Chronology of events leading up to the PIA
32 Mr Hartnett was the former principal of the law firm Hartnett Lawyers.
33 Relevant background relating to the debt owed by Mr Hartnett to Mr Bell is contained in the headnote of the decision of Bell v Hartnett Lawyers (No 3) (2022) 112 NSWLR 463; [2022] NSWSC 1204 (Bell CJ, Adamson JA and Griffiths AJA) (emphasis omitted):
In late 2013, Mrs Mabel Deakin-Bell (Mabel or the mortgagor) died. Under her will, Mr Anthony Robert Bell (the Respondent), was left a property which was subject to a $30,000 mortgage to the late Ms Gwendoline Deakin-Bell (Gwendoline or the mortgagee).
From 2014, Mr Beau Timothy John Hartnett (the Appellant) acted for Gwendoline in seeking to enforce the mortgage. The only evidence of a costs agreement between the Appellant and Gwendoline was an unsigned copy of an agreement which gave a costs estimate of $3,900 to $6,400. That agreement, which purported to be issued "pursuant to the requirement of the Legal Profession Act 2007", contained a clause allowing the charge of an "uplift fee" of 25%, said to be because the Appellant's fees would only become payable upon sale of the property or his ceasing to act for Gwendoline.
On 2 December 2014, Gwendoline commenced proceedings against the Respondent in the Supreme Court of New South Wales seeking possession of the property and payment of the mortgage together with interest and costs, said to amount to $34,683.19 by 14 November 2014 (the Possession Proceedings). These proceedings were ultimately undefended and, on 29 April 2016, orders were made by Davies J for possession and sale of the property. By this time, a series of invoices amounting to approximately $77,200 had been prepared by the Appellant, although there was no evidence that they had been sent to Gwendoline.
On 5 September 2016, the Appellant wrote to the NSW Trustee and Guardian (as the Respondent had not yet obtained probate of Mabel's will), giving an estimate of costs "in the range of $220,000.00-$240,000.00", excluding the real estate agent's commission for sale of the property. On 30 September 2016, the Appellant again wrote to the NSW Trustee and Guardian, advising that the previous estimate did not include the uplift fee nor GST, and that his revised estimate was "in the range of $302,500.00 - $330,000.00." On 1 October 2016, the property was sold at auction for $376,000. The net proceeds of sale were $352,137.02.
On 17 November 2016, Gwendoline signed a document entitled "Specific Trust Account Authority", which authorised payment to her of $39,089.57, payment to Hartnett Lawyers of $288,601.03, and payment of the balance ($33,834.45) to the Supreme Court of New South Wales, pursuant to the orders of 29 April 2016. The payment to the Supreme Court was not made.
The Respondent obtained probate of Mabel's will on 29 November 2016. The Appellant and Respondent thereafter engaged in protracted correspondence in which the Respondent attempted to obtain copies of invoices and amounts charged by the Appellant. This correspondence also involved various complaints by the Respondent to the Legal Services Commissioner of Queensland. The Appellant never provided copies of invoices or amounts charged. Indeed, he took steps actively to dissuade the Respondent from inquiring further, including writing several letters to the Respondent's lawyers in which the Appellant threatened (ostensibly on behalf of his client, Gwendoline) to seek the revocation of the Respondent's grant of probate over Mabel's estate.
Eventually, on 9 January 2018, the Respondent sought a costs assessment in the Possession Proceedings. The Appellant did not ultimately engage in the costs assessment process on behalf of Gwendoline, and it was finalised on 24 May 2018, with the assessor, Mr Christopher Wall, determining a total amount payable of $37,345.50 (the Wall Assessment). Gwendoline died on 31 May 2018.
After further protracted correspondence, on 1 September 2020, the Respondent filed a Summons in the Equity Division in which he sought a declaration that the Appellant held the amount of $287,551.30 as trustee for him, together with an order that the Appellant pay him the amount of $287,551.30 (the Equity Proceedings). Equitable compensation was also sought together with interest, costs and such "further other orders as are appropriate in the circumstances of the case." Certain interlocutory relief was also sought.
On 26 April 2021, Slattery J re-opened the Possession Proceedings. In a further judgment delivered on 12 October 2021 (the second Slattery J judgment), his Honour declined to join the Appellant to the Possession Proceedings, holding that the Appellant "was still amenable to the Court's supervision" pursuant to its inherent supervisory jurisdiction. On 11 November 2021, Slattery J made orders for the filing of a "points of claim" by the Respondent, and a reply and "points of defence" by the Appellant, identifying how this Court's inherent jurisdiction was said to be engaged. These were duly filed, and the two documents identified case numbers for both the Possession Proceedings and the Equity Proceedings. On 16 December 2021, Slattery J ordered that these documents "shall be taken to be pleadings" in both the Possession and Equity Proceedings.
On 7 December 2021, the Appellant filed a Notice of Motion seeking to have both the Equity Proceedings and the Possession Proceedings removed to this Court, on the basis that the Court's disciplinary jurisdiction had been engaged.
That Notice of Motion was dismissed.
On 8 September 2022, Peden J (the primary judge) delivered judgment. Her Honour relevantly ordered, in the Equity Proceedings, the payment by the Appellant of $251,255.53 to the Respondent, which was the difference between the amount the Appellant had been paid and the Wall Assessment.
34 By that decision, Mr Hartnett's appeal from the decision of Peden J was dismissed with costs on 12 October 2023, with Bell CJ observing at [131] that, "[e]xorbitant charging debases the reputation of the legal profession as well as subjecting clients or others involved in litigation to unwarranted costs".
35 Mr Hartnett had given an undertaking to the Court of Appeal on 9 November 2022 that he would not dispose, dissipate or otherwise deal with any assets for which he has an interest in, including company assets where he is a director and shareholder up to the unencumbered value of $311,356.47, on certain terms. In Beau Timothy John Hartnett trading as Hartnett Lawyers v Anthony Robert Bell as Executor of the Estate of the late Mabel Dawn Deakin-Bell (No 2) (2023) 113 NSWLR 381; [2023] NSWCA 311, Mr Hartnett was the appellant, and Mr Bell was the respondent. By that decision, Bell CJ and Adamson JA made the following orders:
(1) Order the appellant to pay the respondent's costs, as ordered on 12 October 2023, in the gross sum of $70,000.
(2) Order the appellant to pay the respondent's costs of the notice of motion filed on 2 November 2023 in the gross sum of $5,000.
(3) Order that the sum of $30,000 paid into court by the appellant and received by the Court on 8 December 2022 be released to the respondent forthwith to be applied in accordance with s 136 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW).
(4) Note that the appellant will not be in breach of the undertaking given to the court by his counsel on 9 November 2022 (the Undertaking) if he pays the following sums into the respondent's solicitor's trust account:
(a) $311,356.47;
(b) post-judgment interest of $28,858.29;
(c) $70,000 (as ordered in order (1) above); and
(d) $5,000 (as ordered in order (2) above).
(5) If and when the appellant pays the amounts set out in order (4) above, he is discharged from the Undertaking.
36 Between 15 December 2023 and 23 January 2024, Mr Bell pursued Mr Hartnett for the amounts owing to him. Mr Bell received no payment from Mr Hartnett.
37 On 22 December 2023, Mr Bell served a bankruptcy notice on Mr Hartnett in relation to judgment debts for sums totalling $340,006.
38 On that same day, Mr Hartnett sought pre-insolvency advice from SV Partners about a possible appointment under Part X of the Bankruptcy Act.
39 On 24 January 2024, Mr Bell filed a creditor's petition, which was listed for hearing on 5 March 2024.
40 On 1 March 2024, Mr Hartnett appointed the Controlling Trustees, themselves officers of SV Partners, under s 188 of the Bankruptcy Act, and provided a statement of his affairs and a draft proposal for dealing with his affairs under Part X of the Bankruptcy Act.
41 Mr Hartnett's statement of affairs dated 1 March 2024 identified the following creditors:
(1) Hartnett Legal Services Pty Ltd in the amount of $3,718,800;
(2) Mr Bell in the amount of $584,589;
(3) Walsh Accountants in the amount of $1,628;
(4) MPB Investments Pty Ltd in the amount of $550; and
(5) Henry House & Home in the amount of $1,500.
42 On 5 March 2024, the Controlling Trustees issued an initial notice to creditors. The following creditors subsequently lodged Statements of Claim in the period between 7 March 2024 and 15 April 2024:
Date Creditor Amount
7 March 2024 Mr Bell $585,899.19
10 April 2024 MPB Investments Pty Ltd ATF MPB Property Trust (MPB Investments) $550
10 April 2024 Ben McCallum-Henry ATF McCallum-Henry Family Trust (McCallum-Henry) $1,500
12 April 2024 Hartnett Legal Services Pty Ltd ATF Hartnett Service Trust (Hartnett Service Trust) $3,688,067
12 April 2024 Walsh Accountants (Walsh Accountants) $1,628
15 April 2024 Arawak Holdings Pty Ltd ACN 157 865 195 (Arawak) $143,913.11