Case Law Ultimate Vision Inventions Pty Ltd v Innovation and Science Australia (Costs)

Ultimate Vision Inventions Pty Ltd v Innovation and Science Australia (Costs)

Document Cited Authorities (1) Cited in Related
Ultimate Vision Inventions Pty Ltd v Innovation and Science Australia (Costs) [2022] FCA 669


Federal Court of Australia


Ultimate Vision Inventions Pty Ltd v Innovation and Science Australia (Costs) [2022] FCA 669

File number(s):

VID 836 of 2019



Judgment of:

WHEELAHAN J



Date of judgment:

9 June 2022



Catchwords:

COSTS – no special circumstances – costs to follow the event.



Cases cited:

Beaman v Bond [2017] FCAFC 142; 254 FCR 480

Keddy v Foxall [1955] VR 320

Lollis v Loulatzis (No 2) [2008] VSC 35

Ultimate Vision Inventions Pty Ltd v Innovation and Science Australia [2022] FCA 606



Division:

General Division



Registry:

Victoria



National Practice Area:

Administrative and Constitutional Law and Human Rights



Number of paragraphs:

13



Date of last submission/s:

7 June 2022



Date of hearing:

Determined on the papers



Solicitor for the Applicant:

P. Jayawardena York of Pradeepa Jayawardena York Law Practice



Counsel for the Respondent:

M. L. Baker



Solicitor for the Respondent:

King & Wood Mallesons





ORDERS


VID 836 of 2019

BETWEEN:

ULTIMATE VISION INVENTIONS PTY LTD

Applicant


AND:

INNOVATION AND SCIENCE AUSTRALIA

Respondent



order made by:

WHEELAHAN J

DATE OF ORDER:

9 June 2022



THE COURT ORDERS THAT:


  1. The applicant pay the respondent’s costs of the proceeding, including reserved costs.



Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

WHEELAHAN J:

  1. I gave judgment in this proceeding, which was an appeal from the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, on 24 May 2022: Ultimate Vision Inventions Pty Ltd v Innovation and Science Australia [2022] FCA 606. I ordered that the appeal be dismissed. The respondent sought costs of the proceeding, which the applicant opposed. In order to give the legal practitioners for the parties an opportunity to make submissions as to costs with the benefit of the court’s reasons for judgment, I made orders that provided for the filing and service of written submissions relating to costs which, if filed, would result in costs being determined on the papers.

  2. Both parties filed written submissions in accordance with the court’s orders. The respondent maintained its application for costs of the proceeding, which the applicant opposed.

  3. The applicant accepted that in the absence of special circumstances, costs would normally follow the event. For the reasons that follow, there are no special circumstances arising in relation to this proceeding, and accordingly costs, including reserved costs, should follow the event.

  4. The applicant advanced eight features of the proceeding which it submitted amounted to special circumstances, the combination of which justified the court making no order as to costs. I will address each of those features in turn.

  5. First, the applicant submitted that it had sought to settle the matter at an early stage and relied upon an open letter dated 24 September 2020 sent by the applicant’s solicitors to the respondent’s solicitors. The letter is no more than an invitation to the respondent to explore the possibility of resolution of all matters to which the applicant and the respondent were parties, and contained no offer. There was no submission by the applicant that explained how a high level invitation to resolve the matters in dispute between the applicant and the respondent could have any proper bearing on the costs of the appeal from the decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal in circumstances where the applicant has been wholly unsuccessful. I therefore place no weight on the first feature.

  6. The second feature on which the applicant relied was that the applicant submitted that it was “compelled” to bring this proceeding, as it was the only avenue open to it to complete the development of its technology project, and to its commercial survival. I do not accept that the applicant was “compelled” to bring this proceeding. The applicant brought the proceeding to challenge findings by the Tribunal that it had not engaged relevant criteria in s 355-20 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth) that may have entitled it to taxation rebates for the years ended 30 June 2014 and 30 June 2015. The burden on the applicant was to demonstrate some error relating to one of the questions of law that were raised on the appeal, which it failed to do. To the extent that the applicant claimed as part of its submission that it was “compelled” to bring the proceeding because it was “impoverished”, I do not regard that as being material to the exercise of my discretion as to costs. In any event, there is insufficient evidence of the resources of the applicant, or otherwise the resources that might be available to it having regard to the financial position of its director and shareholder, Mr Werner Nicolau.

  7. The third feature advanced on behalf of the applicant was that the applicant was “compelled” to bring the proceeding as a result of the conduct of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. The applicant submitted that it was “obliged” to bring the appeal as a result of the unattributed copying of the respondent’s submissions which I considered in detail in my reasons for judgment. I held that, although there had been substantial unattributed copying of the respondent’s submissions to the Tribunal, it did not affect the legality of the Tribunal’s determination. Although the legal consequences of the unattributed copying was a feature of the argument presented on appeal, and also a feature of the disposition of the appeal, I do not accept that the applicant was for that reason “compelled” to bring the appeal, and I do not place any weight on this claimed consideration.

  8. The fourth and fifth features advanced on behalf of the applicant also relied upon the unattributed copying of the respondent’s submissions to the Tribunal, but went further and claimed that “the respondent did not inform the applicant or the court of this copying”. The applicant submitted that the respondent, particularly as a model litigant, had a duty to draw the copying to the attention of the court, citing the decision of the Full Court in Beaman v Bond [2017] FCAFC 142; 254 FCR 480 at [67] and [68]. There is nothing in this submission. The fact that the Tribunal had copied the respondent’s submissions to it was well and truly before the court. It was raised by the applicant in its written submissions. The court invited the applicant to amend its notice of appeal to raise squarely the question of copying as supporting what became Question 6. The court made an interlocutory order at a case management hearing prior to the hearing of the appeal requiring the respondent to file...

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