Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia Pty Ltd (No 2)
[2014] FCAFC 139
Federal Court (Full Court)
2014-10-27
Perram Jj
Not yet cited by other cases
Applicant: Rebecca Richardson
Respondent: Oracle Corporation Australia Pty Ltd (ACN 003 074 468) and Randol Tucker
Ratio
The Court upheld the appellant's presumptive entitlement to indemnity costs under Federal Court Rules 1979 (Cth) O 23 r 11(4) following an offer of compromise served on 20 September 2010, as the appellant ultimately obtained judgment substantially exceeding the offer amount. The Court declined to depart from the presumption despite the Full Court's reassessment of damages upward, characterising the development in jurisprudence on sexual harassment damages as orderly development of pre-existing principle rather than an unforeseeable event justifying departure from the indemnity costs regime.
Outcome
Resolved
partial
Authority signal
Not yet cited by other cases
Signal-weighted score: 0.0
Derived from how later decisions have treated this case. Dark green = leading authority,
green = positively treated, grey = neutral or sparse data,
amber = caution, red = treated negatively.
Key facts · 8
- Appellant served an offer of compromise on 20 September 2010 offering $106,500 plus interest and costs.
- Offer complied with Federal Court Rules 1979 (Cth) O 23 r 5 requirements.
- Offer stipulated 14-day acceptance period.
- Trial concluded 1 November 2012, judgment delivered 20 February 2013.
- Trial judge awarded $18,000 for general damages.
- Full Court increased damages award to $130,000 (subsequently adjusted to $161,572.24 with pre-judgment interest of $31,572.24).
- Respondent did not accept the offer of compromise.
- Federal Court Rules were repealed and replaced by Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) effective 1 August 2011.
Factors
For
- The appellant's offer of $106,500 was substantially less than the judgment sum ultimately awarded.
- The offer complied with all procedural requirements of O 23 r 5.
- The respondent rejected the offer and proceeded to trial.
- The outcome (damages of $161,572.24 including interest) was more favourable to the appellant than the terms of the offer.
- Development in jurisprudence on sexual harassment damages represented orderly development of pre-existing principle rather than an unforeseeable event.
- Court rules such as O 23 are intended to encourage parties to give serious thought to risks of non-acceptance.
Against
- The trial judge's original award of $18,000 was not out of step with past awards in sexual harassment cases at the time.
- The offer price of $106,500 was out of line with historical awards in cases of this kind.
- There may be an argument that the respondent should not be criticised for rejecting an offer that was out of line with comparable precedents.
Legislation referenced
- Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s 51A(1)
- Federal Court Rules 1979 (Cth) O 23 r 4, O 23 r 5, O 23 r 11
- Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) r 1.04
Concept tags · 3
Principles · 9
articulates para 3
Section 51A(1) of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) permits the Court to include in any judgment an amount for interest accrued between the time the cause of action arose and the date judgment is entered.
articulates para 6
Where an applicant makes an offer of compromise under Federal Court Rules O 23 r 11(4) which the respondent fails to accept, and the applicant subsequently obtains judgment not less favourable than the terms of the offer, the applicant is presumptively entitled to indemnity costs from the date after the offer, unless the Court otherwise orders.
articulates para 8
A departure from the presumptive entitlement to indemnity costs under O 23 r 11(4) is appropriate only for proper reasons which, in general, only arise in an exceptional case.
articulates para 9
The mere fact that something unexpected or unforeseen has happened during the course of litigation is unlikely, in a usual case, to provide the kind of proper reasons justifying departure from O 23 rules 11(4) and 11(6), as litigation is inescapably chancy.
articulates para 11
An orderly development of pre-existing legal principle by an intermediate appellate court does not constitute the kind of exceptional circumstance that would justify disengaging a presumptive entitlement to indemnity costs under an offer of compromise regime.
cites para 5
The Court has the power under Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) r 1.04(3) to order that former rules should apply in particular circumstances, including where parties' understanding of an offer was premised on the former rules.
cites para 8
It will be appropriate to depart from the presumptive position under a costs rule for proper reasons which, in general, only arise in an exceptional case.
cites para 8
Litigation is inescapably chancy, and it was precisely to encourage meditation upon that unsettling truth that court rules such as those providing for offers of compromise were introduced.
cites para 9
Rules such as O 23 r 11(4) and r 11(6) encourage the parties to give serious thought to the risk involved in non-acceptance of settlement offers.
Cases cited in this decision · 8
Cited
(2014) 312 ALR 285
(not in corpus)
"…PORATION AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 003 074 468) First Respondent RANDOL TUCKER Second Respondent JUDGES: KENNY, BESANKO & PERRAM JJ DATE: 27 OCTOBER 2014 PLACE: SYDNEY REASONS FOR JUDGMENT THE COURT: In Richardson v...…"
Applied
[2013] FCAFC 116
(not in corpus)
"…understood the former rules applied. Regardless of whether those former rules applied we would order them to apply under r 1.04(3) for reasons given by the Full Court in largely analogous circumstances in Elecspess...…"
Applied
(2013) 215 FCR 95
(not in corpus)
"…er rules applied. Regardless of whether those former rules applied we would order them to apply under r 1.04(3) for reasons given by the Full Court in largely analogous circumstances in Elecspess Pty Ltd v LED...…"
Cited
[2004] FCA 1437
(not in corpus)
"…ule 11(4). It will be appropriate to depart from the presumptive position under rule 11(6) (and hence rule 11(4)) for proper reasons ‘which, in general, only arise in an exceptional case’: Port Kembla Coal Terminal...…"
Cited
(2004) 212 ALR 281
(not in corpus)
"…be appropriate to depart from the presumptive position under rule 11(6) (and hence rule 11(4)) for proper reasons ‘which, in general, only arise in an exceptional case’: Port Kembla Coal Terminal Ltd v Braverus...…"
Cited
(1992) 27 NSWLR 721
(not in corpus)
"…Braverus Maritime Inc (No 2) [2004] FCA 1437 ; (2004) 212 ALR 281 at 284 [17] . In assessing what is exceptional in the relevant sense it is useful to keep in mind, as the New South Wales Court of Appeal put it in...…"
Cited
[1998] NSWSC 367
(not in corpus)
"…at court rules such as Order 23 providing for offers of compromise were introduced. In the words of Mason P, rules such as rules 11(4) and 11(6) encourage the parties ‘to give serious thought to the risk involved in...…"
Cited
(1998) 44 NSWLR 578
(not in corpus)
"…as Order 23 providing for offers of compromise were introduced. In the words of Mason P, rules such as rules 11(4) and 11(6) encourage the parties ‘to give serious thought to the risk involved in non-acceptance’:...…"
Archived text (2058 words)
Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia Pty Ltd (No 2) [2014] FCAFC 139 (27 October 2014)
Last Updated: 27 October 2014
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia
Pty Ltd (No 2)
[2014] FCAFC 139
Citation:
Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia Pty Ltd (No 2)
[2014] FCAFC
139
Appeal from:
Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia Pty Limited
[2013] FCA
102
Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia Pty Limited (No 2)
[2013]
FCA 359
Parties:
REBECCA RICHARDSON v ORACLE CORPORATION
AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 003 074 468) and RANDOL TUCKER
File number:
NSD 438 of 2013
Judges:
KENNY, BESANKO & PERRAM JJ
Date of judgment:
27 October 2014
Catchwords:
COSTS
– claim for indemnity costs
based on letter of compromise – applicability of
Federal Court Rules
1979
(Cth) – whether circumstances to justify departure from
presumption of entitlement to indemnity costs – effect of Full
Court’s reassessment of appropriate range of damages
PRACTICE
AND PROCEDURE
– application for pre-judgment interest
Legislation:
Federal Court of Australia Act 1976
(Cth)
s 51A(1)
Federal Court Rules 1979
(Cth) O 23 r 4, O 23 r
11
Federal Court Rules 2011
(Cth) r 1.04
Cases cited:
Elecspess Pty Ltd v LED Technologies Pty Ltd
[2013] FCAFC 116
;
(2013) 215 FCR 95
cited
Maitland Hospital v Fisher (No 2)
(1992)
27 NSWLR 721
cited
Morgan v Johnson
[1998] NSWSC 367
;
(1998) 44 NSWLR 578
cited
Port Kembla Coal Terminal Ltd v Braverus Maritime Inc (No 2)
[2004] FCA 1437
;
(2004) 212 ALR 281
cited
Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia Pty
Ltd
(2014) 312 ALR 285
referred to
Date of hearing:
Heard on the papers
Place:
Sydney
Division:
GENERAL DIVISION
Category:
Catchwords
Number of paragraphs:
15
Counsel for the Appellant:
Ms R Francois and Ms A Rao
Solicitor for the Appellant:
Picone & Co
Counsel for the First Respondent:
Mr JJ Fernon SC and Ms E Raper
Solicitor for the First Respondent:
Baker & McKenzie
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
GENERAL DIVISION
NSD 438 of 2013
ON APPEAL FROM THE
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
BETWEEN:
REBECCA RICHARDSON
Appellant
AND:
ORACLE CORPORATION AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 003
074 468)
First Respondent
RANDOL TUCKER
Second
Respondent
JUDGES:
KENNY, BESANKO & PERRAM JJ
DATE OF ORDER:
27 OCTOBER 2014
WHERE MADE:
SYDNEY
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
Order
(2)(b) of the orders made on 15 July 2014 be varied by substituting the figure
of $161,572.24 for the figure of $130,000.
The
issue of the offer of compromise be governed by the
Federal Court Rules
1979
(Cth).
The
First Respondent pay the costs of the Appellant in the Court below on a
party-party basis up to and including 20 September 2010
and on an indemnity
basis from 21 September 2010.
Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule
39.32 of the
Federal Court Rules 2011
.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
GENERAL DIVISION
NSD 438 of 2013
ON APPEAL FROM THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
BETWEEN:
REBECCA RICHARDSON
Appellant
AND:
ORACLE CORPORATION AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 003 074 468)
First
Respondent
RANDOL TUCKER
Second
Respondent
JUDGES:
KENNY, BESANKO & PERRAM JJ
DATE:
27 OCTOBER 2014
PLACE:
SYDNEY
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
THE COURT:
In
Richardson v Oracle Corporation Australia Pty Ltd
(2014) 312 ALR 285
this
Court determined that the Appellant was entitled to have the damages awarded to
her substantially increased from that which
she was awarded at trial. The trial
judge had awarded $18,000 but this Court increased the award to $130,000.
Two
questions now remain. First, should the Appellant also receive a sum for
pre-judgment interest. Secondly, should she have the
benefit of an indemnity
costs order on the basis of an offer of compromise served by her on 20 September
2010 in advance of the trial.
The Appellant offered to accept the sum of
$106,500 plus interest together with her costs as at that time as assessed or
agreed
in settlement of the case.
The
first issue may be shortly dealt with as the First Respondent (Oracle) does not
oppose the order sought.
Section 51A(1)
of the
Federal Court of Australia
Act 1976
(Cth) permits the Court to include in any judgment an amount for
interest between the time that the cause of action arose and the
date on which
the judgment is entered. The Appellant submits, and Oracle does not dispute,
that the appropriate figure for interest
is $31,572.24. Order 2(b) of the
orders made on 15 July 2014 will be varied accordingly. We would make no order
as to costs with
respect to this issue.
As
to the second issue of indemnity costs the parties are in dispute. The
entitlement of the Appellant arises from an offer of compromise
served by her
solicitors on Oracle’s solicitors dated 20 September 2010. That offer was
in the following terms:
‘1. This is an offer of compromise made by the
Applicant pursuant to Order 23 of the
Federal Court
Rules
.
2. The
Applicant offers to compromise the whole of the proceedings by:
payment
by the Respondents to the Applicant of the sum of $106,500 plus interest;
and
payment
by the Respondents to the Applicant of the Applicant’s costs of this
proceeding as agreed between the parties or as
assessed.
3. This
offer is open for acceptance by the Respondents until the expiration of 14 days
from the date that it is made.’
The
trial was concluded on 1 November 2012 and judgment delivered on 20 February
2013. After the offer was made the
Federal Court Rules 1979
(Cth) were
repealed by the
Federal Court Rules 2011
(Cth) which came into force on 1
August 2011. There is a preliminary issue as to whether the current debate is
to be resolved under
the former or the new rules. The Court has the power under
the present rules to order that the former rules should apply: see r
1.04. In
this case, the parties’ consideration of the offer of compromise must have
taken place in a context where, at the
material times, they understood the
former rules applied. Regardless of whether those former rules applied we would
order them to
apply under r 1.04(3) for reasons given by the Full Court in
largely analogous circumstances in
Elecspess Pty Ltd v LED Technologies Pty
Ltd
[2013] FCAFC 116
;
(2013) 215 FCR 95
at 99-100
[11]
. We so order.
Order
23 of those former rules provides a regime in which a failure by a party to
accept an offer under that order could have costs
consequences if the party
making the offer subsequently achieved a superior outcome in the litigation.
For the regime to be engaged
the offer must comply with the requirements of
Order 23 rule 5. In this case there is no dispute that the 20 September 2010
offer
did comply with the requirements of that rule and that the regime in Order
23 is therefore applicable.
Debate
is centred instead on the operation of Order 23 rule 11(4), which
provides:
‘(4) If:
(a) an offer is made by an applicant and not
accepted by the respondent; and
(b) the applicant obtains judgment on the claim to which the offer relates not
less favourable than the terms of the offer;
then, unless the Court otherwise orders, the applicant is entitled to an order
against the respondent for costs incurred in respect
of the claim:
(c) up to and including the day the offer was made — taxed on a party and
party basis; and
(d) after that day — taxed on an indemnity basis.’
Oracle
did not accept the offer and, in the events which have occurred, the Appellant
has succeeded in obtaining a judgment sum which
is larger than the one which was
offered.
The
issue which arises is whether this Court should now order that the presumptive
entitlement of Ms Richardson to an indemnity costs
order should be displaced
(i.e., whether the Court should ‘otherwise order’). The genesis of
the debate lies in this
observation in which the whole Court concurred in the
principal judgment (at 338 [237]):
‘...As the reasons of Kenny J show, while we have
concluded that the award in this case was manifestly inadequate, the award
given
by the trial judge was not out of step with some past awards in cases of this
kind. In this circumstance, there may be an argument
available to Oracle that it
ought not to be criticised for rejecting an offer which was out of line with
those other awards. In turn,
this may require a consideration of the
parties’ reasonable or prudent expectations of the litigation at the time
of the offer.
This court is better placed to decide this than the trial judge.
In those circumstances, we would hear the parties (in writing) on
the issue of
the costs of the trial.’
Order
23 rule 11(4) deals with the situation of an offer made by an applicant whereas
rule 11(6) deals with an offer made by a respondent.
Although there are
differences between the two they both create a presumptive entitlement from
which the Court may depart by otherwise
ordering. At least insofar as that
concept is concerned the Court’s exegesis of the principles relating to
Order 23 rule 11(6)
are applicable to rule 11(4).
It
will be appropriate to depart from the presumptive position under rule 11(6)
(and hence rule 11(4)) for proper reasons ‘which,
in general, only arise
in an exceptional case’:
Port Kembla Coal Terminal Ltd v Braverus
Maritime Inc (No 2)
[2004] FCA 1437
;
(2004) 212 ALR 281
at 284
[17]
. In assessing what is
exceptional in the relevant sense it is useful to keep in mind, as the New South
Wales Court of Appeal put
it in
Maitland Hospital v Fisher (No 2)
(1992)
27 NSWLR 721
at 725, that ‘[l]itigation is inescapably chancy’ and
that it was precisely to encourage meditation upon that unsettling
truth that
court rules such as Order 23 providing for offers of compromise were introduced.
In the words of Mason P, rules such as
rules 11(4) and 11(6) encourage the
parties ‘to give serious thought to the risk involved in
non-acceptance’:
Morgan v Johnson
[1998] NSWSC 367
;
(1998) 44 NSWLR 578
at
581-2.
Thus
the mere fact that something unexpected or unforeseen has happened during the
course of the litigation is unlikely, in a usual
case, to provide the kind of
proper reasons for which Order 23 rules 11(4) and 11(6) call. The litigation
landscape is littered
with the wreckage of unforeseeable events and unexpected
circumstances.
It
is evident, we think, that the Court’s decision has effected a change to
the level of awards for general damages in cases
involving sexual harassment.
That was the reason the Court concluded that the trial judge’s original
award of $18,000 ‘was
not out of step with past awards in cases of this
kind’ yet was nevertheless manifestly inadequate by reference to general
standards prevailing in the community (at 316 [118] per Kenny J, Besanko and
Perram JJ agreeing at 316 [119]).
The
Appellant submitted that this development in the Court’s jurisprudence was
not, when all was said and done, particularly
unforeseeable. There is probably
little to be gained in seeking to develop a calculus of jurisprudential
unforseeability. It will
suffice, at least in this case, to observe that we do
not, on balance, regard this Court’s decision in the present case as
other
than the kind of orderly development of pre-existing principle which is the
everyday work of intermediate appellate courts.
As such, it is not a
circumstance which would justify this Court from disengaging the
Appellant’s presumptive entitlement
to indemnity costs.
The
orders of the Court will be:
(1) Order (2)(b) of the orders made on 15 July 2014 be
varied by substituting the figure of $161,572.24 for the figure of $130,000.
(2) The issue of the offer of compromise be governed by the
Federal Court
Rules 1979
(Cth).
(3) The First Respondent pay the costs of the Appellant in the Court below on a
party-party basis up to and including 20 September
2010 and on an indemnity
basis from 21 September 2010.
I certify that the preceding fifteen (15)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justices Kenny, Besanko &
Perram
.
Associate:
Dated: 27 October 2014