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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Various Claimants v Mercedes-Benz Group AG & Ors [2024] EWHC 3186 (KB) (11 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/3186.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 3186 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
THE NOx EMISSIONS GROUP LITIGATION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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VARIOUS CLAIMANTS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) MERCEDES-BENZ GROUP AG (2) MERCEDES-BENZ AG (3) MERCEDES-BENZ UK LIMITED (FORMERLY MERCEDES-BENZ CARS UK LIMITED) (4) MERCEDES-BENZ FINANCIAL SERVICES UK LIMITED (5) MERCEDES-BENZ RETAIL GROUP UK LIMITED (6) 43 AUTHORISED DEALERSHIPS (as listed at Schedule 4 of the Group Litigation Order) |
Defendants |
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– and – |
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DEUTSCHE UMWELTHILFE and CLIENTEARTH |
Interested Parties |
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Malcolm Sheehan KC, James Purnell and Alastair Richardson (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for Mercedes-Benz AG and Others
Guelen & Klinger Rechtsanwälte on behalf of Deutsche Umwelthilfe
ClientEarth representing itself
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CONSTABLE:
Introduction
The Applicable Law
'9. The basic rule under CPR 31.22 is that a party to whom a document has been disclosed may use the document only for the purpose of the proceedings in which it is disclosed unless it comes within one of the exceptions in CPR 31.22(1) – agreement, specific court permission or being "read to or by the court, or referred to, at a hearing which has been held in public". This exception reflects the fundamental open justice principle.
10. Rule 31.22(2) states:
'(2) The court may make an order restricting or prohibiting the use of a document which has been disclosed, even where the document has been read to or by the court, or referred to, at a hearing which has been held in public.'
11. The Court of Appeal's decision in Lilly Icos Ltd v Pfizer Ltd (No. 2) [2002] WLR 2253 is the leading applicable authority on the application of r 31.22(2). Both parties agree that Lilly Icos stands for the following propositions:
1) The starting point is the principle of open justice, and very good reasons are required to depart from the normal rule of publicity;
2) When considering an application in respect of a particular document, the court should take into account the role that the document has played or will play in the trial, and thus its relevance to the process of public scrutiny of the trial process. The court should start from the assumption that all documents in the case are necessary and relevant for that purpose, and should not accede to general arguments that it would be possible or substantially possible to understand the trial and the judgment without access to a particular document, though in particular cases the centrality of the document to the trial is a factor to be placed in the balance;
3) The court must have in mind any "chilling" effect of an order upon the interests of third parties;
4) The court will require specific reasons why a party would be damaged by the publication of a document. Those reasons will in appropriate cases be weighed in light of the considerations in paragraph 11(2) above. Simple assertions of confidentiality and damage which will be done by publication are insufficient even if supported by both parties.'
'… it is not necessary, and indeed it is not relevant, for the interested spectator to have access to [the relevant page], however much it may fall under CPR 31.22(1)(a). That consideration enables the court to take a somewhat less demanding approach to the claim for confidentiality than would otherwise be appropriate.'
(1) a claim to confidentiality needs to be focused with precision by reference to the precise contents of documents; it can often be suitably protected by the use of redaction and/or gisting as tools by which as much of a document or its relevant contents is put into open;
(2) a party who resists disclosure of documents otherwise falling within its disclosure obligations on the basis that the documents contain trade secrets is under a duty to consider, in relation to each piece of information within those documents, whether and to what extent that information is truly confidential;
(3) the court will not readily accept that the entire contents of a given document or a whole class of documents are confidential such that no part of it can be inspected by the other party;
(4) the question of confidentiality must be carefully interrogated.
'In oral submissions the document to which the Defendants pointed was the document entitled "AES/BES*SW-Update*0025*00 Version 13.10.2021" (the "AES/BES document"). That must be taken to be the high water mark of the Annexes. It was a 2021/2022 document – and hence within the EU five year rule of thumb for confidentiality. I would be prepared to accept a real possibility that such a document might contain some confidential material. But again the entire document had been treated as confidential, which was wrong. Certainly too, not all of it was on any sensible reflection confidential. As Mr De La Mare KC put it, it "contains vast passages of things that are absolutely quotidian public information". Even orally what was pointed to was a very small portion of the document and again the confidentiality involved was not properly and specifically explained.'
'24. So, as with the De-designation Application, the Mercedes Defendants have adopted a broad-brush approach in seeking to prevent publication of entire categories of documents, and we conclude that the 31.22 Application fails for essentially the same reasons. The principle of open justice demands that documents read or referred to in a public hearing be available to the public unless there are good reasons otherwise. The Mercedes Defendants have failed to persuade us that, as regards the materials that are the subject of this application, there are such good reasons.
25. This is not to say that such an application will always be hopeless. A genuine justified concern about collateral use of specific material whose commercial sensitivity is properly made clear could be justified – particularly if the role of that material at trial were dubious. There may also be some force in restricting publication of truly sensitive details of extant systems which are not already in the public domain. However, any such application must be properly particularised and evidenced.'
'A non-party may, 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.'
'There may be very good reasons for denying access. The most obvious ones are … the protection of trade secrets and commercial confidentiality.'
The CPR 31.22(2) Application
The CPR 5.4C(2) Application