The relevant principles
8 The first offer of compromise was made under O 23 r 11(6) of the Federal Court Rules 1979 ("the former rules"), the second under the current rules.
9 O 23 r 11(6) of the former rules provided that if:
(a) an offer is made by a respondent and not accepted by the applicant; and
(b) the respondent obtains an order or judgment on the claim to which the offer relates as favourable to the respondent, or more favourable to the respondent, than the terms of the offer;
then, unless the Court otherwise orders:
(c) the respondent is entitled to an order that the applicant pay the respondent's costs in respect of the claim incurred up to 11 am on the day after the day the offer was made, taxed on a party and party basis; and
(d) the respondent is entitled to an order that the applicant pay the respondent's costs in respect of the claim incurred after that time, taxed on an indemnity basis.
10 The reference to an "offer" is to an offer made in conformity with the procedure for making an offer of compromise set out in the rules. There appears to be no dispute that both offers were offers of compromise under the rules (or offers to compromise as they are now called in the current rules) and in any event I am independently satisfied that they were.
11 I discussed the principles relating to the operation O 23 r 11(6) and the first offer itself in one of my earlier judgments in this matter: Visscher v Teekay Shipping (Australia) Pty Ltd (No 2) [2011] FCA 278 ("Visscher No 2"). This judgment should be read with that judgment as well as Visscher No 4.
12 The current rules repealed the former rules on 1 August 2011 (r 1.03). Unless the Court orders that the former rules apply, the current rules apply to a step in a proceeding started before 1 August 2011 if the step is taken on or after that date (r 1.04).
13 Teekay submits that the former rules apply to the first offer (presumably because the relevant step is the making of the offer) and the current rules to the second.
14 The relevant current rule is r 25.14, more precisely r 25.14(2). It is in the following terms.
(1) If an offer is made by a respondent and not accepted by an applicant, and the applicant obtains a judgment that is less favourable than the terms of the offer:
(a) the applicant is not entitled to any costs after 11.00 am on the second business day after the offer was served; and
(b) the respondent is entitled to an order that the applicant pay the respondent's costs after that time on an indemnity basis.
(2) If an offer is made by a respondent and an applicant unreasonably fails to accept the offer and the applicant's proceeding is dismissed, the respondent is entitled to an order that the applicant pay the respondent's costs:
(a) before 11.00 am on the second business day after the offer was served - on a party and party basis; and
(b) after the time mentioned in paragraph (a) - on an indemnity basis.
15 In Kooee Communications Pty Ltd v Primus Telecommunications Pty Ltd (No 2) [2011] FCAFC 141 ("Kooee") at [18] a Full Court stated that if there is any material difference between the former and the current rule, the current rule makes it clear that the presumption in favour of indemnity costs is not enlivened unless an applicant has "unreasonably" failed to accept a respondent's offer of compromise. The Court, however, considered that this was effectively the position prevailing under the former rules and for this reason made no order under r 1.04(3) displacing any part of the new rules. With great respect I have real doubts about whether this is right. It is at odds with what the Full Court said in Futuretronics.com.au Pty Ltd v Graphix Labels Pty Ltd [2009] FCAFC 40 ("Futuretronics") and IFTC Broking Services Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (2010) 268 ALR 1; [2010] FCAFC 31 ("IFTC"), which I can only assume were not brought to the Court's attention. In Kooee the Full Court cited two authorities, both decisions of single judges that predated Futuretronics. In Futuretronics (an application for indemnity costs by the successful respondent to an appeal) the Full Court said at [10]-[11]:
[10] In dealing with rule 11(4), which also uses the expression appearing in r 11(6) - "unless the court otherwise orders" - Hely J in Port Kembla Coal Terminal Ltd v Braverus Maritime Inc (No 2) (2004) 212 ALR 281 at [17], after referring to Heerey J's observation in an earlier case that "compelling and exceptional circumstances" must exist before the court would "otherwise order", said:
Once an offer is made, and a judgment no less favourable obtained, a rebuttable presumption in favour of indemnity costs is created. It then becomes incumbent on the defendant to show reason why the presumption should not crystallise. Correctly understood, Heerey J was explaining the operation of the Rule, rather than impermissibly attempting to place a fetter on the exercise of the court's discretion … [H]is Honour was not seeking to do more than to convey that the prima facie position should only be departed from for proper reasons which, in general, only arise in an exceptional case …
We agree with these remarks about rule 11(4) which in our view are applicable to rule 11(6).
[11] … If the present question was whether the rejection of the later offer was unreasonable, we would have said it was not. However, it is established that the fact that an unsuccessful litigant acted reasonably in rejecting an offer under rule 11(4) (and its counterparts in other jurisdictions) is not of itself a sufficient reason to displace the operation of the rule: New South Wales Insurance Ministerial Corporation v Reeve (1993) 42 NSWLR 100 at 102; Morgan v Johnson (1998) 44 NSWLR 58 at 582; Port Kembla 212 ALR at [18].
[Emphasis added.]
16 In IFTC at [9] the Full Court followed Futuretronics and also observed:
The requirement for "proper reasons" for any departure from the prima facie position of indemnity costs reflects the purpose of the rule. As explained by Mason P in Morgan v Johnson (1998) 44 NSWLR 578 at 581F-582E the rule is intended to encourage the compromise of litigation (such compromise being in both the private and the public interest) and to oblige parties "to give serious thought to the risk involved in non-acceptance" on the basis that "litigation is inescapably chancy": Maitland Hospital v Fisher (No 2) (1992) 27 NSWLR 721 at 725. For these reasons "the ordinary provision is expected to apply in the ordinary case" (referring to New South Wales Insurance Ministerial Corporation v Reeve (1993) 42 NSWLR 100 at 102-103).
17 In Visscher No 2, which was decided before Kooee, I applied both these judgments. It is true, as the Full Court pointed out in Kooee at [15], that the former rules did not expressly provide for a case in which an application is dismissed. But in the light of the authorities as they stood at the time the current rules were made, the proper inference, it seems to me, is that the effect of inserting "unreasonably" into r 25.14 is to change the law in cases where the proceeding is dismissed. Despite what I may think, however, I am now bound to follow Kooee. See Proctor v Jetway Aviation Pty Ltd [1984] 1 NSWLR 166 at 177 per Moffitt P, Glass JA agreeing at 180-1; MacAdam A and Pyke J, Judicial Reasoning and the Doctrine of Precedent in Australia (Butterworths, 1998) [5.26]-[5.28]. The question, then, in each instance is whether Mr Visscher unreasonably failed to accept the offer.