Should security for costs be ordered against the corporate plaintiffs?
74 The impecuniosity of the corporate plaintiffs is a consideration that weighs heavily in favour of an order for security for costs against them.
75 The following considerations also support an order that the corporate plaintiffs provide security for costs:
(a) the application was brought promptly, there was no relevant delay between the joinder of the corporate plaintiffs on 22 December 2021 and the filing of the Security for Costs Application on 8 February 2022; and
(b) the impecuniosity of WSPS and in turn Serif was not caused by Mr Parker's conduct the subject of the proceeding, WSPS was placed into liquidation prior to the impugned conduct.
76 Ms Lee and Mr Silverbrook are the only natural persons that could be said to be standing behind WSPS and Serif and both are parties to the proceedings and thus already exposed to a costs order.
77 Further, given the inability of Mr Ingram to obtain any litigation funding and the impecuniosity of Ms Lee and Mr Silverbrook, I am satisfied that the practical effect of an order that the corporate plaintiffs provide security for costs in the sum sought by Mr Parker would be to stultify the proceedings that they have now brought against Mr Parker.
78 Moreover, it is necessary to have regard to first, the implications of the decision not to order the natural plaintiffs, Ms Lee and Mr Silverbrook, to provide security for costs on the application for security for costs against the corporate plaintiffs and second, public interest considerations in the present context.
79 The question of whether security for costs should be ordered against corporations that are plaintiffs where the Court has declined to order security for costs against natural plaintiffs in the same proceeding has been considered in several authorities, including Harpur v Ariadne Australia Limited [1984] 2 Qd R 523 (Harpur); Street & 7 ors v Lunar Park Sydney Pty Ltd & 3 ors [2006] NSWSC 1317 (Street); Brecher v Barrack Investments Pty Ltd [2018] FCA 472 (Brecher).
80 In Harpur, Connolly J (with whom Campbell CJ and Demack J agreed) stated at 532:
It is not disputed in this case that Harpur is the real plaintiff. The plaintiff companies are joined as a means to his establishing his own rights if he can. There is no question of the companies having any claim independent of Harpur's. There is, to use Plowman J.'s expression, a complete overlap of the interests put in suit. The companies are joined because Harpur has chosen to conduct his business affairs in a fashion which requires the presence in this litigation of corporations of his creation which the law may regard as the appropriate plaintiffs but their interests are, as it is pleaded, beneficially his property. Why then should he be asked to provide massive security for the defendant's costs? He is not seeking to shelter behind the companies. On the contrary he is the prime plaintiff. It does not seem to me that he should therefore be in any different position from any other plaintiff whose assets are within reach of the court's process. The court cannot permit orders for security for costs to be used as a means of keeping a plaintiff out of court Orders for security are in fact infrequently made except in the cases of companies to which s. 533(1) or similar provisions apply and where there is no circumstance to outweigh the obvious force of the company's insolvency.
[Emphasis added.]
81 In Street, Brereton J, after noting that some authorities had proceeded on the basis that if it was concluded that one or more plaintiffs should not provide security for costs, other plaintiffs should not be ordered to pay security, stated at [28]-[29]:
However, this is not an absolute rule, as appears from the judgment of Plowman J in John Bishop (Caterers) Ltd v The National Union Bank Ltd [1973] 1 All ER 707; see also Fiduciary Ltd v Morning Star Research. Where there is a complete identity between the corporate plaintiff and the individual plaintiff, so that all plaintiffs are suing in relation to one and the same defendant, and all plaintiffs must succeed or fail together, security will not ordinarily be ordered against only one of them [Bishop, 709-710]. But where the various plaintiffs' claims have different elements and aspects, so that they will not all necessarily succeed or fail together, although the existence of individual plaintiffs is a factor that diminishes the defendant's claim to be entitled to security against the corporate plaintiff, it does not extinguish it [Interwest Ltd v Tricontinental]. And where the degree of overlap between the claim of the individual and corporate plaintiffs is comparatively small, such that separate orders for costs might be made in respect of each of the plaintiffs, it is usually appropriate that an order for security be made [Bishop, 716; Fiduciary v Morning Star, 33-36].
In the present case, while all the plaintiffs rely on similar facts, they do not sue on the same cause of action. This is particularly so in respect of the Trade Practices claims. Each plaintiff separately has to prove reliance, and each plaintiff separately has to prove that plaintiff's own damages. Importantly, it is only in respect of the Trade Practices claims that liability is asserted against the third and fourth defendants.
[Emphasis added.]
82 In Brecher, Thawley J stated at [28]:
In my view, this is not an appropriate case in which to order security for costs for the following reasons. First, I am not satisfied that there are sufficiently substantial incremental costs over and above what would be incurred in meeting Dr Brecher's claims in any event: Luna Park at [27], [28], Funds First Pty Ltd v Owners Corporation Strata Plan 66609 (No 2) [2008] NSWSC 428 at [13]. It is evident from the pleading that there is substantial overlap between the claims brought by each and that substantially all of the factual substratum would need to be traversed in the claim brought by Dr Brecher. In my view, the principles referred to in Harpur v Ariadne Australia Limited [1984] 2 Qd R 523 (Harpur) and Luna Park at [26] to [28] apply. In my view, there is no realistic possibility of different outcomes as between the applicants. In particular, it was not demonstrated, as it was in Luna Park, that the defence of the corporate applicant's case substantially increased the complexity and likely cost of the case or its nature. It may be accepted that both applicants have different causes of action and that, if EBPL recovers certain damages, then Dr Brecher will not recover damages reflecting that loss and, indeed, may be unsuccessful in obtaining certain relief. For example, Dr Brecher's financial liability under the guarantees may not be shown to be greater if EBPL is successful in its claim for damages. A not dissimilar situation arose in Harpur, where the company had the claim for compensation rather than the individual shareholders and, if the company failed, the individuals also necessarily failed: at 525. So too, the individual shareholders would not recover damages to the extent the relevant damages were obtained by the company. The real difficulty for the first to third respondents is that, if Dr Brecher had brought his claims alone, or the proceedings were now stayed vis-à-vis EBPL, it would still be necessary to traverse substantially the same facts and issues in the claim brought by Dr Brecher. This weighs heavily against an order for security.
[Emphasis added.]
83 While the reasons of Thawley J include the absence of any realistic possibility of "different outcomes as between the applicants" they are not expressed to be dependent on that finding. Read as a whole, the reasoning of Thawley J was directed at more practical issues such as the degree of the overlap in the claims that had been brought, the factual substratum that would need to be traversed and the extent to which the defence of the corporate applicants' claims would increase the complexity and cost of the proceeding.
84 The focus on incremental and increased costs was highlighted by the further reasoning of Thawley J at [29]:
Secondly, even if I had been satisfied that there were sufficient areas of dispute which did not overlap, there was no attempt by the first to third respondents to substantiate what the incremental costs would be in respect of that non-overlapping area. The first to third respondents had sought to tender a two page schedule setting out a costs estimate prepared by Mr Hourn and exhibited to his affidavit. This set out hourly rates of the various identified people who would carry out legal work, the estimated number of hours they would work and, in very general terms, the task that they would perform. This provided a total of $298,270 which was reduced to take into account that only 60% of the solicitor client costs were considered likely to be recovered. The second applicant objected to this schedule on the basis that it insufficiently set out the basis for the assumptions contained within it. The parties agreed that the schedule would be received as a submission. However, no attempt was made by the first to third respondents to identify a rational basis to determine from this total estimate what would be the incremental costs of any non-overlapping area or what additional cost would be incurred specifically by reference to the inclusion in the proceedings of the corporate applicant and its claims.
85 I accept that in these proceedings it cannot be said that the causes of action advanced by the natural and corporate plaintiffs will inevitably rise and fall together. Nevertheless, the causes of action advanced substantially overlap and the factual substratum is the same, namely the alleged failure of Mr Parker to realise valuable assets of WSPS by allowing the US Patents to lapse.
86 Further, Mr Parker has not sought to adduce evidence of additional complexity or incremental costs that would be incurred with respect to the defence of the claims brought by the corporate plaintiffs. It might be reasonably inferred that the breach of statutory and fiduciary duties claims and the tortious claims sought to be advanced against the corporate plaintiffs were materially less complex and the necessary matters to be established to make good those claims substantially overlap with the matters necessary to establish the equivalent claims sought to be advanced by the natural plaintiffs.
87 The other factor that weighs against ordering security for costs against the corporate plaintiffs is the public interest in liquidators being held to account. As Griffiths J stated in Lee at [24] in the context of the Reinstatement Application, there is a public interest in bringing the proceeding against Mr Parker where his alleged failures occurred as an official liquidator. I do not accept that the present proceedings can be characterised as simply a claim for damages by the plaintiffs. An alleged failure by an official liquidator to take steps to secure and then realise significant assets of a company is a serious allegation that has ramifications well beyond the immediate interests of parties seeking to recover damages. It reflects on the public confidence in the administration of insolvent companies, which is an important consideration in the preparedness of stakeholders to have confidence that if a company becomes insolvent all reasonable steps will be taken to secure and realise its assets for the benefit of creditors and members by competent professional insolvency practitioners.