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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Real Estate Opportunities Ltd v Aberdeen Asset Managers Jersey Ltd & Ors [2007] EWCA Civ 197 (09 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/197.html Cite as: [2007] Bus LR 971, [2007] EWCA Civ 197, [2007] 2 All ER 791 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
David Richards J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
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REAL ESTATE OPPORTUNITIES LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) ABERDEEN ASSET MANAGERS JERSEY LIMITED (2) ABERDEEN ASSET MANAGERS LIMITED (3) UBS LIMITED |
Defendant/ 1st Appellant Defendant/ 2nd Appellant Defendant/ 3rd Appellant |
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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)
Iain Milligan QC & Adrian Beltrami (instructed by Messrs Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP) for the 3rd Appellant
Jonathan Sumption QC, Helen Davies & Simon Birt (instructed by Messrs Lovells) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 14/15 February 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
Sections 348 and 391 of FSMA
"348 Restrictions on disclosure of confidential information by Authority etc
(1) Confidential information must not be disclosed by a primary recipient, or by any person obtaining the information directly or indirectly from a primary recipient, without the consent of—
(a) the person from whom the primary recipient obtained the information; and
(b) if different, the person to whom it relates.
(2) In this Part "confidential information" means information which—
(a) relates to the business or other affairs of any person;
(b) was received by the primary recipient for the purposes of, or in the discharge of, any functions of the Authority, the competent authority for the purposes of Part VI or the Secretary of State under any provision made by or under this Act; and
(c) is not prevented from being confidential information by subsection (4).
(3) It is immaterial for the purposes of subsection (2) whether or not the information was received—
(a) by virtue of a requirement to provide it imposed by or under this Act;
(b) for other purposes as well as purposes mentioned in that subsection.
(4) Information is not confidential information if—
(a) it has been made available to the public by virtue of being disclosed in any circumstances in which, or for any purposes for which, disclosure is not precluded by this section; or
(b) it is in the form of a summary or collection of information so framed that it is not possible to ascertain from it information relating to any particular person.
(5) Each of the following is a primary recipient for the purposes of this Part—
(a) the Authority;
(b) any person exercising functions conferred by Part VI on the competent authority;
(c) the Secretary of State;…
349 Exceptions from section 348
(1) Section 348 does not prevent a disclosure of confidential information which is—
(a) made for the purpose of facilitating the carrying out of a public function; and
(b) permitted by regulations made by the Treasury under this section.
(2) The regulations may, in particular, make provision permitting the disclosure of confidential information or of confidential information of a prescribed kind—
(a) by prescribed recipients, or recipients of a prescribed description, to any person for the purpose of enabling or assisting the recipient to discharge prescribed public functions;
(b) by prescribed recipients, or recipients of a prescribed description, to prescribed persons, or persons of prescribed descriptions, for the purpose of enabling or assisting those persons to discharge prescribed public functions;
(c) by the Authority to the Treasury or the Secretary of State for any purpose;
(d) by any recipient if the disclosure is with a view to or in connection with prescribed proceedings…
(5) "Public functions" includes—
(a) functions conferred by or in accordance with any provision contained in any enactment or subordinate legislation…
352 Offences
(1) A person who discloses information in contravention of section 348 or 350(5) is guilty of an offence…
(6) In proceedings for an offence under this section it is a defence for the accused to prove—
(a) that he did not know and had no reason to suspect that the information was confidential information or that it had been disclosed in accordance with section 350;
(b) that he took all reasonable precautions and exercised all due diligence to avoid committing the offence."
"(1) Neither the Authority nor a person to whom a warning notice or decision notice is given or copied may publish the notice or any details concerning it…."
There is no statutory penalty for a breach of section 391.
Background to this litigation
The investigation by the FSA into split capital trusts
The documents etc inspection of which has been refused
a. transcripts and tapes of interviews conducted with the defendants' personnel, directors, employees and consultants by the FSA;
b. documents received by the defendants from the FSA;
c. correspondence between the FSA and the defendants or its employees in connection with the investigation by the FSA and containing what is said to be confidential information for the purpose of section 348 of FSMA.
Two types of disclosure
The change in the position of Aberdeen since the judge's order
The change in the position of UBS since the judge's order
Matters not in issue
Issues for this court and my answers in summary to them
(i) Can a person be said to "obtain" information from the FSA for the purpose of section 348 of FSMA if the FSA gives that person a document containing information which he already has even if he is not the source so far as the FSA was concerned?
In my judgment, for the reasons given below, a person cannot be said to "obtain" information for the purpose of section 348 of FSMA if he already has the information.
(ii) Can a person be said to "obtain" information from the FSA for the purpose of section 348 of FSMA if he knew that information already, or, in the case of a body corporate, knowledge of that information was attributed to it under the general law?
In my judgment, for the reasons given below, a person cannot be said to "obtain" information for the purpose of section 348 of FSMA if he already knew that information, or, in the case of a body corporate, knowledge of that information was attributed to it under the general rules as to attribution.
(iii) Did the judge err in the exercise of his discretion by ordering inspection of the documents notwithstanding the objections raised by UBS?
In my judgment, for the reasons given below, the judge did not err in the exercise of his discretion.
(iv) Will the order for the inspection of warning notices result in publication of them contrary to section 391 of FSMA?
In my judgment, for the reasons given below, the order for inspection of the warning notices would not of itself result in a breach of section 391 of FSMA.
Issue (i): Can a person be said to "obtain" information from the FSA for the purposes of section 348 of FSMA if the FSA gives that person a document containing information which he already has even if he is not the source so far as the FSA was concerned?
"The cardinal rule, as stated in the textbooks on interpretation, for example in Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, 12th ed. (1969), pp. 28-29, is that words in a statute prima facie bear their plain and ordinary meaning. If that rule is applied without modification, then the appellants disclosed the relevant particulars. There is no conflict or contrast between publication and disclosure. The latter activity has many manifestations and publication is one of them. To disclose is to expose to view, make known or reveal and in its ordinary meaning the word aptly describes both the revelation by jurors of their deliberations and further disclosure by publication in a newspaper of the same deliberations, provided always – and this will raise a question of fact – that the publication amounts to disclosure and is not a mere republication of already known facts. "
"The maintenance of confidentiality under Pt V of the 1987 Act for information provided to the Bank is plainly of great importance. Protecting those who provide information to the Bank encourages voluntary disclosure from institutions, third parties and whistle blowers, any of whom might otherwise be unwilling to divulge material. The Bank is of the view that, absent such protection, it would be deprived of the raw material it requires for effective supervision."
"The maintenance of confidentiality as provided in section 82 is of vital importance to the discharge by the bank of its supervisory responsibilities under the Act of 1987. Confidentiality is vitally important to encourage the maximum free flow of information from supervised institutions and third parties whether such disclosure is obligatory or voluntary."
"If, however, my doubts are unfounded and the prohibition in the byelaw does affect the obligation of discovery in a civil action, in my judgment it only applies to information which the member has obtained as a result of the exercise of powers under the Lloyd's Acts. It does not apply to information which he already had before those powers were invoked. That was the judge's view, and I agree with it. It meets the mischief which the byelaw was no doubt intended to prevent: people should not be required or allowed to disclose that which they learn by the exercise of Lloyd's powers. So the members of the Neil committee would not be allowed to disclose the transcripts. But there is no prohibition on the members' agents doing so." (emphasis added)
Issue (ii): Can a person be said to "obtain" information from the FSA for the purpose of section 348 of FSMA if he knew that information already, or, in the case of a body corporate, that information was attributed to it under the general law?
Issue (iii): Did the judge err in the exercise of his discretion by ordering inspection of the documents notwithstanding the objections raised by UBS?
"I should first say a few words on redaction. The jurisdiction of the court under section 236 to order disclosure of facts or documents is subject to the limitations imposed by the need to comply with section 82 of the Banking Act 1987. Speaking quite generally I have no doubt that the court has jurisdiction to order, and in appropriate cases has ordered, production of documents subject to redaction of material whose disclosure for any of a multitude of reasons may be unnecessary or undesirable or unlawful. Accordingly, I have jurisdiction to order Hambros and the interviewees to provide redacted copies of the report and the transcripts which exclude information whose disclosure is objectionable under section 82 of the Act of 1987. But in a case such as the present, concerned with information embargoed by section 82 of the Act of 1987, that is a jurisdiction to be exercised with the greatest caution. There must be taken into account a number of factors of some importance, for example: (1) the making of such an order may be seen as undermining the protection afforded by section 82; the possibility of this exercise being required or undertaken may prejudice the free flow of information to the bank; (2) the difficulty of the exercise. The exercise can only be undertaken by a person with lawful access to the embargoed information. For this reason the liquidator assigns the task in respect of the report and transcripts in Hambros' possession to Hambros. But Hambros may well need the assistance of Norton Rose and the interviewees to identify the supplemental information disclosed by Norton Rose. Likewise the interviewees will in all likelihood require the assistance of Norton Rose to redact their copies. The required assistance may not be provided readily or at all; (3) the risk that an erroneous omission to edit out a passage may constitute a criminal offence; (4) the danger that the redacted document (by reason of the excisions) may prove misleading; and (5) the problems which may be created by such disclosure, e.g. for a witness at a trial or on an examination by the liquidator faced with a truncated document and required to answer questions on it, yet barred from explaining his answers by reference to the passages omitted. In short the process may be time consuming, complicated, expensive and (on occasion) impracticable, and the end product may be of dubious value."
"50. The discretion given to the court by CPR 31.12 is different. The right of a party to refuse inspection of a relevant document is that it would be disproportionate and the court's task under CPR 31.12 is to determine whether that is so. Ready access to the relevant document by some other means could well be a relevant factor, but it is not available to REO in this case."
"51. That is not to say that at least some of the factors to which Lightman J refers may not also be relevant on an application under CPR 31 and I turn now to consider them. The first, undermining the protection afforded by section 82 (section 348 in this case), is not in my judgment applicable to the present application. Full effect must be given to section 348 by redaction of all prohibited information but, once that has been done, neither the section nor its underlying policy could justify a refusal to allow inspection under CPR 31. The second, the difficulty of the exercise, is a factor which I have already considered. In contrast to the case before Lightman J, I am not satisfied, on the evidence before me, that Aberdeen and UBS will require assistance from the interviewees or from the FSA.
52. The third factor is the risk that an erroneous omission to redact a passage may constitute a criminal offence. Care must of course be taken in the process of redaction but the concern must not be overstated. In Bank of Credit and Commerce International (Overseas) Ltd v Price Waterhouse, to which Lightman J referred in his judgment, although not specifically on this point, Laddie J held that section 82 of the Banking Act 1987 created an absolute offence. The risk of inadvertently committing an offence was on that basis significant. In Barings plc v Coopers & Lyband, the Court of Appeal overruled Laddie J, and held that section 82 required "mens rea in the normal way". In giving the judgment of the court, Lord Woolf MR said at para 39:
"An offence is, then, only committed if the person alleged to have committed the offence had knowledge of the circumstances which mean that the information is information to which section 82(1) applies."
The position as regards a breach of section 348 is that disclosure of information in contravention of section 348 is an offence (section 352(1)) but it is a defence for the accused to prove that he took all reasonable precautions and exercised all due diligence to avoid committing the offence (section 352 (6)(b)). If Aberdeen and UBS apply the approach set out in this judgement, it appears to me that they will not commit an offence.
53. In this context it was submitted for UBS that Aberdeen and UBS could not take legal advice as to whether a particular passage should be redacted because, if its disclosure was prohibited, it could not be shown by Aberdeen or UBS to their legal advisers. This was a curious submission because, as the evidence makes clear, their legal advisers already have the transcripts, which they have read and scrutinised. In my judgment this involves no breach of section 348. The solicitors have received the transcripts as agents for Aberdeen and UBS. It would in any case be extraordinary if the section were construed as preventing the parties from showing the transcripts to their lawyers for the purposes of taking legal advice on their obligations as regards the transcripts.
54. The fourth and fifth factors listed by Lightman J and relied on by Aberdeen and UBS were the danger that, once redacted, the transcripts might be misleading and the problems which could arise at trial. These are, as it seems to me, matters for the trial judge and the mere possibility of such risks does not in my view justify a refusal to order inspection of redacted transcripts."
Issue (iv): Will the order for the inspection of warning notices result in publication of them contrary to section 391 of FSMA?
"A particular point was raised by Mr Milligan as regards warning notices sent by the FSA under section 385 of the Act. He submitted that inspection of them was prohibited by section 391(1) which provides that neither the FSA nor a person to whom a warning notice is given or copied "may publish the notice or any details concerning it." Mr Milligan submitted that inspection would involve the defendants in publishing the notices. I do not accept this submission. While "publish" carries a range of meanings in different contexts, its ordinary meaning is to make known to the public or a section of the public. In the context of the Act, it is to be contrasted with the word "disclose" used in section 348. Inspection by parties to litigation in accordance with, and subject to the restrictions imposed by, rules of court is not in my judgment publication for the purposes of section 391. Use of the warning notice or its contents in open court might involve publication, but the court can take steps, such as imposing reporting restrictions or sitting in private, to deal with it." (judgment, para. 56)
Disposition
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins:
Lord Justice Tuckey: