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[2014] NSWSC 876
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Valdemar Ian Valder v The State of New South Wales [2014] NSWSC 876 (1 July 2014)
Last Updated: 2 July 2014
Case Title:
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Valdemar Ian Valder v The State of New South Wales
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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20 May 2014
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Decision Date:
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01 July 2014
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Before:
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Rothman J
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Decision:
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1) Judgment for the defendant; 2) The plaintiff shall pay the
defendant's costs of and incidental to the proceedings, as agreed or
assessed; 3) The parties have liberty within 14 days of the publication of
this judgment to apply for a different or special costs order by
submission of
no more than three (3) pages and any party affected by any such application
shall, within a further 14 days from receipt
of the application, have liberty to
file a response thereto, again by submission of no more than three (3)
pages; 4) Proceedings otherwise dismissed.
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Catchwords:
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TORT - NEGLIGENCE - allegation that police breached duty by not acting as
delivery service for documents - no liability - damage said
to be failure of
criminal appeal and sentence by District Court - no relevant damage
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Valdemar Ian Valder (Plaintiff) The State of New South Wales
(Defendant)
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Representation
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- Counsel:
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Counsel: Self-represented (Plaintiff) M Hutchings (Defendant)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Self-represented (Plaintiff) Henry Davis York
(Defendant)
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File Number(s):
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2012/300384
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Publication Restriction:
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None
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JUDGMENT
- HIS
HONOUR: By Amended Statement of Claim filed 16 October 2012, the plaintiff,
Valdemar Ian Valder, sues for damages allegedly arising from
the negligence of a
member of the police force for whom the defendant, the State of New South Wales
(the State), is vicariously liable.
- The
detail of the conduct of the police said to give rise to negligence is
complicated in the detail, but in relatively short compass
at a general level.
Further, the facts from which it is said liability arises are uncontroversial.
Facts
- The
plaintiff was charged with shoplifting and prosecuted in the Local Court. A
further charge of common assault was preferred and
prosecuted at the same time.
- The
learned Magistrate convicted the plaintiff of each offence charged and fined the
plaintiff $500 for each of the alleged offences.
- From
that conviction and sentence, the plaintiff appealed on all grounds to the
District Court. The District Court proceedings were
heard in Parramatta before
Judge Bennett DCJ, who confirmed the conviction and quashed the sentences
imposed, sentencing the plaintiff
to a good behaviour bond under s 10(1)(b) of
the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999 in relation to both of the
offences. The bond was entered in the District Court and commenced on 18
September 2012.
- The
conditions of the bond were that the plaintiff must be of good behaviour; appear
before the court; and accept certain conditions
relating to residential address
and notification of any change therein.
- From
the sentence imposed by Judge Bennett DCJ, the plaintiff sought to appeal to the
Court of Criminal Appeal. There was no capacity
to appeal to the Court of
Criminal Appeal and, at some other stage, it seems, although there is little
evidence in relation to it,
the plaintiff sought prerogative relief in the Court
of Appeal.
- Whatever
be the ultimate nature of the proceedings and appeals or review that were
sought, the District Court sentence remains extant
and has not been set aside or
quashed.
- The
negligence arises from the conduct of the District Court proceedings referred to
above. An interlocutory order of the District
Court was that any evidence upon
which the plaintiff relied in the all grounds appeal to the District Court
should be served on the
Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) by close of
business 14 September 2012.
- On
Monday, 17 September 2012, the plaintiff attended at the police station at
Parramatta and there conversed with the officer on duty,
BJ Wilcox. The terms of
the conversation are in evidence. It is appropriate for me to repeat the terms
of the conversation to which
the plaintiff has attested:
"I arrived at the police station at around ten to nine on Monday, on the day,
and I walking (sic) to the counter. There was one police
officer with the badge,
the name badge, on his body.
I had a number of documents which was going to be my evidence in the Court of
Appeal in Parramatta. I had that envelope sealed and
addressed to the DPP,
Parramatta Police Station. I had a brief exchange of words with the officer. I
said, "I have given an order
to give this material to the DPP." I even opened
the envelope and showed him the paperwork. He initially said, "Okay", and after
a few seconds, "I am not going to give it to them." I didn't want to be involved
in any discussion. It would not be wise or safe.
So I said, "It is your problem
now" and left the envelope with the officer and I walked out."
- From
the foregoing evidence, and statements made from the bar table by the plaintiff,
it appears that the plaintiff, in the mistaken
belief that the Director of
Public Prosecutions and the Police Prosecutor were one and the same body,
attended the police station
to serve the Police Prosecutor in circumstances
where the direction was to serve the Director of Public Prosecutions.
- From
the evidence, and the explanation given from the bar table, it seems that the
plaintiff told the officer on duty that it was
necessary for the plaintiff to
serve these documents on the DPP and he was serving them on the police so they
could deliver them
to the DPP. This was done in the mistaken belief that the DPP
had an office at the Parramatta Police Station.
- The
police officer replied "Okay", as is attested to above. A proper understanding
of that conversation, as explained, seems to be
that the police officer was
acknowledging that he understood the nature of the request that was being made.
The plaintiff then disclosed
the nature of the documents that were contained in
the envelope to the police officer, at which stage the police officer made it
clear that he would not or could not deliver the documents to the Director of
Public Prosecutions.
- I
consider that to be a proper explanation for the conversation that occurred
between the plaintiff and the police officer at Parramatta.
- At
the time that the documents were delivered to the police station, the time for
service of the documents on the DPP had already
lapsed. Each of the documents
provided to the police, and left with them purportedly for the purpose of
delivery to the DPP, were
documents of which the plaintiff retained copies.
- The
next day, 18 September 2012, the plaintiff appeared before Judge Bennett DCJ at
the hearing of the all grounds appeal. The plaintiff
sought to rely upon the
documents, copy of which had been left with the police.
- His
Honour declined to allow the plaintiff to rely on those documents. The content
and nature of the documents, a copy of which, presumably,
is still retained by
the plaintiff, have not been adduced in evidence in these proceedings. The
Court, as presently constituted,
is unaware of the nature of the documents and
whether they would or could have any effect on the conviction that was confirmed
or
the nature of the sentence imposed.
- These
are civil proceedings. There is an overwhelming inference that the documents, in
the possession of the plaintiff and not produced
to the Court in these
proceedings, would not assist the plaintiff's case in these proceedings.
- Essentially,
the plaintiff's case depends upon the allegation that the police officer owed
the plaintiff a duty to deliver the documents
on his behalf, a breach of which
duty gave rise to damage. The damage is the ultimate conviction in the District
Court at the all
grounds appeal hearing and the consequences of that conviction
on the plaintiff.
Duty of Care
- In
Australia, at least, foreseeability is not the only determining factor in
ascertaining whether the defendant, the State of New
South Wales, has a duty of
care. In the foregoing, by referring to the State, it must be understood that I
am referring to the police
for whom the State is vicariously liable. The
vicarious liability of the State for the conduct of members of the police, in a
claim
such as this, is not in issue in these proceedings.
- In
Sullivan v Moody [2001] HCA 59; (2001) 207 CLR 562, the High Court
said:
"[42] The argument was conducted upon the basis that it was foreseeable that
harm of the kind allegedly suffered by the appellants
might result from want of
care on the part of those who investigated the possibility that the children had
been sexually abused.
But the fact that it is foreseeable, in the sense of being
a real and not far-fetched possibility, that a careless act or omission
on the
part of one person may cause harm to another does not mean that the first person
is subject to a legal liability to compensate
the second by way of damages for
negligence if there is such carelessness, and harm results. If it were
otherwise, at least two consequences
would follow. First, the law would subject
citizens to an intolerable burden of potential liability, and constrain their
freedom
of action in a gross manner. Secondly, the tort of negligence would
subvert many other principles of law, and statutory provisions,
which strike a
balance of rights and obligations, duties and freedoms. A defendant will only be
liable, in negligence, for failure
to take reasonable care to prevent a certain
kind of foreseeable harm to a plaintiff, in circumstances where the law imposes
a duty
to take such care" (per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Hayne and Callinan
JJ).
- The
common law of Australia requires not only foreseeability, but the determination
of a separate question as to whether the law imposes
a duty, for which question
there is no one precise formula: Sullivan v Moody at [48], citing
Professor Fleming. The High Court dealt further with the determination of
existence of such a duty in Sullivan v Moody in the following
passage:
"[50] Different classes of case give rise to different problems in
determining the existence and nature or scope, of a duty of care.
Sometimes the
problems may be bound up with the harm suffered by the plaintiff, as, for
example, where its direct cause is the criminal
conduct of some third party.
Sometimes they may arise because the defendant is the repository of a statutory
power or discretion.
Sometimes they may reflect the difficulty of confining the
class of persons to whom a duty may be owed within reasonable limits.
Sometimes
they may concern the need to preserve the coherence of other legal principles,
or of a statutory scheme which governs certain
conduct or relationships. The
relevant problem will then become the focus of attention in a judicial
evaluation of the factors which
tend for or against a conclusion, to be arrived
at as a matter of principle. In Donoghue v Stevenson, for example, Lord
Buckmaster,
in dissent, was concerned that, if the manufacturer in that case was
liable, apart from contract or statute, to a consumer, then
a person who
negligently built a house might be liable, at any future time, to any person who
suffered injury in consequence; a concern
which later cases showed to have been
far from fanciful. The problem which has caused so much difficulty in relation
to the extent
of tortious liability in respect of negligently constructed
buildings was not only foreseeable, but foreseen, in the seminal case
on the law
of negligence.
[51] In Dorset Yacht Co Ltd v Home Office, Lord Diplock said:
"...[T]he judicial development of the law of negligence rightly proceeds by
seeking first to identify the relevant characteristics
that are common to the
kinds of conduct and relationship between the parties which are involved in the
case for decision and the
kinds of conduct and relationships which have been
held in previous decisions of the courts to give rise to a duty of care".
[52] Conversely, conduct and relationships may have been held not to give
rise to a duty of care, and the reasons for that holding
may provide an
important guide to the solution of the problem in a new case.
[53] Developments in the law of negligence over the last 30 or more years
reveal the difficulty of identifying unifying principles
that would allow ready
solution of novel problems. Nonetheless, that does not mean that novel cases are
to be decided by reference
only to some intuitive sense of what is "fair" or
"unfair". There are cases, and this is one, where to find a duty of care would
so cut across other legal principles as to impair their proper application and
thus lead to the conclusion that there is no duty
of care of the kind
asserted.
[54] The present cases can be seen as focusing as much upon the communication
of information by the respondents to the appellants
and to third parties as upon
the competence with which examinations or other procedures were conducted. The
core of the complaint
by each appellant is that he was injured as a result of
what he, and others, were told. At once, then, it can be seen that there
is an
intersection with the law of defamation which resolves the competing interests
of the parties through well-developed principles
about privilege and the like.
To apply the law of negligence in the present case would resolve that
competition on an altogether
different basis. It would allow recovery of damages
for publishing statements to the discredit of a person where the law of
defamation
would not.
[55] More fundamentally, however, these cases present a question about
coherence of the law. Considering whether the persons who reported
their
suspicions about each appellant owed that appellant a duty of care must begin
from the recognition that those who made the
report had other responsibilities.
A duty of the kind alleged should not be found if that duty would not be
compatible with other
duties which the respondents owed.
...
[62] The statutory scheme that formed the background to the activities of the
present respondents was, relevantly, a scheme for the
protection of children. It
required the respondents to treat the interests of the children as paramount.
Their professional or statutory
responsibilities involved investigating and
reporting upon, allegations that the children had suffered, and were under
threat of,
serious harm. It would be inconsistent with the proper and effective
discharge of those responsibilities that they should be subjected
to a legal
duty, breach of which would sound in damages, to take care to protect persons
who were suspected of being the sources
of that harm. The duty for which the
appellants contend cannot be reconciled satisfactorily, either with the nature
of the functions
being exercised by the respondents, or with their statutory
obligation to treat the interests of the children as paramount. As to
the
former, the functions of examination, and reporting, require, for their
effective discharge, an investigation into the facts
without apprehension as to
possible adverse consequences for people in the position of the appellants or
legal liability to such
persons. As to the latter, the interests of the
children, and those suspected of causing their harm, are diverse, and
irreconcilable.
That they are irreconcilable is evident when regard is had to
the case in which examination of a child alleged to be a victim of
abuse does
not allow the examiner to form a definite opinion about whether the child has
been abused, only a suspicion that it may have happened. The interests of
the child, in such a case, would favour reporting that the suspicion of abuse
has not been dispelled;
the interests of a person suspected of the abuse would
be to the opposite effect."
- Even
where a relationship of the kind that gives rise to a duty of care is
established, such a duty does not necessarily give rise
to the ability to
receive compensation for all losses occasioned. A common law duty of care does
not apply to compensate injury,
loss or damage of all kinds, simply because it
exists in relation to one kind. In Sutherland Shire Council v Heyman
[1985] HCA 41; (1985) 157 CLR 424 at 487, Brennan J (as his Honour then was)
said:
"[27] The corollary is that a postulated duty of care must be stated in
reference to the kind of damage that a plaintiff has suffered
and in reference
to the plaintiff or a class of which the plaintiff is a member.
[28] It is impermissible to postulate a duty of care to avoid one kind of
damage - say, personal injury - and, finding the defendant
guilty of failing to
discharge that duty, to hold him liable for the damage actually suffered that is
of another and independent
kind - say, economic loss. Not only may the
respective duties differ in what is required to discharge them; the duties may
be owed
to different persons or classes of persons. That is not to say that a
plaintiff who suffers damage of some kind will succeed or fail
in an action to
recover damages according to his classification of the damage he suffered. The
question is always whether the defendant
was under a duty to avoid or prevent
that damage, but the actual nature of the damage suffered is relevant to the
existence and extent
of any duty to avoid or prevent it."
- It
is also instructive to recite two pages from the judgment of the High Court of
Australia in Modbury Triangle Shopping Centre Pty Ltd v Anzil [2000] HCA
61; (2000) 205 CLR 254. In Modbury Triangle, Gleeson CJ
said:
"[14] In some cases, where there is a problem as to the existence and measure
of legal responsibility, it is useful to begin by identifying
the nature of the
harm suffered by a plaintiff, for which a defendant is said to be liable."
- To
similar effect is the statement of Hayne J:
"[105] In cases such as the present, where the extent of the relevant duty is
not clear, it is useful to begin by considering the
damage which the plaintiff
suffered, and the particular want of care which is alleged against the
defendant. Asking then whether
that damage, caused by that want of care,
resulted from the breach of a duty which the defendant owed the plaintiff, may
reveal more
readily the scope of the duty upon which the plaintiff's allegations
of breach and damage must depend."
- In
this case, the damage for which Mr Valder seeks an award is the damage
associated with the confirmation of the guilty verdict and
the inability, it is
said, to be admitted as a legal practitioner in New South Wales and/or to
continue as a financial planner in
New South Wales. The want of care, which is
alleged to give rise to the damage, is the failure of the police officer to
deliver to
the Director of Public Prosecution's office the documents delivered
to the police as earlier stated.
- Given
that the claim against the State of New South Wales, which is vicariously liable
for the actions of the police, is a claim in
negligence, the provisions of the
Civil Liability Act 2002 apply. It is unnecessary to decide whether the
provisions of s 5B of the Civil Liability Act preclude a claim for
negligence in the circumstances that Mr Valder alleges occurred. I am prepared
to accept, without deciding,
that s 5B of the Civil Liability Act does
not preclude such a cause of action.
- While
I consider that the burden of taking steps to avoid the risk of harm in a matter
such as this would involve police taking on
the responsibility for the delivery
of papers in all criminal conduct and such a burden would be extremely onerous,
I am also, for
present purposes, prepared to accept, without deciding, that the
onerousness of the burden does not impact upon the provisions of
s 5B(2) and s
5B(1) of the Civil Liability Act in a way that precluded the conduct from
a claim for negligence.
- However,
the provisions of s 5D of the Civil Liability Act dealing with factual
causation and the scope of liability pose significantly greater difficulties for
Mr Valder.
- The
test described in s 5D(a) requires the Court to deal with the factual connection
between the alleged negligence or breach of relevant duty and the occurrence
of
the particular harm. It is otherwise described as the "but for" test of
causation and requires the plaintiff to establish that
he would not have
suffered the harm of which he complains "but for" the defendant's negligence:
Strong v Woolworths Limited [2012] HCA 5; (2012) 246 CLR 182; Adeels
Palace Pty Ltd v Moubarak [2009] HCA 48; (2009) 239 CLR 420.
- As
a consequence of the test in s 5D(1)(a) of the Civil Liability Act, the
plaintiff must prove, to the civil standard of balance of probability, that but
for the failure of the police to deliver the
documents to the Director of Public
Prosecutions, the damage would not have occurred. The evidence before the Court,
and any inference
that may properly be drawn therefrom, does not satisfy that
test. The failure to deliver the documents to the DPP did not cause the
harm.
- Mr
Valder had the opportunity to explain to the District Court that the documents
were delivered to the police on 17 September 2012
and to tender, subject to
procedural requirements as to timing, the documents before the District Court.
The District Court did not
allow the tender.
- Further,
Mr Valder has not provided the material to the Court in these proceedings and
the Court is not in a position to be able to
determine that, if the material
were delivered, tendered and utilised by the District Court, the result of the
proceedings would
have been any different from that which occurred.
- As
well as failing to satisfy the factual causation requirement in s 5D(1)(a) of
the Civil Liability Act, the plaintiff has significant difficulty in
satisfying the requirements of s 5(1)(b) of the Civil Liability Act. In
my view, it is not appropriate for the scope of the police's liability to extend
to the harm caused by the failure to deliver
a document, in circumstances where
the relationship between the plaintiff and the police and the police and the
proceedings to which
the documents relate is so tenuous.
- Further,
the test must include the subjective element as to what the plaintiff would have
done if the alleged breach of duty had not
occurred. This is an issue in which
the plaintiff has particular difficulties. Assuming, for the purpose of this
discussion, but
not deciding, that the police owed a duty of care and breached
it by not delivering the document, the plaintiff was aware, and was
made aware
by the police officer, that the document would not be delivered.
- As
earlier stated in the recital of the evidence, the police officer told the
plaintiff that he would not be delivering the document.
The plaintiff did
nothing in relation to that information. He could have retrieved the envelope
and delivered it himself. He chose
not to do that. It is difficult, if not
impossible, to determine that the failure to deliver the document caused the
harm in circumstances
where the plaintiff had it in his own hands to deliver the
document himself and negate any damage.
- The
plaintiff submits to the Court that the risk of harm associated with the failure
to deliver the documents was "obvious". Given
that the plaintiff is
unrepresented, I do not take that as an admission as to the operation of the
provisions of s 5G of the Civil Liability Act. In any event, this case
does not involve a failure to warn. Nevertheless the plaintiff, to put it in
terms of the Civil Liability Act, was warned of the "obvious risk" when
the police officer made it clear that the documents sought to be delivered would
not be.
- I
have assumed, earlier in these reasons, that a duty of care existed. I make it
clear that the assumption was for the purpose of
dealing with subsequent issues,
which were more obvious and more easily shown to deny to the plaintiff any
prospect of success in
the proceedings. Nevertheless, I should point out that in
my view there is no duty of care owed by a police officer to a member of
the
public to deliver goods or documents to the Director of Public Prosecutions,
simply because a request is made.
- That
is not to say that there are not situations in which a police officer owes a
duty of care to members of the public. Obviously,
police officers, in some
circumstances, owe such a duty. One only has to give the example of
circumstances where a person is to be
arrested.
- Mr
Valder relies upon the assumption of responsibility by the police officer when
he said, "Okay" on being shown the envelope. As
already stated, in my view the
evidence does not establish the assumption of a responsibility to deliver, but,
rather, an acknowledgement
of the nature of the request being made.
- Even
if the initial response were an assumption of responsibility, that assumption
was negated by the express statement of the police
officer that the document
would not be delivered. In this case, the police officer did not assume risk or
responsibility for the
delivery of the goods. Nor does any risk of harm
associated with non-delivery give rise to a cause of action for damages.
- For
the foregoing reasons, the plaintiff has not established his cause of action.
Nevertheless, I will deal with the issue of damage,
but not its assessment.
- The
plaintiff claims damages, being an inability to practice as a legal practitioner
or to continue practice as a financial planner
and/or an investment advisor. The
path to such a claim must travel through the finding of guilt by the District
Court.
- In
other words, the plaintiff claims that the confirmation of the guilt of the
plaintiff for shoplifting and common assault would
deprive the plaintiff of the
capacity, sometime in the future, of practising as a legal practitioner and/or
continuing his capacity
to act as a financial planner or investment planner.
- There
are a number of fundamental problems with such a course. First, the finding of
guilt is an order of the court. No material before
the Court in these
proceedings establishes, or even arguably establishes, that the result of the
District Court proceedings would
have been different were the documents
delivered. The judgment and verdict of the District Court is a verdict of a
court of record.
The assumption must be that it reflects the law and justice.
While the District Court verdict remains extant, it is impermissible
for the
plaintiff to rely on damages that flow from the assumption that the District
Court verdict is wrong.
- Moreover,
no evidence has been put to the Court to establish whether a shoplifting and
common assault charge would be such as to disentitle
the plaintiff from
practising as a legal practitioner (were he otherwise qualified) or a financial
planner (assuming that is currently
the situation).
- In
short, the plaintiff has not established, even as a matter of principle or as a
matter of fact, that damages (whatever their calculation)
arise from the conduct
of the police and can, as a matter of vicarious liability, be sheeted home to
the State of New South Wales.
- For
all of the above reasons, the plaintiff has failed to establish a cause of
action or damage arising from the impugned conduct
of the police.
- The
Court makes the following orders:
(1) Judgment for the defendant;
(2) The plaintiff shall pay the defendant's costs of and incidental to the
proceedings, as agreed or assessed;
(3) The parties have liberty within 14 days of the publication of this judgment
to apply for a different or special costs order by
submission of no more than
three (3) pages and any party affected by any such application shall, within a
further 14 days from receipt
of the application, have liberty to file a response
thereto, again by submission of no more than three (3)
pages;
(4) Proceedings otherwise dismissed.
**********
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