Consideration
18 In her affidavit affirmed 22 May 2016 Ms Maletic deposed that if the Court did not make a protective costs order pursuant to r 40.51 it would be "inconceivable" for her to proceed with the substantive application in this Court.
19 The prospect that these proceedings may perforce be discontinued if the Court refuses Ms Maletic's application is of serious concern. As a general proposition, Courts abhor circumstances which deprive applicants of the opportunity to prosecute their legitimate grievances.
20 In this case, however, after weighing the arguments and consideration of the material before me, I consider the appropriate order is to refuse Ms Maletic's interlocutory application.
21 I have formed this view for the following reasons.
22 First, Mr Black for Ms Maletic submitted Perrett supports the proposition that it is not an absolute rule that costs follow the event, and further that this principle is relevant in the present circumstances where under s 67 of the Act an employee in the Tribunal can recover costs but, conversely, cannot be ordered by the Tribunal to pay Comcare's costs.
23 I am not persuaded that the decision of the Full Court in Perrett supports that proposition. In Perrett the Full Court considered an application by way of appeal from a decision of the Tribunal affirming a decision of the Commissioner for Superannuation concerning the interpretation and operation of s 66(2) of the Superannuation Act 1976 (Cth) (the Superannuation Act) and the level of benefits to which the applicant in that case was entitled under that legislation. The proceedings were complicated by an earlier decision of Jenkinson J as well as the decision of the Tribunal the subject of the application. After determining that the appeal should be dismissed, their Honours continued at 268-269:
When the previous appeal was determined by Jenkinson J apparently no order was made in respect of costs. We propose to make no costs order in the present case. The Tribunal has no power to make orders for costs in relation to cases of this nature and it seems to us to be undesirable that persons who unsuccessfully challenge a decision of the Tribunal should automatically be visited with a costs order in this court. The court should consider the matter of costs, bearing in mind the result of the appeal but also taking into account the reasonableness of the applicant in bringing that appeal and the general importance of the clarification of the law for such an authority as the respondent. We think that this appeal was reasonably brought. As is evident from the number of occasions upon which s 66(2)(c) has been considered by full courts, the paragraph presents difficulties of interpretation. In the present case, involving as it does two physical conditions about which much remains to be learned, it also presents difficulties of application.
24 It is clear from the decision in Perrett, and in particular the paragraph I have just set out, that the Full Court was satisfied that no costs order should be made in light of the specific facts of the case, where provisions of the Superannuation Act were in dispute, and where there had been conflicting authorities which that litigation helped to resolve. Perrett is an example of the Court properly exercising its discretion to make a costs order appropriate to the circumstances of the individual case. I consider that Ms Maletic draws something of a long bow to suggest that the purely hypothetical prospect that the Full Court in her case might take a similar view, and order no costs against her should she be unsuccessful in this application, are factors to which I should have regard in considering the appropriateness of an order under r 40.51.
25 Second, I am not persuaded that this application raises a point of general importance to warrant the capping order sought. The substantive application involved a claim under the Act in relation to an alleged psychological injury or aggravation of an injury, arising from seating arrangements in an office under refurbishment. Comcare claimed that it was entitled to the benefit of the proviso under s 5A of the Act that the injury or aggravation was suffered as a result of reasonable administrative action taken in a reasonable manner in respect of Ms Maletic's employment. Reeve and Drenth v Comcare are Full Court authorities decided within recent years which have considered, in detail, s 5A of the Act. Neither Ms Maletic nor Comcare have asked the Court to revisit principles decided in those cases.
26 Mr Black referred me to the opinion of Gray J in Reeve at [31] that:
… an instruction to perform work at a particular location … would not be regarded as "administrative" action …
27 I respectfully note the comment of his Honour, however consider its relevance in this context to be only that Ms Maletic has an arguable case by reference to that comment, and not that it creates a novel point of law of general importance in Ms Maletic's case.
28 In this regard I also note the submission of Mr Black that "the very ordinariness" of the facts of the case makes it important. However as Mr del Villar for Comcare submitted - in my view correctly - one could say the same about almost any sort of employment situation in which administrative action arose as an issue. The better approach is that the ordinariness of the facts in this case points to an absence of any important legal issue warranting a capping order.
29 Third, I am not satisfied that there is a public interest element to this case. Ms Maletic seeks compensation in pursuit of her own private interests. She is perfectly entitled to do so. Indeed the view has been expressed in at least one case that public interest provides an elusive principle to apply in matters of costs (Shurat Hadin, Israel Law Centre v Lynch (No 2) at [14]).
30 While the concept of public interest may be elusive, I am not persuaded that it is unidentifiable in appropriate cases, or irrelevant in this context. In this respect I note other cases where Courts have made capping orders in light of perceived issues of public interest, such as Haraksin v Murrays Australia Ltd (accessibility of disabled persons in wheelchairs to interstate bus transport), King v Jetstar Airways Pty Ltd (imposed limits to the number of passengers requiring wheelchair assistance on domestic flights), and Corcoran v Virgin Blue Airlines Pty Ltd (independent travel criteria and passengers in wheelchairs on domestic flights). In my view the public interest elements arising in these cases are identifiable, and distinguishable from the absence of public interest in the case currently before the Court.
31 I note that the Community and Public Sector Union (of which I understand Ms Maletic is a member) has agreed to contribute $5,000 towards the costs of the appeal. However this is suggestive only of union support and interest, not an element of public interest.
32 In my view the absence of a demonstrable public interest element militates against an order capping costs for which Ms Maletic could ultimately be liable should she be unsuccessful in her application.
33 Fourth, the amount at which Ms Maletic seeks costs capped, namely $5,000, is low for an application to the Full Court. Comcare relies on an affidavit of Ms Fiona Dempsey, a lawyer with the Australian Government Solicitor, sworn 7 September 2016, in which Ms Dempsey deposes, materially, that if Comcare is successful in the proceeding and an award for costs were made in its favour, Comcare would be entitled to recover no less than $27,938.95 (comprised of two-thirds of identified costs and all identified disbursements). This sum was not challenged by Ms Maletic.
34 Ms Maletic seeks an order for costs to be capped in an amount representing approximately 20% of an amount Comcare claims would be recoverable by it should Ms Maletic be unsuccessful in these proceedings. There is authority that the ratio of the amount being the proposed cap on costs, to the amount actually recoverable by the respondent, is a relevant consideration: King v Jetstar Airways Pty Ltd; Haraksin v Murrays Australia Ltd [2010] FCA 1133. Notwithstanding this, I note that in King v Jetstar Airways Pty Ltd Perram J ordered that costs be capped at $10,000, even though the predicted costs of the respondent were likely to exceed $100,000. His Honour did so:
[21] … to avoid the stifling of what is potentially an important appeal. Having decided that such an order is appropriate, it is that end which must drive the metric by which it is to be measured.
35 However as I have already observed, I do not consider that Ms Maletic's application before the Court raises novel issues of law. In this respect it is not comparable with the proceedings in King v Jetstar Airways Pty Ltd and could not be described as "potentially an important appeal".
36 Finally, as Mr del Villar properly submitted, evidence is scant supporting Ms Maletic's claim in her affidavit of 22 May 2016 that she is in considerable debt and would be subjected to a devastating financial impact should she be required to pay Comcare's costs of the appeal in full. It may be that she will be obliged to discontinue the proceedings should the Court refuse to make the order she has sought, however in light of the lack of evidence before me I cannot be satisfied that the effect of such a refusal would have the stifling effect on the litigation which Ms Maletic claims.