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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Law v St Margarets Insurances Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 30 (18 January 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/30.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 30 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE TAMESIDE COUNTY COURT
The Strand London WC2A Thursday 18 January 2000 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
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MICHAEL G S LAW | Claimant/Respondent | |
and: | ||
ST MARGARETS INSURANCES LIMITED | Defendant/Appellant |
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The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday 18 January 2001
"We act for the Underwriters of HASTY 1 and the Claim Form which you have issued in the Tameside County Court in respect of alleged engine damage has been forward to us to respondent to.
We notice, however, that the named Defendants in the claim form are St Margarets Insurances Limited, who are merely the Insurance Brokers who placed this business with our Clients and who act in the capacity of administrators of the insurance.
St Margarets Insurances Limited cannot therefore have any liability for your claim, which we note from the Particulars of Claim you acknowledge is against the Lloyd's Underwriters who actually subscribed to the policy.
The Defendant named in the Claim Form ought therefore to be amended, and their correct designation should be "Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's subscribing to policy number 1WS-SA-65663".
"Mr Burns [who at that stage was counsel for the appellants] disagrees with the approach of District Judge Osbourne [sic] on that date [2 June]. In effect Mr Burns says that District Judge Osbourne did not seek to exercise a discretion which he clearly has under part 13; that by dismissing the appeal in the way that he did, he did not come to grips with the case and did not apply his mind to the merits of the case as he should under part 13. In an attractive argument Mr Burns states that, furthermore, District Judge Osbourne failed to take on board part 3.10 of the Civil Procedure Rules in relation to what was a procedural defect.
The view taken by District Judge Osborne, in my judgment, was to this effect. In relation to the progress or lack of it as far as this case is concerned, if I have regard (and Mr Burns asks me to and I do in a different context) to the overriding objective in part 1, and to part 1.1(2) which provides:
'Dealing with the case justly includes so far as is practicable ensuring the parties are on an equal footing, saving expense, dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate to the amount of money involved, to the importance of the case, to the complexity of the issues and to the financial position of each party, ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly and allotting [to it; the words "it" and "to" have been transposed] an appropriate share of the court's resources while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases . . .'
Mr Law, if he was a lawyer would say to me: 'Come on, enough is enough in relation to this case. Are you going to put the clock back to the beginning in relation to a claim for £5,000 and continue the legal process, taking up the time of the court when none of this should be necessary?' My answer in this ex tempore judgment is: No, I am not going to put the clock back.
I accept that in relation to the appeal procedure as it now is, I do not agree with the submission that District Judge Osbourne was wrong. Therefore, this appeal fails."
"This is a second-tier appeal, to which CPR 52.13 applies. However, the appeal does seem to me to raise an important point of principle or practice, in that the Judge appears to have wrongly interpreted the overriding objective. The judge appears to have treated the overriding objective as supporting a result which would appear to be wholly unsustainable, namely that a judgment entered in default against the wrong defendant should not be set aside, in circumstances where the only defect in the original application to the District Judge to set aside the judgment was a formal one, capable of being remedied immediately, and where on a second application to the same District Judge (made in correct form) the District Judge declined to consider the merits of the application (namely that the judgment was against the wrong defendant) but dismissed the application on the ground that the right procedural course for the applicant was to appeal his earlier decision."