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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hussein & Anor v Gibson & Anor [2009] EWCA Civ 882 (08 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/882.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 882 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE COWELL)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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HUSSEIN & ANR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GIBSON & ANR |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
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The Respondent appeared in person.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix:
"JUDGE COWELL: Sorry, are you, were you a solicitor.
A. I wasn't called yet. I was working as …
HHJ Cowell: A trainee solicitor, you told me.
A. Yes, trainee solicitor.
HHJ Cowell: But you are not a solicitor.
A. No, I wasn't a solicitor
HHJ Cowell: No.
A. I was converted to.
HHJ Cowell: From?
A. From accountant.
HHJ Cowell: And were you a certified or a chartered accountant or neither?
A. I was a cost management accountant. [The transcript reads 'Inaudible' but I suppose the words were 'A member'] of the Association of Cost and Management Accountants."
"But he is not a member of any of the three main accountancy bodies."
That is the passage that Mr Hussein says that the judge was quoting verbatim from. It seems to me that that is plainly not a verbatim quote, as is clear from the passage in the transcript in these proceedings which I have quoted. It is simply that the judge wanted to understand what the position was that Mr Hussein was speaking to. He claimed to be a solicitor when he had previously told the judge that he was a trainee solicitor, so the judge wanted to be sure that he had understood the evidence that Mr Hussein had given correctly. He then claimed to have been an accountant and the judge again wanted to make sure that he understood exactly what it was that Mr Hussein was speaking of, and so the matter was clarified in that way.
"[Mr Hussein]. No Lord. No, no, no, no.
Q. No?
A. The… I had investigated the collapse of Johnson Matthey Bank on behalf of one client and also on behalf of a client who was involved in its collapse
Q. Yes.
A. And of course I wrote to the then Treasury, one of the MP's on the Treasury's committee of Ireland[?] that the supervision was inadequate at the Bank of England of banks and it is likely that BCCI[?] [inaudible]…
Q. Yes well, this did not have anything to do with the pictures?
A. No, no, no, this had nothing to do with-
Q. Yes, well then…
A. -the names are there because of that.
Q. I see yes.
A. Because I named…
Q. It was… They are something quite different.
A. Yes.
Q. Nothing to do with the pictures?
A. No, no .
Q. Right, thank you very much."
"He then got the defendant to give his evidence with helpful hints in his questions so that his evidence was not his own but three quarters of it was what the judge hinted to the Defendant."
I have read the whole of Mr Gibson's evidence, both in chief as elicited by the judge and in cross-examination in answer to Mr Hussein's questions, and there is in my judgment no possible question whatsoever of the judge assisting Mr Gibson or giving him helpful hints. The matter can be tested by three suggestions in Mr Hussein's grounds about the way in which the judge assisted Mr Gibson. One is in the matter of a discussion about whether articles handed to Mr Gibson were paintings or prints, the second was about whether a watercolour by T B Hardy was damaged or not and the third was whether Mr Hussein had insured his possessions. So far as the question about whether the articles handed to Mr Gibson and collected by him from Mrs Hussein were paintings or prints, the discussion of that matter at pages 41-44 of the transcript are entirely from Mr Gibson himself, with no suggestion from the judge whatsoever that prints might have been involved rather than paintings, and indeed in his final speech at pages 66, 67 and 68 Mr Hussein repeatedly refers to the fact that Mr Gibson had spoken about prints, he said wrongly. Mr Hussein was there accepting that evidence about prints came from Mr Gibson and not from the judge, and there is not a word of complaint from beginning to end of the proceedings or in Mr Hussein's lengthy final submissions that the judge was acting unfairly or had been in any way hinting to Mr Gibson what evidence he should give.
"… to grind his own axe against me personally because of some events in another matter from 2005."
This is a matter that Mr Hussein mentioned today -- he had not mentioned it last time, I did not understand what he was referring to from his grounds of appeal -- but what Mr Hussein told me today is that he had appeared before HHJ Cowell on some previous occasion, as I understood him, and he complained to me today that a counterclaim of his in some previous proceedings had completely disappeared from the computer or from the court files or something to that effect. I do not care anything about that: I am not interested in what Mr Hussein might give me about the details of some previous litigation which was no doubt decided on its own merits, and if appealed against dealt with on appeal on its own merits.
Order: Application refused