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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 >> Michael Wilson & Partners Ltd v Sinclair & Anor (No. 2) [2020] EWHC 1017 (QB) (28 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/1017.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1017 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MASTER ROWLEY (ASSESSOR)
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Michael Wilson & Partners Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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T I Sinclair |
Respondent (1) |
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SOKOL HOLDINGS INC |
Respondent (2) |
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No attendance by or on behalf of the 1st & 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates: 17 March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Chamberlain:
Introduction
(a) whether the SCJ erred in declining to make the setting aside of the default costs certificate conditional on payment of costs certified in previous assessments;
(b) if so, whether I should vary the SCJ's order so as to impose such a condition;
(c) if so, precisely what condition should be imposed.
Submissions for the Appellant
(a) NZD 34,907 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to judgments, orders and costs certificates of the New Zealand High Court, recognised by order of Master Thornett of 6 March 2018;
(b) USD 249,654.17 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to Bahamas Court of Appeal certificate of taxation, recognised by order of Master Eyre of 22 October 2014;
(c) USD 88,072 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to Bahamas Supreme Court certificate of taxation, recognised by order of Master Eyre of 22 October 2014;
(d) £91,112.79 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to default costs certificate 37 of 2018 issued by the Senior Courts Costs Office on 21 February 2018;
(e) £148,327.98 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to default costs certificate 18 of 2018 issued by the Senior Courts Costs Office on 21 February 2018;
(f) £4,857.33 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to the default costs certificate issued by the UK Supreme Court on 11 July 2018;
(g) £4,889.03 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to the default costs certificate issued by the UK Supreme Court on 11 July 2018;
(h) £77,000 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to the order of Chief Insolvency and Companies Court Judge Briggs of 4 December 2018;
(i) USD 159,278.25 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to a costs certificate issued by the Bahamas Court of Appeal, recognised by Master Eyre on 19 October 2014;
(j) All amounts payable by the Respondent to MWP plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to the order of Master Cook of 11 October 2019;
(k) £18,410.62, £83,410.62 and £22,010.75 plus all interest accrued and accruing pursuant to an assessment by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, recognised by order of Master Eyre of 6 August 2015 and the order of Master Cook of 11 October 2019.
Submissions for the Respondents
"50. MWP has produced documentation purportedly evidencing Mr Sinclair's refusal to pay judgment debts. Whilst conduct is a factor in considering proportionality, I should make clear my view that Mr Sinclair's attitude to debt is not a significant consideration when judging the proportionality of MWP's claimed costs of applications 2013/0074 to 2013/0079, if only because it has nothing to do with the level of costs incurred by MWP on those applications. Even if it were a significant factor, I could hardly overlook the fact that MWP has been criticised by the Court of Appeal in the strongest terms for exactly the same sort of conduct.
51. Having assessed MWP's costs against Mr Sinclair in the High Court, the Supreme Court and the JCPC I am in a position to know that Mr Wilson is the driving force behind MWP's costs claims and that costs recovery, for Mr Wilson, is not a means of achieving a reasonable and proportionate indemnity against costs expended. It is, rather, yet another weapon in a personal war.
53. Anyone who comes between Mr Wilson and his opponents becomes, in that context, another opponent. So much is evidenced by the confrontational tone and content of much of MWP's correspondence with courts, including the costs clerk to the JCPC, and Mr Wilson's occasionally openly furious response to adverse rulings. Everything is taken personally: hence, for example, MWP's frequent announcements of its intention to appeal, which seems to be seen by Mr Wilson as something between a threat and a promise of personal vindication.
54. In short proportionality, for MWP, is not and has never been a consideration. Because of that; because reductions to date have been strictly limited to specific points raised by Mr Sinclair; and because MWP's bills as assessed on that basis alone remain exceptionally large for what has been done, I am quite unable to accept MWP's submission that its costs have already been reduced so much that they cannot now be disproportionate in amount."
(a) At [16], Gross LJ noted that in 2015 Burton J had given Mr Emmott leave to enforce the arbitration award against MWP in the same manner as a judgment or order of the High Court.
(b) At [17], Gross LJ made reference to the judgment of Sir Jeremy Cooke (the judgment under appeal: [2017] EWHC 2498 (Comm)) in which he noted at [8] "the ability on the part of Mr Wilson in particular, to state that black is white" and observed that the "distortions of the truth as to what has and has not been decided elsewhere are quite extraordinary".
(c) At [24], Gross LJ cited a number of other observations about the conduct of MWP and Mr Wilson, including that the former had delayed enforcement of the arbitration award "by mounting appeals that are not simply hopeless, but ones he must have known to be hopeless" and had insisted on telling courts worldwide that the awards were under appeal when they were not. At [25], Gross LJ described these as "coruscating factual conclusions", which "comprise a devastating indictment of the conduct of MWP and Mr Wilson".
(d) At [62], Gross LJ said:
" [T]his was not a case of 'Can't pay'; this was a case of a most emphatic 'Won't pay'. It is unnecessary to delve into the detail of MWP's accounts, though there is more than sufficient material there to support the judge's conclusions in this regard at paras 20 and 31 of the judgment. Importantly, MWP has resisted winding up in the BVI on the ground that it is solvent. It cannot be permitted to both approbate and reprobate. In any event, it is amply clear from the stance taken by MWP before the judge and before this Court that it is determined not to pay the judgment, regardless of its ability to do so."
(e) At [70] Peter Jackson LJ said:
"Having listened to the history of the litigation between these two solicitors, I protest at the shameful waste of time and money caused by their private dispute, which has now continued for 13 years and left their reputations in tatters. We were told that Mr Emmott's global costs amount to £2.5m, and Mr Wilson's several times that. Courts in four countries have been (and in at least two cases are being, with no end in sight) plagued with their proceedings and counter-proceedings. It appears that Mr Wilson will stop at nothing to prevent Mr Emmott from receiving the award to which, for all his deceit, he is entitled. Against that background, the robust and principled approach taken by Sir Jeremy Cooke was entirely appropriate. Any court in this jurisdiction that has to consider this dispute in future would do well to remember that the overriding objective in civil proceedings includes a duty on the court to save expense, deal with the case expeditiously and fairly, and allot to it an appropriate share of the court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases; further, that the parties have a duty to help the court to achieve this. This pathological litigation has already consumed far too great a share of the court's resources and if it continues judges will doubtless be astute to allow the parties only an appropriate allotment of court time."
Discussion
Conclusion
Postscript
(a) The Appellant's note reveals a misunderstanding of the nature of the issue before me. The issue before me is whether the setting aside of the default costs certificate should have been made, or should now be made, conditional on the payment by Mr Sinclair/Sokol of judgment debts owed to MWP. It is MWP which seeks the imposition of that condition and, in support of it, invites me to consider fairness and the conduct of the parties.
(b) The point made at [8] above was simply that the imposition of the condition sought by MWP would require me to look to the wider history of these proceedings, including those between MWP and Mr Emmott. Nothing in any of the judgments cited to me suggests that this is a wrong approach to the issue now before me viz. the exercise of the court's discretion to impose conditions on the setting aside of a default costs certificate.
(c) What I said at [9] above flows from the passages I have quoted from the judgments of Gross and Peter Jackson LJJ in the Court of Appeal. Even if it were open to me to reach a different conclusion, embarking on the kind of analysis necessary to do so would as I made clear in [10] above involve a wholly disproportionate deployment of judicial resources. One of the reasons why the exercise would take so long is that, as Gross LJ observed in the passage quoted at [5(b)] above, Mr Wilson is an unreliable historian of this litigation, so it would be necessary to consider a very large number of reported and unreported judgments. There may be some kinds of proceedings in which such an exercise would be unavoidable. The present (an appeal against a decision to grant relief from sanctions in a costs assessment) is not one. As Peter Jackson LJ said, it is unfair to other litigants to spend such a disproportionate amount of judicial time on one dispute. I continue to regard his observations as pertinent to the question before me and I have applied them.