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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> McCarthy, R (on the application of) v The Visitors to the Inns of Court & Anor [2015] EWCA Civ 12 (20 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/12.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 12 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
The Rt Hon Lord Justice Moses
CO/4904/2012
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HON MR JUSTICE NEWEY
and
THE RT HON DAME JANET SMITH DBE
____________________
R on the application of McCarthy |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) The Visitors to the Inns of Court (2) The Bar Standards Board |
Respondents |
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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
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Paul Nicholls QC & Tom Cross (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mawer) for The Bar Standards Board
Hearing date: Tuesday 9 December 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Burnett:
Introduction
The Facts in Outline
The Letters
i) The first letter refers to "Preparation and advice in conference" which has been hand written in paragraph 4. The model has an option which reads "My fee for the advisory and drafting work described in paragraph will be a fixed fee of £ plus VAT". The number "4" has been inserted in the first space together with 719.18 after the pound sign. That is the total for a fee of £675 plus VAT at the rate applicable at the time. The hand written amendments suggest it was provided in response to an undated telephone call. Counsel's evidence was that this was sent on 11 June 2008;ii) The second letter was amended to thank the client for "emails and phone calls". In paragraph 4 it identified the work as "preparation for and advice in conference". The monetary sum inserted was "1028" although once again this was a VAT inclusive figure for five hours work. Counsel's evidence was that this letter was sent on 13 June 2008;
iii) The third letter apparently responded to "emails". Five pieces of work were identified in paragraph 4 namely "(1) advice and drafting of witness statements, (2) advice on procedure and bundles, (3) prep for CMD, (4) advice and representation on WP docs, (5) advice on issues." The fee inserted was "5,000". Counsel's evidence was that this was sent on 16 or 17 July. The "CMD" was the case management hearing and the "WP docs" referred to an issue resolved by the Employment Tribunal on written representations whether certain documents headed "without prejudice" should go into the hearing bundle.
iv) The fourth letter responded to "emails and phone calls". It identified the work as "representation at Central London ET (28 31 July 2008)". The fees section of the model was completed as follows:
"Option 1: My fee for the advisory and drafting work described in paragraph 4 will be a fixed fee of £* plus VAT. You and I agree that I will not send to you the work you have instructed me to draft until you have paid the fee.
* Brief: (£5,000) Refresher: £1,000 per day."
In this fourth letter Counsel adapted the same Option 1 as he had for the others, even though the use of Option 2 would have been more appropriate.
The Tribunal Proceedings
"We have decided that we will not disclose Tim's witness statement until shortly before the hearing date. This will remove the possibility of Mr McCarthy fitting his case around that statement."
The point was repeated in another letter of 26 August 2010. Instead, directions were agreed which enabled the 'prosecution' case to be presented in a bundle of documents (i.e. the complaint, the responses and the disclosed emails etc) with ST and TA attending for cross-examination, but with provision for the BSB to serve further evidence in advance of the hearing. Counsel was required to serve statements and any documents on which he relied by 31 July 2010.
"41. There is no avoiding the fact that on charges 1 and 2 the Tribunal has to decide whether [TA] and his wife or Mr McCarthy have told the truth. The Tribunal has reached the conclusion that [TA and ST] were truthful and that Mr McCarthy was untruthful.
42. Mr MacPherson QC submitted that [TA] was an unreliable witness and made a number of complaints about his behaviour consistent with the terms of his cross-examination.
43. The Tribunal has considered these criticisms in detail and rejects them. [TA] was not a particularly appealing witness and he came across as controlling and obsessive. Nevertheless, he was fastidious and precise on issues of detail and was anxious to ensure that he gave evidence that was accurate and consistent with the relevant documents.
44. It is not necessary for the Tribunal to resolve many of the factual disputes between him and Mr McCarthy. It may also be the case that [TA] was on occasions prone to make allegations in relation to his wife's proceedings which were not supported by cogent evidence. Nevertheless Mr McCarthy had been overpaid and it was entirely clear that [TA] wanted to resolve the financial disputes between them. In his evidence he made concessions about the lack of authority, which he accepted was an unfair point, and he maintained that he did not deliberately fail to disclose the unhelpful e-mails. The Tribunal does not accept that there was any deliberate withholding of unhelpful e-mails by [TA]."
The Tribunal later accepted that when Counsel referred to the need to send Rule 6 letters in an email not produced by TA he may well have intended to do so. Nonetheless it concluded that none was sent and those later produced to the BSB were forgeries.
The Judgment of Moses LJ
"But there still remains the question whether the loss of the opportunity to test TA's evidence by comparing the draft statement with the statement of 29 October and of challenging TA about the comparison could possibly have made any difference to the result. I deliberately put the test higher than that used by the Visitors. They took the view that the evidence against Mr McCarthy was "extremely powerful". I would attach the higher test in the light of the unfairness I have identified. Unless it can be said that there was no real possibility of any alternative result then in my view the decision of the Visitors ought to be quashed." (paragraph 35)
Argument and Discussion
"The test that should be applied is whether, taking all the circumstances of the trial into account, there is a real possibility that the jury would have arrived at a different verdict."
Both Lord Walker and Lord Kerr agreed with Lord Hope. Lord Rodger at paragraph [30] and Lord Brown at paragraph [35] expressed the test in slightly different terms, but to the same effect.
The Cross Appeal on Costs
Mr Justice Newey
Dame Janet Smith