Mr Marshall's insurance documents
9 AIG submitted that there was no legitimate forensic purpose for the notice to produce and, accordingly, it should be set aside: Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) v BHP Coal Pty Ltd (No 3) [2012] FCA 61 at [6]. I accepted that submission.
10 The purpose of a notice to produce served pursuant to r 30.28 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Rules) is to obtain production of documents or things in aid of a trial or hearing in the proceeding: see r 30.28(1). In this case, the applicant seeks the relevant documents for the following other purposes:
(1) to review the excess layer policies to ensure that any issues surrounding the activation of those policies is addressed at the final hearing, to the intent that the policies are properly enlivened if the applicant is successful in her claims; and
(2) for the purposes of mediation and prospective settlement approval.
11 Against the possibility that I would order that the notice to produce be set aside, senior counsel for the applicant, Mr Finch SC, applied orally for an order for the production of the documents covered by the notice to produce pursuant to s 33ZF of the Act.
12 The application was made without evidence from the applicant's solicitor as to the necessity for inspection of the insurance documents. However, AIG did not dispute that the reasons put forward for seeking production of the documents, set out at [10] above, existed and were legitimate reasons.
13 Noting my earlier finding of the real possibility that, if judgment is obtained, Mr Marshall would not be able to meet it, I inferred that the insurance documents are likely to be of utility to the applicant for the purposes of its participation in the mediation and relevant to the reasonableness of any offer of settlement. In the absence of any argument to the contrary, I also accepted that the insurance documents are, or are likely to be, relevant to the matter set out in [10(1)] above.
14 Orders for the production of documents relating to the respondents' insurance have been made by consent pursuant to s 33ZF or s 39P in proceedings no. NSD1983/2017 (Excel Texel Pty Ltd (as Trustee for the Mandex Family Trust) v Quintis Ltd) and NSD862/2018 (Geoffrey Peter Davis & Anor v Quintis Ltd (Receivers and Managers Appointed) (Voluntary Administrators Appointed) (ACN 092200 854) & Ors), and by orders not expressed to be by consent in proceeding VID1213/2016 (Matthew Hall v Slater & Gordon Limited). No reasons were published in respect of these orders.
15 In Kirby v Centro Properties Limited (ACN 078 590 682) [2009] FCA 695 (Kirby), Ryan J declined to give discovery of insurance policies in aid of a mediation of that class action proceeding, although without considering whether production should be ordered pursuant to s 33ZF. At [25], his Honour concluded:
I do not accept that a lack of knowledge by the applicant and his advisers of the existence and extent of insurance cover held by the respondents would, at this early stage, preclude the applicant's advisers from forming, pursuant to s 33V of the Act, an opinion on the reasonableness of any proposed outcome of negotiations in a mediation. Nor do I accept that a mediation occurring in the absence of that knowledge would be "hollow" or inconsistent with the principles which this Court has developed for the mediation or case management of disputes like the present.
16 At [28], Ryan J concluded that it was not within the power or discretion of the Court to compel disclosure to the applicant of the presumptive insurance policies.
17 In Kirby, the Court did not consider whether s 33ZF confers power on the Court to compel the production of documents concerning the respondent's insurance.
18 I also note that Kirby was decided before the commencement of Part VB of the Act, including s 37M, which sets out the overarching purpose of provisions (including, relevantly, s 33ZF), namely, to facilitate the just resolution of disputes:
(a) According to law; and
(b) As quickly, inexpensively and efficiently as possible.
19 Section 33ZF(1) provides:
In any proceeding (including an appeal) conducted under this Part, the Court may, of its own motion or on application by a party or a group member, make any order the Court thinks appropriate or necessary to ensure that justice is done in the proceeding.
20 Recently, in Westpac Banking Corporation v Lenthall [2019] FCAFC 34; (2019) 366 ALR 136 at [85]-[90], the Full Court explained the breadth of this power in the following terms:
85. … Pt IVA was a novel procedure (with its historical roots in equity). The expression of Wilcox J of the width and purpose of s 33ZF in McMullin v ICI Australia Operations Pty Ltd (No 6) [1998] FCA 658; 84 FCR 1 at 4 bears repeating:
Section 33ZF appears in Div 6 of Pt IVA which is headed "Miscellaneous". It bears the marginal note "General power of Court to make orders". These two features support the conclusion, that would in any event arise from its wording, that s 33ZF(1) was intended to confer on the Court the widest possible power to do whatever is appropriate or necessary in the interests of justice being achieved in a representative proceeding. It is understandable Parliament should have thought it appropriate to make such a provision. In enacting Pt IVA of the Federal Court of Australia Act, Parliament was introducing into Australian law an entirely novel procedure. It was impossible to foresee all the issues that might arise in the operation of the Part. In order to avoid the necessity for frequent resort to Parliament for amendments to the legislation, it was obviously desirable to empower the Court to make the orders necessary to resolve unforeseen difficulties, the only limitation being that the Court must think the order appropriate or necessary to ensure "that justice is done in the proceeding".
86. This reflects the expression of the matter in wide terms by the Explanatory Memorandum for the Federal Court of Australia Amendment Bill 1991 and in the Minister's Second Reading Speech. It is the widest possible power that extends to all procedures appropriate or necessary to deal with the matter on a just basis, see Courtney v Medtel Pty Limited [2002] FCA 957; 122 FCR 168 at 182 [48]; and Johnstone v HIH Limited [2004] FCA 190 at [104]-[105]. Having that wide character from its words, context and purpose, the injunction against reading down statutory powers given to courts, absent clear indication in terms or context (The Owners of the Ship "Shin Kobe Maru" v Empire Shipping Inc. [1994] HCA 54; 181 CLR 404 at 421), is of particular force.
87. The language of the section itself, far from hinting at restriction, denotes width, amplitude and flexibility. The power may be exercised on the Court's own motion. "Any" order of the relevant kind is empowered. The view of the Court is for any order that is appropriate or necessary. The word "necessary" was discussed by the Full Court in [Money Max Int Pty Ltd v QBE Insurance Group Ltd [2016] FCAFC 148; (2016) 245 FCR 191] at 223-224 [161]-[165]. We do not repeat that discussion. We agree with it and with the conclusion at 224 [165]: that the expression "necessary to ensure that justice is done" requires that the proposed order be reasonably adapted to the purpose of seeking or obtaining justice in the proceeding.
88. The language of s 33ZF reflects an intention of Parliament that the Court would, over time, in individual cases, develop new procedures in form and contour as it responded to the practical and economic circumstances in which Pt IVA was to work. A wide and unstructured form to the section would permit the practical working out, over time, of available and appropriate procedures for individual Pt IVA cases. This reflects the common law process in its relationship with statute: the experience of the Court accumulated from individual cases applying the law to new facts as they arise: Gageler, "Common Law Statutes and Judicial Legislation: Statutory Interpretation as a Common Law Process" [2011] MonashULawRw 17; (2011) 37(2) Monash University Law Review 1 at 1. The application of s 33ZF will be affected and informed by practical experience, changing practices and the immanent, and to a degree evolving, values of the law as perceived by the Court to be relevant to the operation of s 33ZF's fundamental normative standard: "appropriate or necessary to ensure that justice is done in the proceeding". This does not involve personal intuitive assertion. It is an evaluation to be reasoned and articulated by reference to the values and norms recognised by the statute, equitable principle and the essential features of judicial power: cf Paciocco v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2015] FCAFC 50; 236 FCR 199 at 274-275 [296]-[302].
89. This was the clear intention of Parliament. It would be frustrated by a confined approach urged by Westpac. The purpose of s 33ZF was a wide power in which, using the techniques of judicial power, the Court would shape the procedures and principles applicable to representative actions against an assessment of all connected circumstances.
90. The construction propounded by Westpac was too narrow, in part from giving greater stringency to the word "necessary" than the discussion in Money Max suggests is appropriate, and by characterising the phrase "appropriate or necessary" as hendiadys. Whilst each word assists (as part of the same phrase in the section) in the understanding of the meaning of the other, we do not consider it right to say that there is a hendiadys and that the word "appropriate" has within it the word "necessary". The conjunction is "or", not "and". A view as to appropriateness to ensure that justice is done may found an order. Westpac's submission was also too narrow in restricting the order to the "metes and bounds" of the proceedings, which we took to mean the pleaded issues for resolution. It is not an order restricted to a particular issue requiring resolution. It is "justice" that is to be ensured in the proceeding. That is procedural or substantive justice; and the Court is to be satisfied that there is something in the proceeding that should be addressed in order to ensure that justice in the proceeding is done. There is no reason to limit that to the pleaded issues. There is every reason to view as wide enough to deal, in a fair way, with circumstances that will remove a risk to the prosecution and vindication of the group's rights.
21 I am satisfied that s 33ZF empowers the Court to make an order for the production of documents concerning the insurance of a party if the Court thinks that such an order is appropriate or necessary to ensure that justice is done in the proceeding.
22 In this case, the proceeding involves claims by persons who entered into "consumer leases" regulated by consumer protection legislation. There is an issue about Mr Marshall's capacity to meet any judgment that may be obtained against him and there is an imminent mediation. Any settlement that may be achieved will require Court approval including evidence that the applicant's legal representatives are satisfied that the settlement is fair and reasonable and in the interests of group members as a whole: Zantran Pty Limited v Crown Resorts Limited [2019] FCA 641 at [146]. By para 14.4 of the Class Actions Practice Note (GPN-CA), one of the factors that material filed in support of an application for Court approval of a settlement will usually be required to address is "(g) the ability of the respondent to withstand a greater judgment".
23 It is reasonable to think that the prospects of settlement will be reduced if the applicant's legal representatives are required to assess any settlement offer without information about Mr Marshall's insurance position.
24 In all these circumstances, the applicant will plainly be assisted by access to the documents sought, will be at a significant disadvantage in the mediation if she does not have such access and may otherwise be unable to demonstrate that a proposed settlement is fair and reasonable and in the interests of group members as a whole.
25 I also accepted that access to the excess insurance policies will assist the applicant by enabling her to ensure that those policies are properly enlivened, if appropriate.
26 I accepted that the production of Mr Marshall's insurance documents will confer a tactical advantage on the applicant to the detriment of AIG and that the documents are not relevant to an issue in the proceeding. However, balancing those matters against the considerations in favour of production, I was satisfied that an order for production of the documents is appropriate (and likely necessary) to ensure that justice is done in the proceeding.