A Material Change in Circumstances?
9 The "material change in circumstances" relied upon by Dr Wenkart really starts with the decision of Branson J in Wenkart v Pantzer [2005] FCA 1572, 223 ALR 384. Her Honour there allowed an appeal by Dr Wenkart in two different proceedings which also involved Dr Wenkart and Mr Pantzer in respect to his challenge to two certificates of taxation issued by a taxing officer (Ms Sexton) relating to the claimed remuneration, costs, charges and expenses of Mr Pantzer. The certificates were set aside by Her Honour.
10 An appeal from this decision was, however, allowed by the Full Court in Pantzer v Wenkart [2006] FCAFC 140, 153 FCR 466. The principal ground of appeal was that it was said that the primary Judge erred in determining that Mr Pantzer undertook litigation for his own benefit. In allowing the appeal, Black CJ, Ryan and Moore JJ reasoned:
[43] It may be accepted that a trustee's right to remuneration is restricted to work reasonably and bona fide undertaken for the purpose of administering the estate or performing a statutory public duty with reasonable care and skill and in an efficient and economical way … In the present matter however, the litigation in which Mr Pantzer became involved after Dr Wenkart's bankruptcy had been annulled was to defend, successfully, in the face of sustained opposition from Dr Wenkart, the remuneration, costs, charges and expenses he had claimed at the time of the annulment. From Mr Pantzer's viewpoint, such a course was unavoidable, in a practical sense, if he was to maintain and realise his entitlements.
[44] It was in his capacity as a former trustee that Mr Pantzer was drawn into the litigation to assert a right to be paid a claimed amount which Dr Wenkart had not challenged by seeking taxation in the way provided for by the Regulations, and to exercise an implied right of sale arising from the consent orders and the failure of Dr Wenkart to comply with them. It is true, in a sense, that the litigation was undertaken by Mr Pantzer for his benefit, as the primary judge observed. In the same sense, any litigation into which a trustee might be drawn concerning remuneration, disbursements and expenses is litigation for the trustee's benefit. But to characterise it this way does not necessarily answer the question whether the trustee (or former trustee) has been properly involved in the litigation as an incident of having acted as a trustee charged with the responsibility of administering the bankrupt's estate. In our view, the facts in the present case compel the conclusion that the remuneration, costs, charges and expenses incurred after the annulment of the bankruptcy were so incurred for the purpose of giving practical effect to the 11 March 2002 consent orders and, more generally, administering the estate. Consequently, Mr Pantzer was "lawfully entitled" to them within the terms of the consent orders.
11 The "material change of circumstances" now relied upon by Dr Wenkart is the difference in circumstances between those that emerged subsequent to the decision of the Full Court in 2006 and those that were found by Branson J in 2008.
12 On behalf of Dr Wenkart it is now contended in his written submissions that the "facts which had been assumed at the time of the 2006 Full Court Proceedings were not those which came to be actually found by Branson J in 2008". In Wenkart v Pantzer [2008] FCA 478, Her Honour relevantly found as follows:
[88] As I have already mentioned, on 24 April 2002 (ie earlier than the filing of the cross-claim) Hunt & Hunt formally requested that the costs of Cutler Hughes & Harris be taxed and Ms Sexton was appointed Taxing Officer on 6 August 2002. However, as at 31 October 2003 Ms Sexton had not completed her taxation. For the reasons given above, it seems to me that on 21 October 2003, if not before, Mr Pantzer effectively conceded that he had filed his cross-claim before the quantum of the amount of the costs to which he was legally entitled from Dr Wenkart in respect of the costs of Cutler Hughes & Harris had been determined. Indeed, it appears that a significant portion of the costs of Cutler Hughes & Harris have not been taxed even today. The dates of taxation of the bills of costs of Mr Johnson, Sally Nash & Co and Mr Walsh respectively are also later than the date on which the cross-claim was filed.
[89] If the amounts shown by Mr Pantzer's schedule to have been paid to Cutler Hughes & Harris are disregarded, the schedule does not suggest that Dr Wenkart's bankrupt estate was in deficit on 31 October 2002. If the amounts paid to Mr Johnson, Sally Nash & Co and Mr Walsh are also disregarded the position is even clearer. I conclude that Mr Pantzer has not established that as at 31 October 2002 the quantum of the remuneration, costs, charges and expenses to which he was lawfully entitled had been determined in an amount in excess of the amount of his receipts as trustee of Dr Wenkart's bankrupt estate (see [9] above).
13 The fact of immediate relevance now seized upon by Dr Wenkart is that Mr Pantzer had filed his Cross-Claim prematurely and before he had a legal entitlement to the monies claimed. That fact had not been determined as at the date of the Full Court decision in 2006. His written submissions go on to contend that "to the extent to which the Full Court in 2006 sought to cut short the issues in these proceedings, those pronouncements of entitlements were (at most) merely interlocutory and were hypothetical". It was submitted that "the procedural complexities arising" in the present proceeding should be "recognised as one of the issues to be reconsidered".
14 The sequence of prior decisions was, however, one of the matters taken into account in the previous reasons for decision in August 2010. The fact that Dr Wenkart had been successful in establishing the premature filing of the Cross-Claim was a matter repeatedly referred to in submissions during the course of the previous hearing. It was a matter previously considered and resolved as part of the "mix" taken into account when fixing the percentage of costs to which Mr Pantzer has been held to be entitled.
15 The material change in circumstances now relied upon has previously been taken into account. However, the submissions presently advanced and the issues therein have been considered afresh. It is considered that no variation in the decisions previously reached is warranted - even if such variation is permissible.
16 It is unnecessary to resolve the manner in which Senior Counsel on behalf of Mr Pantzer characterised any relevant "change in circumstances". If there was any such "change in circumstances", it was her submission that the relevant change had to be between the date of the earlier hearing in June 2010 (preceding the August judgment) and the date of the present hearing. All other "circumstances" had, on this approach, been canvassed by the then Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of Dr Wenkart. There was no relevant "change in circumstances", in her submission, between the date of those submissions and the present hearing.
17 However the competing submissions of the parties are to be approached, there is to be no departure from the previous conclusions reached in August 2010.