisdiction to determine those questions, whether it erred in its exercise of discretion in making the relevant orders, including to refuse the equitable set off.
19 As a result of the appeal the 19 February 2018 hearing date for the Variation Letter Costs Claims was required to be adjourned sine die.
20 In an affidavit made 21 December 2017 in relation to the appeal, Mr Astill deposed that while Caason had net assets well in excess of $397,251.51, it had insufficient liquid assets or cash on hand to satisfy the order for it to pay that amount to the Scheme Administrator, either in whole or any substantive part, and that external financing was necessary if the order was to be satisfied.
21 Subsequently the Funder sought security for its costs of the appeal. It obtained security by way of an undertaking from Caason which was recorded in the chapeau to orders made in the appeal on 27 April 2018, as follows:
Upon the Court noting an undertaking given by Caason Investments Pty Ltd (Caason) to the Court to take all necessary steps to permit [the Funder] to call on the Scheme Administrator to pay any adverse costs order made in the application for leave to appeal (or in the appeal proper) in favour of [the Funder] out of the distribution to be made by the Scheme Administrator to Caason, up to the sum of $36,730, which distribution is to take priority over Caason's damages entitlement and reimbursement costs.
22 On 18 June 2018 the Full Court allowed the application for leave to appeal but dismissed the appeal. On 18 October 2018 the Full Court published its reasons for judgment: see Caason Investments Pty Ltd v International Litigation Partners No.3 Ltd [2018] FCAFC 176; (2018) 265 FCR 487 (Caason Appeal).
23 On 19 June 2018, the ATO wrote to Caason and set out its proposed decision in the ATO review. In the proposed decision the ATO concluded that Caason was not entitled to claim GST refunds in relation to legal costs paid by the Funder in the proceeding, but invited Caason to make further submissions in that regard.
24 On 16 July 2018 Caason lodged a further submission with the ATO in which it reiterated various matters which it said supported its entitlement to claim relevant input tax credits. There was then further correspondence between the ATO, Caason and the Scheme Administrator in relation to the GST Refunds Issue through the balance of 2018.
25 On 18 October 2018, following delivery of reasons for judgment in the Caason Appeal, there was an exchange of emails between Mr Andrew Sutherland, a Principal of Russells, the solicitor for the Funder, and Mr Andrew Brown, a partner of Mills Oakley, the solicitor for Caason:
(a) at 4.06 pm Mr Sutherland said:
I refer to the reasons published this morning. We need to resolve the outstanding differences between our respective clients. Can you let me know what steps your client now intends to take? I assume you agree that the matter should be relisted and dealt with.
(b) at 4:30 pm Mr Brown responded by stating that Caason wished to pursue its claim for Variation Letter Costs, which costs he said were still being run up including because Caason had engaged accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC) to assist it to deal with the ATO. He said that once the GST issue had been resolved those costs could be quantified and the Variation Letter Costs Claims could be listed for hearing;
(c) at 5:17 pm Mr Sutherland responded and said:
Dear Andrew
So there is no misunderstanding, our client does not accept that it is in any way liable for PWC's fees (or any other costs). Our client has had no knowledge of their involvement, nor any understanding of their scope of works, estimated charge hourly rates and the like. Our client's approval was not sought nor even the courtesy of being told.
It will not be meeting those fees.
(d) at 5:34 pm Mr Brown said:
Andrew
Your client's default position seems to be that it is not liable for any costs that my client has incurred. I don't recall that the side letter contained an obligation to seek approval before any costs were incurred. The engagement of PwC was done with a view to maximising the return to group members.
I suspect that the question of the PwC fees will be a question for Murphy J in due course.
26 Although the Caason Appeal was dismissed in June 2018 and reasons for judgment handed down in October 2018, by December 2018 the applicants had still not applied to list the Variation Letter Costs Claim for hearing. In light of this I listed the proceeding for a case management hearing on 10 December 2018.
27 The applicants did not appear at that hearing and they provided no explanation for their non-appearance. Counsel for the Scheme Administrator informed the Court that the applicants now sought to claim various substantial further amounts from the settlement fund, including legal and accounting costs incurred by Caason through the ATO review. That was a new 'personal' claim against the settlement fund which had not previously been advanced.
28 The Scheme Administrator sought orders for this new personal claim to be heard and decided as soon as possible so that settlement distribution could proceed. On 10 December 2018 I made timetabling orders pursuant to which the applicants were required to file and serve any interlocutory application they wished to make and any evidence upon which they wished to rely in relation to any further amounts they claimed from the settlement fund by 8 February 2019 (the 10 December 2018 Orders). I listed the application for hearing on 26 February 2019.
29 On 15 January 2019, the ATO issued a final decision to Caason, in which it affirmed its earlier position that Caason was not entitled to claim the relevant GST refunds. The ATO issued a Notice of Amended Assessments to Caason to reflect that decision.
30 Following on from this, Caason advised the Scheme Administrator by email on 21 January 2019 that:
Unless you intend to pursue an appeal my instructions are that Caason cannot take this further having spent a lot of money and done everything possible to try and get the ATO to accept that the GST on the SPB invoices should be refunded…
31 Neither Caason nor Wise Plan complied with the 10 December 2018 Orders by filing an interlocutory application and evidence in support of their new personal claim by 8 February 2019.
32 On 19 February 2019 I made orders by consent to vary the 10 December 2018 Orders, including a 'guillotine' order requiring the applicants to file and serve any application and supporting evidence in respect of any further amounts they claimed from the settlement fund by 1 March 2019, after which date they could not do so without leave. I listed the application for hearing on 21 March 2019.
33 On 1 March 2019 the applicants filed an interlocutory application in relation to their claims for further payments from the Scheme fund (the 1 March 2019 Application). I heard that application on 21 March 2019. During the course of and after the hearing the parties attempted to settle the dispute, as part of which Caason agreed to provide further material to the Scheme Administrator. On 26 March 2019 Squire Patton Boggs (SPB) for the Scheme Administrator sent an email to chambers setting out the arrangements agreed between the parties.
34 On 27 March 2019 Mr Richard Flory, Caason's General Counsel, emailed the Scheme Administrator seeking an extension of time to provide further material and the Scheme Administrator declined to provide an extension. On 29 March 2019 the Scheme Administrator emailed Chambers stating that Caason had not complied with the agreed arrangements for the provision of further material and sought that the Court determine the 1 March 2019 Application.
35 However, given the substantial overlap between the applicants' claims in the 1 March 2019 Application and their Variation Letter Costs Claims, I decided it would be more efficient to delay deciding the 1 March 2019 Application until the Variation Letter Costs Claims had also been heard and the two matters could be decided at the same time.
36 Accordingly I directed the parties to confer and endeavour to agree on a timetable for evidence in the Variation Letter Costs Claims, which I proposed to list in late July. Mr Flory informed the Court that Caason was "quite happy to [pursue its Variation Letter Costs Claim] within the timetable" proposed. I made it clear to the applicants that this was their last chance to agitate their Variation Letter Costs Claims and that a failure to comply with the timetable would have consequences.
37 The parties provided similar draft orders to chambers on 25 March 2019 and on 3 April 2019 I made orders timetabling the Variation Letter Costs Claims, including guillotine orders in Orders 3 and 4 (the 3 April 2019 Orders). Those orders relevantly provided:
1 International Litigation Partners No. 3 Pte Ltd (ILP) has leave to intervene in these proceedings, until further order of the Court.
2 By 3 May 2019, the first plaintiff (Caason) and second plaintiff (Wise Plan) are each to:
(a) file and serve any Interlocutory Application it wishes to make, along with any further affidavits in support of such application, in relation to costs claimed under its "variation letter" agreement with ILP; and
(b) if it files and serves such Interlocutory Application, identify in writing to ILP's solicitor (by email to asutherland@russellssydneypartners.com.au) any affidavits or exhibits previously filed or served in the proceedings upon which it also intends to rely at the hearing of the application.
3 In the event that Caason or Wise Plan does not file and serve, by 3 May 2019, and the Interlocutory Application in accordance with Order 2 above, it may not, after that date file or serve any such application (of the kind contemplated in Order 2) without first obtaining leave of the Court.
4 In the event that Caason or Wise Plan files and serves an Interlocutory Application in accordance with Order 2 above, it may not rely, at the hearing of that application, on any affidavits or exhibits not filed and served, or identified in writing to ILP's solicitor, in accordance with Order 2 without first obtaining, in advance of the application hearing, leave of the Court.
…
I listed the Variation Letter Costs Claims for hearing on 25 and 26 July 2019, and Chambers sent the orders to the parties under cover of an email which stated that the Court was not prepared to further relax the timetable.
38 On 3 May 2019 Wise Plan filed an interlocutory application and affidavit in support of its Variation Letter Costs Claim.
39 Caason did not file an interlocutory application by the 3 May 2019 deadline for compliance. On 16 May 2019 it purported to file and serve an interlocutory application but, by operation of the guillotine orders, it required leave before it could file the application. Caason subsequently sought leave to file the application and I listed that application for hearing on 22 May 2019. For the reasons I explain, I refused to grant Caason leave to file the application.
40 At that stage Wise Plan's Variation Letter Costs Claim remained on foot, but subsequently chambers were notified that the claim had been settled. On 22 July 2019 I made orders, by consent, to dismiss Wise Plan's interlocutory application with no order as to costs.