The Stay Issue
57It is clear from the terms of the orders which Hulme J made, which are set out at [16] above, that he stayed the execution of the orders for costs. Hulme J exposed his reasons for that stay order, in his judgment of 5 December 2007: Dubow v Fitness First Australia Pty Ltd [2007] NSWSC 1390, Hulme J said at [25]:
"There is much to be said for the view that the parties' respective entitlements to costs - at least those arising from events in this court - should be set off before payment is required. In these circumstances I am disposed to adhere to the approach taken in my reasons of 14 September but staying any orders for a time so as to enable such set off to be effected prior to payment being made."
58From this paragraph, I derive the conclusion that Hulme J contemplated that there was to be a set-off made between the respective entitlements to costs so that it could be determined that only a single sum was due by either Ms Dubow to FFA, or FFA to Ms Dubow. In other words, the set-off was to be effected before payment was made and hence, necessarily, before any step or steps were taken to execute, or otherwise enforce the Hulme J costs order.
59The costs orders which Hulme J actually made are set out at [16] above. The terms of the orders make plain that the conclusion which I have just expressed was given clear effect to, on the Court's record. The orders were binding on the parties.
60I observe that, in order to enable the set-off to be calculated, it was both necessary, and appropriate, for the reasonable monetary sum of the Hulme J costs order, in the absence of agreement, to be the subject of the costs assessment process and an ultimate determination.
61On 29 June 2009, Ms Dubow sent an email to the Associate to Hulme J which included the following:
"Would it be possible for Justice Hulme to list this matter to consider the finalization of orders so that the Party Party Costs can be assessed"
62On 1 July 2009, there was an exchange of emails between the solicitors for FFA and Ms Dubow. In her email, Ms Dubow wrote in part:
"The orders as they currently stand are stayed in relation to the costs payable by Fitness First: there is also the incomplete orders as to time for which Fitness First is entitled to set off costs."
63Although in the second part of that sentence there seems to be some doubt about the effect of the provision for set-off in Hulme J's orders, the terms of the email make it absolutely clear that Ms Dubow knew of, and appreciated the effect of the order made by Hulme J staying the costs order which he had made.
64The application foreshadowed in the email of 29 June 2009 did not proceed, apparently because Ms Dubow was informed that if she wished to have the stay lifted, it would be necessary for her to file a notice of motion.
65I further observe that the terms of this email sent by Ms Dubow, make it quite clear that she was aware that the stay of the Hulme J costs order subsisted.
66On 8 November 2010, Ms Dubow filed a notice of motion in the Hulme J proceedings (which was dated 30 September 2010). The notice of motion sought the removal of the stay of the orders made by Hulme J. It was this notice of motion which was ultimately dismissed by consent on 22 February 2011 by the Registrar.
67Also filed on that day was an affidavit of Ms Dubow in support of the notice of motion. In that affidavit, Ms Dubow deposed to the fact that she was at court on 5 December 2007 when orders were first made by Hulme J. This statement confirms my earlier conclusion that she was aware, at all relevant times, that those orders included a stay of the execution of the costs order. Ms Dubow also deposed that she was not aware of the content of the February 2008 orders until 18 February 2010. However, the formalising of the orders which occurred in February 2008 did not effect any change to the stay of the Hulme J costs order.
68It was common ground before me that Hulme J has not made any order that the stay imposed, initially in December 2007, and then in February 2008, be lifted. It was also common ground before me that no other judge of the Supreme Court has made an order providing for that stay to come to an end. As well, it is clear that the parties have not filed any consent order providing that the stay of the Hulme J costs order, come to an end.
69In the context of this apparently clear state of the orders of this Court, Ms Dubow submitted to me that the stay had in fact come to an end, as a consequence of the operation of the costs assessment process, so that when the Costs Certificates were issued, this carried the consequence that the stay had come to an end because the Certificates were capable of being filed, without more in the Supreme Court, or any other court of competent jurisdiction, and thereupon they became registered as a judgment. Ms Dubow argued that the effect of this was that since judgment could be obtained, the certificate of the Costs Assessor amounted to an order of the Court terminating the stay.
70I reject that view. It is simply erroneous, because it fails to take account of the fact that the costs assessment process is not carried on by, nor is it a process which is any part of the Supreme Court, unless there is an appeal to the Supreme Court initiated by one of the parties in accordance with statute.
71The system and procedures for the assessment of cost is created by statute. Part 3.2 of the Legal Profession Act contains the relevant statutory provisions.
72Section 301 of the Legal Profession Act records as one of the purposes of Part 3.2, this:
"(d) to provide a mechanism for the assessment of legal costs and the setting aside of certain costs agreements."
73In the circumstances which existed, as a result of the Hulme J costs order, Ms Dubow was entitled, by s 353 of the Legal Profession Act , to apply to the Manager, Costs Assessment " for an assessment of the whole of, or any part of ..." the costs ordered to be paid to her by FFA. She did so.
74The provisions of Division II of Part 3.2 of the Legal Profession Act are then engaged by such an application. The statute provides for how the assessment is to be undertaken, by whom and against which criteria. The provisions of Subdivision 3 of Division 11 have particular relevance because they deal specifically with the assessment of party/party costs ordered to be paid by a court or tribunal.
75Section 372 provides that the determination by a costs assessor is binding on all parties. It limits any appeal from such a determination to that provided by the Legal Profession Act itself. Subdivision 6 permits an appeal against the decision of a costs assessor, as of right on a matter of law, to the District Court. A broader appeal, which is by way of a rehearing, is permitted with the leave of the District Court, or else of the court or tribunal which made the order for costs.
76The undertaking of a costs assessment is carried out by costs assessors who are appointed in accordance with the Legal Profession Act , and upon appointment are subject to the provisions of Schedule 5. Costs assessors have only those functions conferred on them by and under the Legal Profession Act .
77Section 390(4) of the Legal Profession Act is of particular importance. It provides:
"(4) A costs assessor is not an officer of the Supreme Court when acting as a costs assessor."
78The management of the costs assessment process falls to the Manager, Costs Assessment. Section 4 of the Legal Profession Act defines the term, Manager, Costs Assessment, when used in Division II of Part 3.2 as:
"...the person holding office as Manager, Costs Assessment in the Attorney-General's Department, and includes a delegate of that person."
79The Manager, Costs Assessment, and each of the appointed costs assessors, are not, in their respective capacities an officer of, nor are they a part of the Supreme Court. They are not judicial officers.
80The conduct and decisions of the Manager, Costs Assessment and the costs assessors in the whole of the costs assessment process are subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court: Hall Chadwick v Doyle [2006] NSWSC 1195 at [72]-[73]; Cassegrain v CTK Engineering [2008] NSWSC 457; Khan v Jenni Mattila & Co Lawyers [2011] NSWSC 71.
81This review of the statutory provisions by which the cost assessment process is undertaken, leads to these shortly stated conclusions:
(1)the costs assessment process is a creature entirely of statute: Legal Profession Act ;
(2)a costs assessor whilst exercising his or her statutory functions, is not an officer of the Supreme Court;
(3)the costs assessment process is not a process which involves the exercise of the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court;
(4)none of the steps taken in the course of a costs assessment process, including the issuing of a Certificate of Determination, amount to the making of any judicial order, let alone an order of the Supreme Court;
(5)the determination of a costs assessor embodied in a Certificate is not an order of the Supreme Court.
82Accordingly, the submission of Ms Dubow that the fact of the issuing of the Costs Certificates and the fact that they were sent to her by the Manager, Costs Assessment, either separately or jointly, amounted to a " further order " of the kind embodied in the order of Hulme J, so as to have the effect of lifting the stay imposed by him, is wrong and must be rejected.
83In the result, the stay of the enforcement of the costs orders, as ordered by Hulme J still subsists, and Ms Dubow was not entitled to take any step to enforce the Hulme J costs order. This meant that the filing of the Costs Certificates in both the Local Court and the Supreme Court was in breach of the stay ordered by Hulme J. Such benefit as she has obtained by the obtaining of the judgments in her favour in both courts has been obtained in contravention of the stay order of Hulme J.
84FFA is entitled to relief from this conduct.