The application to discontinue the proceeding against Mr Shaw
23 The Official Trustee seeks leave to discontinue the proceeding by filing a Notice of Discontinuance in the usual form, on the following conditions:
(a) The Applicant must pay the Respondent's legal costs of the proceeding, such entitlement to costs to arise only upon the Respondent's discharge from bankruptcy; and
(b) The Applicant may not recover its legal costs of the proceeding or its legal costs of proceedings QUD145/2023 and QUD440/2023 from the bankrupt estate of the Respondent.
24 Mr Shaw does not consent to the discontinuation of the proceeding whilst he has an extant interlocutory application.
25 The Brumley Affidavit, to which Mr Shaw objects, does little more than exhibit correspondence passing between the solicitors for the Official Trustee and Mr Shaw between 1 October 2024 and today, certain court documents, and the Official Trustee's responses (dated 1 December 2023) to Mr Shaw's requests for information made between 17 September 2023 and 1 November 2023.
26 The Objections are as follows:
As to [2], Mr Shaw objects to Mr Brumley's statement that he is authorised by the Official Trustee to make the affidavit on its behalf.
As to [6]-[12], Mr Shaw objects to the paragraphs exhibiting the correspondence between the parties on the basis that the correspondence is irrelevant to the case management hearing.
As to [13], Mr Shaw objects to the statement that the Official Trustee does not agree to pay Mr Shaw's costs in so far as they relate to QUD 145 of 2023 and QUD 440 of 2023, on the basis that it is "Irrelevant Opinion, Source of belief not produced".
As to [16], Mr Shaw objects to the Statement that the Official Trustee does not agree to Mr Shaw's third condition of discontinuance - seeking a hearing of his interlocutory application of 19 September 2024 - "Irrelevant Opinion, Source of belief not produced".
As to [18], which explains the Official Trustee's position in relation to each paragraph of the interlocutory application of 19 September 2024 consequent on the proceeding be discontinued, on the basis that it is "Not admissible, Not stating facts, Opinion".
27 There is some force in Mr Shaw's objection to [18], which is really in the nature of submissions. The position outlined in that paragraph was, in any event, dealt with by Counsel in written and oral submissions. It is unnecessary for me to have regard to that paragraph.
28 The balance of the objections cannot be sustained. I am not prepared to infer, in the absence of a skerrick of evidence to the contrary, that a legal practitioner who has sworn to having been instructed to: make an affidavit on behalf of his client; give his client's position on matters relating to costs; and respond on his client's behalf to a proposed condition put by the other side, is being anything other than entirely truthful. This is not the first occasion on which Mr Shaw has cast such an aspersion on a legal practitioner without any basis for so doing.
29 Further, there is nothing objectionable in [6]-[12]. The correspondence between parties since the last hearing is inevitably a matter that is commonly brought to the attention of the Court at a case management hearing and is, in any event, relevant to the Official Trustee's application to discontinue the proceeding.
30 That correspondence shows that, by return email sent at 2.11pm on 1 October 2024, Mr Shaw: asked certain questions about costs; queried the continuance of his interlocutory application and particularly what he describes as a "review of the decision 6 October 2023"; noted his agreement to the Official Trustee advising the Court both that it wishes to discontinue the proceeding and, if necessary, will seek leave to do so; and raised questions in relation to his appeal proceedings NSD 9 of 2022 and NSD 42 of 2022, both with the Official Trustee as respondent. He also noted that he had requested a "directions hearing" for 7 October 2024.
31 By email to Mr Shaw on 9 October 2024, the solicitors for the Official Trustee attached a Notice of Discontinuance for Mr Shaw's consideration, and informed him, inter alia, that:
(1) the legal costs incurred by the Official Trustee in the proceeding would not be borne by his bankrupt estate;
(2) the Notice of Discontinuance to be filed will provide that the Official Trustee pays Mr Shaw's legal costs of the proceeding;
(3) upon discontinuance, all of the Official Trustee's claims in the proceeding will end. They could not give legal advice about the status of the interlocutory application; and
(4) if the proceeding is discontinued, the Official Trustee expects that the stay of proceedings in NSD 9 of 2022 and NSD 42 of 2022 would be lifted, and a new timetable fixed in respect of both proceedings; and
(5) the Official Trustee does not agree that it is liable to compensate Mr Shaw or his bankrupt estate.
32 From this correspondence, it is clear that, from at least 9 October 2024, Mr Shaw has been on notice that the Official Trustee proposed to discontinue the proceeding.
33 Mr Shaw responded by email dated 11 October 2024 indicating that he would agree to discontinuance on terms that the Official Trustee's costs of the proceeding (and its costs in respect of Mr Shaw's applications for leave in QUD 145 of 2023 and QUD 440 of 2023) were not recovered from his bankrupt estate or him personally; that the Official Trustee agrees to pay Mr Shaw's recoverable legal costs including in respect of his applications for leave in QUD 145 of 2023 and QUD 440 of 2023; and that his interlocutory application filed on 19 September 2024 be listed for a hearing.
34 The solicitors for the Official Trustee advised Mr Shaw by email on 8 November 2024 that the Official Trustee did not agree to the listing of the interlocutory application for hearing for the reason that the matters raised in that application would fall away upon the discontinuance of the proceeding. The Official Trustee also did not agree to pay Mr Shaw's costs in proceedings QUD 145 of 2023 or QUD 440 of 2023 because final costs orders have been made in each of those proceedings. In that email, Mr Shaw was invited to consent to the attached Notice of Discontinuance, failing which he was again informed that the Official Trustee would seek leave to discontinue the proceeding.
35 Consequently, by at least 8 November 2024, Mr Shaw was on notice that the Official Trustee would seek leave to discontinue the proceeding in the absence of Mr Shaw's consent. The fact that an application would be made, and the reasons for making the application, were set out for Mr Shaw. Thus, he had all the information that would ordinarily be provided by a formal interlocutory application. Further, Mr Shaw conceded he had been served with the Brumley Affidavit and the written submissions on 8 November 2024. It is for these reasons that I have dispensed with any requirement for the Official Trustee to file an interlocutory application in proper form.
36 Further, in all the circumstances, it is appropriate that the Official Trustee be granted leave to discontinue the proceeding. The Official Trustee has, as is usual, undertaken to pay Mr Shaw's costs.
37 As to the continuance of Mr Shaw's interlocutory application, it is appropriate that both he and the Official Trustee are afforded the opportunity to make submissions as to whether paragraphs 19 and 20 of that application, being that the Court conduct an inquiry pursuant to ss 90-1, 90-2, 90-5, 90-10, 90-15 and 90-20 of the Insolvency Practice Rules, constitutes a cross-claim that survives discontinuance of the proceeding under r 15.11(b) of the Rules.
38 Mr Shaw conceded that everything else he wished to raise in his interlocutory application would be captured by an inquiry, were one to be ordered.