Federal Treasury Enterprise (FKP) Sojuzplodoimport v Spirits International B.V.
[2012] FCA 23
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2012-01-25
Before
Edmonds J
Catchwords
- cross-claimant's offer of further security appropriate.
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (51 paragraphs)
Introduction 1 This is a motion on notice filed 23 December 2010 which I heard on 27 September 2011. By the motion, the cross-respondent ('Spirits') sought, inter alia, orders that: (1) The cross-claimants ('FKP') give discovery of documents relating to the separate questions which were the subject of orders made on 26 November 2010 (leave to appeal from those orders having been refused on 20 May 2011: Spirits International B.V. v FKP Sojuzplodoimport [2011] FCAFC 69), by reference to five categories. (2) Leave be granted to Spirits to file and serve an amended defence to the further amended cross-claim in a form previously provided to FKP's solicitors. (3) FKP provide additional security for Spirits' costs in respect of the cross-claim in the sum of $1,200,000 within 14 days of the making of such an order by way of payment into the controlled moneys account maintained by FKP's solicitors. 2 By the time the motion came on for hearing, the orders sought had been, to some extent, overtaken by events: (1) The dispute as to Spirits' categories for discovery by FKP in relation to the separate questions had resolved to this extent: (a) Categories 1 and 2, by consent, were agreed; (b) Category 3 was not pressed; (c) Categories 4 and 5 were still in dispute. During the course of the hearing, senior counsel for Spirits stated that categories 4 and 5 were no longer pressed. In consequence, there is no longer any dispute as to the scope of FKP's discovery of documents relating to the separate questions. (2) The issue as to leave to file further pleadings had resolved to this extent: (a) FKP intends to file a Second Further Amended Cross-Claim which requires leave. Spirits consents to leave being granted on the basis that FKP pay Spirits' costs thrown away by reason of the amendments; (b) FKP accepts that Spirits does not require leave to file a Defence to the Second Further Amended Cross-Claim: see r 16.55 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 ('FCR'); (c) FKP requires leave to file its proposed Reply, certainly insofar as it raises claims that have not previously been pleaded, but Spirits consents to leave being granted on the basis that FKP pay Spirits' costs thrown away by reason of the amendments; (d) Spirits says that it does not require leave to file its proposed Rejoinder in reliance on r 16.08 of the FCR. In my view, the foundation for that contention is wrong or at best attended with considerable doubt. FKP says that leave is required but consents to leave being granted for all but paragraph 3 of the proposed Rejoinder. The hearing in relation to the pleadings was confined to this latter issue, namely, irrespective of whether or not leave was required, whether Spirits should be allowed to rely on its proposed Rejoinder including para 3. The parties took the approach, correctly in my view, that it was within the Court's power to control its own processes and it was in the interests of the efficient management of the case for the issue to be resolved now on the basis of a pleading notionally filed rather than be the subject of a post-filing motion for strike-out or summary dismissal. (3) Spirits' application for the provision of an additional $1,200,000 in security for costs and FKP's opposition to it on the basis that it is significantly in excess of the amount of further security to which Spirits is entitled was the one constant from the time of the filing of the notice of motion in December 2010 until it came on for hearing at the end of September last. FKP did not dispute, in principle, Spirits' entitlement to security for costs in the proceedings. FKP is a party incorporated and resident outside the jurisdiction and there is no suggestion that it has any assets in the jurisdiction. The only issue is the amount of further security to be awarded. FKP offered to pay an additional amount of $300,000, which, when added to the $625,000 previously provided by FKP together with interest of $121,000 exercised on that sum, would bring the total security to $1,046,000, a substantial sum for a matter that has not yet included the preparation of affidavit evidence.