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[2021] NSWSC 664
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Schneider v Kemeny; Kemeny v Schneider (No 2) [2021] NSWSC 664 (10 June 2021)
Last Updated: 10 June 2021
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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Schneider v Kemeny; Kemeny v Schneider (No 2)
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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8 June 2021
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Date of Orders:
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8 June 2021
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Decision Date:
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10 June 2021
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity
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Before:
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Rees J
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Decision:
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No order as to the plaintiff’s costs in family provision and
possession proceedings. Judgment corrected under the slip rule.
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Catchwords:
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COSTS – offer of compromise – offer served 1.39pm Christmas Eve
– offer open till noon 21 January 2020 – whether
closing date
“no less than 28 days after the date on which the offer is made”
– r 20.26(5)(a) UCPR – principles
for reckoning of time at [21]-[25]
– offer not compliant. COSTS – family provision –
executor offered $1M – plaintiff’s claim dismissed – whether
plaintiff should
pay indemnity costs or bear his own costs – where adverse
costs order would alter the basis on which provision was refused
–
plaintiff to bear own costs.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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John K de Groot and Bruce W Nickel, Family Provision in Australia (5th ed,
2016, LexisNexis) Ritchie’s Uniform Civil Procedure Rules NSW
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Category:
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Costs
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Parties:
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Proceedings 2019/286823 (Family Provision) Michael Schneider
(Plaintiff) Gabor Kemeny (Defendant)
Proceedings 2019/258836
(Possession) Gabor Kemeny (Plaintiff) Michael Schneider (Defendant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: Proceedings 2019/286823 (Family Provision) Mr M K Meek SC
(Plaintiff) Mr L Ellison SC (Defendant)
Proceedings 2019/258836
(Possession) Mr L Ellison SC (Plaintiff) Mr M K Meek SC
(Defendant)
Solicitors: Proceedings 2019/286823 (Family
Provision) MJM Lawyers (Plaintiff) Diana Perla & Associates
(Defendant)
Proceedings 2019/258836 (Possession) Diana Perla &
Associates (Plaintiff) MJM Lawyers (Defendant)
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File Number(s):
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2019/286823 (Family Provision) 2019/258836 (Possession)
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JUDGMENT
- HER
HONOUR: On 13 May 2021, I gave judgment in these proceedings, dismissing the
plaintiff’s claim for family provision and, in parallel
possession
proceedings, extended the plaintiff’s rent-free period in the
testator’s apartment for 28 days beyond delivery
of my judgment:
Schneider v Kemeny [2021] NSWSC 524. I requested the parties to bring in
short minutes of order giving effect to my reasons within 14 days, also then
notifying any errors
and omissions.
- The
parties were unable to agree on orders. Competing short minutes of order were
submitted, accompanied by written submissions. I
heard further argument from the
parties’ senior counsel on 8 June 2021 and made orders which are
reproduced at the end of this
judgment. Whilst neither party then required
written reasons, the executor subsequently requested same. These are my reasons
for
the orders made yesterday. I have used the same terminology as in my
principal judgment.
FACTS
- On
20 August 2019, the executor commenced possession proceedings against the
plaintiff. On 13 September 2019, the plaintiff commenced
family provision
proceedings, supported by the plaintiff’s first substantive affidavit.
Orders were made for mediation. On
8 October 2019, Ward CJ in Eq appointed 27
November 2019 as the date for mediation before Mr CF Hodgson.
- In
November 2019, affidavits were filed on behalf of the executor in the family
provision proceedings, including by Mr Kemedy, Michael
and Deborah Rutstein,
being the solicitor who took Ms Kemeny’s instructions and prepared her
last two Wills.
- The
mediation was unsuccessful. On 2 December 2019, the plaintiff served an offer of
compromise, agreeing to accept $1.55 million
together with a right to reside in
Ms Kemeny’s apartment until payment or sale of the apartment and payment
of his costs of
both the possession and family provision proceedings.
The offer
- On
24 December 2019, at 1.39 pm, the executor served an offer of compromise,
offering to pay the plaintiff $1,000,001 together with
a further two
months’ accommodation in the apartment, and the plaintiff’s costs of
the possession proceedings. The offer
was open for acceptance until noon on 21
January 2020. Rule 42.13A of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW)
(UCPR) had the consequence that, if the plaintiff accepted the offer, he
was also entitled to an order for his costs of the family provision
proceedings
assessed on the ordinary basis up to the time when the offer was made. The
offer was not accepted.
- In
early 2020, the parties continued to file and serve their substantive affidavits
and, on 26 May 2020, Ward CJ in Eq listed both
proceedings for hearing on 9
November 2020 for seven days before me. On 8 July 2020, the plaintiff served a
second offer of compromise,
offering to accept $1.7 million. On 2 November 2020,
shortly before the hearing commenced, the plaintiff served a third offer of
compromise, offering to accept $1.2 million.
SUBMISSIONS
- The
executor sought an order that the plaintiff pay the executor’s costs on
the ordinary basis up to 7 January 2020 and on the
indemnity basis thereafter,
given the non-acceptance of the executor’s offer of compromise. As the
offer of compromise was
served on Christmas Eve, the executor sought indemnity
costs from two weeks later, being 2 January 2020.
- The
plaintiff sought that there be no order made in respect of his costs of the
possession and family provision proceedings, with
the result that he pay his own
costs.
Executor’s submissions
- The
executor submitted that prima facie, pursuant to UCPR, rule 42.1 costs
“follow the event”. There was nothing exceptional about this case
that any other order should be made. This is
not a case where the plaintiff was
impecunious or received no benefit from the deceased’s estate or was made
an unreasonable
offer. When the offer of compromise was served, the
plaintiff’s affidavit in chief had been served for more than three months.
His circumstances were known. The narrative affidavits on behalf of the
executor (being his, and those of the children of the deceased)
had been served
and consequently, the financial circumstances of the beneficiaries were known to
the plaintiff. The offer took into
account the facts and circumstances as
represented by the plaintiff at the mediation.
- The
offer was much more favourable to the plaintiff than the result he achieved.
Given the size of the offer, the outcome of the proceedings,
and the information
available to the plaintiff at the time the offer was made, failure to accept the
offer was unreasonable. The
plaintiff had not filed any evidence to demonstrate
it was not unreasonable for him to reject the offer. The executor’s senior
counsel relied on Flanagan v Fisher [2021] NSWSC 598, where Kunc J
referred to “the undoubted public policy interest in encouraging
settlement by giving effect to Calderbank offers.
As has been said by several
Judges of this Division, the ordinary principles in relation to costs generally
apply in family provision
matters”: at [71].
- As
to the possession proceedings, the executor submitted that he commenced the
proceedings once the plaintiff had used his occupation
of the deceased’s
realty for a period longer than that contemplated under clauses 3(e) and 3(d) of
the Will of the deceased.
Notwithstanding the plaintiff’s experience as a
Wills and Trustee practitioner, although he commenced his proceedings within
the
12 month limitation period, he was in no hurry to commence those proceedings at
all. The deceased died on 18 February 2019.
The rent-free occupation expired on
19 August 2019. The Summons for possession was filed on 20 August 2019.
The family provision
Summons was filed on 13 September 2019. In December 2019,
interim orders were made by consent with regard to the plaintiff’s
occupation of the realty. Those orders were made in the context of the plaintiff
seeking ownership of the realty at the forthcoming
hearing. However, at trial,
he abandoned any claim to the realty but sought a lump sum of between $1.5
million and $1.6 million.
(To be fair to the plaintiff, the abandonment of his
claim to the realty appeared referrable to events which had occurred not long
before the hearing, being his unanticipated retirement and the fact that his
mother had passed away, such that he now expected to
receive an inheritance
under her Will).
- The
executor submitted that the plaintiff was not obliged to pay any occupation fee
during his occupation of the estate realty but
merely outgoings. The Offer of
Compromise included provision for the plaintiff to have two months occupation of
the estate realty
once orders were made. This was more favourable than has been
ultimately awarded by the Court. Further, the plaintiff had not lived
at the
realty for months at a time, revealed in updating material filed shortly before
the trial.
- The
executor submitted that the plaintiff’s misplaced appreciation of the
strength of his case prevented the due and proper
administration of the estate
and, in particular, the sale of the realty. The executor was prima facie
entitled to possession of the estate realty, he being obliged to collect the
assets and in due course liquidate the estate for the
benefit of the
beneficiaries and, possibly the claimant. The right of the plaintiff to occupy
the realty was an indulgence, more
so when that right was not accompanied by an
obligation to pay rent or licence fee. This constituted a benefit out of the
estate
of the deceased worth $106,000 which the plaintiff did not have to pay.
In those circumstances, an order for possession being made,
costs should follow
the event.
Plaintiff’s submissions
- The
plaintiff submitted that the executor’s offer of compromise did not comply
with the rules as it was open for acceptance
until noon on 21 January 2020
whilst a period of 28 days after the date of service of the offer expired at
midnight on 21 January
2020. Accordingly, the offer was not an effective offer
of compromise for the purposes of the UCPR and the terms of rule 42.15A of the
UCPR have no effect, although may have significance as a Calderbank offer.
Subject to the rules of Court, costs are in the
discretion of the Court: section
98 Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW). The rules of court recognise an
ultimate discretion in the Court by providing if the Court makes any order as to
costs, it
is to order that the costs follow the event unless it appears to the
Court that some other order should be made as to the whole or
any part of the
costs: rule 42.1 UCPR. The Succession Act 2006 (NSW) expressly provides
that the Court may order that the costs of proceedings under the Chapter dealing
with family provision claims
for costs to be paid out of the estate of the
deceased in such manner as the Court thinks fit: section 99.
- It
was said to be notoriously difficult to predict family provision outcomes. A
family provision claim is not quantifiable by the
parties’ legal advisers
prior to judgment with anything like the prescience possible in a claim for a
liquidated sum such as
contract debt or even in a claim for unliquidated damages
for personal injury or for future economic loss, where there are statutory
and
judicial guidelines to guide estimation of damages. In family provision claims
there is a large element of subjective assessment
by the Judge. On any
particular set of facts, inevitably there will be a variety of answers given by
different judges: see Vanvalen v Neaves (2005) 65 NSWLR 268; [2005] NSWSC
1003 at [56]- [58] per Palmer J.
- The
parties in these proceedings made offers between $1 million and $1.7 million at
various times to resolve the plaintiff’s
claim. In assessing the
reasonableness of the plaintiff’s conduct in not accepting the
defendant’s offer, the plaintiff
submitted that it should be borne in mind
that the parties themselves exchanged offers at a level which was significantly
different
from the determined outcome of the case.
- The
plaintiff submitted that the Court recognises that it may be appropriate to make
costs orders in family provision proceedings
which deviate from the usual
course. In particular, family provision cases stand apart from cases in which
costs follow the event.
Costs in family provision cases generally depend on the
overall justice of the case. It is not uncommon, in the case of unsuccessful
applications, for no order to be made as to costs, particularly if it would have
a detrimental effect on the applicant's financial
position: Purnell v
Tindale [2020] NSWSC 746 per Henry J at [333] citing Gaudron J in Singer
v Berghouse [1993] HCA 35; (1993) 67 ALJR 708 at 709; Penfold v
Predny [2016] NSWSC 472 per Hallen J at [167]. As noted in Singer v
Berghouse, “there may even be circumstances in which it is appropriate
for an unsuccessful party to have his or her costs paid out of
the
estate”: at 709.
- The
Court found that the plaintiff’s net assets are some $1.46 million. The
plaintiff’s costs and disbursements of these
proceedings were $306,717.
The executor’s legal costs were estimated at $313,302.20. Bearing his own
costs will have a significant
impact upon the plaintiff’s financial
position. If the plaintiff were required to pay the executor’s costs at
all, it
would have a significant detrimental impact upon his financial position,
leaving the plaintiff with $839,980 to provide accommodation
for himself, to
provide for his general living expenses during his retirement and to provide for
the unforeseen contingencies in
life. It was submitted that the overall justice
of the case justifies the costs orders sought by the plaintiff.
- The
plaintiff’s senior counsel also submitted that the family provision and
possession proceedings were heard together and,
in substance, the possession
claim was part and parcel of the family provision claim so that the same costs
order should abide, that
is, the plaintiff should bear his own costs of the
proceedings with the defendant’s costs to be paid out of the estate on an
indemnity basis.
WAS THE OFFER A VALID OFFER OF
COMPROMISE?
- Rule
20.26(5)(a) of the UCPR provides that, in order for an offer to comply with the
rules, “the closing date for acceptance
of an offer ... is to be no less
than 28 days after the date on which the offer is made.”
- Rule
1.11 of the UCPR provides:
Reckoning of time
(1) Any period of time fixed by these rules, or by any judgment
or order of the court or by any document in any proceedings, is
to be reckoned
in accordance with this rule.
(2) If a time of one day or longer is to be reckoned by
reference to a given day or event, the given day or the day of the given
event
is not to be counted.
(3) If, apart from this subrule, the period in question, being
a period of 5 days or less, would include a day or part of a day
on which the
registry is closed, that day is to be excluded.
(4) If the last day for doing a thing is, or a thing is to be
done on, a day on which the registry is closed, the thing may be
done on the
next day on which the registry is open.
(5) Section 36 of the Interpretation Act 1987 (which
relates to the reckoning of time) does not apply to these
rules.
- Applying
rule 1.11(2), the day on which an offer of compromise is issued “is not to
be counted”. This accords with section 36(1) of the Interpretation Act
1987 (NSW) in any event.
- Further,
as Barrett J eloquently explained in Autumn Solar Installations Pty Ltd v
Solar Magic Australia Pty Ltd [2010] NSWSC 463 at
[8]- [10]:
8 ... as Gibbs J pointed out in Forster v Jododex
Australia Pty Limited [1972] HCA 61; (1972) 127 CLR 421 at 426, it has
been held ever since Lester v Garland [1808] EngR 326; (1808) 15 Ves Jun 248; 33
ER 748 that, as a general rule, the law takes no account of fractions of a day.
The idea that a day is defined by or made up of a multitude
of fragments of time
is one that cannot be accepted unless required by some particular directive as
to interpretation (for example,
a directive to have regard to hours and minutes,
as distinct from merely days).
9 ... the point [is] made by Kitto J in Prowse v
McIntyre [1961] HCA 789; (1961) 111 CLR 264, at 274:
The beginning of a day is nothing but the end of the day
before, and the end of the day is nothing but the beginning of the next;
just as
the eastern boundary of a piece of land is identical with the western boundary
of contiguous land.
10 Thus all beginnings of days and all ends of days fall
precisely at the point of midnight, not an instant before or an instant
after.
As Euclid recognised in mathematics, a point has no magnitude.
- That
is, the closing date for acceptance of an offer of compromise made on 24
December 2019 must be no less than 28 days after 24
December 2019, not counting
24 December 2019, and ending at midnight on the said closing date.
- The
executor’s senior counsel submitted that there was a legitimate argument
that, by closing the offer at noon on 21 January
2020, it was only one hour and
forty minutes short of 28 days. Whilst arguable, it is also contrary to
long-standing principle. Further,
the offer was served at a time of year which
makes me less inclined to construe the rule liberally in favour of the party
making
the offer. Presumably for the same reason, the costs order sought by the
executor only sought indemnity costs from two weeks after the date of the
offer.
- Thus,
the offer of compromise does not comply with the rules. The prescribed
consequences which follow from its non-acceptance do
not follow here.
WHAT COSTS ORDER SHOULD BE MADE?
- As
to an appropriate costs order to be made following an unsuccessful claim for
family provision, the authors of John K de Groot and
Bruce W Nickel, Family
Provision in Australia (5th ed, 2016, LexisNexis) observe, “In recent
years, the most common costs order in New South Wales when an application is
dismissed is that the plaintiff pays the defendant’s costs, usually on a
party-and-party basis ... Cases in which the [unsuccessful]
applicant is not
required to pay the respondent’s costs were said to be rare in New South
Wales in Ray v Greenwell [2009] NSWSC 1197 at [17].”: at [10.6]
(some footnotes omitted). Whilst most jurisdictions adhere to a well-established
practice that, generally speaking,
on a failed application, there will be no
order as to costs, “In New South Wales the cases suggest that the practice
is more
honoured in the breach than the observance ... the normal rule is costs
follow the event, no order as to costs is an exception and
costs out of the
estate is a rarity”: at [10.14].
- The
principles in respect of costs orders in family provision matters were recently
summarised by the Court of Appeal in Haertsch v Whiteway (No 2) [2020]
NSWCA 287 per Macfarlan, Meagher and Leeming JJA at
[4]-[11]:
4 The general power to award costs in Civil Procedure
Act 2005 (NSW), s 98 provides that costs are in the discretion of the
court, though the exercise of that discretion is subject to the general rule
that
costs should follow the event: Uniform Civil Procedure Rules
2005, r 42.1. Family Provision Act, s 33 contains an additional
power and permits certain unsuccessful applicants for provision to have their
costs paid out of the estate
whether or not there are special circumstances
justifying such a course. It has been said to reflect a different starting
point to
the default rule in r 42.1 but, as has been explained, it can have no
application to this case.
5 It is well established that family provision
applications “raise different issues with respect to
costs” to those
raised by other proceedings: Salmon v
Osmond [2015] NSWCA 42 at [172] (Beazley P, McColl and Gleeson JJA
agreeing). The liberal approach to costs in such cases has a long
provenance, though reference
is now typically made to remarks of Gaudron J
in Singer v Berghouse [1993] HCA 35; (1993) 67 ALJR
708 at 709, to the effect that “costs in family
provision claims generally depend on the overall justice of the
case” and
that it is “not uncommon, in the case of
unsuccessful applications, for no order to be made as to costs, particularly if
it
would have a detrimental effect on the applicant’s financial
position”. Indeed, in some jurisdictions it would seem
that
no order as to costs is the usual or general consequence of an
unsuccessful application: Bowyer v Wood [2007] SASC 327; (2007) 99 SASR 190 at
210, 211; [2007] SASC 327; Underwood v Underwood [2009] QSC 107
at [32]- [33].
6 However, as Giles JA observed in Jvancich v
Kennedy (No 2) [2004] NSWCA 397 at [11] (Handley and McColl JJA
agreeing), the “overall justice of the
case” is “not remote from costs following the
event”.
For one thing, the default rule encourages prospective
applicants for provision to have regard to the significant costs
consequences
to themselves of making such an application. But
while the default rule in r 42.1 applies to family provision proceedings, its
application
remains subject to the court exercising greater than
usual “liberality and discrimination” in deciding whether
to depart
from it: Salmon v Osmond at [174] (Beazley P, McColl
and Gleeson JJA); Chapple v Wilcox (2014) 87 NSWLR
646; [2014] NSWCA 392 at [26]- [27] (Basten JA, Gleeson JA agreeing);
[138]-[139] (Barrett JA, Gleeson JA agreeing).
7 It is not uncommon, though atypical, for an unsuccessful
applicant not to be ordered to pay the defendant’s costs where
the applicant is or would become impecunious and the claim for provision was
reasonable or borderline: see eg, with no attempt to
be exhaustive, Re
Sherborne Estate (No 2) (2005) 65 NSWLR 268; [2005] NSWSC
1003; Moussa v Moussa [2006] NSWSC 509; Bevilacqua v
Robinson (No 2) [2008] NSWSC 520; Ray v
Greenwell [2009] NSWSC 1197; Dugac v Dugac [2012]
NSWSC 192; Raiola v Raiola [2014] NSWSC 1172; Purnell v
Tindale [2020] NSWSC 746.
...
9 The impecuniosity of an unsuccessful party, without more,
is no reason to deprive a successful party of an order for costs to
which
they are otherwise entitled: Sassoon v Rose [2013] NSWCA 220 at
[10] (Meagher JA, Gleeson JA agreeing); Northern Territory v
Sangare (2019) 265 CLR 164; [2019] HCA 25 at [26]- [27]. However,
the irrelevance of impecuniosity is said to be “subject to some
relaxation in family provision cases”: Chapple v
Wilcox at [141]. One reason that the impecuniosity of an
unsuccessful applicant for family provision is of greater than usual
relevance
is that adverse costs orders might alter the basis on which the
claim for provision was rejected, and thereby cause or justify a
further
application: McCusker v Rutter [2010] NSWCA 318 at
[34]. ....
...
11 Although family provision claims can only succeed or fail,
those binary outcomes tend to conceal difficult and
even “borderline”
questions of judgment. That is one
reason for the more liberal approach to costs: Re Sherborne Estate (No
2) at 279; Moussa v Moussa at [8]. Those observations
are typically directed to the evaluative and discretionary judgments as to what
would constitute adequate
provision for the applicant’s proper
maintenance, education or advancement. ...
- See
also Smith v Moore (No 2) [2020] NSWSC 1640 per Williams J, who also
relied on the passage from Chapple v Wilcox (2014) 87 NSWLR 646; [2014]
NSWCA 392 cited in Haertsch v Whiteway (No 2), reproduced at [13]
of her Honour’s judgment and also here:
Generally speaking, of course, a litigant's financial position is irrelevant
when it comes to the exercise of the costs discretion,
particularly where that
litigant is a plaintiff. Having subjected the defendant to court proceedings
and lost, a plaintiff without
means will generally not be able to
resist a costs order just because he or she cannot pay. That general principle
may be subject
to some relaxation in family provision cases by application of
‘liberality and discrimination’ - but only, I think, where
the
claim, although ultimately unsuccessful, had merit and involved a genuine
question whether the scheme of testamentary benefaction
in fact applying was, in
the particular circumstances, one reflecting community standards.
In Jvancich v Kennedy (No 2) (above), Giles JA recognized
an analogy, as to costs, between family provision cases and probate proceedings.
He noted that, in probate
cases, departure from the rule that costs follow the
event is often recognized as appropriate where the testator has been the cause
of the litigation - where, for example, the will is ambiguous. In such cases,
the costs of unsuccessfully opposing the executor may
be ordered to be paid out
of the estate. It may be said, in the same way, that if the testator has been
the cause of family provision
litigation by failing to make some disposition
that he or she arguably should have made in accordance with community standards,
the
costs burden should fall on the estate, even if the ultimate decision of the
court does not accommodate that disposition.
- More
recently, in Sarant v Sarant (No 2) [2020] NSWSC 1897, Hallen J
summarised the case law at [29]-[39], concluding at [39]:
From all of the authorities, it is clear that the purpose of a costs order is to
reach a fair and just result. The making of a costs
order in any case where
there are competing considerations will reflect a broad evaluative judgment of
what justice requires: Gray v Richards (No 2) [2014] HCA 47; (2014) 315 ALR 1
at 2 [2]; [2014] HCA 47 at [2] (French CJ, Hayne, Bell,
Gageler and Keane JJ).
The plaintiff also relied on
Penfold v Predny per Hallen J at [165] and Purnell v Tindale per
Henry J at [334]-[336], where similar principles were enunciated.
- Non-complying
offers of compromise may amount to Calderbank offers with similar cost
consequences if the plaintiff’s refusal
to accept the offer was
unreasonable in the circumstances. The executor’s offer was clearly a
Calderbank offer.
- It
is implicit in the submissions of the plaintiff’s senior counsel (at [17])
that the offers of compromise made by the plaintiff
and the executor were in a
‘band’ which suggests that my judgment, dismissing the
plaintiff’s application altogether,
could not be predicted and is an
‘outlier’ (and thus, inferentially, wrong). The selection of the
figure in an offer
of compromise may reflect a number of factors including the
executor’s assessment of the chance that the plaintiff may accept
the
offer; the executor’s expectation that on no account would the plaintiff
accept the offer but nonetheless wishing to secure
costs protection at a healthy
level going forward; the parties’ respective assessment of the evidence
then served; the parties’
assumptions as to how key witnesses will perform
when giving evidence, and whether they will be accepted as witnesses of credit;
the parties’ assumption that the plaintiff’s version of events will
not be substantially undermined by documentary and
affidavit evidence assembled
thereafter. I cannot know the ingredients which produced the figure offered by
the executor but, assuming
it to be within the ‘band’ of outcomes
predictable by learned senior counsel practising in this field of law, then the
offer was self-evidently reasonable and the plaintiff’s non-acceptance of
the offer was unreasonable. This factor strongly
supports the making on the
costs order sought by the executor.
- However,
if I make the costs order sought by the executor, then it will have a
detrimental effect on the plaintiff’s financial
position, which I took
into account in my principal judgment. Whilst such a costs order would not
render the plaintiff impecunious,
it would nonetheless cause a material change
in an important factor which I took into account in dismissing his application
for provision,
this is, it would alter the basis on which the claim for
provision was rejected. The plaintiff’s claim, although ultimately
unsuccessful, was not novel or without merit. I consider that the costs order
suggested by the plaintiff reach a fair and just result
or achieve overall
justice in the case.
- In
respect of the possession proceedings, I agree with the plaintiff’s senior
counsel that the family provision and possession
proceedings were effectively
heard as one proceeding. I did take the plaintiff’s period of rent-free
accommodation into account
in my consideration of his claim for family provision
and I do not wish to materially alter the bases upon which I dismissed the
plaintiff’s claim overall by making the costs orders sought by the
executor.
ERRORS AND OMISSIONS
- The
executor notified various errors and omissions to my principal judgment, to
which the plaintiff did not initially agree but ultimately
agreed save for one,
in respect of which the plaintiff wished to preserve his position. In my
principal judgment, I noted at [206]:
(emphasis added)
Michael earns some USD$100,000 a year and has modest net assets of some
$15,000. In February 2020, Michael and his wife had their first child and
would like to buy their first home in a good school district in
the Maddison
area, which costs between AUD$1 million and $1.5 million. They plan to have a
second child soon.
- In
fact, Michael’s liabilities are some $15,000, whilst his net assets
are USD$266,478. Both figures appear on the same page on Michael’s
affidavit in sequential
rows of a table as follows:
LIABILITIES
|
My HECS Debt
|
(E) AU$20,000 (= US$14,166)
|
TOTAL LIABILITIES
|
US$14,166
|
SUMMARY
|
Assets
|
US$280,644
|
Less Liabilities
|
-US$14,166
|
NET ASSETS
|
US$266,478
|
- I
clearly made an error. Notwithstanding the plaintiff’s wish to preserve
all possible appeal rights, this error appears to
me to fall squarely within
rule 36.17 of the UCPR, which provides:
Correction of judgment or order (“slip rule”)
If there is a clerical mistake, or an error arising from an accidental slip or
omission, in a judgment or order, or in a certificate,
the court, on the
application of any party or of its own motion, may, at any time, correct the
mistake or error.
- In
its commentary, Ritchie’s Uniform Civil Procedure Rules NSW
observed at [36.17.5], “In its primary connotation, the slip rule
applies where the fact of the error, mistake, omission or
slip is a matter upon
which no real difference of opinion can exist. ... A criterion suggested for
determining whether a proposed
correction is justified is the hypothetical
enquiry as to whether the supposed error, if it had been drawn to the attention
of the
Court or the parties at the relevant time, would have been corrected as a
matter of course ...”. It is harder to think of a
clearer example of such
an error. Accordingly, it is appropriate to make the amendment under the slip
rule, which I have done at
the conclusion of these reasons.
- Whilst
I am on the subject, the last two sentences of [207] of my principal judgment
also contain minor errors when compared with
[10] and [12] of Sarah’s
affidavit of 30 October 2020 (Court Book 1263-1264) as
follows:
Sarah and her husband’s assets are modest comprising some $125,000
$145,877 together with superannuation (mostly her husband’s)
of some
$280,000 $289,171.17. Their weekly living expenses are some $1,700
$1,581.
- I
will also correct these errors.
ORDERS
- For
these reasons, I made the following orders on 8 June 2021:
In
Family Provisions Proceedings 2019/286823:
(1) Dismiss the Summons filed on 13 September 2019.
(2) Order that the Defendant’s costs be paid from the Estate on the
indemnity basis.
(3) No order be made in relation to the Plaintiff’s costs with the
intent that the plaintiff bear his own costs of the proceedings.
In Possession Proceedings 2019/258836:
Note the agreement of the parties to the following orders:
(4) The Plaintiff is entitled to possession of the realty at 34/16 Neild
Avenue, Darlinghurst (“the realty”) comprised
in folio identifier
106/SP83594.
(5) Grant leave to the plaintiff to issue a writ of possession in respect of
the realty.
(6) Stay the execution of the writ for possession of the realty until 11 June
2021.
(7) The defendant is entitled to occupy the realty free of any obligation to
pay rent or an occupation fee up to and including 11
June 2021.
(8) Order the defendant to vacate the realty on or before 11 June 2021.
(9) To the extent that the defendant’s occupation of the realty extends
beyond 11 June 2021, the defendant is to pay to the
plaintiff an occupation fee
of $1,400 per week until he vacates.
(10) No order as to the defendant’s costs of the proceedings to the
intent he bear his own costs.
(11) The Plaintiff’s costs be paid from the estate on the indemnity
basis.
- In
addition, I make the following orders:
(1) Pursuant to rule 36.17 of
the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), amend “$15,000” in
Schneider v Kemeny [2021] NSWSC 524 at [206] to
“US$266,478”.
(2) Pursuant to rule 36.17 of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW),
amend Schneider v Kemeny [2021] NSWSC 524 at [207] as follows (changes
underlined):
Sarah and her husband’s assets are modest
comprising some $149,000 together with superannuation (mostly her
husband’s)
of some $289,000. Their weekly living expenses are some
$1,600.
**********
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