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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 26 June 2015
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Supreme Court New South Wales
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Case Name:
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Colin Joss & Co Pty Ltd v Cube Furniture Pty Ltd
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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[2015] NSWSC 829
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Hearing Date(s):
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By written submission
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Decision Date:
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26 June 2015
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Before:
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Hammerschlag J
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Decision:
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Plaintiff/cross-defendant to pay the costs of the defendant/cross-claimant
on the indemnity basis. No orders for pre-judgment interest
or interest on
costs
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Catchwords:
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COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION – COSTS – indemnity costs – failed
challenge to an arbitral award under Commercial Arbitration Act 2010 (Cth), s
34(2)(b)(ii) – whether there is a presumption in favour of indemnity costs
absent exceptional circumstances - HELD – there is no such
presumption
– indemnity costs warranted anyway.
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Legislation Cited:
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Commercial Arbitration Act 2010 (Cth)
Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) |
Cases Cited:
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Colin Joss & Co Pty Ltd v Cube Furniture Pty Ltd [2015] NSWSC 735
A v R [2009] HKCFI 342; [2009] 3 HKLRD 389 A v B [2007] EWHC 54 (Comm) John Holland Pty Limited v Kellogg Brown & Root Pty Ltd [No 2] [2015] NSWSC 564 IMC Aviation Solutions Pty Ltd v Altain Khuder LLC (2011) 38 VR 303 TCL Air Conditioner (Zhongshan) Co Ltd v Castel Electronics Pty Ltd (2014) 311 ALR 387 Profilati Italia SrL v PaineWebber Inc and another [2001] EWHC 24; [2001] 1 Lloyds Rep 715 |
Category:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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Colin Joss & Co Pty Ltd - Plaintiff
Cube Furniture Pty Ltd - Defendant |
Representation:
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Counsel:
J. Twigg QC with S. Ipp - Plaintiff S. Duggan - Defendant Solicitors: Macpherson & Kelley Lawyers Pty Ltd - Plaintiff Goodman Law - Defendant |
File Number(s):
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2014/370641
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JUDGMENT
67. Parties should comply with arbitration awards. A person who obtains an award in his favour pursuant to an arbitration agreement should be entitled to expect that the Court will enforce the award as a matter of course.
68. Applications by a party to appeal against or set aside an award or for an Order refusing enforcement should be exceptional events. Where a party unsuccessfully makes such application, he should in principle expect to have to pay costs on a higher basis. This is because a party seeking to enforce an award should not have had to contend with such type of challenge.
69. Further, given the recent introduction of Civil Justice Reform (CJR), the Court ought not normally to be troubled by such type of application. A party unmeritoriously seeking to challenge an award would not be complying with its obligation to the Court under Order 1A Rule 3 to further the underlying objectives of CJR, in particular the duty to assist the Court in the just, cost-effective and efficient resolution of a dispute.
70. If the losing party is only made to pay costs on a conventional party-and-party basis, the winning party would in effect be subsidising the losing party's abortive attempt to frustrate enforcement of a valid award. The winning party would only be able to recover about two-thirds of its costs of the challenge and would be out of pocket as to one-third. This is despite the winning party already having successfully gone through an arbitration and obtained an award in its favour. The losing party, in contrast, would not be bearing the full consequences of its abortive application.
71. Such a state of affairs would only encourage the bringing of unmeritorious challenges to an award. It would turn what should be an exceptional and high-risk strategy into something which was potentially "worth a go". That cannot be conducive to CJR and its underlying objectives.
72. Accordingly, in the absence of special circumstances, when an award is unsuccessfully challenged, the Court will henceforth normally consider awarding costs against a losing party on an indemnity basis. The Respondent will here pay the Applicant’s costs on an indemnity basis.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nsw/NSWSC/2015/829.html