Should each party bear their own costs?
22 It is convenient to consider first the applicant's contention that each party should bear their own costs. His counsel advanced four considerations in favour of this contention:
(a) the proceedings involved claims for breaches of human rights and had a "significant public interest dimension";
(b) the proceedings were in the nature of a test case;
(c) the proceedings had been properly commenced and maintained; and
(d) the respondents' rejection of his own settlement offers.
23 In support of the submission that the proceedings involved claims for breaches of human rights having a public interest dimension, counsel for the applicant referred to Delta Electricity v Blue Mountains Conservation Society Inc [2010] NSWCA 263 and to Oshlack. In relation to Oshlack, I understood counsel to be referring to the considerations to which Gordon and Gummow JJ referred at [20]; to which McHugh J referred at [49]; and to which Kirby J referred at [137]-[139]. In relation to Delta Electricity, I understood counsel to be referring to the principles emerging from the authorities to which Basten JA referred at [55]-[62]. Counsel could also have referred to the decision of Mortimer J in DBE17 v Commonwealth of Australia (No 2) [2018] FCA 1793.
24 The difficulty with this submission of the applicant is that the human rights claim which he pursued, i.e, the claim of racial discrimination, did not, on any reasonable view, have reasonable prospects of success and should have been recognised as such. With respect to those representing the applicant, both the pleading of that claim and its pursuit seemed to have been ill thought out. That became particularly evident during the final submissions when counsel had difficulty in articulating a realistic factual basis upon which it could be found that the impugned conduct of the respondents had been based on race: see the Principal Judgment at [708]-[774].
25 The fact that proceedings are brought as a test case with a view to determining the position for other litigants with like claims can, in some circumstances, be relevant to the exercise of the cost discretion: Commissioner of Australian Federal Police v Zhang (No 2) [2016] VSCA 191; (2016) 310 FLR 482 at [17]. However, the suggestion that the applicant brought his proceedings as a test case of this kind has not been supported by evidence. So far as the Court is aware, it was raised for the first time in counsel's submissions concerning costs. There had been no previous indication that either party regarded the proceedings as a test case and, with due respect to counsel, the manner in which the proceedings were conducted did not suggest that they were of that kind. Moreover, the fact that a substantial class action had been commenced in the Court by different solicitors (Jenkings v Northern Territory of Australia Action NTD64/2016) before the applicant commenced his proceedings on 26 May 2017 seems to militate against a view that this action was regarded as a test case. There was some, but by no means substantial, overlap between the applicant's claim and the claims in the class action.
26 The reasoning applied by the Court of Appeal in The State of Western Australia v Collard [2015] WASCA 86 is apposite presently. The Court (Buss, Newnes and Murphy JJA) said:
[60] … In our view, the circumstances of this case could not be considered to be of the 'rare and exceptional character' that might justify a departure from the usual order as to costs … The claim was brought primarily to advance the respondents' private interests. It raised some novel issues of importance to those Aboriginal people who had been made wards of the State in similar circumstances and their parents, but that did not sufficiently distinguish it from other litigation commonly before the courts that clarifies the law for the benefit of third parties.
(Citation omitted)
27 In submitting that the proceedings had been properly commenced and maintained, counsel referred to the applicant's statutory right to commence the proceedings granted by s 46PO of the Australian Human Rights Commission Act 1986 (Cth) (the AHRC Act). He also submitted that "these proceedings made a claim which could not be properly articulated as a representative action in other proceedings".
28 I accept that the ability to bring proceedings granted by s 46PO is an important element in the armoury for the enforcement of human rights and should not be lightly circumscribed. However, the applicant had, as a minimum, to be able to establish an arguable basis upon which he alleged the human right involved (the right not to be subject to racial discrimination) had been contravened. In my view, it should have been apparent that this claim was not reasonably arguable. As indicated above, the racial discrimination claim of the applicant seems to have been ill thought out.
29 There are other matters bearing upon the merit of the submission that the proceedings had been properly commenced and maintained. The most obvious is that the applicant was not a reliable witness and, as the Principal Judgment indicates (at [56]), there were several matters on which his evidence was not accepted. On some matters the applicant must have known that he had given misleading accounts, e.g, his account of his conduct in the Boxing Day incident.
30 There is in addition the remarkable development on the afternoon of the last day of trial when counsel for the applicant abandoned the claims for an extension of time in which the applicant could commence the proceedings. As I noted in the Principal Judgment at [897], this was an astonishing development in the trial. Even now, it has not been properly explained.
31 Finally, I refer to the submission of counsel concerning the respondents' rejection of the applicant's offers of settlement. Counsel submitted:
[20] Fourthly, the rejection of the Applicant's cost offers in circumstances where the Respondents knew that the Applicant was a prisoner and had been so since a child demonstrates that the Respondents were unconcerned about the costs of defending these proceedings. That fact calls for explanation. None is offered. In particular, no attempt is made to tell the Court that these proceedings were not being used by the Respondents as a vehicle to test their defences in advance of the representative proceedings to follow.
[21] The Court is entitled to find that the Applicant made two reasonable offers of settlement which were rejected and the reason why the Respondents elected to defend these proceedings at trial is not explained. The inference is that the Respondents wished to test the Applicant's claims. As a test case, it is open to the Court to make an order that, apart from the existing costs orders, each party should pay their own costs.
32 Given that the applicant failed in the proceeding altogether, I decline to attach significance to the respondents' rejection of the applicant's costs offers. It could hardly be said to have been unreasonable in those circumstances for the respondents to have wished "to test the applicant's claims". Moreover, a wish to test the applicant's claims does not mean that this action was a "test case". I also observe that the applicant's offer involved the respondents paying the whole of his party-party costs (other than those which had been the subject of interlocutory orders) despite the applicant himself recovering only a modest sum. These costs appear to have been substantial so that the applicant's overall offer cannot be regarded as modest.
33 In the circumstances, there is no reason for the Court not to exercise the costs discretion in the usual way by requiring the applicant, as the unsuccessful party, to pay the respondents' costs of the action.
34 There remains the question of the scale on which the applicant should pay those costs.