First Item
19 I start with the $1,400 item in respect of the expert report of Bryant Mazaraki Murphy Pty Ltd.
20 First, it is appropriate that I record what Hulme J said in his judgment of 3 July 1997 concerning the origin of the report:
"In support of the claim that allowance should be made for Mr Blake to be accommodated in premises acquired or adapted for Mr Blake there was prepared and tendered a report from an architect, Mr Mazaraki. On this topic I said:-
"The claim for a purpose-built residence is quantified in accordance with a report of a Mr Mazaraki in the sum of $237,316. In his report Mr Mazaraki costed two residences. One consisted principally of three bedrooms, a living room, dining room, kitchen, laundry, bathroom, hall, entry and garage. It was of brick veneer construction and cost $724 per square metre.
The second included a housekeeper's flat, a nurses' or carers' room where equipment for Mr Blake's care could be accommodated, a larger main bedroom for wheelchair use and attendant access, an ensuite bathroom designed to an Australian standard and to allow for trolley access, a much larger garage, wider passages and larger spaces for better mobility between items of furniture. Its construction was in cavity brick to resist wheelchair impact. The cost per square metre was $824. The cost of the former house was estimated at $96,709, the cost of the second at $334,025 and the difference of $237,316 is the Plaintiff's claim.
Mr Mazaraki was not cross-examined nor was any competing report tendered by the Defendant. So far as my notes record no submissions were advanced by the Defendant against my acceptance of the evidence contained in Mr Mazaraki's report if I took the view that accommodation in his own residence was appropriate for the Plaintiff.
Notwithstanding this approach by the Defendant I am not prepared to include in the Plaintiff's damages under this heading anything like the amount claimed. The Plaintiff is for all practical purposes immobile. He is presently carried in some fashion from his bedroom to a bathroom and to what I may call an exercise and feeding room. There is no evidence which indicates that he himself needs significantly greater facilities than these although the evidence of Miss Wilson is that his existing accommodation is cluttered and, at least in part, too small. I accept that the Plaintiff's bedroom and bathroom need to be bigger than usual. The exercise room may well also need to be somewhat larger than a main bedroom or lounge room of average size. Obviously the means of access between these rooms should be wider than a normal doorway and access from those rooms to the outside of the house should follow suit.
But apart from such matters I do not see any need for a residence in which the Plaintiff can be looked after on his own to be any different from many ordinary houses. Obviously the house must be easily accessible by wheelchair but, with minimal alteration many houses are. The claim as advanced is in my view ridiculous.
Mr Mazaraki's report included arguments against the alteration of an existing residence. Some of these no doubt have some validity in some situations but it requires no knowledge beyond that of the community generally to recognise that the addition of "granny flats" is by no means an unknown phenomenon in Sydney. A "granny flat" to accommodate the Plaintiff might well be larger than usual but again many homes have quite sufficient land for this.
Given the absence of debate on this topic during the course of the hearing I think I should be willing to hear the parties further on the topic of the appropriate quantum of any allowance for a private residence for the Plaintiff. However, my tentative inclination is that the appropriate amount is a sum of $67,500. this is calculated by adopting Mr Mazaraki's $824 per square metre, multiplying this figure by 57.6 square metres being the area allowed by him for the Plaintiff's bedroom and ensuite (3.6m x 8m) and adding a similar area for an exercise room and storage, adding a sum of $10,000 for contingencies and a similar amount for consultant's fees and escalation."
My offer to hear the parties further was not taken up.
In my reasons of 11 December 1995 also I observed that there was a deal of duplication in the documentation on the topic of the cost of accommodation for the Plaintiff and that the work involved in its preparation must have been significantly more than was necessary or appropriate to the facts of the case. I also took into account the effect on the Defendant's costs an excess of zeal on the Plaintiff's side of the record would have had." (at pp3-5).
21 To that should be added what Hulme J said at pages 15-18 of that judgment omitting less relevant matters:
"Firstly, given the nature of adversarial litigation it is appropriate and indeed necessary for solicitors engaging in such an exercise to ensure that any claim made and the evidence obtained in support do not sell their clients short by reason of being too little. In this regard I do not intend by anything I say to suggest that any nice judgment is required, error in which lays a solicitor open to the risks of an order for costs being made against him. Nevertheless, it is incumbent on solicitors to ensure that any claim bears a reasonable relationship to the facts of a case as those facts are known to the solicitor. The duty solicitors owe to the Court and to their clients may at times require them to take steps to check or have checked information given to them. The duty requires them to exercise a reasonable degree of care in the giving of instructions to experts such as Mr Mazaraki to ensure that the task undertaken by the experts is itself one which has a reasonable relationship to those facts. After all, someone will have to face the costs of an expert's work and in many if not most cases a response from the opposite side in the litigation can be expected to be influenced by the terms of any report served .
Secondly, I accept that there is considerable scope for the exercise of judgment in the formulation and in the method of preparation of cases and that the test is not whether, particularly with the benefit of hindsight, that formulation or preparation should or could have been done differently and less expensively.
………
Turning to Mr Mazaraki's report, it was clearly appropriate for the solicitor to make a claim in the proceedings for the cost of accommodation for Mr Blake and in that connection to obtain a report from someone such as Mr Mazaraki. However that is not the issue. The issue concerns the extent of the claim made, and of the report from Mr Mazaraki. It was submitted that the approach of the Defendant's legal representatives to which I have referred in the passage quoted argues, if it does not demonstrate, that the approach taken by the Plaintiff's solicitors and Mr Mazaraki was justified and that the Plaintiff's solicitor would have been guilty of professional negligence if he had not advanced the claim as he did. I agree that the approach of the Defendant's legal advisers is a factor to which I should have regard. However it cannot be determinative. I must make my own judgment.
Reconsideration has not caused me to depart in any way from the views I have previously expressed. The claim that the Plaintiff's accommodation needs were such as to justify a new and purpose built house and that he should therefore recover the cost of that, to the extent to which it exceeded the cost of a more modest and, one might say, usual standard residence was not justified. I do not mean by that it failed. Its bringing was not justified by the facts the solicitor must have known.
To the extent to which costs were incurred as a result of what may be described in the extravagance in the claim they should in my view be laid at the solicitor's door. However, that some accommodation claim and report from Mr Mazaraki was justified means that it is only those extra costs which should be treated in that way.
Rule 66 enables me to seek a report from a taxing officer before making any order under the rule. However that if the Court can deal with the matter on its own the Court should do so. The costs and expenditure of resources involved in the obtaining of such a report, even if some greater reliability in the quantification of amounts involved, is not unlikely to exceed the benefits of greater precision. In this case there is enough material before me to make what I regard as a proper order although in light of the fact that I feel unable at this stage to adopt this approach to the other matters, I will refer this matter also for taxation or assessment if the solicitor desires me to do so.
Mr Mazaraki's firm charged $4078 for three reports including $1400 for the report with which I have the greatest concern, that of 24 April 1994. To that sum there were added amounts for interest. The interest rate since 30 September 1994 seems to have been about 14%. The approach taken by Mr Mazaraki involved him in costing two residences, each larger than the accommodation which Mr Blake reasonably needed and this topic took up about 6 pages of a 13 page report. The balance of the report contains some introductory material, about 2 pages of material copied from an earlier report and deals also with ongoing costs. Some of the latter reflects aspects of the claim I regard as extravagant. I have no doubt that the vast bulk of work reflected in the $1400 charged was the work I regard as unnecessary. ….." [emphasis added]
22 The actual report is to be found in Addendum A to the White Book at 2. The report is prepared by an undoubted expert architect on the accommodation needs of handicapped persons. Essentially, it sets out what the expert considers to be the appropriate course. He recommends building a new home in which the plaintiff's horrendous disabilities would be properly accommodated. In the expert's opinion, this was preferable to altering an existing house by reason of what the expert considered to be "invariably practically double the related new cost" (para 6.4). The report concluded with a comparison of cost of housing for an able-bodied person ($96,709) and the cost of housing for a handicapped person ($334,025), so deriving an estimate of additional capital costs of $237,316.
23 As can be seen from the trial judge's rejection of that figure, he concluded not only that the additional cost would be unjustified but that the bringing of such a claim was "not justified by the facts the solicitor must have known", being "costs … incurred as a result of what may be described in the extravagance in the claim".
24 Nonetheless, the trial judge did allow a lesser figure of $67,500 calculated by adopting Mr Mazaraki's own expert assessment of $824 per square metre.
25 The fundamental problem with this approach was not that no report was prepared in opposition and no attempt made to cross-examine Mr Mazaraki by the defendant. All of that may be explicable on the basis that the defendant did not consider that necessary in order to refute the extra cost. Rather, the objection that the claimant makes is that nowhere does the trial judge articulate reasons why it was not proper for the plaintiff to have engaged Mr Mazaraki to prepare such a report. I mean by that, reasons distinct from the trial judge's reasons for rejecting the claim based on that report, when
(a) the rejection was not in toto, and
(b) the architect's report was necessary support for the claim, even if it was ultimately rejected as extravagant.
26 In particular, one might imply from the trial judge's disallowance of the cost of the report that there was some inferred unreasonableness in instructing the architect in the first place. But if that were so, no basis is set out in for such an inference as, for example, medical reports or some other source for suggesting that the reference to Mr Mazaraki as an expert on housing for a disadvantaged person was unreasonable. The cost of the report, $1,400, does not appear excessive. There is no suggestion in the trial judge's reasons that the architect must have been misled in the instructions given him. Nowhere does the trial judge conclude that the solicitor concerned should have gone to another architect or gone with different instructions. Indeed had he done so, no doubt further costs would have been incurred.
27 Underlying all of this is the implication that the argument put for the costs of a new purpose-built house for Mr Blake in his severely handicapped state was not merely wrong, but an argument improperly put, such that the cost of the disbursement should be disallowed; and that, notwithstanding that an allowance was made for conversion costs for which such an expert's report could not be irrelevant. Indeed the trial judge himself drew on the per square metre cost of construction of Mr Mazaraki. The reasons the trial judge give relate to why the argument was wrong, not why it was improperly put.
28 In all of this, the role of the costs assessor should not be disregarded. To the extent that Mr Mazaraki charged, as the trial judge explains, $4,078 for three reports including $1,400 for the report of 24 August 1994, there could have been a disallowance to the extent unjustified. It does not appear that there was any such disallowance. It is conceivable that the trial judge, proceeding by impression, had considered that the $4,078 for the three reports was excessive and therefore $1,400 should be required to be borne by the solicitor concerned for that reason also. But if so, that is again nowhere expressly stated.
29 The emphasised portion of what the trial judge says contains trenchant criticism of the solicitor concerned. I refer in particular to the statement that "the duty [solicitors owe to the court and to their clients] requires them to exercise a reasonable degree of care in the giving of instructions to experts such as Mr Mazaraki to ensure that the task undertaken by the experts is itself one which has a reasonable relationship to those facts …". That suggests that the solicitor concerned was negligent in employing Mr Mazaraki. But this is again without reasons for that assertion, save as some kind of carry over from the reasons leading the trial judge to reject the claim for a new house, yet allow $67,500 for conversion costs. There is no explanation for why an argument for the larger figure, an argument that ultimately failed, should, even if extravagant, lead to mulcting of the solicitor with the costs.
30 In reaching the conclusion that the cost of this item should not have been effectively imposed on the solicitor Kelly rather than the client, I base it essentially on a lack of reasons. There is also in the unreasonableness of the result, absent reasons explaining it, as to indicate error of the kind identified in House v the King, though the precise error is not readily identifiable where reasons are lacking.