Marlborough Express

Chorus wins court costs after ‘flattery’ case

- Chloe Ranford Local Democracy Reporter

A telecommun­ication giant that used ‘‘grossly misleading flattery’’ in a bid to secure a broadband contract with a council has won back court costs.

Chorus sought costs from Creative Developmen­t Solutions, which it strung along last year to try and win a deal with the Marlboroug­h District Council to roll out broadband in the Marlboroug­h Sounds.

Creative last year claimed at the High Court, in Wellington, that Chorus breached a nondisclos­ure agreement by making use of its ‘‘confidenti­al informatio­n’’ in a bid for the government’s rural broadband initiative.

Justice Dobson dismissed the proceeding in November after finding Creative’s informatio­n was not of value to Chorus and ordered each party to cover their own costs.

But Chorus asked him to ‘‘reconsider’’ a month later, as it tried to settle the dispute before it reached court.

On June 12, Chorus offered $750,000 if a settlement was reached by June 28, a day before it was due to submit evidence briefs.

It also offered $500,000 if a settlement was reached after June 28 but by August 2.

Chorus filed papers claiming compensati­on from the June deadline for Creative’s failure to accept their offer, plus ‘‘increased costs’’, as their offer was rejected ‘‘without reasonable justificat­ion’’. But Creative solicitor Michael Wigley said in a response earlier this month that the offer was not enough to overcome the ‘‘unusual circumstan­ces’’.

Last year, Justice Dobson said in his judgement that Chorus used a ‘‘misleading, flattering tone of approval’’ to hide a ‘‘negative’’ view of Creative’s intellectu­al property, in what was a ‘‘most unusual dynamic’’.

The flattery began when Chorus, Creative and the council came together to submit to a Crown Infrastruc­ture Partners initiative in February 2018.

Creative asked Chorus for help after the council’s previous submission to the initiative, which it helped develop, was unsuccessf­ul.

But it later discovered Chorus was attempting to bid on its own for the government initiative using what Creative thought was their ‘‘confidenti­al informatio­n’’.

Wigley said the circumstan­ces were enough to negate the costs claim.

But Justice Dobson disagreed in a judgement last week, and awarded Chorus half its legal costs and half its disburseme­nt costs from June 28.

He said despite Creative’s ‘‘annoyance at the misleading flattery Chorus had subjected it to’’, their offer was enough to support a claim for costs.

‘‘Acceptance of either offer would have produced a substantia­lly better outcome for [Creative] than has resulted from my substantiv­e judgement.’’

Creative’s communicat­ions director Brendon Burns said on Thursday he was unsure how much Creative owed Chorus, and declined to share what it had cost for the company to pursue the court case.

He said Creative had filed an appeal to the Court of Appeal on Justice Dobson’s November decision, which he hoped would occur later this year.

 ?? STUFF ?? Chorus was slammed in November for misleading behaviour.
STUFF Chorus was slammed in November for misleading behaviour.
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