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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 2 December 2009
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION:
Tobin v Ezekiel; Estate of
Lily Ezekiel [2009] NSWSC 1313
JURISDICTION:
Equity
Division
Probate List
FILE NUMBER(S):
106746/06
HEARING
DATE(S):
3 November 2009
EX TEMPORE DATE:
3 November
2009
PARTIES:
Robert Stephen Angyal (Applicant)
Evelyn Tobin
(First Plaintiff)
Clara Ezekiel (Second Plaintiff)
Morris Ezekiel (First
Defendant)
Albert Ezekiel (Second Defendant)
JUDGMENT OF:
Brereton J
LOWER COURT JURISDICTION:
Not Applicable
LOWER COURT FILE NUMBER(S):
Not Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL
OFFICER:
Not Applicable
COUNSEL:
Mr R Parsons
(applicant)
Mr T Kelly (sol) (plaintiffs)
Mr T Hale SC w Mr J Tobin
(defendants)
SOLICITORS:
Keith Hurst & Associates
(applicant)
T.D. Kelly & Co (plaintiffs)
McLachlan Chilton
(defendants)
CATCHWORDS:
REAL PROPERTY – caveat –
claim for caveatable interest - where a right to share in the surplus of a
deceased estate, after
liabilities have been discharged, is not a caveatable
interest
LEGISLATION CITED:
CATEGORY:
Procedural and
other rulings
CASES CITED:
Guardian Trust and Executors of New
Zealand v Hall [1938] NZCA 2; [1938] NZLR 1020
Re Savage’s Caveat [1956] NZLR
118
TEXTS CITED:
DECISION:
Applicant’s claim for
caveatable interest dismissed
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
EQUITY
DIVISION
PROBATE LIST
BRERETON
J
Tuesday 3 November 2009
106746/06 Evelyn Tobin & anor v Morris Ezekiel & anor; The Estate of Lily Ezekiel
JUDGMENT (ex
tempore – Application for Costs of Mediator)
1 HIS HONOUR: I regret that in my view it is plain that there is
no tenable claim to a caveatable interest in this case. It is well-established
that a right to share in the surplus of a deceased estate, after liabilities
have been discharged, is not a caveatable interest (See
Re Savage’s
Caveat [1956] NZLR 118; Guardian Trust and Executors of New Zealand v
Hall [1938] NZCA 2; [1938] NZLR 1020). The claim of a creditor of the estate – which
is, after all, what the applicant’s status really is – is in worse
plight than that of a beneficiary of the estate in that respect. It cannot
logically make any difference that the only remaining
asset of the estate is
land.
2 The order that the costs of the mediation be paid out of the estate,
made at a time when no mediator had been identified, could
not possibly have
created an interest in land owned by the estate such as to found a caveat by the
mediator. The application for
an order extending the operation of the caveat
is, therefore, doomed to fail, and there is no point in permitting the applicant
to
intervene in the proceedings for the purpose of enabling that application to
be pursued.
3 It has been submitted that I should retrospectively
rectify that position by making an order charging the mediator’s costs
on
the Bondi property. There are a number of difficulties with that proposed.
First, it is not at all clear that the Bondi property
is, at present, an asset
of the estate, it having been transmitted to the defendants. It may be that, as
a result of these proceedings,
that is undone in the future; but at present it
seems at least probable that the property is no longer an asset in the estate
–
and indeed was not when the relevant order was made.
4 Secondly,
to make such an order at this stage would be to alter the basis of the
commercial relations between the parties, after
their commercial relationship
has come to an end. I have the greatest sympathy for Mr Angyal’s
position, who is plainly entitled
to be paid, but I do not think I can allow
that sympathy to bring about a retrospective change in the commercial and
contractual
relationship between the parties. Regrettably, it seems to me that,
as the mediation agreement provides for the parties to share
equally the costs
of the mediation, and that the plaintiffs and defendants are jointly and
severally liable to pay the mediator’s
fees, his remedy is to sue the
plaintiffs and the defendants on that agreement for those fees. While I have
been tempted to impose
some summary solution in that respect, I do not think I
can properly give a judgment in his favour in these proceedings, on a claim
for
those costs which has not yet been articulated in any proceeding, and to which,
therefore, there has been no opportunity to plead
any defence.
5 Accordingly, I am not prepared to grant leave to the applicant to
intervene in the proceedings, nor to make any other of the orders
proposed in
the applicant’s Draft Notice of Motion. That motion not having been
filed, it does not appear to me that there
is any need to make any formal orders
dismissing it, other than to refuse leave to file it.
6 The matter was relisted today, at the request of the applicant, for the
purpose of obtaining relief to which the applicant was not
entitled, and,
frankly, it should have been reasonably apparent that that was so. On the other
hand, the defendants have responded
on a scale that exceeded the needs of the
application in question. While they were entirely entitled to do so, those who
adopt such
a course do so at their own risk, to the extent that the response is
more than proportionate. That should not be taken as the slightest
reflection
on the utility of Mr Hale SC’s involvement in the proceedings, but simply
an application of principals of proportionality.
7 In my view, the applicant must pay the defendants’ costs, but
those costs should not include the costs of retaining Senior
Counsel for the
purposes of the application.
8 I order that the applicant, Robert Angyal, pay the costs of the
defendants of today, such costs not to include the costs of retaining
Senior
Counsel.
**********
LAST UPDATED:
1 December 2009
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