Consideration
24 The two 'elements' O'Bryan J describes are not, of course, immutable prerequisites to making any order to set aside. But they are useful guidelines to the exercise of the discretion, and the hearing was conducted on the basis that Dr Nugawela did have to establish a good reason why he was unable to attend Court on 14 December 2023, and that he did have to establish that he had a prima facie basis to resist the orders for security for costs and for the dismissal of the appeal if security was not given within a certain time.
25 Dr Nugawela has failed to establish either of those things. As to the first, I have described above what Dr Nugawela's evidence does not say. It does not say that it was medically necessary that he be admitted to Hollywood Private Hospital on 12 December 2023. It may be accepted that he had been suffering pre-syncopal and syncopal episodes and that his consulting cardiologist thought it advisable to admit him for further tests and treatment. But there is no evidence that this had to occur over the particular range of dates on which it did occur.
26 To the contrary, Dr Mabote's second medical certificate refers to it as an elective admission that was recommended for further investigations. And the fact that it did not occur immediately after the consultation on 7 December 2023, but five days later, suggests that there was some flexibility as to the dates. As I have said, the production of this second medical certificate at the hearing put a different complexion on the evidence, and led me to give Dr Nugawela's affidavit the close reading that has been undertaken.
27 The sequence of events described in in the second certificate raises another matter that is relevant to the exercise of the discretion, namely why, if admission to hospital was recommended after a consultation on 7 December 2023, Dr Nugawela did not attempt to inform the Court before his admission, rather than on 13 December 2023. The proper course, if Dr Nugawela's presence in hospital was medically necessary on 14 December 2023, was to apply for an adjournment and with medical evidence in support. Dr Nugawela had the opportunity to do this. While a self-represented litigant, he has considerable experience of the courts. The fact that he did not apply for an adjournment further erodes his position that his presence in hospital on that day is a good explanation for why he did not attend the hearing.
28 Some 11 days before the hearing of the present application, the respondent filed an outline of written submissions which made serious allegations about what was asserted to be the real reason for Dr Nugawela's admission to hospital. Those allegations were withdrawn at the hearing; I mention them here to show that Dr Nugawela was on advance notice that the respondent challenged the adequacy of the evidence that he had adduced to support the position that his absence from the hearing on 14 December 2023 was medically necessary. Yet Dr Nugawela has not adduced any evidence which establishes that essential fact.
29 Dr Nugawela observed in oral submissions that his medical conditions and treatment were private matters. That can be accepted. But when a person seeks to rely on medical conditions and treatment as an explanation as to why he did not appear at a court hearing, the explanation and evidence supporting it needs to be sufficiently full and frank to demonstrate a good excuse for his non-attendance.
30 Dr Nugawela also observed that coronary care units such as that at Hollywood Private Hospital are highly specialised places where the activities of a large number of medical specialists are coordinated. They are not places where patients are admitted or kept as inpatients for no good reason. As a 74-year-old, his age also means that his hospitalisation was not unreasonable. All of that may be accepted too. But it does not follow that it was necessary for Dr Nugawela's recommended hospitalisation for further investigations to take place on a day on which he had a court commitment. Nor does it explain why, if it was necessary, Dr Nugawela did not seek an adjournment.
31 As to the second 'element', namely whether the evidence discloses an argument of sufficient merit to warrant setting aside the order, Nugawela (No 1) sets out why security for costs was ordered on 14 December 2023. With two exceptions, Dr Nugawela's evidence and submissions do not address any of the reasons set out there, so as to demonstrate that he had a prima facie basis to resist the order for security for costs.
32 The first exception is that, as has been recounted, Dr Nugawela's own evidence on the present application states that his financial resources are severely limited and that he has no income. That disposes of a reservation I expressed in Nugawela (No 1) at [17]-[19] that there was no up to date evidence of Dr Nugawela's impecuniosity. Also, at the hearing of the present application the respondent produced an extract from the National Insolvency Register establishing that Dr Nugawela is an undischarged bankrupt. So on that basis, the case for ordering security appears stronger now than it did on 14 December 2023.
33 The other exception to Dr Nugawela's failure to address any of the reasons for ordering security is to be found in the submissions summarised above, which are said to show that the respondent's conduct has caused his impecuniosity. If established, that would be a reason against exercising the discretion to order security for costs.
34 As mentioned, those matters are submissions unsupported by evidence. But even if they were to be received as if they were evidence, they would not establish a prima facie case that the respondent caused Dr Nugawela's impecuniosity.
35 As to the medical practice and premises, they were sold and there is nothing to suggest that the price was depressed by the respondent's conduct.
36 There is also nothing to suggest that the sale of the medical practice's equipment caused financial loss. In any event, that the respondent did sell that equipment is contradicted by an affidavit sworn by him on 22 February 2024 which states that he did not auction off any medical equipment or other property, which was (to the best of his knowledge) sold by the relevant financier. That evidence is not contradicted and I accept it.
37 As to the sale of other properties by the banks, there is nothing to suggest that the respondent could stop that happening, or had any reason to do so.
38 As to the allegation about removing records, it is impossible to ascertain what connection, if any, this has to the apparent subsequent action by AHPRA which led to the loss of Dr Nugawela's licence to practice. In the absence of clear evidence to the contrary, there is no basis for any conclusion that the conduct of the respondent was causally related to that step, taken by an independent regulatory body.
39 As to the claim that the respondent did not proceed with various taxation objections, there is no basis in the evidence to think that, even if he had, that would have produced a better financial outcome for Dr Nugawela. The bases of the objections and the amounts involved are largely not disclosed. The submissions do say that the Full Court ruled that Dr Nugawela's 'basic tax debt' was about $150,000 plus penalties and interest, but why or how the conduct of the respondent contributed to this assessment is unknown. It is not enough for Dr Nugawela to say in general terms, as he does, that the respondent 'sided with the ATO'.
40 As a result, I am not persuaded that Dr Nugawela has a prima facie case that the respondent's conduct caused his impecuniosity. Beyond that, the reasons articulated in Nugawela (No 1) stand.