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Our Sydney costs lawyers and legal costs consultants are experts in party/party and solicitor/client costs disputes. We also have a wealth of experience in all aspects of costs litigation. Serving clients in Sydney, Newcastle, Central Coast and all NSW locations, including QLD. Need to resolve a costs issue? Contact us for a free consultation with a costs assessor. https://www.rose-lawyers.com.au/
Our Sydney costs lawyers and legal costs consultants are experts in party/party and solicitor/client costs disputes. We also have a wealth of experience in all aspects of costs litigation. Serving clients in Sydney, Newcastle, Central Coast and all NSW locations, including QLD. Need to resolve a costs issue? Contact us for a free consultation with a costs assessor.
https://www.rose-lawyers.com.au/
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E Group Security Pty Ltd v Chief
Commissioner of State Revenue (No 2)
[2021] NSWSC 1296
Calderbank offers and the indemnity costs order
Last week's case of E Group Security Pty Ltd v Chief Commissioner of State
Revenue (No 2) [2021] NSWSC 1296 shows how difficult it can be in securing
indemnity costs even where a party has beaten their own Calderbank offer.
Key takeaways:
When putting forward a Calderbank offer (or considering acceptance of such an
offer), always consider the following, non-exhaustive, list of questions:
Does your opponent have enough information/evidence to determine whether
offer is a reasonable one?
Does the period for acceptance allow the other side to properly consider the offer
and to accept it?
Is the offer clear and unambiguous?
Is your opponent able to accept the offer?
If the answer to any of the above is ‘no’, there is a higher likelihood that the
Calderbank offer will not secure indemnity costs even if a higher amount is
achieved at trial.
Further takeaway; if the Calderbank offer precluded your opponent from
accepting the offer, consider reopening this offer once this has been rectified.
This could at least secure indemnity costs from the date of the subsequent
Calderbank offer
The Facts:
On 15 December 2020, the Plaintiff had put forward a Calderbank offer, open for
a period of 14 days, as well as filing a proposed amended appeal statement.
Without going into the minutiae of the judgment, it was broadly accepted that
the judgment obtained was better than the Calderbank offer put forward.
The Defendant accepted that costs should follow the event, but disputed the
making of an indemnity costs order. HHJ Ward CJ agreed, noting that a significant
amount of evidence was provided to the Defendant only after expiry of the offer.
"To my mind, the complexity of the issues in dispute, and the inconsistencies
raised by the proposed amended appeal statement with the evidence served to
that point, are powerful factors pointing against a conclusion that it was
unreasonable for the defendant not to accept the Calderbank offer at the time it
was made."
Ward CJ also noted that although 14 days is often a reasonable timeframe for
acceptance, the timing of the amended appeal statement meant that, in this
instance, it was insufficient.
"in the present case, that gives rise to the particular difficulty of allowing only 14
days for acceptance of the offer because, at the same time as the offer, the
plaintiff was foreshadowing an amended appeal statement."
This case illustrates how broadly a Court will exercise its discretion under s 98 of
the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW), thereby making it even more difficult to
secure indemnity costs order for your client, even where a properly formulated
Calderbank offer was made that clearly should have been accepted before trial.