Court awards costs against personal representative
Galloway (Litigation guardian of) v. Barski | 2017 BCSC 719 | British Columbia Supreme Court
Estates -- Actions involving personal representatives -- Practice and procedure -- Costs -- Miscellaneous
Special costs -- Father had two children, daughter and son Ja -- Daughter, without knowledge or consent of her
father, used power of attorney to transfer property from her deceased mother to her father and then from her
father to trust -- Trust agreement included terms making daughter sole legal and equitable trust beneficiary, and
trust agreement nominated her son (grandson) as daughter’s nominee with full power to manage and deal with
land -- Third-party notice directed at Ja included number of serious allegations against Ja -- Father brought
successful action to have transfer of property set aside and to restore title to property to himself; daughter and
grandson brought unsuccessful counter-claim against father for relief, and brought unsuccessful third party
notice against son seeking protection order -- Overall, Ja and father were substantially successful in outcome of
litigation -- Issue arose as to whether father and Ja should recover special costs -- Each of father and Ja as third
party was to recover costs assessed at 60 per cent of special costs -- Estimate of costs awards was at $41,589 --
If parties could agree to costs at that amount, then order would be made accordingly, and if not, parties would
need to assess costs at registrar’s hearing -- Claims by daughter and grandson that father required protection
from Ja while acknowledging his competence were baseless -- Claims about Ja’s history of bad behaviour,
criminal activity and complicity in his mother’s death were spurious -- In addition to being unnecessary given
that father was competent, trust served daughter’s purposes, and when confronted with father’s request to return
title to land to him, daughter and grandson refused to comply notwithstanding that their legal position was
without merit -- Defendants were warned that their counterclaim and third party notice were flawed and that
father and Ja would seek special costs -- Daughter failed in her role as fiduciary towards her father, and
defendants’ posture amounted to more than mistake -- Defendants’ resistance to father’s claim seeking return of
title to his home was exceptional circumstance meriting rebuke of special costs -- Allegations made against Ja
in third party claim were egregious attack on his character, speculation and unfounded allegations warranting
rebuke through special costs order -- Defendants’ conduct against father and Ja was reprehensible -- Litigation
improperly embroiled father in defendants’ meritless claims which were really aimed at Ja but were improperly
directed father as well.