29 Ms Warner's affidavits also deal with other aspects of the preparation for arbitration to which I will return in due course. One of the matters raised by the plaintiff in seeking the orders in the Summons is the size and complexity of the claim made by the defendant in the arbitration. It is submitted that the claim is "huge" in monetary terms and the complexity of the matter is demonstrated by the Points of Claim, 108 pages long, containing more than 30 separate allegations of breach of contract and allegations of bad faith and fraud.
30 The plaintiff also claims that the defendant has not particularised its claims properly, although as I understand the evidence that has been prepared very urgently for this application, it is apparent that on the evening of 19 February 2004, last Thursday, further material was provided to the plaintiff that may dilute that complaint.
31 There is in evidence as exhibit 1, a list of 22 statements that have been served by the defendant on the plaintiff. The first 14 of those statements were all prepared and sworn or signed prior to 6 February 2004. Nine were finalised in January, five prior to 21 January, two on 28 January, one on 29 January and two on 30 January. Two were finalised on 4 February, one on 5 Febraury and two on 6 February. There are 8 other statements, one dated 13 February, three dated 16 February and four dated 17 February 2004. All the statements were provided to the plaintiff on 16 and 17 February 2004 and it is apparent, although there was some dispute about this during the course of today's argument, that there are at least six lever arch folders plus 13 lever arch folders of documents that have been delivered to the plaintiff on 16 and 17 February.
32 The plaintiff submitted that the vastness of the issues can be seen both from the Points of Claim and from the information contained in Ms Warner's affidavits in relation to the nature of the statements that have been served. There is evidence that the statements contain allegations that are very wide ranging in respect of the breaches alleged in the Points of Claim. The plaintiff submitted that it can be seen from exhibit 1 that more than half of the defendant's witness statements have been ready for weeks, since well before the start date and now the plaintiff has only a matter of days to respond to them. It is submitted that many of the statements contain material not foreshadowed in the Dispute Notice or in the Points of Claim so that the plaintiff was unable to prepare to anticipate such material before the statements were served.
33 There is also a claim that the defendant deliberately interfered with the plaintiff's attempts to try to get ready for this arbitration. However Mr Sackar QC submitted that the plaintiff does not need to prove that there was deliberate interference, because, in any event, the evidence establishes that there was delay caused to the plaintiff's preparation in this very tight time frame.
34 There are in evidence some letters exhibited to Ms Warner's affidavit which disclose that the plaintiff was writing to a third party, Pro-met Engineers Pty Ltd, seeking documents, including documents reporting to and updating Austeel and monthly engineering reports and invoices.
Freehills' letter to Pro-met of 20 January 2004 indicated that the plaintiff intended to make an application to this Court the day after the appointment of the third arbitrator, to be granted leave to issue a subpoena for production to be served on Pro-met. Indeed, the letter indicated that if it assisted they would even arrange for the documents to be collected and brought to the Court.
35 What happened thereafter was that Pro-met obviously notified Austeel it had received Freehills' letter and Austeel then wrote both to Pro-met and Freehills. Mr Holmes QC submitted that there is nothing other than an open course of conduct adopted by Austeel evidenced in these letters. He submitted that Austeel informed Freehills that it was going to communicate with Pro-met and that its letter to Freehills would be sent to Pro-met. However, the letter that was sent to Freehills, advised that Austeel took the view that the documents sought by Freehills from Pro-met "do not form part of our claim set out in the dispute notice" and that the invoices "are not relevant to the proceedings". Austeel indicated to Freehills it did not consider that Freehills had a right to issue a subpoena. It then stated that the copy of that letter would be forwarded to Pro-met and its lawyers.
36 What Austeel did on the same day was to write to Pro-met requesting that Pro-met deliver up the documents that were in fact the subject of the proposed subpoena. That request was purportedly based upon a clause in a confidentiality agreement, a copy of which was enclosed with the letter to Pro-met. Austeel gave Pro-met until the following day at 12 noon to deliver those documents to it. Austeel did not inform Freehills that it was about to require such delivery up.
37 The debate between Pro-met and Austeel seems to have become heated and Austeel threatened Pro-met that it would terminate its retainer unless it did as it was being asked. Ms Warner took the view that the correspondence disclosed an intention to extract from the proposed subpoenaed party the documents that the plaintiff was seeking so that when the plaintiff sought them there would be nothing produced. I do not have to decide today whether it was the intention of the writer of the letters to do that. The consequence of it was simply a further use of resources in a manner that was not going to bring fruit by reason of the defendant seeking to get back from Pro-met its documents. Even if it was done pursuant to a true belief that this was something that was permissible in the teeth of the proposed subpoena and consistent with its desire to protect its confidentiality of documents, it seems to have deflected the plaintiff's energies unnecessarily. Indeed, Professor Palmer rejects any suggestion that he intended to do anything improper and I have taken into account his denial.
38 The next matter is the financial model, the Mizuho Model. Mr Holmes, I apprehend, agreed that the energies of the plaintiff were spent in using a model that is not being used in the arbitration. However he did suggest from the Bar table that there was somewhere a suggestion that it would not matter which model was used. That is not the evidence before me.
39 It was not until 12 or 13 February 2004 when the Points of Claim were apparently served, that the plaintiff received notice that the King model was unequivocally adopted by the defendant for the quantification of the huge damages that it claims. Had it been the case that the defendant could have informed the plaintiff that the King Model was to be used its energies would not have been expended in the wrong direction. Mr Holmes submitted I should read the correspondence carefully, which I have done in the limited time available, in which Professor Palmer indicated that certain documents were not in existence prior to a particular time. The statement of Mr King, the author of the King Model, is referred to in exhibit 1 as dated 6 February 2004. It must have been the case, that as at or before 6 February 2004 the defendant was aware that the King model was to be relied upon in the arbitration.
40 It seems to me that it would have been appropriate, proper and fair to remove the misapprehension that had been clearly communicated by Ms Warner to the defendant that the resources of the State were being utilised to prepare for arbitration on a model that was not going to be used. It does seem that those resources were deflected in this way up until 12 or 13 February 2004. It is worth noting that relatively recent authority indicates that, at least in litigation, parties should ensure that their opponents' misapprehensions are corrected: White v Overland [2001] FCA 1333 at par [4]. This approach is based on the need to ensure that costs are not wasted and in my view is one that should be adopted in arbitrations. It is clear to me that the plaintiff proceeded for weeks prior to this arbitration on a false premise and that the false premise was not corrected.
41 The plaintiff submitted that the relief sought in the Summons will not convert a short arbitration process into a massive trial process. It is submitted that the relief sought would only extend the whole process by approximately three weeks and that it is still remarkably quick for a matter of this importance and complexity to be dealt with in under two months. What is being sought is to extend the time for the commencement of the hearing by two weeks, the time of the hearing (on a stop watch basis in which the parties have an equal time to present their cases) practically by four days, but only on business days, rather than business days and weekends, and the time for delivery of the award of the arbitrators to seven days after the hearing is concluded.
42 The defendant submitted that the Court should pay close regard to the terms of the agreement and to the parties' intentions that the terms of clause 14.3 with its tight time frame should govern the process of arbitration without interference from the Court.