She said it was also her job to add a "reality check" to Mr McCracken's claim for storage which he estimated at $150 a week.
"Your co-tenant has found this very distressing. She has indicated she wants this over and done with," Ms Elliot said.
Mr Graves left the room to call Castle-Hughes and returned to tell the tribunal that the pair agreed to forgoing their $2550 bond.
Ms Elliott said the "full and final" tribunal order was that the bond would be retained by the landlord and Mr McCracken would not have to pay a $250 fine for failing to lodge the financial security.
Mr Graves said the saga had been hard on Castle-Hughes.
That Mr McCracken had not filed the bond spoke volumes about what kind of landlord he was, he said.
"His excuse was, he didn't know ... going into a tenancy agreement as a landlord, how do you not know? Everyone knows you've got to lodge it, don't plead ignorance."
Mr McCracken said he'd never rented out a property before which was partly why he hadn't lodged the bond with the tribunal. He claimed Mr Graves had agreed.
Mr McCracken said: "People have got to understand, she's a movie actress, what she did [leaving] was just theatrics."
Mr McCracken said he was pleased with the outcome. "It's done a very important thing. I think it's put them firmly in their place."