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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 >> EMW Law LLP v Halborg [2016] EWHC 2526 (Ch) (14 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2526.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2526 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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EMW LAW LLP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SCOTT HALBORG |
Defendant |
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Vikram Sachdeva QC (instructed by EMW Law LLP) for the Claimant
Robert Marven (instructed by Deals & Disputes Solicitors LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13 April, 18 August 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Clark:
The applications
(1) the claimant's application dated 29 October 2015 for specific disclosure ("the disclosure application");(2) the defendant's application dated 18 November 2015 for an order that there be a trial of a preliminary issue.
Claim and parties
"a. The Defendant would use all reasonable efforts to negotiate recovery of the Claimant's costs from the Defendants to the Substantive Claim.
b. The Defendant would not prevent the Claimant from the recovery of its costs from the Defendants to the Substantive Claim.
c. The Defendant was obliged not to prefer his own costs recovery over that of the Claimant.
d. The Defendant was obliged to ascribe to the Claimant a fair proportion of any global costs settlement.
e. The Defendant was obliged to pursue a costs settlement on behalf of the Claimant if all costs apart from those attributable to the Claimant's work had been settled.
f. The Defendant was obliged to keep the Claimant informed of all relevant developments in the recovery of the Claimant's costs.
g. The Defendant was obliged to disclose to the Claimant any documents relevant to the recovery of the Claimant's costs.
h. The Defendant was obliged to seek instructions from the Claimants to the Substantive Claim in relation to any issues arising in the recovery of the Claimant's costs."
(1) The claimant would be paid a reasonable sum by the defendant for its work, to be assessed if not agreed;(2) If no costs at all were recovered from the defendants in the substantive claim, then that obligation would be extinguished;
(3) If some costs were recovered from the defendants in the substantive claim, then the defendant would pay the claimant a reasonable proportion of its costs;
(4) The defendant was under an obligation to use best endeavours, alternatively reasonable endeavours, to recover the claimant's costs in the substantive claim.
"all the contentions put forward on behalf of Mr Halborg failed and all by a wide margin, none coming anywhere near satisfying me that the criteria for summary judgment had been met."
"As the Judge said, the claimant undoubtedly has an arguable claim for fees"
and continued
"There is no other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard. Indeed, quite the reverse. The claim needs to be resolved at a full hearing before further appeals are mounted."
Permission was granted on one point not relevant to this application (whether the claimant is a "litigant in person" for the purpose of quantifying the costs awarded to it on the defendant's unsuccessful strike out application) by Briggs LJ on 7 April 2016.
Disclosure application
"(1) The court may make an order for specific disclosure or specific inspection.
(2) An order for specific disclosure is an order that a party must do one or more of the following things –
(a) disclose documents or classes of documents specified in the order;
(b) carry out a search to the extent stated in the order;
(c) disclose any documents located as a result of that search."
"The court will take into account all the circumstances of the case and in particular the overriding objective in Pt 1 (see Practice Direction supplementing Pt 31, para.5.4 (para.31APD.5) and the concept of proportionality).
The rationale for the discretion to order specific disclosure is that the overriding objective obliges the parties to give access to those documents which will assist the other's case: Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Exeter City AFC Ltd [2004] B.C.C. 519. The court has a discretion as to whether it makes the order. It may make an order at any time, regardless of whether standard disclosure has already occurred; and it may make orders for specific disclosure against a claimant before the service of the defence where it would assist the defendant to plead a full defence rather than an initial bare denial: Dayman v Canyon Holdings Ltd January 11 2006 unrep. ChD, H.H. Judge Mackie Q.C.
The court will need to satisfy itself as to the relevance of the documents sought, and that they are or have been in the party's control, or at least that there is a prima facie case that these requirements will be met. The relevance of documents is analysed by reference to the pleadings, and the factual issues in dispute on the pleadings: Harrods Ltd v Times Newspaper Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 294; [2006] All E.R. (D) 302 (Feb) at [12]. Where a claim is likely to turn on particular documents there is a stronger case for an order to be made: Chantrey Vellacott v Convergence Group plc [2007] EWHC 1774 February 6, 2006, ChD Rimer J. (Lawtel LTL Doc. No.AC9100857 (in that case particular emails and draft documents))."
(1) the relevance of the documents sought;(2) whether those documents which are subject to without prejudice privilege are disclosable.
Relevance – identifying the issues
(1) The signed Bill of Costs submitted by the defendant in the substantive claim(2) Correspondence, attendance notes or meeting notes, relating to communications between the defendant and Berrymans from 22 July 2011 to date, relating to any discussion, negotiation or settlement of the defendant's costs in the substantive claim
(3) Correspondence, orders and other communications between the defendant and the SCCO in the detailed assessment proceedings in the substantive claim
(4) Documents evidencing payments made by Berrymans to the defendant
(5) Correspondence and other documents that substantiate the work done by the claimant for the defendant
(6) Correspondence between the defendant and his costs draftsman in the substantive claim.
(1) Signed Bill of Costs
(2) Correspondence between the defendant and Berrymans
(1) that they are irrelevant;(2) that they are privileged.
Relevance
"21. On or around the end of November 2011 the Defendant settled the costs of the Substantive Claim ("the Settlement").
22. Since that date the Defendant has refused to provide details of the Settlement. The Defendant has also refused the claimant authority to negotiate its costs claim with the Defendant to the Substantive Claim. As a result, the solicitors to the Defendants to the Substantive Claim have refused to deal with the claimant.
23. In breach of the implied terms pleaded at paragraph 14 above the Defendant has:
a. Failed to use all reasonable efforts to negotiate recovery of the Claimant's costs from the Defendants to the Substantive Claim.
b. Prevented the Claimant from recovering its costs from the Defendants to the Substantive Claim
c. Preferred his own costs recovery over that of the Claimant.
d. Failed to ascribe to the Claimant a fair proportion of any global costs settlement
e. (If, contrary to the above, all costs apart from those attributable to the Claimant's work had been settled) failed to pursue a costs settlement on behalf of the Claimant, having apparently accepted at face value the ascription of the Claimant's work as being worth nothing.
f. Failed to keep the Claimant informed of all relevant developments in the recovery of the Claimant's costs.
g. Failed to disclose to the Claimant all documents relevant to the recovery of the Claimant's costs (including, in particular, negotiations over costs, and details of the settlement agreement over costs)."
Privilege
Persons entitled to the privilege
Legal principles
"The without prejudice rule is a rule governing the admissibility of evidence and is founded upon the public policy of encouraging litigants to settle their differences rather than litigate them to a finish. It is nowhere more clearly expressed than in the judgment of Oliver LJ in Cutts v Head [ 1984] Ch.290:
"that the rule rests, at least in part, upon public policy is clear from many authorities, and a convenient starting point of the inquiry is the nature of the underlying policy. It is that parties should be encouraged so far as possible to settle their disputes without resort to litigation and should not be discouraged by the knowledge that anything that is said in the course of such negotiations (and that includes, of course, as much the failure to reply to an offer as an actual reply) may be used to their prejudice in the course of the proceedings. They should, as it was expressed by Clauson J in Scott Paper Co v Drayton Paperworks Ltd (1927) 44 RPC 151 ,156 be encouraged fully and frankly to put their cards on the table … the public policy justification in truth, essentially rests on the desirability of preventing statements or offers made in the course of negotiations for settlement being brought before the court of trial and submissions on the question of liability."
The rule applies to exclude all negotiations genuinely aimed at settlement whether all or in writing from being given in evidence."
"Nearly all the cases in which the scope of the "without prejudice" rule has been considered concern the admissibility of evidence at trial after negotiations have failed. In such circumstances no question of discovery arises because the parties are well aware of what passed between them in the negotiations. These cases show that the rule is not absolute and resort may be had to the "without prejudice" material for a variety of reasons when the justice of the case requires it. It is unnecessary to make any deep examination of these authorities to resolve the present appeal but they all illustrate the underlying purpose of the rule which is to protect a litigant from being embarrassed by any admission made purely in an attempt to achieve a settlement."
"In Muller's case (which was a decision on discovery, not admissibility) one of the issues between the claimant and the defendants, his former solicitors, was whether the claimant had acted reasonably to mitigate his loss in his conduct and conclusion of negotiations for the compromise of proceedings brought by him against a software company and its other shareholders. Hoffmann L.J. treated that issue as one unconnected with the truth or falsity of anything stated in the negotiations, and as therefore falling outside the principle of public policy protecting without prejudice communications. The other members of the court agreed but would also have based their decision on waiver."
"the public policy aspect of the rule is not … concerned with the admissibility of statements that are relevant otherwise than as admissions i.e. independently of the truth of the facts to be admitted."
"to dissect out identifiable admissions and withhold protection from the rest of without prejudice communications … would not only create huge practical difficulties but would be contrary to the underlying objective of giving protection to the parties …"
"That was a case in which the plaintiff asserted that a settlement that he had made was a reasonable settlement and the defendant asserted that it was not. The reasonableness of the settlement was therefore directly in issue and it was the plaintiff who put it in issue. It is hardly surprising that in those circumstances the court ordered disclosure of the negotiations leading to the settlement."
(3) Correspondence, orders and other communications between the defendant and the SCCO in the detailed assessment proceedings in the substantive claim
(4) Documents evidencing payments made by Berrymans to the defendant
(5) Correspondence and other documents that substantiate the work done by the claimant for the defendant
(6) Correspondence between the defendant and his costs draftsman in the substantive claim.
Conclusion on the disclosure application
Preliminary issue application
"Which, if any, of the implied terms alleged at paragraphs 14 of the Amended Particulars of Claim redated 18 May 2015 are implied terms of [the agency CFA]"
Whether to order a preliminary issue – the test
(1) Section 8 of the Technology and Construction Court Guide – 2016 White Book, Vol 2, paras 2C-43, pp532-534;(2) Steele v Steele [2001] CP Rep 106 – a decision of Neuberger J, in which he identified 10 factors which could be relevant;
(3) McLoughlin v Jones [2002] QB 1312, in which David Steel J set out the following principles:
(i) Only issues which are decisive or potentially decisive should be identified;(ii) The questions should usually be questions of law;(iii) They should be decided on the basis of a schedule of agreed or assumed facts;(iv) They should be triable without significant delay making full allowance for the implications of a possible appeal;(v) Any order should be made by the court following a case management conference.
"Taking the pros first, Mr Lawrence for Pannone, who seeks such an order, refers first to the fact that, in a sense, an ex turpi causa defence is an in limine challenge to the case being advanced based upon the proposition that, if the claim is arising out of a fraud committed by the claimant, the court should have nothing whatsoever to do with it. That is a fair analysis, but it carries no great weight on the question whether or not to order it to be dealt with by way of preliminary issue. In my judgment, questions of case management, questions of cost, delay and the use of the parties and the court's resources must come first and foremost in the consideration whether any particular issue should be dealt with as a preliminary issue."
Conclusion on the preliminary issue