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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Westminster International BV & Ors v Dornoch Ltd & Ors [2009] EWCA Civ 1323 (04 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1323.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1323 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE COMMERCIAL COURT
(MR JUSTICE COOKE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
____________________
WESTMINSTER INTERNATIONAL BV & ORS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DORNOCH LTD & ORS |
Respondents |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr N Jacobs QC (instructed by Stephenson Harwood) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Etherton:
Factual background.
The procedural background
Litigation privilege
"15. The Claimants expressly relied on the WNV Report to found their claim that the WD Fairway was a CTL. The Defendants' position in this respect is set out in paragraph D8 of the Amended Amalgamated Defence, viz. that this report was manifestly inadequate for that purpose because:
15.1 The WNV Report estimated the cost based upon "presently known information regarding the vessel's position and condition";
15.2 No tenders of repair had been obtained, as is the custom in the London marine insurance market;
15.3 No detailed investigation of the equipment or spares on WD Fairway had been carried out;
15.4 No dive or drydock survey had been carried out on the hull of the vessel; and
15.5 The WNV Survey contained insufficient detail as to how various repair estimates had been calculated.
This position was formed within days of receipt of the report. Messrs Noble Denton reported to my firm in early May 2007, by which stage, it became clear that, on their estimates, the vessel was unlikely to be a CTL."
"17….I believe that the single wider purpose, or at least the dominant or dual purpose behind the generation of the Noble Denton documents following 28 March 2007, was that of collecting evidence for use in potential litigation and so as to enable the giving of legal advice in connection with that potential litigation. The Defendants were not seeking to ascertain whether the WD Fairway was a CTL as a matter of academic interest. The reason why the Defendants needed to make such enquiries was to enable legal advice to be given as to their liability or otherwise under the policy of insurance and to collect evidence for use in that potential litigation in relation to whether the vessel was a constructive total loss.
18. The Claimants were requesting that the Defendants agree that the vessel was a CTL based on an intermediate report, which was prepared when the surveyors had not been on board the vessel and at a time when a bottom damage survey had not been carried out. The Defendants were therefore unsatisfied with the reliability of the WNV report and required further investigations to be carried out.
The Claimants did not share the Defendants' view that further investigations were necessary. Given this stance and the potential for there to be a discrepancy between the WNV estimated repair costs and the Noble Denton estimates, there was the possibility of litigation. This possibility became even more pronounced from the first time that Noble Denton reported to Stephenson Harwood with substantive figures in early May 2007 and even more so once Noble Denton produced its first estimate. This was set out in an email from Mr Tony Kersey of the Second Defendant to Gordon Street of Marsh, acting as brokers on behalf of the Claimants on 15 May 2007 and later substantiated by the detailed figures provided by Mr Kersey on 18 May 2007. The estimate showed that Noble Denton disagreed with WNV's assessment and, critically, with their view that the vessel was at that stage proved to be a CTL.
19. It was clear that if the Claimants persisted with their claim and the Defendants resisted it, some form of litigation would be inevitable."
"12. The reasons are ultimately very simple. At 27th March underwriters had the WNV report. On reading it, it became clear to them that the surveyors who had been instructed on their behalf, and would be referred to, and are referred to, as 'their surveyors', were saying that there was a constructive total loss. That was something which the insurers were not prepared to accept at that stage because they thought the report was manifestly inadequate. They certainly required more investigation and, for that purpose, they wanted to instruct Noble Denton and wanted to do so through solicitors. At that stage it must have been obvious to them that so doing was very likely to lead to trouble and likely to lead to aggravation, hostility and could well give rise to litigation in the future. Because their own surveyors had already said that it was a constructive total loss, to then require further material to be supplied, with a view to cross-checking that and with a view to perhaps defending any claim which might later emerge, it must have seemed to them that this could give rise to litigation on the part of the assured.
13. Mr Jacobs, I think, can fairly pray in aid what appears in para. 20 of Mr Davis' statement. What emerges there is material which was not known to the underwriters at the time but material which reveals what the claimants' stance was in June, July and August 2007, where it is plain that the claimants themselves envisaged the possibility of litigation and the steps that they would have to take to justify their position in court and to pursue successfully the claim that they had advanced.
14. Even if I was wrong about the position in March, I think the position in May again is 'more pronounced', as it is put, and that at no stage, notwithstanding the phraseology used in para. 18 of Mr Davis' statement, was anyone thinking about a mere possibility of litigation which was fanciful. At all times the underwriters could reasonably have in prospect the idea that litigation was going to take place, or that there was a real prospect of litigation or litigation could be seen to be reasonably in prospect, however one puts that test."
"Where litigation privilege is being claimed, it seems to me that the person who is responsible ultimately for the creation of the document, and whose motivation and state of mind is in issue, is the person who ought to be making the statement in question. At the very least, if it is to be someone else, that person should in the statement give the source of the information as to the purpose, to which the statement refers, so that it is plain who it is that is being referred to and who it is that is said to have had the dominant, dual or single wider purpose in question."
"What, then, was the purpose of the reports? The learned judge found a duality of purpose because, he said, the insurers wanted not only to obtain the advice of their solicitors, but also wanted to ascertain the cause of the fire. Now, for my part, I find these two quite inseparable. The insurers were not seeking the cause of the fire as a matter of academic interest in spontaneous combustion. Their purpose in instigating the enquiries can only be determined by asking why they needed to find out the cause of the fire. And the only reason that can be ascribed to them is that of ascertaining whether, as they suspected, it had been fraudulently started by the insured. It was entirely clear that, if the claim was persisted in and if it was resisted, litigation would inevitably follow. The claim had been made and there was no indication that it was not going to be pressed, particularly after Mr MR's acquittal. It is, as it seems to me, entirely unrealistic to attribute to the insurers an intention to make up their minds, independently of the advice which they received from their solicitors, that the claim should or should not be resisted. Whether they paid or not depended on the legal advice which they received, and the reports were prepared in order to enable that advice to be given. The advice given would necessarily determine their decision and would also necessarily determine whether the anticipated litigation would or would not take place."
"In the present case the retainer is said to be for the purpose of investigating and advising on the casualty. In my judgment that meets the dominant purpose test, for the purpose of investigation is inseparable from the purpose of advice."
"This possibility became even more pronounced from the first time that Noble Denton reported to Stephenson Harwood the substantive figures in early May 2007 and even more so once Noble Denton produced its first estimate"
Waiver of privilege
"In my judgment, by bringing civil proceedings against his solicitor, a client impliedly waives privilege in respect of all matters which are relevant to the suit he pursues and, most particularly, where the disclosure of privileged matters is required to enable justice to be done."
"When a client sues a solicitor who has formerly acted for him, complaining that the solicitor has acted negligently, he invites the court to adjudicate on questions directly arising from the confidential relationship which formerly subsisted between them. Since court proceedings are public, the client brings that formerly confidential relationship into the public domain. He thereby waives any right to claim the protection of legal professional privilege in relation to any communication between them so far as necessary for the just determination of his claim; or, putting the same proposition in different terms, he releases the solicitor to that extent from the obligation of confidence by which he was formerly bound. This is an implication of law, the rationale of which is plain. A party cannot deliberately subject a relationship to public scrutiny and at the same time seek to preserve its confidentiality. He cannot pick and choose, disclosing such incidents of the relationship as strengthen his claim for damages and concealing from forensic scrutiny such incidents as weaken it. He cannot attack his former solicitor and deny the solicitor the use of materials relevant to his defence. But, since the implied waiver applies to communications between client and solicitor, it will cover no communication to which the solicitor was not privy and so will disclose to the solicitor nothing of which he is not already aware."
Lord Justice Wilson:
Lord Justice Sullivan:
Order: Appeal dismissed