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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 >> Application in Private [2017] EWHC 3606 (Comm) (14 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/3606.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 3606 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Application in Private |
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Jeremy Cooke :
"Visa submits that the applicable principles and outcome are the same, whether the application is considered under CPR 36.11 or 36.10."
"(1) A Part 36 offer is accepted by serving written notice of acceptance on the offeror.
"(2) Subject to paragraphs (3) and (4) and to rule 36.12, a Part 36 offer may be
accepted at any time (whether or not the offeree has subsequently made a different offer), unless it has already been withdrawn.
"(Rule 21.10 deals with compromise, etc. by or on behalf of a child or protected party.)
"(Rules 36.9 and 36.10 deal with withdrawal of Part 36 offers.)
"(3) The court's permission is required to accept a Part 36 offer where –
"(a) rule 36.15(4) applies;
"(b) rule 36.22(3)(b) applies, the relevant period has expired and further deductible amounts have been paid to the claimant since the date of the offer;
"(c) an apportionment is required under rule 41.3A; or
"(d) a trial is in progress.
"(Rule 36.15 deals with offers by some but not all of multiple defendants.)
"(Rule 36.22 defines 'deductible amounts'.)
"(Rule 41.3A requires an apportionment in proceedings under the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 and Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934.)
"(4) Where the court gives permission under paragraph (3), unless all the parties have agreed costs, the court must make an order dealing with costs and may order that the costs consequences set out in rule 36.13 apply."
"(a) A Part 36 offer which was made less than 21 days before the start of a trial is accepted; or
"(b) A Part 36 offer which relates to the whole of the claim is accepted after expiry of the relevant period; or
"(c) Subject to paragraph (2), a Part 36 offer which does not relate to the whole of the claim is accepted at any time.
"The liability for costs must be determined by the court unless the parties have agreed the costs."
"In considering whether it would be unjust to make the orders referred to in paragraphs (3) and (4), the court must take into account all the circumstances of the case including –
"(a) the terms of any Part 36 offer;
"(b) the stage in the proceedings when any Part 36 offer was made, including in particular how long before the trial started the offer was made;
"(c) the information available to the parties at the time when the Part 36 offer was made;
"(d) the conduct of the parties with regard to the giving of or refusal to give information for the purposes of enabling the offer to be made or evaluated; and
"(e) whether the offer was a genuine attempt to settle the proceedings."
"(2) Where this rule applies –
"(a) if the offeree has not served notice of acceptance of the original offer by the expiry of the relevant period, the offeror's notice has effect on the expiry of that period; and.
"(b) if the offeree serves notice of acceptance of the original offer before the expiry of the relevant period, that acceptance has effect unless the offeror applies to the court for permission to withdraw the offer or to change its terms –
"(i) within 7 days of the offeree's notice of acceptance; or
"(ii) if earlier, before the first day of trial."
"The concept of the relevant period is key to the operation of Part 36. Its determination is important in the context of a number of rules, in particular those concerned with the acceptance of offers and the withdrawal of or changing terms of offers."
"It may be noted that in paragraph (g)(ii) the words 'or such other period as the court has determined' no longer appear."
"On an application ... the court may give permission for the original offer to be withdrawn or its terms changed if satisfied that there has been a change of circumstances since the making of the original offer and that it is in the interests of justice to give permission."
(i) the object is to encourage reasonable settlement of actions with consequent saves in cost to the parties and to the state in terms of court time.
(ii) the earlier such settlement takes place the better and the rules encourage this, because the earlier the offer, the earlier the expiry of the relevant period, with the automatic cost consequences which follow from an early offer under the terms of CPR 36.13(1) if there is an acceptance, and 36.17(3) if it is declined.
(iii) any settlement, however late, is to be encouraged if it results in savings of costs and court time.
(iv) Part 36 is a self-contained procedural code which contains a highly structured and highly prescriptive set of rules with limited and restricted discretion given to the court.
(v) certainty and predictability is of vital importance in construing such a procedural code. Parties need to know where they stand when offers are made or considered.
(vi) the underlying rationale for the setting of a relevant period is to give the offeree sufficient opportunity to consider the offer free from the fear that it might be withdrawn at any moment. Prior to trial, 21 days is considered sufficient. At trial, the whole duration of the trial is specified, though it is plain that some trials might last only one or two days whilst others may last months, as in the current case.
(vii) the need for the court's permission for acceptance in a number of situations, including the situation where a trial is in progress, or for permission to withdraw an offer in the time allowed by the rules for consideration of the offer by the offeree is to give the court a monitoring function so it can release an offeror from its offer where there is a sufficient change of circumstances to make it unjust for the offeror to be held to that offer.
The authorities
"Indeed, we think it is desirable to say that it must not be thought that a defendant who has paid a sum into court is entitled, as of right, to resile from that step. He must, in our opinion, show that there are good reasons for his application – for instance, the discovery of further evidence, which puts a wholly different complexion on the case, as in the two cases cited, or a change in the legal outlook brought about by a new judicial decision, as in the present case, and there may be others. Having once put a valuation on the plaintiff's case, the defendant ought not to be allowed to alter it without good reason. We think the same considerations apply if the matter comes before the court on an application by the plaintiff to have the money paid out to him. The court is not to consider merely whether the amount paid in is large or small, nor is it called on to take into account the sort of circumstances which would be proper if, for instance, it were asked to approve a settlement on behalf of an infant. Apart from matters such as fraud or mistake affecting the original payment, it should consider whether there is a sufficient change of circumstance since the money was paid in to make it just that the defendant should have an opportunity of withdrawing or reducing his payment."
"The defendant chose to make the Part 36 payment before Mr Pinder's report arrived. In doing so she secured the advantage of an earlier payment into court and took the risk that Mr Pinder's report might improve her evidential position. The fact that it may have done so was not, in my view, even close to a sufficient change of circumstance any more than was the second surveyor's report in Manku v Seehra 7 Con LR 90. It was not based on the discovery of new evidence nor a change in legal outlook. Rather, the defendant was relying on a further review of available information by a fresh expert. I do not consider that the defendant has shown that she should in justice be permitted to reduce her Part 36 payment so as to deny the claimant's otherwise unfettered right to accept the full payment within the 21 days."
"36. The standard of persuasion which a defendant applying for permission to withdraw or reduce a Part 36 payment has to achieve has been variously stated. In Cumper v Pothecary [1941] 2 KB 58 Goddard LJ said, at p 70, that the defendant must show that there are good reasons for his application, such as the discovery of further evidence which puts a wholly different complexion on the case or a change in legal outlook brought about by a new judicial decision. He said that, apart from matters such as fraud or mistake affecting the original payment, the court should consider whether there is a sufficient change of circumstance since the money was paid to make it just that the defendant should have an opportunity of withdrawing or reducing his payment.
"37. In Manku v Seehra 7 Con LR 90 Judge John Newey QC referred to Cumper v Pothecary [1941] 2 KB 58 and subsequent cases. He said of the case before him that the defendant's application was not based on the discovery of new evidence nor a change in legal outlook. The defendant was relying on a last minute review of available information by a fresh expert. He refused the defendant's application.
"38. In Marsh v Frenchay Healthcare NHS Trust The Times, 13 March 2001, Curtis J considered a defendant's application under CPR r 36.6(5) to withdraw or reduce a Part 36 payment which the claimant had accepted, where shortly afterwards enquiry agents had taken videos of the claimant doing various tasks which were said to call in question the credibility of the case he had made. Curtis J considered that, under the CPR, the standard propounded in Cumper v Pothecary [1941] 2 KB 58 should be discarded in favour of a flexible approach to achieve the overriding objective.
"39. In MRW Technologies v Cecil Holdings (unreported) 22 June 2001, Garland J heard an appeal against a master's order giving a defendant permission under rule 36.6(5) to withdraw a Part 36 payment. He said, in my view correctly, that the same considerations apply to giving permission to withdraw money in court as to refusing permission to take it out. He inclined, with reference to Curtis J's decision in Marsh v Frenchay Healthcare NHS Trust, to a more flexible approach to take account of the overriding objective. But he also considered that Goddard LJ's phrase in Cumper v Pothecary [1941] 2 KB 58, 'a sufficient change of circumstance since the money was paid to make it just that the defendant should have an opportunity of withdrawing or reducing his payment was to be adopted as consistent with the overriding objective'. I agree.
"40. In the present case, the judge referred both to change of circumstances sufficient to justify a reduction and to the overriding objective. But his erroneous decision that the defendant's application operated as an automatic stay meant that he gave no, or too little, weight to the fact that the application had been made within the 21 days and that to grant it would deprive the claimant of an otherwise unfettered right to accept payment. This requires this court to consider afresh the judge's exercise of discretion, which in any event I consider to be, or to come close to being, plainly wrong.
"41. The evidence before the judge and this court is that of the defendant's solicitor attached to the application verified by a statement of truth. This relates the facts about Mr Pinder's report and the delay in obtaining it which I summarised at the beginning of this judgment. Mr Freedman accepts that, if Mr Pinder's opinion were accepted without qualification, the damages would be less that £24,500. He maintains that Professor Gregg's opinion would sustain a larger award than £24,500. This court does not have either of the medical reports, We are unable to reach any considered view of our own. But I do not think it is necessary to do so. It is clear that the difference between the two experts was nothing out of the ordinary in personal injury litigation.
"42. The defendant chose to make the Part 36 payment before Mr Pinder's report arrived. In doing so, she secured the advantage of an earlier payment into court and took the risk that Mr Pinder's report might improve her evidential position. The fact that it may have done so was not, in my view, even close to a sufficient change of circumstance, any more than was the second surveyor's report in Manku v Seehra 7 Con LR 90. It was not based on the discovery of new evidence nor a change in legal outlook. Rather, the defendant was relying on a further review of available information by a fresh expert. I do not consider that the defendant has shown that she should in justice be permitted to reduce her Part 36 payment so as to deny the claimant's otherwise unfettered right to accept the full payment within the 21 days.
"43. For these reasons, I would allow the appeal and make appropriate consequential directions or orders."
(a) One, the fact that the application was made very late in a trial where there would be little savings in costs as a result of settlement.
(b) Two, the fact that the changed position of both of the parties on offers known to the court showed a material change in their perceptions of the merits of the case and the likely outcome, and that this constituted a material change in circumstances.
(c) Three, the fact that the tide of battle might have flowed resolutely one way during a trial without there being knockout blow -- an accumulation of small things in a trial where the individual events are not necessarily dramatic or determinative of the eventual result -- was nonetheless a significant factor to be taken into consideration.
The history of the proceedings
(i) by the European Commission on 19 December 2007, upheld by the General Court of Appeal on 24 May 2012 and the Court of Justice of the European Union 11 September 2014 in relation to MasterCard intra EEA MIFs.
(ii) by the Competition Appeal Tribunal on 14 July 2016 in the Sainsbury's/MasterCard litigation in this country, following a trial held between January and March 2016. That led to an award of some £69 million in damages. It related to the MasterCard MIFs. Judgment was given in that case in July 2016.
(iii) that judgment was issued in the course of a trial in the Commercial Court in litigation between Arcadia and most of the claimants in the current action against MasterCard in respect of the MasterCard MIFs. That trial before Mr Justice Popplewell ran from 3 June 2016 and concluded in October 2016 with judgment reserved.
"The offer is intended to have the consequences identified in Section 1 of Part 36 of the CPR. In particular, if the Claimant accepts the Offer within a 21 day period from the date of this letter (the 'Relevant Period'), our clients will be liable for the Claimant's recoverable costs up to the date of the Notice of Acceptance, in accordance with CPR 36.13.
"If the Claimant does not accept the Offer made to it, and fails to obtain a judgment which is more advantageous than the Offer, our clients intend to rely on CPR 36.17. In other words, in those circumstances, our clients will seek an order that the Claimant pay our clients' costs from the date when the Relevant Period expires, plus interest on those costs."
"Dear Sirs,
"We refer to our letter of 11 January 2017 regarding the Visa Defendants' withdrawal of 3 January 2017 of the settlement offers made to each of the clients on 7 November 2016 under CPR Part 36 (together, the 'Offers').
"We have previously made clear our position that the Offers have been effectively withdrawn, such that they are no longer capable of acceptance by your clients. For the avoidance of any doubt, that remains unchanged.
"In light of your clients' apparent disagreement with this view, we wish to draw your attention to the fact that Mr Justice Popplewell's judgment of 30 January 2017 in your clients' claim against MasterCard (the 'Arcadia MasterCard Judgment') constitutes a further change in circumstances which means that it would not be in the interests of justice for the Court to permit your clients to accept the Offers. Accordingly, insofar as our clients' previous withdrawal of the Offers was not effective (which we do not accept) then the Offers are now withdrawn on this additional ground. Further or alternatively, we put you on notice that we will rely on this further change in circumstances as a basis for contending that you should not be granted permission to accept the Offers should your clients seek such permission under CPR 36.11(3)(d).
"Yours faithfully."
"4. However:
"(1) It has become apparent as the trial in these proceedings has progressed that the Claimants' claims are very weak and likely to fail, and that their expert witness is unable to support them in crucial respects;
"(2) Because of these developments, Visa first warned the Claimants of its intention to withdraw the Part 36 Offers, then served notice to withdraw the offers on 3 January 2017. Under the provisions of Part 36, that notice does not take effect until the conclusion of the trial;
"(3) Moreover, the legal outlook has changed very significantly since the offers were made. On 30 January 2017, Popplewell J gave judgment in favour of MasterCard in Arcadia v MasterCard [2017] EWHC 93 (Comm) (the 'Arcadia MasterCard judgment'). That claim was brought by these same Claimants (save for Marks & Spencer), represented by the same legal team, and relying on the same expert witness. It raised very similar issues to those which arise in these proceedings. It is apparent, both from legal findings made by Popplewell J, and from his conclusions on issues of fact based on very similar evidence, that the Claimants are bound to lose this claim.
"5. Although the Claimants dispute this assessment in their evidence in support of this application, their conduct speaks for itself. They notified Visa of their intention to accept the Part 36 Offers the day after the hand down of the Arcadia MasterCard judgment. The offers they are seeking permission to accept are a tiny fraction (less than 6%) of the sums they are claiming in these proceedings, including interest. The great majority of the costs of the trial have now been incurred. They could not conceivably be acting in this way if they thought they had a realistic prospect of success. There is no credible explanation for their decision to accept the offers other than that their own assessment is that the Arcadia MasterCard judgment has materially changed the prospects of their claims succeeding.
"6. If the Claimants are permitted to accept the offers, they will be saved their very substantial liability for Visa's costs (indeed, they seek payment of their own very large costs), in circumstances in which they have sat on their hands for months, until all the evidence has been heard, treating the Part 36 Offers as a one-way bet on which they could rely, in case the Arcadia MasterCard judgment and/or the trial itself went against them.
"7. Permitting them to accept the offers in these circumstances would defeat the object of Part 36 of encouraging reasonable settlement, and the consequential saving of costs and court time. It would give offerees an incentive not to negotiate where Part 36 offers have been made, and a trial is going badly for them, but instead to wait until the very last minute, racking up costs and expending court resources, in the hope that something will turn up, with the expectation that, if it does not, the Part 36 offer will provide a safety net.
"8. No significant court time or costs would be saved if the Claimants are permitted to accept these offers, since the evidence is complete and the written submissions are due to be filed on 13 February 2017 (the day on which this application is to be heard).
"9. Moreover, permitting the Claimants to accept the offers would be unjust to Visa. Visa gave the Claimants ample notice that it no longer considered the offers to be acceptable, and, in that knowledge, the Claimants chose to continue to incur (and to force Visa to incur) the costs of the trial until its virtual conclusion.
"10. The Court is invited in these circumstances to exercise its discretion to refuse the applications for permission to accept the Part 36 Offers."
Change of circumstances constituted by the events of the trial itself
Change of circumstances constituted by the decision of Mr Justice Popplewell
"To qualify as a matter putatively relevant under the 'legal outlook' head, each point identified must be a point of law; there must be a pre-existing legal position, ie by a decision of the court which clearly establishes the relevant position as opposed to the position being uncertain; the legal position must have changed in Visa's favour; and the change must have been unanticipated and reasonably unable to be anticipated."
"My hunch is that it may not make any difference at all, because the fact that Mr Justice Popplewell heard different evidence is not relevant to your Lordship, and the position, as it seems to me, is likely to be that Mr Justice Popplewell will make findings of fact on the evidence that he heard and then he will make findings of law which we will address in closing submissions, which won't be binding on your Lordship but will have the normal persuasive authority of another judge of the High Court."