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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 >> Stokoe Partnership Solicitors v Grayson & Ors [2021] EWCA Civ 626 (30 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/626.html Cite as: [2021] 4 WLR 87, [2021] WLR(D) 261, [2021] EWCA Civ 626 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE HON MR JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
QB-2020-002492
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
____________________
STOKOE PARTNERSHIP SOLICITORS |
Appellant/ Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) PATRICK TRISTAM FINUCANE GRAYSON (2) GRAYSON + CO LIMITED |
Defendants/Respondents |
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- and – |
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(3) STUART ROBERT PAGE (4) PAGE CORPORATE INVESTIGATIONS LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Jeff Chapman QC and Samuel Ritchie (instructed by BDB Pitmans LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 15 April 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
"3. The firm currently acts for a man named Karam Al Sadeq. He has been detained in a prison in Ras Al Khaimah in the UAE for something over 6 years. His incarceration follows his conviction in the UAE in respect of substantial fraud said to have been committed by him. Mr Al Sadeq disputed and continues to dispute this allegation. He alleges that he came to be in the UAE only because of an act of unlawful rendition. He further alleges that he was tortured during interrogation once he had been taken to the UAE. His case is that his conviction was based on material obtained as a result of torture and duress. Mr Al Sadeq has brought proceedings in this jurisdiction against an international law firm and some of that firm's current or former partners. The proceedings were issued by the firm in January 2020. Full particulars of claim were served in April 2020. The essence of the claim in those proceedings is that the defendants were complicit or involved in Mr Al Sadeq's rendition and subsequent interrogation and torture.
4. The partner of the firm with conduct of the Al Sadeq litigation is Haralambos Tsiattalou. At the end of March 2020 Mr Tsiattalou was contacted via an intermediary by a man named Oliver Moon. Mr Moon said that he had been instructed to obtain confidential information about the firm, in particular banking information. His instructions had come from a man named Gunning but his understanding was that Gunning in turn was acting at the behest of Paul Robinson (the First Defendant in the Claim number QB-2020-002218). In order to establish that Mr Robinson was involved as suggested by Mr Moon, the firm created two documents which purported to contain confidential banking information. In fact, the documents had been created so as to remove confidential information. The firm was able electronically to track the documents and to identify any person who accessed them. By this route the firm (with the assistance of an investigation agency) identified Mr Robinson.
The proceedings
5. On 29 June 2020 the firm issued a Part 7 claim against Mr Robinson and the company by which he operated. The proceedings were for injunctive relief to restrain Mr Robinson from actual or threatened breaches of confidence. In addition, the firm sought a disclosure order pursuant to Norwich Pharmacal v Customs and Excise Commissioners [1974] AC 133. The claim identified three categories of confidential information which Mr Robinson had obtained or attempted to obtain. In addition, the claim referred to other alleged activity relating to confidential information in the hands of third parties. The overarching allegation made was that the obtaining of or attempting to obtain confidential information was linked to the Al Sadeq litigation.
6. The firm specified the Norwich Pharmacal order sought. It required Mr Robinson to swear an affidavit providing full information on three issues: the identity of the person providing him with instructions; the extent of the confidential information already obtained from the firm; the identity of those to whom he had passed on the confidential information.
7. On 5 July 2020 Mr Robinson attended the offices of the firm and answered questions relating to his activity vis-à-vis the firm. Either on that day or on the day following he provided the firm with his affidavit in draft form. On 7 July 2020 the case was considered by Chamberlain J. He made an order recording that the parties had compromised the claim on terms. For my purposes the relevant term is the order set out at paragraph 1 of the judge's order, namely that Mr Robinson was to swear an affidavit by 4.30 p.m. on that day dealing with disclosure. In fact, the affidavit had already been sworn in the same terms as the draft already provided to the firm. The affidavit was required to deal with the following:
- The identity of any person who had requested Mr Robinson or his company to obtain confidential information from the firm.
- The manner in which the requests were made including whether they were in writing, the gist of the requests and a copy of any written request retained by Mr Robinson.
- What confidential information was obtained from the firm.
- To whom the confidential information was provided and the circumstances of any such provision.
8. Paragraph 7 of the judge's order recorded the nature of the compromise. All further proceedings against Mr Robinson and his company were stayed save for the purpose of enforcing the terms of the order.
9. Mr Robinson' affidavit ran to 39 paragraphs. The essential matters to which I need to refer are as follows:
- His instructions came from Patrick Grayson who was a private investigator and by whom Mr Robinson had been instructed in the past.
- He was first instructed at a meeting at the Goring Hotel in Belgravia at some point in January 2020. He was able to produce messages dated 30 January 2020 which showed a meeting on that date.
- At the meeting Mr Grayson asked Mr Robinson whether he knew of anyone capable of obtaining bank records and other information relating to the firm in response to which Mr Robinson said that Mr Gunning would be able to do so.
- At no point did Mr Grayson identify by whom he was instructed and Mr Robinson did not ask him.
- Communication between Mr Robinson and Mr Grayson was by means of an encrypted application named Signal. Mr Robinson did not have a record of the messages sent and received via this application because Mr Grayson had configured the application to delete messages automatically after 12 hours. He did produce screenshots of the record of the voice calls carried out via the application i.e. the fact of the calls and when they were made.
- The gist of the communication between Mr Robinson and Mr Grayson after the meeting in January 2020 was following up on Mr Grayson's original request.
- Mr Robinson was paid £5,000 in cash by Mr Grayson. The total fee agreed was £10,000. The balance had not been paid.
- The confidential information obtained consisted of the two documents created by the firm following the contact from Mr Moon. Mr Robinson did not request or obtain any other confidential information.
- Mr Gunning passed information to Mr Robinson via e-mail. Mr Robinson would pass on the information to Mr Grayson.
- On one occasion thought to be in early March 2020 Mr Robinson had met Mr Grayson in Sloane Square and had given Mr Grayson a hard copy print out of the information passed by Mr Gunning together with a USB stick containing the same information in electronic form.
- On other occasions Mr Robinson sent Mr Grayson material received from Mr Gunning via an encrypted e-mail account. Mr Robinson had deleted the e-mails before being served with the claim.
- Mr Robinson had no knowledge of the purpose for which the information was required. He knew nothing about any surveillance of Mr Tsiattalou during the solicitor's visit to Dubai in February 2020.
10. Mr Robinson also made passing reference to a man named Stuart Page as being someone with whom he had worked from time to time. I infer from the terms of the questions apparently put to Mr Robinson prior to him swearing his affidavit that Mr Page was someone already regarded by the firm as a relevant party. Mr Robinson did not suggest that Mr Page was involved in the dealings he had with Mr Grayson.
11. On 16 July 2020 the firm issued a Part 7 claim (namely Claim number QB-2020-002492) against Mr Grayson and Mr Page and their respective companies. In relation to Mr Grayson (the First Defendant in that claim) the details of the claim principally were drawn from the material set out in the affidavit of Mr Robinson. I understand that the firm were unaware of the existence of Mr Grayson prior to Mr Robinson identifying him. No matter was pleaded beyond the material provided by Mr Robinson.
12. On 17 July 2020 the firm issued applications for interim relief from Mr Grayson and Mr Page in similar terms to the application made in respect of Mr Robinson. On 24 July 2020 Tipples J made an order by consent upon the applications. In relation to Mr Grayson the consent order largely consisted of recitals of undertakings given by him. The order provided a definition of confidential information. The definition was as follows:
"Confidential Information" shall mean any information sourced or derived, in whole or in part, from any document, whether paper or electronic, that has been obtained from the Claimant without its authority and is either designated as confidential, or is evidently confidential by reason of its subject-matter or the manner in which it has been obtained.
"Confidential Information" shall include, but shall not be limited to: (i) the Claimant's banking records, accounts and statements; (ii) the Claimant's telephone records, accounts and statements; and (iii) documents which have not been published and which, on their face, relate to the conduct of legal proceedings on behalf of Mr Karam Al Sadeq."
Mr Grayson undertook to swear a disclosure affidavit dealing with the four matters set out at paragraph 7 above, namely the matters in respect of which Mr Robinson had sworn an affidavit. Mr Grayson further undertook that his affidavit would state the treatment of any Confidential Information.
13. Mr Grayson's affidavit is dated 29 July 2020. He set out the definitions of Confidential Information as recited in the consent order. He said that no-one had requested him to obtain Confidential Information from or pertaining to the firm. He had not obtained any such information. In consequence, he had not provided such information to anyone. He concluded by stating "I never asked Mr Robinson to obtain Confidential Information relating to the Claimant (firm)". Wherever he used the term "Confidential Information" in his affidavit, Mr Grayson capitalised the first letter of each word. The proper inference to be drawn from that is that he was seeking to be strict in his definition of the term i.e. by reference to the definition in the order.
14. The firm took the view that the contents of Mr Grayson's affidavit were inconsistent with the affidavit sworn by Mr Robinson. On 10 August 2020 the firm wrote to the solicitors acting for Mr Grayson and made a request for further information pursuant to Part 18 of the Civil Procedure Rules. The firm set out two separate passages from Mr Robinson's affidavit and asked inter alia the following:
"Please state whether Mr Grayson accepts any part of the account given in the text from Mr Robinson's affidavit reproduced above, and if so which.
Please state whether Mr Grayson denies any part of the account given in the text from Mr Robinson's affidavit reproduced above, and if so which."
The solicitors acting for Mr Grayson declined to provide the further information requested. They argued that the request was wholly premature.
15. On 2 September 2020 the firm served the Particulars of Claim in the action against Mr Grayson and Mr Page. In relation to Mr Grayson the case as pleaded was based on the affidavit of Mr Robinson together with affidavit evidence previously obtained from Mr Gunning and Mr Moon. Three requests for information concerning the firm were pleaded as follows:
(1) On or about 2 April 2020, Mr Robinson requested Mr Gunning to obtain the banking co-ordinates of the Claimant;
(2) On or about 9 April 2020, Mr Robinson requested Mr Gunning to access the Claimant's main bank account and to obtain transactional data for the past three months;
(3) On or about 21 April 2020, Mr Robinson requested Mr Gunning to obtain information as to the "movements in and out of Dubai - for Feb 2020" of Mr Haralambos Tsiattalou.
16. The requests as pleaded were termed "the Example Requests". It was averred that these were the only requests known to the firm at the time of the pleading. The right to add other matters should they become known was reserved………
18. The evidence of Mr Robinson was the foundation of the firm's case against Mr Grayson. Indeed, it properly can be said that it was and is almost the entirety of the firm's case……………
19. The Defence of Mr Grayson was served on 30 September 2020. It admitted that a meeting between Mr Grayson and Mr Robinson took place at the end of January 2020 at the Goring Hotel. It denied that at the meeting Mr Grayson asked Mr Robinson if he could obtain banking information relating to the firm. Mr Grayson's case was that the meeting was a social catch-up between friends. His case further was that he had not sought or obtained any information relating to the firm of the kind alleged. At the same time as the Defence Mr Grayson responded to the request for further information which had been made in August 2020 by the firm. It was said that the request had been superseded by the later pleadings, the position of Mr Grayson having been made clear in his Defence.
20. On 9 October 2020 the firm issued an application notice both in the proceedings involving Mr Grayson and the stayed proceedings to which Mr Robinson was a party. The nature of the application in each case effectively was identical. I recite the order sought against Mr Grayson:
"An order, pursuant to s.37 of the Senior Courts Act 1981 and/or the Court's inherent jurisdiction that the First Defendant be cross-examined on his sworn affidavit dated 29 July 2020 made on behalf of the First and Second Defendants. The affidavit is inconsistent with an affidavit of Mr Paul Robinson dated 6 July 2020 in separate but related proceedings (QB-2020-002218). The Claimant needs to resolve the inconsistency in order to uncover the identity of the ultimate perpetrator of very grave wrongdoing, i.e. an apparent attempt wrongfully to interfere with litigation pending before the High Court."
The submissions made to the judge
- The litigation underlying the claims against Mr Robinson and Mr Grayson involves very serious allegations which are of considerable public interest.
- Ever since it became apparent in early 2020 that the firm was acting in the Al Sadeq litigation, the firm, in particular Mr Tsiattalou, has been subject to increasingly worrying attempts to subvert its conduct of the litigation. Evidence served two days before the hearing on 11 November 2020 showed that there had been a concerted attempt to mount a cyber-attack on the firm.
- What has happened to the firm – which shows every sign of continuing – is of the highest order of seriousness. The firm has been attacked as has (indirectly) Mr Al Sadeq. The rule of law is under threat.
- Mr Robinson has admitted participation in efforts to obtain confidential information. He was not acting on his own behalf. He was merely doing the bidding of others. The court should take urgent action to allow the identification of the malicious actors engaging in the attacks on the firm.
- The purpose of the Norwich Pharmacal jurisdiction is to allow a party to identify the ultimate wrongdoer. In this case that purpose is being thwarted not only by Mr Grayson but also by Mr Robinson. In order to achieve the purpose intended by the orders made in July 2020, it is just and convenient for cross-examination of both men to be ordered.
- The cross-examination would not be anything to do with the action involving Mr Grayson which currently is moving towards trial. It would be solely designed to achieve the end meant to be achieved by disclosure i.e. identification of the ultimate wrongdoer.
- Mr Grayson in effect consented to a Norwich Pharmacal order when he undertook to swear a disclosure affidavit. By definition that meant that he accepted that he was mixed up in wrongdoing. The stance he took in his affidavit was inconsistent with that position. Cross-examination was the only reasonable and effective means of resolving the matter.
The decision of the judge
"34. [T]here is little guidance on whether there is any jurisdiction at all to order cross-examination on a disclosure affidavit ordered under the Norwich Pharmacal procedure. The defendants in these proceedings did not invite me to reject the applications purely on the basis that there is no jurisdiction to order cross-examination in the circumstances of this case. I suspect that they considered that these proceedings were not a suitable vehicle to reach such a conclusion. What does seem to me to be a proper conclusion is that cross-examination on a disclosure affidavit sworn under the Norwich Pharmacal procedure when the intended purpose simply is to identify the ultimate wrongdoer should be ordered only in exceptional circumstances. It is common ground that cross-examination in an asset disclosure case should be the exception rather than the rule. When cross-examination is appropriate it will tend to be in cases where documents and digital material are at odds with the affidavit and where cross-examination might reasonably be expected to assist in the tracing of assets. Similar considerations are less likely to apply in cases where the issue is the identification of a wrongdoer so as to allow proceedings to be taken against that wrongdoer. What is "just and convenient" – that being the overarching test – will take those matters into account.
35. The applications in respect of Mr Robinson and Mr Grayson are separate and must be considered separately. I shall deal first with Mr Robinson. His case is straightforward. His affidavit was sworn after the firm and those representing the firm had had a significant opportunity on 5 July 2020 to question him directly. It has not been suggested that the affidavit differed in any material respect from what Mr Robinson said on 5 July 2020. I infer that there was no material difference. Had there been, procedural steps would have been taken forthwith. When the order was made in his case, the firm knew precisely what Mr Robinson was going to disclose. The Part 7 claim was merely a means to an end which had been achieved by the date of the order.
36. The claim made by the firm in the proceedings against Mr Grayson is based almost entirely on the evidence set out in the affidavit. The Particulars of Claim conclude with a statement of truth. That must mean that the firm is proceeding on the basis that the affidavit of Mr Robinson is true. That position is in stark contrast to the circumstances of Dr Nwobodo and Mr Ereshchenko in the authorities to which I have referred.
37. The basis upon which it is now suggested that Mr Robinson should be subjected to cross-examination is strained. In the firm's skeleton argument, it is said that "the possibility that he has not revealed everything and given a fully truthful account cannot be discounted, especially in view of Mr Grayson's inconsistent evidence". The general proposition that a person who has sworn an affidavit has not revealed everything could apply in almost every case. That can hardly be a reason for ordering cross-examination, especially when such an order is to be the exception rather than the rule. Here, the general proposition is said to be supported by the inconsistency with Mr Grayson's account. I regret that I do not follow that argument. Mr Grayson's evidence is that he did not give Mr Robinson any instructions to seek confidential information. The firm's case is that he did. The firm has pleaded its case on the basis of the truthfulness of Mr Robinson's evidence to that effect. In those circumstances the fact that Mr Grayson has given an inconsistent account is of no assistance at all in supporting a suggestion that Mr Robinson has not revealed everything. […]
39. I turn to the application in relation to Mr Grayson. His affidavit was sworn in very different circumstances to that of Mr Robinson. Although the order in his case was made by consent, it did not follow a consensual approach of the kind applicable in Mr Robinson's case. Mr Grayson was served with a claim form setting out the confidential information said to have been sought by Mr Robinson. Thus, he was on notice of what Mr Robinson said but he did not engage in any discussion with the firm prior to swearing his affidavit. In addition, his affidavit was sworn with specific reference to the definition of Confidential Information as set out in the order. I asked Mr Chapman QC who represented Mr Grayson at the hearing before me whether he accepted that the inconsistency between the two affidavits could only be explained on the basis that either Mr Robinson or Mr Grayson was lying. I raised that question because I could see that it might be said that Mr Grayson's affidavit, in adhering to the strict definition of "Confidential Information" given in the order, was truthful in its face even though it might appear to be inconsistent with the evidence of Mr Robinson. Mr Chapman did not pursue that line of reasoning. I hope that I shall be forgiven for saying that I found his response to my question a little opaque. He referred to the possibility of mistake which seems to me to be an unlikely proposition. The safest course is to proceed on the basis that there is a clear inconsistency between the two affidavits and that Mr Robinson and Mr Grayson cannot both be giving accurate and reliable accounts. In plain English one or other of them is lying as to the part played by Mr Grayson."
"40. The first difficulty with the application in relation to Mr Grayson is that he is a party to current proceedings which are moving towards a trial albeit that I cannot say when that trial might take place. The claim against him is that he sought to obtain confidential information in relation to the firm. It has been particularised by reference to the evidence of Mr Robinson. Mr Grayson denies the claim and he has served a defence of which no further particulars have been sought. The remedies sought by the firm include Norwich Pharmacal relief. Thus, an issue for the trial judge will be the adequacy of the affidavit sworn by Mr Grayson. Mr Grant on behalf of the firm argued strenuously that the original Norwich Pharmacal order was and is juridically separate from the claim to be tried. He pointed out that the Particulars of Claim on which the firm will present its case did not exist at the time of the order made by Tipples J. That is true but the proposition misses the true point. In the proceedings the cross-examination of Mr Grayson inevitably will concentrate on his assertion that he has made full disclosure. The firm's case is that he has not done so and that he has breached the firm's confidence. To permit cross-examination now on Mr Grayson's affidavit would be to pre-empt the cross-examination at trial. On the face of it that cannot be just and convenient. The fact that the case is proceeding to trial is not of Mr Grayson's making. The firm has determined that this is the appropriate course. It is not for me to comment on that determination. However, it does have consequences as I have set out above.
41. The second difficulty is that the case against Mr Grayson is limited in scope. The pleaded case is that there were three attempts to obtain confidential information as set out at paragraph 15 above. Each of the attempts occurred in April 2020. Whether the sort code and account number of the firm's bank account was confidential information is doubtful. Many solicitors will include those details on any invoice they submit. The same lack of confidentiality could be said to apply in relation to historic information concerning Mr Tsiattalou's travel arrangements. Confusingly the pleaded case is that whatever information in fact was obtained was provided to Mr Grayson in early March 2020. For Mr Grayson now to be required to attend for cross-examination on events which occurred some seven months ago and which were of such limited ambit does not seem to me to be an obvious requirement taking into account what is just and convenient. Mr Grant argued that this approach fails to take account of the continuing depredations of the firm's business. The submission is that cross-examination is required "so that we can put a stop to what is happening". I accept that the case against Mr Grayson is not be considered in a vacuum. If he gave instructions to Mr Robinson in April 2020 in respect of information relating to the firm and he did so at the request of another (potentially the ultimate wrongdoer), it is a possible inference that the wrongdoer responsible for those events is concerned with more recent events. But it is not a clear and inevitable inference. What is just and convenient must be judged principally by reference to the wrongdoing in respect of which the Norwich Pharmacal relief was obtained.
42. The third difficulty is that this is not a case in which the firm can call upon the same kind of material as was available to the claimants in Kensington and the Ereshchenko case. Those cases were different in nature since they were principally concerned with asset tracing, an exercise which is bound to give rise to documentary and digital material in relation to which effective cross-examination can be mounted. The chronology in those two cases in simple terms was that the affidavit was sworn following which significant material emerged which contradicted its contents and which demonstrated the inadequacy and untruthfulness of the affidavit. In the Ereshchenko case there were two untruthful affidavits. Here Mr Grayson has given an account which is inconsistent with that of Mr Robinson. Had e-mail traffic or other documents emerged which demonstrated that Mr Grayson in fact had engaged with Mr Robinson in some kind of search for information, that might have allowed a conclusion that cross-examination would be just and convenient. Beyond the limited material which was produced by Mr Robinson at the outset, no such digital or documentary material is available.
43. The fourth matter of relevance is that, given the proceedings against Mr Grayson are continuing and the respective cases have been pleaded, there is scope for the firm to use the mechanism of Part 18 to obtain further information. The request for further information first requested in August 2020 has not yielded any useful result so far as the firm is concerned. However, the issue has yet to be considered by a Master or judge. Part 18 gives the court a wide power to order additional information in relation to any matter in dispute in the proceedings. I have not been asked to consider how that power might be exercised on the facts of this case but that it is a potential route available to the firm cannot be disputed. This is a highly relevant consideration in respect of whether ordering cross-examination would be just and convenient.
44. Taking all of those matters into account, I am satisfied that, even assuming there is jurisdiction to order cross-examination in the circumstances of this case, such an order is not appropriate in relation to Mr Grayson. It would not be just and convenient to make such an order.
45. It follows that both applications fail. At the end of his oral submissions Mr Grant said that the Norwich Pharmacal orders had not succeeded in their aim for "extraordinary reasons". It does not seem to me that for two witnesses to contradict each other is extraordinary. Clearly it is frustrating for the firm given the lengths to which they have gone in pursuing this matter. However, it is not such an exceptional circumstance that either Mr Robinson or Mr Grayson should be required to attend for cross-examination."
The grounds of appeal
"(a) [...] A claimant should not be hampered in its ability to obtain Norwich Pharmacal relief (identifying a third party wrongdoer) merely because they have issued timely substantive proceedings.
(b) It is unrealistic. There is no date for a trial. Meanwhile, the ultimate wrongdoer remains at large.
(c) The reason could only have weight if Mr Grayson was guaranteed to give evidence at trial. There is no such guarantee.
(d) The focus of cross-examination in this application would be upon those who instructed Mr Grayson, not whether Mr Grayson's actions were wrongful.
(e) The Claimant was prepared to undertake not to use any material obtained via cross-examination at any future trial."
"(2) Second, at §41, the Judge stated that "the case against Mr Grayson is limited in scope". However, the nature of the substantive case against Mr Grayson was irrelevant: the purpose of cross-examination was to discover who instructed Mr Grayson, in order to enable the Claimant to ascertain the full extent of the wrongdoing and bring such other proceedings against other wrongdoers as may be appropriate.
(3) Third, at §42, the Judge relied upon the fact that there was limited material available to deploy in cross-examination. However, the essential difference between Mr Robinson and Mr Grayson is stark, and Mr Grayson's answers to date suggest that he has responded in an extremely technical manner. The purpose of cross-examination was to elicit more complete answers from Mr Grayson, and thus to reveal the identity of those orchestrating the campaign against Stokoe. It is a legitimate expectation that the process of giving evidence under oath before a High Court Judge would, by its solemn and rigorous nature, cause or compel Mr Grayson to give a true account of his part in material matters.
(4) Fourth, at §43, the Judge stated that the Claimant could use CPR Part 18. However, this was wrong in principle: CPR Part 18 is not an appropriate substitute for cross-examination when the veracity of an affidavit is in issue." [The grounds of appeal went on to describe subsequent developments in the litigation, to which I turn next.]
The application to adduce fresh evidence
Cross-examination of a defendant prior to trial
"Mr Allen's most forceful submission was that it was wrong in principle to order cross-examination on a Mareva discovery affidavit in respect of matters which had relevance to the substantive issues in the action. He pointed out that the defendant has an option whether or not to give evidence and submit to cross-examination at the trial. Before the defendant takes that decision the plaintiff has to undertake the burden of adducing evidence to make out his case. It was, submitted Mr Allen, manifestly unjust that a plaintiff should be able to compel a defendant to submit to cross-examination which might provide the plaintiff with the material on which to advance his case on the merits. It was doubly unjust that this should occur before the close of pleadings and discovery. Here, with more justification, Mr Allen relied again upon Scott J's reference [in Bayer v Winter [1986] 1 WLR 540] to the Star Chamber inquisition.
In my judgment, it is undesirable that a plaintiff should be able in Mareva proceedings to extract, by cross-examination under order of the court, material upon which to build his case for the substantive hearing. I envisage circumstances where, if this were the price that had to be paid for an effective Mareva injunction, it would, nonetheless, be a price worth paying in the interests of justice. But the court must be astute to guard against abuse of the Mareva process by plaintiffs who are using it in an attempt to discover facts that will assist them in the action. The fact that cross-examination on a Mareva discovery affidavit will relate to matters which are relevant to the substantive issues, is a matter to which the judge should have regard when considering whether to permit this process."
"(1) the statutory discretion to order cross-examination is broad and unfettered. It may be ordered whenever the court considers it just and convenient to do so;
(2) generally cross-examination in aid of an asset disclosure order will be very much the exception rather than the rule;
(3) it will normally only be ordered where it is likely to further the proper purpose of the order by, for example, revealing further assets that might otherwise be dissipated so as to prevent an eventual judgment against the defendants going unsatisfied;
(4) it must be proportionate and just in the sense that it must not be undertaken oppressively or for an ulterior purpose. Thus, it will not normally be ordered unless there are significant or serious deficiencies in the existing disclosure; and
(5) cross-examination can in an appropriate case be ordered when assets have already been disclosed in excess of the value of the claim against the defendants."
"Under all heads the cross-examination that is to be allowed must be clearly focused on identifying assets belonging to the defendants against which the worldwide freezing order should bite. No ancillary cross-examination affecting the merits of the claim will be permitted. That is not the purpose of what is being allowed. I will be astute to ensure that the cross examination does not become excessive or oppressive or counterproductive and that the claimants do not obtain a collateral advantage in the substantive litigation by being allowed to pursue the disclosure process to this exceptional next stage."
"Even if there is no jurisdictional bar to ordering cross-examination of a deponent on his affidavit or disclosure statement, the exercise of such power is reserved to extreme cases where there is no alternative relief. In general, the only circumstances whereas cross-examination to documents and disclosure may be appropriate at an interlocutory stage is in the context of freezing and search orders, where it may be crucial to establish what has happened to and the location of assets prior to trial."
"It seems to me that there is power to make such an order under section 37 of the Supreme Court Act and under the Norwich Pharmacal jurisdiction. On any view, the Norwich Pharmacal jurisdiction is apt to cover situations post judgment. Also, on any view, Dr Nwobodo has become mixed up, at the very least, in dishonest attempts to defeat execution of the judgments against Congo…."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Lord Justice Coulson:
(Order: Appeal dismissed with no order as to costs. Claimant's application for permission to appeal to the Supreme Court refused.)