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Blog 67. Caveator relying on forged document pays indemnity costs.

Iceland Properties Pty Ltd v Palta & Anor [2022] VSC 734, McDonald J. (28 November 2022).

The facts were –

Gill acknowledged that before July 2018 Palta had advanced funds to Iceland or him on particular terms.   In August 2022, Iceland, Gill and others entered into a deed of settlement of litigation requiring Gill to pay $6.5 m. by 1 December 2022.   He had paid a 10% deposit and contended that the caveat was impeding his ability to raise finance to pay the balance.

McDonald J. ordered removal of the caveat with indemnity costs, holding –

  1. There was not a probability that at trial Palta would establish that he had an interest as a chargee of the property. The matters raised by his counsel were a very tenuous basis for the asserted caveatable interest and any probability was insufficient to justify the practical effect of the caveat on the ability of Iceland to deal with its property. [24]-[35]
  2. If it had been necessary to consider it, the balance of convenience would also have favoured removal of the caveat, particularly relevant being that a prima facie case, if any, was weak and that the caveat was a significant impediment to Gill obtaining finance. The lower risk of injustice was to order removal of the caveat, notwithstanding that it was common ground that Palta had advanced funds to Gill, the circumstances of the present case being quite unusual.  There was accordingly very significant risk of injustice if the caveat remained. [36]-[40]
  3. The caveator would be ordered to pay indemnity costs.  On the first two court days the caveator had resisted the removal of the caveat on the basis of an agreement which he now conceded was forged, having notice of this contention for over two years without taking steps to establish the authenticity of the agreement, then accepting that the agreement was forged but nonetheless asserting on a very tenuous basis that Gill was the perpetrator.  It should have been readily apparent to the caveator before the first day of hearing that the agreement on which he relied was forged. [41]-[44]

       Philip H. Barton

          Owen Dixon Chambers West

        Tuesday, March 7, 2023

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