Plankton Australia Pty Limited v Rainstorm Dust Control Pty Limited
[2017] FCA 1616
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2017-12-21
Before
Lee J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (4 paragraphs)
- The respondents' interlocutory application dated 19 December 2017 and filed on 21 December 2017 be dismissed.
- The respondents pay the applicants' costs of the interlocutory application. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
a introduction and background 1 An interlocutory application has been filed by the respondents seeking an order for the transfer of these proceedings to the Western Australian Registry of the Court. 2 The proceedings first came before me as duty judge on 4 December 2017. At that time, an application was made for urgent interlocutory relief. Following an interim regime being agreed between the parties, the applicants sought an urgent final hearing. 3 At that stage, I indicated to the parties that in relation to various separate liability issues (that is, the urgent aspects of the relief sought) it may be possible for a hearing to be conducted before me in Sydney at the end of December 2017, including with the Court sitting, if necessary, on 29 December 2017. 4 It became evident in a subsequent case management hearing that the respondents intended to attempt to adduce evidence from a number of witnesses at the hearing, which meant that the case may not be able to be conducted within the time available at the end of 2017 and that the proposed truncated timetable would potentially prevent the respondents from marshalling the evidence they wished to adduce at the hearing. 5 From both before and shortly after the proceedings were commenced, the respondents have maintained that the proceedings involve Western Australian land and that the majority of conversations and dealings between the parties took place in Western Australia. Indeed, even before proceedings were commenced, the respondents entreated the applicants that if proceedings were instituted, they be commenced in the Western Australian Registry. 6 Be that as it may, both the applicants and the respondents recognise that the liability aspects of the proceedings should be determined as quickly as possible. This is now common ground and it is unnecessary for the purpose of these reasons to go into the detail, but it suffices to note that on 15 December 2017 an interlocutory regime was put in place by which all interlocutory steps are to be completed by 8 February 2018 and by which a separate hearing is to be listed on a date to be fixed in February 2018. 7 The reason why I was prepared to accede to such an expedited timetable was first, because I considered that the issues to be determined at the separate hearing were of a relatively narrow compass and could likely be resolved with alacrity and, secondly, as a reflection of the fact that as a commercial court, every reasonable effort should be made to resolve commercial disputes as quickly as possible, subject to the other demands on the Court. 8 As counsel for the applicants put it, given that there is a hearing date in February 2018, the issue is not so much where the trial should be heard, but in locating a judge who will be in a position to both hear the case and potentially deliver judgment by the end of February 2018.