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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Laib v Aravindan & Ors [2003] EWHC 2521 (QB) (30 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2003/2521.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 2521 (QB) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Gene Chandler Laib |
Claimant/Appellant |
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- and - |
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Renuka Aravindan (1) (practicing as HKH PARTNERSHIP solicitors) Khurram Mian (2) |
1st Defendant/Respondent |
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Mr William Flenley (instructed by Cripps Harries Hall) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates : 27th October 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morland : Judgment.
"Any losses on currency exchange fluctuations would be met by the claimant."
"The facility was repayable in full not later than 31st December 1994"
"The relations between the mortgagee and the claimant were governed by Luxembourg law irrespective of the country in which a given transaction took place and irrespective of the court having jurisdiction in any dispute. The Court of Luxembourg City was the only competent court in respect of any litigation that may arise between the mortgagee and the claimant, whether arising out of the agreement or otherwise. Notwithstanding this, the mortgagee reserved the right to commence legal action in any other court of competent jurisdiction if it deemed that necessary."
"And Upon Hearing Counsel for the plaintiff and Counsel for the defendant ..
"That paragraph I of the said Originating Summons do stand over generally with liberty to restore (i.e. claim for payment of 399,524.72 DM.)"
"That the defendant do
(i) within 28 days after ordinary service of this Order upon his solicitors HKH Partnership of Broadway Chambers 1 Cranbrook Road Ilford Essex IG1 4DU and
(ii) after service of this Order upon him whichever is the later SUCH service to be effected by first-class post addressed to him at the property hereinafter mentioned"
"deliver to the plaintiff possession of the property comprised in the said mortgage known as The Garden Floor Flat 2a Lauderdale Road London W9."
"that the defendant be at liberty to apply to discharge or vary this Order within 14 days after such service upon him"
"We refer to the above matter and enclose copy Legal Aid Certificate which we have finally received from the Legal Aid Board. Quite clearly the delay in granting our client Legal Aid has been unconscionably. However we are happy that this has now been granted to our client and we would be grateful if you could let us know as to whether Counsel requires a conference or any further information from our client"
"Prior to 12 November 1996 I worked for Mr Kalim on a part-time basis and my salary in effect amounted to commission of 50% of the net profit costs of the conveyancing transactions which I progressed through to a successful completion. Mr Kalim died very unexpectedly of a heart attack on 12 November 1996. He died intestate. His daughter, as his personal representative, asked me to run the practice on behalf of Mr Kalim's estate until a decision could be made as to what would happen to the practice. I agreed to do so on the basis that the commission arrangement I had had with Mr Kalim would remain the same.
The period following Mr Kalim's death was very stressful. There were a lot of matters to attend to such as notifying The Law Society, Mr Kalim's insurers, the bank etc of Mr Kalim's death plus of course there was the responsibility of dealing with the clients of Mr Kalim. I cannot recall the precise number of files which myself and Mr Mian had to take over from Mr Kalim. I would estimate the figure to be somewhere between 300 and 400 files with the majority being litigation files. My legal experience lay only in conveyancing. I did not deal with litigation matters. For this reason, I agreed with Mr Mian that I would deal with the conveyancing files whilst he would take over Mr Kalim's litigation files. A standard proforma letter was prepared and sent out to all of Mr Kalim's clients confirming that I would be dealing with conveyancing matters and Mr Mian with litigation matters.
Other than being involved in the preparation of the letter which went to the claimant, I had no involvement with any of Mr Kalim's litigation files and I had no knowledge whatsoever of the claimant or his case at that time."
"I write to inform you that Mr Azhar Kalim passed away on the 12th November 1996. I have been appointed the Solicitor/Manager of the Practice, which will continue to trade from the above address.
I will be dealing with the conveyancing matters and Mr Khurram Mian will be dealing with litigation matters.
If you have any queries please contact myself or Mr Mian.
"P.S. Could you please telephone our offices upon receipt of this letter to make an appointment with Mr Mian"
"Prior to 12 November 1996 I was a trainee solicitor employed by Mr Kalim and I worked with Mr Kalim and with Mrs Aravindan. On 12 November 1996 Mr Kalim died, very suddenly and without any warning. After this, the task fell to Mrs Aravindan – assisted by me – to carry on the running of Mr Kalim's practice. As Mrs Aravindan had no experience of contentious matters, it was agreed that I would take over Mr Kalim's litigation caseload and she would deal with the conveyancing matters.
It became apparent that Mr Kalim had a large number of litigation files. There were roughly 300 – 400 litigation and conveyancing files in total and the litigation files were in the majority. It was necessary for me to prioritise the files and decide what work was urgent and what could wait. Therefore I firstly looked at Mr Kalim's diary to see whether any particular files were marked urgent or whether there were any hearings or deadlines to be complied with. There were no entries for the claimant's file. Of course correspondence would come in on a number of Mr Kalim's files and if that indicated that something needed to be done urgently it was dealt with. Also clients would telephone and ask for matters to be dealt with and that was another way of working out was urgent and what was not."
"I did not look at the claimant's file until 27th November 1996. The only contact between myself and the claimant in the period form 12 November 1996 to 27th November 1996 was the sending on the 19th November 1996, of a letter to the claimant by Mrs Aravindan to notify him that Mr Kalim had died…"
"…The attendance note which I made when I looked at the claimant's file on 27th November 1996 indicates that, although I spent 1½ hours on the file on that day, I did not consider there was any great urgency in terms of dealing with the claimant's file. It is possible that the reason I looked at the claimant's file on that date is that it was the date on which we received James Chapman & Co's letter of 26th November 1996 acknowledging receipt of notification of Legal Aid.
"Attendance Note. 1 hour 30 mins.
Perusal of file. I had taken over the conduct of this file due to the death of Mr Kalim. Went through file briefly. Legal Aid has only just been granted. Need to arrange a conference with client and Counsel in order to progress matters further. Would need to go through the file properly and sort out the papers, it appeared that there were some papers missing, therefore there must be another file."
"I am increasingly concerned about possible time limitation problems which we all thought could be looming in due course. Although I remain of the view that Mr Chandler's claims should be made by way of defence and counterclaim to the summons issued by Unibank (which includes payment of sums due as part of the relief sought), it is not apparent that it may be wise to issue a protective writ as a fall back should such an application to put in the defence and counterclaim be refused."
"5 March 1997
2A Lauderdale Road London W9.
We write with further reference to the above matter. The sale of the above property by Unibank SA as mortgagee was completed on 26th November 1996. The sale price was £203,505.00. We enclose a completion account, which shows that after deduction of the costs and expenses of the sale and discharging the arrears of service charge on your client's account, the net amount received by Unibank SA was £193,375.62.
A Valuation fee of £125.00 was discharged by Unibank SA, reducing the net balance to £193.250.62.
The amount required to repay the outstanding indebtedness was £177,480.80 leaving a surplus of £15,769.82.
We are therefore enclosing the Bank's cheque for this amount in favour of Mr Laib and shall be obliged if you will acknowledge receipt."
"In earlier proceedings (the mortgagee) had sued (the claimant) and on the 10th May 1996 Master Dyson made an order after having had full arguments from Counsel for both sides. An order for possession was made. Security was paid over to (the claimant) and as far as (the mortgagee) is concerned their action against security is finished.
By his order Master Moncaster dismissed any remaining action."
"On 26th November of 1996 the property was sold and the debt which was owed to the bank by this claimant was repaid. In those circumstances, of course, there was no reason whatsoever why the application in relation to the money judgment should ever have been restored. The defendants in this case say, therefore, that in effect the case falls within the provisions of CSI International –v- Archway Personnel. The principle in that case, it seems to me, can be stated very shortly in the one sentence of Lord Justice Roskill at page 1075 in which he said this: "The action had for all practical purposes come to an end when satisfaction of the judgment had been obtained."
In my judgment that is precisely the situation which pertains here. The action was for all practical purposes over once the bank had obtained its money, which it did, by selling the property and taking the appropriate amount from the proceeds to satisfy its debt. It follows that, in my judgment, there is no real prospect certainly of successfully arguing in these proceedings that there could be any negligence attaching to the period after 26th November, because no counterclaim would then have been permissible.
So what I have to decide is whether there is a real prospect of the claimant in this case persuading the court that the defendants were negligent in failing to issue their counterclaim between 12th November, when the solicitor died, and the 26th November when the right to make a counterclaim came to an end.
In my judgment it only needs to be stated in that way to show that there is no real prospect whatsoever of successfully alleging negligence over that very short period of time in relation to the activities, or lack of activities, of these two defendants who – it must be said – had no warning whatsoever that the solicitor was likely to die, and the fact that they did not seize upon this far –from- plain point in relation to one of several hundred files, in my judgment, could not conceivably render them open to a successful allegation of professional negligence."
"The plaintiff company, incorporated in Thailand, agreed with the defendants, an English limited company, to recruit staff for work in the Middle East. The agreement was made in Thailand. A dispute arose between the parties, in settlement of which the defendants agreed to pay to the plaintiffs £44,816 by three post-dated cheques. The first cheque for £15,000 payable on July 6, 1978, was dishonoured on presentation. The plaintiffs issued a writ in respect of the dishonoured cheque, to which there was no defence. The plaintiffs applied for summary judgment under R.S.C. Ord 14. The defendants filed an affidavit seeking a stay of execution of the judgment the plaintiffs were expected to obtain, and adverted to a prospective counterclaim. The matter came before Master Lubbock on November 28, 1978. He gave judgment with interest for the plaintiffs and refused a stay of execution. The defendants made no request for directions with respect to the counterclaim. On April 10, 1979, the defendants solicitors sent to the plaintiffs' solicitors a bankers' draft for the full judgment debt with interest and costs. On May 1, the defendants' solicitors sent a document entitled "Defence and Counterclaim" to the plaintiffs' solicitors who refused to accept service of it. The defendants signed judgment in default on the counterclaim. Master Lubbock set aside that judgment on the ground of irregularity. The defendants appealed to Sir Douglas Frank Q.C., sitting as a deputy High Court Judge, who allowed the appeal and gave the defendants leave to counterclaim
On the plaintiffs' appeal
Held, allowing the appeal, that where a counterclaim had been raised but had not been formally pleaded or made the subject of a summons for directions, once judgment for a party had been obtained and fully satisfied thereafter there was no action in existence in which the counterclaim could be made, and that, accordingly, the defendants were unable to serve a counterclaim on the plaintiffs.
Decision of Sir Douglas Frank Q.C. sitting as a deputy High Court Judge in the Queen's Bench Division reversed.
Roskill L.J. said at page 1074:-"
"Walton J. asked Mr Jacob what his submission was regarding any possible time limit upon "making" a counterclaim. Mr Jacob grasped the nettle. He said there was no relevant time limit because there was a lacuna in the rules in the case where a judgment had not been stayed. He claimed that a defendant was at liberty at any time thereafter to deliver a counterclaim. Now in a case such as the present that would have most curious results. A counterclaim may be barred by the Limitation Act 1939 but as the notes to Ord. 15, r.2 in The Supreme Court Practice (1979), at p. 166 point out, section 28 of that Act provides that:-
"a claim by way of set-off or counterclaim is deemed to be a separate action and to have been commenced on the same date as the action in which it is pleaded."
If Mr. Jacob's argument is taken to its logical conclusion, then notwithstanding that the plaintiffs had obtained full satisfaction of the judgment, the defendant can, years later, as it were, out of the blue, serve a counterclaim. I do not think that is right. It may be that certain amendments are required and could, with advantage, be made to the rules in order to make clear what the position is. But I rest my decision on this simple point: where a counterclaim, even if it has previously been raised, has not been the subject of a summons for directions or when required of a formal pleading before the time when the plaintiff had received full satisfaction of the judgment which he has obtained against the defendants, I do not think there is still extant any action by the plaintiffs in which the defendants could properly counterclaim against them. The action had, for all practical purposes, come to an end when satisfaction of the judgment had been obtained."
Eveleigh L.J. said at page 1076:-
"No directions have been given relating to a counterclaim before the judgment was satisfied and consequently in my opinion there was no cause or matter extant that could cover any proceedings in relation to a counterclaim that was not yet properly pleaded."
Walton J. agreed with both judgments
"The facts.
On 5 October 1989 Greyhound made an agreement in writing with Mr Rahman and his wife to advance the sum of £5,000 to be repaid over five years by 60 monthly instalments of £156.30 capital and interest. The rate of interest on the outstanding balance was 32.1%. The loan was secured by a legal charge on the property on the same day to secure all moneys owing to Greyhound under the loan agreement. On 28 April 1995 Greyhound assigned the legal charge to the respondent, Sterling Credit Ltd ("Sterling"), which has been substituted as a party to the proceedings.
The Rahmans fell into arrears with the monthly payments. Default notices were served. A letter before action was sent. A summons for possession was issued on 2 October 1990 and served. There was no claim for a money judgment. On 12 November 1990 an order was made for delivery up of possession of the property by 10 December 1990. There was no adjudication by the court on the issue of the amount of the moneys owing to Greyhound. The Rahmans did not attend the hearing.
The Rahmans are still in possession of the property. Appointments to enforce warrants for possession have been met by last minute payments. On 1 March 1993 Mr Rahman applied to suspend a warrant for possession. His application was dismissed. When an attempt was made to enforce the warrant on 2 March Mr Rahman paid the bailiff £750, the warrant was withdrawn and enforcement was not proceeded with. Monthly instalments continue to be paid and accepted. A total of about £14,000 has been paid, but it is estimated that £13,000 is still owing to Sterling.
The Proceedings.
On 24 April 1998 Mr Rahman applied to the county court to set aside the possession order and the warrant for possession and for leave to file a defence and counterclaim alleging for the first time that the 1989 loan was an extortionate credit bargain and seeking an order under section 139 of the 1974 Act."
"Mr Neville attempted to distinguish the CSI case as a decision on the special provisions on summary judgment in RSC Ord 14, r 3(2) and contended that, in any event, on the facts of this case the judgment had been satisfied
I do not accept those submissions. The real question is whether the action is at an end, so that there are no longer any proceedings by the claimant to which the defendant can respond with a counterclaim. This action is not at an end. Mr Rahman and his wife are still living in the property. Sterling continues to accept monthly instalments. Sterling has not yet obtained possession of the property. It cannot do so without a further application to the court for a warrant of execution, the existing one having expired at the end of 12 months and more than six years has elapsed since the possession order was made"….
"It is true that the counterclaim to reopen the transaction could have been raised earlier in this action, but, as already explained, the action is still extant. This is not one of those cases where a party seeks to raise in a new action an issue, which could and should have been properly raise for decision in an earlier action, which has already been tried.
I would therefore allow the appeal and grant permission for the service of a counterclaim applying for the reopening of the credit bargain of 1989."