The Principles to apply on the question of costs
14 In all cases the exercise of the judicial discretion on costs requires the making of orders that are just, equitable, fair and reasonable in all the circumstances of the case. The principal relevant authorities, including the Chief Judge's judgment in Kiama Council v Grant [2006] NSWLEC 96; 143 LGERA 441, list the relevant factors to be weighed in the balancing act.
15 Costs are compensatory, not punitive (Latoudis v Casey (1990) 170 CLR 534), the power to award them is purely discretionary (Oshlack v Richmond River Council ("Oshlack") [1998] HCA 11; 193 CLR 72), and the discretion to award costs on any basis must be exercised judicially (Port Stephens Council v Sansom [2007] NSWCA 299; 156 LGERA 125). There is always also the overriding principle that the costs expected to be met by parties and paid to their opponents must be "proportionate as to what is truly at stake" (see Sackville J in Seven Network Limited v News Limited [2007] FCA 1062; ATPR (Digest) 42-274 at [18]).
16 In the ordinary course, if one party is found entitled to an order for costs, the ordinary order would be on a party/party basis. To depart from that "ordinary course" the court needs to find "some positive ground or good reason" to do so (Australiawide Airlines Ltd v Aspirion Pty Ltd [2006] NSWCA 365 and Residents Against Improper Development Inc v Chase Property Investments Pty Ltd [2006] NSWCA 323; 149 LGERA 360). In Oshlack (at [44]), Gaudron and Gummow JJ said that indemnity costs were appropriate where the case involved "some relevant delinquency on the part of the unsuccessful party". The court must look at all the circumstances pertaining to each particular stage of the litigation (South Eastern Sydney Area Health Service v King ('King') [2006] NSWCA 2). For costs to be awarded on an indemnity basis the court has to find "special circumstances".
17 Many of the relevant principles and cases concerning indemnity costs were recently surveyed by Pain J in Glaser v Poole (No.2) [2010] NSWLEC 232, but each case turns on its own facts.
18 In one of my own decisions, Ray Fitzpatrick Pty Limited v Minister for Planning (No.5) [2008] NSWLEC 183, I said this in respect of indemnity costs (at [79]):
'To result in an order for indemnity costs the behaviour of the party concerned, whether generally or in regard to its rejection of an offer of compromise, must be found to be "imprudent", "unreasonable", or tainted by fraud, misconduct, an ulterior motive, wilful disregard for known facts or settled law, groundless contentions, "disentitling conduct", "plainly unreasonable conduct", or "relevant delinquency".'
19 Circumstances which might justify an order for costs to be made on an indemnity basis could include those surrounding the making and rejection of some offer of compromise in the proceedings, and/or circumstances where the party subject to the order to pay costs behaved in an "unreasonable" manner, such as to be regarded by the court, as having been guilty of "disentitling" conduct. (See my discussion of these principles in Monaghan v Holroyd Council [2009] NSWLEC 112; 167 LGERA 321).
20 Both those circumstances are alleged by the Council to arise against the interests of the applicant company in the present proceedings, but in deciding these matters it is well accepted law that the court cannot conduct a hypothetical trial on the merits of the dispute in order to decide the question of costs (Re Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs: Ex parte Lai Qin [1997] HCA 6; 186 CLR 662, Australian Securities Commission v Aust-home Investments Ltd (1993) 44 FCR 194).
21 In so far as any rejection of a settlement offer is concerned, other than where a relevant Rule (such as, now, UCPR 20.26) might apply, one governing principle is that laid down by Calderbank v Calderbank [1975] 3 All ER 333; 3 WLR 586. In order to ground an order for indemnity costs, the letter relied upon to invoke the Calderbank principles must constitute "a genuine offer of compromise which it was unreasonable for the [offeree] not to accept" (Leichhardt Municipal Council v Green [2004] NSWCA 341, per Santow JA at [46], Evans Shire Council v Richardson (No.2) [2006] NSWCA 61 at [26]). See also Elite Protective Personnel Pty Ltd v Salmon ("Elite") [2007] NSWCA 322 per McColl JA at [97]-[99] - the decision in Elite was in particular reference to consideration of offers "inclusive of costs", but it contains useful restatements of relevant issues to be considered in the exercise of judicial discretion on costs. Specifically on "inclusive" offers, and the capacity of an offeree to estimate whether "the offer represented a true compromise", see also Tinyow v Lee [2006] NSWCA 247.
22 In Trustee for the Salvation Army (NSW) Property Trust v Becker (No.2) [2007] NSWCA 194, Ipp JA distinguished between "Rules offers" and "Calderbank offers", saying (at [27]-[28]):
"27 Calderbank offers are simply offers that do not comply with the relevant rules of court relating to the making of offers of compromise: Jones v Bradley (No 2) (at [5]). Whether an offer, intended to be an offer under the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules but which is ineffective because it does not comply with those Rules, operates as a Calderbank offer, depends upon the intention of the offeror as revealed by the terms of the offer. The offer may disclose an intention that it should take effect only if it complies with the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules. On the other hand, it may disclose a general intent to make an offer, irrespective of whether it takes effect under the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules or not.
28 The offer of compromise in this case provided that, if it was ineffective under the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules because different Rules applied in probate proceedings, the offer was to be treated as a Calderbank offer. As I have explained, the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules do apply to offers of compromise in probate proceedings, and the offer of compromise is ineffective under the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules as it does not comply with Pt 20 r 20.26(2). Nevertheless, in my opinion, the offer reflects an overriding intent that, irrespective of its application under the relevant Rules that might apply to it, it should take effect as a Calderbank offer. In my opinion, the offer of compromise was capable of being accepted by the appellant on the basis that it was an informal Calderbank offer and should be regarded as such an offer."
23 His Honour held (in [29]) that the offer in that case constituted a genuine compromise unreasonably rejected by the appellants, and referred to an earlier judgment he had given in the same litigation (see [2007] NSWCA 136, at [131]) where he had said:
" I respectfully agree with the judge that, had the charities carried out a reasonable evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses of their case at that time, it would have become clear 'that they were without any reliable evidence to prove the grounds upon which their opposition was based': at [59]."
24 In Commonwealth of Australia v Gretton ('Gretton') [2008] NSWCA 117, Beazley JA also characterised offers (in terms of Rules, Calderbank, etc), referred to many of the authorities referred to above, and noted that the making of a Calderbank offer does not automatically result in a favourable costs order, even where the judgment is more favourable to the party making the offer, than the offer itself. The offer must be a genuine offer of compromise which it is unreasonable for the appellant not to accept. The onus is on the party making the offer to satisfy the court that it should exercise the costs discretion in its favour. In Mackinnon v BlueScope Steel (AIS) Pty Ltd & Ors (No.2) [2009] NSWCA 229, Hoeben J (with whom Ipp and Macfarlan JJA both agreed) stressed the point that each case turns on its own facts when it comes to the application of the Calderbank principles.
25 In Chaina v Alvaro Homes Pty Ltd [2008] NSWCA 353, Basten JA (at [105]ff) sourced the modern approach to indemnity costs as the judgment of Holland J in Degmam Pty Ltd (In Liq) v Wright (No.2) [1983] 2 NSWLR 354 and surveyed the leading cases in the Federal Court (Fountain Selected Meats (Sales) Pty Ltd v International Produce Merchants Pty Ltd (1988) 81 ALR 397 per Woodward J, and Colgate-Palmolive Company v Cussons Pty Ltd (1993) 46 FCR 225 per Sheppard J), summarised by Beazley JA in Chen v Karandonis [2002] NSWCA 412. Basten JA observed (at [111]) that "more recent case-law generally shows a tendency to grant indemnity costs orders more readily than was the case in the past". Gretton had expanded the operation of the test of unreasonableness from the consequences of refusing a Calderbank offer to "other aspects of a party's conduct of litigation" ([112]). His Honour was concerned ([113]) that the principles be carefully applied so that "the extent that an unsuccessful party will be at risk of an order for costs assessed on an indemnity basis, absent some blameworthy conduct on its part" should not be allowed to widen. "A test of unreasonableness should not be upheld on other than clear grounds".
26 In Gilberg v Maritime Super Pty Ltd (No.2) [2009] NSWCA 394, Hodgson JA took the view (at [120]) that the making of an indemnity costs order on the basis of a Calderbank refusal "would not depend solely on whether the court was satisfied that the offeree acted unreasonably in refusing the offer". In Canterbury City Council v RTA of NSW [2004] NSWLEC 536, Lloyd J said that the rejection of a reasonable offer was but "one among many" factors to be considered. The Court of Appeal had said in King (at [90]):
"The discretion to award indemnity costs following a Calderbank letter must be considered having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including the relevant strengths and weaknesses of each party's case as they may have been apparent to the parties at the time the offer was made".
27 In Baulderstone Hornibrook Engineering Pty Limited v Gordian Runoff Limited & Ors [2006] NSWSC 583, at first instance, Einstein J observed that evidence of unreasonable conduct on the part of the party ordered to pay costs is usually required (Rosniak v Government Insurance Office (1997) 41 NSWLR 608, at 616 per Mason P). He went on to observe (at [22]) that the difficulty or otherwise of the litigation cannot itself be the basis for the order of costs on a special basis as the courts are constantly engaged in complex litigation and the fact that a particular piece of litigation raises difficult questions of law necessitating elaborate presentation is not a novelty. He went on to say that the mere fact that a party fights the proceedings fiercely and that no stone is left unturned, is not a ground for a special costs order, nor is the mere fact that a case has been found to lack merit (see at [23] and [24]). His Honour noted that a Calderbank letter raises no prima facie presumption in favour of indemnity costs. At [36] His Honour said: "The fact that the offer proves to have been more favourable than the ultimate judgment does not of itself prove unreasonable conduct in rejecting the offer". The relevant question is whether the failure of the party to accept a settlement offer was reasonable and that has to be assessed in the light of all the circumstances (Jones v Bradley (No.2) [2003] NSWCA 258).
28 Baulderstone went on appeal to the Court of Appeal (see Baulderstone Hornibrook Engineering Pty Ltd v Gordian Runoff Ltd (No.2) [2009] NSWCA 12). Allsop P said (at [18]):
"… Parties to litigation are expected to act reasonably in the running, and the resolution by compromise, of litigation. Stubborness, intransigence and unrealistic and unreasonable expectations and demands can lead to unnecessary and unreasonable demands on scarce public resources. Just as parties are obliged to exhibit co-operation and openness in the conduct of litigation … they are obliged not to act unreasonably in the consideration and dealing with settlement offers."
29 The final authority relied upon by Council was Michael Wilson & Partners Ltd v Nicholls ('Wilson') [2009] NSWSC 669, another matter involving Einstein J. From the commencement of the proceedings, the defendants complained that the plaintiff at short notice, and sometimes without notice, produced at the bar table and sought to tender vast quantities of documents in folders. The defendants had complained that it had not been possible for them "on the run" to absorb this material. The plaintiff's response was that the documents had been long discovered and were present in the electronic court book - they were "no more and no less than the result of the plaintiff's endeavours to make more user-friendly, the materials for consideration during the hearing" ([15]). His Honour commented that regardless of those explanations, the plaintiff had conducted "trolley load litigation". At [16] His Honour said: "By this term I refer to the practice of a party in litigation with little or no notice, to flood its opponent with materials and then to insist that whilst its opponent is entitled to a period in which to endeavour to absorb the new materials, that period should be miniscule".
30 At [17], His Honour quoted some comments by Allsop P, said to have been made in the Baulderstone appeal decision to which I have referred, but the paragraph numbers he gives, "[160]-[161]", are not correct. The "[161]" from which I wish to quote actually comes from a case of the same name, reported at [2008] NSWCA 243. It makes the comment that:
" the need for clarity, precision and openness as part of this co-operation [to express the issues for trial before and during the trial] has been emphasised in the context of ambush or surprise… [and] flows most clearly from the statutory duty of a party and his or her legal representatives in legal proceedings to assist the court to further the overriding purpose to facilitate the just, quick and cheap resolution of the real issues in dispute and to participate in the processes of the Court to that end ". (See also Civil Procedure Act 2005 s 56).
31 Einstein J said (in Wilson, at [21]):
"These issues of case management of major litigation presently being heard on a final basis raise questions of fine judgment. On the one hand the Court must avoid the circumstance in which a defendant without proper ground seeks to put off the hearing into the dim distant future. On the other hand the Court administers justice and must ensure that there is a 'fair' playing field. Trolley load litigation is to be discouraged. But when it has clearly been deployed and has the capacity to wrong foot the opposing party, the court utilises its many powers to right the imbalance. That is appropriate presently. The defendant's costs of and occasioned by the time be taken in and absorbing the latest tranche of eighteen or thereabout folders are to be paid by the plaintiff on an indemnity basis."
The Claim for Indemnity Costs
32 In its NOM Council sought from the applicant, in the alternative: