Unnecessary Costs
14I repeat the facts and the findings set out in paragraphs [23] - [45] of my principal judgment. On this costs application Argyle relied on evidence from Mr Quigley and Mr Petrucco. The former was responsible for the day to day conduct of the proceedings on behalf of the plaintiff until 1 April 2011. Mr Petrucco became the solicitor on the record from 5 April. Mr Quigley was apparently the solicitor responsible for recommending that a "corporate reconstruction expert" be engaged. To that end he obtained instructions from the executor. On 17 November 2010, Mr Quigley consulted Mr Keenan from an accounting firm known as BRI Ferrier. Mr Keenan provided a verbal costs estimate of $30,000 for BRI Ferrier and $15,000 for additional specialist taxation advice.
15On 15 December 2010, Mr Quigley provided formal written instructions to Mr Keenan. His letter made clear that the engagement related only to these proceedings. It was, in substance, a carte blanche to enquire into and report on all steps that "might conceivably be taken" to give effect to the testator's intention that, among other things, the property known as Glengowan be transferred to Mrs Retallack. In addition, Mr Keenan was asked to advise on the practical effects of taking those steps - that is all of the steps that "might conceivably be taken". This included, in relation to each of those steps, the effects, wherever applicable, of "capital gains tax, stamp duty, income tax, inter-generational transfer exemptions, legal costs, accountancy costs, the mortgage debt to the National Australia Bank and any other practical consequences you consider relevant".
16This was an accountant's nirvana. I referred in my principal judgment to the intricacies of each option that were laid out in excruciating and labyrinthine detail in Mr Silvia's report: at [24]. Unfortunately none of it was necessary for the proceedings. None of it was useful. None of it facilitated the resolution of the real issues in dispute, namely the questions of construction arising out of Clauses 4, 5 and 16 of the will.
17This unsatisfactory situation only became worse. On 17 February 2011, Mr Keenan stated that "the costs have blown out a bit". On 21 April 2011, he informed Mr Petrucco that BRI Ferrier's time costs were in excess of $97,000 and that the costs of Moore Stephens, who provided additional specialist taxation advice, were in excess of $50,000. Mr Keenan said however that BRI Ferrier would accept $65,000 and that Moore Stephens would accept $25,000 excluding GST. The total of these two amounts was precisely double the initial estimate of $45,000. In due course, Mr Petrucco negotiated a further modest reduction - $60,000 and $22,000 respectively. To this must be added a further $15,000 which is the agreed amount for a supplementary report from Moore Stephens. The final total for the expert reports is therefore $97,000.
18It is obvious that there was insufficient ongoing supervision by Argyle over the work being undertaken by the accountants. No satisfactory attempt was made, while the work was being carried out, to ensure that the accountants were working to the initial estimate. There was insufficient scrutiny and inadequate oversight. There was not the same level of prudence and circumspection that one would expect from a reasonable person of business looking after his or her own affairs.
19The fault is not however entirely that of Argyle. Professional experts have an obligation to behave promptly, frankly and openly when or if they become aware that their estimate of fees and expenses is likely to be materially exceeded. They must inform their principal and provide an opportunity for an informed choice to be made - whether or not to proceed with the engagement or to re-negotiate its terms and extent. It is commercially unacceptable for a professional expert to remain silent, to complete the work and then to present a bill significantly in excess of the original estimate - as if it were a fait accompli. Such conduct is unacceptable whether it is merely forgetful, or just sharp.
20Ultimately however, the real problem is that, whatever it may have cost, the work which Mr Quigley commissioned from BRI Ferrier and Moore Stephens was unnecessary for these proceedings. It did not assist, and never would have assisted, the resolution of the questions of construction arising from the terms of Clauses 4, 5 and 16 of the will. In that sense, the sum of $97,000 for which BRI Ferrier and Moore Stephens claim payment, is wasted expenditure. There was no reasonable basis for incurring it in these proceedings.
21Argyle now proposes that only 50% of the costs of the expert reports be apportioned to these proceedings. It proposes to apportion the remaining 50% of those costs to the administration of the estate. Argyle's engagement letter dated 15 December 2010 made clear that the retainer of BRI Ferrier was for the purpose of these proceedings. The current proposal emerged as a result of the criticisms in my principal judgment. It is a partial recognition of the wasted expenditure involved in the expert reports - at least for the purposes of these proceedings.
22I am only dealing with the costs of these proceedings. The costs of the administration of the estate, other than those that are incidental to the proceedings, will fall for determination when or if accounts are passed by the executor. As far as these proceedings are concerned, it would not matter whether the amount of the costs of the expert reports proposed to be apportioned to these proceedings was 10%, 20% or 50%. Those costs were simply never necessary for these proceedings. They were not reasonably incurred for the purpose of the proceedings. It was not reasonable, for the purpose of the proceedings, to carry out the work to which the costs relate. They should not, in my view, be recoverable as costs of and incidental to these proceedings.
23The same must follow for a proportion of Argyle's own professional costs. Insofar as work was carried out by Argyle in connection with the expert reports, it was of no utility in the proceedings. It was not reasonable to carry out that work. Nor was it reasonable to carry out the work represented by the tender of a large quantity of irrelevant factual evidence. I referred to this additional unfortunate aspect of the proceedings in paragraph [39] - [40] of my principal judgment. The same reasoning must also apply to counsels' fees. However, counsel who originally appeared for the plaintiff no longer appear. They were not separately represented on the costs hearing and no submissions were put on their behalf. It will be sufficient if I leave it to their judgment to make suitable arrangements with Argyle and the executor in the light of these reasons. I am confident in the outcome.
24I will shortly explain what costs I propose to allow. But the fact that I have concluded that a substantial proportion of the costs incurred in the conduct of the proceedings on behalf of the executor should not be recoverable, is entirely consistent with the conduct of the hearing on 1 August 2011. It became quite apparent at that hearing that the expert reports and the substantial majority of the factual evidence tendered by the plaintiff, served no useful purpose in facilitating the determination of the proper construction of Clauses 4, 5, and 16 of the will. As the hearing progressed, and submissions were developed, this must have been obvious to the legal representatives of the plaintiff. It should come as no surprise that I have reached the conclusions that I have explained.
25Apart altogether from the specific provisions of the Civil Procedure Act and the Legal Profession Act to which I referred in paragraphs [5] - [7] above, the court has long exercised control over unnecessary or unreasonable costs incurred by trustees in legal proceedings, notwithstanding the indemnity to which a trustee is prima facie entitled. I can do no better than repeat the following exposition by Long Innes CJ in Eq in Price v Church of England Property Trust Diocese of Goulburn (1935) 35 SR (NSW) 444 at 460:
It is clear that a trustee is entitled, as a general rule, to be indemnified out of the trust property against his full costs of legal proceedings which he has properly instituted or defended on behalf of the trust; it is, however, equally clear that he will not be allowed to charge against the trust property the costs of unnecessary proceedings, or of elaborate proceedings where he might have obtained the same result by a simpler and less expensive procedure: Thomas v Walker (18 Beav. 521), Wells v Malbon (31 Beav. 48); and I think it highly probable, I need not put it higher at present, that the same result would follow in a case where the trustee had incurred unnecessary costs in proceedings properly instituted against him as trustee.