61 In cases where an offer of compromise was made, appendices AB and AC made provision for variable caps on professional costs by reference to the definitions of Cap A, Cap B and Cap C at r 2.01A. In addition, disbursements may be awarded for the expenses of witnesses or interpreters by r 2.11. There is no provision which allows for variation of any of the specified amounts for professional fees, which it will be noticed is for the professional fees of solicitors and counsel.
62 The power to award costs is of course a creature of statute. The general power in the case of the Magistrates' Court is conferred by s 131 of the Magistrates' Court Act which relevantly provides:
Costs to be in the discretion of the Court
(1) The costs of, and incidental to, all proceedings in the Court are in the discretion of the Court and the Court has full power to determine by whom, to whom and to what extent the costs are to be paid.
(2) Subsection (1) applies unless it is otherwise expressly provided by this or any other Act or by the Rules or the regulations.
…
63 Before the judicial registrar, counsel for the applicant advanced three reasons in support of the submission that the applicant's costs should not be capped. In order: the long procedural history, the contractual entitlement to costs and a general submission that Mr Warren defended the matter contrary to ss 18, 19 and 25 of the Civil Procedure Act 2010 (Vic). The first does not engage with s 105, if properly construed it operates as a costs cap in arbitration proceedings. The second was put on the basis that the contractual entitlement "is not capped by the arbitration scale." The difficulty with that submission is that it overlooks that contractual provisions to receive costs do not displace the discretionary power to award costs: Stuart v Rabobank Australia Ltd (No 2) [2021] FCA 1626 (Rabobank) at [7]-[20] (Halley J). Further, it does not engage with how the contractual provision operated to displace s 105 of the Magistrates' Court Act.
64 As to the Civil Procedure Act provisions, s 16 imposes a paramount duty which is owed to the court to further the administration of justice in civil proceedings. This duty forms one of the overarching obligations set out ss 16-26, and which apply to, amongst others, a party to civil proceedings: ss 10-15. In summary, the obligations are to act honestly (s 17), not to advance claims or defences that are frivolous, vexatious or an abuse of process (s 18), not to take any step in a proceeding absent a reasonable belief that the step is necessary to facilitate the resolution or determination of the proceeding (s 19), to cooperate in the conduct of the proceeding (s 20), not to mislead or deceive (s 21), to use reasonable endeavours to resolve the dispute (s 22), to use reasonable endeavours to narrow the issues in dispute (s 23), to ensure that costs are reasonable and proportionate (s 24) and to minimise delay (s 25).
65 A contravention of the overarching obligations may be considered by the court as provided at s 28:
Court may take contravention of overarching obligations into account
(1) In exercising any power in relation to a civil proceeding, a court may take into account any contravention of the overarching obligations.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), in exercising its discretion as to costs, a court may take into account any contravention of the overarching obligations.
66 For contravention of an overarching obligation, there is a specific costs sanction at s 29 which relevantly provides:
Court may make certain orders
(1) If a court is satisfied that, on the balance of probabilities, a person has contravened any overarching obligation, the court may make any order it considers appropriate in the interests of justice including, but not limited to -
(a) an order that the person pay some or all of the legal costs or other costs or expenses of any person arising from the contravention of the overarching obligation;
(b) an order that the legal costs or other costs or expenses of any person be payable immediately and be enforceable immediately;
….
(3) This section does not limit any other power of a court to make any order, including any order as to costs.
67 Section 30 provides that an application for an order under s 29 is to be made to the court in which the civil proceeding is heard and in accordance with the rules of the court. There is no corresponding rule in the General Rules or the Miscellaneous Rules. In any event, the substantive question is, if the effect of s 105 of the Magistrates' Court Act is to impose a costs cap in arbitration proceedings, whether it is displaced by s 29 of the Civil Procedure Act.
68 The approach to the construction of the legislative scheme is settled: SZTAL v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] HCA 34; 262 CLR 362 at [14] (Kiefel CJ, Nettle and Gordon JJ):
The starting point for the ascertainment of the meaning of a statutory provision is the text of the statute whilst, at the same time, regard is had to its context and purpose. Context should be regarded at this first stage and not at some later stage and it should be regarded in its widest sense. This is not to deny the importance of the natural and ordinary meaning of a word, namely how it is ordinarily understood in discourse, to the process of construction. Considerations of context and purpose simply recognise that, understood in its statutory, historical or other context, some other meaning of a word may be suggested, and so too, if its ordinary meaning is not consistent with the statutory purpose, that meaning must be rejected.
(Footnotes omitted.)
69 The scheme of Div 2 of Pt 5 of the Magistrates' Court Act is clear. The starting point is that small civil claims for monetary relief of less than $10,000 must be dealt with by arbitration. Arbitration is expressed to be a less formal procedure for the resolution of small claims. It is not a requirement that an award be accompanied by reasons, though reasons may be requested and, if so, must be provided for the making of an award. If an amount is awarded that is less than $500, the court must not award costs unless special circumstances exist. For awards of more than $500, the court "may" award costs to a party but only in accordance with the relevant rules: s 105(2).
70 Although this power is conferred permissively it is one that is expressly constrained by the content of relevant regulations or rules. One then turns to r 2.08 of the Miscellaneous Rules. The textual constraint upon exercise of the power is clear. Where no offer of compromise is served in a proceeding referred to arbitration the discretion to award professional costs is constrained by the amounts specified in Appendix AA. The discretion is subordinated to an award "in accordance with" the stepped items in the table.
71 These provisions do not expressly confer any power to make an award that differs from the stepped items where the only scope for variation is provided by the table, and not by the court. Further, in my view these provisions are structured to deny any implication that s 105(2) operates to confer an implied power to bypass Appendix AA. What is clear from s 131(2) is that the general discretionary power to award costs is subordinate to express provisions to the contrary in the Magistrates' Court Act, or by Rules or Regulations. The Anthony Horden construction principle is expressly enacted in this statutory scheme: Anthony Horden and Sons Ltd v The Amalgamated Clothing and Allied Trades Union of Australia (1932) 47 CLR 1 at 7 (Gavan Duffy CJ and Dixon J).
72 Cost capping by legislation is a familiar technique, common in personal injury claims, reflecting the policy concern that legal costs should be proportionate to the complexity and quantum of claims. The Victorian legislative scheme has received judicial attention in two cases. Initially the Magistrates' Court Civil Procedure Rules 1989 (Vic) did not make provision for an award of costs in cases where no monetary amount was awarded, primarily where a claim was dismissed. In that circumstance, s 105 did not restrain the exercise of the costs discretion: Taylor v Hartley, unreported Supreme Court of Victoria, 1 December 1992 and Karmine Pty Ltd v Zambelli, unreported Supreme Court of Victoria, 15 August 1994 (Zambelli). That issue is now addressed in Appendix AA of the Miscellaneous Rules, which makes provision for cases where the award is only for costs. Subject to that, in Zambelli, Ashley J at p 5 observed of s 105(2):
The opening words do not mean that every factual situation apropos costs which may arise in an arbitration is described in sub-section (1). Rather, they mean that, subject to sub-section (1) - if it has application - the quantum of costs is to be determined in a particular fashion. So, if there are relevant regulations, costs are to be awarded in accordance therewith; if there are no such regulations, then the costs are to be awarded "in accordance with the rules". It would be open to regulations to prescribe the costs to be awarded in favour of successful defendants. But, as O'Bryan J concluded in Taylor v Hartley, the regulations do not do so. That could be an accidental omission. More probably it reflects the legislature's intent that the costs inhibitions of s 105(1) and (2) should only operate in respect of the costs of a successful plaintiff. Whatever be the explanation, clear it is that the regulations are silent as to the costs which may be awarded to a successful defendant.
In short, then, s 105 (1) does not apply to circumscribe the power of the Magistrates' Court to award costs to a successful defendant to a claim (or counterclaim) determined by way of arbitration. Further, the broad discretion as to costs vested in the Magistrates' Court by s 105(2) is not, in the case of a successful defendant, inhibited by the limiting effect of the regulations.
73 The reasoning of Ashley J accords with the interpretation that I have concluded is applicable to s 105 when read with the Miscellaneous Rules in that it operates as a restraint on the exercise of the discretionary power of the Magistrates' Court in arbitration proceedings. It is a costs cap that does not of itself admit discretionary variation.
74 This interpretation conforms with the legislative history and purpose disclosed by Parliament in the extrinsic materials.
75 Commencing with the legislative history. The arbitration provisions were first introduced by the Courts (Further Amendments) Act 1986 (Vic) which inserted Part VIIIA into the Magistrates' Court's Act 1971 (Vic). Part 1 of the Courts (Further Amendments) Act stated the purposes of the Act as including: "to make provision for certain complaints in Magistrates' Courts to be referred to arbitration". Section 72A provided that the Magistrates' Court "must not hear and determine a complaint" for monetary relief less than $3,000 unless the complaint has been referred to arbitration. Section 72B provided for the informal conduct of arbitrations by a magistrate in terms similar to s 103 of the present provision in the Magistrates' Court Act. Section 72D dealt with costs, which "may be awarded" to a party but not if the award was less than $500 "unless special circumstances make it desirable to do so."
76 The amendments were reviewed in light of concerns about legal representation and the attendant costs of arbitration: see generally the discussion by Douglas R and Laster L, Reforming the People's Court: Victorian Magistrates' Reactions to Change (published March 1992, available at www.aic.gov.au) at 69-71. The Magistrates' Court's Bill 1989 (Vic) was tabled in the House of Assembly and read a seco6nd time on 23 March 1989. As introduced, cl 105 of the arbitration division provided:
(1). The Court may, in an arbitration (including an arbitration in which no notice of defence is given), award costs in respect of the whole or part of the issue and service fees paid by the successful party but, subject to sub-section (2), the parties to the arbitration must otherwise bear their own costs.
(2) If the Court is satisfied that special circumstances make it appropriate to do so, it may make any order as to costs that it thinks just.
77 This provision is to be understood in the context of cl 103(4) which proposed that a party must appear in person in an arbitration except where the party is a body corporate or if it appears to the court "that representation by an agent is necessary". Clause 103(5) proposed that the court "must not approve" as an agent, a barrister or solicitor of the Supreme Court absent the agreement of the other parties and satisfaction of the court "that no other party to the arbitration is thereby unfairly disadvantaged".
78 In the second reading speech (Victoria, Parliamentary Debates, Legislative Assembly, 23 March 1989 at 487) the Attorney-General, Mr McCutcheon, relevantly said:
The government's main purpose in reforming the Magistrates' Courts is to achieve greater access for all Victorians to the court system.
Two years ago we introduced a system of arbitration into the courts. We agreed at the time that it would be reviewed after two years. This review has been done by my department and it indicates to me that the system of arbitration has not been as effective in achieving our objectives of low-cost access to the courts as we would have liked. In response to this review, the government has decided to amend the provisions relating to arbitration in the courts to be in line with the Small Claims Tribunal. In future all civil matters under $5000 must go to arbitration in the courts will be prevented from granting costs unless there are exceptional circumstances…
Although the government has some concern about eliminating legal representation, we believe people can represent themselves in these matters as they usually relate to questions of fact, rather than to law. A magistrate acting as a referee, in our view, is better at assessing who caused an accident and is far less intimidating than a legal representative who cross-examines witnesses…
79 The proposal to exclude lawyers met with resistance, which is recorded in the second reading speech in the Legislative Council and the subsequent debate: Victoria, Parliamentary Debates, Legislative Council 26 May 1989 from 1279. In summary, the opposition objected to the clause excluding a right of legal representation in arbitration proceedings before the Magistrates' Court. Mr W R Baxter said:
The amendments that will be moved in the Committee stage are the result of negotiations and will put a cost cap on those matters that go to arbitration, which accord with the scale that is accepted by the Law Institute of Victoria.
80 The deliberations of the House in Committee are recorded from page 1287. Clause 103 was amended to delete the limitation upon representation by a legal practitioner. Clause 105 was deleted and replaced with its current form. Mr Walker speaking for the government, who moved the amendment motion, having specified its terms, said:
The intention of this new clause is to provide a mechanism to put a cap on costs the court may award in arbitration proceedings.
81 The opposition members agreed and speaking for the opposition, Mr Baxter said:
The National Party supports the new clause. I reiterate the view I expressed during the second-reading debate about the costs involved in appearances before the court generally, and in particular where small amounts are involved, are of great concern to me, and the proposal for it meets with the approval of the National Party.
I have had discussions with the Law Institute of Victoria and the original suggestion was that the amendment should be included in the Bill.
…
Where the amount of monetary relief awarded is under $500, the amount of costs will be nil, which is the current situation for arbitration proceedings, so there has been no change. Where the amount awarded is between $500 and $3000, the amount of costs will be $500; and from $3000-$5000, the amount of $600 will be the maximum that can be awarded by the court. To my mind, the figures are reasonable but significantly less than is usually awarded at present.
The Law Institute of Victoria has been realistic and generous in agreeing to the amounts. Provided procedures can be put in place for arbitration hearings in Magistrates' courts to streamline matters and enable cases to be heard expeditiously, these cost caps which are included in new clause AA will cause little difficulty for the legal profession.
82 My excursion into the legislative history establishes two matters. The mischief addressed by Parliament was that minor civil claims must be the subject of a streamlined and costs-efficient arbitration procedure in the Magistrates' Court and that central to achieving this goal was the costs cap if legal practitioners were to have a right of appearance. And the purpose of cl 105 was to set a cap on the amount of costs that the Magistrates' Court may award as determined by relevant rules or regulations. Although costs capping may be considered a blunt instrument, the mechanism is a recognised one to ensure that legal costs are proportionate: generally, see the explanation of Mason P in Newcastle City Council v McShane (No 3) [2005] NSWCA 437; 65 NSWLR 155 at [25]-[30].
83 That leaves for consideration the further issue of whether the Civil Procedure Act provisions, in particular the costs provisions at s 29, displace the constraint of s 105 of the Magistrates' Court Act. Section 1 states the purposes of the Civil Procedure Act as including to reform and modernise the laws, practice, procedures, and processes relating to civil proceedings, including in the Magistrates' Court, to apply the overarching obligations "to improve standards of conduct in litigation" and to expand "the powers of the courts in relation to costs in relation to civil proceedings." By s 4 the Act applies to all civil proceedings, save for certain types of proceedings under various statutes, not including the arbitration provisions of the Magistrates' Court Act. It does not by s 4(4) apply to any proceeding under a prescribed Act. There is no relevant prescription.
84 Sections 28 and 29 of the Civil Procedure Act must be read with the cost provisions at Pt 4.5, ss 65A-65E of which s 65C provides in part:
Other costs orders
(1) In addition to any other power a court may have in relation to costs, a court may make any order as to costs it considers appropriate to further the overarching purpose.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the order may -
(a) make different awards of costs in relation to different parts of a proceeding or up to or from a specified stage of the proceeding;
(b) order that parties bear costs as specified proportions of costs;
(c) award a party costs in a specified sum or amount;
(d) fix or cap recoverable costs in advance.
…
85 Then s 65E expressly addresses the interrelationship of these provisions with other costs powers and relevantly provides:
Interaction with other powers of court
(1) Nothing in this Part limits any power a court may have -
(a) to award costs in a proceeding -
(i) in the case of the Supreme Court, under section 24 of the Supreme Court Act 1986 or any rules of court; or
(ii) in the case of the County Court, under section 78A of the County Court Act 1958 or any rules of court; or
(iii) in the case of the Magistrates' Court, under section 131 of the Magistrates' Court Act 1989 or any rules of court;
…
86 I received supplementary written submissions from Mr Gladwin that the costs order made by the judicial registrar is supported by ss 28, 29 and 65C of the Civil Procedure Act. My attention is drawn to a decision of Magistrate Grainger in Buyer Central Pty Ltd v Sodhi [2021] VMC 22, where her Honour appears to have assumed that the arbitration costs cap may be bypassed by the making of a costs order pursuant to s 29 of the Civil Procedure Act. It is not apparent from the decision whether the point was argued and, in any event, her Honour did not exercise the s 29 power, the reasoning is obiter and there are difficulties with it.
87 On one view, ss 28 and 29 are of no application to s 105 because whilst it confers discretionary power to make a costs order, it circumscribes the quantum that may be awarded, so as to preclude an award of costs in a larger sum pursuant to s 28(2) or s 29(1). The reason is that each assumes that there is a discretion to be exercised. Another matter is that s 65E by expressly referencing the general costs discretion at s 131 of the Magistrates' Court Act, by necessary implication does not affect the operation of s 105 in arbitration proceedings. These views do not seem to be affected by s 106A of the Magistrates' Court Act because the intent of this provision is to make it clear that the arbitration provisions are not affected by and do not derogate from Chapter 5 of the Civil Procedure Act, which is concerned with "Appropriate dispute resolution" including arbitration. Indeed, the fact that s 106A deals with one aspect of the Civil Procedure Act which is not concerned with the costs of an arbitration proceeding, tends against a construction that s 105 is not self-contained.
88 In any event, whether those propositions should be preferred, instead of a broader interpretation to the effect that if there is a breach of the overarching obligations then the costs cap at s 105 is disapplied, is ultimately not a matter that I must decide in determining whether a substantial issue has arisen on the question whether in truth and in reality Mr Warren is liable for the costs component of the order as amended for a number of reasons. The first is that no distinct application was made to the Judicial Registrar under s 30 for an order pursuant to s 29. That is not a mere matter of form, as exercise of the discrete costs power at ss 28(2) and 29(1) requires a conclusion that the person the subject of the application has contravened an overarching obligation, about which the court must be satisfied on the balance of probabilities. There must be some specification of a contravention and finding to that effect. Whilst it is true that counsel for the applicant asserted before the judicial registrar that Mr Warren's defence was contrary to the Civil Procedure Act, beyond the broad submission that the defence was raised simply to delay, there was no identification of how the two defences that the judicial registrar rejected in her reasons, were relied upon by Mr Warren in breach of the Civil Procedure Act's overarching obligations.
89 The second is that the judicial registrar made no finding that Mr Warren had contravened any one or more of the overarching obligations in order to engage the costs discretion at ss 28(2), 29(1) or 65C of the Civil Procedure Act.
90 The third is that it is plainly apparent from the reasons of the judicial registrar that she considered the contractual entitlement was sufficient to bypass the costs cap at s 105 of the Magistrates' Court Act. That conclusion inevitably flows from the reasons given by the judicial registrar upon considering the contractual clause when she said: "having looked at that clause that seems tight so I will accept those submissions" whereupon she then moved to the question of quantum. In my view the contractual provision was incapable of displacing the statutory cap as, if it is open to litigants to contract out of the statutory cap, Parliament's purpose is defeated. Moreover, there is simply no basis to construe s 105 as conferring a statutory power to exercise a costs discretion by reference to a conflicting contractual provision. It is not open to the parties to confer a power which the statute denies.
91 Later, when the judicial registrar stated that "on reflection I think the court does have a discretion", there was a failure to identify its source. The compelling inference is that, not having based her decision on a finding that Mr Warren breached one or more of his overarching obligations, the judicial registrar must have considered that she had a general discretion to make a different costs order by reference to the general power at s 131 of the Magistrates' Court Act. For the reasons that I have explained that provision does not confer power to bypass the explicit requirements of s 105.
92 The fourth is that to the extent that contractual clauses may operate on general discretionary statutory costs powers (assuming the application of the Civil Procedure Act provisions inconsistently with s 105), the obligation is to take the provision into account, not simply act in obedience to it: Rabobank at [12]-[14] and Dal Pont GE, Law of Costs (3rd ed, LexisNexis, 2013) at [15.41] where the author states:
The effect of a clause purporting to entitle a litigant to costs quantified on other than the party and party basis must be understood. As superior courts are vested with the discretion to award costs, the parties cannot oust that discretion by contract. To uncritically give effect to such a term is to fetter the court's discretion.
(Footnotes omitted.)
93 A fortiori that observation applies to inferior courts of limited jurisdiction. Whilst in the next sentence Professor Dal Pont observes that "the bulk of authority" is to the effect that if the agreement is valid and enforceable, it will be given effect to, the judicial registrar in this matter did not proceed in that way. The costs application submissions were accepted because of the conclusion that the contractual clause "seems tight". The judicial registrar did not turn her mind to how that clause was relevant to contravention of the overarching obligations to engage any separate costs discretion conferred by the Civil Procedure Act.
94 For these reasons I have concluded that there are substantial reasons to enliven my discretion to look behind the judgment debt that the petitioning creditor relies upon, limited to the liability of Mr Warren for the costs component of $7,732.57. For the same reasons, the discretion to do so should be exercised although the steps are indistinguishable in this matter. No further hearing is required to resolve whether I am satisfied the petitioning creditor has provided satisfactory proof that there is in truth and reality a judgment debt due to it by Mr Warren as claimed in the amended Creditor's Petition in the amount of $11,190.67. The matter has been fully argued before me, over several days and I have afforded every opportunity to the petitioning creditor and to Mr Warren to provide full written submissions in support of their respective positions. The issues that I have raised do not turn upon an evidentiary analysis beyond the documents that I have referred to.
95 For the reasons I have given, I am not satisfied as required by s 52 of the Bankruptcy Act that there is owing by Mr Warren to the petitioning creditor a debt that exceeds the statutory minimum of $10,000 as a prerequisite to the presentation of the creditor's petition pursuant to s 44 of the Bankruptcy Act because I am not satisfied that in reality the petitioning creditor has established that Mr Warren is liable for the costs component of the amended order. Put simply, the petitioning creditor has not satisfied me that it was open to the Judicial Registrar to make the costs order. It is no answer to submit as Mr Gladwin does, that Mr Warren has not adduced evidence that he is solvent. That may have been an important consideration if the applicant had established an entitlement to present the creditor's petition, based on a debt at or exceeding the statutory minimum.
96 It follows that the creditor's petition must be dismissed, and the sequestration order made by a registrar of this Court on 16 February 2023 must be set aside. That leaves a large question about the costs of the creditor's petition and the costs of the administration thus far incurred by the trustee. The parties and the trustee should be heard, particularly by reference to the decisions of the Full Court in Bechara v Bates [2021] FCAFC 34; 286 FCR 166 and Porter v Ghasemi [2021] FCAFC 144; 286 FCR 556.