Mallegowda v Sood
[2014] NSWDC 216
At a glance
Source factsCourt
District Court of NSW
Decision date
2014-08-05
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (8 paragraphs)
Judgment 1This proceedings consist of a claim and cross-claim, each seeking damages for defamation, brought by members of the Indian community in the Newcastle area. Bozic SC DCJ allocated a 7-day hearing date commencing 18 August 2014 in the defamation list on 28 March 2014. This hearing date was given over the objections of the plaintiff/cross-defendant, who complained of outstanding particulars and answers to interrogatories by the defendants/cross-claimants. 2The answers to particulars and interrogatories provided after the matter was set down for hearing consisted largely of refusals to answer. This resulted in the plaintiff/cross-defendant filing the notice of motion which first came before me on 20 June and, following an exchange of submissions, was relisted on 1 July 2014. As is set out below, the plaintiff/cross-defendant not only sought orders for answers but orders to vacate the hearing date. 3The circumstances in which I came to hear this notice of motion were as follows. The plaintiff's notice of motion for further and better answers to interrogatories and particulars, and for vacation of the hearing date of 18 August 2014, was initially sent to the registry, but not processed through the defamation list as the proceedings had been allocated a hearing date. It was eventually filed 19 June 2014, and a copy sent to me by the registry as the appointed trial judge. Given the urgency of an application to vacate the hearing date, I listed this application the following day, on 20 June 2014, on the understanding that argument would not take place on that day but that directions could be made. 4In the notice of motion, the plaintiff sought the following orders: (1)That the first defendant/cross claimant and second defendant answer the outstanding requests for further and better particulars outlined in the letter dated 24 April 2014 from the plaintiff's solicitors to the defendants' solicitors. (2)That the first defendant/cross claimant and second defendant answer the outstanding interrogatories referred to in the letter dated 22 April 2014 from the plaintiff's solicitors to the defendants' solicitors. (3)That the hearing date of 18 August 2014 be vacated. (4)Costs. 5In accordance with my orders of 20 June 2014, the parties provided me with written submissions as to the interrogatories and particulars arguments. Although I had intended to deal with these matters in chambers by a written judgment sent to the parties, I was unable to do so, in part because the application to vacate the hearing date could not be dealt with in such an informal fashion, and in part because Mr Connell's submissions were of a general nature. 6When the proceedings came before me on 1 July 2014 for argument on the outstanding particulars and interrogatories, Mr Potter, the counsel then appearing, had another concern: his instructing solicitor had been served, either late on Friday or over the weekend, with a supplementary expert's report. In this report, the defendants/cross-claimants' expert changed his position on a vital issue of timing in relation to the sending of certain emails. Mr Potter made an oral application that this report, served late and without leave, should not be able to be relied upon at the trial. 7The first issue for determination on 1 July was, however, the outstanding issues in the plaintiff's notice of motion. The defendants' written submissions in relation to the request for particulars generally asserted (paragraph 6, answers 2, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14; paragraph B answers 2 - 17, 19, 21, 22, 24, 25, 28, 30, 31, 38 - 41) that these were not proper requests for particulars, or by a reference to an affidavit, or by the statement that these were matters for evidence. The basis for objection to answering these questions was that these were not proper requests for particulars for the reasons stated by the court in "Bass v Permanent Trustee". 8No citation for this apparent decision was given, but there is a decision Bass v Permanent Trustee (1999) 198 CLR 334. This decision deals with constitutional law issues concerning suits to which the State is a party and whether the State was a "person" for the purposes provisions in the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). (This decision is of no assistance in this litigation, although I found the section "Responding effectively to complex litigation" at pp 363 - 4 of assistance on case management issues). The defendants/cross-claimants probably intended to refer to Bass v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd [2006] NSWCA 343 at [43], where Hunt AJA explained that the obligation to give particulars did not require a party to disclose the evidence upon which he proposed to prove his case. This is no answer to the obligations to provide proper particulars under Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) ("UCPR") r 15.4(1) for particulars of the plaintiff's state of mind, which is the principal request. 9Similarly, on the issue of interrogatories, the parties had sent me written submissions in order that I could deal with the issues "on the papers" without need for further argument. The letter from the plaintiff's solicitors dated 22 April 2014 at page 65 of the affidavit set out each of the unanswered interrogatories pressed by the plaintiff. The objections were based on claims of lack of relevance, or that the interrogatory was outside the leave granted in the order of 21 February 2014 by Elkaim SC DCJ. 10Elkaim SC DCJ's order on 14 February 2014 (one of a long series) was: "Leave to the plaintiff to administer interrogatories limited to the defences of truth and comment and the issue of malice as particularised on 19 February 2014 to both defendants." 11Elkaim SC DCJ did strike out a number of particulars set out in the above two letters dated 19 February, but nevertheless gave leave to interrogate on these other issues. The submission to the contrary was misconceived. 12Mr Connell's submissions of 23 June 2014 shed little light on why these interrogatories have not been answered, beyond asserting that the plaintiff "seeks to abuse the indulgence by administering interrogatories going beyond the leave" (submissions, paragraph 13) and (at paragraph 14) that further interrogatories are "not necessary", "oppressive", "a trial by interrogatory", and "such over-use of interrogatories in contrary [sic] should be discouraged", as his clients "will be giving evidence at trial and will be available for cross examination". 13Mr Connell supplied additional written submissions on the morning of the hearing of the argument and, in light of the defendants/cross-claimants' revised expert's report (discussed in more detail below); Mr Potter reduced the number of particulars and interrogatories in dispute. I then heard the parties' oral argument as to the adequacy of answers to particulars and interrogatories. 14The defendants/cross-claimants were unsuccessful in resisting the orders to provide further and better answers. I made orders in relation to answers, and also in relation to the plaintiff/cross-defendant's application for pre-trial expert evidence in conclave and by joint report, aimed at minimising the impact of the late-served report. I canvassed with the parties whether the giving of reasons and the making of costs orders was appropriate. The parties did not ask for reasons, but asked for leave to provide further submissions (on the next day these proceedings were before the court) on costs. Those submissions were forwarded to the court, but no costs argument was heard on 5 August 2014. The parties did not mention the issue of costs of this argument, presumably due to the imminence of the hearing. 15When making these orders, given the hearing date was so close, and the possibility of further dispute about the answers or the expert reports could not be ignored, I stood over the plaintiff/cross-defendant's Notice of Motion part-heard to 5 August 2014. Both parties were therefore on notice that the application to vacate the hearing date had not gone away just because the argument had been heard and orders made about the expert evidence, and that compliance with these orders was expected. The orders I made were as follows: (1)No further affidavits, notices of motion or other documents are to be filed without leave of the Court. (2)First Defendant is to answer plaintiff's interrogatories 26, 32-40, 46-51 in 14 days. (3)Second Defendant is to answer plaintiff's interrogatories 8-10, 21, 22 and 35-40 in 14 days. (4)The defendants are to answer plaintiff's request for particulars in 14 days. (5)The defendants are to provide the comment particulars sought pursuant to r 15.28 Uniform Civil Procedure Rule 2005 (NSW) (paragraph F of the Defence). (6)Pursuant to r 31.4 Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), the parties exchange lists of witnesses they propose to call (other than the paries themselves) in chief, along with an outline of the evidence that witness is likely to give, by 1 August 2014. (7)The respective experts for the parties are to meet without legal representatives by 11 July 2014, to identify all matters which are agreed between the experts and all remaining areas of disagreement and to provide to the parties a joint report outlining those issues by 25 July 2014. (8)The plaintiff's Notice of Motion filed on 19 June 2014 is stood over part heard to Friday 1 August 2014 at 9:30am. (9)Costs of today reserved. (10)Grant leave to the parties to exchange an outline of submissions concerning costs which will be dealt with on the next occasion. 16Although the date of 1 August 2014 was chosen to suit the convenience of the parties, this date was later found to be inconvenient to counsel for the defendants/cross-claimants, and the Notice of Motion was stood over to 5 August 2014, just under two weeks before the hearing date of 18 August 2014, to suit their counsels' convenience. 17When the proceedings came before me on 5 August, Mr Dibb appeared for the plaintiff, having received a brief to appear at the hearing in the place of Mr Potter late on the day before. He told me he had received two boxes of material, but that he had "not yet found" the answers to interrogatories and particulars inside them. He could not tell me how many witnesses he was calling as he had not yet interviewed them, and would need a week to do so. He was aware a list of 12 witnesses had been sent to the solicitors for the defendants/cross-claimants, but agreed that it was deficient, as were the proposed outlines of evidence which had been served only on 1 and 2 August 2013. 18Although Mr Dibb conceded he was not yet in a position to say the proceedings were ready for hearing, he said that he was instructed that the plaintiff wanted the hearing to proceed. He was confident that he would be "up to speed in a couple of weeks". Unfortunately, the hearing is in a couple of weeks. 19Mr Tobin QC, for the defendants/cross-claimants, said that his clients were ready, and the vacation of the hearing date would result in a significant costs burden to his clients. He asked that the hearing proceed on 18 August, and submitted that a further listing of these proceedings on Wednesday 13 August, to monitor compliance with any outstanding steps would be sufficient to ensure the matter was ready for hearing. If the matter was still not ready on Wednesday 13 August, then what Mr Tobin QC called "the case management axe" could fall on the parties. Mr Tobin QC reminded me that both parties were keen for the hearing to take place, as the factual matrix of events was "a running sore" in the Indian community in Newcastle, New South Wales. 20These proceedings have a long procedural history and appear to have been conducted with some hostility on both sides. This should not prevent the matter from being ready for hearing, but there are outstanding issues which concern me in my capacity as trial judge: (a)The defendants/cross-claimants' objections to answers were general and without merit. While answers have been provided, counsel for the plaintiff, who came into the matter yesterday, has not yet read them and cannot tell me if the answers are satisfactory. Copies were not provided to Mr Dibb, or to me, although this would have been an easy way for this issue to be resolved. (b)The plaintiff/cross-defendant has not properly complied with the order for the provision of a list of witnesses and outlines of evidence. Mr Dibb tells me he will require a week to interview the relevant witnesses, and that this will make a further extension of the timetable for a return date before me on Wednesday 13 August, which is only three days before the hearing is due to start. (c)There are outstanding issues about the experts' reports and a supplementary joint report will need to be filed. It is hoped that this can be prepared before the hearing. However, on the morning of 6 August 2014, when I was about to hand down judgment at 10 am, I received an email headed "urgent" from the solicitors for the plaintiff/cross-defendant raising issues about the timing of a telephone call from a Mr Visweshwariah in relation to the deletion of a gmail account, seeking leave to issue a subpoena urgently. In addition, the serious allegation is made that the defendants have not complied with my orders of 1 July 2014 to send a witness list. While I propose to disregard this extracurial communication, it is of concern to me that the ambit of the expert evidence has been only very recently considered by the parties, apparently only as a result of my making orders for a conclave and joint report. I have marked the correspondence from the plaintiff's solicitors as MFI 1 in this application. It is also of concern to me that claims of this kind are made in correspondence to my associate, even though it was sent to the solicitors for the defendants/cross-claimants, and which is contradictory to the statements made by Mr Dibb in court. (d)These proceedings were set down for hearing for 7 days, the parties having told Bozic SC DCJ that the hearing would take 5 - 7 days. The defendants/cross-claimants have provided witness outlines for 15 witnesses. In addition to the defendants themselves and their expert, three of those witnesses will give evidence on what Mr Tobin QC called "technical" matters and three on justification issues, including alleged admissions by the plaintiff. It is hard to know how many witnesses the plaintiff will call as Mr Dibb has not yet commenced to interview them, but prior to his coming into the matter it would appear that the names of 12 witnesses and partial outlines of evidence were served. Mr Tobin QC agreed that there were "a lot of witnesses" and that completion of the hearing in 7 or even 10 days might not be possible. (e)Although these are minor matters, some interlocutory steps remain outstanding, such as the parties' applications in relation to the costs of the particulars and interrogatories, while others have never been brought. For example, the defences and cross-claim plead numerous imputations which have not been the subject of any rulings. These will add to the time taken for the conduct of the hearing. 21It would be only in the most extreme circumstances that a court would vacate a hearing date where both parties assure me (notwithstanding the fact that one of them has a part-heard application before the court to vacate the hearing date) that they wish the hearing to proceed. The circumstances in which a court would, of its own motion, vacate a hearing date against the wishes of the parties would need to be exceptional. The question is whether that is the appropriate order to be made in the circumstances, having regard to the overriding principles of ss 56 - 62 Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW). This requires a careful examination of the pleadings and procedural history, as well as of the correct approach to case management as set out in ss 56 - 62 and 66 of the Civil Procedure Act.