Did you write that down? Court affirms file notes are crucial

Snapshot

  • Contemporaneous written records become valuable evidence when one person’s recollection of events differs from another’s.
  • In Odlum v Friend, the NSW Court of Appeal confirmed the relevance of a solicitor’s emails and file notes in a dispute over advice given in relation to offers to settle costs issues in property adjustment proceedings.

This difficulty may account for some of the many claims against solicitors alleging negligent advice in relation to the settlement of court proceedings. Often the assertion is that if the client had been properly advised they would not have settled on the terms that they did. Occasionally, it is asserted that if the client had been properly advised they would have accepted an offer of settlement.

In Odium v Friend [2024] NSWCA 159., the solicitor acted for Ms Odlum in relation to a property dispute with a former de facto partner back in 2011. Macready AsJ delivered judgment in that matter and stood over the question of costs.

Before the costs hearing, the former partner made an offer to accept a payment of $30,000 for costs. Ms Odlum told her solicitor that she did not want to pay any of her former partner’s costs. The offer was rejected and a counteroffer was put that the parties bear their own costs. On the day before the costs hearing the former partner made a second costs offer of $23,000.

The offer was not accepted, the costs hearing went ahead and Macready AsJ ordered Ms Odlum pay 75 per cent of her former partner’s costs on an ordinary basis. This amounted to approximately $98,000.

Practice tips

  • Always promptly communicate offers of settlement to your client and confirm in writing any advice given and instructions received in relation to the offer.
  • When making a file note of a meeting, make a note of the time as well as the date, the place where the meeting is happening and the names of all persons present.
  • And, of course, ensure that your file notes record any advice given as well as instructions received.

This article originally appeared on lsj.com.au

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