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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 >> Zai Corporate Finance Ltd v AIM Disciplinary Committee of the London Stock Exchange Plc & Anor [2017] EWCA Civ 1294 (30 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1294.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1294, [2017] WLR(D) 584, [2017] Bus LR 2139 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mr Justice MOSTYN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE LINDBLOM
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ZAI CORPORATE FINANCE LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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AIM DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE OF THE LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE PLC - and – LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE PLC |
Respondent Interested Party |
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Mr Ben Jaffey QC (instructed by Latham & Watkins (London) LLP) for the Respondent
Ms Monica Carss-Frisk QC and Mr Harry Adamson (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing date : 27 June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division :
"This handbook, which forms part of the AIM rules, sets out the procedures to be followed when … the Exchange wishes to commence disciplinary proceedings against an AIM company or nominated adviser for a breach of the AIM rules …
C15.1.2 The AIM Disciplinary Committee … shall, as a tribunal of first instance, hear and determine charges against a nominated adviser in respect of a breach of its responsibilities under the AIM rules or in respect of any allegation that the integrity and reputation of AIM has been or may be impaired as a result of its conduct or judgement …
C15.3 If the AIM Disciplinary Committee finds, on the balance of probabilities, that a nominated adviser has breached the AIM rules, or that the integrity and reputation of AIM has been or may be impaired as a result of its conduct or judgement it may impose one or more of the following sanctions:
C15.3.1 fine the nominated adviser;
C15.3.2 censure the nominated adviser;
C15.3.3 remove the nominated adviser from the register; and/or
C15.3.4 publish the action it has taken and the reasons for such action.
C18.3 Other than as set out in these rules, and other than as between the parties and their advisers, all parties shall keep confidential any matters relating to any proceedings save where disclosure is permitted or required by law.
C21.1 … the Chairman or any member of the AIM Disciplinary Committee whom he nominates may give any directions and take any other steps he considers appropriate for the clarification of the facts and issues and generally for their just, efficient and expeditious presentation and the determination of the matters in issue. The Chairman or any member of the AIM Disciplinary Committee whom he nominates may hold one or more pre-hearing reviews for those purposes and the determination of the matters in issue …
C22.1 The AIM Disciplinary Committee will usually conduct hearings in private, although an AIM company or nominated adviser which is subject to proceedings has the right to ask for such hearing to be conducted in public. An AIM company or nominated adviser requiring such hearing to be conducted in public shall notify the Chairman at least five business days prior to commencement of the hearing.
C22.8 At a hearing the AIM Disciplinary Committee may:
…
C22.8.2 make any directions which may be given at a pre-hearing review, and vary any direction which has been made; and
C22.8.3 make all such directions with regard to the conduct of and procedure at the hearing as the AIM Disciplinary Committee considers appropriate for securing a proper opportunity for the parties to present their cases and otherwise as may be just.
C23.6 The AIM Disciplinary Committee may publish part or all of its decision or a summary of it, and the reasons for the decision. Where the sanction imposed is a private censure, the AIM Disciplinary Committee may publish its decision in part or a summary of it and the reasons for the decision without revealing the identity of the AIM company or nominated adviser sanctioned.
C25.1 The AIM Disciplinary Committee may vary any of these procedures to adapt to the circumstances of any particular case."
"We do not consider ZAI's request for an oral pre-hearing review is justified.
… ZAI has offered no reason why a departure from Rule 22.1 of the Handbook is justified and therefore the Exchange would request ZAI to explain by way of written submission why it wishes the hearing to be in public."
In written directions dated 24 May 2016, the Chairperson of the Committee in accordance with Rule 21.1 made a direction that "All oral hearings in this matter are to be held in private."
"The Exchange states that it sees no good reason why the ADC should depart from its existing direction that the hearing be in private. The good reason is that it is expressly within the rules of AIM that up to five business days before the date of the hearing a party "has the right to ask for such hearing to be conducted in public" by notification to the Chairman of the ADC to that effect. It was thought to be helpful to be transparent on this point at this stage even though we could simply provide such notification shortly before the hearing.
It is a point of considerable concern that the Exchange even seeks to make the representations it does in respect of our request the hearing be in public. Such representations are manifestly inconsistent with the rules of its own market. Further, the Exchange, in receipt of advice will, or should, know that the right to be heard fairly in public is a principle generally enshrined in law and to seek to assert a contrary outcome is not consistent with the proper conduct of a regulator and, again, is an example of the Exchange pursuing this matter as though it were a commercial litigation and not a regulatory proceeding. We must reserve our position to come back to this point on another date, in another place or at the hearing itself."
On 19 October 2016, CMS Cameron McKenna LLP wrote again to the Secretary of the Committee, reiterating that there was no good reason to depart from the existing direction. Later the same day, ZAI sent an email to the Secretary of the Committee:
"…we will refrain from a detailed response. We are, however, bound to note with rising concern the ongoing resistance by the Exchange to our right to have the matter heard fairly in public. This is not a matter of discretion, requiring only notification under the rules, and the Exchange seeking, on advice, to argue otherwise would we believe be viewed very dimly in any forum."
"C22.1 of the Handbook only states that the general rule is that AIM disciplinary hearings are to be held in private. According to this provision, an automatic exception to the general rule takes effect in the event that a request to have the hearing conducted in public is made. Indeed, the fact that a nominated adviser can require the hearing to be conducted in public and need only notify the ADC Chairman a mere 5 days prior to the hearing taking place makes it abundantly clear that there is no residual discretion of the ADC to deny the request once it has been made. The lack of ADC power to refuse such a request once made is borne out by the fact that nowhere in C22.1 of the Handbook is there a list of factors to be taken into account when deciding whether or not to 'approve' a nominated adviser's request for a public hearing. The ADC's attempt to rely on a discretion that does not exist is undeniably ultra vires."
"The Rules only state than an AIM company or nominated advisor has the right to ask for the hearing to be in public and do not state that the ADC must agree to such a request. The ADC does not consider that the inclusion of the word "requiring" contains an obligation on the ADC to conduct the hearing in public once asked.
Further, the Rules do not state that the ADC must grant such a request when asked. In the absence of such a rule the ADC considers that it must assess such requests as part of its general case management powers. Rule C21.1 affords the ADC wide case management powers to "give any directions and take any other steps [he] considers appropriate for the clarification of the facts and issues and generally for their just, efficient and expeditious presentation and the determination of the matters in issue".
If, which is not agreed, Rule C22.1 gives an AIM company or Nominated Advisor a right to compel the ADC to hold the hearing in public, Rule C25.1 permits the ADC to vary any of the procedures set out in the Rules to adapt to the particular circumstances of the case. As such, the ADC can choose to vary the procedures to not permit public hearings and / or grant itself discretion to refuse a request for a public hearing.
When considering making its direction of 24 May 2016 in response to a request by ZAI for the hearing to be in public, the ADC considered the fact that both the Statement of Case from the Exchange and the Response to the same from ZAI name a number of individuals and companies and makes comment on their conduct. Some of these individuals and companies are still active in the market and the ADC considered that holding the hearing in public would be unduly prejudicial to their rights, particularly given that they have no notice of these proceedings and therefore no right of reply.
The ADC does not consider that holding the hearing in public will alter its approach to hearing the matter brought by the Exchange or impact on its obligations to be impartial and diligent when deciding the matters before it. Further, pursuant to Rule C22.10 the hearing will be recorded and the parties may request a transcript. A right of appeal from the decisions of the ADC also exists. The ADC therefore saw no reason when making the direction of 24 May 2016 for it to depart from the default position that the hearing be in private and was provided with no compelling reasons by ZAI to persuade the ADC otherwise."
"… we were mindful of the fact that both the Exchange's Statement of Case dated 30 December 2015 and ZAI's Response dated 15 April 2016 named a number of individuals and companies, some of which are still active in the market, and commented on their conduct. The other members of the ADC and I shared the concern that there would be a serious, detrimental and irreparable impact on those individuals and companies if unproven allegations against them were circulated in the public domain. Some of the relevant allegations are summarised in the Confidential Annex to this statement (I invite the Court to hear submissions on the Confidential Annex in private, to avoid causing the very prejudice that our decision to hold a private hearing seeks to avoid. I understand that the consent of the parties participating in these proceedings to this course of action has been sought. The Confidential Annex will be served once agreement has been reached). We therefore considered that holding the hearing in public would be unduly prejudicial to the rights of these individuals and companies, particularly since they had no notice of the Disciplinary. Proceedings and therefore right of reply. We were concerned about the effect this might have on the individuals and companies to which the Statement of Case referred.
… we did not consider that holding the hearing in public would alter our approach to hearing the matter brought by the Exchange or have an effect on our duty to be impartial and diligent when deciding the matters before us."
i) First, that ZAI had an absolute and unqualified right to demand that the hearing be in public.ii) Secondly, that what was being demanded, without qualification or nuance, was a hearing in public. There was no acknowledgement that even if the hearing was in public it might be appropriate, for example, to conduct parts of the hearing in private or to make provision for anonymity. To put the same point rather differently, there was no acknowledgment that even if the hearing was in public it would be open to the Committee, and might be appropriate for the Committee while the hearing was going on, to exercise its powers under Rules C22.8.3 and 25.1.
iii) Thirdly, and consistently with its stance, that from beginning to end ZAI never drew attention to a single feature of this particular case as being relevant to anything the Committee had to have in mind in coming to a decision on this point. As Mostyn J pointedly observed, para 13, "beyond statements that open justice is a Good Thing the case for the claimant is strikingly devoid of any reasons why the rule [of privacy] should be departed from."
(1) Meaning of Rule C22.1
"While the broad principle is that the Courts of this country must, as between parties, administer justice in public, this principle is subject to apparent exceptions … But the exceptions are themselves the outcome of a yet more fundamental principle that the chief object of Courts of justice must be to secure that justice is done … litigation as to a secret process, where the effect of publicity would be to destroy the subject-matter, illustrates a class which stands on a different footing. There it may well be that justice could not be done at all if it had to be done in public. As the paramount object must always be to do justice, the general rule as to publicity, after all only the means to an end, must accordingly yield."
Referring to what he described as trade secrets or private correspondence, the Earl of Halsbury commented, p 443, that:
"it would be the height of absurdity as well as of injustice to allow a trial at law to protect either to be made the instrument of destroying the very thing it was intended to protect."
To similar effect, Lord Shaw of Dunfermline, p 483, said this:
"The third case – that of secret processes, inventions, documents, or the like – depends upon this: that the rights of the subject are bound up with the preservation of the secret. To divulge that to the world, under the excuse of a report of proceedings in a Court of law, would be to destroy that very protection which the subject seeks at the Court's hands."
Similar observations appear in the speeches of Earl Loreburn and Lord Atkinson.
"… to construe the verb in the first sentence as doing no more that expressing a request but construing the verb in the second as granting an entitlement leads to a reading which is nonsensical."
"… an interpretation should not produce absurd results. Were the interpretation by the claimant to be adopted then, notwithstanding that the rule plainly inclines to privacy, the result would be to leave proceedings in the ADC in a worse position than open court proceedings governed by CPR 39.2. Under that provision the general rule is that a hearing is to be in public but there is a discretion, in certain specified circumstances, to hear a matter in private. One of the exceptions is where the case involves confidential information and publicity would damage that confidentiality. If the interpretation advocated by the claimant were correct then, on asking for a hearing in public, that would have to be granted without scope for refusal on any ground, not even national security. Mr Jaffey QC rightly argues that such a 'right' to force a public hearing could be used by a person to defeat disciplinary proceedings against them. For example, ADC hearings may involve market-sensitive information about an AIM company which a nomad has advised is unnecessary to disclose; unproven allegations by the LSE that an AIM company breached the Rules; unproven allegations by a nomad that an AIM company misled or otherwise disabled it from ensuring the company's compliance; or evidence about confidential governmental contracts entered into by an AIM company, e.g. for the sale of defence or surveillance equipment. In such cases the disclosure of such information could result in serious harm to private or public interests. The very question under examination in the disciplinary proceedings may be whether certain information should have been made public. If nomads could insist on a public hearing, it may force the LSE to abandon the disciplinary action against them. A public hearing could also affect third parties such as former employees, AIM companies and their senior staff."
(2) Discretion
i) The first derives from the fact, as I have already noted, that at no stage in the proceedings before the Committee did ZAI ever advance any case based on the exercise of discretion, let alone draw the Committee's attention to any features of this particular case which might be relevant to anything the Committee had to decide. In these circumstances, it hardly lies in its mouth to complain about the Committee's decision. In my judgment, one simply does not get to the rationality argument upon which ZAI now seeks to rely.
ii) Secondly, and in any event, I can see no flaw or error, let alone any irrationality, in either the Committee's decision or its reasoning. On the contrary, its approach was, in my judgment, entirely sensible.
"In my judgment the decision made by the ADC was rational and fair and cannot be impugned. It may have been laconic, but that is of the nature of case management decisions. When it comes to case management decisions in my opinion the general rule should be that "less is more"."
I respectfully agree.
(3) Article 6
"In the determination of his civil rights and obligations or of any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. Judgment shall be pronounced publicly but the press and public may be excluded from all or part of the trial in the interest of morals, public order or national security in a democratic society, where the interests of juveniles or the protection of the private life of the parties so require, or to the extent strictly necessary in the opinion of the court in special circumstances where publicity would prejudice the interests of justice."
"… while the Court agrees that Article 6(1) states a general rule that civil proceedings, inter alia, should take place in public, it does not find it inconsistent with this provision for a State to designate an entire class of case as an exception to the general rule where considered necessary in the interests of morals, public order or national security or where required by the interests of juveniles or the protection of the private life of the parties, although the need for such a measure must always be subject to the Court's control. The English procedural law can therefore be seen as a specific reflection of the general exceptions provided for by Art 6(1)."
Secondly (para 48):
"… a literal interpretation of the terms of Article 6.1 concerning the pronouncement of judgments would not only be unnecessary for the purposes of public scrutiny but might even frustrate the primary aim of Article 6.1, which is to secure a fair hearing."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Lewison :
Lord Justice Lindblom :