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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Nelson & Anor v Clearsprings (Management) Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 1252 (22 September 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1252.html Cite as: [2007] 1 WLR 962, [2007] 2 All ER 407, [2006] EWCA Civ 1252, [2007] WLR 962 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE LEEDS COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Bush
District Judge Giles
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BROOKE
and
LORD JUSTICE WALLER
____________________
(1) DAVID NELSON (2) SHIRENE VERONICA HANLEY |
First Claimant/ Appellant Second Claimant |
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- and - |
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CLEARSPRINGS (MANAGEMENT) LIMITED |
Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Robert Smith (instructed by Messrs Restons) for the respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Anthony Clarke MR:
This is the judgment of the court.
Introduction and background
"1. Immediate possession of the property together with its 5 sets of keys.
2. Arrears of rent due amounting at
the date hereof to £6,083.88
3. Reparations amounting to £2,028.56
4. Mesne profits @ £520 a month from
the date hereof to 2 April 2005
amounting to £5,521.97
5. Further or other relief as to the Court
seems just
6. Costs"
The total of the money claim was £13,634.41. Both the claim form and the particulars of claim included a statement of truth. The name and address of the defendant, the respondent in this appeal, were stated on the claim form to be "ClearSprings (Management) Ltd, 28 Brook Road, Brook Road Business Park, Rayleigh SS6 7XJ, Essex". (We shall refer to that entity throughout as 'the respondent'.) On the front of the claim form, which is entitled "Claim Form for Possession of Property", it is stated that the claimant (a term that in this context means both claimants) is claiming possession of the property.
The judgment and subsequent applications
"(5) I also draw the Court's attention to CPR 13.2 and respectfully suggest that in this case Judgment should be set aside as of right as the Judgment has been entered irregularly as the Claim Form and Particulars of Claim were not served, having been endorsed by the Claimants with a wrong address for service."
The application first came before District Judge Giles on 8 September 2004. The application was opened (consistently with Mr Reston's statement) as an application under CPR Part 13. However the claimants took the point that the application could not be made under Part 13 because the judgment was not a judgment in default. The respondent then submitted that the application was made under CPR 39.3(5). It also submitted that it was entitled to have the judgment set aside as of right. The application was adjourned to enable the claimants to prepare submissions in relation to the respondent's new case.
"If, in breach of the CPR, a claimant fails to serve a defendant and the defendant is unaware of the proceedings against him, in my judgment, justification for the exercise of the court's jurisdiction must be found. It does not appear to me that rule 39.3 should be construed as investing the court with jurisdiction where the defendant has not been served and has no knowledge of the proceedings. In my judgment, guidance may still therefore be obtained from White v Weston."
The appeal
Before the CPR
"Whether it is entirely right to say that there is no discretion in the matter or whether, as it seems to me, the Court of Appeal in White v Weston said that there may be a discretion but it can only be exercised one way, is I think immaterial. If it is an exercise of discretion, where there has been no service at all, the discretion can only be exercised one way as appears to have been the view of the court in Gold Ocean Assurance Ltd v Martin [1990] 2 Lloyd's Rep 215."
The position under the CPR
"Where the claimant serves the claim form and particulars of claim, he must produce at the hearing a certificate of service of those documents ….."
In this case the claimants did not purport to serve the claim form or the particulars of claim because they were served by the court. By rule 6.14(1), where a claim form is served by the court, the court must send the claimants a notice which will include the date on which the claim form is deemed to be served under rule 6.7. Although the court's computerised record states that "deemed service" was on 22 May 2004, we are not sure whether such a notice was sent by the court to the claimants in this case. We have only seen a notice of issue.
"39.3 (1) The court may proceed with a trial in the absence of a party but –
…
(c) if a defendant does not attend, it may strike out his defence or counterclaim (or both).
(2) Where the court strikes out proceedings, or any part of them, under this rule, it may subsequently restore the proceedings, or that part.
(3) Where a party does not attend and the court gives judgment or makes an order against him, the party who failed to attend may apply for the judgment or order to be set aside.
(4) An application under paragraph (2) or paragraph (3) must be supported by evidence.
(5) Where an application is made under paragraph (2) or (3) by a party who failed to attend the trial, the court may grant the application only if the applicant –
(a) acted promptly when he found out that the court had exercised its power to strike out or to enter judgment or make an order against him;
(b) had a good reason for not attending the trial; and
(c) has a reasonable prospect of success at the trial."
"102. In our judgment, the position is clear. There are two conditions precedent for the operation of the provisions of rule 6.5(6), namely that (a) no solicitor is acting for the party to be served, and (b) the party has not given an address for service. If those conditions are satisfied, then the rule states that the document to be sent must be sent or transmitted to, or left at, the place shown in the table. In the case of an individual, that means at his or her usual or last known residence. The rule is plain and unqualified. We see no basis for holding that, if the two conditions are satisfied, and the document is sent to that address, that does not amount to good service. The rule does not say that it is not good service if the defendant does not in fact receive the document. If that had been intended to be the position, the rule would have said so in terms. Nor can we see any basis for holding that, if the claimant knows or believes that the defendant is no longer living at his or her last known residence, service may not be effected by sending the claim form, or leaving it at, that address. That would be to fly in the face of the clear words of the rule. The rule is intended to provide a clear and straightforward mechanism for effecting service where the two conditions precedent to which we have referred are satisfied."
31. …. The position is most clearly stated in a passage in the dissenting judgment of Orr LJ in Thomas Bishop Ltd v Helmville Ltd [1972] 1 QB 464, 478-9 which was cited and expressly approved in [A/S Cathrineholm v Norequipment Trading Ltd [1972] 2 QB 314] (where this court had to choose between earlier conflicting authorities):
"the point of time to be looked at in deciding whether the judgment was regularly obtained is the time when the judgment was given or signed, and if at that time there is nothing known to the court (or to the plaintiff whose duty it would be to communicate it to the court) which indicates that the relevant process has not been delivered in the ordinary course of post, it is to be deemed to have been so delivered for the purposes of that judgment, though it will be open to the defendant to apply to have that judgment set aside on the court's discretion on the ground, inter alia, that he was not served in time."
"Thus the new code:
….
vi) made it clear that the difference between a default judgment wrongly entered (which must be set aside – see CPR 13.2) and any other default judgment (which may only be set aside if one of the conditions set out in CPR 13.3(1) are satisfied and the application was made promptly) depends on whether the procedural steps required by CPR 12.3 were or were not followed (so far as relevant in the particular circumstances) or whether the whole of the claim had been satisfied before the judgment was entered;
vii) made a special provision in CPR 13.5(2) requiring a claimant to file a request for his own judgment to be set aside, or to apply to the court for directions, if after entering judgment he subsequently has good reason to believe that the particulars of claim did not reach the defendant before he entered judgment."
CPR 13.5 has since been revoked. The provisions of Part 13 are different from those of CPR 39.3.
"34. In the present case on the findings of the district judge the judgment was regularly entered, because it was posted to the defendant at his usual residence and the district judge made no finding that the claim form was returned undelivered. The situation might have been different if she had found that the claimant deliberately suppressed the claim form when it arrived by post in his house. It follows that on the ordinary interpretation of the relevant provisions of the Civil Procedure Rules, supported by the judgment of this court in Smith v Hughes (see paras 23-24 above), this judgment could only be set aside as a matter of discretion pursuant to CPR 13.3, and it would not be possible to fault the way in which Judge Yelton exercised his discretion. The suggested defence had no merit at all. For completeness I would add that Mr Adam appears to have paid no rent at all since 1997, and the idea that Rent Act protection in these circumstances protects a tenant who was in fact habitually living with his sister on the other side of London is not a particularly appealing one."
"41. I do not see anything in the new code which contravenes ECHR Article 6 in the way which Mr Zuckerman suggests. A code which permits service by post to an individual at his usual or last known residence, and which allows such service to stand as good service unless it is known before a default judgment is entered that that method of service was ineffective provides for an accessible, fair and efficient way of administering justice, and these are all attributes much prized by Strasbourg jurisprudence.
42. The code gives a defendant access to a court if for some reason the prescribed method of service does not draw the proceedings to his attention before the judgment is entered. So long as the claimant has complied with the rules, the judgment is a regular one, but if the defendant can show that he has a real (and not a merely fanciful) prospect of successfully defending the claim or that there is some other good reason why the court should intervene, the court is empowered to set aside the judgment, so long as the application is made promptly, after the defendant has become aware of the proceedings."
"Note that the wording of r 39.3(5) provides more stringent requirements than CCR O 37, r 2 which it replaced. The court no longer has a broad discretion. There is only jurisdiction to set aside a regular judgment if the party seeking to have the order set aside can satisfy all three requirements."
They also note that that paragraph was quoted with approval by Simon Brown LJ in Regency Rolls Ltd v Carnall [2000] EWCA Civ 379. It is true, as Mr Jones observes, that Simon Brown LJ was not expressly considering the question whether the rule applied only to regular judgments but, in our judgment, the instincts of both the editors and Simon Brown LJ were correct.
"(m) take any other step or make any other order for the purpose of managing the case and furthering the overriding objective".
Rule 3.1(7) provides:
"(7) A power of the court under these Rules to make an order includes a power to vary or revoke the order."
Rule 3.10 (to which we referred earlier) provides:
"Where there has been a error of procedure such as a failure to comply with a rule or a practice direction –
(a) the error does not invalidate any step taken in the proceedings unless the court so orders; and
(b) the court may make an order to remedy the error."
The present case
Concluding Remarks
i) If the defendant can show he has not been served (or is not deemed to have been served) with the claim form at all, then he would normally be entitled to an order setting the judgment aside and to his costs in making the application.ii) If, when the claimant is served with an application to set aside such a judgment, he believes that he can show that the defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim, then he may apply to the court for orders dispending with service of the claim form, permission (under CPR 24.4(1)) to apply forthwith for summary judgment, and for summary judgment on his claim.
iii) If such an application and cross-application are made the court should make such order as it considers just.
iv) If the claimant can show that the defendant has been guilty of inexcusable delay since learning that the judgment has been entered against him, the court would be entitled to make no order on the defendant's application for that reason. The judgment would then stand (subject to any direction made by the court, whether in relation to statutory interest accruing due on the judgment or otherwise).