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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 31 October 2017
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND WELLINGTON REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA
TE WHANGANUI-Ā-TARA ROHE
CIV 2017-485-522 [2017] NZHC 2369
BETWEEN
|
D N SANDILANDS
Applicant
|
AND
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NEW ZEALAND LAW SOCIETY First Respondent
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AND
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J A SIGNAL Second Respondent
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Hearing:
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25 September 2017 (Teleconference)
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Counsel:
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Applicant in Person
P Collins for First Respondent
J Forrest for Second Respondent
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Judgment:
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28 September 2017
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JUDGMENT OF CHURCHMAN J
[1] By statement of claim dated 9 June 2017 the applicant sought
judicial review of a decision made by the Manawatu Standards
Committee on 17
December 2013 in relation to complaint number 8472.
[2] The sole relief sought in the statement of claim was the setting
aside of the decision in complaint 8472.
[3] The matter came before the Court by way of judicial
teleconference on
25 July 2017.
[4] By consent the New Zealand Law Society was substituted for the
National
Standards Committee as the first respondent.
SANDILANDS v NZ LAW SOCIETY [2017] NZHC 2369 [28 September 2017]
[5] The Court made an order pursuant to s 14(2)(b)(i) of the Judicial
Review Procedure Act 2016 that the second respondent be
added to the
proceedings. A timetable order in relation to the filing of documents was also
made.
[6] On 1 August 2017 the first respondent filed a statement of defence.
This statement of defence expressly admitted that the
first respondent had made
a reviewable error.
[7] On the same date the first respondent filed a memorandum
of counsel indicating that the reviewable error was
admitted and that the first
respondent would not defend the judicial review application.
[8] On 7 August 2017 the second respondent filed a statement of
defence.
[9] The first respondent filed a memorandum dated 20 September 2017 for
the case management teleconference of 25 September 2017.
In this memorandum,
the first respondent made it clear that it consented to judgment being entered
in terms sought by the
applicant in the statement of claim and
that the decision (complaint 8472) be set aside. The memorandum indicated
that the first respondent opposed any order for costs.
[10] By memorandum of 22 September 2017 the second respondent indicated
that she did not oppose the application for judicial review
and consented to the
decision in relation to complaint 8472 being set aside.
[11] The applicant filed a number of further documents and memoranda including: (a) an affidavit dated 26 August 2017;
(b) an affidavit dated 16 September 2017; (c) an email dated 19 September 2017;
(d) a memorandum dated 19 September 2017;
(e) a memorandum dated 20 September 2017; (f) memoranda dated 24 September 2017.
[12] The applicant sought in some of these documents reimbursement of
sums variously described as “disbursements”
and
“costs”.
[13] In addition to seeking costs, one of the memoranda dated 24
September 2017 sought various directions as to how the
first respondent
should deal with complaint 8472 and six other complaints.
[14] Pursuant to the affidavit dated 16 September 2017 Mr Sandilands
sought as “costs” the sum of AU$810.00 paid to
an Australian law
firm Fenton O’Shea, DHL courier costs of $103.71, and legal fees paid to
Wellington law firm Rainey Collins
in the sum of $2,205.75, a total of
$3,119.46.
[15] The memorandum of 20 September 2017 sought a further AU$36.72 by way
of further courier costs. The total amount sought
is NZD$3,158.18 in relation
to disbursements.
[16] By a memorandum dated 22 September 2017, counsel for the first
respondent opposed the various costs applications other than
acknowledging that
the applicant was entitled to reimbursement of the High Court filing fee
$540.00.
[17] The first respondent drew the Court’s attention to r 14.12 of
the High Court
Rules 2016 and noted that “disbursement” was defined as
being:
... an expense paid or incurred for the purposes of the proceeding that would
ordinarily be charged for separately from legal professional
services in a
solicitor’s bill of costs ...
[18] The memorandum also pointed out that the applicant had not, at any stage, been represented by lawyers in the proceedings. It was noted that when a party is represented by lawyers, costs are calculated by reference to the different categories of appropriate daily recovery rates and time allocations in schs 2 and 3 of the High Court Rules.
[19] In a memorandum dated 24 September 2017 Mr Sandilands made a
new claim for $5,000 “costs” in relation
to his own time and,
together with his disbursement claims his total sum claimed was
$8,958.18.
[20] In relation to the courier costs Mr Sandilands said that these were
incurred because the High Court required original copies
of the affidavits and
that, as he resided in Queensland, the only practical way of him
supplying these to the High Court
was by way of courier.
[21] At the teleconference on 25 September 2017 Mr Sandilands expanded on
the basis for his claim for “costs” of $5,000
in respect of his own
time. He suggested that this case involved an issue of public interest and thus
qualified as the sort of “exceptional
circumstances” which justified
such an award.
[22] At the teleconference, Mr Collins for the first respondent
emphasised that at all stages in these proceedings Mr Sandilands
had been
self-represented and that Rainey Collins had been at pains to indicate that they
did not represent him. He pointed out
that the statement of claim and
supporting substantive affidavits filed in this matter self-evidently were not
drafted by a lawyer.
[23] He said that to the extent that Rainey Collins advised Mr
Sandilands, they were acting as his agent and that they did not
do anything
recognised within sch 3 of the High Court Rules as one of the matters in respect
of which costs was calculated. Mr Collins
acknowledged that the Court had an
element of discretion in relation to disbursements but confirmed that the only
disbursement accepted
was the filing fee.
[24] At the teleconference Ms Forrest for the second respondent indicated
that she was unaware, until receipt of the latest memoranda
filed by Mr
Sandilands, that costs were sought against her client.
[25] She pointed out that the reviewable error in this case was not that of her client but of the first respondent but otherwise she adopted the submissions made on behalf of the first respondent.
Decision
[26] By consent I set aside the decision in relation to complaint 8472.
That was the sole relief sought in the statement of claim.
[27] The first respondent is now obliged to consider that matter afresh.
However, it is not for me to tell the first respondent
how to do that or to make
the various other directions in relation to that complaint and the six other
complaints as sought by Mr
Sandilands in his most recent memoranda.
[28] In relation to costs and disbursements I accept that the reviewable
error here was made by the first respondent and not the
second respondent and it
is therefore appropriate that the first respondent meet any award of
costs.
Lay litigant costs
[29] The concept of “costs” in the High Court
Rules, as distinct from disbursements, is constrained
by the content
and formatting of schs 2 and 3. Schedule 3 lays out a comprehensive list
of what actions billed by solicitors
may be recovered for.1 Unless
exceptional circumstances exist, the rule is that a lay litigant like Mr
Sandilands cannot recover costs. No such exceptional
circumstances exist
here.
[30] Neither Rainey Collins nor Fenton O’Shea
formally represented Mr Sandilands in the proceedings
or undertook any
of the recoverable work identified in schedule 3. I am therefore unable to
order reimbursement of their
fees as “costs”.
[31] However, there is some authority that sums paid to a solicitor for help in preparing documents and preparing to appear and argue the case in person can be read liberally as “reasonable disbursements”, the rationale being that those costs were incurred and have assisted in relieving the unsuccessful party from having to
pay costs for the lay litigant’s legal representation at
hearing.2 Unfortunately, I
1 High Court Rules 2016, sch 3.
2 A Beck McGechan on Procedure (loose leaf ed, Thompson Reuters) at [HRPt14.10(2)], citing
cannot determine on the sparse particulars of the two invoices
provided by Mr Sandilands on 16 September 2017 the degree
to which the costs
incurred by Fenton O’Shea and Rainey Collins fall under this
classification.
[32] I thus reserve my decision on this aspect of costs and direct Mr
Sandilands to file full details of the services rendered
to him by the two
firms, such information to be filed within 14 days of this decision. I note
further that Mr Sandilands is not
permitted to “white-out” or
otherwise redact aspects of the invoices he does not like as he appears to have
done in documentation
previously supplied.
[33] In the meantime, by consent, I order that the first respondent
reimburse the applicant for the filing fee in the sum of $540.00.
[34] I also order that the first respondent reimburse the applicant
courier charges of AU$142.43. This is on the basis that
these expenses were
reasonably incurred and, in terms of r 14.12 of the High Court Rules fall within
the definition of a disbursement.
[35] Had Mr Sandilands been represented by a solicitor, the
disbursement on couriering the affidavits from Australia
would have been
incurred and would have been shown as a separate charge to legal
fees.
[36] I decline to make any award in relation to Mr Sandilands’ own
time. I do not accept that the proceedings involved
any particular element of
public interest so as to justify departure from the standard rule which is that
litigants in person are
not entitled to claim “costs” for their own
time.3
[37] I conclude by noting that much of the material put before the Court by Mr Sandilands has been either irrelevant or unhelpful, in particular his allegations that counsel for the respondents have been engaged in some form of inappropriate
conspiracy or collusion.
Harrison v Keogh [2015] NZHC 3320 at [11].
3 Re Collier (a bankrupt) [1996] 2 NZLR 438, (1996) 10 PRNZ 145 (CA).
[38] Mr Collins has treated Mr Sandilands with courtesy and respect
and
Mr Sandilands’ insinuations to the contrary are
regrettable.
Churchman J
Counsel:
Darroch Forrest, Wellington
P Collins, Barrister, Auckland
Applicant
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