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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Sodastream Ltd v Coates & Ors [2009] EWHC 1936 (Ch) (31 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/1936.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1936 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SODASTREAM LIMITED (In liquidation) (By James RICHARD DUCKWORTH liquidator of SODASTREAM LIMITED) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) PAUL CHRISTOPHER COATES (2) PETER GORDON WISEBURGH (3) JULIA ANN HAMPSHIRE (4) MOSHE BAR HAIM (5) DAN FIRER |
Defendants |
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Orlando Gledhill (instructed by Brabners Chaffe Street LLP) for the Fifth Defendant
Hearing dates: 9 and 10 July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blackburne :
"…On receipt of a without notice application with a request for the matter to be disposed of on paper, the court should consider whether it is appropriate to dispose of the matter without a hearing. In our view, there is a danger in dealing with important applications on paper. An application for an extension of time for service of the claim form is potentially of critical importance, especially where the application is made shortly before the end of the four months period for service and where the cause of action has become time-barred since the date on which the claim form was issued. If the application is allowed and an extension of time is given, the defendant can always apply under CPR r 23.10 for the order to be set aside, in which case the applicant may be worse off than if it had been refused in the first place. It is highly desirable that on the without notice application, full consideration (with proper testing of the argument) is given to the issue of whether the relief sought should be granted. Equally, if an application is made late in the day and refused on paper when proper argument would have made it proper to grant, a great deal of heartache can be saved. We think that applications of this kind, where time limits are running out, should normally be dealt with by an urgent hearing. We accept, however, that owing to time constraints, pressure of business and the like, it will sometimes not be possible to deal with such an application other than on paper. Even in such cases, however, consideration should be given to dealing with the application by telephone."
It is a noteworthy feature of all five applications to extend time for the service of the claim form in this case that this cautionary advice was ignored: not one of the applications was dealt with by hearing; all were dealt with on paper. All were made after the cause of action had become time-barred. As will appear, one of them was made on the very last day of the extended period for service. With the possible exception of the first of them, the evidence in support - in each case it was a witness statement by Ms Saxby - was in the briefest of terms. It was evidently thought unnecessary to exhibit to those brief statements any correspondence or other background material. Although I have no reason to think that there was the slightest intention to mislead the court, none of the applications after the first of them drew attention to the fact that the application had been preceded by another or others. By the time of the second and subsequent applications it would have been apparent from a reference in each witness statement to the fact that the claim form had been issued on 1 November 2007 that there must have been at least one earlier extension of time. But that was left to the reader to divine.
"7. Three of the five Defendants reside in Israel. Two of the above Defendants have been served, however The Foreign Process Office within the Royal Courts of Justice have been unable to serve the Fifth Defendant, Mr Dan Firer of 21 Robinson, Petach Tikva, Israel
8. Permission is therefore sought to extend the deadline for service of the Claim Form upon the Fifth Defendant until 1 September 2008. It is understood that the Fifth Defendant is in contact with the solicitors instructed by the remaining four Defendants and therefore it is anticipated that service can take place very shortly potentially through solicitor [sic] instructed by the other Defendants."
"8. We have been in contact with the solicitor acting on behalf of the First, Second, Third and Fourth Defendant. We understand that the solicitors are in contact with the Fifth Defendant and it was anticipated that it would be agreed that they would be instructed to accept service on behalf of the Fifth Defendant, however they have now confirmed that they are not instructed to do so.
9. It will now be necessary to instruct a process server in Israel to attempt to serve the Fifth Defendant. In the meantime it has also been agreed that the claim will be stayed in order to attempt a settlement of this matter."
"No explanation has been given as to why service was not effected by the Foreign Process Section."
That was simply untrue: the Directorate of Courts of Jerusalem had indicated in a document which had been supplied by the Royal Courts of Justice to Clarke Willmott on or about 19 August that the "recipient" (ie the fifth defendant) had "moved to an unknown address".
"8. We have been in contact with the solicitor acting on behalf of the First, Second, Third and Fourth Defendant. The solicitors have been/are in contact with the Fifth Defendant and previously indicated that they were instructed by the Fifth Defendant and that they would be making an application to the court on his behalf. However they have informed us that they are not instructed to accept service on behalf of the Fifth Defendant.
9. It has therefore been necessary for the Claimant to attempt to instruct a process server in Israel to attempt to serve the Fifth Defendant. Some delay has been caused due to difficulty obtaining a suitable agent, such an agent has now been instructed and we hope that service can be [e]ffected fairly swiftly.
10. A case management conference has been listed for 9 February 2009 and the directions sought will include disclosure followed by the filing of a reply by the Claimant to the defence.
11. Permission is sought to extend the deadline for service of the Claim Form upon the Fifth Defendant until 1 May 2009 to enable the Claimant to attempt to undertake alternative means of service of the documents upon the Fifth Defendant in Israel. Given the directions sought, it is submitted that none of the parties will be prejudiced by the further extension."
"We confirm that we are not instructed to accept service on behalf of the Fifth Defendant."
Then, after stating, incorrectly because Clarke Willmott had not thought it necessary to inform BCS of the third extension, that the extended time for service had expired, the writer of the letter, a Mr Lancefield of BCS (and the person within BCS having care and conduct of the matter), stated that:
"We are presently considering an Application to have the proceedings against the Fifth Defendant dismissed with costs."
Since the fifth defendant had not been served and BCS had no instructions to accept service on his behalf and believed that the time for service had in any event expired, that last sentence could only sensibly have referred to an application by the other defendants. But even if Ms Saxby misunderstood it to mean that the fifth defendant would somehow be applying to have the unserved claim against him dismissed, a further three months had passed since that letter was sent before Ms Saxby made her statement in paragraph 8.
Counsels' submissions
The legal position
(1) An application to set aside an order extending time obtained on a without notice application is a rehearing of the matter, not a review of the decision to extend time.
(2) The principal and frequently the only question is to determine whether there was a good reason for the claimant's failure to serve the claim form within the period allowed by the rules.
(3) If there was a very good reason for the failure to serve within the specified period, an extension of time will usually be granted, for example where the court has been unable to serve the claim form or the claimant has taken all reasonable steps to serve but has been unable to do so.
(4) Conversely, the absence of any good reason for the failure to serve is likely to be a decisive factor against the grant of an extension of time.
(5) The weaker the reason for failure to serve, the more likely the court will be to refuse to grant the extension.
(6) Whether the limitation period applicable to the claim has expired is of importance to the exercise of the discretion since an extension has the effect of extending the period of limitation and disturbing the entitlement of the potential defendant to be free of the possibility of any claim.
(7) The fact that the claimant has delayed serving the claim form until the particulars of claim were ready is not likely to provide a good reason for the failure to serve.
(8) The fact that the person to be served has been supplied with a copy of the claim form or is otherwise aware of the claimant's wish to take proceedings against him is a factor to be considered.
(9) Provided he has done nothing to put obstacles in the claimant's way, a potential defendant is under no obligation to give any positive assistance to the claimant to serve the claim form, so that the fact that the potential defendant has simply sat back and awaited developments (if any) is an entirely neutral factor in the exercise of the discretion.
Decision
Result