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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 >> Apex Global Management & Or v Global Torch Ltd & Ors [2013] EWHC 3478 (Ch) (30 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/3478.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3478 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Royal Courts of Justice |
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B e f o r e :
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APEX GLOBAL MANAGEMENT & ORS. |
Petitioners |
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- and - |
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GLOBAL TORCH LTD. & ORS. |
Respondents |
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Official Shorthand Writers and Tape Transcribers
Quality House, Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
MR. JUSTIN FENWICK QC and MR DANIEL SAOUL (instructed by Irwin Mitchell LLP) appeared on behalf the Respondents.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE MANN:
"But, unfortunately, the Prince is also going to be a witness and he is a party to these proceedings, for good or bad, so it seems to me that heshould be required to behave like any other party, and if he chooses not to, then you will have to explain why."
"I am told that in Ms Santos' statement – I am reminded that she deals with the fact that there is a protocol where they do not sign, someone signs on their behalf and that –"
To which Vos J. responded,
"I know, but I am afraid their protocols are valid in Saudi Arabia but not here. I cannot have this as a precedent for the future conduct of this litigation. Prince Abdulaziz is a party to this litigation. He must be treated like every other party. The rules of the court must apply to him as to any other party. If he chooses not to make them applicable, then whatever consequences are appropriate will follow. I am sure that the matter will be carefully considered. I am sure that common sense will be exercised by the other parties to these proceedings. But the order must be in the form that would usually be made."
Mr. Wardell then acknowledged that that would be the order. That is the extent of the decision on the point.
"(vii) A power of the court under these rules to make an order includes a power to vary or revoke the order."
Not surprisingly the courts have sought to impose some limits on that lest it become a vehicle for constant, frequent and unjustified challenges to orders that have been made. The fulfilment of the whole purpose of making orders and rules relating to estoppel, functus and certainty depends on court orders standing and not being re-litigated time and time again. The most recent case on the point is the case of Tibbles v SIG plc [2012] 1WLR 2591. In that case Rix L.J. at paragraph 39 set out the sort of considerations which apply. He emphasised that discretion has a role to play and sometimes the join between discretion and jurisdiction may be hard to identify, but nonetheless he set out the follow principles:
"39. In my judgment, this jurisprudence permits the following conclusions to be drawn:
(i) Despite occasional references to a possible distinction between jurisdiction and discretion in the operation of CPR 3.1(7), there is in all probability no line to be drawn between the two. The rule is apparently broad and unfettered, but considerations of finality, the undesirability of allowing litigants to have two bites at the cherry, and the need to avoid undermining the concept of appeal, all push towards a principled curtailment of an otherwise apparently open discretion. Whether that curtailment goes even further in the case of a final order does not arise in this appeal.
(ii) The cases all warn against an attempt at an exhaustive definition of the circumstances in which a principled exercise of the discretion may arise. Subject to that, however, the jurisprudence has laid down firm guidance as to the primary circumstances in which the discretion may, as a matter of principle, be appropriately exercised, namely normally only(a) where there has been a material change of circumstances since the order was made, or (b) where the facts on which the original decision was made were (innocently or otherwise) misstated.
(iii) It would be dangerous to treat the statement of these primary circumstances, originating with Patten J and approved in this court, as though it were a statute. That is not how jurisprudence operates, especially where there is a warning against the attempt at exhaustive definition.
(iv) Thus there is room for debate in any particular case as to whether and to what extent, in the context of principle (b) in (ii) above, misstatement may include omission as well as positive misstatement, or concern argument as distinct from facts. In my judgment, this debate is likely ultimately to be a matter for the exercise of discretion in the circumstances of each case.
(v) Similarly, questions may arise as to whether the misstatement (or omission) is conscious or unconscious; and whether the facts (or arguments) were known or unknown, knowable or unknowable. These, as it seems to me, are also factors going to discretion: but where the facts or arguments are known or ought to have been known as at the time of the original order, it is unlikely that the order can be revisited, and that must be still more strongly the case where the decision not to mention them is conscious or deliberate.
(vi) Edwards v. Golding is an example of the operation of the rule in a rather different circumstance, namely that of a manifest mistake on the part of the judge in the formulation of his order. It was plain in that case from the master's judgment itself that he was seeking a disposition which would preserve the limitation point for future debate, but he did not realise that the form which his order took would not permit the realisation of his adjudicated and manifest intention.
(vii) The cases considered above suggest that the successful invocation of the rule is rare. Exceptional is a dangerous and sometimes misleading word: however, such is the interest of justice in the finality of a court's orders that it ought normally to take something out of the ordinary to lead to variation or revocation of an order, especially in the absence of a change of circumstances in an interlocutory situation."