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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Faniyi v Solicitors Regulation Authority [2012] EWHC 2965 (Admin) (26 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/2965.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2965 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Nathaniel Akindele Faniyi |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Solicitors Regulation Authority |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
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Michael McLaren QC (instructed by Russell Jones & Walker) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 12 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foskett:
Introduction and background
"If satisfied that it is just so to do, the Tribunal may grant the application upon such terms, including as to costs, as it thinks fit ."
The events between 10 June and 2 December 2010
"In accordance with Rule 13(7) of the Solicitors Disciplinary Proceedings) Rules 2007 I hereby give NOTICE that I do not agree to the admission in evidence of any of the documents exhibited to your Supplementary Statement of 6 May 2010 with page numbers 1 to 230. I require the authenticity of each and every document be proved at the hearing of this matter.
Further take notice that I dispute each and every statement of fact set out in your Rule 5 statement dated 21 August 2009 and your Rule 7 Supplementary Statement of 6 May 2009."
"We acknowledge receipt of your letter of the 7th June.
The Tribunal forwarded to us a copy of your letter to them to which was attached the sick note dated the 7th June 2010 which stated that Mr Faniyi was neither fit for work nor must he attend a Court appearance.
Accordingly, and as you will be aware from the Tribunal, they decided to adjourn the case to another date.
That date has not yet been fixed, and we would be grateful if you would confirm that Mr Faniyi's condition is now improving so that we can apply for a fresh listing of this case.
We hope that Mr Faniyi makes a speedy and good recovery."
"The above matter has been listed for an all day Substantive Hearing on Thursday, 2nd December 2010. All matters are listed for 10am and the order of hearing is decided on the day."
"Thank you for your letter dated 9th June 2010.
The matter involves two complicated cases with several documents. The authenticity of each and every document in the two bundles had been challenged and the Prosecutor has volunteered to provide the originals of the documents for the benefit of the trial.
In view of the nature and complexity of the documents and allegations, it is reckoned that the hearing of the trial is likely to last five days.
I will be available from November 2010 to March 2011."
"Please find enclosed a copy of a letter that I received today from Mr Faniyi. The last paragraph states that this case is likely to last five days. Could you clarify the situation for me as I will have to move quite quickly on getting the matter moved if this is in fact the case?"
"I acknowledge receipt of your letter dated the 28th June 2010. Unfortunately, a letter was sent to you dated the same day informing you that your matter is listed for a one day hearing on the 2nd December 2010.
In light of this, I will contact Mr Marriott and I will be in contact with (sic) shortly."
"I thank you for your two letters of the 28th and 30th June advising me in the first that the hearing is now listed for the 2nd December 2010, and in the second advising me that the Respondent believes the case will take five days.
I do not accept it will take five days. It may upon reflection take a little more than one day and therefore the Tribunal on a prudent basis may decide to list it for two days; however, even this, I believe could be avoided as the Respondent makes reference to the authenticity of each and every document, and it does make sense for him therefore to visit our offices by appointment where we can show him the original documents that we have.
I therefore encourage the Respondent to make the suitable appointment. I have sent a copy of this letter to Mr Faniyi. I trust this assists."
"I acknowledge receipt of your letter dated the 6th July 2010.
I have, in fact, listed this matter for 1 day only, on the 2nd December 2010. The date was fixed so that the same Tribunal members could attend.
I thank you for your assistance in this matter."
"I refer to my letter to the Tribunal dated the 6th July which was copied to you. Please would you make contact so as to convene a mutually convenient appointment at this office so as to inspect the original documentation.
You will appreciate that the trial has only been listed for 1 day, and your indication that it would last rather longer was based upon, in the main, the fact that you had challenged the authenticity of each and every document.
Please therefore contact this office with a view to scheduling a mutually convenient appointment".
The SDT hearing on 2 December 2010
The application for a re-hearing on 16 December 2010
"108. The test to be applied to the issue of whether it was "just" to grant the application was the balance of probabilities test and the particular issue to consider was whether the [Appellant] had "deliberately absented himself" from the hearing or "voluntarily chosen not to attend" .
109. It was very clear to the Tribunal that the [Appellant] had been informed by the Tribunal office on 28 June 2010 of the hearing date of 2 December 2010. The [Appellant] had never been told by the Tribunal office, or by the Applicant or his office, that the hearing date had been adjourned, vacated or re-listed. The [Appellant] had sought to rely on a letter from the tribunal dated 30 June 2012. That letter neither said nor implied that the hearing on 2 December was being vacated. The [Appellant] could not reasonably have interpreted that letter as notification that the date had or would be changed. The [Appellant] had acknowledged that he had received the Applicant's letter of 6 July 2012 which referred to a second day possibly being needed for the hearing, but only if the Applicant did not inspect the documents as offered by the Applicant. Again, this letter did not say or imply that the hearing date of 2 December would not be effective.
110. The [Appellant] had sought to rely in an alleged agreement with the Applicant, the late Mr Marriott, which was referred to in the [Appellant's] statement of 6 December at paragraph 8 where the [Appellant] says, "Around July 2012, Mr Marriott and I agreed that the matter should be listed for a minimum of 2 days in February 2011." The Tribunal concluded that there was no such agreement. If there had been any agreement between the Applicant and [Appellant] to this effect, it would have been noted on the Applicant's file. The Tribunal had heard that there was nothing on the Applicant's file which indicated any such agreement nor was there anything in writing produced by the [Appellant] to corroborate the purported agreement. In any event, even if there had been an agreement between the parties about the matter being listed for 2 days in February 2011, that could not have operated automatically to vacate the 2 December hearing.
111. The Tribunal further noted and accepted the evidence of Mr Drury in his attendance note of a conversation with the [Appellant] on 8 December, after this application had been made, in which the [Appellant] had said that, "..., he had been in discussions with GM as he wanted 5 days for the hearing. NF (The [Appellant]) said that GM told him to apply SDT for the hearing he wanted". The [Appellant's] statement there was inconsistent with what the Tribunal had been told today.
112. The [Appellant] had made no contact with the Tribunal office, the SRA or the Applicant in the period from July 2010 about the hearing date or, indeed, arrangements to inspect the Applicant's documents. The Tribunal noted that the [Appellant] had failed to take any steps to clarify the position if the correspondence had created in the [Appellant's] mind any doubt about the listing of the matter.
113. The Tribunal took into account what it had been told by the [Appellant's] solicitor about how the [Appellant] had learned the outcome of the hearing on 2 December. The [Appellant] had not said that the first indication he had of the outcome was receipt of the Order, as would usually be the case where a [Appellant] did not attend the hearing. The Tribunal found it unbelievable that two members of the [Appellant's] close-knit community, whom he said he did not know, had by chance attended the Tribunal on 2 December and had reported to him the outcome of the hearing without there being some connection between the [Appellant] and those gentlemen. A reasonable inference to be drawn was that the [Appellant] had been aware that the hearing would go ahead and had arranged for someone to observe the proceedings. The Tribunal was a public forum but it was unusual for members of the public to attend without having some prior knowledge of or interest in a case. The [Appellant] had sought to explain his method of learning the outcome of the hearing as a coincidence, but that was too remote a possibility for the Tribunal to consider this proposition.
114. The Tribunal found that the [Appellant] had not been open and frank in his statement and submissions, between which there were some inconsistencies. The [Appellant] had not been honest about his alleged agreement with the Applicant about re-listing the hearing for 2 days in February 2011 and the attendance of two gentlemen as observers at the 2 December hearing. If the [Appellant] had believed that the 2 December date had been vacated he had had no reasonable basis for that belief. The Tribunal found, rather, that the [Appellant] had known about the hearing and that it had not been vacated, adjourned or re-listed.
115. The Tribunal found that the submissions of the Applicant, as set out in the outline submissions and noted above, were more credible than those of the [Appellant].
116. In the light of all of the matters noted above, it was clear to the tribunal that the [Appellant] knew the hearing was due to take place on 2 December, having been fully informed of the date, but had deliberately absented himself. In these circumstances the [Appellant] had not been denied a fair hearing. The [Appellant] had not discharged the burden of proof and the Tribunal was not satisfied that it would be just to order a re-hearing. The application for a re-hearing was therefore dismissed."
Was the decision to refuse a re-hearing wrong?
Criticism's of the original SDT hearing of 2 December 2010
13.(1) Subject to the following provisions of this rule, the Civil Evidence Act 1968, and the Civil Evidence Act 1995 shall apply in relation to proceedings before the Tribunal in the same manner as they apply in relation to civil proceedings.
(2) Any notice given under the provisions of the Acts mentioned in paragraph (1) shall be given no later than 21 days before the date fixed for the hearing of an application.
(3) Any counter-notice shall be given no later than 10 days before the date fixed for the hearing.
(4) No later than 28 days before the date fixed for the hearing of an application, the applicant may, by written notice, require any other party to the application to indicate to him, no later than the date on which the period of 14 days from the date of the giving of the notice expires, which of any facts set out in the Statement submitted in support of the application are in dispute.
(5) Failure to reply to such a notice shall be material only in relation to the question of costs.
(6) Any party to an application may, by written notice, not later than nine days before the date fixed for the hearing, request any other party to agree that any document may be admitted as evidence.
(7) If any other party desires to challenge the authenticity of a document which is the subject of paragraph (6), he shall no later than the date on which the period of six days beginning with the date on which the notice was served, give notice that he does not agree to the admission of the document and that he requires that its authenticity be proved at the hearing.
(8) If the recipient of a notice given under paragraph (6) does not give a notice in response within the period mentioned in paragraph (7), he shall be deemed to have admitted the document unless otherwise ordered by the Tribunal.
(9) A party to an application may, pursuant to Section 46(11) of the Act, require the attendance at the hearing of any person or the production of any document relevant to the proceedings and any summons for that purpose shall be in the form of Form 5 in the Schedule to these Rules.
(10) At the discretion of the Tribunal, the strict rules of evidence shall not apply at a hearing before the Tribunal.
14.(1) The Tribunal may in its discretion, in respect of a whole case or of any particular fact or facts, proceed and act upon evidence given by Statement.
(2) Every Statement upon which any party proposes to rely shall be filed with the Clerk and served on all other parties to the application in question no later than 21 days before the date fixed for the hearing of the application together with a notice in the form of Form 6 in the Schedule to these Rules.
(3) Any party on whom a notice has been served under paragraph (2) and who requires the attendance, at the hearing, of the witness in question shall, no later than 9 days before the date of the hearing require, in writing, the other party to produce the witness at the hearing .
21.(1) Subject to the provisions of these Rules, the Tribunal may regulate its own procedure.
(2) The Tribunal may dispense with any requirements of these Rules in respect of notices, Statements, witnesses, service or time in any case where it appears to the Tribunal to be just so to do .
"If the Tribunal is satisfied that notice of the hearing was served on the respondent in accordance with these Rules, the Tribunal shall have power to hear and determine an application notwithstanding that the Respondent fails to attend in person or is not represented at the hearing."
"38. The Tribunal considered allegation 7 and found the chronology provided by the Applicant most helpful. As to facts, the Tribunal was satisfied on the evidence, particularly the chronology of correspondence that contracts had not been exchanged with Mr OL on 5 July 2007. It was satisfied that this had been proved to the higher standard. The Tribunal was not, however, satisfied that the allegation in the Rule 7 statement that the Respondent had "fabricated his file and fabricated a contract in an attempt to mislead the SRA and third parties into believing that contracts were exchanged on 5 July 2007 when in fact this was not the case " had been proved to the required higher standard. It was satisfied that contracts had not exchanged on that day and it was satisfied that the Respondent had taken a selective approach in submitting papers to the SRA in response to the Section 44B notice. It did not consider however that evidence of his intent linking these two facts was established. The Tribunal did however consider that in respect of his approach to the Regulator he had been reckless and that allegation 7 had been proved but that dishonestly had not.
39. In respect of allegation 8 the Tribunal was satisfied that the Respondent had attempted to mislead Mr & Mrs T and in so doing failed to act with integrity, contrary to Rule 1.02 of the SCC. It had made this finding to the higher standard on the same facts as in respect of allegation 7 and again foundthat he had acted recklessly but did not find that dishonesty had been proved. The Tribunal did not have evidence of the Respondent's intentions."
(3) At the conclusion of the hearing, the Tribunal shall make a finding as to whether any or all of the allegations in the application have been substantiated whereupon a clerk shall inform the Tribunal whether in any previous disciplinary proceedings before the Tribunal allegations were found to have been substantiated against the Respondent.
(4) The Respondent shall be entitled to make submissions by way of mitigation in respect of any sanction (including any order for costs) which the Tribunal may impose.
" Those who fail to attend lose the right to participate and explain, and they do so at their peril. As [was] conceded, if, without more, a solicitor deliberately absented himself it would not be feasible to argue that he was entitled to a re-hearing."
Pitchford LJ: