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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 >> Batmanghelidjh, R (On the Application Of) v Charity Commission for England And Wales [2024] EWHC 2637 (Admin) (18 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2637.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2637 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
The KING on the application of CAMILA BATMANGHELIDJH |
Claimant |
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MICHAEL-KARIM KERMAN |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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CHARITY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND AND WALES |
Defendant |
____________________
Tom Hickman KC and Faisel Sadiq (instructed by the Charity Commission) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 10 October 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWIFT
A. Introduction
B. The power to order substitution of a claimant.
"3. On the face of it, the rules governing such an application are those set out under Section 1 of Part 19 of the Civil Procedure Rules. But, as both Mr Drabble QC for Lady Berkeley and Miss Cooke for the fourth defendant pointed out though for very different reasons the language of the relevant provisions is hard to apply to public law proceedings. Looking in particular at the wording of Rule 19.2 (4), which governs substitution and is in the following terms
"The court may order a new party to be substituted for an existing one if
(a) the existing party's interest or liability has passed to the new party; and
(b) it is desirable to substitute the new party so that the court can resolve the matters in dispute in the proceedings",
The concept of the original claimant having an "interest" which has "passed" to the would-be claimant is inapt. While in one sense claimants in public law proceedings whether in the form of conventional judicial review proceedings or other statutory challenges of the kind with which we are here concerned are of course required to have an "interest" in the dispute, it is an interest of a very different kind, and the term is used in a very different sense, from a private law interest; and it is hard to see how such an interest can be "passed" to another person. Nor, I might add, does a defendant in public law proceedings normally have a "liability" which can be passed. It is fairly clear to me that what the draftsman had in mind was private law rights and obligations, which are indeed capable of being "passed" by being devolved or assigned.
4. Yet if it followed that a claimant could never be substituted in public law cases it is not difficult to envisage circumstances in which the result would be most unjust. Take the example of an unincorporated pressure group where judicial review proceedings have been taken in the name of a particular individual, say the chairman, but while the proceedings are pending he dies: it seems to me inconceivable that another member of the group would not be permitted to be substituted as a party. Indeed, the same in my view would be the case even if the original claimant simply had second thoughts and no longer wished to be involved but other members of the group wished to pursue the challenge originally made in his name. I am told, and it comes as no surprise, that there are many instances in public law cases of such substitution taking place, although I have been referred to no authority where the formal basis of the substitution has been discussed save Eco Energy, to which I refer below. It is, I suppose, arguable that cases of this kind could be accommodated within the provisions of Section 1 of CPR 19 by a benign construction of the concept of the passing of an interest. But in my view, that would be stretching language beyond breaking point. I prefer accepting Mr Drabble's eventual submission to conclude that Part 19 is, though no doubt by oversight, simply not intended to cover public law cases and that the power of substitution which I believe must exist depends on the inherent jurisdiction of the court it being understood that such jurisdiction would be exercised, so far as possible, in accordance with the principles appearing in Part 19 and the cases relation to it and its predecessor Rules."
In that case, the River Thames Society, which appears to have been an unincorporated association, had made an application under section 288 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 challenging a grant of planning consent, but then decided it did not wish to continue the proceedings. The vice-chairman of the society applied to be substituted as claimant. She had participated in the prior planning enquiry. The submission made in opposition to that application was that to allow substitution would undermine the purpose behind section 288 of the 1990 Act as it would permit a person, like the applicant who could have started proceedings under 288 in her own right, to circumvent the requirement that any such application had to be made within a six-week period hence undermining the statutory object of finality. Underhill J allowed the application. He concluded that the purpose of section 288 of the 1990 Act was not impaired when there was a "sufficient identity of interest between the original claimant and the person seeking to be substituted" (judgment at paragraph 7). On the facts of the application, Underhill J continued.
" It seems to me that there can be no bright line indicating exactly where there begins to be a sufficient identity of interest between the original claimant and the person seeking to be substituted so that the policy of Section 288 can be said not to be being substantially undermined. Here, while the case is not as strong as in the paradigm discussed above [at paragraph 4 of his judgment], it is still very far from being a case of a stranger who has failed to apply in time seeking to take opportunistic advantage of someone else's claim. Lady Berkeley was a vice-chairman of the Society and, on the evidence, the proceedings were taken at her instigation. It is reasonable to assume that if the Society had not taken them she would have done. The Society is, as I have mentioned, helping to fund the claim, at least to a modest extent. The relationship in those circumstances could hardly be closer, and in my view, it suffices. The case is different to that considered by Lord Justice Buxton in Eco Energy, because there the original claimant had no locus. In such a case the defendant would indeed suffer a real prejudice by having a claimant who did have locus substituted after the six-week period for a claimant against whose claim he had a complete answer. It is not so here."
"16. the Court can permit an individual claimant in judicial review proceedings who is recognised as bringing the proceedings on behalf of a wider group to be substituted by another such claimant if in the course of the proceedings the original claimant for one reason or another does not wish to proceed."
As to the circumstances before him, Underhill J continued:
"18. I see the force of the argument that substitution in judicial review proceedings should not be permitted simply on the basis of a community of interest, in the broad sense, between a claimant who no longer wishes to proceed and a new claimant who wishes to pick up the baton; and I am prepared to accept for the sake of argument that substitution is only permissible where it is apparent that the original claimant was from the start bringing the claim for the benefit of a wider group which was in some sense associated with him in doing so. But I do not think that that further element needs to be established by the use of any particular formula. It is enough that it should be apparent to the defendant and any interested parties. In the present case, it was, and certainly should have been, apparent to all concerned that SDR was indeed claiming to be acting with the support of others who associated themselves in the claim. "
C. Decision