Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd

JurisdictionAustralia Federal only
Judgment Date31 August 2007
Neutral Citation[2007] FCA 1348
CourtFederal Court

FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd [2007] FCA 1348



PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – preliminary discovery – requirements of O 15A r 6 of Federal Court Rules 1979 (Cth) – purpose of preliminary discovery narrower than discovery after action commenced – preliminary discovery need only provide evidence sufficient to enable applicant to decide whether to pursue proceedings.


Federal Court Rules 1979 (Cth) O 15 r 2(3), O 15A r 6


Matrix Film Investment One Pty Ltd v Alameda Films LLC [2006] FCA 591 cited

Tyco Australia Pty Ltd v Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd (2005) 142 FCR 429 cited

St George Bank Ltd v Rabo Australia Ltd (2004) 211 ALR 147 applied


OPTIVER AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 077 364 366) v TIBRA TRADING PTY LTD (ACN 117 881 759), TIBRA CAPITAL PTY LTD (ACN 120 313 395), TIBRA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD (ACN 124 402 160), TIBRA INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PTY LTD (ACN 120 338 445), DINESH BHANDARI, GLENN WILLIAMSON, TIMOTHY BERRY, ANDREW KING AND KINSEY COTTON

NSD 1116 OF 2007

TAMBERLIN J

31 AUGUST 2007

SYDNEY



IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY

NSD 1116 OF 2007

BETWEEN:

OPTIVER AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 077 364 366)

Applicant

AND:

TIBRA TRADING PTY LTD (ACN 117 881 759)

First Respondent

TIBRA CAPITAL PTY LTD (ACN 120 313 395)

Second Respondent

TIBRA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD (ACN 124 402 160)

Third Respondent

TIBRA INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PTY LTD (ACN 120 338 445)

Fourth Respondent

DINESH BHANDARI

Fifth Respondent

GLENN WILLIAMSON

Sixth Respondent

TIMOTHY BERRY

Seventh Respondent

ANDREW KING

Eighth Respondent

KINSEY COTTON

Ninth Respondent

JUDGE:

TAMBERLIN J

DATE OF ORDER:

31 AUGUST 2007

WHERE MADE:

SYDNEY

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

1. Paragraphs [5]-[24] of the Notice to Produce filed by the applicant on 9 August 2007 be struck out.

2. Each party pay its own costs.


Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules.


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY

NSD 1116 OF 2007

BETWEEN:

OPTIVER AUSTRALIA PTY LTD (ACN 077 364 366)

Applicant

AND:

TIBRA TRADING PTY LTD (ACN 117 881 759)

First Respondent

TIBRA CAPITAL PTY LTD (ACN 120 313 395)

Second Respondent

TIBRA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD (ACN 124 402 160)

Third Respondent

TIBRA INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PTY LTD (ACN 120 338 445)

Fourth Respondent

DINESH BHANDARI

Fifth Respondent

GLENN WILLIAMSON

Sixth Respondent

TIMOTHY BERRY

Seventh Respondent

ANDREW KING

Eighth Respondent

KINSEY COTTON

Ninth Respondent

JUDGE:

TAMBERLIN J

DATE OF ORDER:

31 AUGUST 2007

WHERE MADE:

SYDNEY


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

1 This is a motion by the applicant (“Optiver”) to strike out a Notice to Produce filed by the respondents (“Tibra”) on 9 August 2007 in relation to an application for pre-action discovery. The issue raised is whether all or part of the Notice to Produce travels beyond the documents contemplated by O 15A r 6 of the Federal Court Rules 1979 (Cth), and seeks to obtain and test the substance of documents which are appropriate for discovery only in post-action discovery when pleadings have been made and issues are more clearly defined.

2 A party which makes an application for pre-action discovery under O 15A r 6 must establish that:

(i) there is reasonable cause to believe that the applicant in a proceedings has or may have the right to obtain relief from an identified person;

(ii) the applicant, having made all reasonable inquiries, does not have sufficient information to enable it to decide whether to commence proceedings; and

(iii) there is reasonable cause to believe that the identified person has, is likely to have or is likely to have had possession of any document relating to the question whether the applicant has a right to obtain relief, and that inspection of the document would assist the applicant to decide whether to commence proceedings.

If all these requirements are satisfied, the Court has a broad discretion to order or refuse discovery of the documents sought.

3 In support of its application of 19 June 2007, Optiver filed two affidavits. The first was an affidavit of Mr Shale, a software development manager at Optiver, who was responsible for developing and overseeing the development of the software which is the subject of the proceedings. He describes the development and performance of the automated securities trading software, and other software, which it is said, may have been misappropriated by the respondents. He refers to the resignation of the fifth to ninth respondents from Optiver, with whom he had worked on the software program, and says that they had established a new business in competition with Optiver. He explains why he believes the respondents may have used Optiver’s automated trading software developed during their employment without its consent.

4 The other affidavit filed by Optiver was that of Mr Keldoulis, a director responsible for supervising all aspects of Optiver’s business. He refers to searches made of the ASIC register and to inquiries made to ascertain whether there was any indication that the former employees had misappropriated the securities trading software. He expresses the belief that some or all of the respondents are in possession of a copy of the software written by Optiver’s employees in the course of their employment.

PRINCIPLES AND REASONING

5 In approaching an application for pre-action discovery it must be kept in mind that this type of discovery is calculated to avoid unnecessary waste of time and money otherwise spent as a consequence of the institution or conduct of an action which is not sustainable, and also to enable a prospective applicant to make a reasonably informed decision whether to embark on litigation. It is not designed to be a preliminary hearing of the merits of the case. The extent of such discovery will be narrower and on a different basis than the discovery which occurs after proceedings have been instituted and the issues are defined. It is a step which precedes the institution of substantive litigation and is to some extent exploratory in nature.

6 Despite the narrower scope of pre-action discovery and the different questions to which it relates, an estimation of the strength of a prospective case including consideration of possible defences may be material. Pre-action discovery is only directed to provide evidence sufficient to enable an applicant to decide whether to commence the proceedings. The sufficiency of this evidence need not go so far as to enable the applicant to decide there is a prima facie case or to evaluate the prospects of success on the ultimate hearing at any high level of probability. Pre-action discovery is not designed to enhance or justify a decision which has already been taken to commence proceedings: see Matrix Film Investment One Pty Ltd v Alameda Films LLC [2006] FCA 591. The focus of this form of discovery is on the question whether the requirements of O 15A r 6(a), (b) and (c) have been made out and, if so, whether the Court should exercise its discretion to require production. In discovery after an action has been commenced, the question is whether there are documents relevant to the matters and issues raised on the pleadings, including but not limited to those referred to in O 15 r 2(3). Any determination of an application for pre-action discovery must be made having regard to these considerations.

7 There is now no doubt that the Court has power to make an order that a Notice to Produce be issued in a pre-action discovery application if directed to the questions set out in O 15A r 6. However, notwithstanding this power, the Court retains its broad discretion whether to allow a Notice to Produce to stand in whole or in part: see Tyco Australia Pty Ltd v Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd (2005) 142 FCR 428. In that case, as pointed out by Hill J at 438, although the issues in pre-action discovery are very limited, they can give rise to contestable issues of fact which can be the subject of cross-examination. Accordingly, before making a determination, the Court must consider whether the relevant Notice to Produce is limited to the establishment of those matters necessary to be satisfied under the requirements of O 15A r 6. A Notice to Produce like any other litigious measure must not be an abuse of process.

8 The relevant principles concerning pre-action discovery are concisely summarised by Hely J in St George Bank Ltd v Rabo Australia Ltd (2004) 211 ALR 147 at 153. It is unnecessary to reproduce his Honour’s summary, but I have applied those principles in my consideration of the challenge to the present Notice.

9 The Notice to Produce in this application has four parts. The documents sought in the first part (paragraphs [1]-[4]) relate to the determination of issues in the proceedings and conform to the requirements of O 15A r 6. The documents sought in the second and third part (paragraphs [5]-[17] and paragraphs [18]-[20] respectively) relate to matters arising out of Mr Shale’s and Mr Keldoulis’ affidavits respectively. The documents sought in the fourth part (paragraphs...

Get this document and AI-powered insights with a free trial of vLex and Vincent AI

Get Started for Free

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex

Unlock full access with a free 7-day trial

Transform your legal research with vLex

  • Complete access to the largest collection of common law case law on one platform

  • Generate AI case summaries that instantly highlight key legal issues

  • Advanced search capabilities with precise filtering and sorting options

  • Comprehensive legal content with documents across 100+ jurisdictions

  • Trusted by 2 million professionals including top global firms

  • Access AI-Powered Research with Vincent AI: Natural language queries with verified citations

vLex
3 cases
  • Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd
    • Australia
    • Federal Court
    • 1 February 2008
    ...Relations and Small Business [2002] FCAFC 269 Malouf v Malouf (1999) 86 FCR 134 Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd [2007] FCA 1348 Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd [2007] FCA 1560 Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd [2007] FCA 2065 Qanta Softwar......
  • Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd
    • Australia
    • Federal Court
    • 12 October 2007
    ...86 FCR 134 considered Makita (Australia) Pty Ltd v Sprowles (2001) 52 NSWLR 705 cited Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd [2007] FCA 1348 referred Quanta Software International Pty Ltd v Computer Management Services Pty Ltd (2000) 175 ALR 536 cited Sanofi v Parke & Davis Pty L......
  • Garde-Wilson v Google LLC
    • Australia
    • Federal Court
    • 18 March 2021
    ...7.23, 10.43 Sarbanes Oxley Act 2002 (USA) Stored Communications Act (USA) Cases cited: Optiver Australia Pty Ltd v Tibra Trading Pty Ltd [2007] FCA 1348 Regie Nationale Des Usines Renault SA v Zhang [2002] HCA 10; (2002) 210 CLR 491 Schaefer v Universal Scaffolding & Equipment LLC 839 F. 3d......