Indemnity costs: offer of compromise
6 I should record that there was no dispute between the parties as to the relevant principles. The applicant's counsel referred to the decision of Kenny J in Lowe v Mack Trucks Australia Pty Limited (No 2) [2008] FCA 711 (Lowe v Mack Trucks), which provides a convenient summary of the relevant principles (at [5]-[8]). Those paragraphs read as follows, and I adopt the principles set out therein:
[5] By virtue of s 43 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth), the Court may make orders as to costs. The power, which is discretionary, must be exercised judicially: see Ruddock v Vadarlis (No 2) (2001) 115 FCR 229 at 234 per Black CJ and French J. Within this general discretion, it is accepted that costs ordinarily follow the event, with the result that a successful litigant receives costs in the absence of special circumstances justifying some other order: see Ruddock v Vadarlis (No 2) (2001) 115 FCR 229 at 234 per Black CJ and French J.
[6] The usual rule is that costs are payable on a party and party basis, unless the circumstances of the case warrant a departure from the normal course: see Colgate-Palmolive Company v Cussons Pty Limited (1993) 46 FCR 225 ("Colgate-Palmolive") at 233 per Sheppard J and the Federal Court Rules (Cth), O 62. In that case, Sheppard J considered the circumstances in which indemnity costs might be awarded, referring, amongst other things, to "misconduct that causes loss of time to the Court and to other parties" although, as his Honour concluded, "[t]he question must always be whether the particular facts and circumstances of the case in question warrant the making of an order for payment of costs other than on a party and party basis": see Colgate-Palmolive at 233-234. The Full Court reconsidered the appropriateness of an indemnity costs award in Re Wilcox: Ex parte Venture Industries Pty Ltd (No 2) (1996) 72 FCR 151 ("Re Wilcox") at 152-153 per Black CJ and 156-158 per Cooper and Merkel JJ. In Re Wilcox, at 156-157, Cooper and Merkel JJ reiterated Sheppard J's approach, saying:
In order to exercise the discretion [regarding costs] judicially the following principles have been accepted by the Court as applicable:
(a) the Court ought not to depart from the rule that costs be ordered on a party and party basis unless the circumstances of the case warrant the Court in departing from the usual course;
(b) the circumstances which may warrant departure from the usual course arise as and when the justice of the case so requires or where there may be some special or unusual feature in the case to justify the court in departing from the usual course;
(c) whilst the circumstances in cases in which indemnity costs have been ordered offer a guide, the question must always be whether the particular facts and circumstances of the case in question warrant the making of an order for costs other than on a party and party basis.
See also Abbott v Random House Australia Pty Ltd [1999] FCA 1540 at [5] per Beaumont, Miles and Drummond JJ, quoting the above passage with approval. Even more recently, the Full Court in Hamod v New South Wales (2002) 188 ALR 659 at 665 (per Gray J, with whom Carr and Goldberg JJ agreed) explained the basal principle for an award of indemnity costs in the following terms:
Indemnity costs are not designed to punish a party for persisting with a case that turns out to fail. They are not awarded as a means of deterring litigants from putting forward arguments that might be attended by uncertainty. Rather, they serve the purpose of compensating a party fully for costs incurred, as a normal costs order could not be expected to do, when the Court takes the view that it was unreasonable for the party against whom the order is made to have subjected the innocent party to the expenditure of costs.
[7] A perusal of other cases decided in this Court, including in recent times, shows that these principles are regularly applied. In particular, the Court may award indemnity costs in respect of misconduct that causes loss of time to the Court and to other parties: see Tetijo Holdings Ltd v Keeprite Australia Pty Ltd [1991] FCA 187 per French J, referred to with approval in Colgate-Palmolive at 233 and Ugly Tribe Co Pty Ltd v Sikola [2001] VSC 189 ("Ugly Tribe") at [7] per Harper J. In Xat Ky v Australvic Property Management Pty Ltd (No 2) [2007] FCA 1785, Middleton J awarded indemnity costs to prevent the plaintiffs being out of pocket where "there was a considerable loss of time, inconvenience to the parties and the Court, and a wilful disregard to established law in the attempts to re-open the case … and in the application for a restraining order": see [12]-[13], [29].
[8] The same principles with regard to indemnity costs are applied in other Australian courts. In Ugly Tribe, Harper J referred (at [7]) to the need for special circumstances to justify departure from the usual rule, instancing "[c]onduct which causes loss of time to the Court and to other parties" and "[t]he failure until after the commencement of the trial, and without explanation, to discover documents the timely discovery of which would have considerably shortened, and very possibly avoided, the trial". As his Honour said, however, "[t]he categories of special circumstances are not closed". As Mason P, with whom Meagher JA and Clarke A-JA agreed, said in Rosniak v Government Insurance Office (1997) 41 NSWLR 608 at 616, "the court requires some evidence of unreasonable conduct, albeit that it need not rise as high as vexation" before departing from the usual party and party costs order.
7 The offer of compromise which is in evidence before me is an annexure to the affidavit of Patrick Kaluski sworn 11 June 2010. As noted, the offer of compromise was forwarded by the applicant's solicitor to Steggles' solicitor under cover of a letter dated 30 November 2009 expressed to be without prejudice save as to costs. The applicant's counsel contended that this was a formal offer of compromise within the meaning of the applicable Federal Court Rules at the time the offer was made (O 23 rr 3 and 4).
8 In this regard, I note that the Federal Court Rules as then in force have been repealed by the Federal Court Rules 2011, which commenced on 1 August 2011 (see Part 1 Rules 1.02 and 1.03 of the Federal Court Rules 2011). Part 1 Rule 1.04(3) provides that the Court may order that the Federal Court Rules as in force immediately before 1 August 2011 apply, with or without modification, to a step mentioned in subrule (2). Subrule (2) refers to a step in a proceeding that was started before 1 August 2011 if the step is taken on or after 1 August 2011. This proceeding was started before 1 August 2011. After consultation with the parties, and without any demurral on their part from the course of action which I proposed, I made an order pursuant to Part 1 Rule 1.04(3) that the Federal Court Rules as in force immediately before 1 August 2011 apply to the costs application to be heard and determined by me today. In consequence, the previous version of the Federal Court Rules is applicable.
9 According to the applicant, as the offer of compromise was not accepted within the prescribed period of 14 days, O 23 r 11(4) of the Federal Court Rules is engaged. That rule provides as follows:
(4) If:
(a) an offer is made by an applicant and not accepted by the respondent; and
(b) the applicant obtains judgment on the claim to which the offer relates not less favourable than the terms of the offer;
then, unless the Court otherwise orders, the applicant is entitled to an order against the respondent for costs incurred in respect of the claim:
(c) up to and including the day the offer was made - taxed on a party and party basis; and
(d) after that day - taxed on an indemnity basis.
10 Accordingly, the applicant said there should be an order for indemnity costs in its favour unless the Court otherwise orders.
11 For its part, Steggles contended that there were a number of reasons to support a conclusion that the applicant had not obtained judgment on the claim to which the offer related not less favourable than the terms of the offer. It further contended (as I understood the submissions of Steggles' counsel) that in any event the Court should otherwise order.
12 The first reason relied on by Steggles was that, at the date the offer of compromise was made (30 November 2009), the applicant's claims in the proceeding were still evolving. This is demonstrated by the fact that substantial amendments were foreshadowed in correspondence forwarded on 29 November 2009 by the applicant's solicitor to Steggles' solicitor, which enclosed a copy of the applicant's draft further amended application and draft further amended fast track statement. These were filed and served in accordance with leave which I had granted on 24 November 2009. The proposed amendments included the addition of what has become known as the Preference Claim (in para 33C of the further amended fast track statement) and substantial changes to the way in which the estoppel case against Steggles was particularised (in para 43A of the same document). The further amended fast track statement was filed on 2 December 2009 (that is, a few days after the service of the offer of compromise) pursuant to my orders. Steggles therefore noted that, as at the date the offer of compromise was made, there was no Preference Claim in existence. As such, the applicant's success on the Preference Claim as set out in my judgment of 6 July 2011 could hardly be seen as a more favourable result to the applicant than that which would have resulted from acceptance of the offer of compromise, given the state of the pleadings at the time the offer was made.
13 The second reason identified by Steggles' counsel concerned the details of the offer of compromise itself. Paragraph 3 of the offer set out the following as a term of the compromise of "the whole of the proceedings":
Growers will be provided with a minimum stock density of 19.5 birds per square metre during the term of the Contract.
14 According to Steggles' counsel the offer of compromise accordingly proposed, in effect, a variation of the contract between the Growers and Steggles which was outside any possible outcome of the case.
15 The third reason identified by Steggles' counsel related to para 5 of the offer of compromise, which provided that a term of the offer was as follows:
From 1 January 2010 the batch rate adjustment mechanism will apply based on delivered batch rates in the previous 6 months (in accordance with Appendix B of the Contract) and the Standard Growing Fee for each 6 month period will be adjusted retrospectively.
16 According to Steggles' counsel, I found (in my judgment of 27 April 2010) a requirement for an annual review, not a six-monthly review.
17 The fourth reason was that the offer contained other features unrelated to the proceeding which also, in substance, sought to vary the contract between Steggles and the Growers. In particular, my attention was drawn to paras 2 and 7 of the offer of compromise insofar as they dealt with mortality rates. Paragraph 2 provided for a standard Adjusted Farm Mortality Rate of 3.5% for all Growers for the period between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2009, and para 7 provided for a standard Adjusted Farm Mortality Rate of 4% for all Growers from 1 January 2010 during the remainder of the term of the contract. The issue of farm mortality was not a part of the proceeding before me; accordingly, it was said by Steggles that I could not be satisfied that a not less favourable result has been achieved.
18 In summary it was Steggles' position that, having regard to all these circumstances, it was not unreasonable for Steggles not to have accepted the applicant's offer of compromise made on 30 November 2009.
19 Although I accept the applicant's submission that early offers of compromise should be encouraged and that the rules providing for an entitlement to indemnity costs in the circumstances specified form part of the Court's armoury to encourage early settlement, I have concluded that there is substance in Steggles' submissions as to the particular offer of compromise in this case. In short, O 23 r 11(4) assumes that the Court determining the costs issue will be in a position to ascertain fairly readily whether the judgment on the claim to which the offer relates is not less favourable than the terms of the offer. Although it was put to me by the applicant's counsel that the result in the judgments I delivered in this proceeding is obviously more favourable to the applicant than that proposed in the offer of compromise, I do not consider this to be clear from the material which has been presented to me. I accept that the offer of compromise was genuine in the sense that it was a real attempt to compromise this complex litigation. Indeed, the complexity of the offer itself discloses the genuineness of that attempt. However, the difficulties I have with the conclusion contended for by the applicant are as follows.
20 First, although the applicant's counsel pointed me to the orders made on 30 August 2010 - in particular order 6, in which I declared that as a result of certain other matters Steggles was contractually obliged to provide each of the Growers with chicks at a stock density of 19.5 birds per square metre - it is not apparent to me that the effect of that declaration was the same as Steggles having accepted the offer of compromise. The declaration operated only "as a result of the matters declared in orders 1, 4 and/or 5 above". In particular, it was consequential upon the estoppels declared by orders 4 and 5, being promissory estoppels operating against Steggles in favour of Marianne Peen and Malcolm Wood. The effect of those estoppels was, as I found, that the contract operated to require (in substance) equal treatment of the other Growers. This is not the same as the term of the offer of compromise set out in para 3 and reproduced above. If Steggles had accepted that offer of compromise, para 3 would itself have operated as a contract without regard to the position of Marianne Peen and Malcolm Wood so that, for the balance of the term, all Growers would have been provided with the specified minimum stock density.
21 The second difficulty relates to batch mortality rates. The applicant's counsel submitted that the rates specified in paras 2 and 7 of the offer of compromise constituted average rates, so that Steggles could not be worse off than it ultimately was in light of the outcome of the proceeding. That may be the case, and may be capable of being demonstrated in relation to para 2 of the offer of compromise. However, para 7 operates from 1 January 2010 for the remainder of the term of the contract. The contract operates on the basis of actual mortality rates experienced by Growers in relation to any individual batch, whereas the effect of para 7 of the offer of compromise would have been to vary the contract to provide for a standardised mortality rate across all Growers. The effect this might have had on the Growers' entitlements and Steggles' liabilities for the balance of the term of the contract is unknown.
22 For these two reasons, I am not in a position to be satisfied that the applicant has obtained judgment on the claim to which the offer relates not less favourable than the terms of the offer. The applicant has certainly been successful on all of its claims in the proceeding, but the offer goes beyond those claims and the consequences had it been accepted are not apparent. Even if I were incorrect in this regard, I consider that the existence of the two factors outlined above would provide a proper basis on which to otherwise order under the exception to O 23 r 11(4).
23 As a general matter, although I accept the submission for the applicant that the offer was genuine and was intended to encourage an early compromise of this proceeding, I cannot be satisfied, in the circumstances to which I have referred, that Steggles' conduct in not accepting the offer during the 14-day period for which it was open was unreasonable. As Steggles' counsel indicated, at the time the offer was made there were substantial changes being made to the applicant's case, including the addition of the Preference Claim and the formulation of the estoppel claim. While I ultimately accepted both claims I recognise that from Steggles' point of view, as at 30 November 2009, the claims were relatively new and the case was certainly evolving. As such, I am unable to conclude that the purpose of an indemnity costs order, as reflected in the rules on which the applicant relied, would be furthered by the making of such an order based on the offer of compromise. In short, for the reasons given, I am not satisfied that the entitlement set out in the relevant rule is engaged, and I am otherwise satisfied that it is not appropriate for such a costs order to be made in all the circumstances of this case.