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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Coulson v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 1547 (28 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1547.html Cite as: [2013] 1 Costs LO 117, [2012] EWCA Civ 1547, [2013] IRLR 116 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
The Hon.Mr Justice Supperstone
B e f o r e :
Lord Justice Sullivan
and
Lord Justice McCombe
____________________
ANDREW COULSON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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NEWS GROUP NEWSPAPERS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Christopher Jeans QC, Mr Nicholas Randall (instructed by Allen & Overy LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8th November 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
(A) Introduction
"4.6 To the extent that it is lawfully able to do so, [NGN] will pay any reasonable professional (including, without limitation, legal and accounting) costs and expenses properly incurred by [Mr Coulson] after the Termination Date [viz. 28 February 2007] which arise from his having to defend, or appear in, any administrative, regulatory, judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings as a result of his having been the Editor of the News of the World".
(B) Factual Background
"We will provide advice in connection with the investigations (civil, criminal and parliamentary) into the allegations of phone hacking at the [NoW] newspaper, and any other allegations which arise relating to Mr Coulson's editorship."
The letter stated that invoices would be rendered monthly in respect of charges incurred in the preceding month. NGN paid DLA's fees covering such work undertaken by them between 25 January 2011 and 23 August 2011.
(C) The Rival Contentions
(D) The Arguments Amplified
"It makes no sense for any employer to agree to pay for criminal defence costs of an individual
(a) whom he no longer employs
(b) in respect of alleged criminal activity which formed no part of his job."
(Respondent's skeleton argument, paragraph 54)
"could never have the assistance of a civil court to ease himself of the burden of the amount of any fine or costs…" (Emphasis added)
(R. Leslie Ltd. v Reliable Advertising [1915] 1 KB 652) and the following:
"It is…a principle of our law that the punishment inflicted by a criminal court is personal to the offender, and that the civil courts will not entertain an action by the offender to recover an indemnity against the consequences of that punishment."
(Askey v Golden Wine Co. Ltd. [1948] 2 All ER 35, 38 per Denning J (as he then was).
(E) The Judge's decision
"29. Plainly, as Editor, Mr Coulson was required to act lawfully. That being so the reference to "Editor" in the clause must be to someone performing the lawful duties of Editor. His duties comprised only lawful activities. Accordingly it cannot have been intended that activity outside the scope of an Editor's lawful responsibilities would be covered by an indemnity; still less that the indemnity should extend to any serious criminal activities for which he was alleged personally to be responsible.
30. Mr Jeans accepts that the words "judicial proceedings" as a matter of language do not exclude criminal proceedings. However, he submits, and I agree, personal wrongdoing is not within the intention of the clause…[T]hese words are not apt to describe the Claimant's participation in criminal proceedings brought against him arising from his own alleged personal misconduct. They are not a natural way of expressing the concept of defending oneself."
"47. Mr Laddie submits that what distinguishes the authorities on which Mr Jeans relies for the application of the ex turpi causa principle from the present case is first, that in all those cases the claimant had been convicted of a criminal offence (or was liable to pay penalties to a regulator) and was relying on the conviction (or liability) to found the claim; and second, in none of those cases was there a formal contractual agreement, the terms of which obliged one party to indemnify the other in relation to legal costs. Mr Jeans does not submit that the clause is contrary to public policy and an illegal agreement. I agree with Mr Laddie that the maxim ex turpi causa has no application to the present case. Accordingly I reject Mr Jeans' submission that the claim was premature on that ground. I accept Mr Laddie's submission that the indemnity requires the Defendant to meet the Claimant's legal costs within a reasonable time of payment becoming due. "
(F) Discussion
"Proceedings for a crime under this Act shall not be instituted except by or with the consent of the Attorney-General",
related to the time when the accused person comes to court to answer the charge.
"25. The second main issue is whether Mr Learmonth's claims for attendances on the claimant prior to charge and after acquittal are, in the words of section 16(6), for expenses incurred by the claimant "in the proceedings". As to the attendance on the claimant prior to the charge, that is to say on 6th April 2000, for a period of 30 minutes, Mr Davies, in his submission, adopted Mr Learmonth's explanation given in his first affidavit, which reads:
"…he attended my office, having already been interviewed by the Police in relation to the matter, who had then granted him bail to return to the Police Station once they made further enquiries. It is submitted that he was entitled to receive advice in relation to the possible outcome when surrendering to his bail."
26. Mr Davies added that if Mr Learmonth had been instructed to attend and advise the claimant at the initial interview (which he was not ) it could not have been reasonably disallowed as part of his bill in the proceedings. Here the attendance followed such an interview and was at a stage when the police investigations were nearly complete and the claimant had shortly to surrender to his bail. No doubt, I would add, matters passed between the claimant and Mr Learmonth on that occasion by way of instructions which would have had to be given at a later stage after charge.
……
28. In my view, the first of those claims for attendance prior to the charge, for the reasons given, would, adopting a sensible and realistic interpretation of the words "in the proceedings", clearly be encompassed by them. Instructions were given at a time when charge was imminent and the bail on which the claimant had been placed was about to expire. It seems to me that on a sensible approach it could not reasonably be said that the advice sought and given at that initial attendance was not "in the proceedings" simply because the charge had not yet been preferred."
(G) Conclusion
Lord Justice Sullivan
Lord Justice Laws