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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Stagecoach East Midlands Trains Ltd & Ors v Secretary of State for the Department of Transport (Re 2019 Rail Franchising Litigation) [2019] EWHC 2922 (TCC) (30 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2019/2922.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2922 (TCC) |
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HT-2019-000173 A v B, HT-2019-000187 A v B |
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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2019 Rail Franchising Litigation Stagecoach East Midlands Trains Limited and others |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Department of Transport |
Defendant |
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Mr Tim Ward Qc (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Stagecoach Claimants
Mr Jason Coppel Qc and Mr Patrick Halliday (instructed by Ashurst LLP) for the WCTP Claimants
Mr Rhodri Thompson Qc, Ms Anneli Howard and Ms Niamh Cleary (instructed by Eversheds Sutherland (International) LLP and others) for the Defendant
Ms Valentina Sloane Qc (instructed by Burges Salmon LLP) for the FTWC Interested Party
Hearing dates: 30th October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stuart-Smith Wednesday, 30 October 2019
(14:09 pm)
Ruling by MR JUSTICE STUART-SMITH
MR JUSTICE STUART-SMITH:
Introduction
Principles
"In essence, on an application of this sort, the court is faced with a balancing exercise between, on the one hand, the obvious desirability of retaining a fixed trial date which promotes certainty and avoiding any adjournment which can only add to the costs of proceedings and, on the other, the risk of irredeemable prejudice to one party if the case goes ahead in circumstances where that party has not had proper or reasonable time to prepare its case."
The Present State of the Rail Franchising Litigation
The Defendant's Application
"The defendant's legal team has been working excessive hours for months on end. The same applies to the members of the Department who provide instruction in this litigation."
a. Witness statements. Mr Gilliam says that the defendant anticipates calling 15 to 20 witnesses. This number is the assessment if all liability matters fall to be decided. The number for pensions issues is said to be between two and seven. The defendant's evidence makes clear that a Mr Baghurst will be the main witness on pensions issues, though he is unlikely to be the sole witness and will need assistance from others. Ms Oudahar says that proofing Mr Baghurst is underway and has been for some considerable time. The defendant's written submission is that preparing witness statements will require the review of the parties' combined disclosure of 70,000 documents, though it is clear on the defendant's evidence as clarified by Mr Gilliam that this is a major exaggeration, for two reasons. First, the 70,000 itself is exaggerated; second, it is absurd to think that a witness or witnesses either could or should review all disclosed documents. What is required from a witness is their admissible factual evidence in relation to any genuinely material documents about which they can give proper admissible factual evidence. Witness statements are due to be exchanged on 15 November 2019;
b. Expert evidence. It appears from the defendant's submissions that no expert has yet been appointed to act on his behalf. This is a surprising state of affairs, given that the pensions issues have been in play for a considerable time and permission for expert evidence was given on 1 July with a direction for service by 11 December 2019;
c. Trial preparation. The defendant points out that the trial date is only six weeks after reply statements and four weeks after the exchange of expert evidence. The defendant submits that trial bundles would need to be with counsel by the end of November, which is not achievable as things stand. The gist of the submission is that there is insufficient time to prepare properly for trial, not least because of the interpolation of Christmas and New Year holidays.
d. ADR. The defendant submits that extending the time to trial will give greater opportunity for exploring ADR.
a. First, they assert that the January trial period can and should be used for pensions-related liability issues. These issues are submitted to be within a relatively narrow compass, readily isolated for a coherent trial of issues and within the power of the parties to prepare adequately for a fair trial;
b. Second, they accept that other liability issues will have to go off, not least because three weeks is insufficient time for all liability issues to be tried. WCTP makes a virtue of this by pointing out that the other liability issues are not common to all parties and would require some wasteful attendance if heard all at the same time. On behalf of First Trenitalia, Ms Sloane points out that even if WCTP succeeds on pensions, they may lose on one or more of the other grounds for WCTP's disqualification so that a split trial as contemplated would not be determinative. Mr Coppel does not agree, but the position is at least arguable. However, if the claimants lose their pensions challenge, the subsidiary issues fall away as their disqualification was justified;
c. Third, the claimants submit that there has been no change in circumstances that justifies a further relaxation in the timetable laid down by the court in June. Specifically, they submit that the scope of disclosure was foreseeable in June and has not changed and that in any event disclosure turning out to be more burdensome than expected is not a good reason for adjourning a trial, relying on paragraph 14 of Elliott. Furthermore, disclosure is now at least substantially complete and was in any event much narrower than contemplated in June because of the major concession in September reducing the width of the defendant's disclosure obligations. Both these points, in my judgment, are well made, though they are far from decisive on their own;
d. Fourth, the claimants are critical of the defendant's management of the litigation, which they say has imposed self-inflicted burdens. In this regard, they cite the defendant's inadequate response to earlier requests for disclosure which necessitated contested applications, which the defendant substantially lost; the bringing and subsequent abandonment of applications for specific disclosure from the claimants; diversion of resources into the unsuccessful strike-out application; tardy acceptance of the need for CROs and the CCRO, and a failure to resource the management of the litigation effectively and efficiently, despite, or perhaps even because of, gross overwork by committed individuals and the availability of resources from three leading firms of solicitors. The difficulty with this submission is that even if the criticisms are well-founded, about which I make no finding, quantifying their effect, either singly or cumulatively, is impossible;
e. Fifth, the claimants submit that it would be unsatisfactory for the defendant, having secured a major concession in the scope of its disclosure obligation on the basis that it was necessary to protect the trial date, now to avoid the trial date despite having been granted that major concession. The court is reminded of the defendant's submission in September that:
"The emerging picture appears to be that there is in reality a choice to be made as to the future conduct of this case. If the January trial date is to be retained then it will be necessary for a more restrictive approach to disclosure to be adopted, failing which it will be impossible for the volume of evidence that is being generated to be absorbed and addressed over the few months that now remain to trial."
f. Sixth, the claimants submit that the difficulties between here and trial are exaggerated by the defendant, both as to the number of documents in play, which is established, and as to the number of witnesses and experts who would be required even if all issues were in play, let alone if the January trial slot were to be limited to pensions-related issues;
g. Seventh, the claimants reject the suggestion that the litigation is now purely about money claims. Stagecoach seek a declaration that the award of the franchise to Abellio was unlawful and that, accordingly, the contract award to Abellio is void. WCTP submits that its primary objective in this litigation is still to secure a fair chance to compete for the West Coast franchise, and seeks the quashing of its disqualification and of the FTWC franchise agreement. As I made clear during the hearing, I am not in a position to make and make no observation or finding about the strength or otherwise of this aspect of their claim. For present purposes, it is only material that I cannot ignore it;
h. Eighth, Stagecoach takes the separate point that its disqualification has caused it reputational damage which can only be fully remedied by a finding that the disqualification was unlawful;
i. Ninth, the claimants assert the almost eternal truth about adjournments, namely that they lead to an increase in expenditure of costs which are seldom, if ever, recoverable in adequate measure by adversely affected parties;
j. Tenth, the claimants reject the suggestion that an extended period would enable ADR and in any event do not accept that giving the parties an opportunity to settle would be a good reason for adjourning a trial date, relying on paragraph 28 of Elliott;
k. Eleventh, the claimants submit that there's still a public interest in expedition, not simply because there is always such an interest in procurement claims, but because the size and significance of these franchises means that a decision adverse to the defendant may have implications, both strategic and political, for the future organisation of the railways in general and these franchises in particular;
l. Twelfth, the claimants point to the evidence of Ms Oudahar, which includes something of a pre-emptive strike against the granting of injunctive or quashing relief. Her evidence makes it clear that the defendant would wish to argue that any delay militates progressively and cumulatively against the making of such orders because of the major disruptive effect of having to reverse, rewind or review the operation of franchises that have been awarded. During the hearing, Mr Thompson said that the defendant would be prepared to disavow reliance on any increased disruption attributable to the delay caused by an adjournment. On reflection, that is not a full or satisfactory solution because the court could not ignore the realities of the circumstances and potential disruption when it came to consider whether to impose a quashing order or not. That is so whether or not the defendant disavows reliance on additional disruption attributable to delaying the trial process;
m. Thirteenth, and finally, the claimants point to the difficulties that were experienced in identifying the January trial date because of the many other commitments of busy lawyers. They rightly remind the court that it was necessary, though undesirable for the other case in question and the interests of the administration of justice as a whole, to postpone another trial in order to clear the decks for this litigation to take the January period.
Discussion
a. First, he states that the pensions issues, which are accepted as being common to the parties, raise far-reaching issues as to the history and context of the issues as they have developed across the railway industry over a period of years, and the interaction of the Department's policy objectives with external constraints. I accept that the issues go wider than what has been described as the "red card" moment of the decision to disqualify the claimants, but I do not accept that the evidence about the formulation of policy so far as relevant renders the period for witness statements unfeasible, particularly as it is acknowledged that Mr Baghurst, who is the lead witness on pensions issues, is knowledgeable, and that the proofing process is already underway. I do not exclude the possibility that difficulties might arise in future in relation to evidence from other departments, but that is not a present reality and it would be wrong to describe it as giving rise to a real present risk of an unfair trial when it may never arise. As I have already made clear, I reject outright suggestion that proofing Mr Baghurst or any other witness requires review of all disclosed documents. No one has yet made a submission to the effect that the material documents will not be well-known and within a much more limited compass.
b. Second, Mr Gilliam submits that evidence will be required about the background to develop the PSRM and the advice it relied upon in doing so and that the defendant will need to give evidence in relation to the advice provided by GAD and PwC and the reliance placed upon it. In my judgment, the evidence before the Court does not begin to demonstrate that appropriate evidence of this type cannot be marshalled within the time limited by the current orders.