Each promise that a promisor makes to a promisee by entering into a contract with him creates an obligation to perform it owed by the promisor as obligor to the promisee as obligee. If he does not do so voluntarily there are two kinds of remedies which the court can grant to the promisee. It can compel the obligor to pay to the obligee a sum of money to compensate him for the loss that he has sustained as a result of the obligee's failure to perform his obligation. This is the remedy at common law in damages for breach of contract. But there are some kinds of obligation which the court is able to compel the obligor actually to perform. ... But, since a court of common law could make and enforce orders for payment of a sum of money, where the obligation was itself an obligation to pay a sum of money, even a court of common law could compel the obligor to perform it. Historically this was the only remedy which the court would grant at common law when an obligor failed to perform this kind of obligation." ( Moschi , supra, per Lord Diplock at 346-347.)
25 In these proceedings, Mr Checchia sues for damage for breach of contract. Notwithstanding what seems to be the submission of NRMA, those damages do not sound in equity, even though, at one level, the Court is requiring NRMA to perform its obligation under the contract. The performance of its obligation, being the payment of money, is not a specie of specific performance, but a remedy at common law for damages.
26 The foregoing is not intended to suggest that there is no discretion to award interest. Delay and delinquency by the plaintiff are relevant to the extent that they affect the appropriateness of compensating for the time during which the amount has been denied to him. The purposes of MACA are also relevant. Thus the avoidance of fraud is a relevant consideration.
27 Yet, while s 116 and s 117 of MACA disclose a statutory purpose to avoid and deter fraud and dishonesty, s 118 of MACA evidences a statutory purpose that compensation should be paid, even to those guilty of fraud, except to the extent that the fraud has resulted in a benefit. "Fraud" in the foregoing is used to include "fraudulent claims", and false and/or misleading statements, conduct or omissions to which ss 116, 117 and 118 of MACA refer.
Interest
28 The Settlement Agreement, by Clause 5, requires payment of "interest at the rate of 10% per annum for every day after the 21st day from receipt by NRMA Insurance of the last of the documents specified" in the previous clause. There is a mistaken reference to Clause 5 in the body of Clause 5, but, clearly the clause referred to is Clause 4.
29 Clause 5 is inelegantly drafted. The Court will construe it to refer to the documents last received. Somewhat faintly, NRMA submits that Mr Checchia did not provide it with all the information necessary to calculate deductions and, therefore, interest does not run.
30 There are three obvious answers to that submission. Firstly, Clause 4 does not require Mr Checchia to provide anything; it establishes a timeframe for payment based upon the date of receipt of certain documents and information. There is no evidence, which evidence would be solely within the knowledge of NRMA, as to when the receipt occurred.
31 Secondly, the submission of NRMA was that all of the information it needed to calculate the deductions was not supplied. But Clause 4(c), to which that submission refers, requires the receipt of "information", not documents.
32 The only documents to which Clause 4 refers are "the signed Settlement Agreement" and "the signed Health Insurance Commission Notice of Settlement". There is no suggestion that they were not provided by Mr Checchia to NRMA. Further, there is no suggestion that the documents were not provided well before 21 days prior to the date from which interest is sought to be calculated.
33 Thirdly, as has been explained, Mr Checchia is not enforcing the obligation to pay interest under the contract, but has successfully sued for damages for breach of contract and the order for interest issues from the Court, not to enforce any contractual obligation, but to compensate for the period from which Mr Checchia ought to have been recompensed, but did not have use of the funds, to which he was, because of the breach, entitled.
34 Mr Checchia has been denied access to money to which he was entitled, under the contract, and, were Mr Checchia to have taken proceedings immediately, would have been awarded forthwith. He was, on the basis of the principal judgment, entitled to be paid. He was not paid. The grant of interest is part of the compensation for the breach; it is not, and cannot be used as, a punishment for Mr Checchia's earlier misbehaviour: Ruby v Marsh [1975] 32; (1975) 132 CLR 642 at 644; Bennett v Jones (1977) 2 NSWLR 355; Faulkner v Bourke (1990) 19 NSWLR 574; Robb Evans of Robb Evans & Associates v European Bank Ltd (No 2) [2009] NSWCA 170 at [35]-[46].
The obligations of NRMA under MACA
35 NRMA, correctly and appropriately, submits, in answer to both the application for interest and the application for indemnity costs, that it has particular and peculiar obligations imposed upon it under MACA, which obligations require it, as an insurer, to take "all such steps as may be reasonable to deter and prevent the making of fraudulent claims" (s 116 of MACA).
36 It is unnecessary, and probably inappropriate, for the Court to discuss the distinction, if any, between "fraudulent claims" and "a statement knowing that it is false or misleading ... in an accident notification form ..., in a notice of a claim ..., or in the course of the assessment" etc (cf s 116 and s 117 of MACA).
37 For present purposes, the Court shall assume that the obligations, imposed on an insurer, to deter and to prevent the making of fraudulent claims (s 116 of MACA), is equivalent to deterring and preventing the making of a knowingly misleading or false statement in a claim (s 117 of MACA), and/or the doing or omitting to do something knowing it to be false or misleading (s 118 of MACA). On that assumption, there is, at a theoretical level, at least, some force in NRMA's submission.
38 The obligation imposed, in those circumstances, by s 116 of MACA, is an arguably exceptional circumstance to which the Court must give consideration in assessing whether interest should be awarded and whether to award indemnity costs.
39 But the obligation is to deter and to prevent by all reasonable steps. When NRMA learned that Mr Checchia had provided wrong information, upon which it had based its decision to settle the claim for the sum agreed, it was required, assuming NRMA considered the claim fraudulent, to take all steps as were reasonable to ensure that Mr Checchia did not obtain an advantage from the fraud, and, by so doing, deter him and others from behaving likewise.
40 The difficulty, at a practical level, however, is great. On 22 February 2007, Mr Checchia offered to set aside the Settlement Agreement. At that point, if that offer were accepted, NRMA would have ensured that no benefit could be obtained from any fraud or misleading conduct. Its obligation would have been fulfilled, at least in large part.
41 Further, on 12 May 2008, Mr Checchia served an Offer of Compromise, pursuant to Part 20.26 of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (UCPR). The offer was for judgment for Mr Checchia in the sum of $1.0 million, plus interest under s 100 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005, plus costs as agreed or assessed, plus costs of the CARS Proceedings. The offer was open for 28 days.
42 At the hearing, in its submissions to the Court, NRMA submitted that the proper assessment of damage was less than the amount agreed upon in the Settlement Agreement. It referred to hypothetical negotiations with a "frank and truthful" claimant that, in the circumstances of Mr Checchia, might derive a settlement of $745,000. Otherwise, NRMA's assessment of damage, it submitted, was between $300,000 and $600,000. The alleged right not to pay the settlement sum was said to arise under s 118 of MACA. That provision reduced the liability "to the extent of the financial benefit ... obtained" from the misleading or false conduct.
43 The Settlement Agreement was for a sum of $1,225,000 ("the Settlement Sum"), including $40,000 for costs of the CARS proceedings, i.e. the amount of the damages arising under the Settlement Agreement was $1,185,000 (see principal judgment, supra, at [163]). As a consequence, on its best case, NRMA was entitled not to pay $885,000 (the difference between $300,000 and $1,185,000). On the basis of its hypothetical negotiations, it was entitled not to pay the difference between $1,185,000 and $745,000, namely, $440,000. The refusal to pay any part of the Settlement Sum went beyond any right that NRMA possessed and beyond any reasonable step.
44 Further, if NRMA were concerned, genuinely, to ensure that no advantage was gained by Mr Checchia from his conduct that was false and misleading, then that purpose would have been fully satisfied by the acceptance of the offer to rescind the Settlement Agreement.
45 For the above reasons, the Court does not accept that, in the circumstances of this case, NRMA's conduct should be treated, because of NRMA's obligation under s 116 of MACA, in a way that would exempt it from the payment of proper compensation, including, where appropriate, interest and indemnity costs.
Conclusions on interest liability
46 The damages to which Mr Checchia was entitled because of his accident were, at least, the amount of the settlement (principal judgment at [163] and [166]). The Settlement Sum was due for payment on 10 November 2006. The breach was manifest from shortly thereafter.
47 Mr Checchia should be compensated for not having the money from the time he should have. But the Court is not enforcing the interest payment under the contract. The Court, in accordance with the statement of claim, is awarding interest on the damages.
48 As such, interest will be calculated in accordance with s 100 of the Civil Procedure Act and Schedule 5 of the UCPR. The rate in Schedule 5 relates directly only to interest under s 101 of the Civil Procedure Act (i.e. any interest on judgment, not interest prior to judgment), but in the absence of evidence or good reason for a departure from that rate, ought to apply to interest under s 100.
49 The interest order is permitted, because there is no contractual (or other) right to interest on the damages award. Interest under the Settlement Agreement is payable on the Settlement Sum at 10% per annum. The Settlement Sum has not been paid. The Court has ordered payment of damages for the non-payment of the Settlement Sum. Damages are a secondary obligation, arising from breach. The obligation to pay the Settlement Sum was a primary obligation, arising under the contract itself: McDonald, supra; Moschi, supra. These two are conceptually different and s 100(3)(b) is not invoked.
50 If the foregoing be incorrect, the interest would be payable under the contract at the higher rate of 10% per annum, not the 9% per annum prescribed for the relevant periods by Schedule 5.
Indemnity costs and the period for which interest is calculated
51 The award of costs, on the basis of its assessment, is governed by s 98 of the Civil Procedure Act. The discretion reposed in the Court must be exercised judicially and in accordance with the rules.
52 The award of costs is not a punishment; nor is it a reward. It is part of the process of compensation; in this case, compensation for the reasonable costs of enforcing rights.
53 As UCPR 42.1 makes clear, ordinarily, costs follow the event. There is no good reason to depart from that and Mr Checchia is entitled to his costs. Mr Checchia claims those costs should be awarded on an indemnity basis.
54 NRMA opposes such an order. It does so for the following reasons: