McLaughlin v Dungowan Manly Pty Ltd
[2011] NSWSC 384
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Supreme Court of NSW
Decision date
2011-04-28
Before
Pembroke J, The J, Ward J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
The Application to Set Aside 21The outcome of the proceeding was that I was not satisfied that the plaintiffs were entitled to the declarations and orders which they sought. I therefore dismissed the originating process, namely the summons filed on 10 February 2011. That carried with it the subsequent statement of claim. Additionally, as I pointed out in the principal judgment, neither the summons nor the statement of claim claimed any specific relief in relation to the oppression claim. I therefore fashioned an appropriate declaration to reflect my findings on that question. I then made a costs order.
Rule 36.17 22The application to set aside is put on two bases. The first depends on the slip rule, Rule 36.17. This cannot succeed. There is no clerical mistake, or inadvertent error or omission, or other error, in my "judgment or order". It accurately reflected my intentions. The application under the slip rule seemed to confuse the distinction between the reasons on the one hand, and the judgment, order or decision on the other hand: see Rule 36.2. 23In fact, prior to the hearing of the application to set aside the judgment, I requested the legal representatives of the plaintiffs to specify in their proposed notice of motion each clerical mistake, slip or error for which they contended and to identify what precisely they proposed should be substituted. This they could not do. The plaintiffs nonetheless persisted with their application under the slip rule. At the hearing they relied on Newmont Yandal Operations Pty Limited v The J Aron Corporation & The Goldman Sachs Group Inc & Ors (2007) 70 NSWLR 411 (Spigelman CJ, Santow JA and Handley AJA). But that was a case about unintended or unforeseen consequences of a judgment. In such a case, there may well be "error" of the type encompassed by the slip rule, at least when read with Section 56 of the Civil Procedure Act. But it does not assist here. 24My orders do not have unintended consequences. Their legal effect is to reject the plaintiffs' asserted entitlement to the declarations and orders which they sought. Their practical effect is to deny the validity of the resolutions passed by the plaintiffs at the purported meeting of the Company which they conducted on 6 January 2011 and the steps which they took consequent upon those resolutions. My intention was to bring about a situation by which the Company's appeal from the decision of Ward J, currently at a standstill, could proceed.