The general rule for costs in family law matters is contained in section 117(1) of the Family Law Act 1975, which states “each party to proceedings under this Act shall bear his or her own costs”. However, there are exceptions to this rule, and the court can make orders requiring one party to pay the other party’s costs.
However, there is no requirement for more than one of these factors to be present before a costs order is made.
Further, there is no distinction made in the Act between costs orders for parenting or property matters.
If an Independent Children’s Lawyer is appointed, the court can order that each party bears the cost in a proportion the court considers fair. This applies unless a party has received Legal Aid or a party would suffer financial hardship if it had to pay.
A court may make a costs order against a party who declines an offer to settle, if after the final hearing it can be seen that party would have been better off accepting the offer. This power is available to ensure offers to settle are considered seriously by both parties, to minimise the cost of litigation, to reduce the court’s considerable workload, and to avoid the risk of a wealthier party dragging out proceedings to exhaust the other party.
Any failure to comply with the Federal Circuit and Family Court (Family Law) Rules 2021 will be considered, such as:
It is standard for a costs order to be made on a “party and party” basis, where an unsuccessful party is ordered to pay the costs of the successful party. However, a successful party will not be able to recover all of its legal costs. It will be able to recover only the costs for certain items of work on a scale prescribed under the Federal Circuit and Family Court (Family Law) Rules 2021.
It is important to remember that party and party costs will generally not reflect the amount you have been charged by a lawyer; usually party and party costs will be significantly less than your actual legal fees.
It is also worth noting that an order for costs is made to compensate a party against expenses incurred in proceedings; costs are not a penalty or a payment of damages.
An indemnity costs order means that one party must pay all costs that the other party reasonably incurred. There must be exceptional circumstances for the court to depart from the usual practice by awarding indemnity costs.
In the 2020 Federal Circuit Court case of contact Armstrong Legal.
This article was written by Sally Crosswell
Sally Crosswell has a Bachelor of Laws (Hons), a Bachelor of Communication and a Master of International and Community Development. She also completed a Graduate Diploma of Legal Practice at the College of Law. A former journalist, Sally has a keen interest in human rights law.
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