You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Supreme Court of Victoria >>
2023 >>
[2023] VSC 672
Database Search
| Name Search
| Recent Decisions
| Noteup
| LawCite
| Download
| Context | No Context | Help
Re Trani [2023] VSC 672 (21 November 2023)
Last Updated: 22 November 2023
IN THE SUPREME
COURT OF VICTORIA
|
Not Restricted
|
AT MELBOURNE
COMMON LAW DIVISION
PRACTICE COURT
S
ECI 2023 02082
IN THE MATTER of a proposed
proceeding
BETWEEN
|
|
|
|
v
|
|
|
|
NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED ACN 004 044
937
|
Proposed First Defendant
|
|
|
- and -
|
|
|
|
THE OFFICIAL TRUSTEE IN BANKRUPTCY AS TRUSTEE OF THE BANKRUPT ESTATE OF
ABRAHAM DIQUINZIO
|
Proposed Second Defendant
|
---
JUDGE:
|
|
WHERE HELD:
|
|
DATE OF HEARING:
|
|
|
|
CASE MAY BE CITED AS:
|
|
MEDIUM NEUTRAL CITATION:
|
|
---
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Refusal by Prothonotary to accept documents
for filing – Supreme Court (General Civil Procedure) Rules 2015
(Vic) r 28A.04(5) – Substantially irregular – Seeks to
relitigate judgment of the Court – Decision of Prothonotary
upheld –
Refusal to direct Prothonotary to accept and seal documents.
---
APPEARANCES:
|
Counsel
|
Solicitors
|
For the Proposed Plaintiff
|
No appearance (the application being referred
on the papers by the Prothonotary)
|
|
For the Proposed Defendants
|
HIS
HONOUR:
1 Patrizia Trani (the applicant)
attempted to file a Writ and Statement of Claim (the proposed Writ and
Statement of Claim) naming the National Australia Bank Limited (NAB)
and the Official Trustee in Bankruptcy as Trustee of the Bankrupt Estate of
Abraham Diquinzio (the Trustee) as
defendants.
2 On 18 May 2023, the Prothonotary
rejected the proposed Writ and Statement of Claim and accompanying documents
(collectively the
Documents) on the basis that they were substantially
irregular.
3 This is an application for a direction
under r 28A.04(5) of the Supreme Court (General Civil Procedure) Rules 2015
(the Rules) that the Prothonotary seal and accept the Documents. For
the reasons that follow, I will not direct the Prothonotary to seal and
accept
the Documents for filing.
4 On 9 August 2021, NAB
commenced proceedings against the applicant and Abraham Diquinzio to recover
possession of land at 28 Eastgate
Street, Pascoe Vale South (the land).
On 31 May 2022, the Prothonotary entered judgment in default of appearance.
5 On 5 July 2022, the applicant applied to set aside
the default judgment. Efthim AsJ dismissed that application on 3 October 2022.
The applicant appealed the judgment of Efthim AsJ. That appeal was dismissed by
Croft J on 29 March
2023.[1]
6 The
proposed Writ and Statement of Claim does not plead any discernible cause of
action, but what is clear is that the applicant
wishes to assert that NAB is not
entitled to the possession of the land and that she is entitled to recover
compensation and pecuniary
penalties from NAB because it has sought to enforce
its right to possession. The gravamen of the applicant’s complaint is
that NAB obtained a judgment without there being a trial by
jury.
7 In the proposed Writ and Statement of Claim
the applicant sets out her claim for relief in the following terms:
- An
interlocutory injunction to prevent the first defendant [NAB] obtaining
possession of the [land] before trial by jury.
- [NAB]
owes me by Blackstones Commentaries as described above. A liquidated sum of
$165,000 by five as for a corporation, calculated
by reference to s4B Crimes Act
1914 for attempting to pervert the course of justice in respect of the Judicial
Power of the Commonwealth as set out in s43 Crimes Act 1914 by obtaining an
arbitrary Possession Order from a Judge, a total of $825,000 and a liquidated
penalty of $280.500 by five as prescribed
for a corporation, for arbitrarily
attempting to deprive the plaintiff and her partner of the physical liberty to
develop the property
they are attempting to arbitrarily repossess by a
Possession Order. A Sum of $1,402,500 A Grand Total of $2,227,500 due to the
plaintiff
and her partner.
- If
the liability is denied to penalty be assessed daily until it is settled or
tried by reference to s4K Crimes Act 1914.
- An
assessment by the court of the allegation that the possession order obtained by
[NAB] was obtained in breach of the alleged Commonwealth
enactments and whether
it is liable to the Pecuniary penalties prescribed therefrom. The right to seek
this order derives from s15F Crimes Act 1914 and s80 Judiciary Act
1903.
8 The proposed Writ and Statement of
Claim constitutes an attempt to re-litigate the very matters determined by the
judgment of Croft
J. Paragraph 1 seeks to restrain NAB from enforcing a valid
order of the Court which was the subject of that judgment. Paragraphs
2 and 3
seek compensation and pecuniary penalties predicated on an assumption that
NAB’s right to possession is somehow unlawful,
an assumption which cannot
be properly maintained in light of the judgment. Paragraph 4 seeks to impugn
the default judgment on
grounds not raised before Efthim AsJ or Croft
J.
9 Further, there is simply no basis in law for the
relief sought in paragraphs 2 and 3. The references to the Crimes Act 1914
(Cth) (Crimes Act) ss 4B, 4K and 43 are completely
misconceived. Section 4B of the Crimes Act deals with pecuniary penalties for
offences and s 4K makes provision in relation to continuing and multiple
offences. The allegation of an attempt by NAB to pervert the course of justice
under s 43 of the Crimes Act for seeking an order of the Court for
possession of the land was properly described by the Prothonotary in his reasons
as scandalous.
10 Whilst there are references in
the proposed Writ and Statement of Claim to forms of equitable relief, there is
nothing in the facts
alleged which could ground such relief and it is apparent
that any such relief stands or falls on the proposition that NAB has somehow
acted unlawfully in obtaining the order for possession and seeking to enforce
it.
11 The attempt to bring a proceeding which rests
entirely for its foundation on propositions contrary to a judgment of the Court
between
the same parties may properly be described, as the Prothonotary did in
his reasons, as irregular. In my view this is also one of
those “rare and
exceptional cases”[2] in which
it also constitutes an abuse of process.
12 In the
circumstances, there is no reason to exercise the power under r 28A.04(5). The
Prothonotary was correct not to accept the
Documents.
---
[1] National Australia Bank Ltd
v Trani and Anor [2023] VSC
142.
[2] Austin v Dwyer
& Ors [2023] VSC 76, [15].
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/vic/VSC/2023/672.html