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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 >> Corbiere Ltd v Ke Xu [2018] EWHC 112 (Ch) (26 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/112.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 112 (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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(1) CORBIERE LIMITED (2) TRENCHANT LIMITED (3) TRENCHANT EMPLOYEE SERVICES LIMITED -and- |
Claimants |
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KE XU -and- SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant Intervener |
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Mr Ke Xu (Appeared in Person)
Mr Robin Tam QC, Mr Alan Payne (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Intervener)
Hearing dates: 12 January 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli :
Introduction
Background
"88. The Claimants contend that if Mr Xu were to be deported before 14 August 2018 this would interfere with their fair trial rights in the civil proceedings. Mr Fordham submits that there is no practical and effective civil process if Mr Xu has been allowed to leave the UK. He could not effectively be brought to account and civil remedies against him could not effectively be secured and enforced. There is obvious benefit, it is said, to the Claimants in being able to cross-examine Mr Xu on the material issues in the civil proceedings. If returned to China he would be very unlikely to attend cross-examination by video link, and even if he were to do so, such evidence would be substantially inferior to live evidence. Further, the remedies that the Claimants seek are likely to be frustrated by his deportation. The enforcement of any judgment in China will be very difficult.
89. Mr Tam submits that, absent a specific order from the court, it is a matter for Mr Xu whether or not he chooses to exercise his Article 6 right to participate in the civil proceedings. If he chooses not to, he may waive his own Article 6 rights but this would not amount to an interference with the Claimants' Article 6 rights. Mr Xu's consent to deportation demonstrates that he does not wish to participate from within the UK.
90. In any event, even if Mr Xu's deportation would somehow interfere with the Claimants' Article 6 rights Mr Tam submits that the strong public interest in deporting a serious foreign criminal such as Mr Xu outweighs any such interference.
91. Mr Tam submits that if the Claimants fear that Mr Xu's departure from the UK will interfere with their Article 6 rights they can apply within the civil proceedings for an order prohibiting his travel outside the UK. Mr Fordham accepts that the most appropriate forum for consideration of the Article 6 issue is in the civil proceedings and he has informed me that the Claimants have recently made arrangements for such an application to be made to a judge in the civil proceedings in the event that they do not succeed in the present claim.
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103. I consider the proper forum for any Article 6 issue to be raised is in the civil proceedings. Permission is therefore refused on the Article 6 ground."
The Disclosure Application
Passport Application
(1) First, it is necessary to consider the harm that would be done to the defendant in making the order;(2) Second, it is necessary to consider the harm to the Claimants if no order is made. In Bayer v Winter AG itself, where the order was sought in aid of an order for disclosure, Fox LJ noted that if the defendant left the United Kingdom, then the plaintiffs were at risk that they would be unable to obtain the information, noting that while within the jurisdiction the defendant could be compelled to attend for cross-examination;
(3) Third, the essential question is whether the order was reasonable and necessary, ancillary to the due performance of the court's functions;
(4) Fourth, recognising that the order interferes with individual liberty, it should be for a period of time that was no longer than necessary to enable the plaintiffs to serve the orders to which the restraint order was ancillary, and to endeavour to obtain from the defendant the information referred to in those orders;
(5) Fifth, Fox LJ noted that the court had both the power, and the duty – where an order such as an order for disclosure had been made – to take such steps "as will enable the order to have effect as completely and successfully as the powers of the court can procure."
"(i) The power to impound a passport pending the disposal of a financial remedy claim exists in principle in aid of all the court's procedures leading to the disposal of the proceedings.
(ii) But it involves a restriction of a subject's liberty and so should be exercised with caution. The authorities emphasise the short-term nature of the restraint. The law favours liberty.
(iii) A good cause of action for a substantive award must be established.
(iv) The applicant must establish that there is probable cause for believing that the respondent is about to quit the jurisdiction unless he is restrained.
(v) And the applicant must further establish that the absence of the respondent from the jurisdiction will materially prejudice her in the prosecution of her action.
(vi) Provided that the principles in (i)–(v) are carefully observed a passport impounding order will represent a proportionate public policy based restraint on freedom of movement founded on the personal conduct of the respondent."
(1) There is no necessity for the broader form of order at this stage, since the Claimants have the protection of the narrower form of order in support of the disclosure order;(2) I do not accept that the Claimants would be materially prejudiced at trial if Mr Xu were absent, since his non-attendance would not inhibit their ability to prove their case before the court.
(3) While I accept that there is potential for material prejudice to the Claimants in respect of enforcement of any order they obtain at trial, it lies in the Claimants' hands to obtain pre-trial relief which would (if enforced) substantially remove such post-trial prejudice. Insofar as they would be prejudiced in enforcing any judgment by reason of lack of information, the information they would need is essentially the same as that which is sought by the Disclosure Application and the narrower form of restraint order that I am prepared to make provides sufficient protection. Insofar as they would be prejudiced in enforcing any order as to delivery up of items, because without Mr Xu's presence within this jurisdiction it may be said that they have no effective means of enforcement, then it seems to me that there are other pre-trial remedies available to them, in the form of orders for delivery up of relevant materials pending the trial, which could themselves, if appropriate, be supported by an extension of the restraint order to enforce compliance. Such an extension would, like the narrower form of order I am currently prepared to make, be for only so long as Mr Xu failed to comply. I do not pre-judge whether an application for delivery up pre-trial would succeed, since no application has so far been made, noting only that such an order was made by Mann J at the outset of these proceedings in August 2014, in respect of the materials that Mr Xu was then known to have taken.
(4) Accordingly, I am not satisfied that it is currently necessary to make a restraint order on the Passport Application that extends until after trial.
(5) In those circumstances, the harm to Mr Xu of such an order (which would be significantly greater than the harm inflicted by the more limited form of order, since it would not lie in his hands to bring the period of restraint to an end) would not in my judgment be justified.
Article 6
(1) First, if this court makes an order restraining Mr Xu from leaving the jurisdiction then, while that does not affect the obligation in s.32 of the UK Borders Act 2007 to deport Mr Xu, it is a matter which the SSHD is bound to take into consideration when determining the timing of that deportation.(2) Second, if the deportation of Mr Xu would be a breach of the Claimants' rights under Article 6, then the duty to deport Mr Xu is disapplied. In those circumstances, Mr Fordham QC, appearing for the Claimants in respect of public law issues, submits that if the SSHD nevertheless wishes to deport Mr Xu, she has the burden of establishing that the interference is justified.