4. General Division - Civil
PD 4.3.2
Supreme Court of Western Australia
Consolidated Practice Direction
6.
Conferral must occur shortly prior to the making of an application and
must relate to the application itself rather than simply to the issue that is
the subject of the application. The giving of notice of an intention to
make an application is not conferral.
7.
Practitioners with authority to resolve the interlocutory dispute must
confer either face to face or by telephone. While an exchange of
correspondence will often be part of the conferral process it will only be
where face to face or telephone contact is
not feasible that reliance
simply upon written communication can be justified. In such a case,
which will be exceptional, the claimed justification should be set out in
the memorandum of conferral.
8.
A memorandum of conferral must follow Form 108. It is not acceptable
to include a note regarding conferral at the foot of an application. A
separate memorandum must be filed. The memorandum must set out
briefly the facts relied upon to show conferral.
It is not acceptable to
note simply that conferral has occurred and that the parties are unable to
agree.
9.
Affidavits filed in connection with the proceedings should not contain
any reference to the conferral without leave of the court. In the past the
practice of including this material in affidavits has discouraged the
making of concessions in the course of those communications.
10. In the event that parties are unable to resolve the matters in dispute
between them, there must be conferral with a view to
agreement being
reached as to the programming of the application for a case management
conference. This may enable the Court to make programming orders or
to deal with the application entirely without the need for any appearance
by the parties. Paragraph 3 of Form 108 deals with this.
11. In the event that a party seeks an order that the requirement for conferral
be waived, for example, because attempts to confer with other parties
have been unsuccessful
or urgency, then:
•
An order to this effect must be sought in the application; and
•
A memorandum in terms of Form 109 must be filed that states
briefly the facts relied upon to support waiver.
4. General Division - Civil
PD 4.3.2
Supreme Court of Western Australia
Consolidated Practice Direction
12. A failure to:
•
confer;
•
file
a memorandum of conferral; or
•
comply with the requirement to omit reference to the conferral in
an affidavit without leave of the court (par 9);
may result in adverse costs orders being made against those parties or
practitioners who are at fault.
4. General Division - Civil
Supreme Court of Western Australia
Consolidated Practice Direction
4.3.2.1.
Form 108 - Memorandum of Conferral
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