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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Spin Communications t/a Storm FM v. Independent Radio and Television Commission [2000] IESC 56 (14th April, 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2000/56.html Cite as: [2000] IESC 56 |
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1. It
is unnecessary for me to set out the background in detail to this case because
it derives to an extent from the same sequence of events as the last case.
There is this important difference in this case, that the applicants have
raised an express issue of bias on the part of the IRTC in granting the licence
to the notice party and in that context the applicants have also abandoned the
other grounds so that the sole ground on which the action will now be fought in
the High Court is on the ground of bias. Because of that, which he saw as a
differentiating factor in that case, while the learned High Court judge awarded
security for costs in favour of the IRTC, and that decision is not being
appealed from, he declined to make an order for security of costs in favour of
the notice party and he did so on the basis, as appears from his brief
extempore
judgment,
2. I
am satisfied that the learned High Court judge was in error in adopting that
approach. The court is not concerned with a case in which, it may be, that at
the end of the High Court proceedings, because perhaps a multiplicity of notice
parties were brought in, not all of whose presence was necessary, the court may
exercise its discretion by declining to order costs except in favour of one
representative notice party as it were who has really carried the whole burden
of the argument and in circumstances where the presence of other notice parties
may have been entirely superfluous.
3. That
is not this case. This is a case in which the notice party, as indeed the High
Court judge accepted, is a party with a vital interest in the outcome of the
matter. As Chief Justice Finlay said in the
O’Keeffe
.v. An Bord Pleanála
case, where you have a party such as the Notice Party in the present case who
is vitally interested in the outcome of the proceedings, they must be joined as a
4. I
am very far from setting down any general rule because it is always a matter
for the High Court in the exercise of its discretion to decide whether a party
is entitled to costs at the end of the hearing. But there appears to be nothing
in the present case to suggest that if the IRTC and the notice party are
successful in these proceedings they would not both be awarded their costs as
both having a vital interest in the outcome.
5. In
those circumstances I am satisfied that the learned High Court judge was in
error in holding them not entitled to costs and I would allow the appeal and
order security for costs to be furnished in the same amount as was ordered in
the case of the IRTC.