REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
PAGONE J:
43 I have had the advantage of reading the joint reasons for judgment of Edmonds and Gleeson JJ and respectfully agree with their Honours in all but one respect. I have a different view in relation to the second argument put by the appellants and, more particularly, about the concession made by senior counsel in argument.
44 The issue engaged by the appellants' second argument concerns the extent to which the finality of orders determine whether the proceedings are concluded for the purposes of r 42.7(2) of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW). Rule 42.7 provides:
42.7 Interlocutory applications and reserved costs
(1) Unless the court orders otherwise, the costs of any application or other step in any proceedings, including:
(a) costs that are reserved, and
(b) costs in respect of any such application or step in respect of which no order as to costs is made,
are to be paid and otherwise dealt with in the same way as the general costs of the proceedings.
(2) Unless the court orders otherwise, costs referred to in subrule (1) do not become payable until the conclusion of the proceedings.
Counsel for Cassegrain argued that the relevant inquiry for the purposes of the application of the rule was whether the proceedings in question had concluded. That was because r 47.2(2) provides that costs orders do not, unless otherwise ordered, become payable "until the conclusion of the proceedings". Counsel for the appellant argued that the combined effect of orders 10 and 17 made by Bergin CJ on 24 July 2012, and in particular order 17, necessarily required something more to occur in the proceeding which meant that it had not concluded for the purposes of rule 42.7(2).
45 It was in that context that counsel for the appellant was asked by the court during the hearing of the appeal whether it was accepted by the appellants that the proceedings had concluded if order 17 was found to be a final order. The essential part of the response made by senior counsel for the appellants is set out in the joint judgment but it may be desirable to set out more of the exchange between bench and bar from the transcript between T7 line 44 and T9 line 44:
EDMONDS J: Do you accept that - or do you not accept that if the court was to find that the orders made by her Honour were - we were of the view that they were final orders, that the proceedings had concluded?
MR EINFELD: Not - with a slight adjustment, if I may be permitted, to the question. The question is whether the proceeding - the question is whether the proceedings concluded and, therefore, the questions will be - well, there might be some final orders. The question is whether the substantive orders, that is, the orders addressing this question of the liability of our clients to pay our friend's clients, are final. Yes.
EDMONDS J: But if - well, I will rephrase it. Court were to find that the relevant orders which her Honour made - I will just get the date - 24 July .....
MR EINFELD: ..... come. Yes.
EDMONDS J: 24 July. The relevant orders with which we're concerned I think were - in particular, the costs order was 16, I think.
MR EINFELD: Yes.
EDMONDS J: And it's also relevant as to what her Honour had to say in order 17.
MR EINFELD: Yes. Correct.
EDMONDS J: But if the court was to find that they were final orders, do you say the proceedings are concluded for the purpose of 42.7?
MR EINFELD: Not necessarily - - -
EDMONDS J: Not necessarily. No doubt - - -
MR EINFELD: - - - for this reason - - -
EDMONDS J: Well, you can expand that. That's something I - in your own time.
MR EINFELD: No. No. I will do it now. I say not necessarily for this reason. A division has to be made. Let it be accepted for the moment that the order for costs was a final order. That - I will go the other way around. If it be accepted that the orders relating to the substantive liability of the appellants were final, then the answer to your Honour's question is yes so that if the declaration relating to liability, order 16 and 17 - sorry - if the declaration as to liability, which I think is paragraph 10, and the order for the inquiry and what's to happen after the date upon which those orders were pronounced are to be treated as final, as his Honour found they were, then the answer to your Honour's question is yes. We would accept that the proceedings have concluded. The mere fact, however, that the costs order is a final order does not mean that the proceedings as a whole have concluded. Every time an order for costs is made in proceedings, even in an interlocutory application, that costs order ..... certainly, for example, there's authority - - -
EDMONDS J: Until it's set aside.
MR EINFELD: Until set aside is a final order.
EDMONDS J: Yes.
MR EINFELD: So in this case let it be accepted that order 16 is a final - has the stamp of - - -
EDMONDS J: I suppose I - - -
MR EINFELD: - - - finality on it - - -
EDMONDS J: I suppose I - - -
MR EINFELD: - - - and it doesn't - - -
EDMONDS J: I put it - I think I've got the concession I was looking for from you because I was more concerned about her Honour's finding about liability and, as you rightly say, that was order 10. So - - -
MR EINFELD: Yes. The declaration was - - -
EDMONDS J: The declarations.
MR EINFELD: - - - 10.
EDMONDS J: So that if the court were to find that that was a final order - - -
MR EINFELD: Yes.
EDMONDS J: - - - then you would agree that the proceedings have concluded.
MR EINFELD: If the combination of 10 and 17, that is, the declaration of liability
- - -
EDMONDS J: And the setting up of inquiry.
MR EINFELD: And 17, what is happen - what is to happen with that declaration are to be treated by the court as final, we would have to accept the proceedings - - -
EDMONDS J: You would have to accept the proceedings - - -
MR EINFELD: - - - had concluded.
EDMONDS J: - - - had concluded. Thank you very much, Mr Einfeld.
The concession made by senior counsel for the appellant in this exchange is, in my view, heavily qualified. He did concede that the proceedings had concluded if the proper construction of the combination of orders 10 and 17, and in particular of order 17, was to be treated by the court as final, but the concession in those terms does not fully reveal the qualification of the concession. The argument which senior counsel for the appellants was making was that the orders could not be regarded as final because on their face they required something to be done which, in turn, when done, required the matter to come back to court and, therefore, that until then neither could the orders be regarded as final nor could the proceedings relevantly be concluded.
46 The submissions returned to these matters after the exchange set out above with counsel submitting at T14 line 20 to T15 line 19:
So what's to be done with that declaration in a case in which the plaintiffs in the Supreme Court sought monetary compensation? The answer to that follows at 17, but your Honour the presiding judge has correctly drawn attention already to paragraph 16, and we pause there, because there is, it may be accepted, what might be described for perhaps the purpose of an appeal a final order for costs. The question is a bit academic, because in New South Wales, at least, leave is needed to appeal on a question of costs in any event. But the appellants here were ordered to pay the plaintiff's costs. But the question of conclusion of the proceedings is not to be determined by whether or not there was a final costs order, and the question in this case will turn, we respectfully submit, upon the terms of order 17. And we just want to pause at a couple of important points to note a couple of important points.
An inquiry be held as to the existence and quantum -
just stopping there, not just quantum but existence and quantum, that is, of any loss; that is, the inquirer will need to be determined whether there is any loss, and if so, the quantum of that loss. And it may, of course, be that the referee or inquirer might conclude that there was no such loss. And then it's necessary to determine whether that loss was caused by reason of the transfer of the subject shares. And the next words are vital, we submit, in the third line:
The purpose of that inquiry is for the purpose of making orders for equitable compensation to be paid.
Now, at first instance the primary judge, we submit, simply swept up this order and said, "Well, it was pretty final." I'm paraphrasing perhaps without due respect to the precise reasons, to which we will come, but, "This all had the stamp of finality about it." But it doesn't, because her Honour has herself expressed the view that the inquiry was to be undertaken for the purpose of making orders - that is, in the future - for equitable compensation to be paid. In our submission, that language is unequivocally clear, that her Honour did not intend that the proceedings be concluded, but that - to answer our friends' question in their written outline, "What more remained to be done" - the answer to this appeal, they submit, is to be answered by the - is to be determined by answering the question, "What else was there left to be done?" And the answer is right in front of us.
What's left to be done is an inquiry, a decision as to whether any money is payable at all, and if so, the matter is to come back to the court in order that her Honour or the court will then make orders for the payment of compensation. So long as that be construed in the manner in which we respectfully submit it ordinarily ought, it is manifest, we submit, to pick up the words of rule 42.7 subrule (2), that the proceedings are not concluded, because what remained to be done was that the matter had to come back to the court for the making of final orders. And then it proceeds to identify the contents of the inquiry, the terms of which perhaps don't matter for present purposes, save that at the end there's the reference to a determination of any amount to be ordered. And again, it may be that there might or might not be amounts to be ordered pursuant to the Corporations Act.
The earlier concession made by senior counsel was, it seems to me, more limited than the court had sought to determine by the questions. The concession was conditional and based upon the hypothesis that the court was concluding that the orders were "final" in a practical sense of there being nothing further to be done to give effect to the combined operation of orders 10 and 17 which had been made by Bergin CJ. Order 10 had declared joint and several liability to compensate the respondent by declaring:
10. Claude Cassegrain, Anthony Sarks and Felicity Cassegrain are jointly and severally liable to compensate Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited for any loss to Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited arising from the transfer of Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited's shares in CaTTO and OAL to Felicity Cassegrain on 19 and 20 January 2005 respectively.
Order 17, however, required an inquiry to be conducted to determine the existence and quantum of any loss which had been suffered by reason of the transfer of the shares, and that inquiry was expressly required to be undertaken for the purpose of making further orders in the future for equitable compensation to be paid. Order 17, thus, provided:
17. An Inquiry be held as to the existence and quantum of any loss to Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited by reason of the transfer of Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited's shares in CaTTO and OAL to Felicity Cassegrain for the purpose of making orders for equitable compensation to be paid to Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited by Claude Cassegrain, Anthony Sarks and Felicity Cassegrain. That Inquiry is to include the assessment of any damage to Gerard Cassegrain & Co Pty Limited by reason of the contraventions of ss 180, 181(1) and 182(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 by Claude Cassegrain and Anthony Sarks (including any profits made by Claude Cassegrain and/or Anthony Sarks resulting from the contraventions) referred to in Declarations 5 and 6 and the determination of any amount of compensation to be ordered under s 1317H of the Corporations Act 2001 against Claude Cassegrain and Anthony Sarks. (Emphasis added)
There was, therefore, pursuant to the terms of order 17, something further to be done in the proceeding, including the making of orders. The fact of liability had been declared and the mechanism for determining the quantum of the liability had been ordered but, so the argument ran, the proceedings had not yet concluded within the meaning of r 42.7(2) because the orders themselves, although final in one sense, required the matter to come back to the court for the making of the orders contemplated by order 17.
47 In my view, the words "the conclusion of the proceedings" in r 42.7(2) are deliberately wide and contemplate the practical termination of the proceedings in which cost orders have been made. The purpose of the rule is to defer the payment of costs until that practical point in time is reached when the proceeding has come to an end, subject, of course, to a court making a contrary order. No such order was sought by the respondents in the proceeding before Bergin CJ and, therefore, their ability to require the payment of the costs depended upon a factual inquiry into whether the proceedings had concluded. In my view the proceedings had not concluded by the orders made but, rather, the orders made contemplated an inquiry to be undertaken which, in itself, could be expected to incur additional costs which might themselves bear upon amounts payable as between the parties. Rule 42.7(2) has made the payment of costs dependent upon "the conclusion of the proceedings" subject to any order to the contrary and not to the juristic analysis of whether specific orders were final. The concession made by senior counsel, as I understand it, was that the finality of the orders would result in the proceeding being concluded if the orders themselves, and the terms of order 17 in particular, meant that there was nothing more in the proceeding that needed to be done. In my view the orders were not final in that sense and I would therefore have allowed the appeal.
I certify that the preceding five (5) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Pagone.