4.2 Relevant principles
39 As Ms Kimber submitted and the Owners Corporation accepted, the onus lies upon the Owners Corporation to establish that the amended application should be struck out and/or the proceedings summarily dismissed and those powers must be exercised with caution.
40 First, the Owners Corporation submits that the amended application should be struck out in its entirety and the proceeding dismissed pursuant to s 37P(6) of the Federal Court Act. Section 37P relevantly provides that:
(1) This section applies in relation to a civil proceeding before the Court.
(2) The Court or a Judge may give directions about the practice and procedure to be followed in relation to the proceeding, or any part of the proceeding.
(3) Without limiting the generality of subsection (2), a direction may:
(a) require things to be done; …
…
(5) If a party fails to comply with a direction given by the Court or a Judge under subsection (2), the Court or Judge may make such order or direction as the Court or Judge thinks appropriate.
(6) In particular, the Court or Judge may do any of the following:
(a) dismiss the proceeding in whole or in part;
(b) strike out, amend or limit any part of a party's claim or defence;
(c) disallow or reject any evidence;
(d) award costs against a party;
(e) order that costs awarded against a party are to be assessed on an indemnity basis or otherwise.
41 In this case, the Owners Corporation contends that Ms Kimber failed to comply with the leave granted by the Registrar in the orders made on 1 June 2016 "to file an amended Interlocutory Application to seek review of all the orders made Registrar Tesoriero on 4 May 2016, such amended application to be filed and served by 15 June 2016". Instead, save for the order sought relating to the order made by the Registrar awarding the Owners Corporation its costs, the Owners Corporation submits that the amended application raises a raft of issues disconnected from and unrelated to the orders made by the Registrar and properly the subject of an application for review under s 35A(5) and (6) of the Federal Court Act.
42 That said, it may be that on a generous reading, Ms Kimber intends, by seeking an order to "go behind the judgement" to challenge the Local Court judgment which forms the basis of the Bankruptcy Notice. This aligns with the oral submissions made by Ms Kimber. Accordingly, bearing in mind the caution which must be exercised on an application of this kind, it is appropriate to consider whether the proceeding might be saved by allowing leave to amend to include such a claim notwithstanding that this allegation is not apparent from the amended application itself: see e.g. Spencer v The Commonwealth (2010) 241 CLR 118; [2010] HCA 28 (Spencer) at 130-131 [22] (quoted at [53] below).
43 Secondly, the Owners Corporation submits that there has been a failure to comply with the rules as to pleading in r 16.02(1) and (2) of the Federal Court Rules. Rule 16.02(1) provides that:
(1) A pleading must:
(a) be divided into consecutively numbered paragraphs, each, as far as practicable, dealing with a separate matter; and
(b) be as brief as the nature of the case permits; and
(c) identify the issues that the party wants the Court to resolve; and
(d) state the material facts on which a party relies that are necessary to give the opposing party fair notice of the case to be made against that party at trial, but not the evidence by which the material facts are to be proved; and
(e) state the provisions of any statute relied on; and
(f) state the specific relief sought or claimed.
44 Conversely r 16.02(2) identifies what a pleading must not contain, providing that:
(2) A pleading must not:
(a) contain any scandalous material; or
(b) contain any frivolous or vexatious material; or
(c) be evasive or ambiguous; or
(d) be likely to cause prejudice, embarrassment or delay in the proceeding; or
(e) fail to disclose a reasonable cause of action or defence or other case appropriate to the nature of the pleading; or
(f) otherwise be an abuse of the process of the Court.
45 The requirements of r 16.02(1) and (2) are not mere technicalities. They reflect the function of pleadings, namely, to state with sufficient clarity the case that must be met so as to ensure the basic requirement of procedural fairness that a party should have the opportunity of meeting the case against it and incidentally to define the issues for decision: Banque Commerciale SA en Liquidation v Akhil Holdings Ltd (1990) 169 CLR 279 at 286 (Mason CJ and Gaudron J). Thus, as the Owners Corporation submits, a failure to comply with the requirements in r 16.02 may found an application to strike out the pleading under r 16.21. That rule provides that:
A party may apply to the Court for an order that all or part of a pleading be struck out on the ground that the pleading:
(a) contains scandalous material; or
(b) contains frivolous or vexatious material; or
(c) is evasive or ambiguous; or
(d) is likely to cause prejudice, embarrassment or delay in the proceeding; or
(e) fails to disclose a reasonable cause of action or defence or other case appropriate to the nature of the pleading; or
(f) is otherwise an abuse of the process of the Court.
46 However, even if it is found that all of a pleading should be struck out under r 16.02, that does not necessarily mean that the proceedings should be permanently stayed or dismissed. An opportunity may well be afforded to replead. Thus an application under r 16.02 differs from an application under s 31A(2) of the Federal Court Act for summary dismissal.
47 Thirdly, the Owners Corporation places reliance upon r 16.59 which relevantly provides that that a party who has been given leave to amend a pleading must make the alterations on the pleading.
48 Finally and in the alternative, the Owners Corporation relies on s 31A(2) of the Federal Court Act which provides that:
(2) The Court may give judgment for one party against another in relation to the whole or any part of a proceeding if:
(a) the first party is defending the proceeding or that part of the proceeding; and
(b) the Court is satisfied that the other party has no reasonable prospect of successfully prosecuting the proceeding or that part of the proceeding.
(3) For the purposes of this section, a defence or a proceeding or part of a proceeding need not be:
(a) hopeless; or
(b) bound to fail;
for it to have no reasonable prospect of success.
(4) This section does not limit any powers that the Court has apart from this section.
49 This power applies to an application to review a decision of the Registrar, having regard to the definition of "proceeding" in s 4 of the Federal Court Act.
50 Related to this, r 26.01 of the Federal Court Rules provides relevantly:
(1) A party may apply to the Court for an order that judgment be given against another party because:
(a) the applicant has no reasonable prospect of successfully prosecuting the proceeding or part of the proceeding; or
(b) the proceeding is frivolous or vexatious; or
(c) no reasonable cause of action is disclosed; or
(d) the proceeding is an abuse of the process of the Court; ….
51 The power summarily to dismiss proceedings must always be exercised with great care notwithstanding that the criterion in s 31A may be satisfied on grounds wider than those contained in previous iterations of the rules authorising summary dispositions, as s 31A(3) makes clear: Spencer at 131-132 [24] (French CJ and Gummow J).
52 I do not accept that s 31A applies only when a reasonable cause of action is disclosed. A written submission to that effect was correctly withdrawn by the Owners Corporation at the hearing. Rather, as Hayne, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ explained in Spencer at 141 [59]:
In many cases where a plaintiff has no reasonable prospect of prosecuting a proceeding, the proceeding could be described (with or without the addition of intensifying epithets like "clearly", "manifestly" or "obviously") as "frivolous", "untenable", "groundless" or "faulty". But none of those expressions (alone or in combination) should be understood as providing a sufficient chart of the metes and bounds of the power given by s 31A. Nor can the content of the word "reasonable", in the phrase "no reasonable prospect", be sufficiently, let alone completely, illuminated by drawing some contrast with what would be a "frivolous", "untenable", "groundless" or "faulty" claim.
53 Similarly, French CJ and Gummow J in Spencer explained at 130-131 [22] that:
The section authorises summary disposition of proceedings on a variety of bases under its general rubric. It will apply to the case in which the pleadings disclose no reasonable cause of action and their deficiency is incurable. It will include the case in which there is unanswerable or unanswered evidence of a fact fatal to the pleaded case and any case which might be propounded by permissible amendment. It will include the class of case in the longstanding category of cases which are "frivolous or vexatious or an abuse of process". The application of s 31A is not, in terms, limited to those categories.
54 The principles relevant to a consideration of whether an application has no reasonable prospects of success for the purposes of s 31A were summarised recently in Eliezer v University of Sydney [2015] FCA 1045 as follows in a passage which was drawn to the parties attention at the hearing and with which no party took issue:
35. First, the respondents as the moving parties bear the onus of persuading the Court that the application has no reasonable prospects of succeeding: Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Cassimatis [2013] FCA 641; (2013) 220 FCR 256 (Cassimatis) at 271 [45] (Reeves J).
36. Secondly, as the respondents submit, the intention behind the enactment of s 31A is "to lower the bar for obtaining summary judgment (including summary dismissal) below the level that had been fixed by such authorities as Dey v Victorian Railway Commissioners (1949) 78 CLR 62 at 91-92, and General Steel Industries Inc v Commissioner for Railways (NSW) (1964) 112 CLR 125 at 129-130…": White Industries Aust Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [2007] FCA 511; (2007) 160 FCR 298 (White Industries) at 310 [54] (Lindgren J); see also Cassimatis at 271 [46] (Reeves J). In the cases to which Lindgren J referred in White Industries, the requirement had been expressed in such terms as "manifestly groundless" or "hopeless". As Hayne, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ held in Spencer v The Commonwealth of Australia [2010] HCA 28; (2010) 241 CLR 118 (Spencer) at 139 [52]-[53]:
…effect must be given to the negative admonition in sub-s (3) that a defence, a proceeding, or a part of a proceeding may be found to have no reasonable prospect of successful prosecution even if it cannot be said that it is "hopeless" or "bound to fail". …[I]t is important to begin by recognising that the combined effect of sub-ss (2) and (3) is that the inquiry required in this case is whether there is a "reasonable" prospect of prosecuting the proceeding, not an inquiry directed to whether a certain and concluded determination could be made that the proceeding would necessarily fail.
In this respect, s 31A departs radically from the basis upon which earlier forms of provision permitting the entry of summary judgment have been understood and administered.
37. Thirdly, the assessment required by s 31A of whether a proceeding has no reasonable prospects of success necessitates the making of value judgments in the absence of a full and complete factual matrix and argument, with the result that the provision vests a discretion in the Court: Kowalski v MMAL Staff Superannuation Fund Pty Ltd [2009] FCAFC 117; (2009) 178 FCR 401 (Kowalski) at 408-409 [28] (the Court). That discretion includes whether to deal with the motion at once or at some later stage in the proceedings when the legal and factual issues have been more clearly defined: Butorac v WIN Corporation Pty Ltd [2009] FCA 1503 at [19] (Buchanan J); Cassimatis at 272 [50] (Reeves J).
38. In the fourth place, despite the threshold for summary dismissal having been lowered, the discretion must still be exercised with caution (Spencer at 131 [24] (French CJ and Gummow J) and 141 [60] (Hayne, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ)). Consistently with this, the discretion is concerned "with the bringing and defending of proceedings, not just with pleadings; with substance, not just with form": White Industries at [50] (Lindgren J) (approved in Kowalski at 409 [30] (the Court); see also Spencer at [23] (French CJ and Gummow J)).
39. Finally, in his Honour's helpful explanation of how these principles are to be applied, Reeves J in Cassimatis further explains at 271-272 [46] that:
…the determination of a summary dismissal application therefore does not require a mini-trial based upon incomplete evidence to decide whether the proceedings are likely to succeed or fail at trial. Instead, it requires a critical examination of the available materials to determine whether there is a real question of law or fact that should be decided at trial. Each application for summary judgment or summary dismissal has to be determined according to its particular circumstances. What is required is a practical judgment of the case at hand. The relevant circumstances will partly depend upon the stage which the proceedings have reached. Among other things, this will affect the materials available to the Court considering the application, for example, whether pleadings have been exchanged, or discovery of documents has occurred.
55 For the reasons set out below, I have reached the view that the proceedings must be summarily dismissed under s 31A of the Federal Court Act.