Indemnity costs - the First to Fourth Plaintiffs
22The Plaintiffs submitted that there were three reasons why indemnity costs should be ordered in favour of the First to Fourth Plaintiffs.
23First, it was said that the application was commenced and continued in circumstances where Ms Seco, properly advised, should have known that she had no chance of success against the natural plaintiffs. This was for two reasons. First, Ms Seco never made inquiries before commencing her application and, once it was commenced, never had any evidence to suggest that the natural plaintiffs would be unable to meet an adverse costs order in her favour. Second, even if Ms Seco had such evidence, there was never any basis on which Ms Seco could have overcome the principle which now has regulatory form in UCPR Part 42 r 42.21(1B) that "if the plaintiff is a natural person, an order for security for costs cannot be made merely on account of his or her impecuniosity".
24In relation to the second point set out in the previous paragraph, the Plaintiffs also engaged with the reasons advanced by Ms Seco in her solicitors' 6 August 2013 reply to the Calderbank letter. Insofar as she sought to rely on UCPR Part 42 r 21(1)(e) to the effect that the natural plaintiffs were not suing for their own benefit, but for the benefit of a third party called TDK Pty Ltd, the Plaintiffs submitted that there was no evidence to support that conclusion. They contended that Ms Seco was quite unable to demonstrate that the natural plaintiffs were anything but a puppet or mere shadow for TDK Pty Ltd (to adopt the language of Lockhart J in Andrews v Caltex Oil (Aust) Pty Ltd [1982] FCA 42; (1982) 40 ALR 305; (1982) 60 FLR 261). It was further submitted that the second basis proffered by Ms Seco in her letter, invoking the inherent or implied jurisdiction of the Court, took the matter no further than the contention that the natural plaintiffs were not suing for their own benefit.
25The Plaintiffs' second reason for an indemnity costs order in favour of the natural plaintiffs was that Ms Seco had abandoned her application in relation to them without prior notice at the last possible moment before the hearing. No reasons were given for the change of position and the plaintiffs had prepared for the application, including written submissions, upon the assumption that the application was maintained against all parties.
26Third, the Plaintiffs submitted that Ms Seco's rejection of the offer set out in the Calderbank letter (insofar as it related to the natural plaintiffs) was unreasonable. The Calderbank offer identified why the application against the natural plaintiffs would fail and presented a genuine compromise in proposing a dismissal of the application with no order as to costs. That offer was more favourable to Ms Seco than her current position, in which she accepts she is liable to pay the Plaintiffs' costs.
27Ms Seco's response to these arguments may be summarised as follows.
28First, she submitted that she had led evidence obtained from notices to produce to the natural plaintiffs of their income tax assessments, which established that they were in receipt of modest incomes. Furthermore, it was said that the natural plaintiffs had failed to produce to the Court any documents relating to their asset or liability position, on the basis of which the Court would more readily infer that such information would not have assisted them.
29Second, it was submitted that her application was not based "merely" on the impecuniosity evidenced by the material referred to in the preceding paragraph. The trigger for the application had been Ms Seco becoming aware that a non-party, TDK Pty Ltd, had paid two invoices from the Plaintiffs' solicitors in respect of the proceedings. It was submitted that the obvious inference from that fact was that the natural plaintiffs were suing for the benefit of TDK Pty Ltd.
30Third, it was submitted that the Plaintiffs' reliance on Ms Seco's late abandonment of her application against them without prior notice was no different in substance from the first ground relied upon by the Plaintiffs and did not constitute a special or unusual feature of the case justifying an indemnity costs order. Furthermore, it was said that if the Court were to order indemnity costs, this would discourage responsible advocacy which, in this case, was evidenced by the proper, but late, abandonment of her application against the natural plaintiffs.
31Fourth, Ms Seco contended that the Calderbank letter did not involve "a real and genuine element of compromise" (see Anderson Group Pty Ltd v Tynan Motors Pty Ltd (No 2) [2006] NSWCA 120; (2006) 67 NSWLR 706). An offer which was dismissal of Ms Seco's application on the basis that she bear her own costs demonstrated that the offer lacked the requisite element of compromise. In support of this last proposition, Ms Seco relied upon Leichhardt Municipal Council v Green [2004] NSWCA 341 at [31]-[37].
32Applying the principles set out in paragraph [21] above, the Court in general accepts the submissions put on behalf of the natural plaintiffs. They are entitled to an order for indemnity costs because Ms Seco, properly advised, should have understood her application against the natural plaintiffs was hopeless and her rejection of the offer contained in the Calderbank letter was unreasonable.
33This is a case where Ms Seco, properly advised, should have known that her application against the natural plaintiffs had no chance of success. Whether the material which Ms Seco gathered after filing her motion was sufficient even to establish the impecuniosity of the natural plaintiffs is beside the point. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that it did, the real question was whether Ms Seco ever had any proper basis to overcome the principle now enshrined in UCPR Part 42 r 42.21(1B).
34The law generally sets its face against the making of security for costs orders against natural persons, no matter how impecunious. The exceptions are clear. I do not accept Ms Seco's submission that the natural inference from the fact that TDK Pty Ltd had paid some of the Plaintiffs' legal bills was that the natural plaintiffs were suing for the benefit of TDK Pty Ltd. That conclusion does not follow: Andrews v Caltex Oil (Aust) Pty Ltd [1982] FCA 42; (1982) 40 ALR 305 at 309; 60 FLR 261.
35In the course of argument, Senior Counsel for Ms Seco accepted that there were a number of possible inferences, but pressed the contention that the most obvious one was that which had been identified on her behalf. That submission is not correct. In the absence of further information, which Ms Seco did not have before she commenced her application and never obtained during the course of that application, it was misconceived to suggest that the mere fact of payment by TDK Pty Ltd could satisfy the Court that the natural plaintiffs were suing for the benefit of TDK Pty Ltd.
36Ms Seco's next answer, that the Plaintiffs' second reason (the application was withdrawn late and without prior notice) does not of itself provide a reason to order indemnity costs, is correct. However, her contention that an indemnity costs order would discourage or penalise responsible advocacy is not. Responsible advocacy is required, inter alia, by sub-sections 56(3) and (4) of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) (the "CP Act"), provisions to which I shall return in the final section of this judgment. The abandonment of hopeless points is a necessary prophylactic to staunch the flow of useless costs and (albeit not always successfully) to minimise the prospects of an indemnity costs order that is far more likely to follow if the Court's time is taken up with what is obviously an untenable application.
37Next, the Calderbank letter did represent a real and genuine compromise. While it may not always be the case, where the Plaintiffs (especially the natural plaintiffs) had good reasons to believe they would succeed, the only point they had to "give away" was the costs to which they would be entitled if successful. Contrary to Ms Seco's submission, the judgment of Santow JA (Stein JA agreeing) in Leichhardt Municipal Council v Green [2004] NSWCA 341 at [36] accepted "that no error of legal principle exists in holding that a "walk-away" offer can in a particular case be a "genuine offer of compromise"" (emphasis added).
38Insofar as Ms Seco's rejection of the Calderbank letter is concerned, it was unreasonable of her not to accept the offer insofar as it related to the natural plaintiffs. In reaching this conclusion I have not overlooked that the offer in the Calderbank letter did not, in terms, differentiate between the Plaintiffs. However, while in most cases it is the rejection of an offer outright that the Court considers, that is only the most common example of what the fundamental question must be: was the offeree's response to the offer unreasonable?
39In this case Ms Seco, properly advised, should have understood that she had no case for an order for security against the natural plaintiffs. In that situation it was unreasonable for her not to make a counter offer to "walk-away" from that part of the claim.
40Given that the Calderbank letter was sent only three days after the Amended Notice of Motion was filed, I find on the balance of probabilities that the natural plaintiffs would have agreed to "walk-away" in relation to the application against them. There are two reasons for this. First, while the terms of the offer did not differentiate between the Plaintiffs, the Calderbank letter clearly distinguished between the natural plaintiffs and K Bricks in the arguments it raised to demonstrate what it contended was the hopelessness of Ms Seco's application. Ms Seco and her advisers clearly understood that different considerations applied between the natural plaintiffs and K Bricks. Second, in the absence of already having incurred significant costs, there would be no reason for the natural plaintiffs to have rejected a "walk-away" counter offer made in relation to them.