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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 >> FKJ v RVT & Ors [2022] EWHC 411 (QB) (25 February 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/411.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 411 (QB), [2022] Costs LR 293 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FKJ |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and |
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(1) RVT (2) QGN (3) CBN |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Ms Adrienne Page QC and Mr David Hirst (instructed by Taylor Hampton Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 31st January 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 12.30pm 25th February 2022.
Mrs Justice Collins Rice:
Introduction
which confirms/declares that: in accordance with CPR Part 36.16(2), the Defendants may refer to a Part 36 offer made by the Claimant on 15 October 2020 for the interlocutory hearing purposes of: (i) case management in this action; (ii) costs budgeting in this action; and (iii) the Defendants' pending strike-out/summary judgment application .
Legal context: Civil Procedure Rules Part 36
(1) A Part 36 offer will be treated as 'without prejudice except as to costs'.
(2) The fact that a Part 36 offer has been made and the terms of such offer must not be communicated to the trial judge until the case has been decided.
Grounds of Appeal
1. The Master wrongly failed to apply the decision of His Honour Judge Freedman (sitting as a High Court Judge) in Handyside v Lowery (unreported, 2 April 2015) at [14]. The decision of the High Court Judge was binding upon the Master and should have been treated as such.
2. The Master wrongly equated the principles applying to 'without prejudice' privilege with those applying to Part 36 offers.
3. The Master ought to have concluded that parties are permitted to refer to Part 36 offers where questions of proportionality arise. This is the basis for permitting parties to refer to Part 36 offers in the context of interim payments, for example. The Master wrongly concluded that Part 36 offers may not be taken into account at an interim stage because they are or may be admissions against the offeror's interest. In the case of interim payments, it is on this very basis that Part 36 offers are relied upon (because the offeree seeks to demonstrate that the offeror acknowledges that his/her claim has at least a certain value, which is greater than his/her open position).
4. The Master was wrong to conclude that the 'costs' in 'without prejudice save as to costs' refers exclusively to final costs orders (that is, costs orders made after the relevant issue has been decided). Alternatively, the Master was wrong to decline to extend the list of common law exceptions to the 'without prejudice save as to costs' rule to costs management.
Analysis
(a) The question of principle
Interim Hearings As stated in r.36.16(2), the general rule restricts disclosure to the 'trial judge' and it has long since been understood that it does not prevent disclosure to a judge dealing with interim matters in the course of which it may be both necessary and desirable for the judge to know of offers made (Williams v Boag [1941] 1 KB 1, CA). Nowadays, of course, parties and their solicitors should be aware of the need for different approaches to references to offers depending on whether the judge conducting the CMC [case management conference] or other interim hearing is, or could be, the trial judge. This is of particular importance where the designated civil judge is conducting the pre-trial proceedings or in specialist courts where case management is undertaken by judges rather than masters or district judges.
Since the rule refers specifically to the trial judge there is within the rules no prohibition, in appropriate circumstances, against drawing the attention of a judge, master or district judge exercising pre-trial case management functions to the existence (and indeed the terms) of a Part 36 offer. (paragraph 14-07)
I do not agree that, if a man has paid money into Court with an admission of liability, and subsequently has found that he has made a mistake and gets leave to amend his defence, it is then impossible for him to come to the Court in some way or other and say: 'Having regard to the new defence that I have been allowed to put up denying liability, I ought to have liberty to withdraw that notice of admission of liability and safeguard my right ultimately to have that money repaid to me'.
The court cannot adopt a strained construction of the CPR in reliance on the overriding objective: see per Peter Gibson LJ in Vinos v Marks & Spencer [2001] 3 All ER 784, 791. The terms of CPR 36.19 admit of only one construction, namely the payment in can only be used on arguments as to costs.
The reference to CPR 36.19 is to an earlier version of the Part 36 Rules which provided that (1) a Part 36 offer will be treated as 'without prejudice except as to costs' and (2) the fact that a Part 36 payment has been made shall not be communicated to the trial judge until all questions of liability and the amount of money to be awarded have been decided'; the equivalent modern provision to the second of these is CPR 25.9: The fact that a defendant has made an interim payment, whether voluntarily or by court order, shall not be disclosed to the trial judge until all questions of liability and the amount of money to be awarded have been decided unless the defendant agrees. This is not, however, a case about a Part 36 payment.
(b) Senior Master Fontaine's decision on the facts
it is well known to judges that in media claims such as misuse of private information claims, the damages are often the least of the concerns, or only a part of the concerns, of the claimant. Vindication is usually an important consideration, and so can be the obtaining of an injunction so that the mischief caused will not continue.
Decision