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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Jaffray & Ors v The Society of Lloyds [2007] EWCA Civ 586 (20 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/586.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 586, [2008] 1 WLR 75, [2008] WLR 75 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
IN THE MATTER OF VARIOUS APPLICATIONS
IN THE MATTER OF JAFFRAY v THE SOCIETY OF LLOYDS
[2002] EWCA Civ 1101
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
Sir William Jaffray and others |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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The Society of Lloyds |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr David Foxton QC instructed by Messrs Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer for the Respondent
Hearing date : 6 June 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Buxton:
This is the judgment of the court.
Background
Taylor v Lawrence and CPR 52.17
The jurisdiction to re-open determined appeals: a summary
Taylor v Lawrence in a case of bias
There…needs to be a procedure which will ensure that proceedings will only be reopened where there is a real requirement for this to happen. One situation where this can occur is a situation where it is alleged, as here, that a decision is invalid because the court which made it was biased. If bias is established, there has been a breach of natural justice. The need to maintain confidence in the administration of justice makes it imperative that there should be a remedy. The need for an effective remedy in such a case may justify this court in taking the exceptional course of reopening proceedings which it has already heard and determined. What will be of the greatest importance is that it should be clearly established that a significant injustice has probably occurred and that there is no alternative effective remedy…..Where the alternative remedy would be an appeal to the House of Lords this court will only give permission to reopen an appeal which it has already determined if it is satisfied that an appeal from this court is one for which the House of Lords would not give leave.
Taylor v Lawrence in a case of fraud
It is the reality of the situation which means that we cannot, as Sir George Jessel MR did in Flower v Lloyd, take refuge in the fact that there is an alternative remedy. If there is no effective right of appeal to the House of Lords and this court is the only court which can provide a remedy then in our judgment there can arise the "exceptional circumstances" to which Russell LJ referred in In re Barrell Enterprises [1973] 1 WLR 19.
And it was in those circumstances that there arose the power of the court, like any other court, in the words of Lord Diplock in Bremer Vulcan at p 977, already quoted, to do what was necessary to maintain its character as a court of justice. That, as we have seen, was what permitted the Court of Appeal to deal with cases of bias on the basis adopted by the House of Lords in Pinochet(No 2).
It has long been the settled practice of the Court that the proper method of impeaching a completed judgment on the ground of fraud is by action which, as in any other action based on fraud, the particulars of the fraud must be exactly given and the allegation established by the strict proof such a charge requires. In Flower v Lloyd (1877) 6 Ch D 297, 302 the Court of Appeal, consisting of Jessel MR, James and Baggallay LJ, held that there was not jurisdiction in the Court of Appeal to entertain a similar application with regard to one of their own judgments. James LJ states that "you cannot go to your adversary and say 'You obtained the judgment by fraud and I will have a rehearing of the whole case' until that fraud is established." Flower v Lloyd, Cole v Langford [1898] 2 QB 36 and Baker v Wadsworth (1898) 67 LJ (QB) 301 show that the right procedure for that purpose is by action. That, however, there is jurisdiction in special cases to set aside a judgment for fraud on a motion for a new trial may be accepted. Hip Foong Hong v Neotia [1918] AC 888 is such a case; but it should be remembered that this case had come up to the Privy Council on this procedure and the Board would naturally be unwilling to defeat a case at its last stage on such a ground.
…where a new trial is sought upon the ground of fraud, procedure by motion and affidavit is not the most satisfactory and convenient method of determining the dispute. The fraud must be both alleged and proved; and the better course in such a case is to take independent proceedings to set aside the judgment upon the ground of fraud, when the whole issue can be properly defined, fought out, and determined, though a motion for a new trial is also an available weapon and in some cases may be more convenient
Taylor v Lawrence as seen in subsequent cases
a) Fresh evidence admitted under the rule in Ladd v Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489, sufficient to be taken into account in a first appeal, will not in itself justify a second appeal under Taylor v Lawrence
b) For the Taylor v Lawrence test to be passed, there has usually, but not necessarily always [§20], to be shown corruption of the judicial process [§18]
c) Absent "corruption", merely to demonstrate that the wrong result was reached below may justify reopening the earlier appeal; the earlier appeal will not be reopened simply on claims that the first decision may have been wrong [§22].
Even if that practice were to be regarded as less settled, so that it is a matter of discretion on the particular facts of each case whether such an allegation of fraud should proceed by way of appeal or by way of fresh action, nevertheless it is in my judgment clear that in this case Mr Pell should be required to proceed by way of fresh action and not by way of appeal. First, the alleged fraud is hotly disputed. Second, in a complex case the allegation has yet to be clearly and properly set out in the way in which only pleadings can clarify. Thirdly, the appeal process is an unsatisfactory basis for the analysis of an untried allegation of fraud.
The allegations in this case: preliminary
Allegation A: Sir David Rowland committed perjury before Cresswell J
Allegation B: Mr Murray Lawrence committed perjury before Cresswell J
the evidence given to the court in Jaffray was misleading as to the knowledge about asbestos liabilities faced by the market on the part of at least two key witnesses (Murray Lawrence and Sir David Rowland) and that the Council/Committee of Lloyds knew in the 1980's that the accounting systems in place at Lloyds were unable to produce reasonable estimates of the outstanding liabilities for a number of reasons, some continuing throughout the period and some of particular significance in relation to particular years
Allegation C: various people committed perjury in relation to the Murray Lawrence letter
The terms of the misrepresentation found against Lloyds
Reinsurance to close [RITC]
Mrs Adams and Mr Butler
Conclusion