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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Glidepath BV & Ors v Thompson & Ors [2005] EWHC 818 (Comm) (04 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/818.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 818 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Glidepath BV and Others |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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John Thompson & Others |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr David Brook (instructed by Howell Jones & Partners) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 29 April 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Colman: :
"(5) Any other person may –
(a) unless the court orders otherwise, obtain from the records of the court of copy of –
(i) a claim form, subject to paragraph (6) and to any order of the court under paragraph (7);
(ii) a judgment or order given or made in public (whether made at a hearing or without a hearing), subject to paragraph (6); and
(b) if the court gives permission, obtain from the records of the court a copy of any other document filed by a party, or communication between the court and a party or another person.
(6) A person may obtain a copy of a claim form or a judgment or order under paragraph 5(a) only if –
(a) where there is one defendant, the defendant has filed an acknowledgment of service or a defence;
(b) where there is more than one defendant, either –
(i) all the defendants have filed an acknowledgment of service or a defence;
(ii) at least one defendant has filed an acknowledgment of service or a defence, and the court gives permission;
(c) the claim has been listed for a hearing; or
(d) judgment has been entered in the claim."
"(1) A witness statement which stands as evidence in chief is open to inspection during the course of the trial unless the court otherwise directs.
(2) Any person may ask for a direction that a witness statement is not open to inspection.
(3) The court will not make a direction under paragraph (2) unless it is satisfied that a witness statement should not be open to inspection because of –
(a) the interests of justice;
(b) the public interest;
(c) the nature of any expert medical evidence in the statement;
(d) the nature of any confidential information (including information relating to personal financial matters) in the statement; or
(e) the need to protect the interests of any child or patient.
(4) The court may exclude from inspection words or passages in the statement."
"An arbitration claim form may only be inspected with the permission of the court."
"34. The consideration that parties have elected to arbitrate confidentially and privately cannot dictate the position in respect of arbitration claims brought to Court under CPR 62.10. CPR 62.10 therefore only represents a starting point. Such proceedings are no longer consensual. The possibility of pursuing them exists in the public interest. The Courts, when called upon to exercise the supervisory role assigned to them under the Arbitration Act, 1996, are acting as a branch of the state, not as a mere extension of the consensual arbitral process. Nevertheless, they are acting in the public interest to facilitate the fairness and well-being of a consensual method of dispute resolution, and both the Rule Committee and the Courts can still take into account the parties' expectations regarding privacy and confidentiality when agreeing to arbitrate.
36. Under CPR 62.10, the Rule Committee considered that, in cases where permission to appeal is appropriate (e.g. because an award raises some point of general legal importance or is clearly wrong), the starting point was to treat the public interest in a public hearing as outweighing any wish on the parties' part for continuing privacy and confidentiality. In the case of other arbitration claims, the Committee saw the starting point as reversed. As required by art. 6(1) (cf. par. 27(iii) above) and as stressed in Pelling, Clibbery v. Allan and P. v. B.W. in the family context, the matter remained under the Court's control in any particular case.
38. The range of arbitration claims within the definition in CPR 62.10 is very wide. Adapting words of the President, there "cannot properly be a blanket protection of non-publication in all cases" which fall initially to be heard in private under CPR 62.10. It may be possible to some extent to group cases arising out of the same type of circumstances. I find it difficult, as at present advised, to see why a judgment determining that there was no valid or applicable arbitration agreement or (probably) that arbitrators issued an award without jurisdiction, or dismissing an application for a stay of current proceedings in favour of arbitration should be private. There are arbitrations about factual circumstances and issues which appear unlikely to involve any significant confidential information at all. The main motive to arbitrate may be different considerations, such as the expertise or informality of the arbitrators - many shipping and commodity arbitrations must fall into this category. In arbitration claims relating to such arbitrations, the starting point may easily give way to a public hearing. In every case, while it will be appropriate to start the hearing in private as contemplated by CPR 62.10, the Court should be ready to hear representations from one or other party that the hearing should be continued in public, and should anyway if appropriate raise this possibility with the parties, as Lord Woolf stressed in ex parte Kaim Todner [1999] QB 966.
"If the case is one of urgency, the court may, on the application of a party or proposed party to the arbitral proceedings, make such orders as it thinks necessary for the purpose of preserving evidence or assets."
"While I would endorse the observations of Mr. Justice Colman in the Insurance Co. case that it is not enough that an award or reasons might have a commercially persuasive impact on the third party to whom they are disclosed, nor that their disclosure would be 'merely helpful, as distinct from necessary, for the protection of such rights,' I would not detach the word 'reasonably' from the word 'necessary', as the passage just quoted appears to do. When the concept of 'reasonable necessity' comes into play in relation to the enforcement or protection of a party's legal rights, it seems to me to require a degree of flexibility in the Court's approach. For instance, in reaching its decision, the Court should not require the parties seeking disclosure to prove necessity regardless of difficulty or expense. It should approach the matter in the round, taking account of the nature and purpose of the proceedings for which the material is required, the powers and procedures of the tribunal in which the proceedings are being conducted, the issues to which the evidence or information sought is directed and the practicality and expense of obtaining such evidence or information elsewhere."