CTHFCA
Coumanios v Giunti
[2017] FCA 1449
Federal Court of Australia|2017-12-06|Before: Perry J
View original sourceAt a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2017-12-06
Before
Perry J
Catchwords
- COSTS - no reason to depart from the ordinary rule on costs
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
COSTS - no reason to depart from the ordinary rule on costs
Judgment (4 paragraphs)
[1]
- The applicants are to pay the costs of the first and second respondents as agreed or taxed. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
[2]
- INTRODUCTION 1 The applicants, Frosso Coumanios, Stanley Charles Coumanios and John Coumanios, are former bankrupts. The second respondent, Maxwell Prentice, is the trustee of the bankrupt estates of the former bankrupts (the trustee). The first respondent, Giuseppe Giunti, is a creditor in the bankrupt estates. By the statement of claim, the applicants advanced claims to a number of properties in Greece, as well as to the proceeds of sale by such properties. By the time the matter proceeded to trial, the proprietary claims had been abandoned. However the applicants maintained their claim for the sum of $23,324.64, being the sum realised from the sale of four properties on the island of Lesbos in Greece. The applicants also sought a permanent stay of proceedings against Mr Giunti in Australia and Greece in order to prevent him from realising other properties located in Greece pursuant to orders made by a Greek court for the enforcement of a judgment obtained by Mr Giunti in the District Court of New South Wales against the applicants (the District Court judgment). The District Court judgment pre-dated the bankruptcy and was accepted as a provable debt against the applicants in the bankruptcies. 2 The application was comprehensively dismissed in Coumanios v Giunti [2017] FCA 678 (Coumanios (No. 1)). In my reasons in Coumanios (No. 1) at [80], I expressed the preliminary view that costs should follow the event and therefore that the applicants should pay the first and second respondents' costs but, at their request, afforded the applicants an opportunity to be heard if they wished to contend for a different outcome. The parties subsequently filed submissions on costs, with the applicants contending that the parties should pay their own costs. However, Mr Giunti contends that the applicants should pay his costs on a full indemnity basis on the basis that the applicant had no standing to commence the proceedings and the proceedings were totally misconceived and should never have been commenced. The second respondent contends that there is no reason why the ordinary rule that costs follow the event should not apply. 3 Having considered the parties' submissions, I consider that the applicants should pay the respondents' costs on a party/party basis.